617. Robert Southey to Edith Southey,
16 October 1801
*
Friday. Oct. 16 1801.
Dublin
Dear Edith, in my last no direction was given. you will write
under cover, & direct exactly in this form
the Right Honble
Isaac Corry
&c &c &c
Dublin.
this said personage I have not yet seen, whereby I was kept
in a state of purportless idleness. he is gone to his own
country, playing truant from business among his friends.
tomorrow his return is probable. I like his character he
does business well & with method, but loves his
amusement better than business & prefers books to
official papers. It does not appear that my work will be
anyways difficult copying & letter writing which any
body could do, if any body could be confidentially trusted.
John Rickman
is a great man in Dublin & in the eyes of the world, but not
one jot altered from the John Rickman of
Christ Church, save only that in compliance with an extorted
promise he has deprived himself of the pleasure of [MS
illegible] his head by putting powder on it. he has
astonished the people about him – the government stationer
hinted to him when he was giving an order, that if he wanted
any thing in the pocket book way – he might as well put it
down in the order. But he pulled his own – look Sir – I have
bought one for two shillings. his predecessor admonished him
not to let himself down by speaking to any of the clerks –
why Sir – said John
Rickman – I should not let myself down if I spoke
to every man between this & the bridge – & so he
goes on in his own right way. he has been obliged to mount
up to the third story, before he could find a room small
enough to sleep in – & there he led me to show me his
government bed, which because it is a government bed
contains stuff enough to make a dozen – the curtains being
compleatly double & mattress piled upon mattress, so
that tumbling out would be a dangerous fall. – About our
quarters here when we remove hither in June, he will look
out. the filth of the houses is intolerable – floors &
furniture offending you with Portugueze nastiness. but it is
a very fine city – a magnificent city – such public
buildings & the streets so wide. for these advantages
Dublin is
indebted to the prodigal corruption of its own government.
every member who asked money to make improvements got it –
& if he got 20,000 pounds – in decency spent 5 for the
public, & pocketed the rest. these gentlemen are now
being hauled a little over the coals, & they have grace
enough to thank God the Union did not take place sooner.
The Peace [1] was not welcome to the
Patricians [2] – it took away all their hopes of
“any fun” by the help of France. the government acting well
& wisely, controul both parties, the Orange men &
the United Irish men, [3] & command
respect from both. the old fatteners upon the corruption are
silent in shame. the military who must be kept up will be
well employed in making roads, this measure is not yet
announced to the public. It will be difficult to civilize
this people. an Irishman builds him a turf stye – gets his
fuel from the bog, digs his patch of potatoes & then
lives upon them in idleness. like a true savage he does not
think it worth while to work that he may better himself.
potatoes & buttermilk – on this they are begotten &
born & bred, & whiskey sends them to the third
heaven at once. If Davy had one of them in his laboratory, he could
analize his flesh blood & bones into nothing but
potatoes & buttermilk & whiskey. they are the
primary elements of an Irishman. their love of “fun”
eternally engages them in mischievous combinations, which
are eternally baffled by their own blessed instinct of
blundering. the United Irishmen must have obtained
possession of Dublin
but for a bull. [4] on the night appointed, the mail
coach was to be stopt & burnt about a mile from town
& that was the signal. the lamplighters were in the plot
– & oh to be sure! the honeys would not light a lamp in
Dublin that
evening, for fear the people should see what was going on. –
Of course alarm was taken & all the mischief prevented.
– Modesty characterises them as much here as on the other
side of the water. a man stopt Rickman yesterday
– I’ll be oblaged to you Sir – if youll
plaise to ask Mr Abbot [5] to give me a place of
sixty or seventy pounds a year – . favours indeed are asked
here with as unblushing & obstinate a perseverance as in
Portugal. – This is the striking side of the picture. the
dark colours that first strike a stranger. their good
qualities you cannot so soon discover. genius indeed
immediately appears to characterise them. A love of saying
good things – which 999 Englishmen in a thousand never dream
of attempting in the course of their lives. When Lord
Hardwicke [6] came over there fell a fine rain after the first after a long
series of dry weather. a servant of Dr
Lindsays [7]
heard an Irishman call to his comrade in the street – Ho
Patt – & we shall have a riot – of course a phrase to
quicken an Englishmans hearing. this rain will breed a riot
– the little potatoes will be pushing out the big ones.
Did I send in my last the noble bull that
Rickman
heard? he was late in company when a gentleman looked at his
watch & cried it is tomorrow
morning! – I must wish you good night.
Rickman has
received a sane letter from Burnett, who
only plays off the desperato where it will produce an
effect. Lamb
writes that the person with whom he cohabits is a young
surgeon & nephew to a great wine merchant, [8] who gives him long
credit. so they drink two sorts of wine & live happy.
Godwin is
courting a widow who has one child; [9] she is a very disgusting
woman says Lamb,
& wears green spectacles.
I shall send you no money, because I shall
bring it. dear Edith I wish I knew when – but certainly very
soon. Mr Abbot goes in a few days &
I should not think, nor is it thought that Mr
Corry will long remain after him. perhaps ten days
– or a week may be the utmost of my stay. the shorter the
better. it is hateful to be alone. about my shirts. cloth is
but sixpence a yard less than in England, & to that
amount at last I am sure to be cheated. is it not better
wait till you can buy them for me? the people love a little
cheatery dealings. in the first shop which Rickman entered,
he was asked 8 shillings & sixpence for what the man
directly sold him at four shillings. I have bought no books
yet – for lack of money. today Rickman is
engaged to dinner – & I am to seek for myself some
ordinary or chop house. this morning will clear off my
letters, & I will make business a plea hereafter for
writing fewer. tis a hideous waste of time. – my love to
Coleridge &c. I
will if indeed I do not write to him also.
Edith God
bless you.
yr
R Southey
Notes
* Watermark:
crown with fleur de lys
MS: Pforzheimer Collection,
New York Public Library, G’ANA 0032
Previously
published: Charles Cuthbert Southey (ed.), Life
and Correspondence of Robert Southey, 6 vols
(London, 1849-1850), II, pp. 167-171. BACK
[1] Britain and France had signed
‘Preliminary Articles of Peace’ on 1 October 1801. This
was effectively a ceasefire to allow negotiations for a
full treaty. BACK
[2] The
Irish, as followers of St Patrick, 5th-century patron
saint of Ireland; but also a play on the word for Roman
aristocrats. BACK
[3] The Orange Order, founded in 1795, was supported by
Irish Protestants, especially in Ulster. The United
Irishmen, founded in 1791, was the revolutionary
organisation behind the 1798 uprising for an
independent, democratic Ireland. BACK
[4] The
United Irishmen’s rising was planned for the night of 23
May 1798. It was largely prevented by information from
informants, which allowed the army to occupy the rebels’
assembly points. BACK
[5] Charles Abbot, Lord
Colchester (1757-1829; DNB), Chief
Secretary for Ireland 1801-1802, The Speaker 1802-1817.
Rickman was his secretary. BACK
[6] Philip
Yorke, 3rd Earl of Hardwicke (1757-1834;
DNB), Lord Lieutenant of Ireland
1801-1805. BACK
[7] Charles
Lindsay (1760-1846), private secretary to the Lord
Lieutenant and later Bishop of Kildare 1804-1846. BACK
[8] Both the merchant and his
nephew are unidentified. BACK
[9] On 21 December 1801 Godwin married his
second wife, Mary Jane Clairmont (1768-1841;
DNB). She had two children, but was
probably not a widow. BACK