My dear friend
There is a great pleasure in revisiting ones
native country in spite of its rains & fogs &
Laplandishness – yet I hardly feel myself nearer the greater
part of my friends than when the sea was between us. One is
calling me East – another West – & I am going North [1] – in truth I should find
omnipresence a very convenient attribute at this present. –
but as I neither possess the
cap of Fortunatus, [2] nor
his more desirable purse.
First then to business. here I am – but
happily not to remain – for in the spring I expect to
revisit the continent [3] & there make my abode for some years.
Of course I have done with law – & wisely – as I have
reason to look for some an
appointment in some of the embassies to Italy. this you will
not mention. & there my inclination & health will
prudently be pleased. – The house at Burton you will allow
me to relinquish at Michaelmas. there is a troublesome
business, of which Rickman doubtless will undertake the more
troublesome part – & for some assistance I reckon upon
your kindness. I wish to have the furniture sold – save only
the beds & the clothes thereunto belonging – i-e – the
sheets blankets & counterpanes. these xxxxx may I beg you to house
for a few months? with the boxes of wearing apparel &
the books? – I shall request Rickman to pack
them up, & transact the sale – that I may trouble you as
little as possible. you will have the goodness to advise
with him how they may be sold most advantageously. for the
kitchen grate & boiler Mrs what is
her name there – of whom they were bought professed herself
ready at any time to repurchase them. All the keys of the
boxes I will send down – as soon as you shall have replied –
for I know not whether the second volume of the
Anthology [4] has
even been sent to you, & if not, it shall make part of
the parcel. – if I mistake not Rickman will be
at Christ Church when this shall arrive.
Of Portugal I sincerely wish it were in my
power to send you any tidings, for I have myself a serious
interest in the fate of the factory, [5] & am as ignorant as the English
newswriters, tho not so ready to invent lies upon the
subject. common prudence in the government, common talents
in the Commander, common courage in the officers would have
saved the country. the people could & would have beat
the Spaniards, nor I do believe that even French tactics
could have subdued a country, strong by nature, defended by
famine – & a brave & spirited people proud of their
own name, & bitterly hostile to their enemies. but no
preparations were made. no magazines ready, no provisions.
the troops were starving – the General [6] at
Lisbon when the Spaniards had proceeded some way into the
country. she was left to the Saints & the Army of
Martyrs – & so the peace was made – but what that peace
is I know no more than you. the terms will be as favourable
towards England as Portugal can make them [7]
– but Portugal was at the mercy of Spain, & Spain under
the direction of France.
As I cannot calculate upon more than a six
months stay in England – that time must be disposed of as
advantageously as possible & I am about as soon as
possible to set forth for Keswick where Coleridge resides. part of the autumn I shall
pass in North Wales – thus at once seeing my friends – &
what is the most worthy of a visit in the Island, &
storing myself with the appropriate knowledge for Madoc [8] – about which for certain urgent
& obvious reasons, it is probable that I must seriously
set to work. I have a years labour lying dead – to me a
serious evil. but it is absolutely necessary for me to
revisit Portugal & did I publish any part of my
materials before all are collected – I should find the
archives shut against such an Historian.
The weather (except for dry soils like yours)
augurs ill for the harvest – a serious evil in every point
of view. [9] we want one excellent harvest
to convince the people that the price of provisions is not
so much occasioned by scarcity as they imagine. Taxes &
the great quantity of paper money must ever render them
enormously dear. As for the Invasion – tis an old bugbear –
& I conceive all the preparations in France can only be
intended as weights in the scale of negociation.
Addington [10] has every motive for making peace,
& whatever be my opinion of his talents – I give him
credit for sincerity – moreover he does not make long
speeches, which are usually designed to puzzle & fatigue
an audience. But peace will bring no immediate relief –
& our burthens will not be removed as hastily as they
have been laid on. I look on to a foreign residence with
much satisfaction on every account. my literary pursuits
will be [MS obscured]ided – my health I trust confirmed –
& I shall procure the luxuries of life with less
exertion than it has ever cost me here to obtain the
necessary decencies.
My Mother is
very unwell. with Edith she joins in remembrances to yourself &
your Mother. [11]
your little girl [12] must walk &
talk mainly by this time. do not forget me when Mr Coleman [13] is with you. let me hear from you as soon
as you can without inconvenience – & omit not to say
whether you have received or not the second Anthology. –
direct to me at Mrs Danvers’s. Kingsdown.
Bristol.
God bless you –
yrs truly
Robert Southey.
Saturday. August 1. 1801.
Notes
* Address: To/ Charles Biddlecombe Esqr/ Burton/ near Ringwood/
Hampshire./ Single
Stamped: [illegible]
MS: Berg
Collection, New York Public
Library
Unpublished. BACK
[2] Fortunatus was the hero of a series of tales widely
published in 16th and 17th-century Europe. He had a
purse that always replenished itself and a cap that
could carry the wearer wherever he wished. BACK
[3] A reference to the proposal by Wynn that Southey should
become Secretary to Sir William Drummond (c. 1770-1828;
DNB), classical scholar, poet and
diplomat; Charge d’Affaires in Denmark 1800-1801,
Minister-Plenipotentiary in Naples 1801-1803 and
1807-1808, and Ambassador to the Ottoman Empire in
1803. BACK
[5] The British Factory at Lisbon. The
official organisation of British merchants in the
Portuguese capital, it was not finally abolished until
1825. BACK
[6] Joao Carlos de Braganca e
Ligne de Sousa Tavares Mascarenhas de Silva, Duke of
Lafoes (1719-1806), Secretary of State (prime minister)
6 January–21 May 1801, and commander of the Portuguese
army sent to resist the Spanish invasion. BACK
[7] The Treaty of Badajoz,
signed on 6 June 1801, required Portugal to close its
ports to British ships, indemnify Spain for the cost of
the war with Portugal and cede Olivenca to Spain. BACK
[8] Southey had completed
a version of Madoc in 1797-1799, but was
hoping to revise it for publication. It did not appear
until 1805. BACK
[9] Southey was
correct; there was a poor harvest in 1801, leading to
high food prices. BACK
[10] Henry
Addington, Viscount Sidmouth (1757-1844;
DNB), The Speaker 1789-1801, Prime
Minister 1801-1804, Home Secretary 1812-1822. There were
persistent reports of a French invasion fleet massing at
Boulogne in the summer of 1801, but Addington’s ministry
edged towards beginning peace talks with France on 1
October 1801. BACK
[11] Mrs
Biddlecombe’s first name and dates are unknown. BACK
[12] Biddlecombe's daughter, b. 1799. BACK
[13] Unidentified; probably an acquaintance of
Southey’s from his residence at Burton in 1797 and
1799. BACK