771. Robert Southey to John Rickman,
[8 April 1803]
*
Dear Rickman
We are all bustle & business & brown
paper & cords & packages. Tom has been
appointed to the Galatea [1] (not the Mercury [2] as the newspapers have it) & is
this day setting off. he is probably first Lieutenant –
& if we must go to loggerheads will start with a fair
chance of mending his fortunes.
You will not see me in London so soon as I
had at first resolved. I can come up to better advantage in
the autumn. this is a good reason, & moreover I wish
that cursed La Gripe [3] to be
completely extirpated before
lest I should fall into his clutches again.
Septuagints [4]
ought to be more common, for the reason you have given. but
you misreckon upon the possible price at which they could be
sold. Unless School masters sanction them & adopt them,
school boys would not buy them, & nothing but a great
school sale could cover the expences. all printing is of
course dear in proportion to its closeness, & crowded
Greek would be God knows what per sheet, treble – or six
fold the English price. I have let my Greek sleep so long
that perhaps it may never be awakened – yet I must read
Homer again & again. I mean to hunt the Byzantine
historians for facts of manners & such corollaries as
may be gleaned – & there must be something in
Nonnus [5] which might be
useful in writing upon Hindostan – to all this, bless the
old Editors! their Latin will help me, & I have yet
Greek enough to verify all that concerns me. – Elmsley whom you
saw at my rooms, is editing Sophocles at Edinburgh. [6] I am
glad he is doing any thing, tho the stock of human knowledge
will be but little increased by any corrections of the metre
of a Greek chorus. Elmsleys very complete knowledge of the language
will one day be applied to some better purpose. it is a
great thing to break the ice. facilis descensus! [7] – printers ink has a bird-lime
quality of sticking to the fingers.
Danvers is
much obliged to you for putting his letter in so fair a way
of reaching its mark. – I have not written to Lamb – & am
sorry for it – but in fact I know not how to mention his sister,
& cannot write without mentioning her. in all cases
madness is a dreadful affliction – & in this instance it
is peculiarly dreadful. [8]
You are going to Lewes – I wish it were to
Portsmouth. the Lt
of H. M. S. Galatea would be
very glad to see you on board.
God bless you –
RS.
Good Friday.
Notes
* Endorsement:
Apr 8 1803
MS: Huntington Library, RS
34
Previously published: Kenneth Curry (ed.),
New Letters of Robert Southey, 2 vols
(London and New York, 1965), I, pp.
310-311. BACK
[1] HMS Galatea, a
32-gun Royal Navy frigate, bound for the West
Indies. BACK
[2] HMS Mercury, a
28-gun Royal Navy frigate, serving in the Eastern
Atlantic. BACK
[3] The influenza epidemic of 1803, which had been
especially virulent in England and France. BACK
[4] A Greek version of the Old Testament,
written in Alexandria (3rd-1st centuries BC). BACK
[5] Nonnus
(4th-5th centuries AD), Greek poet and author of the
epic Dionysiaca. BACK
[6] In later life, Elmsley
edited several of Sophocles’ (c. 497-406 BC) plays,
including Oedipus Tyrannus (1811) and
Oedipus Coloneus (1823). BACK
[7] Publius Vergilius Maro
(70-19 BC), Aeneid, Book 6, line 126:
‘descent is easy’. BACK
[8] Mary Lamb had been taken to an asylum in
Hoxton on 29 March. She was back home with her brother
by May 1803. BACK