Associations to the word «Elegy»
Noun
- Ode
- Churchyard
- Sonnet
- Ovid
- Epitaph
- Lament
- Keats
- Stanza
- Orpheus
- Gray
- Poem
- Satire
- Shelley
- Dryden
- Tennyson
- Whitman
- Epistle
- Punk
- Eton
- Cello
- Epic
- Bard
- Poetry
- Muse
- Verse
- Goethe
- Poet
- Qu
- Milton
- Viola
- Ballad
- Pumpkin
- Osaka
- Funeral
- Bassoon
- Marlowe
- Hymn
- Caprice
- Masterpiece
- Walpole
- Soprano
- Eliot
- Waller
- Tragedy
- Chaucer
- Epilogue
- Praise
- Piano
- Orchestra
- Lullaby
- Goldsmith
- Tam
- Rhapsody
- Sampler
- Prelude
- Metamorphosis
- Graveyard
- Colored
- Tchaikovsky
- Shakespeare
- Authorship
- Clarinet
- Coleridge
- Meditation
- Liber
- Partridge
- Virgil
- Iain
- Inca
- Violin
- Chu
- Prologue
- Cornelia
Adjective
Wiktionary
ELEGY, noun. A mournful or plaintive poem; a funeral song; a poem of lamentation.
Dictionary definition
ELEGY, noun. A mournful poem; a lament for the dead.
Wise words
Love. Fall in love and stay in love. Write only what you
love, and love what you write. The key word is love. You
have to get up in the morning and write something you love,
something to live for.