558. Robert Southey to William Taylor,
26 November 1800
*
Dear William Taylor
I am perplexed about Harry.
remain he must not & ought not. to himself it must be
irksome & now little advantageous – to Mr Maurice unhandsome & unjust. he
has literally no home, & this difficulty of an
intermediate resting place is what now distresses me. I have
sent my Thalaba to market & demand an hundred guineas
for a first edition. getting this sum I do not doubt, [1] & have
appropriated it as an apprentice fee with Henry –
as you advise. it is a better plan than what I had
formed [2] – & my former one was only imagined the
most practicable when formed, not the best. Will you make
enquiry in your part of the world if such a situation can be
procured for him? & if it can, signify it to John May – Richmond
Green – Surry. into whose hands I have directed the purchase
money to be paid, & who is commissioned to apply it to
this purpose. Among you I know it must be his wish to settle
– nor elsewhere have I any motive for preference of place.
with Bristol my own connection is precarious – Davy will not
always remain at the Pneumatic Institution, [3] & the
death of a very infirm old Lady [4]
which cannot long delay, will perhaps move thence my dearest
friend, & leave me little heart to visit it again.
besides Harry must not be placed with any one to whom he
would too soon feel himself superior – & this he must do
at Bristol. a situation however must be accepted where it
offers. You will not think me encroaching in thus requesting
you to act for him yet I feel that our distant
correspondence does not justify me.
It has been suggested to me [5] to try my fortunes at
the East Indian bar – where success could not be doubtful.
my inclinations are decidedly hostile to this scheme – but I
must not lightly & hastily reject it. my constitution
unhappily requires a warmer climate than England, of this my
health here is a convincing proof. moreover old Brama [6] would be an interesting acquaintance.
the contra arguments weigh heavier & Camoens [7] warns me from India.
But it is time to talk of Portugal. we have
as yet escaped the yellow Fever, & the yellow Fever will
effectually guard us against the French & Spaniards, if
any danger could be apprehended from invasion. no such
danger has ever existed. before a French army could scale
Lisbon the whole species would be embarked – & here the
property is kept in chests ready at a moments alarm. the
multitude of ships always in the Tagus would take off the
more valuable merchandise – plunder therefore cannot allure
the French here. the remaining bales of cotton would not pay
their soldiers – nor the sugar casks sweeten their lemonade.
besides provisions are scarce both here & in Spain. a
hostile army could not subsist six weeks. If however the
French should chuse to take possession of Lisbon in order to
distress England – the blow would speedily recoil. a fleet
would block up the Tagus & famine speedily drive them
over the Pyrenees. Spain & Portugal must one day blend
into one country. the hour is not yet come. one country is
not strong enough to conquer – both too unenlightend to
unite. You then as well as we, will wonder at the enormous
army quartered here – if you can wonder at any ministerial
absurdity. the most probable opinion here is that it is a
collusion between the courts of Madrid & Lisbon managed
by France – to get as many English troops here as possible –
in order to keep them quiet. they solicited for
Abercrombies [8] troops also – the whole expedition – to
prevent the attack on Egypt. The necessary advance in the
price of provisions oppresses the people who see the cause
in the foreign soldiers. they talk very freely. the army
& navy lose twenty per cent by the paper in which they
were <are> paid.
of course the discount goes to account – & the arrears
must be one day paid!
I am up to the ears in chronicles. a pleasant
days amusement – but battles & folios & Moors &
Monarchs teaze me terribly in my dreams. I have just
obtained access to the public Manuscripts – & the
records of the Inquisition tempt me. five folios – the whole
black catalogue! yet I am somewhat shy of laying heretical
hands upon these bloody annals. the Holy Office is not dead
– but sleepeth. [9] there
however it is that I must find materials for the history of
Reformation here & its ineffectual efforts. the I obtain access thro one
of the Censors of Books here [10]
– an ex-German divine – who enlisted in the Catholic
service, professing the one faith with the same sincerity
that he preached the other. a strong-headed, learned &
laborious man – curious enough to preserve his authorative
reviews of all that is permitted to be printed or sold in
Portugal. these reviews I have seen, & by this means
become acquainted with what is not brought to light. – The
Public Library here is magnificently established. [11] the books well arranged with
ample catalogues – a librarian to every department – &
free access to all – without a cloak. the Museum is also
shut to all in this – the common dress – a good trait of
national honesty. The ruin of the Jesuits gave rise to this
foundation. their libraries were all brought to Lisbon,
& the books remained as shovelled out of the carts for
many years. they are not yet wholly arranged. English
writers are very few – alm
scarcely any. but for what regards the peninsula – for
church & monastic history – & the laborious &
valuable compilations of the last centuries – a more
compleat collection does not probably exist.
