From Gothic to Romantic: Thomas Chatterton's BristolAlistair Heys Redcliffe, 2005 - 144 páginas Even 235 years after his supposed death by suicide, Bristol s boy-poet Thomas Chatterton remains a fascinating and controversial figure. This challenging collection of eight essays questions long-held assumptions about Chatterton's life and offers new insights into the young poet's influence on English art and literature. Architectural historian Timothy Mowl argues that, rather than a proto-Romantic, Chatterton was more a Rococo poet living among the eclectic furore of a brash Rococo city. Art historian Michael Liversidge assesses how the Chatterton myth encouraged and influenced artistic depictions of St Mary Redcliffe church by artists such as Girtin,Turner and Varley. |
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Página 77
... suggest that ' pilgrims ' visited Thicknesse's memorial because it fulfilled the need for sentimental mourners to attach their grief to a particular location . In 1787 , Thicknesse issued a public complaint about the number of visitors ...
... suggest that ' pilgrims ' visited Thicknesse's memorial because it fulfilled the need for sentimental mourners to attach their grief to a particular location . In 1787 , Thicknesse issued a public complaint about the number of visitors ...
Página 123
... suggest that the young poet was certifiably insane , as opposed simply to being an intellectual rebel who enjoyed ... suggests that calomel is mercurius dulcis ( mercurous chloride or ' horn - quicksilver ' ) : ' it is most commonly ...
... suggest that the young poet was certifiably insane , as opposed simply to being an intellectual rebel who enjoyed ... suggests that calomel is mercurius dulcis ( mercurous chloride or ' horn - quicksilver ' ) : ' it is most commonly ...
Página 137
... suggests that a rent of 2s to 3s 6d was nor- mal , although garrets might be cheaper ( p . 391 ) . 28. Poems , Supposed to have been Written at Bristol , by Thomas Rowley , and Others , in the Fifteenth Century , ed . Thomas Tyrwhitt ...
... suggests that a rent of 2s to 3s 6d was nor- mal , although garrets might be cheaper ( p . 391 ) . 28. Poems , Supposed to have been Written at Bristol , by Thomas Rowley , and Others , in the Fifteenth Century , ed . Thomas Tyrwhitt ...
Términos y frases comunes
architecture argued arsenic Art Gallery artists Barrett Bath Blaise Castle Blake Blake's Bristol Museums Bristolians British builder building Burgum Canynge Catcott century Chatterton and Romantic church classical Coleridge controversy copies Death of Chatterton E.H.W. Meyerstein eclectic eighteenth-century Elegy English Erdman essay Farley's Bristol Journal Felix Farley's Bristol figure forgeries friends garden genius Gillray Gillray's Gordon Kelsey Gothic Hannah Imagination inspiration Iolo Morganwg Iolo's J.M.W. Turner Jerusalem John Sell Cotman John Varley landscape letter literary literature medieval Memoirs merchant Monody monument myth Nick Groom Palladian perhaps Philip Thicknesse poem poet poetry pride published quoted by Meyerstein Rococo Romantic Culture Rowley's satire St Mary Redcliffe suggests suicide Tate Britain Thicknesse's Thomas Chatterton Thomas Chatterton London Thomas Girtin Thomas Rowley thou Timothy Mowl tion trade Turner verse vision visionary Wales Walpole watercolour Welsh William William Canynge Wordsworth writing wrote Yearsley