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The Epistolary Melancholy of Thomas Gray
- Biography
- University of Hawai'i Press
- Volume 2, Number 2, Spring 1979
- pp. 125-140
- 10.1353/bio.2010.0856
- Article
- Additional Information
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Written from the standpoint of "a life spent out of the World," Gray's letters reveal a persistent strain of melancholy which can be interpreted as a symptomatic response to the eighteenth-century problem of the "golden mean." This essay argues that if Gray did experience the culture of his time as being fragmented and self-negating, a view which the correspondence persuades us to adopt, then his melancholy is implicitly a criticism of his age.