Bath.
June 13th.
98.
My dear Sir
I thought I recognized your seal – & it
gave me very great pleasure to find myself not forgotten by
persons who I often recollect with pleasure & gratitude.
Six years have elapsed since I left school, & since last
I saw you. All my views in life & many of my opinions
have been changed more than once during that period; the
result is – that at twenty four I am married, without a
want, almost without a wish unsatisfied. Time &
Experience have done me much good, & somewhat tamed me:
imagine me taller & still thinner than in 1792, &
with even spirits which nothing either elevates or
depresses, & you will have most of the alterations that
the interval has produced.
I have been married two years, according to
the Gipsey prophecy at Norwood, [1] which
Tom may
recollect – but alas of the promised five children &
good fortune I have as yet no appearance. the first however
Time may give me, & the Law, my present study, may
possibly one day accomplish the rest of the prediction. be
that as it may I am happy.
hitherto we have been obliged to live in
lodgings. I have now the prospect of soon enjoying the
comforts of a house. at present I am employed in settling
my
mother, & with her we shall pass the Autumn,
for I am sorry to add that my wifes health has obliged us to
quit London for the present, & thus interrupted my
professional pursuits. I have been alarmed by her
indisposition, but she is now better, & indeed my
prospects are in every direction brightening. I have had
some difficulties, but they are over. necessity joined with
inclination to make me an author, & now only the
pleasant motive remains. I acquired some money & more
reputation. the one soon went, but it supported me when I
had no other support. the other I trust will not be lost. I
have many plans & great ones to execute should it please
God to allow me life & leisure.
The second edition of my best work is lately
published. [2] I have one large copy remaining, &
am glad of this opportunity of disposing of it. [3] it shall be sent by the
first coach. you will find the poem much altered, &
bearing little resemblance to the rhymes which you may
remember of the school boy.
I beg my remembrances to all your family. I
have often thought of them, & recollected Rye with
pleasure. the newspapers have [MS torn] given me some [MS
torn] of my old acquaintance in that part of the world. [MS
torn] shall hope sometimes to hear of them by a [MS torn]
channel.
God bless you.
yours as ever
Robert Southey
Notes
* Address: To/ Thomas P. Lamb Esqr/ Mountsfield Lodge/ Rye/
Sussex
Stamped: BATH
Endorsement: Southey
MS: Duke University Library
Previously
published: John Wood Warter (ed.), Selections
from the Letters of Robert Southey, 4 vols
(London, 1856), I, pp. 56–57. BACK
[1] Norwood Common in Surrey was a popular
destination for Londoners on a day out and home to a
number of well-known gipsy fortune-tellers. BACK
[2] The
second edition of Joan of Arc, published
in 1798. BACK
[3] Joseph Cottle struck off
special large copies of Southey’s works to be given as
presentation volumes. BACK