504. Robert Southey to George Dyer, 27 March 1800
*
My dear Dyer
I am sorry my boxes should so long have
encumbered you. a friend of mine by name Rickman who is
speedily coming to London will call at your rooms &
inspect them to see if they are safe from worms, & if
you find them inconvenient, will remove them. I would not
have them taken out they are mingled with linen – letters
&c &c –, & to disorganize the arrangement would
be doing mischief. you will be pleased with Rickman. He is a
singular man, of uncommon talents, whom I greatly
esteem.
Thank you for the subscribers. [1] of course
the Booksellers must have them at their own price. my plan
is to raise an annuity by the subscription – profits – &
any exertion to increase [MS torn] the list I feel as a
personal favour. we have now about 240 copies subscribed
for.
Your Democritus Junior I have thankfully
reprinted. [2] it is a good poem. your sonnet was
printed & cancelled because – it was no sonnet – being
sixteen lines long. in the course of next week the [MS torn]
Anthologies will be sent to London.
Let me hear from you when I am in a foreign
land. my direction will be with the Reverend Herbert
Hill. <Lisbon.> my friends must not forget me –
& I will not forget them.
God bless you.
yrs affectionately
Robert Southey
If you pass thro Gracechurch Street – be good enough to
call on Arch [3] the
bookseller. & tell him I shall have an opportunity
of sending him the 2£-5- which I owe him, by a friend,
before my departure. I shall not remain here more than a
fortnight.
Stokes Croft. Bristol.
March 27. 1800
Notes
* Address: To/ George Dyer/
6. Cliffords Inn/ Fleet Street/ London
Postmark:
March 28/ 1800
Watermark: [partial] H
MS:
Department of Rare Books, Special Collections and
Preservation, River Campus Libraries, University of
Rochester, Robert Southey Papers A.S727
Previously
published: R. Baird Shuman, ‘Southey to Dyer: An
Unpublished Letter’, Notes and Queries,
206 (1961), 14–15. BACK
[1] Dyer had been collecting
subscribers to Southey and Cottle’s The Works of
Thomas Chatterton (1803). BACK
[2] George
Dyer, ‘Democritus Junior, or the Laughing Philosopher’,
Annual Anthology (Bristol, 1800), pp.
284–286. BACK
[3] John
and Arthur Arch, publishers (fl. 1792–1838) at this
time based in Gracehurch St, London. BACK