The Poetical Works of Thomas Chatterton with an essay on the Rowley poems by the Rev. Walter W. Skeat and a memoir by Edward Bell |
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XXV. |
XXVIII. |
XXXI. |
XXXII. |
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XXXV. | XXXV. |
XXXVI. |
The Poetical Works of Thomas Chatterton | ||
XXXV.
Lamyngeton's spritespeaks.
Let all my faults be buried in the grave;
All obloquies be rotted with my dust;
Let him first carpen that no faults can have;
'Tis past man's nature for to be aye just.
But yet, in soothen, to rejoice I must,
That I did not immeddle for to build;
Since this quaintissed place so glorious,
Seeming all churches joinèd in one guild,
Has now supplièd for what I had done,
Which, to my candle, is a glorious sun.
The Poetical Works of Thomas Chatterton | ||