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Gouler's Requiem_.) The word 'storthe' is a good example of Chatterton's use of strange words. The effect of a sudden outcry which it produces would be lost in a modernized version which rendered it 'death'. Mr. Watts-Dunton in his article on Chatterton in Ward's _English Poets_ speaks of his extraordinary metrical inventiveness and of his ultimate responsibility for such lines as these-- And Christabel saw the lady's eye And nothing else she saw thereby Save the boss of the shield of Sir Leoline tall Which hung in a murky old niche in the wall-- the anapaestic dance of which breaks in upon the normal iambic movement of the poem with a natural dramatic propriety. He compares too _The Eve of St. Agnes_ with the _Excelente Balade of Charitie_, remarking that it was only in his latest work that Keats attained to that dramatic objectivity which was 'the very core and centre of Chatterton's genius.' Another writer, Mr. Thomas Seccombe, speaks of his 'genuine lyric fire, a poetic energy, and above all an intensity remote from his contemporaries and suggestive (as Cimabue in his antique and primitive manner is suggestive of Giotto and Angelico) of Shelley and Keats.' Chatterton's influence on the great body of poets of the generation succeeding his own was very considerable--Mr. Watts-Dunton indeed declares him to have been the father of the New Romantic School--and the affection with which Keats, Coleridge, Wordsworth and many others regarded him was extraordinary. He was their pioneer, who had lost his life in a heroic attempt to penetrate the dull crassness of the mid-eighteenth century. He had great originality and the gift of an intense imagination. If he is sometimes crude and immature in thought and expression--if his images sometimes weary by their monotony--it is accepted that a poet is to be judged by his highest and not his lowest; and Chatterton's best work has an inspiration, a singular and unique charm both of thought and of music that is of the first order of English poetry. III. BIBLIOGRAPHY. A great deal more has been written about Chatterton than it is worth anybody's while to read. To begin with, there are all the volumes and pamphlets concerning themselves with the question whether the Rowley poems were written by Chatterton or by Rowley, or by both (Chatterton adding matter of his own to existing poems written in the fifteenth century), or by neither. It may be said tha
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