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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>
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<date>2011-08-15</date>
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<idno type="edition">letterEEd.26.781</idno>
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<date when="2011-08-15">August 15, 2011</date>
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<sourceDesc>
<p>Houghton Library,
                        bMS Eng 265.1 (9).  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
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											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
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<p>A research grant from the British Academy made much of the archival work possible, as did support from the
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<div n="781" type="letter">
<head>781. Robert Southey to <ref target="people.html#BedfordGrosvenorCharles">Grosvenor Charles Bedford</ref>, <date when="1803-05-09">9 May
                        1803</date>
<note place="foot" resp="editors" type="headnote">Address: To/ G.
                        C. Bedford Esq<hi rend="sup">r</hi>/ Exchequer/ Westminster/ Single<lb/>
                        Postmarks: BRISTOL/ MAY 9 1803; B/ MAY 11/ 1803<lb/>MS: Houghton Library,
                        bMS Eng 265.1 (9)<lb/>Unpublished.</note>
</head>
<p rend="indent5"> Kehama. 2.</p>
<p rend="indent5"> _____</p>
<lb/>
<lg type="stanza">
<l rend="indent3"> A moment, doubtful of the sound,</l>
<l rend="indent2"> She listened till the sound was heard no more ..</l>
<l rend="indent2"> Then – what a thrilling shriek! – she rushes on.</l>
<l rend="indent2"> The darkness &amp; the wood impede her way –</l>
<l rend="indent4"> She lifts her voice again</l>
<l rend="indent4"> “Laderlad!” .. &amp; again –</l>
<l rend="indent2"> A tone oerstrained to hoarseness. can he hear</l>
<l rend="indent2"> And answer not that agonizing call?</l>
<l rend="indent4"> ‘Laderlad!’ – far away</l>
<l rend="indent4"> Selfish in misery</l>
<l rend="indent2"> He heard the call &amp; faster sped his flight.</l>
</lg>
<lb/>
<lg type="stanza">
<l rend="indent2"> She leans against that tree whose jutting bough</l>
<l rend="indent3"> Smote her so rudely. her poor heart</l>
<l rend="indent4"> How audibly it pants!</l>
<l rend="indent3"> Her breath how short &amp; painful!</l>
<l rend="indent3"> Hark! all is still around her –</l>
<l rend="indent3"> And the night so utterly dark!</l>
<l rend="indent3"> She opened her eyes &amp; she closed them</l>
<l rend="indent3"> And the blackness &amp; blank were the same.</l>
</lg>
<lb/>
<lg type="stanza">
<l rend="indent3"> The howl of the Tyger wakened her</l>
<l rend="indent3"> From that strange &amp; deathy dreaminess,</l>
<l rend="indent3"> She starts – &amp; her head instinctively</l>
<l rend="indent4"> Turnd to the terrible sound.</l>
<l rend="indent5"> Far off the Tyger howld.</l>
<l rend="indent2"> A nearer horror met the Maidens view.</l>
<l rend="indent3"> There stood before her a dim form,</l>
<l rend="indent2"> A human form amid the darkness shaped.</l>
<l rend="indent4"> Dim-lighted like the haze</l>
<l rend="indent4"> That sweeps athwart the sky</l>
<l rend="indent2"> When the red moon looks ominous in heaven.</l>
</lg>
<lb/>
<lg type="stanza">
<l rend="indent4"> That spectre form had fixd</l>
<l rend="indent4"> His eyes upon her full;</l>
<l rend="indent4"> The light which shone in them</l>
<l rend="indent4"> Was like a light from Hell,</l>
<l rend="indent2"> And it grew deeper, kindling as they gazed.</l>
<l rend="indent4"> She could not turn her looks</l>
<l rend="indent4"> From that infernal gaze.</l>
<l rend="indent4"> It fixd &amp; fastened them, . .</l>
<l rend="indent4"> It palsied ever power ..</l>
<l rend="indent4"> Sense – memory – thought were gone –</l>
