580. Robert Southey to Charles
Danvers, 6 May
1801
*
My dear Danvers.
You will be expecting me – & will be
disappointed at receiving only a letter. I cannot yet depart
– in about a month we shall set off – earlier or later by
some ten days as may suit a ship – if we find one.
Your letter must have been lost – & it
leaves me in the dark about some things alluded to in that
which has just reached me. I know not why Davy has left
Bristol [1] –
& shall bitterly miss him. indeed the doubt where to
settle annoys me much. except you & your mother I have
no attachment at Bristol. all else are mere acquaintance – a
common – cold – lip – intercourse – neither gratifying the
affections nor the intellect. in London I neither can nor
will live. I must be where the Sun & Moon & Stars
& He who created them are visible. As for Coleridge he is at the end of the world. [2]
Bristol suits me best, & a house about Ashton, or Leigh,
or over the down would strongly tempt me – or in your row.
but not yet. my autumn must be in Wales & Cumberland,
& I have to work hard to recover my expences here &
raise enough for furniture. The little I saw of King much pleased me
– but Humphry
Davy is an unreplaceable companion. For society of
all places I have ever seen Norwich is the best. Bristol has
so many divisions & subdivisions of party & sects; –
& poor Cottles shop is a loss. [3] – twas a gossip-place of meeting that tho
it might make some idle hours made some pleasant ones.
however to Bristol I look on as my future home, its
reachable distance from London & Hereford where my Uncle
will most likely be one day settled – the neighbouring woods
& rocks & walks with which I have so old an intimacy
– the printing office too is some inducement. & as there
is no keeping my
Mother from that miserable dungeon or rather
Bedlam where she will immure herself [4] – the best thing
possible that I can do is to have a house near where she may
go in any short lucid interval.
My Uncle is
removing his books piecemeal as opportunity allows for
shipping them. four boxes are consigned to you by the
inclosed bill of lading. they are all English – that is
English-printed (for some may be Greek or Latin) & in
English binding, therefore liable to no duty. If King could house
them for me at the Wells it would be better than lodging
them in the College Green, as they will be in the latter case
almost inaccessible to me. the foreign books we try to
smuggle into England, & have succeeded in landing one
valuable box. the number of my own books which are now of a
very serious value, & also of my Uncles
that are lying idle & dead about England, must soon
anchor me. they cannot follow me, & I therefore must
settle with them.
That you have been so long without a letter
you will probably attribute to the right cause – I &
Waterhouse [5] have
accomplished our tour in Algarve. we have seen the whole of
that kingdom, & half the province of Alentejo. a labour
of 530 miles – 23 days – during which we endured some
hardships from the miserable state of the country –
sometimes being able to procure neither bread nor wine –
& four times reduced to beg a nights lodging for want of
estalagems. In compensation we have seen much, &
acquired some knowledge. I will not skim the cream of the
journey – my journal [6] with
a few conversational comments may furnish an evenings
amusement in Bristol. I have now only the three small
northern provinces to visit. Beira, Tras os montes, &
Entre Douro e Minho, look at the map & you will see they
are not quite a third of Portugal. but they form its most
beautiful, most interesting, & most populous part. I am
in truth very desirous of remaining yet six months – the
summer at Cintra – to
Porto in September, & thence over the North. Only Ediths wishes to
return prevent me – in other respects it would be every way
advantageous inasmuch as the more I labour here, the nearer
my supplies will be when I return. It is only since my Uncles
return from England that he has encouraged my historical
labours. [7] he
was not perhaps quite aware of the literary rank which I
hold in the world, till he there learnt it, & found some
of his own friends apprized of my design & anxious for
its execution. now he forwards it in every way, & hunts
out books & information with as much zeal &
assiduity as myself.
When Thalaba is finished have the goodness to
send two copies here by way of Capt
Yescombe [8] as usual – & directed to
my
Uncle. they need not be bound – we have broken in
a [MS obscured] to bind in my taste, & Morocco cost as
only <the> calf price of England.
I have just & barely begun the Curse of
Keradou [9] – which literally is stopt from some
scruples of conscience in matters of taste. it is begun in
rhymes – as irregular in length, cadence, & disposition
as the lines of Thalaba. I write them with equal rapidity –
so that on the score of time & trouble there is neither
loss or gain. But it is so abominable a sin against what I
know to be right – that my stomach turns at it. it is to the
utmost of my power vitiating, or rather continuing the
corruption of public taste. it is feeding people upon French
cookery, which pleases their diseased & pampered
palates, when they are not healthy enough to relish the
flavour of beef & mutton. my inducements are – to avoid
any possible sameness of expression – any mannerism, &
to make as huge an innovation in rhymes as Thalaba will do
in blank verse. but I am almost resolved to translate what
is already done into the Thalaban metre.
