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  1. Ruth Chatterton (* 24. Dezember 1892 in New York City, New York, Vereinigte Staaten [1]; † 24. November 1961 in Norwalk, Connecticut, Vereinigte Staaten) war eine US-amerikanische Schauspielerin, Autorin von Theaterstücken und Romanen sowie Pilotin. Sie war während der frühen 1930er Jahre der größte weibliche Star der Paramount .

  2. Study for ‘Chatterton’ Henry Wallis. c.1856. View by appointment. Rosalind James Sant. date not known. The Awakening Conscience William Holman Hunt. 1853. On display at Tate Britain part of Historic and Modern British Art. Portrait of Sidney Wells Joa ...

  3. Chatterton, Thomas (1752–70) English poet and forger of antiquities. He achieved posthumous fame for poems such as “Bristowe Tragedie” and “Mynstrelles Songe”, supposedly composed by Thomas Rowley, an imaginary 15th-century monk. An erratic talent, his early suicide established him as a hero of the Romantic movement.

  4. The Death of Chatterton by Henry Wallis, Birmingham version. The Death of Chatterton is an oil painting on canvas, by the English Pre-Raphaelite painter Henry Wallis (1830 - 1916), now in Tate Britain, London. Two smaller versions, sketches or replicas, are possessed by the Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery and the Yale Center for British Art.

  5. Wilde deemed Chatterton the ‘father of the Romantics’ and lectured on his work at Birkbeck College in 1886. In their introduction, Bristow and Mitchell propose that ‘Chatterton catalyzed Wilde’s interest in the thematic and psychological links between creative agency and criminality, originality and artifice’ (p. 28). This statement ...

  6. 13. Mai 2019 · Once upon a time, Thomas Chatterton was the famous dead poet. Chatterton (1752-1770) had already been dead for decades when he was taken up like a kind of mascot by the Romantics, including William Wordsworth, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, John Keats, Percy Bysshe Shelley, and Lord Byron. For them, Chatterton—who famously killed himself a few ...

  7. Thomas Chatterton, 1795. The Monthly Visitor : View (no portrait) Biography and 'Goggle-Eyed' portrait : View portraits page, image no.1. The magazine was printed in 1797, 27 years after the death of Chatterton, and this magazine is adamant that he didn't write the poems of Rowley, see pages 5 - 20. An enjoyable read.