Sir,
The Rev. Sir Herbert
Croft has replied, in the Gentleman’s
Magazine for February, to my statement of his
conduct towards the family of Chatterton. [1] That statement, it appears, was
inaccurate, in supposing him to have been in orders in 1778.
In no other part does it require correction. Sir Herbert
does not deny that he promised to return the
letters in an hour, when he borrowed them, nor that
he published them without the knowledge
of the family, for his own emolument. How far the
publication, entitled Love and Madness, [2] was indebted to
these letters for its value, its popularity, and its sale,
the public can judge. Sir Herbert
does not deny his promises to the family of after assistance, nor that, when Mrs. Newton [3] applied for it,
he required a certificate of her
character from the clergyman of the parish.
To the personalities contained in Sir
Herbert’s letter, I make no reply: these things do
not concern the public. Sir Herbert
may still date his letters from
Denmark, and complain of my attacking him during a
north-east wind; it is not my business to correct these
mis-statements. But as he has endeavoured to injure the
proposed publication, by declaiming against the principles,
real and imputed, of the editor. I will not let pass the
opportunity of requesting, that party prejudices may not
injure a work designed to benefit the family of Chatterton.
The sister of Chatterton supports
herself by teaching children to read; she is advancing
in years, and her sight begins to fail. Should the
subscription for his works be extensive, it will render her
old age comfortable, and provide for her child.
Sir Herbert
intimates that my object is to profit by the subscription; –
the list of the subscribers shall be published, and the
accounts.
Robert Southey.
Bristol,
March 20.
Notes
* MS: MS has
not survived
Previously published: Monthly
Magazine, 9 (April 1800), 253 [from where
the text is taken]. BACK
[1]
Gentleman’s
Magazine, 70 (February–April 1800), 99–104,
222–226, 322–325. BACK
[2] Herbert Croft, Love
and Madness (1780). BACK
[3] Mary Newton
(1749–1804), Chatterton’s sister. BACK