Friday, September 30, 2005

Pondering On A Painting

Have you ever been struck by a painting, I mean struck in the way that somehow it touches a chord deep within you? It has happened to me on several occasions and I shall write about just one today.

I first saw a print of the work when I was around seven years old.  My mother was, for a time, employed as a cleaner at the home of a reasonably wealthy lady.  Her name was Mrs. Walkinshaw, funny how I can remember that so clearly.  Her home was a treaure trove of antique furniture, beautiful glass and china and smelled strongly of lavendar polish.  It was the school holidays and my mother had asked Mrs. W. permission for me to go along with her.  I do not think the old lady was best pleased but she agreed.  She told me to sit quite still and not touch anything.  I sat and gazed around the room and my eye came to rest on a print she had hanging on the wall.  It fascinated me the minute I saw it.  A young man lying sprawled across a bed, long hair flowing.  I stared and stared, somehow imagining that this young man would suddenly open his eyes (there is nothing like the imagination of a child) I somehow willed him to open his eyes. I wanted him to wake up. I was drawn to that work of art somehow.  I had seen paintings before but none had touched me like this one. For many days afterwards I thought of it.

Years were to pass before I saw the same painting again in another house and the person who owned this print told me the name of the boy in the picture.  So, I went home and looked him up.

His name was Thomas Chatterton and, in brief, here is his story.

He earned the reputation of being both a forger and a genius.  He was born in Bristol in 1752.  As a boy he was moody and quiet, he was considered unteachable, of  little intelligence and he did not thrive at school, he was expelled from one teaching establishment.  However, he was a voracious reader and very early on he developed an interest in all things old, especially the Middle Ages. He would spend hours in the church of St. Mary Redcliffe studying the ancient tombs, running his handsover them and deciphering the inscriptions.  Many hours were spent in his room alone writing poetry - he actually started writing poetry at around the age of seven. When he left school he was apprenticed to a lawyer and hated it.  He had access, in the church, to the parish chest and the historical documents it contained.  He studied these and came up with the idea of producing manuscript poems, lost poems which he said he had  "discovered " written by a fifteenth-century monk called Thomas Rowley. Quite why he wanted to become famous this way is not known.  He took the works to local antiquaries who were thrilled to the learn of the existence of this early Bristol poet, Rowley, of whom they had known nothing.  The excitement went to Chatterton's head and he became more ambitious.  He sent samples of his work, including some of his Rowley poems to Town and Country Magazine.  He decided he needed a patron and so he contacted the emiment writer Horace Walpole whose gothic novel ,The Castle of Otranto, had also claimed to be a translation of a lost manuscript. Chatterton sent Walpole examples of his "Rowley" poems.  At first Walpole heartily encouraged this young prodigy. However, he changed his position later and proclaimed the Rowley poems to be fakes, denouncing Chatteron as a forger and a cheat.

Chatterton moved to London hoping to further his career and find new patronage. At first he was happy mixing with writers and politicians. He wrote political pamphlets, poetry and even an opera.  He continued to pen the Rowley poems.  Fortune however, turned against him, his payments were little and commissions for work were falling off. He moved to  an attic room in Holborn.  He hardly ate or slept for months but sat desperately writing - stories, songs, plays, and  the poems of Thomas Rowley.  He was becoming ever more depressed. His former friends shunned him, he had written home telling how successful his life was in London and now he could not bear to admit the truth to his mother. His landlady tried to help him by asking him to share her meals but he refused.  On the 24th August 1770, Thomas Chatterton tore all his manuscripts to shreds and swallowed arsenic.  He left a note which stated "I leave my mother and sister to the protection of my friends if I have any....."  He was just seventeen years old.

Some modern authorities claim that his death was accidental, that he was taking arsenic as a cure for veneral disease and by some mishap took an overdose.  I do not agree.  He had suffered from moodiness and depression since childhood.  Why would he leave a note like that and why would he tear up all his work if he did not intend to take his own life?

It was only after his death that he came to be recognised as a genius.  Yes, he had created a fictitious poet/ monk, but it was Chatterton himself that did all of the writing. This boy with so little education, one who had been thought to be of limited intelligence.  It was realised then what a great talent he had possessed.  He become an icon to poets such as Keats and Byron.  William Wordsworth called the him "the marvellous boy".  His work is still read and studied today.

Here is the picture that affected me so all those years ago

The death of Chatterton ~ Henry Wallis

It still touches me.  I see a life cut short, I see a young man who felt he had nowhere else to go and yet, outside that open window, is the whole world.  A world that waited for him, a world that could have been his. I see doomed youth, for all youth is doomed, youth does not last, the weight of time soon presses down and youth has flown forever.  I see wasted talent, what might have been.  Had he presented the Rowley poems as his own when he wrote them he probably would  have received great acclaim and perhaps been hailed as one of England's greatest ever literary geniuses.  It also reminds me that nobody should waste their talents.  We all have talents, little or big. We are better at some things than at others.  But we all have gifts , we can all contribute, we do all contribute.  We must use our gifts and not squander them or think that we do not count for anything, because we do.  Poor Thomas, if only he could have seen that. This picture still does and I think always will, touch my heart.

Is there a painting that stirs your emotions?

 

 

20 comments:

Anonymous said...

What a touching tale. Thank you for sharing it with us.

The picture is very touching.

Gem xx

Anonymous said...

