The Rowley Poems by Thomas Chatterton
page 33 of 413 (07%)
page 33 of 413 (07%)
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explain obvious difficulties because he could not understand them.
Bryant is the least absurd of the Pro-Rowleians. 1782. Dean Milles' edition of the Rowley poems--a splendid quarto with a running commentary attempting to vindicate Rowley's authenticity. Milles was President of the Society of Antiquaries and his commentary is characterized by Professor Skeat as 'perhaps the most surprising trash in the way of notes that was ever penned. 1782. Mathias' _Essay on the Evidence ... relating to the poems called Rowley's_--he is pro-Rowleian and criticizes Tyrwhitt's appendix. 1782. Thomas Warton's _Enquiry ... into the Poems attributed to Thomas Rowley_--Anti-Rowleian. 1782. Tyrwhitt's _Vindication_ of his Appendix. Tyrwhitt had discovered Chatterton's use of Bailey's Dictionary and completely refutes Bryant, Milles, and Mathias. It may be observed in passing that though Goldsmith upheld Rowley, Dr. Johnson, the two Wartons, Steevens, Percy, Dr. Farmer, and Sir H. Croft pronounced unhesitatingly in favour of the poems having been written by Chatterton: while Malone in a mocking anti-Rowleian pamphlet shows that the similes from Homer in the _Battle of Hastings_ and elsewhere have often borrowed their rhymes from Pope! 1798. _Miscellanies in Prose and Verse_ by Edward Gardner (two volumes). At the end of Volume II there is a short account of the Rowley controversy and, what is more important, the statement that Gardner had seen Chatterton antiquate a parchment and had heard him say that a person who had studied antiquities could with the aid of |
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