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Melancholy |
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Melancholy See also Grief. Acheron river of woe in the underworld. [Gk. Myth.: Howe, 5] lists causes, symptoms, and characteristics of melancholy. [Br. Lit.: Anatomy of Melancholy] beset by woes. [Br. Lit.: “Sad Fortunes of Amos Barton” in Walsh Modern, 45] humor effecting temperament of gloominess. [Medieval Physiology: Hall, 130] melancholy, bittersweet music born among American Negroes. [Am. Music: Scholes, 113] serious, moody, melancholic minister. [Br. Lit.: St. Ronan’s Well] driven to gloom by collapse of expectations. [Br. Lit.: Bleak House] oracle so awe-inspiring, consulters never smiled again. [Gk. Myth.: Brewer Dictionary, 1103] amusingly gloomy, morose donkey. [Children’s Lit.: Winnie-the-Pooh] meditative poem of a melancholy mood. [Br. Lit.: Harvey, 266]
immigration center where many families were separated; “isle of tears.” [Am. Hist.: Flexner, 193] “lone lorn creetur” with melancholy disposition. [Br. Lit.: David Copperfield] black mood dominates his consciousness. [Brit. Lit.: Shakespeare Hamlet] flesh brings melancholy to those who eat it. [Animal Symbolism: Mercatante, 125] poem celebrating the pleasures of melancholy and solitude. [Br. Lit.: Milton Il Penseroso in Magill IV, 577] “can suck melancholy out of a song.” [Br. Lit.: As You Like It] forever weeping and bemoaning his fate. [Br. Lit.: Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland] no joy here when Casey struck out. [Am. Sports Lit.: “Casey at the Bat” in Turlin, 642] composed, sang many melancholic songs in memory of deceased Eurydice. [Gk. Myth.: Orpheus and Eurydice, Magill I, 700–701] discomfited by his existence’s purposelessness, solitarily despairs. [Fr. Lit.: Nausea] hapless and helpless soldier; resigned to his fate. [Comics: Horn, 595–596] life’s gloominess. [O.T.: Psalms 23:4] child full of woe. [Nurs. Rhyme: Opie, 309] tree symbolizes grief. [Flower Symbolism: Flora Symbolica, 178] |
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More mysterious is the sense of a shared life radiated by Eleonor and Giles Robertson as they sit at a large wooden table in their home in Edinburgh (1987) and even more so by Anci and Harry Guy in Groby, UK (1989), who look melancholily into the camera but seem so firmly united through common hardships and love that no action or gesture is needed to illustrate intersubjectivity in the most profound sense. |
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