Jeannette you write so well you should have been a writer of some kind. Have you ever tired to write books of anykind? Your story today is so good even if it does have a sad ending. Beautiful graphic today.
There has been very few real paintings I have ever seen. But I do love pictures especially of scenery, flowers and wildlife of any form.
Hope your back is feeling much better today. I am having a hard time with mine after being on my feet more lately. Helen

Anonymous said...

Perhaps if he had said the poems were his own work he probably felt he wouldn't be believed , especially after being told he had little intelligience. I agree, he obviously was struggling with some sort of mental illness right through his childhood, unfortunately not recognised or understood then. It is quite a stunning picture but I can't say I've really seen one that sticks in my mind, maybe I have yet to come across it

Anonymous said...

Great story as usual and also the paintings are wonderful...loved it so much.  You are so good at your writing talents...I can never get enough.  Hope you are feeling better today...Hugs...
Joyce

Anonymous said...

One of your "best" entries, I think. I never leave your journal without having learned something new. Love that. Thanks, hon.
Barb- http://journals.aol.com/barbpinion/HEYLETSTALK

Anonymous said...

Really good entry today Jeannette,You too could be a writer you tell the stories so well. The picture that has always moved me was one called "In Love " by Marcus Stone, Our parents had a copy on the landing at our old home, but my brother and his wife  inheired it.The original I believe is in a museum at Nottingham.
Hope your back is abit better.

Anonymous said...

Oh Jeanette this is a wonderful entry.  This painting really does express so much emotion.  

Derek

Anonymous said...

Excellent as ever,inspirational,Jeannette the famous author in cognito again  Jan xx

Anonymous said...

wow, great entry! I often wonder what the painter was thinking, sometimes you can really see into the soul of someone...

Su
xx

Anonymous said...

My husband owns a first edition of Chatterton which features this work on the frontispiece.  So many of these young poets died in garretts that you'd have thought they'd have got a job to keep their minds off their troubles and food on their tables <g>
It's sad tho how many promising and talented lives were cut short. I've seen similar type of depictions of Byron on his deathbed - perhaps the romanticism of it all, which might now be thought maudlin and sentimental, appealed to artists of the time.

Anonymous said...

That was a beautiful story. There is a painting that my aunt has but once hung in my grandmothers living room. It is a painting of an old man, sitting at a table with a small bowl of soup and a small piece of bread and he is bowing his head saying grace. As a young one I often wondered why he was thank God for such a small meal. As I grew older and closer to God, I began to understand. Every time I go to my aunts, I stare at that painting. It brings me joy and taught me to thank my creater for even a small piece of fruit. Maybe one day I will be allowed to own that painting. I love it so much!

Anonymous said...

An amazing story Jeannette, I could hardly believe he had achieved all that by that tender age.  And to kill himself!  Thanks for sharing this story with us.  I myself have always been taken by Constable`s `Haywain` for the very reason that my grandfather, a talented artist, reproduced this painting with almost as much detail as the painter himself.  I loved to look at the tiny details, such as the boy in the background.  I just really liked it.  My father, on the other hand told me of a painting of Lord Kitchener that hung on the wall at the top of the stairs when he and his siblings were young.  The painting terrified them and they hated to pass it by on the way to bed, especially on dark winter nights, as they claimed LK`s eyes followed them along the landing...lol! :-)

Sandra xxxx

Anonymous said...

    What a terribly sad story.
Jude
http://journals.aol.com/jmorancoyle/MyWay

Anonymous said...

How sad that this genius gave up and just think what more he could have done.  I don't understand anyone reaching a point of no return, life has new beginnings for us everyday. I once took a workshop on teen suicide and was amazed at how many there are every year.  I can only encourage any parent or friend of a teen to help them if they are discouraged.  We were told that if someone says they want to end it all, to be alerted.  I get up every morning and thank God for a new day !  We never know what surprises there may be along the way !
'On Ya' - ma

p.s.  I don't think I could look at that picture everyday .

Anonymous said...

Jeannette. .This is a fabulous entry! I so enjoyed reading this one so thank you.You should have your own magazine. .photos courtesy of Mike of course!One painting that does do something for me is one of Atkinson Grimshaws 'Tree shadows on the park wall. . .mainly because I have walked down that lane  many times ,it was painted in 1872 but still looks the same today.Its funny really because to escape the rain today we dashed in to the City Art Gallery and the original is in there!

Anonymous said...

You're right, Jeannette, this is a very touching painting.  How sad that such a young man felt he could not endure anymore of life.  Of course, in those days, 17 was a ripe age, I suppose.  You've posed a very good question, though, about a painting that stirs my emotions.  I shall have to think on that one and do a journal entry on it.  

I hope your back is feeling better.  Back pain is the most uncomfortable of all pain, I think.

Susan

Anonymous said...

I love this story and the painting.  I can absolutely see why it touched you so!  I think I may do the same kind of entry one day soon.  There are a few paintings that stir me so...I will have to remember the first...

Be well,
Dawn

Anonymous said...

Good evening.....I like the painting but the story of the young man is horribly sad. Someone should have recognized his genius before he took his own life. This is sad to read.

Anonymous said...

Very touching and very informative.  I can understand your fascination  with it from an early age.
Thanks for sharing it.
Evelyn

Anonymous said...

I like this entry - very thought provoking and it's probably true that we do have this painting or picture that makes us stop and think!!  Thanks for sharing your story Jeannette - what a tragic tale!!