625. Robert Southey to William
Taylor, 11 November 1801
*
Wednesday night. Nov. 11. 1801.
My dear friend
Amid the bustle & everlasting motion in which of late I have
been engaged, I have neglected to apprize you of my goings on. partly indeed
trusting that Henry would
learn every thing worth knowing from his Mother.
Soon after my letter to him I joined my friends in Wales. we made
what was designed to be our first journey, which terminated at Llangedwin, Wynns abode. there I found a letter
inviting me to Ireland to become Corrys private Secretary for one year. the term prudently limited
lest we should not suit each other. the proffered salary 400£ Irish. about 350
English, of which the half was specified as travelling expences. my
circumstances neither required nor allowed hesitation. So after touching at Keswick twice, on my road to & from
Dublin, here I am in my scribe
capacity. My friend Rickmans
acquaintance with Corry brought this
about. he is Secretary to Abbot. [1] & his residence in Dublin will render my Irish half year very
endurable, as he is one of the most men whom I
most esteem for his whole moral & intellectual character
I have been a week in town, & in that time have learnt
something. the civilities which already have been shown me discover how much I
have been abhorred for all that is valuable in my nature. such civilities excite
more contempt than anger – but they make me think more despicably of the world
than I would wish to do. As if this were a baptism that purified me of all
Jacobinical sins – a regeneration – & the one congratulates me, & the
other visits me, as if the author of Joan of Arc & of Thalaba [2] were made a great
man by scribing for the Irish Chancellor of
the Exchequer! –
I suppose my situation by all these symptoms to be a good one.
for a more ambitious man doubtless very desirable, tho the ladder is longer than
I design to climb. my principles & habits are happily enough settled. My
objects in life are leisure to do nothing but write, & competence to write
at leisure, & my notions of competence do not exceed 300 a year. – Mr Corry is a man
of gentle & reconciling manners. fitter men for his purpose he doubtless
might have found in some respects – none more so in regularity & dispatch.
the newspapers I hear are at me – I am used to flea bites, & never scratch a
pimple to a sore.
Doubtless you have seen the British Critics Review of
Thalaba. [3] it is so perfect in its kind that I have no doubt in
ascribing it to Sir Herbert Croft.
the personality in the Monthly Review [4] I cannot so easily
account for: Dr Geddes [5] has been whispered to me – but I hardly credit
the whisper. for never having seen the man I cannot have offended him. – I
recollect not whether or no I thanked you for your judgement of Thalaba, &
acceded to its censure in great part. as far as I can judge by what reaches my
own ears the poem has been succesful to its fair deserts; that is in the
character it is gaining – of the sale I yet know nothing.
Burnett is at work for
Phillips. [6]
the young warrior fights under a veterans shield, & his bantlings are to be
fathered by no less a personage than Dr Mavor [7] – head-journeyman to Edmund Curl the
Second. [8] For this trade – a miserable trade, George Burnett is noways qualified.
he over rates his own powers, & every body else under-rates them. my advice
to him has been – turn Usher or tutor. & give your leisure to asserting your
literary character. to this he will not stoop – at present he has employment.
but he neither calculates rightly on its precariousness nor on his own fitness
& ability to discharge it. his knowledge is not at
hand <ready> – like the Bank it has cash – but alas! not payable
on demand.
I wait my books & papers before I can be comfortably
industrious – to correct Madoc – & proceed with the Curse of Kehama [9] – these are to be my
leisure labours – both with the hope of long escaping the Press. for some half
dozen reasons, of which the wisest is, that the longer they remain, the higher
value they will acquire – not merely from the gradual correction – the ripening
of crude fruit – but because my own character as a poet will strengthen, like a
retired players. My time is sold at a better price than the booksellers would
have given for it.
Do you come to London this winter? If I had the Wishing Cap [10] I would see you at Norwich – a
place of which all remembrance is pleasurable. – direct under cover to
Right Honble
Isaac Corry
&c &c &c
Duke Street – Westminster –
<there is much meaning in the and pussey ands. [11] – Henry I hope will write – I wish to hear
of him & from him.>
farewell.
yrs affectionately
R Southey.
Notes
* Address: To/ Mr Wm Taylor Junr/ Surry
Street/ Norwich./ Single
Stamped: BRIDGE St./
Westminster
Postmark: [partial] NO/ 12/ 01
MS: Huntington Library,
HM 4831
Previously published: J. W. Robberds (ed.), A Memoir of
the Life and Writings of the Late William Taylor of Norwich, 2
vols (London, 1843), I, pp. 377-380. BACK
[1] Charles
Abbot, Lord Colchester (1757-1829; DNB), Chief Secretary for
Ireland 1801-1802, The Speaker 1802-1817. BACK
[2]
Joan of Arc (1796) and (1798);
Thalaba the Destroyer (1801). BACK
[3]
British
Critic, 18 (September 1801), pp. 309-310. The review was
anonymous and a sustained attack on ‘this complete monument of vile and
depraved taste’. BACK
[4]
Thalaba the Destroyer (1801) was not reviewed in the
Monthly Review until volume 39 (November 1802), pp.
240-251. The Monthly had already published a number of
unfriendly reviews of Southey’s other work, e.g. of Poems
(1799) in volume 31 (March 1800), pp. 261-267. BACK
[5] Alexander Geddes (1737-1802; DNB), Catholic
priest and scholar. BACK
[6] Sir Richard Phillips
(1767-1840; DNB), publisher and magazine proprietor. BACK
[7] William Fordyce Mavor (1758-1837;
DNB), clergyman, schoolmaster and writer. Burnett was
working on his Universal History, Ancient and Modern (1802),
which was published by Phillips. BACK
[8] Edmund Curll (d. 1747;
DNB), prolific early 18th-century bookseller and
publisher. BACK
[9] Southey had completed a version of
Madoc in 1797-1799 and was revising it for publication.
It did not appear until 1805. He was still drafting the first book of the
Curse of Kehama (1810). BACK
[10] Southey is referring to Fortunatus, the
hero of a series of tales widely published in 16th and 17th-century Europe.
Fortunatus had a purse that always replenished itself and a cap that could
carry the wearer wherever he wished. BACK
[11] A punning reference to the ‘&cs’ Southey used instead of
Corry’s official titles. BACK