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<title type="main">The Collected Letters of Robert Southey. Part 2: 1798-1803 </title>
<title type="subordinate">A Romantic Circles Electronic Edition</title>
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<name>Southey, Robert, 1774-1843</name>
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<editor>Lynda Pratt</editor>
<sponsor>Romantic Circles</sponsor>
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<resp>General Editor, </resp>
<name>Neil Fraistat</name>
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<resp>General Editor, </resp>
<name>Steven E. Jones</name>
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<name>Laura Mandell</name>
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<date>2011-08-15</date>
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<idno type="nines">rce393</idno>
<idno type="edition">letterEEd.26.384</idno>
<publisher>Romantic Circles, http://www.rc.umd.edu, University of Maryland</publisher>
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<date when="2011-08-15">August 15, 2011</date>
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<sourceDesc>
<p>Beinecke Library, GEN MSS 298, Series I, Box 1,
                        folder 14.  Not previously published.</p>
<p>These letters were edited with the assistance of Carol Bolton, Tim Fulford and Ian Packer</p>
<p>For permission to publish the text of MSS in their possession, the editor wishes to thank the Beinecke Rare
											Books and Manuscript Library, Yale University; Berg Collection of English and American Literature, The New
											York Public Library, Astor, Lenox and Tilden Foundations; the Bodleian Library Oxford University; the
											British Library; Boston Public Library; the Syndics of Cambridge University Library; the Syndics of the
											Fitzwilliam Museum Cambridge; Haverford College, Connecticut; the Historical Society of Pennsylvania; the
											Hornby Library, Liverpool Libraries and Information Services; the Houghton Library, Harvard University;
											the John Rylands Library, Manchester; the Kenneth Spencer Research Library, University of Kansas; Luton
											Museum (Bedfordshire County Council); Massachusetts Historical Society; McGill University Library; the
											National Library of Scotland; the Newberry Library, Chicago; the New York Public Library (Pforzheimer
											Collections); the Pierpont Morgan Library, New York; the Public Record Offices of Bedford, Suffolk (Bury
											St Edmunds) and Northumberland, the Master and Fellows of Trinity College, Cambridge; the Society of
											Antiquaries of Newcastle upon Tyne; the Trustees of the William Salt Library, Stafford, the Wisbech and
											Fenland Museum; the University of Virginia Library.</p>
<p>A research grant from the British Academy made much of the archival work possible, as did support from the
											English Department of Nottingham Trent University.</p>
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<div n="384" type="letter">
<head>384. Robert Southey to <ref target="people.html#MayJohn">John May</ref>, <date when="1799-02-26">26 February
                        1799</date>
<note place="foot" resp="editors" type="headnote">Address: To/ John May Esq<hi rend="sup">r</hi>/ 4 Bedford Square/ London/
                        Single<lb/>Stamped: [illegible]<lb/>Postmark: [partial]
                        FE/ 27/ 99<lb/>Endorsement: 1799 N<hi rend="sup">o</hi>
                        32/ Robert Southey/ No place 26 Feb<hi rend="sup">y</hi>:/ rec<hi rend="sup">d</hi>: 27 d<hi rend="sup">o</hi>/ans<hi rend="sup">d</hi>: 28 d<hi rend="sup">o</hi>
<lb/>MS: Beinecke Library, GEN MSS 298, Series I, Box 1,
                        folder 14<lb/>Unpublished.</note>
</head>
<opener>
<dateline rend="right">
<date when="1799-02-26">Tuesday 26. Feb<hi rend="sup">y</hi>. 99.</date>
</dateline>
<salute>My dear friend</salute>
</opener>
<p rend="indent1"> My books are at last done, &amp; will I trust
                    be sent off this evening. I shall desire <ref target="people.html#CarlisleAnthony">Carlisle</ref> to
                    send yours, that one parcel may serve.</p>
<p rend="indent1"> You probably guessed the reason of my not
                    visiting town the last term. the extreme inclemency of the
                    weather &amp; my own state of health, prevented me; I was
                    not well enough to go from home with comfort, or to endure
                    the fatigue of so long a journey. since the frost has broke
                    I find myself materially better – I have shaken off many of
                    my most uncomfortable symptoms, &amp; hope now, by paying my
                    chief attention to my health during this summer, to be
                    enabled to pay no attention at all to it in the winter.</p>
<p rend="indent1"> From <ref target="people.html#HillHerbertUncle">my Uncle</ref> I
                    have heard nothing since I saw you. An acquaintance<note n="1" place="foot" resp="editors">Unidentified.</note>
                    of <ref target="people.html#TylerElizabeth">Miss Tyler</ref>
                    has a son at Lisbon, who writes word that <ref target="people.html#HillHerbertUncle">my Uncle</ref> has
                    been very ill but is recovering. I wrote to <ref target="people.html#ThomasDr">D<hi rend="sup">r</hi>
                        Thomas</ref> upon <ref target="people.html#TylerElizabeth">Miss Tylers</ref>
                    affairs, almost in the words of the copy you saw. he did not
                    reply, nor was it either necessary or expected that he
                    should. something will probably be done. at least he knows
                    what it is that is wanting.</p>
<p rend="indent1">
<ref target="people.html#SoutheyHenryHerbert">Harry</ref>
                    writes in terms of much satisfaction with his new
