A speaker in one of these title places notes that “The others have gone; they were tired… But I would rather be standing here” in a poem that declares “There is something terrible about a child.” Charlotte Mew wrote a poem set at one of these places “In Nunhead.” A “school” of poetry named for these places included Thomas Parnell and Robert Blair. In a poem set in one of these places, the speaker imagines “a heart once pregnant with celestial fire” and “hands” that “wak’d to ecstasy the living lyre.” The speaker of a poem reflects that “the paths of glory led but to” one of these places in a poem that includes an epitaph to “A youth to Fortune and to Fame unknown” and begins “The curfew tolls the knell of parting day.” For 10 points, an elegy by Thomas Gray is set in a “Country” type of what location? ■END■
ANSWER: graveyards [or cemeteries; or graves; or churchyards; accept “In Nunhead Cemetery”; accept “Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard”; prompt on churches by asking “in what part of the church is that poem set?”]
<Indiana A, British Literature>
= Average correct buzz position