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Birth date
1716
Death date
1771
Birth town
London
Country
England
Poems by this Poet
Displaying 21 - 30 of 55
Title Post date Rating Comments
Ode on the Death of a Favorite Cat, Drowned in a Tub of Gold Fishes
Average: 2 (2 votes)
0
Fragment
Average: 1 (2 votes)
0
The Triumphs of Owen
No votes yet
0
On Lord Holland's Seat near Margate, Kent
Average: 3 (2 votes)
0
Sonnet
No votes yet
0
Epitaph on Dr. Keene
Average: 1 (2 votes)
0
Epitaph on Dr. Keene's Wife
Average: 1 (2 votes)
0
The Progress of Poesy
No votes yet
0
Tophet
No votes yet
0
The Death of Hoel
Average: 4 (2 votes)
0
Gray's father was a scrivener while his mother and aunt kept a milliner's shop. He led a quiet, studious life in the main, training in law after his degree at Cambridge and then becoming a history done at Peterhouse.

Gray formed a friendship with Walpole which was broken off as a result of a disagreement during a "Grand Tour of Europe" (1734-39), though they were eventually reconciled in 1745. This friendship was important to Gray's literary career and Walpole later published The Progress of Poetry and The Bard, an impassioned summary of English history, on his Strawberry Hill Press. Gray sent his Ode on the Spring to an Etonian friend, Richard West, who died shortly afterwards, prompting the Sonnet on the Death of West. Gray was immensely popular and helped to create a new taste in poetry; fertile ground for the romantic poets to follow him. In 1757 at the death of the Poet

Laureate Cibber, the post was offered to Gray, but he refused it.