Use of elegy in Sentences. 26 Examples
The examples include elegy at the start of sentence, elegy at the end of sentence and elegy in the middle of sentence
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elegy at the start of sentence
- Elegy: Adagio cantabile e rubato, ind minor.
elegy at the end of sentence
- There are playing beautiful elegy.
- What begins as a satiric novel of ideas ends as a surprisingly moving elegy.
- Aimless Breeze flaps against the heavy glass windows like playing an ancient elegy.
elegy in the middle of sentence
- Mind out! elegy A mournful poem.
- To compose an elegy upon or for.
- Funeral elegy, hold a memorial ceremony for youth.
- Gillian Wearing presents an elegy to one of life's losers.
- The sonnet is an emotional elegy, and the tone is mournful.
- The lonely elegy urges, who let profane lonely read the boudoir?
- The border Town is more a grievous custom elegy than a moving love eclogue.
- That perches in the soul and sings the elegy without the words and never stop.
- That perches in the soul and sings the elegy without the words, and never stope.
- But it is neither an elegy of the novel nor a grim prediction of its imminent demise.
- The writer sings an elegy of concuss the spirit returns to bowel for fool's tragedy destiny.
- Gennady Rozhdestvensky recited Alexander Pushkin's elegy, preceded by my reading it in translation.
- The text researches for the elegy trying to discuss its virtue in literature and aesthetic culture.
- West's elegy magnifies the warts and the amours, yet gives poetic poignancy to the portraits he draws here.
- Yet that tiny elegy speaks forward, too, perhaps, to another vanished relatedness, between Martin and his first wife.
- This is an elegy for all of them, a haunting and beautiful novel, perfectly filmed by Vittorio de Sica, and awarded an Oscar in 1971.
- The protagonist's six-day brief physical leisure trip corresponds with the psychic journey of the discovery of the myth and elegy of Englishness.
- Similarly, Urian Oakes (1631-81) touches a nerve of agony in these lines of his laborious "elegy upon the Death of the Reverend Mr. Thomas" (1677).
- The death of Lincoln deeply touched great American poet, Walt Whitman, and inspired him to create his most superb elegy When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloom'd.
- Anything he writes is going to be forced, compelled - and with his forced fingers rude he violates the formal prosodic, the metrical, scheme of his elegy at its very opening.
- And he concludes with a wry elegy for the typewriter, a machine that has become, along with the movie projector and the turntable, a fetish and an emblem of superannuated modernity.
- The famous elegy, Written in a Country Churchyard by Thomas Gray, the outstanding poet of English sentimentalism of the 18th century, is the perfection of the sentimental literature.
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