728. Robert Southey to John Rickman,
18 October 1802
*
The Scriptores Rerum Hispanicarum [1] is a Latin book – (the English may
come too as a make weight – it is useful in way – one of the
many works of the most indefatigable translator I remember)
– about the same size as the English one– in a yellowish rough calf binding – the only book
which I possess so bound. I believe its first title is
Hispania Illustrata. but you will ascertain it by the odd
circumstance that it was compiled from the Library Roberti
Beli Angli. the following will fill the box. I underline
those which I should prefer if they will fit equally
well.
Portugueze Dictionary – a thick 4to all in
Portugueze. [2]
Estatutos de Coimbra. [3] folio. –
Estatutos da Ordem de Christo. [4]
folio. I believe both in parchment & lean.
Catalogo das Rainhas de Portugal. [5]
a thin folio & lettered. the four
duodecemos in blue paper that came to pieces in their former
carriage being Vida de S. Francisco Xavier by Lucena. [6]
Hist. de los Ordenes Militares
[7]
– a thin parchment folio. Historia
Maritima [8] – 3 of the
small quarto size – bound a la Portugueze & in good
plight. a curious book – being the history of all the
shipwrecks of their Indian vessels, collected from those who
escaped the wreck & regularly published for the use of
others. – these will probably suffice but I will add a few
more titles for security –
Frey Gerundio. [9] 2 small 4to.
Flores de Espana. [10]
X folio. thin. Hist.
Insulana. [11] folio parchment.
the papers of the Portugueze Academy [12] – 5 or 6
small 4to clumsily half bound in Morocco that has been
pressed smooth & so spoilt. two of the same family [13] a little taller whose names I remember
not – but they are ax
commentaries upon the Law of Portugal – bound like the last
– except that the Binder had English Letters & Rules for
the back.
I would have the twenty quartos of the Xxx Hist Genealogica, [14] but they
will weigh plaguily heavy – & it is wiser to wait till
they may be shipped for Neath – if my treaty take effect.
You mistake my Circ. Xtmas. I do not hastily
publish, nor till after the last finish
so far as my next journey to Portugal be concerned in it.
but I thank you for your offer of a home in London. I shall
not move willingly – & see no probability of any
business to call me – but if it should you will make me the
less reluctant to obey.
Vincent &
I did not part on good terms. I
received my xx indeed he sent me away <off> & you
may smile at the effect it produced – I parodied
Shenstone.
He frownd with scholastical sway –
I could scarcely my freedom discern –
So sternly he sent me away
I thought that he bade me return.
[15]
I was to blame – but less than he was, the punishment
exceeded the offence – & Vincent never
used me well – because I was the son of a country tradesman.
this was less felt by me than it was seen by others – but
there were palpable & shameful instances – for I was
perhaps the most regular in my conduct of all who were under
him. my feelings towards him have changed materially since
his book in defence of public schools. [16] I forgave him all
private ill will – & could have shaken him by the hand
for it. the Nearchus [17] is a middling thing
– & the other book less than middling – so says my Uncle – a
man of more than middling intellect & information. –
Vincent
wanted to make me a Latin poet – & I had sense enough to
follow my own instinct.
Lamb I hear has
been at Keswick this
summer. xxxx conjugal
rixation [18] of which he speaks would not have
affected me – indeed my presence would have greatly
repressed it – for I am the only man among his acquaintance
to whom Coleridge does not complain of his wife – &
that I think implies some merit on my part. it is all from
his want of calculation, from that
constant sacrifice to present impulse which marks his
character & blasts the brightest talents that I have
ever witnessed. I very much wished you to have seen him
once. Lamb knows
him better than most men – & I thoroughly know him – you
would have given a fair first-sight opinion – because you
would have looked thro the dazzle of conversation. Lamb says
“the rogue has given me philtres to make me love
him” [19] – I never feel so
little satisfied with myself as when upon recollecting that my inclination to
like him has always got the better of a judgement – felt at
first sight – & deliberately & perpetually
strengthened by every experience.
George the
Second is in London, & George the First
trying what he can do to serve him. characteristic
situations! Danvers proposed a good tutorship here but the
Second
George thought it beneath him. poor fellow it is a
most unhappy madness – by the by do you know a deaf Irish
Member who is here with his children & a still deafer
wife – a Mr Saunderson? [20] He seems a clever man if one could but
talk to him without cracking ones lungs.
I have not learnt your rapid handwriting.
mine oeconomizes paper – & therefore in letter writing
becomes prodigal of time – this morning I have none to
spare. remembrances from my household & from Danvers. –
from me also to Lamb & his sister –
farewell.
R. Southey.
Oct. 18. 1802.
