The Marvellous Boy

The Life and Myth of Thomas Chatterton

Linda Kelly author

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Faber & Faber

Published:22nd Jan '09

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

The Marvellous Boy cover

In 1770, at the end of his tether, the seventeen-year-old poet Thomas Chatterton, penniless and starving, despairing of success and tormented by a sense of failure, committed suicide in his garret room.

Within a few years he was transformed into a legend. In the dawning Romantic Movement, he became a symbol of some of its most powerful preoccupations - suicide, youth and neglected genius.

During the two ensuing centuries, Chatterton has become one of the most famous of literary suicides. To the Romantics in the nineteenth century, the premature death of this precocious genius became a source of inspiration. His suicide inspired Vigny's melodramatic play Chatterton, and forty years later, Leoncavallo's opera spread to Italy. The Pre-Raphaelites, especially Rossetti, were fascinated by his death. In the twentieth century, the eccentric scholar and poet E. W. Meyerstein developed a lifelong passion for him.

Linda Kelly explores the development, pervasiveness and astonishing persistence of the Chatterton legend, throwing new and revealing light on the writers and artists who admired him.

'A book that leaves out nothing important and yet keeps us reading like a novel.' John Wain

ISBN: 9780571248421

Dimensions: 216mm x 135mm x 13mm

Weight: 230g

176 pages

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