The Works of Thomas Chatterton
Thomas Chatterton author Joseph Cottle editor Robert Southey editor
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Published:26th Sep '13
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
First published in 1803, this three-volume collection brings together the works of poet and forger Thomas Chatterton (1752–70).
Thomas Chatterton (1752–70), Wordsworth's 'marvellous boy', died aged only seventeen, but his legacy influenced the Romantics for decades. First published in 1803, this three-volume collection brings together his works. Volume 2 is devoted to the expertly forged Rowley poems, Chatterton's crowning achievement.Thomas Chatterton (1752–70) was only seventeen when he died of arsenic poisoning. Among his family and friends he was known as a versifier with a fascination for medieval manuscripts, but none suspected the true scope of his work. At eleven, he was already writing poetry, and by the end of his life his love poems, eclogues and forged medieval pieces numbered in the hundreds. They were to influence the Romantics for decades after his death. This three-volume collection of his work, edited by Joseph Cottle and Robert Southey, first appeared in 1803. Volume 2 contains the Rowley poems, for which Chatterton is best known. Ironically, they were never published under his own name in his lifetime: he claimed that the poems were transcripts he had taken from the work of Thomas Rowley, a fifteenth-century monk. The value of these ambitious forgeries is still underappreciated.
ISBN: 9781108063388
Dimensions: 216mm x 140mm x 31mm
Weight: 690g
552 pages