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ELEGY

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Originally appearing in Volume V09, Page 253 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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ELEGY  , a

short poem of lamentation or regret, called forth by the decease of a beloved or revered person, or by a general sense of the pathos of mortality . The Greek word EXeye(a is of doubtful signification; it is usually interpreted as meaning a mournful or funeral
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song . But there seems to be no proof that this idea of regret for
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death entered into the
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original meaning of EXeyela . The earliest Greek elegies which have come down to us are not funereal, although it is possible that the
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primitive iXeyfia may have been a set of words liturgically used, with
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music, at a
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burial . When the elegy appears in surviving Greek literature, we find it dedicated, not to death, but to war and love .
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Callinus of Ephesus, who flourished in the 7th century, is the earliest elegist of whom we possess fragments . A little later
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Tyrtaeus was composing his famous elegies in Sparta . Both of these writers were, so far as we know, exclusively war-like and patriotic . On the other hand, the passion of love inspires
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Mimnermus, whose elegies are the prototypes not only of the later Greek pieces, and of the Latin poems of the school of Tibullus and Propertius, but of a
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great
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deal of the formal eroticpoetry of
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modern
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Europe . In the 6th century B.C., the elegies of Solon were admired; they are mainly lost . But we possess more of the
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work of Theognis of
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Megara than of any other archaic elegist, and in it we can observe the characteristics of Greek elegy best . Here the Dorian spirit of chivalry reaches its highest expression, and war is combined with manly love .

The elegy, in its

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calm
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movement, seems to have begun to lose currency when the ecstasy of emotion was more successfully interpreted by the various rhythmic and dithyrambic inventions of the Aeolic lyrists . The elegy, however, rose again to the highest level of merit in Alexandrian times . It was reintroduced by
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Philetas in the 3rd cent . B.C., and was carried to extreme perfection by
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Callimachus . Other later Greek elegists of high reputation were
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Asclepiades and
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Euphorion . But it is curious to
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notice that all the elegies of these poets were of an amatory nature, and that antiquity styled the funeral dirges of
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Theocritus,
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Bion and Moschus—which are to us the types of elegy—not elegies at all, but idylls . When the poets of Rome began'their imitative study of Alexandrian
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models, it was natural that the elegies of writers such as Callimachus should tempt them to immediate imitation . Gallus, whose
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works are unhappily lost, is known to have produced a great sensation in Rome by
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publishing his
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translation of the poems of Euphorion; and he passed on to the composition of erotic elegies of his own, which were the earliest in the Latin language . If we possessed his once-famous Cytheris, we should be able to decide the question of how much Propertius, who is now the leading figure among
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Roman elegists, owed to the example of Gallus . His brilliantly emotional Cynthia, with its rich and unexampled employment of that alternation of
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hexameter and
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pentameter which had now come to be known as the elegiac measure, seems, however, to have settled the type of Latin elegy . Tibullus is always named in conjunctionwithPropertius, who was his contemporary, although in their style they were violently contrasted . The sweetness of Tibullus was the
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object of admiration and constant imitation by the Latin poets of the Renaissance, although Propertius has more austerely pleased a later taste .

Finally,

Ovid wrote elegies of great variety in subject, but all in the same form, and his dexterous easy metre closed the tradition of elegiac
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poetry among the ancients . What remains in the decline of Latin literature is all founded on a study of those masters of the
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Golden Age . When the Renaissance found its way to England, the word " elegy " was introduced by readers of Ovid and Propertius . But from the beginning of the 16th century, it was used in
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English, as it has been ever since, to describe a funeral song or lament . One of the earliest poems in English which bears the title of elegy is The Complaint of Philomene, which George Gascoigne began in 1562, and printed in 1576 . The Daphnaida of Spenser (1591) is an elegy in the strict modern sense, namely a poem of regret pronounced at the obsequies of a particular person . In 1579 Puttenham had defined an elegy as being a song " of long lamentation." With the opening of the 17th century the composition of elegies became universal on every occasion of public or private grief . Dr Johnson's definition, " Elegy, a short poem without points or turns," is singularly inept and careless . By that time (1755) English literature had produced many great elegies, of which the Lycidas of Milton is by far the most illustrious . But even Cowley's on Crashaw, Tickell's on Addison, Pope's on an Unfortunate Lady, those of
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Quarles, and Dryden, and Donne, should have warned Johnson of his mistake . Since the 18th century the most illustrious examples of elegy in English literature have been the Adonais of Shelley (on Keats), the Thyrsis of Matthew Arnold (on Clough), and the
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Ave atque Vale of Mr Swinburne (on Baudelaire) . It remains for us to mention what is the most celebrated elegy in English, that written by Gray in a Country Churchyard .

This, however, belongs to a class apart, as it is not addressed to the memory of any particular person . A writer of small merit,

James Hammond (1716-1742), enjoyed a certain success with his Love Elegies in which he endeavoured to introduce the erotic elegy as it was written by Ovid and Tibullus . This experiment took no hold of English literature, but was welcomed in France in the amatory works of Parny (1753-1814), in those of Chenedolle (1769-1833), and of Millevoye (1782-1816) . The melancholy and sentimental elegies of the last named are the typical examples of this class of poetry in French literature . Lamartine must be, included among the elegists, and his famous " Le
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Lac " is as eminent an elegy in French as Gray's " Country Churchyard " is in English . The elegy has flourished in
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Portugal, partly because it was cultivated with great success by Camoens, the most illustrious of the Portuguese poets . In
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Italian, Chiabrera and Filicaia are named among the leading
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national elegists . In German literature, the notion of elegy as a poem of lamentation does not exist . The famous Roman Elegies of Goethe imitate in form and theme those of Ovid; they are not even plaintive in character .

End of Article: ELEGY
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ELEGIT (Lat. for " he has chosen ")
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ELEMENT (Lat. elementum)

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