392. Robert Southey to John May, 28 March
1799
*
My dear friend
My better plan respecting Edward will be
when I am next in London to call on Dr
Roberts, the Master of St Pauls, [1] & make all the necessary enquiries
respecting where the boys are boarded &c, whether as at
Westminster [2] this is an expence to the
friends, or makes as at Christs Hospital [3] a part of the foundation. For
the last week the
boy has been with me. & the necessity of
settling him becomes more & more apparent. I never saw a
lad with a better capacity or with habits more compleatly
bad.
Dr
Thomas has written to me. he says he has struggled
hard to preserve Miss Tylers estates for better times, that he has
raisd the rentals, which will make <them> sell better
if they must be sold – that till her affairs be settled he
will supply her with money as it comes into his hands, or
before, if it can be done with any convenience to himself.
“Yet (he adds) every thing that can be done will be of no
avail unless she will resolutely determine to live within
her income.” – how all this
business can be settled I know not – as her embarrasments
become more pressing she has let my Mother
know more respecting them, & she is indebted to her
friends more deeply than I supposed or than Dr
Thomas can imagine. Edward must
certainly be removed – the situation is ruinous to him. his
restraints & indulgencies are equally improper. he is
never suffered to play with his school-fellows – therefore
whenever he has been playing he comes home with a falshood
to excuse himself. he has been so much her companion that he
has all the forward tittle-tattle of an old superannuated
Master-of-the-Ceremonies. he has no diffidence, no sincerity
– the boy has
lived so much in the theatre that he is perpetually acting a
part. of me & only of me he stands in some awe – but the
moment he is out of my sight he is doing something wrong,
& neither repeated detection, reproof nor admonition
seem to have <any> effect in curing him of falshood.
Nothing can be so ruinous as living with a person whom he
does not love & does not respect. I shall be in town the
first of May & will take measures for settling him.
Mr Pine, [4] the Methodist Minister, on
whose authority I relate the Sailors story, [5] had neglected to ask the names of
the captain – ship &c. his name might, I doubt not, have
been inserted. the Cottles know him well & have the fullest
reliance on his veracity. Cottles mother
took the story down as he related it, & from her my
account was taken.
My Uncle
used to call Penwarne [6] a stupid Devonshire man –
& then add that nothing but stupid fellows came out of
Devonshire. I remember him chiefly for his ingenuity in hanging hiding his money
& watch in the foot of his boot, which somebody stole
out of his bedroom one day.
Mr Maurice writes me a good account of
Harry. he finds him quick & attentive &
is about to begin French with him & mathematics. Maurices is a
very handsome letter – he seems attached to Harry
& to take an interest in bringing his talents forward.
for the holydays Harry is
invited to a Mr Mannings [7] near Yarmouth. a gentleman somewhat advanced in life,
with whom I spent some comfortable days last May. On Burnetts
removal which takes place next month, William Taylor
will look after him, & with him whenever it is necessary
he will find a home.
I find great pleasure in the correspondence
of William
Taylor, his attainments are infinitely beyond
those of any man whom I ever knew, & he has no parade,
no ostentation of knowledge. the notice & company of
such a man will greatly stimulate Harry to
his studies; as not all the advice in the world could make
him so sensible of the advantages derivable from them.
You will perhaps be pleased to hear that I
look forward to the conclusion of Madoc. of the 15 book to
which the first copy extends, 12 are finished. I almost
expect to show you the whole in May. I have some prospect of
seeing N Wales when our year is expired here. Wynn has some
plan of that kind for me – & I much want to study the
scenery of that country.
God bless you –
yrs affectionately
R Southey.
Ediths
remembrance.
Thursday 28. March. 99.
I break open my letter to beg you would send my
Mothers money. [8]
Notes
* Address: To/ John May Esqr/ 4. Bedford Square/ London/
Single
Stamped: [partial] BRISTOL
Postmark: MR/
29/ 99
Watermark: [illegible]
Endorsement: 1799
No. 34./ Robert Southey/ No
place 28 March/ recd: 29 do/ ansd: 20
April
MS: Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center,
University of Texas, Austin
Previously published:
Charles Ramos, The Letters of Robert Southey to
John May: 1797–1838 (Austin, Texas, 1976),
pp. 41–43. BACK
[1] Richard Roberts (fl.
1769–1814), High Master of St Paul’s School,
London. BACK
[2] Westminster School, London, from which Southey had been
expelled in 1792. BACK
[3] Christ’s Hospital, the
London public school whose alumnae included Coleridge
and Charles Lamb. BACK
[4] Possibly William Pine (d.
1803), a leading Bristol Methodist and printer of the
Bristol Gazette, or his son, William
Pine (1769–1837). BACK
[5] The story behind Southey’s
‘The Sailor, who had Served in the Slave-Trade’,
Poems, 2 vols (Bristol, 1799), II,
pp. [103]–114. BACK
[6] Unidentified; possibly a member of the English
community in Portugal. BACK
[7] Probably William Manning
(dates unknown), who lived in Ormesby, a village to the
North of Yarmouth. See The Poll for a Member to
Serve in Parliament, for the Borough of Great
Yarmouth, in the County of Norfolk; Taken on Friday
the 29th of May, 1795 (Yarmouth, 1795), p.
19. BACK
[8] I break … money: written on fol 2
v. BACK