My dear Grosvenor
I expect to see you soon. in less than three
weeks – as soon as distance by land & by water, allowing
for an
<
up to Keswick, will
permit. Mr Corry & I have only past thro the
preliminaries of a bow &c take-by-the-hand, for he is
moving off in such a hurry that I do not receive livery
& seisin of the secretarian pen till we reach
London.
Grosvenor if you should think of writing a
book as Ovid [1] has done,
concerning metamorphoses, probably my transformation into a
man of business may find a place there. – I am reconciled to
my lot inasmuch as the neighbourhood of Dublin is very lovely
– & in John
Rickmans society I feel little want of any other.
he & I like a whale & a man are of the same genus
tho with many great specific
differences. If he lives long enough I expect to see him one
of the greatest & most useful men whom our country has
produced. he bends every thing to practice, his very various
knowledge is always brought to bear upon some point of
general importance & his situation will now give him the
power of producing public benefit.
I have spent the first days of my new era,
characteristically & to my satisfaction, as on my
arrival Mr Corry was absent – what did I but
opened Madoc [2] & commenced the great
labour of rebuilding it. when Mr
C returned, & I found myself at leisure – I
went on with my work – so that I have done something in
Ireland.
Howbeit Grosvenor to all that my situation
requires I am equal. punctuality is my pride, method almost
my hobby horse – & I am not deficient in activity.
leisure enough will be left me, & tho my invitation runs
only for a year – if I may believe John Rickman – I
am in the road to fortune – a clean
road Grosvenor, & not a very long way. Huzza! I have had
my ups & downs upon this ocean of the world – but & have no objection
to cast anchor in port.
For the first year my income will not be
increased. it will amount about to the same as my usual
receipt augmented by my own brain-breeding. but my shoulders
are lighter Grosvenor – look at the picture in the Pilgrims
Progress. [3] What happened to Xtian when he saw the
cross? he put nothing in his pocket
either.
Am I not in right healthy spirits? – &
yet they will mend when I get home. it is not good for man
to be alone – & tho it were good, it would not be
agreable.
Where should I lodge in town to be near Great
George Street? I think the River streets from the Strand are not too
far. & a more important question – shall I know as much
of you when we are in the same place – as when half the
island seperates us? – now Grosvenor make you a good
resolution – & look you keep it.
Send me a letter to Keswick with a shake
by the hand inclosed.
Oh – I had almost forgotten two points of
antiquity. It is the opinion of Coleridge that the Irish are descended from
certain aboriginals who escaped the deluge in a cock boat,
that rested upon Mount Taurus. – my own idea is that they
are of Cretan race – the descendants of Pasiphae. [4]
R Southey.
Tuesday. Oct. 20. 1801.
Notes
* Endorsements: 20. Octor 1801; 20 Oct 1801
MS: Bodleian Library,
Eng. Lett. c. 23
Previously published: John Wood
Warter (ed.), Selections from the Letters of
Robert Southey, 4 vols (London, 1856), I,
pp. 174-176. BACK
[1] Publius
Ovidius Naso (43 BC- AD 17/18),
Metamorphoses. BACK
[2] Southey
had completed a version of Madoc in
1797-1799 and was revising it for publication. It did
not appear until 1805. BACK
[3] John
Bunyan (1628-1688; DNB), The
Pilgrim’s Progress (1678-1684). When
Christian saw the Cross his burden fell into the
sepulchre. BACK
[4] Both these stories connect
the Irish to bulls. Taurus was the name of a bull in
Greek mythology. Pasiphae, Queen of Crete, fell in love
with him and their child was the Minotaur. BACK