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Writings and Witterings


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Chatterton—Prologue

The Death of Chatterton by Henry Wallis

The Death of Chatterton by Henry Wallis (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

This prologue is the first stanza in a sequence of ten poems about Thomas Chatterton. The other nine stanzas are from the viewpoints of individuals, e.g. his mother, a girlfriend, his doctor, who are imagined standing at the foot of his deathbed remembering him. He influenced many lives.

Prologue

He learned to read from a black-letter Bible,
was thought a backward boy, no scholar.
Lonely, close and comely,
poor boy was deemed a dullard.

He forged his first letters from
illuminated capitals;
cutting consonants, reviewing verbs,
giving names to nouns.

Memory on memory makes his story,
they talk of it still sighing their sorrows.
Merciless London, no crumb offered,
the baker rebuffed him for begging a loaf.

Polly Stretton © 2013