560. Robert Southey to Charles
Danvers, 10 December 1800
*
Wednesday 10 December. 1800. Lisbon.
My dear Danvers
The frippery box arrived on Sunday. not so our cheese. I have not
yet seen Yescombe [1] but am in great fear that they
have been stopt for the good of the nation & eaten at Falmouth by act of
Parliament. – with regard to Lambe you have acted quite properly in shunning him. he had nothing
but well-meaning to recommend him – & as he seems to have discarded decency,
one may be allowed to avoid vulgar ignorance. – Mrs
Madox [2] I have seen at your house, & her husbandsx person I recollect – having sometimes met him
when walking with you. you will give me credit for sincerity in wishing I could
be one of your rich customers.
I am hard at history. [3] the labour pleases me
& I feel both power & inclination for the work. but the scantiness of my
finances miserably cripples me. I cannot afford to buy two or three very costly
works – which I must buy before any one page is in a state for publication. thus
will I at last lose much time & labour in going over the old ground, when
the hooks & eyes of connection shall between
one author & another shall be mislaid in my memory. I must lay out thirty
pounds – but in losing Thalaba [4] my sheet-anchor was lost. certainly there will be
the first volume quarto of the History ready for the Press by next winter. the
literary history [5] will soon follow
– if success encourages it. Madoc is my Army of Reserve. – after a summer in
Wales has been devoted to correcting it, its publication will be a question of
prudence – , whether like your old wine it will increase in value by keeping –
or whether I shall publish as soon as possible not to lose the yearly profits
that may be expected. it would greatly delight me to give Mrs Danvers her
poem in print. [6] You
will not be surprized to hear that I am thinking of another long poem – the
story imaginary – the groundwork Hindoo mythology. some progress in the plan is
made, & probably in a few days I shall gallop thro the first book. [7]
I must send you more money & more commissions – but as I
delay writing to John May for about a
fortnight or three weeks, you will have the goodness to execute them on credit,
till that time. imprimis [8] a copy of Joan of Arc [9] – Russia bound
according to my fashion. if Jackson [10] has
forgotten it there is the first Anthology [11] among the
books we left, as a pattern. secondly – I am grown shabby & want a coat
& pantaloons. my measure was left with Baker, [12] & probably his successor has retained the same
foreman. if it should be lost there is I think an old black coat at Mrs Frickers by
which a new one might be made. chuse me a good brown. velvet collar – covered
buttons. worsted pantaloons the same colour – they are easily made to fit a long
lean man. if my Uncle returns
thro Bristol – he will take the parcel – my Mother can inform you of this.
otherwise direct it to him as usual. my motive for sending so far is that a coat
here would cost me five pounds. water carriage costs nothing – & I get it on
shore without difficulty or trouble.
I have at last seen & seditionized with Davys friend. [13] a pleasant & able man.
from whom I hope some useful introductions to those friars who are worth
knowing. we have some pleasant English neighbours – a Biddeford family [14] with whom is a Miss
Seton a very clever woman, who draws most admirably. I find no fault
in her except a resemblance to Mrs Barbauld in countenance;
& that is a heavy one. a friend of Capel Loft [15] is here – recommended to me as a man of
literary acquirements. his name Du Bois [16] – I have as yet seen him but little. after all Thomas the Cat
is my chief companion – & a most magnificent Thomas he is. fat as Rover, all
life & good humour.
Our wet weather is now commenced after a series of the most
delightful days I ever experienced. we had scarcely a cloud thro the whole
November. now we sit by the fire – for we have removed to tenant my Uncles house during his
absence. Lisbon grows weekly worse as to robbery & murder & I hope is
now so bad that it must awaken the police. daily murders & robberies so
impudent that they astonish everybody. our vacant house has been opened &
searched but there was nothing left portable enough to steal. last Monday two
boatmen stabbed a poor fellow by mistake – begged his pardon & left him
dying. the robbers are usually soldiers & in several instances Cadets –
answering to our Ensigns. it is not possible to conceive a more total anarchy as
to all useful purposes of society. yet there is a germ of vitality – a living
spark existing – we see only the worst classes of society – the highest &
the lowest – the oppressors & the oppressed. in the middle class – the
tiers-etats – & tis a prophetic name – there are many who think & feel –
who remember the past – & look on to the future.