<l rend="indent2"> She heard not now the Tygers louder howl –</l>
<l rend="indent3"> She thought not on her father now –</l>
<l rend="indent4"> Her cold hearts blood ran back –</l>
<l rend="indent2"> Her hand lay senseless on the bough she claspd</l>
<l rend="indent4"> Her feet were motionless,</l>
<l rend="indent4"> Her fascinated eyes</l>
<l rend="indent2"> Like the stone eyeballs of a statue fixd –</l>
<l rend="indent2"> Yet conscious of the sight that blasted them.</l>
</lg>
<lb/>
<lg type="stanza">
<l rend="indent4"> The wind is abroad,</l>
<l rend="indent4"> It scatters the clouds,</l>
<l rend="indent3"> The darkness drives before it,</l>
<l rend="indent3"> The stars shine out in their beauty,</l>
<l rend="indent3"> And the moon is bright &amp; full.</l>
<l rend="indent3"> Distinct &amp; darkening in her beams</l>
<l rend="indent4"> That spectre form appears,</l>
<l rend="indent2"> The moon light gives to view his form &amp; face,</l>
<l rend="indent2"> The living face &amp; form of Arvalan,</l>
<l rend="indent3"> His hands are spread to clasp her –</l>
<l rend="indent4"> As if a lightning stroke</l>
<l rend="indent4"> Had broke the spell of fear,</l>
<l rend="indent4"> All franticly she flew.</l>
</lg>
<lb/>
<lg type="stanza">
<l rend="indent4"> By the way side there stood</l>
<l rend="indent2"> An open Temple of the Travellers friend –</l>
<l rend="indent4"> Thither she sped her flight,</l>
<l rend="indent3"> And now upon the holy ground –<note n="1" place="foot" resp="editors">A moment, doubtful … ground –: Verse written in double
                            columns. An early draft of Book 2 of <title>The Curse of
                            Kehama</title>.</note>
</l>
<l rend="indent2"> Yea even before the altar of the God</l>
<l rend="indent3"> Hath Arvalan with arm of flesh </l>
<l rend="indent3"> Seizd her for vengeance, even then</l>
<l rend="indent3"> In her extremest agony</l>
<l rend="indent2"> Did Kalyal feel his fleshly hold relax.</l>
<l rend="indent4"> She tarried not to see</l>
<l rend="indent2"> How Pollear the insulted had put forth</l>
<l rend="indent4"> His angry power to save –</l>
<l rend="indent2"> Breathless &amp; faint her tottering feet run on –</l>
<l rend="indent2"> They strike the root of yonder Manchineel</l>
<l rend="indent3"> She falls beneath the poison tree.</l>
</lg>
<lb/>
<p rend="indent3"> Thus endeth the second Book</p>
<p rend="indent5"> of</p>
<p rend="indent3"> The Curse of Kehama.</p>
<p rend="indent5"> __</p>
<lb/>
<p rend="indent1"> The next book – that is as far as written, shall not be so long
                    on its way.</p>
<p rend="indent1"> I am making history,<note n="2" place="foot" resp="editors">Southey’s uncompleted ‘History of Portugal’.</note> making verses, making
                    lime &amp; making water, all in very great abundance. I should be worth a Kings
                    ransom to a besieged town where the cisterns had failed – or to supply a canal
                    in a hot summer – or to furnish a spring tide extraordinary for launching an
                    East Indiaman in the middle of the moon or to try the effect of irrigation upon
                    the great Zahara.<note n="3" place="foot" resp="editors">The Sahara
                        desert.</note>
</p>
<p rend="indent1"> Perhaps &amp; probably I shall visit London next month, these
                    Chronicles fascinate me to a great chair – &amp; I ought to be all day upon my
                    legs instead of my great chair.</p>
<p rend="indent1"> The third book shall come soon for it will cast a strong light
                    upon the story</p>
<closer>
<salute rend="indent1"> God bless you –</salute>
<signed rend="indent2"> R S.</signed>
<lb/>
<date when="1803-05-09">Tuesday. May 9. 1803.</date>
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