Thomas Gray's poem "Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard" is summarized as follows:
The poem opens with a narrator observing the countryside at dusk from a country churchyard filled with graves of ordinary people. Over three stanzas, the narrator contrasts the simple lives and deaths of these "rude forefathers" with societal values like ambition and grandeur. The narrator suggests that among the dead may have been people who could have achieved great things if given the opportunity. In the final stanzas, the narrator reveals they too are among the dead, speaking from beyond the grave, and their epitaph is inscribed on a headstone in the churchyard.