862. Robert Southey to John May, [7-8 December
1803]
*
My dear friend
I have directed Longman &
Rees to send to
Tavistock Street (No 4 I think) a copy
of Amadis [1] for my Uncle
which you will have the goodness to ship off when you find
an opportunity. I have received two letters from him within
the last three days, both are wholly collectanea of
information de Historiâ & præterea nihil. [2]
My articles in the Annual Review [3] as far as I can
recollect what are noticeable are the Travels & Voyages
of Sauer – Mackenzie – Acerbi – Olivier & Fischer.
Pallas & Mrs Guthrie. The Life of
Lord Walpole. The Tesoro Español – Ketts Lectures (I forget
the exact title of that shallow book) & the Periodical
Accounts of the Baptist Mission. There are sundry smaller
articles or less interesting which I cannot call to mind –
among them Poetry by the author of Gebir – a French book on
the origin of printing – Memoirs of Le Kain &c. [4] I saw
the book only by accident at Bristol & cannot direct you
so well where to look for what is time-worthy – except that
the book of Chasteaubriand [5] is reviewed by Mrs Barbauld – the queer author of Atala
who to shew the Beauties of Xtianity calls the Almighty the
Great Monk of the Universe – the eternal old Batchelor. you
will trace William
Taylor in Pinkertons Geography, & in the
Statistics. [6]
Harry
tried his hand upon Soulavie [7] – with what
success I know not, for it was not told me till too late to
examine.
In this years batch I have found it necessary
to chastise ignorance & knavery with a very heavy hand.
you will I think find some good & most just ridicule
& some honest indignation in the next volume. I am now
upon the history of the Methodists – & of the Methodist
Mission. [8] I look upon myself as a very good
Reviewer, never losing sight of my text – pointing out
always what is valuable, & sometimes enlivening what is
dull. but it is dull work – & when I lay aside
Madoc [9] or the History of Portugal [10] to write for a Review – if
I were a Catholic I should expect it to be set down to my
mortification count score.
on the creditor side of my account with Heaven.
––––
Thursday night.
Thus far had I written yesterday immediately
on receiving yours. this evening there arrives a letter
inclosing a draft on me for five pounds thirteen drawn by
my brother
Edward – the letter by the hand writing comes from
some low tradesman – it is dated Exeter & says that Edward informed
the writer I was duly advised & requests it may be
accepted & returned by return of post. it had been
directed to Bristol. I am very much disturbd &
distressed by this circumstance. For what he can have
incurred the expence God knows. & for a boy of fifteen
to be taking up money in my name is a thing which must not
be permitted. You know as much of his situation as I do,
& if he be at Mr Barhams [11] by
invitation to spend his Xmas his washing bills are all the
expences he need incur. I know not what to do & never
stood so much in need of advice. my first feeling was
immediately to return the draft unaccepted, that the boy may
feel the consequences of his ill conduct immediately – for
sure I am in my own mind that he must be made to feel sooner
or later, & that if he be now encouraged to rely on me I
shall never be safe. – On consulting with Coleridge I
have done this – & have told the holder of the draft
that not knowing the cause or occasion I could not conceive
what circumstances could have justified a respectable
tradesman in cashing a draft for a boy just <of> fifteen. –
& I have said to Edward that he ought to know as I would always
exert myself to the utmost to serve him & assist him in
any worthy pursuit, so he ought to be sure that I would
never become an accomplice in any immoral action by giving
my after sanction. this lesson will teach him that I can act
decidedly.
Could I with propriety have detained the
draft I should have awaited your advice. as that could not
be I think what has been done is on the whole best – painful
as it is. He can have no excuse for what he has done, having
without my knowledge & against my known opinion quitted
the situation in which I had placed him. [12] clothes he could
not want having been fitted for the navy in August &
having a new plain suit just before, & being by his own
account at a private house he can have no justifiable
expence to that amount. the holder of the draft says Edward told him
I was advised – this was not the case – the boy thought to
take me by surprize. I feel confident that if I had in this
instance yielded he would have imagined me in his power
& proceeded from bad to worse. As it now stands the
lesson will <can> only
frighten him – the man must take back whatever he has
entrusted him with – & deserves some loss for having
accepted a draft from a boy. – I thought to have ended the
letter very differently but thus it is I am plagued &
thus it will continue to be. It was my Uncles
& Mothers fate before me.
God bless you.
RS.