                        situation.<note n="2" place="foot" resp="editors">Henry
                        Herbert Southey had become a pupil at the school run by
                        Michael Maurice.</note> I have written to <ref target="people.html#MauriceMichael">M<hi rend="sup">r</hi> Maurice</ref> respecting the bent of his
                    studies, &amp; to himself also, requesting him to pay
                    particular attention to mathematics. I desired him likewise
                    to apply to French, as he is not yet too old to attain a
                    facility in speaking it, &amp; as, if he ever graduates, it
                    will I hope be at a foreign University, which to me appears
                    on every account preferable to Edinburgh. At Gottingen or
                    Leyden a man must in his own defence acquire the language of
                    the country; the proportion of <del rend="strikethrough">his</del> English students being small the less danger
                    is there of evil example, &amp; in general young men who go
                    there, go seriously to pursue their studies.</p>
<p rend="indent1"> M<hi rend="sup">r</hi> Grenville whose fate
                    is so doubtful is <ref target="people.html#WynnCharlesWW">Wynns</ref> Uncle. he has also a brother on board the
                        Proserpine.<note n="3" place="foot" resp="editors">The
                        frigate <hi rend="ital">Proserpine</hi> had been wrecked
                        off Heligoland on 31 January 1799. Its passengers
                        included Wynn’s older brother, Sir Watkin Williams Wynn
                        (1772–1840; <title>DNB</title>), and uncle, Thomas
                        Grenville (1755–1846). Both survived the
                        shipwreck.</note> they have every reason, he tells me,
                    to hope they are landed, but are still in a state of
                    dreadful suspense.</p>
<p rend="indent1"> I am very glad you like my play plot.<note n="4" place="foot" resp="editors">Southey’s proposed
                        tragedy ‘The Days of Queen Mary’; see
                            <title>Common-Place Book</title>, ed. John Wood
                        Warter, 4 series (London, 1849–1850), IV, pp.
                        190–192.</note> I have one doubt respecting it – the
                    popularity of its subject. will an audience feel with its
                    personages? is there not so much worldly interest, or
                    indifference upon such subjects, that the feelings actuating
                    my leading characters will be coldly comprehended &amp;
                    thought unnatural or ridiculous. <ref target="people.html#WynnCharlesWW">Wynn</ref> seems to
                    think the advantages of the story overbalance this
                    objection, which yet he allows to be weighty. I cannot
                    satisfy myself with a beginning. excepting this I understand
                    the story well &amp; how to develope it.</p>
<p rend="indent1"> I have met with the title of a French poem,
                    from the way in which it was mentioned it seems to have been
                    but an indifferent one, which must resemble the plan of my
                        Kalendar.<note n="5" place="foot" resp="editors">The
                        ‘Kalendar’, a sequence modelled on Ovid’s (43 BC–AD 17)
                            <title>Fasti</title>, was never completed.</note>
                    L’Almanac Chantant de M. Nau.<note n="6" place="foot" resp="editors">M. Nau (first name and dates unknown),
                            <title>Almanach Chantant</title> (1750).</note> it
                    must have appeared somewhere about 1750, &amp; cannot I
                    should imagine be very scarce. will you be good enough to
                    enquire for it as you occasionally may pass any of the old
                    French booksellers. I have derived much benefit in reading
                    bad poems (of the Epic kind) by learning what to avoid,
                    &amp; sometimes found a pearl in the dunghill.</p>
<p rend="indent1"> One of <ref target="people.html#ColeridgeSamuelTaylor">Coleridges</ref> children is dead.<note n="7" place="foot" resp="editors">Berkeley Coleridge had died
                        on 10 February 1799.</note>
<ref target="people.html#FrickerSarah">M<hi rend="sup">rs</hi> C.</ref> has been with us lately, for a
                    fortnight. he is expected to return in May. she has received
                    a very kind letter from <ref target="people.html#ColeridgeGeorge">George
                        Coleridge</ref> I hear.</p>
<p rend="indent1"> I shall probably pass the interval between
                    the two next terms with <ref target="people.html#BedfordGrosvenorCharles">Bedford</ref>, &amp; in that case shall have frequent
                    opportunities of seeing you. – my Almanac of the Muses<note n="8" place="foot" resp="editors">A working title for
                        the <title>Annual Anthology</title>, the first volume of
                        which appeared in 1799.</note> will soon go to the press
                    – pity me for being unable to find a better title – but this
                    is the title of the French &amp; German collections, &amp;
                    it will be an advantage to have this collection recognized
                        <del rend="strikethrough">there</del> on the
                    continent.</p>
<closer>
<salute rend="indent1"> &lt;<ref target="people.html#FrickerEdith">Edith</ref>
                        desires to be remembered.&gt; God bless you. </salute>
<salute rend="indent2"> yrs affectionately</salute>
<signed rend="indent3"> R Southey.</signed>
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