782. Robert Southey to Thomas Southey,
12 May 1803
*
Dear Tom
Joe [1] arrived safely before your
letter. he knew the house very well – but took no kind of
notice of me. his first thing was to attack Cupid [2] – then to lift up his leg in the kitchen.
& now he is gone vagabonding. he shall be taken care
off
Stuart has not
had room to insert the history of the bottle [3] – but has promised to do it as soon as he
can. he had a similar account some months since. the bottle
was thrown in half way to America & found at the
Highlands – I know not the time or latitude. After the Kings
birthday [4] my poems will go in almost
daily. [5] You will see some more in the manner of
Garci Ferrandez. [6]
Two volumes of Amadis are printed. [7] the
other two both begun – & will go on with less delay than
the former as I have directed all the proofs to go to Wynn for
franking. I should think you may receive a copy in six
weeks. I shall this day write to demand payment, which has
been delayed – tho by the written terms of our agreement it
was to be made upon delivery of the whole manuscript. I am
not pleased at this delay. The book is talked of &
expected in London in a manner which may perhaps
considerably influence the sale
Thank you for the song [8] – tho I
should have liked it better in print. that Cross [9] I take to be a man of
Bath who lived in Kingsmead Street & in the year 90
& 91 wrote verses by the thousand in pamphlets &
volumes & newspapers & magazines all deadilily
bad.
The books for Tom Southey are finished all
excepting one. Emery & Adams [10] have bound them very
neatly – Barry [11] has made a
tawdry business of the Chatterton. they will come dearer
than he was aware of, my Operas being of some extent. Amadis
will make 12 volumes of my Operas of the same size. & I
expect to write for Stuart tales enough to make one day a
volume under this title, Romances & Poems of Spanish
History. [12] I have already above
six hundred lines.
Poor Bella [13] is gone home at last. I am very sorry that
she is gone & very sorry for the cause. she is in a
wretched state of health, & will die at last of
consumption. We may get a better servant – but not easily
one whom I shall like so well.
This evening we go to the Morgans –
where I have no intention – if I can help it of staying
supper – because –. Bristol has been inconvenienced by the
stoppage of Saverys [14]
bank – which now however goes on again. Puss is daily
expected to lie in – the effect of bad company &
wall-walking. Cupid is incorrigible in spite of daily
beatings he retains his love of fowls & mutton &
will certainly one day get shot. which I am very sorry for it for he <is > is a worthy feller –
I never saw a more affectionate dog. – Joe is just
returned.
Margaret grows & almost talks. she has a
tooth just making its appearance. she continues to observe
the fifth Commandment, [15] the only one which I
consider as binding upon her. Cupid is her darling
delight.
War seems inevitable [16] – & yet God knows what it is all about.
today may perhaps decide the question – this week certainly
must. remember you catch Jeremy [17] coming over.
Massena [18] has said he
would willingly sacrifice eight fleets of transport with 50,000 men
on board each to get land
the ninth. this news Stock [19] heard at
Paris & it is true. Well said Master Massena! but I
suspect that if Bonaparte [20] should lose one cargo the French will
not let him send out another. – I expect more books from
Lisbon. the worst thing the war can do for me will be to
turn the English out of Portugal – Zounds what a calamity
would that be to my poor history. I mean to go over next
year – & a disappointment would half break my heart.
Ediths love.
she & all are well. I have been much plagued with
diabetes & am under Kings care for it – taking soap & soda –
& the sulphat of iron.
God bless you –
R Southey.
May 12. 1803.
2 Joan of Arc
2 Poems.
2 Thalaba
2 Anthologys
4 Amadis [21]
Notes
* Address: To/
Lieutenant Southey/ H. M. S. Galatea./ Portsmouth./
Single
Postmark: [partial] AY 13 1803
MS:
British Library, Add MS
30927
Unpublished. BACK
[3] A bottle containing a letter
that was thrown off ship-board by Tom Southey; see
Southey to Thomas Southey, 22 April 1803, Letter
775. BACK
[4] George
III’s (1738-1820, King of Great Britain 1760-1820)
birthday was 4 June. BACK
[5] This was
an exaggeration. Southey published eleven poems in the
Morning Post, July-December
1803. BACK
[6] ‘Garci Ferrandez’ was dated ‘Bristol, 1801’ in
Southey’s final edition of his Poetical
Works, 10 vols (London, 1837-1838), VI, p.
121. However, it does not seem to have been published
until nearly a decade after its composition, appearing
in the Edinburgh Annual Register for
1809, 2 vols (Edinburgh 1811), II, pp.
637-641. BACK
[7] Southey’s translation of
Amadis of Gaul (1803). BACK
[9] John Cartwright Cross (d.
1809), playwright and poet. BACK
[10] The Bristol bookselling and printing
business Emery and Adams. BACK
[11] Possibly the Bristol bookbinder, printer and stationer
Bartholomew Barry (fl. 1790s-1830s). BACK
[12] This
project did not materialise. BACK
[13] The Southeys’ servant, she died in
1804. BACK
[14] Harris and Savery of Narrow Wine St, Bristol. BACK
[15]
Exodus 20: 12, ‘Honour thy
father and thy mother’. BACK
[16] Britain declared war on France on 18 May
1803. BACK
[18] Andre
Massena (1758-1817), French general. BACK
[19] John Edmonds Stock (1774-1835), radical,
Unitarian and doctor. He was an assistant to Thomas
Beddoes at the Preventive Medical Institution for the
Benefit of the Sick and Drooping Poor in Bristol
(formerly the Pneumatic Institute). BACK
[20] Napoleon Bonaparte (1769-1821, First
Consul 1799-1804, Emperor of the French
1804-1814). BACK
[21] 2 Joan
... Amadis: Inserted in another hand. BACK