654. Robert Southey to Charles
Danvers, [started before
and continued on] 6 February [1802]
*
My dear Danvers
I told you of my intended journey to Norwich
– it has been prevented by Ediths
increasing illness, [1]
& I am in a comfortless state of health myself. partly
it is the climate – & something I attribute to the
place, & still more to the perpetual uneasiness on Ediths account.
There came two letters from Tom this week. one
to his
mother – poor fellow written a fortnight after her
death! – the other to me – to say that he was going
immediately to the West-Indies! – & desiring me not to
let his
Mother make herself unhappy on that account. I
have mastered my own mind so much that nothing ever
violently agitates or affects me – but <& yet> every unpleasant
circumstance produces very mischievous effects. it comes
upon me at night – or whenever I am unemployed – exactly
like the story of Cortes & the physic. [2] I wish very much to get from London if
only for a week – the change would certainly benefit me –
& yet I cannot go with any comfort while Edith continues
in so wretched a state. the worst part of her disease is a
loathing of all remedies – her stomach rejects the diet
which Carlisle recommends & half the medicines. her
spirits are beyond any thing you can imagine, bad. her
digestion never goes on without strong aperients. – I am now
myself so unwell in head & stomach that I do not go out
– I fear I shall lose the opportunity of sending the
tickets [3] by Estlin therefore. shall I frank them down?
Saturday 6 Feby.
Yesterday there came two long letters from
my
Uncle. they say nothing of his removal, which
indeed cannot be so soon as we imagined, for he desires me
to send him over certain new books. he is very anxious about
my history, & much pleased that it continues my
object. [4] Of Toms destination
he knew nothing. he had sent him 100 dollars, & written
in his behalf to Lord St Vincents. With the
letters came a jewel-necklace for Lord Bute, to be by me
delivered into his own hands. [5] I went to day with it – &
found that he had sold his town house. unluckily – as for
the love of the Library I wanted to renew my acquaintance
with the Lord. – My Uncle goes on hunting books for me. Even if I
did not love my historical work beyond all other, I should
for his sake make it my chief object.
Be so good as to pack up the set of Don
Quixote – the little books in red Morocco which were in the
sliding shelf under your book case [6] – & send them
by coach to Wynn. 5. Stone Buildings. Lincolns Inn. my Uncle
writes me word that he has got another set & that I may
dispose of mine. this news came seasonably just as I was
about to write to you to give my own away.
Coleridge dines at Wynns to day
with me. after all his foolish gossipping [7] about his wife – he now talks of returning in six weeks
to Keswick – &
when he can, removing with his family & the
Wordsworths [8] to the
South of France. plain it is that this climate suits him as
little as it does me. I do not however wish that we should
go abroad together. our habits are not enough alike. I wish
the similarity – or the dissimilarity were greater.
Did I tell you how Burnetts pupils
had both eloped? [9] & how
kindly Lord Stanhope has behaved to him? [10]
We have letters from Joseph Lovell [11] – as I expected – very kind
& as they ought to be. he will settle all about Robert.
It is long since you have written – [MS
obscured]tless because you believed me at Norwich. how is
Mrs Danvers? [MS obscured] the
Secretary [12] has so little to do
that he hopes he may have leave to see her sooner than he at
first expected.
Edith is a
little better. for me – I wish my health were as good as my
spirits. brother brute is very unmanageable.
God bless you –
yrs affectionately
Robert Southey.
Notes* Address: [in
another hand] Mr Danvers/ Kingsdown/
Bristol Postmark: 6/ FEB/ 1802 Endorsements:
London Feby. six 1802.; CW Williams
Wynn MS: British Library, Add MS
47890 Previously published: Kenneth Curry (ed.),
New Letters of Robert Southey, 2 vols
(London and New York, 1965), I, pp.
270-272. BACK [1] Edith Southey was pregnant with her first child. BACK [2] Hernan Cortes (1485-1547),
conqueror of the Aztec empire. Gomara tells the story of
how a fever-stricken Cortes took a purgative to relieve
his symptoms. Before the medicine took effect, his camp
was attacked and Cortes fought alongside his men to
repel the attackers. Cortes’s activity delayed the
working of the medicine, which only took effect the
following day after he had rested; see Francisco Lopez
de Gomara (c. 1511-1566?), Cortes. The Life of
the Conqueror by His Secretary, trans.
Lesley Byrd Simpson (Berkeley, CA, 1964), pp.
108-109. BACK [3] Southey
had purchased tickets in the state lottery for Danvers;
see Southey to Charles Danvers, 26 January 1802, Letter
652. BACK [4] Southey’s
projected ‘History of Portugal’. BACK [5] John Stuart, 1st Marquess of Bute
(1744-1814; DNB), Ambassador to Spain
1795-1796. Southey had possibly been introduced to Bute
through the latter’s chaplain, George Martin
Maber. BACK [6] The nine-volume edition of Miguel de
Cervantes Saavedra (1547-1616), Don Quixote de la
Mancha, published in Madrid in 1798. This
was not disposed of by Southey as it was no. 3191 in the
sale catalogue of his library. BACK [7] Coleridge’s marital
unhappiness had led him to spread stories of his wife’s
behaviour, tales Southey (who was, of course, Sarah
Coleridge’s brother-in-law) was keen to disavow; see
Southey to Charles Danvers, 9 January 1802, Letter
649. BACK [9] Burnett had been employed as tutor to Charles Stanhope
(1785-1809) and James Stanhope (1788-1825), the two
younger sons of the controversial politician and
inventor Charles (‘Citizen’) Stanhope, 3rd Earl Stanhope
(1753-1816; DNB). The boys’ flight from
their father’s house was described in a letter from
Charles Lamb to John Rickman, [?1 February 1802], E.W.
Marrs Jr (ed.), The Letters of Charles and Mary
Anne Lamb, 1796-1817, 3 vols (Ithaca, NY and
London, 1975-1978), II, pp. 49-50. BACK [10] Stanhope had retained
Burnett in his employ, even though the latter now had
nothing to do. BACK |
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