Notes* Address: To/ John May Esqr/ Richmond/ Surry/ Single Stamped:
KESWICK/ 298 Postmarks: E/ DEC 12/ 1803; 10 o’Clock/
DE. 12/ 1803 F.N. Endorsement: No. 90 1803/ Robert Southey/ No date/ recd. 12th Decr/ ansd. 13th do
MS:
Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center, University of
Texas, Austin Previously published: Charles Ramos,
The Letters of Robert Southey to John May:
1797–1838 (Austin, Texas, 1976), pp. 88-89
[dated 12 December 1803]. Dating note: Dated from
internal evidence; letter was begun on 7 December and
continued on Thursday 8 December 1803. BACK [1] Southey’s
translation of Amadis of Gaul
(1803). BACK [2] The Latin translates as
‘Collections from various sources on History and nothing
else’. BACK [3]
Annual Review for
1802, 1 (1803). BACK [4] Southey reviewed the
following in the Annual Review for 1802,
1 (1803): Martin Sauer (dates unknown), An
Account of a Geographical and Astronomical
Expedition to the Northern Parts of Russia Performed
by Joseph Billings in the Years 1785-1796
(1802), 7-17; Alexander MacKenzie (1763/4-1820;
DNB), Voyages from Montreal,
on the River St Laurence, through the Continent of
North America, to the Frozen and Pacific Oceans in
the Years 1789 and 1793 (1802), 18-30; Peter
Simon Pallas (1741-1811), Travels through the
Southern Provinces of the Russian Empire, in the
Years 1793 and 1794 (1802), 66-73; Maria
Guthrie (dates unknown), A Tour Performed in the
Years 1795-6, through the Taurida, or Crimea
(1802), 62-66; Giuseppi Acerbi (1773-1846),
Travels through Sweden, Finland and Lapland,
to the North Cape, in the Years 1798 and
1799 (1802), 45-56; Guillaume Antoine
Olivier (1756-1814), Travels in the Ottoman
Empire, Egypt and Persia (1801), 89-101;
Periodical Accounts Relative to the Baptist
Missionary Society (1800-1801), 207-218;
Augustin Louis Josse (1763-1841; DNB),
El Tesoro Espanol o Biblioteca Portatil
Espanola (1802), 557-566; William Coxe
(1748-1828; DNB), Memoirs of
Horatio, Lord Walpole (1802), 599-601;
Pierre Lambinet (1742-1813), Recherches
Historiques, Litteraires et Critiques sur l’Origine
de l’Imprimerie (1799), 704-711; Henri Louis
Cain (1728-1778), Memoires de Henri Louis Le
Kain (1801), 595-599; Poetry by the
Author of Gebir (1802), 663-666; Frederick
Augustus Fischer (1771-1829), Travels in Spain in
1797 and 1798 (1802), 35-43; and Henry Kett
(1761-1825; DNB), Elements of
General Knowledge, Introductory to Useful Books in
the Principal Branches of Literature and
Science (1802), 579-584. Southey does not
name the review attributed to him in Charles Cuthbert
Southey, Life and Correspondence of Robert
Southey, 6 vols (London, 1849-1850), VI, p.
398 of Francis Wrangham (1769-1842; DNB),
Poems (1802), 655-657. BACK [5] Francois-Rene de Chateaubriand
(1768-1848), author of Atala (1801). His
Genie du Christianisme ou Beautes de la
Religion Chretienne (1802) was reviewed in
Annual Review for 1802, 1 (1803),
247-255. BACK [6] John
Pinkerton (1758-1826; DNB), Modern
Geography (1802), reviewed in Annual
Review for 1802, 1 (1803), 437-448 and all
the works in the section on ‘Statistics’,
413-436. BACK [7] Jean-Louis Giraud-Soulavie (1751-1813),
Historical and Political Memoirs of Louis
XVI (1802), Annual Review for
1802, 1 (1803), 308-311. BACK [8] William
Myles (1756-1828), A Chronological History of the
People called Methodists (1803),
Annual Review for 1803, 2 (1804),
201-213. Southey may also be referring (inaccurately) to
London Missionary Society, Transactions of the
Missionary Society (1803), which he reviewed
in Annual Review for 1803, 2 (1804),
189-201. BACK [9] Southey had
completed a version of Madoc in 1797-1799
and was revising it for publication. It did not appear
until 1805. BACK [10] Southey’s uncompleted
‘History of Portugal’. BACK [11] John Barham Foster-Barham
(1763-1822), a wealthy merchant in the West India trade
and partner in Plummer, Barham & Co. How Edward
Southey had made his acquaintance is unclear. BACK [12] On the brig-sloop HMS Suffisante. BACK |
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