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ts. An illusion is successfully conveyed of a dim remote age when an idle-strenuous people lived only to be picturesque, to kill one another in tourneys, to rear with painful labour beautiful elaborate cathedrals, and yet had so much time on their hands that they could pass half their lives cracking unhallowed sconces in the Holy Land and, in that part of their ample leisure which they devoted to study, spell 'flourishes' as 'Florryschethe'. But if any one still anxious for literal truth should insist--'Is not the impression as false as the medium that conveys it? Were the middle ages really like that? Is it not a fact that the average baron stayed at home in his castle devising abominable schemes to wring money or its equivalent from miserable and half-starved peasants?'--such a one can only be answered with another question: 'Is Pierrot like a man, and has it been put beyond question that Pontius Pilate was hanged for beating his wife?' The Rowley writings are--properly considered--entirely fanciful and unreal. They have many faults, but are seen at their worst when Chatterton is trying to exhibit some eternal truth. There is a horrible (but perfectly natural) didacticism--the inevitable priggishness of a clever boy--which occasionally intrudes itself on his best work. Thus that charming fanciful fragment which begins-- As onn a hylle one eve fittynge At oure Ladie's Chyrche mouche wonderynge embodies this truism fit for a bread-platter--or to be the 'Posy of a ring'--'Do your best.' Canynges and Gaunts culde doe ne moe. And the poet's boyishness demands still further consideration. He has a crude violence of expression which is apt to shock the mature person--some of the descriptions of wounds in the two Battles of Hastings would sicken a butcher; while in another vein such a phrase as Hee thoughte ytt proper for to cheese a wyfe, And use the sexes for the purpose gevene. (_Storie of William Canynge_) has an absurd affectation of straightforward good sense divested of sentiment which could not appeal to any one on a higher plane of civilization than a medical student. And this is easily explicable if only it is borne in mind that the Rowley poems were written by a boy, and that such lovely things as the Dirge in _AElla_ suggest a maturity that Chatterton did not by any means perfectly possess. In some respects he was as childish (to use the word in no contemptuous sense) as in others he wa
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