I regret my approaching return to England
& earnestly wish I could remain six or seven years in a
country whose climate so well suits me, & where I could
find ample & important occupation. Once more I must
return when my history shall be as far compleated as is
possible at home, to give it its last corrections here.
The fits of alarm respecting the yellow fever
are periodical. about once a week we have a days panic. not
causelessly – look at Beja in the map – it has been there –
but the
Bishop
[12] burnt down the house in which the
sick had died. three days last week the public amusements
were suspended, & the efficacy of prayer tried. the more
respectable congregations that attended evinced a general
fear. St Roques life is advertised in
the Madrid gazette – as the saint to be called in, in
pestilence. St Sebastian also is famous
in these cases. Earthly remedies none have been found – or
none [MS torn] Lisbon. even now the nature of the disease is
differentl[MS torn] reported – & the method of treatment
not known. We trust to cold weather & the rains. Should
these only suspend the contagion – if it breaks [MS torn]
again in the spring, it must inevitably reach Lisbon, &
I shall then think of my own safety.
From England nothing has reached me but the
unhappy Alfred of poor Cottle. [13] I laboured hard &
honestly to suppress its birth – & am thrown into a cold
sweat by recollecting it. Coleridge ought to be upon the Life of
Lessing. [14] he
ought also to write to me – & I have my fears lest the
more important business should be neglected like the other.
George
Burnett has not written me – nor have I done my
duty towards him. my Bristol accounts of his going on were
such as pained me. The Anti-Jacobine [15] is – as you know – appointed our
Envoy. & the Jacobine – like every body else – must make
his formal visit. I hear he has all the coxcombry of an
Etonian – & the most I retain of Westminster is an
Etonophobia confirmed by seeing them at Oxford. Frere
however is undoubtedly a man of genius. pray write to me. I
am in an illiterate land – only among acquaintance – your
letters will be weighed among your good works.
God bless you.
yrs
Robert Southey.
Nov. 26. 1800.
Lisbon.
Notes* Address: To/
Mr Wm Taylor
Junr/ Surry Street./ Norwich/
Single Stamped: LISBON Postmarks: FOREIGN
OFFICE/ DE/ 13; BDE/ 13/ 1800 Endorsement: Ansd 1 Feb MS: Guildhall Library,
London, MS 03109 Previously published: J. W.
Robberds (ed.), A Memoir of the Life and Writings
of the Late William Taylor of Norwich, 2
vols (London, 1843), I, pp. 358–363 [in part]; Adolfo
Cabral (ed.), Robert Southey: Journals of a
Residence in Portugal 1800–1801 and a Visit to
France 1838 (Oxford, 1960), pp. 139–140 [in
part]. BACK [1] Southey received £115
for 1,000 octavo copies of Thalaba the
Destroyer (1801). BACK [2] William
Taylor had suggested that Henry Herbert Southey should
be trained by a provincial surgeon, rather than
attending medical lectures in London (Taylor to Southey,
5 October 1800, J.W. Robberds (ed.), A Memoir of
the Life and Writings of the Late William Taylor of
Norwich, 2 vols (London, 1843), I, p.
354). BACK [3] Davy left the Pneumatic
Institute, Bristol for a new post at the Royal
Institution, London in January 1801. BACK [7] Luis Vaz de Camoens
(1524–1580), Portuguese poet. He failed to make his
fortune in India. BACK [8] Sir
Ralph Abercromby (1734–1801; DNB),
second-in-command of the British forces that invaded
Holland in 1799 and commander of the expedition to Egypt
in 1801. BACK [9] Though the Inquisition in Portugal had lost many of its
powers, it was not abolished until 1821. BACK [10] Johann Wilhelm Christian Muller
(1752–1814), came to Portugal in 1772 as chaplain to the
Dutch Factory; entered the Portuguese civil service as a
translator in 1790 and converted to Catholicism. BACK [11] The Real Biblioteca
Publica da Corte, established in 1796. It inherited many
works collected by the Jesuits before their expulsion
from Portugal in 1759, and in 1797 acquired the records
of the Inquisition. BACK [13] Joseph Cottle,
Alfred, An Epic Poem, in Twenty-four
Books (1800). BACK [14] Coleridge had intended to write a life of the German
poet, Gotthold Ephraim Lessing (1729–1781). BACK [15] John Hookham Frere
(1769–1846; DNB), educated Eton, and
Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge (BA 1792, MA
1795); MP for West Looe 1796–1802; envoy extraordinary
and plenipotentiary to Portugal 1800–1802 and then to
Spain 1802–1804, 1808–1809. Also a poet, he contributed
parodies to the Anti-Jacobin
1797–1798. BACK |
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