506. Robert Southey to John May, 2 April
1800
*
My dear friend
Before my departure from England I proceed to
state to you all my arrangements, as far as they are made.
first as to pecuniary matters reviewing of course must be
suspended, & I have for some months ceased writing for
the news-paper, [1]
owing to inability from ill-health. the loss is not less
than an hundred a year. but an old school fellow (a
clergyman, by na name Elmsly)
understanding from Wynn that I was going abroad, immediately offered
me, thro him, an hundred pounds: a sum which will defray the
expences of the journey, the voyage, & the personal
expences necessary to clothe us for a twelvemonths absence. this
done, my annual income remains, f £160. [2] which
you will receive quarterly for me, & to which amount I
will draw on you. xxx there
will be also from ten to twenty pounds due from the Critical
Review, which I shall direct to be paid to you. – I shall
send over my Thalaba for publication from Lisbon – this will
assuredly, tho I reserve the afte copyright of the after editions, produce
£100. Some one of my friends, [3] who is connected with
the booksellers, will transact the business for me, &
the money shall be deposited in your hands. this is my fund
for our return. if peace permits I will return over the
Pyrenees – & in that case the journey will pay its own
expences. my destined employment in Portugal you are
acquainted with. in order to keep up my connection with the
Critical Review I have engaged to review Portugueze books –
& Spanish if I can get them. [4]
there will be so little to do that it cannot be estimated at
more than ten pounds worth – but it continues my connection:
the Annual Anthology remains charged for some articles which
I wish to have sent for my Uncle in
the autumn, & for ten pounds towards the maintenance of
my cousin
Margaret.
My brother Harry –
this is the most awkward circumstance. I had been looking on
to a house in London where he could have had a home when he
left Mr Maurice. Harry was
sixteen in January last – I know not how he can be better
situated – or indeed
otherwise situated, than where he is.
My Mother
will remain with her sister. I wished her to have passed the
summer at Burton –
where she might easily have found some acquaintance to have
accompanied her, & shared her house-keeping expences.
she is never happy with her sister – a miserable women with
whom no one can be happy. nothing <unpleasant> but
this recollection will accompany me.
My worldly affairs, in case of death, are
easily arranged. a copy of Madoc [5] is in the possession of
my friend Charles
Danvers, incorrect as it now is, should I be
summoned to another state of existence, its value will be
considerably more than you imagine. Coleridge would edite this, & whatever else I
may leave worth editing. the produce you would dispose of as
might best serve Edith – & my Mother.
xxxxx but if my Mother
will not live with Edith, the little annuity that may be raised must
not be lessened by the smallest part going into the College
Green. My two younger brothers [6] have uncommon talents – I
trust I shall live to bring them forward so as to see them
hold honorable & useful stations in society. if it be
ordered otherwise, the name they bear will procure continue – or procure
them friends, & their abilities remain a better
inheritance than wealth.
Thus much for all that is of importance. we
purpose setting off for Falmouth on the Thursday in the next
week. but it is possible that I may not receive the money
for my journey &c by that time. it passes thro Wynns hand
& he may not then be in London. Edith is unwell
– & I think of a journey to Falmouth on that account
with unpleasant forebodings. I believe <a good>
climate is almost as essential to her health as to my
own.
In a few days you will receive the second
Annual Anthology; [7]
& with it the papers respecting Chatterton. [8] should the subscription fill sufficiently
during my absence, I can transfer my papers to Coleridge & leave him to oversee the
publication.
God bless you.
yrs affectionately
Robert Southey.
Wednesday. April 2. 1800.
No. 10. Stokes Croft. Bristol.
Notes
* Address: To/ John May Esqr/ 16. Charlotte Street/ Rathbone Place/
London/ Single
Postmark: B/ APR 3/
1800
Endorsement: No 52. 1800/
Robert Southey/ Stokes Croft 2 April/ recd. 3 do/ ansd. 6 do
MS: Princeton University
Library, Robert H. Taylor Collection, Box
17
Previously published: John Wood Warter (ed.),
Selections from the Letters of Robert
Southey, 4 vols (London, 1856), I, pp.
101–104; Adolfo Cabral (ed.), Robert Southey:
Journals of a Residence in Portugal 1800–1801 and a
Visit to France 1838 (Oxford, 1960), pp.
71–72 [in part]. BACK
[1] Southey had ceased contributing poems to the
Morning Post in December 1799. BACK
[2] The amount of Southey’s annuity from Wynn. BACK
[4] This arrangement fell through. BACK
[5] A fair copy of the 15-book
Madoc 1797–1799; now Beinecke
Library, Tinker MS 1938. BACK
[8] Southey and Cottle’s
The Works of Thomas Chatterton
(1803). BACK