Thomas Chatterton Article

Thomas Chatterton summary

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Below is the article summary. For the full article, see Thomas Chatterton.

Thomas Chatterton, (born Nov. 20, 1752, Bristol, Gloucestershire, Eng.—died Aug. 24, 1770, London), English poet. At age 11 Chatterton wrote a pastoral eclogue on an old parchment and passed it off successfully as a 15th-century work. Thereafter he created more poems in a similar vein, attributing them to a fictitious monk he called Thomas Rowley. After a mock suicide threat freed him from an apprenticeship to an attorney, he set out for London. There he had some success with a comic opera, The Revenge, but when a prospective patron died, he found himself penniless and without prospects and committed suicide at 17. Considered a precursor of Romanticism, he was praised by such poets as Samuel Taylor Coleridge, John Keats, Lord Byron, and William Wordsworth.