737. Robert Southey to Grosvenor
Charles Bedford, [started
before and continued on] 28 November 1802
*
Dear Grosvenor
I thought you would know from Wynn that I
trespass on my eyes only for short letters – or from Rickman to whom
my friend Danvers will have carried the latest news of me
this day. if those unhappy eyes had been well you would ere
this have received Kehama. [1] they have been better & are again worse
– in spite of lapis calaminaris [2] – goulard [3] – cayenne pepper – & the surgeons
lance. but they will soon be well so I believe &
trust.
You have seen my Cid [4] – & have not seen
what I wrote to Wynn about its manner. everywhere where possible
the story is told in the very phrase of the original
chronicles which are almost the oldest works in the
Castilian language. this
song the language in itself poetical becomes more
poetical by necessary compression – if it smack of romance –
so does the story. in the notes the certain will be
distinguished from the doubtful, passages quoted, &
references to author & page uniformly given. Thus much
for this which is no specimen of my historical style. indeed
I do not think uniformity of style desirable – it should
rise & fall with the subject & adapt itself to the
matter. moreover in my own judgement a little peculiarity of
style is desirable, because it nails down the matter to the
memory – you remember the facts of Livy – but you remember
the very phrase of Tacitus & Sallust, [5] & the phrase reminds you of
the matter when it would else have been forgotten. this may
be pushed like every thing else too far & become
ridiculous but the principle is true.
As a different specimen I wish you could see
a life of S. Francisco [6] – a section upon Mohammedanism – &
a chapter upon the Moorish period. Oh these eyes! these
eyes! to have my brain in labour & this spell to prevent
delivery like a damned cross-legged Juno! [7] – farewell till tomorrow – I must
sleep – & laze & play whist
till bed time.
Sunday.
Your story of Duppa & the
Apples is an excellent story – & your note is a good
note. Snakes have been pets in England. is it not Cowley who
has a poem upon one –
Take heed fair Eve you do not make
Another tempter of the Snake – [8]
They ought to be tamed & taken into
our service. for snakes eat mice – & can get into their
holes after them – & in our country the venomous species
is so rare that we should think them beautiful animals were
it not for a recollection of the old Serpent. When I am housed & homed (as by the blessing of God I shall be – or
hope to be in the next Spring – not that the negociation is
over yet – but I expect it will end well – & that I
shall have a house in the loveliest part of South Wales – in
a vale between high mountains – & an onymous house too
Grosvenor – & one that is down in the map of
Glamorganshire, & its name is Maes Gwyn – & so
much for that & theres an end of my parenthesis) then do I purpose to enter into a grand
confederacy with certain of the animal world. every body has
a dog – except those who keep a bitch – e.g. as Snivel [9] – most people have a cat – but I will have
moreover an Otter & teach him to fish – for there is
salmon in the river Neath, & I should like a hawk – but
that is only a vain hope – & a gull or an osprey to fish
in the sea & I will have a snake – if Edith will let
me – & I will have a Toad to catch flies – & it
shall be made murder to kill a spider in my domains,– then
Grosvenor when you come to visit me – N.B. you will arrive
per mail between five & six in the morning at Neath –
ergo you will find me at breakfast about seven – you will
see Puss on one side & M. Otto on the other both looking
for bread & milk, & Margery in her little great chair, & the Toad
upon the tea table, & the snake twisting up the leg of
the table to look for his share.
there – two pages in a make a letter of decent length from such a
poor blind Cupid [10] as
Robert Southey – & I hope to finish the
second letter of Kehama in a few days.
Sunday 28. Nov. 1802.
Notes
* Address: To
/ G. C. Bedford Esqr / Exchequer/
Westminster./ Single
Postmark: [partial] TOL/
28
Endorsements: 28 Novr 1802;
28 Novr. 1802
MS: Bodleian
Library, MS Eng. Lett. c. 23
Previously published:
Charles Cuthbert Southey (ed.), Life and
Correspondence of Robert Southey, 6 vols
(London, 1849-1850), II, pp. 193-196 [in
part]. BACK
[1]
The Curse of Kehama
(1810). Southey had begun drafting Book 2 on 4 June
1802. BACK
[3] Goulard’s extract, a
solution of lead acetate and lead oxide, used as an
astringent. BACK
[4] Southey had transcribed for Wynn material
relating to Rodrigo Diaz de Bivar (c. 1040-1099), a
Castilian aristocrat and military commander, whose
exploits were the subject of numerous poems and tales.
Southey’s English translation and compilation of three
of these was published in 1808 as The Chronicle
of the Cid. BACK
[5] Three Roman historians:
Titus Livius (59BC-17AD), author of From the
Founding of the City; Publius Cornelius
Tacitus (56-117 AD), author of Histories
and Annals; Gaius Sallustius Crispus
(86-34 BC), author of The Conspiracy of
Catiline and the Jugurthine
War. BACK
[6] St Francis (1181/2-1226), founder of the
Franciscan order. All these ‘specimens’ were drafts of
parts of Southey’s unfinished ‘History of
Portugal’. BACK
[7] Roman goddess of marriage
and childbirth. BACK
[8] Southey was mistaken: these
lines are not by Abraham Cowley (1618-1667;
DNB), but by Edmund Waller
(1606-1687; DNB), ‘To a Fair Lady,
Playing with a Snake’ (1645), lines 16-17. BACK
[10] Roman god of erotic love, often portrayed
blindfolded. BACK