I have been admitted behind the curtain – introduced to one of
the Censors, [17] shown his official reports of every books
presented for publication – & thus know not only what is published – but
those more important works that are not – that are strangled in the birth. this
Censor was the Lutheran Minister here who changed his religion & is now as
sincere in Popery – as he was in Protestantism. by his introduction he is of
indispensable use to me, for he is a man of power, – communicative & very
well informed. by his means the manuscripts are at my use. I even meditate the
adventure of searching the records of the Inquisition. five written folios of
the bloody chronicle whose outside I have seen with respectful eyes &
itching fingers.
In writing history [18] I actually want an
Amanuensis, so troublesome is the shifting from book to paper. I am sanguine as
to the merits of this work – not as to its success. fashion – rank in life –
connections are every thing. for six quartos Gibbon [19] got 8000 pounds. I shall be satisfied if I get 1500 for
three – tho I expect a more durable & deserved reputation than that even of
Gibbon. money – money is my only want. they reckon by moidores & six &
thirties – & we learn like them to consider these pieces only as guineas –
only as single coins – when alas there is a lamentable difference in the number
of a yearly income. If Sam Reid calls
here on his return – I should like to re[MS obscured] him – should the time suit
my plans. conveniences are of little import to s[MS obscured] are Edith & myself. – a pot to be
sick-in is the only article in requisition. & we should by embarking
directly for Bristol save full thirty guineas – allowing a handsome price for
passage & provisions. this is a material object. Why did you not tell me the
name of his ship that I might have found him out?
I shall inclose my
cousins letter to you – to spare her postage. Will you purchase for
her such useful things as she probably would think too expensive to afford –
& pay yourself when the remittance arrives. I will remit enough to leave
something for her afterwards. much I cannot do. the call for the Thalaba money
has quite crippled me.
Coleridge has never
written – nor has Mrs
C. written to Edith since
her confinement – which is I think somewhat uncivil. why will he given his children such Heathenish <names?>. –
did he dip him in the river & baptize him in the name of the Stream
God? [20]
By the next packet I expect news of the parcels arrival both from
you & Rickman. his negociation
will I hope be succesful – & if so Thalaba ought to be now in the printers
office & gone to the Devil at last. [21]
God bless you. our love to your Mother. Time runs away at an unmerciful rate & a few packets
more will cross only, before we shall reach Bristol – still the port to which
after every wandering I return.
yrs affectionately
Robert Southey.
Notes
* Address: To/ Mr Danvers./ 9. St James’s Place./ Kingsdown./
Bristol
Stamped: LISBON
MS: British Library, Add MS
47890
Previously published: Kenneth Curry (ed.), New Letters of
Robert Southey, 2 vols (London and New York, 1965), I, pp.
230–233 [where it is misdated 18 December 1800]. BACK
[1] Edward Bayntun Yescombe
(1765–1803), Captain of the packet, King George, which
sailed between Falmouth and Lisbon. BACK
[2] Possibly the wife (first name
and dates unknown) of John Maddox (dates unknown) of Park Row,
Bristol. BACK
[3] Southey’s unfinished ‘History of Portugal’. BACK
[5] Southey’s ‘literary
history’ of Spain and Portugal was never completed. BACK
[6] Southey finished the
15-book version of Madoc (1797–1799) at the Danvers’ house in
Bristol. A heavily revised version was finally published in 1805. BACK
[7]
Common-Place Book, ed. John
Wood Warter, 4 series (London, 1849–1850), IV, pp. 12–15 contains his early
plans for The Curse of Kehama (1810). BACK
[8] Translates as
‘in the first place’. BACK
[10] Probably Joseph Jackson (fl. 1780s –1790s) a Bristol bookbinder. BACK
[12] Possibly William Baker (dates unknown), a tailor of Bridge
Street, Bristol. BACK
[14] The Hammett family from Bideford,
Devon. BACK
[15] Capel Lofft (1751–1824; DNB), miscellaneous
writer and politician. BACK
[16] Edward Du Bois (1774–1850; DNB), lawyer, author and magazine
editor. BACK
[17] 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
[18] Southey’s unfinished ‘History of Portugal’. BACK
[19] Edward Gibbon (1737–1794; DNB), The
History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire
(1776–1788). BACK
[21] A pun on the ‘Printer’s Devil’, an apprentice in a printer’s
workshop. BACK