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There are 5 critical essays on Graveyard poets.

Critical Essays on Graveyard poets
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Critical Essay by Isabel St. John Bliss
14,836 words, approx. 50 pages
In the following essay, Bliss maintains that Young's poem is much more than just a piece about death, and should be considered an expression of Christian apologetics.
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Critical Essay by W. Hutchings
7,275 words, approx. 24 pages
In the following essay, Hutchings attempts to demonstrate that the ambiguous syntax used by Gray when referring to death creates much uncertainty for the reader.
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Critical Essay by Cecil V. Wicker
6,924 words, approx. 23 pages
In the following essays, Wicker argues that Young strove to be original in his works and that he treated the melancholy of his day in a new fashion that led to Romanticism. This Romanticism can be seen in the Graveyard tradition, of which Young was one of the founders.
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Critical Essay by Thomas Woodman
6,474 words, approx. 22 pages
In the following essay, Woodman discusses Parnell's three most famous pieces and argues that although they have many aspects to them, he wrote them, most of all, with a Christian purpose in mind.
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Critical Essay by Samuel Johnson
2,860 words, approx. 10 pages
In the following essay, originally published in 1781, Johnson provides a brief overview of Parnell's life and claims that his poems, while not works that stemmed from a great mind, have a pleasant sense about them which was enjoyable to the writer himself as well as the reader.


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