Write to me once more. we shall not move
before June certainly – & I am hopelessly anxious about
Peggy. the
fox glove seems always to check disease – never to cure it!
– & how goes on Cottle & Dr Burnett? – I think of returning to
Bristol with no small additional satisfaction – for the sake
of shaking George by the hand. poor fellow – he has at last
the means of a bare support. – Harry,
you probably know from my mother, is settled with Mr Martineau [10] – that heavy expence
is over – but there must long be calls from that quarter. he
is left at liberty to change his mind at Michaelmas when
Martineau will, if he chuses to leave him, return 3 fourths
of the fee. this was handsome & unexpected. I hope the
boy will continue – it is the better trade of the two. –
& I believe Oxford would ruin them. his talents are
respectable – & I believe his morals good – but I do not
suspect him to be possessed of either intellectual or moral
strength to resist the ruin of a University. God bless you.
our love to your
Mother – I have bought a work bag for her at
Lagos. made from the aloe fibres – curious for its materials
– but too fine for her taste or mine. Still it is a
curiosity – & she shall have with it a story how in that
very city of Lagos I was arrested by a guard of eight
soldiers & a corporal. remember me to Cottle – to
Charles Fox [11] – above all to the
Doctor [12] – King must look upon
me as an acquaintance in the future tense. tell him I am an
old out-patient of the Pneumatic Institution – one of the
very first – & by prescription have a right whenever I
chuse to claim it – to a dose of beatification. [13]
I have said nothing of my own state of health
this long time – because in fact I have long been so
perfectly well as never to think of it. I eat & drink to
what ought to be a prohibited degree of appetite in England,
& sleep like the Stadtholder. [14] thank God – & this climate of
Portugal, – Oh the wicked Monthly Magazine for April-fool
day. [15] Page 221 – column the second – line the
last!!! I did laugh – & will not
Mrs Danvers forgive if me I did swear
also?
Shipped by the Grace of God in good order tho
badly written in & upon the good Packet called the Earl
Gower – now riding at anchor in the river Tagus. – & so
God send the good Ship to her desired port in safety. Amen.
May 6. 1801.
yrs affectionately
Robert Southey.
Notes
* Address: To/ Mr
Danvers./ 9. St James’s Place/
Kingsdown/ Bristol
Stamped: LISBON
MS: British
Library, Add MS 30928
Previously published: John
Wood Warter (ed.), Selections from the Letters of
Robert Southey, 4 vols (London, 1856), I,
pp. 153-157 [in part]; Adolfo Cabral (ed.),
Robert Southey: Journals of a Residence in
Portugal 1800-1801 and a Visit to France
1838 (Oxford, 1960), pp. 167-169 [in
part]. BACK
[1] Humphry
Davy was in negotiations to accept the post of assistant
lecturer in chemistry at the Royal Institution, which
would involve a move from Bristol to London. BACK
[3] Financial difficulties had caused Joseph
Cottle to close his bookshop in Wine St., Bristol in
1799. BACK
[5] Samuel
Waterhouse (dates unknown), later a prominent figure in
the British community in Portugal. BACK
[6] Southey’s journal of this tour was published in Adolfo
Cabral, Robert Southey: Journals of a Residence
in Portugal 1800-1801 and a Visit to France
1838 (Oxford, 1960), pp. 33-61. BACK
[7] Southey’s unfinished ‘History of Portugal’. BACK
[8] Edward
Bayntun Yescombe (1765-1803), captain of the packet, King George, which sailed between
Falmouth and Lisbon. BACK
[9] One of
the earliest surviving drafts of Book 1 of the
Curse of Kehama (1810) is dated
‘Lisbon. May 5. 1801’, Department of Rare Books, Special
Collections and Preservation, River Campus Libraries,
University of Rochester, Robert Southey Papers
A.S727. BACK
[10] Philip Meadows Martineau (1752-1829),
surgeon at the Norfolk and Norwich Hospital and a member
of the Martineau family, prominent Unitarians in
Norwich. Southey preferred that his brother, Henry
Herbert Southey, train as a doctor, rather
than attend Oxford University and become an Anglican
clergyman as his uncle, Herbert
Hill, suggested. BACK
[11] Charles
Fox (c. 1740-1809; DNB), orientalist,
poet and parrot owner. BACK
[13] Southey is referring to his
inhalation of nitrous oxide as part of the early
experiments at the Pneumatic Institute, Bristol. BACK
[14] The Stadtholder was the hereditary chief
executive of the Dutch Republic. In 1801 it was Willem V
(1748-1806). BACK
[15]
Monthly Magazine, 11 (April 1801),
221. The passage which caused Southey such amusement had
described how Bristol could ‘lay claim to the soaring
genius or enraptured muse of a Southey, a Coleridge, or
a Cottle’. His mirth was,
undoubtedly, produced by the inclusion of the last
name. BACK