Notes
* Address:
[partial] Esqr / hens Court/ Palace
Yard/ Westminster
Postmarks: B/ OCT 19/ 1802;
[partial] 122/ BRISTOL/ 80
Endorsement: RS/ Oct.
14./ 1802
MS: Huntington Library, RS
28
Previously published: Kenneth Curry (ed.),
New Letters of Robert Southey, 2 vols
(London and New York, 1965), I, pp. 293-295 [in
part]. BACK
[1] Robert Beale (1541-1601;
DNB), Rerum Hispanicarum
Scriptores (1579), no. 1420 in the sale
catalogue of Southey’s library. Rickman had mistaken an
unidentified English translation for this work in Latin.
But Southey was wrong in thinking Beale’s work had the
title Hispania Illustrata. This book of
1604 was by the Belgian Jesuit, Andeas Schottus
(1552-1629). BACK
[2] Possibly Bernardo de Lima (dates unknown),
Diccionario da Lingua Portugueza
(1783), no. 3503 in the sale catalogue of
Southey’s library. BACK
[3]
Estatutos da Universidade de
Coimbra (1772-1773), no. 3197 in the sale
catalogue of Southey’s library. BACK
[4] Fernando De Moraes (fl. 1717),
Diffiniçoens e Estatutos dos Cavalleyros e
Freyres da Ordem de Jesu Christo (1717), no.
3592 in the sale catalogue of Southey’s library. BACK
[5] Jose Barbosa Machado (c.
1688-c. 1770), Catalogo Cronologico, Historico e
Genealogico, e Critico das Rainhas de
Portugal (1727), no. 3233 in the sale
catalogue of Southey’s library. BACK
[6] Joao de Lucena
(1549-1600), Historia da Vida do S. Francisco de
Xavier (1788), no. 3412 in the sale
catalogue of Southey’s library. BACK
[7] Francisco Caro de Torres (c.
1560-1630), Historia de las Ordenes Militares de
Santiago, Calatrava, y Alcantara (1629), no.
3327 in the sale catalogue of Southey’s library. BACK
[8] Bernardo
Gomes de Brito (1688-1759), Historia
Tragico-Maritima (1735), no. 3476 in the
sale catalogue of Southey’s library. BACK
[9] Jose Francisco de Isla (1703-1781),
Historia del Famoso Predicador Fray Gerundio
de Campazas (1770), no. 3496 in the sale
catalogue of Southey’s library. BACK
[10] Antonio Sousa de Macedo (1606-1682), Flores de
Espana, Excellencias de Portugal (1737), no.
3792 in the sale catalogue of Southey’s library. BACK
[11] Antonio Cordeiro (1641-1722), Historia Insulana
das Ilhas a Portugal Sugeytas no Oceano
Occidental (1717), no. 3363 in the sale
catalogue of Southey’s library. BACK
[12]
Memorias de
Litteratura Portugueza, pela Academia Real das
Sciencas de Lisboa (1792-1796), no. 3532 in
the sale catalogue of Southey’s library. BACK
[13]
Memorias de
Academia Real das Sciencias de Lisboa
(1797-1799), no. 3302 in the sale catalogue of Southey’s
library. BACK
[14] Antonio Caetano de
Sousa (1674-1759), Historia Genealogica da Casa
Real Portugeza (1735-1748), no. 3738 in the
sale catalogue of Southey’s library. BACK
[15] A parody of
William Shenstone (1714-1763; DNB),
‘Pastoral Ballad, in Four Parts. Written in 1743’,
lines 37-40; Southey had previously sent this to
Thomas Davis Lamb, [c. 31 July 1792], The
Collected Letters of Robert Southey. Part
1, Letter 20, and (a slightly different
version) to Charles Collins [begun 4 June 1792],
The Collected Letters of Robert Southey.
Part 1, Letter 12. BACK
[16] William Vincent, A
Defence of Public Education (1801) had
robustly refuted allegations about the lack of religious
education in public schools. BACK
[17] William Vincent, The Voyage of Nearchus from the
Indus to the Euphrates (1797). The ‘other
book’ was The Periplus of the Erythraean
Sea (1800-1805). BACK
[18] Quarrelling between Samuel Taylor and Sara
Coleridge. BACK
[19]
King Henry IV, Part 1, Act 2, scene
2, lines 18-19 [adapted]. BACK
[20] Francis Saunderson
(1754-1827), MP for County Cavan in the Irish Parliament
1788-1800, and the UK Parliament 1800-1806. He was so
deaf he used an ear trumpet in the House of Commons. He
was an Irish Whig, who had opposed the Irish
administration and the Union of 1800. His wife was Anne
White (d. 1845), of Miskin, Glamorgan. They had seven
children. BACK