Burton Ralph POLLIN died in 2009. His considerable work on Edgar Allan Poe has somewhat thrown into shade his pioneering researches about William Godwin. His Ph.D. thesis was devoted to Education and Enlightenment in the Works of William Godwin (1962). Though not entirely flawless, the book drew attention upon the author of Political Justice at an early date. He unearthed and republished Godwin's second novel, Italian Letters, or the History of the Count de St. Julian (1965), rescued from oblivion "four substantial pamphlets which were widely and favourably reviewed at that period" [1783] (Four Early Pamphlets, facsimile reprint, 1965) and Godwin's Uncollected Writings (facsimile reprint, 1968), studied "characteristic onomastic patterns" in the fiction of William Godwin (Tijdschrift voor levende Talen, XXXVII, 1971). His 659-page synoptic bibliography Godwin Criticism (1967) remains a landmark in this field of study. At a time when nobody really cared for Mary Shelley, he published a paper on "Philosophical and Literary Sources of Frankenstein" (Comparative Literature, XVII, 1965), discussed Shelley's sonnet Ozymandias and its relation to Mary's petname "The Dormouse" (The Dalhousie Review, XLVII, 1967). Such achievement is well worth reviving nowadays.