653. Robert Southey to Charles
Danvers, [28 January 1802]
*
Thursday.
My dear Danvers
I did not receive your letter till yesterday evening. to George I shall immediately write,
advising him, unless any situation quite to his liking should occur, to ship
himself for Bristol. poor fellow – I will do what I can for him, but God knows
my power is not much & I see no end to embarrassment after embarrassment.
the first & most promising scheme is to tow him after that good ship the
Rickman. he can certainly do the
business of a comms. accomptant in a public office, & Rickman will assuredly have the
inclination to serve him. If that fails (for the papers speak of a change in
Irish administration) [1] we must either apprentice him, or look out
some clerks place. It was a rare fortune that gave me this years salary from
Corry. else I know not how I
could have weathered it. with the year it will end – & I shall endeavour to
get some birth abroad – Spain – Italy – Egypt – anywhere to be warm. I am sorry
now that my Uncle is leaving
Portugal. he returns too late to render his relations comfortable – &
perhaps I may be settled at Lisbon when he has abandoned it.
We are well lodged. Edith still ill, with the worst of all possible colds in addition to
her other complaints. [2]
Mrs Lovell much
disordered by vexation. the old man [3] has taken
offence at my letter, which was certainly a very proper & respectful one. he
has sent Robert back to his
grandmothers, [4] & seems disposed to cast him upon
chance-charity. I have written to Joseph Lovell, [5] who I
suppose will put him to school, even if his other relations do nothing. I do not
yet decide upon the old mans meaning as he is too angry to be understood. but if
he be the scoundrel which I suspect him, he had better agree with Dr Bradford [6] by the year, for by the Lord I will fret him into
a perpetual fever. he shall spend more than the 40 £ that he allowed his sons
widow & child, in saline draughts.
Coleridge must certainly
work for Stuart, because Stuart bears his expences & they
are by no means trifling ones. Poole
is with him – in spite of his own conversation, & even his own belief, he
likes London. its company suits him, & you know how he wants all the
stimulants that society can afford him.
On Sunday I go to Norwich. I hope the change will benefit me – at
any rate I shall be glad to see Harry – & William
Taylor.
George Burnett shall have the
half-crown whenever we meet. did you suppose that He would
have time to buy the tickets? [7] he was all hurry & bustle & dawdle while in London,
& after all went off in a chaise – the coaches went at 6 & 1/2 past ten
in the morning.
farewell God bless you – I wish May were come that I might breathe Kingsdown air again. our love to
Mrs Danvers.
yrs affectionately
Robert Southey
Maurices [8]
bill is more moderate than expected. thank him for me when you pay it. If no
unforeseen demand come upon me I shall be able to clear off my Bristol debts
in April. doubtless my
mothers bill for medicine there will be sent to me – but I cannot
pay all – my Uncle will do
what he can I well know. God bless him – he is an excellent good man, who
has all his life been drained in this way by his relations.
Notes
* MS: British Library, Add MS
47890
Unpublished.
Dating note: Dated by reference to the preceding
and succeeding letters to Danvers of 26 January 1802 (Letter 652) and
[started before and continued on] 6 February [1802] (Letter
654). BACK
[1] Charles Abbot, Lord
Colchester (1757-1829; DNB), Chief Secretary for Ireland
1801-1802, was about to leave office and on 10 February took up a new role
as The Speaker, 1802-1817. BACK
[2] Edith Southey was
pregnant with her first child. BACK
[5] Probably the brother of Robert Lovell (Southey’s late
brother-in-law) and therefore the uncle of the child Robert Lovell, whom
Southey was attempting to persuade the Lovells to provide for (see Lovell family). BACK
[6] Dr
Bradford, probably a medical practitioner in Bristol, his first name and
dates are unknown. BACK
[7] Tickets in
the state lottery; see Southey to Charles Danvers, 26 January 1802, Letter
652. BACK
[8] Joseph Maurice (dates
unknown), was an apothecary with a shop at St Michaels Hill in Bristol.
He had treated Southey and his wife when they were in Bristol. BACK