The Rowley Poems by Thomas Chatterton
page 48 of 413 (11%)
page 48 of 413 (11%)
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apprized of the principal circumstances of his short life. He was born
on the 20th of November 1752, and educated at a charity-school on St. Augustin's Back, where nothing more was taught than reading, writing, and accounts. At the age of fourteen, he was articled clerk to an attorney, with whom he continued till he left Bristol in April 1770. Though his education was thus confined, he discovered an early turn towards poetry and English antiquities, particularly heraldry. How soon he began to be an author is not known. In the _Town and Country Magazine_ for March 1769, are two letters, probably, from him, as they are dated at Bristol, and subscribed with his usual signature, D.B. The first contains short extracts from two MSS., "_written three hundred years ago by one Rowley, a Monk_" concerning dress in the age of Henry II; the other, "ETHELGAR, _a Saxon poem_" in bombast prose. In the same Magazine for May 1769, are three communications from Bristol, with the same signature, D.B. _viz_. CERDICK, _translated from the Saxon_ (in the same style with ETHELGAR), p. 233.--_Observations upon Saxon heraldry_, with drawings of _Saxon atchievements_, &c. p. 245.--ELINOURE and JUGA, _written three hundred years ago by_ T. ROWLEY, _a secular priest_, p. 273. This last poem is reprinted in this volume, p. 19. In the subsequent months of 1769 and 1770 there are several other pieces in the same Magazine, which are undoubtedly of his composition. In April 1770, he left Bristol and came to London, in hopes of advancing his fortune by his talents for writing, of which, by this time, he had conceived a very high opinion. In the prosecution of this scheme, he appears to have almost entirely depended upon the patronage of a set of gentlemen, whom an eminent author long ago pointed out, as _not the very worst judges or rewarders of merit_, the booksellers of |
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