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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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<idno type="nines">rce863</idno>
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<p>British Library, Add MS
                        30928.  Previously  published: Kenneth Curry (ed.),
                            New Letters of Robert Southey, 2 vols
                        (London and New York, 1965), I, pp.
                    335-336.</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
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											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
											English Department of Nottingham Trent University.</p>
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<div n="854" type="letter">
<head>854. Robert Southey to <ref target="people.html#DanversCharles">Charles
                        Danvers</ref>, <date when="1803-11-19">19 November
                        1803</date>
<note place="foot" resp="editors" type="headnote">Address: To/ Mr Danvers/ 4. Orchard
                        Street/ Bristol/ by favour of/ M<hi rend="sup">r</hi>
                        Clarkson.<lb/>MS: British Library, Add MS
                        30928<lb/>Previously published: Kenneth Curry (ed.),
                            <title>New Letters of Robert Southey</title>, 2 vols
                        (London and New York, 1965), I, pp.
                    335-336.</note>
</head>
<opener>
<dateline rend="right">
<date when="1803-11-19">Saturday night. Nov<hi rend="sup">r</hi> 19. 1803.</date>
</dateline>
<salute>Dear Charles</salute>
</opener>
<p rend="indent1"> In the hurry of <ref target="people.html#ClarksonThomas">Clarksons</ref>
                    sudden summons I have leisure to do little more than give
                    him his passport. Who he is you &amp; all the friends of the
                    abolition know. he <hi rend="ital">was</hi> a Clergyman, but
                    in his opinion is now Quakerish.<note n="1" place="foot" resp="editors">Though ordained as a deacon, Clarkson
                        renounced his orders in 1795 and was sympathetic to
                        Quakerism.</note>
</p>
<p rend="indent1"> The wine has not yet made its appearance. I
                    pray for it every day – or do something equivalent to
                    praying – that is – abstain from swearing at what I drink
                    instead, making hope teach patience to provocation. You
                    shall be paid by a draft on <ref target="people.html#LongmanThomas">Longman</ref> for my
                    work now in hand which will be done in February.</p>
<p rend="indent1"> Thelwall<note n="2" place="foot" resp="editors">John Thelwall (1764-1834;
                            <title>DNB</title>), radical orator, writer and
                        elocutionist.</note> is in this neighbourhood &amp; we
                    shall probably see him soon. he is thriving upon Lectures on
                    Elocution. actually thriving. we live in an odd world. they
                    were going to hang &amp; murder him for very intelligible
                    Jacobinism &amp; now when he rigmarolls them with a farrago
                    of what he does not understand himself it is Oh Rare John
                    Thelwall – and they give him three &amp; sixpence apiece.
                    but he is an honest fellow <del rend="strikethrough">x</del>
                    I have a great respect for him, &amp; never yet suffered an
                    Aristocrat to wag his tongue against him in my presence
                    giving him a set down.</p>
<p rend="indent1"> I will make time to tell you a most excellent
                    story of my friend Solomon.<note n="3" place="foot" resp="editors">Samuel Solomon (1768/9-1819;
                            <title>DNB</title>), manufacturer and promoter of
                        the best-selling quack medicine ‘Cordial Balm of
                        Gilead’. Southey met him on the boat to <ref target="places.html#Dublin">Dublin</ref> in
                        1802.</note> you know the Custom House Laws. If goods
                    for exportation be rated under their value to defraud the
                    revenue, the officers may seize them paying the price
                    whereat they were rated. D<hi rend="sup">r</hi> Solomon
                    enters a large cargo of Balm of Gilead for Lisbon, at 7s-6
                    per bottle. the selling price is half a guinea. The Custom
                    House Officer told him he was under-rating it, &amp; he
                    should seize it in consequence unless he amended the error.
                    do as you please Sir said the Doctor. I shall rate it at
                    7-6. The fellow bit – seized the whole, paid three
                    half-crowns a bottle – &amp; remained with a stock in hand
                    of Balm of Gilead. Solomon tried the trick again, but it
                    would not answer.</p>
<closer>
<salute rend="indent1">
<ref target="people.html#FrickerEdith">Ediths</ref>
                        remembrance.</salute>
<salute rend="indent2"> God bless you.</salute>
<salute rend="indent3"> yrs very affectionately</salute>
<signed rend="indent4"> R Southey.</signed>
</closer>
<postscript>
<p rend="indent1"> Remember me to Betty.<note n="4" place="foot" resp="editors">Danvers’ servant; her
                            first name and dates are unknown.</note>
</p>
<p rend="indent1"> Have you seen Joe lately? &amp; my poor
                            Cupid!<note n="5" place="foot" resp="editors">Joe
                            had been Tom Southey’s dog; and Cupid was a dog
                            belonging to Charles Danvers.</note> poor fellow I
                        believe he loved me as well as if I had been his own
                        brother.</p>
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