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            <div type="letters">
                <head>Prophets in Southey’s Manuscripts and Correspondence</head>
                <p rend="noCount">The excerpts from Southey’s manuscripts and letters presented here disclose his
                    continued interest in, and personal knowledge of, the prophets of his era—Bryan,
                    Brothers, Southcott. They also show that he based some of his fictional
                    characters on them—the prophet Neolin, in <title>Madoc</title>, being based on
                    Brothers. Most of the letters date from the period when he was writing
                        <title>Letters from England by Don Manuel Alvarez Espriella</title> (1807),
                    and reveal the research he undertook for that volume: he even planned to visit
                    Southcott at home and Brothers in the asylum. The manuscript passages are from
                    the working draft of <title>Letters from England</title> now kept at Chetham’s
                    Library, Manchester; they reveal that the account published in 1807 differed in
                    wording and in the order of the sections discussing prophecy.</p>
                <list><head>
                    <hi rend="bold">Robert Southey to William Taylor</hi>
                </head>
                <item>Date: <date when="1805-04-09">9 April 1805</date></item>
                <item>Address: To/ M<hi rend="sup">r</hi> W<hi rend="sup">m</hi> Taylor Jun<hi
                        rend="sup">r</hi>./ Surry Street/ Norwich</item>
                <item>Location: Huntington Library, HM 4873 </item>
                <item>Published: <title>A Memoir of the Life and Writings of the late William Taylor,
                        of Norwich</title>, ed. J. W. Robberds, 2 vols (London, 1843)</item></list>
                <p rend="noCount">Neolin is the common mixture of rogue &amp; madman to be found in all from
                        Zerdasht<note n="1" place="foot" resp="editor">Zoroaster, Zarathustra: the
                        Persian prophet, born over a thousand years before Jesus, who founded the
                        religion of Zoroastrianism. One of Southey’s earliest schemes was to write
                        epic poems on all the world’s major religions and mythologies, including
                        Zoroastrianism, about which he had read in Bernard Picart’s <title>Cérémonies
                            et coutumes religieuses de tous les peuples du monde</title> (1723-43)
                        and in the 1771 French translation of the <title>Avesta</title> by
                        Abraham-Hyacinthe Anquetil Du Perron. He never fulfilled this
                        purpose.</note> to <ref target="people.html#BrothersRichard">Richard
                        Brothers</ref>, with the courage &amp; presence of mind of Mohammed.</p>
                <ab rendition="#horizontalRule" />
                <list><head>
                    <hi rend="bold">Robert Southey to John Rickman</hi>
                </head>
                <item>Date: <date when="1806-03-19">19 March [1806]</date> [dating from JR’s
                    endorsement]</item>
                <item>Address: To/ John Rickman Esqr </item>
                <item>Location: Huntington Library, RS 86</item>
                <item>Published: <title>Selections from the Letters of Robert Southey</title>, ed. J.
                    W. Warter, 4 vols (London, 1856).</item></list>
                <p rend="noCount">Besides the Asiatic fables are full of resemblances to Xtianity, which have been
                    advanced by Dupuis &amp; Volney<note n="2" place="foot" resp="editor">Charles
                        François Dupuis (1742-1809), French scientist and politician, who published
                        his extensive, twelve volume, <title>Origine de tous les Cultes, ou la
                            Réligion Universelle</title> in 1795, positing the common origin of all
                        astronomical and religious mythologies. He continued this argument in his
                            <title>Mémoire Explicatif du Zodiaque, Chronologique et
                            Mythologique</title> (1806); Constantin François de Chassebœuf, Comte de
                        Volney (1757-1820), French philosopher, historian and orientalist, who
                        predicted the union of the world's religions in recognition of their shared
                        common truths in <title>Les Ruines, ou Méditations sur les Révolutions des
                            Empires</title> (1791).</note> on the one hand to prove that the whole
                    is astronomical allegory, — &amp; by Maurice &amp; Halhed<note n="3"
                        place="foot" resp="editor">Thomas Maurice (1754-1824), oriental scholar and
                        historian, who published <title level="m">Indian Antiquities</title> (1792-1796) with the polemical
                        intent of defending the historicity of the Bible against the French
                        scholars, Dupuis and Volney, who argued that all the world's religious myths
                        were allegorical; Nathaniel Brassey Halhed (1751-1830), orientalist and
                        philologist, who saw aspects of Hinduism as anticipated by Biblical
                        tradition.</note> on the other to show that the mysteries of Religion were
                    revealed to the Patriarchs. These gentlemen should first have enquired <del>to
                        all of these xxxxxxxxx xxxxx xxx the xxxxx &lt;xxxx&gt;</del> &lt;when&gt;
                    this trade in <del>xxxxxxxxx</del> mythology was carried on.</p>
                <p rend="noCount"> If there be any one thing in which the world has decidedly regenerated it is in
                    the breed of Heresiarchs. They were really great men in former times, devoting
                    great knowledge &amp; powerful talents to great purposes. In our days they are
                    either arrant mad men, or half rogues who pick out the worst parts of the
                    established creed. I am about to be the S<hi rend="sup">t</hi> Epiphanius<note
                        n="4" place="foot" resp="editor">Saint Epiphanius (ca. 310-403), Bishop of
                        Salamis, compiled a huge compendium of heresies.</note> of Richard Brothers
                    &amp; <ref target="people.html#SouthcottJoanna">Joanna Southcote</ref> — what
                    say you to paying these worthies a visit some morning? the former is sure to be
                    at home Haslam<note n="5" place="foot" resp="editor">John Haslam (1764-1844),
                        surgeon-apothecary at Bethlem Lunatic Asylum (Bedlam).</note> would
                    introduce us, &amp; we might get <del>xxx</del> &lt;Gods Nephew to give us
                    his&gt; opinion of Joanna. I know some of his witnesses &amp; could enter into
                    the depths of his system with him. D. Manuel ought to see Bedlam. As for Joanna,
                    though tolerably versed in the history of human credulity, I have never seen any
                    thing so disgraceful to common sense as her previous publications; — but I am
                    afraid that in all these cases it may be laid down as a general rule that the
                    more nonsense the better. Whenever a point of doctrine has been discussed the
                    most absurd has carried the day.</p>
                <p rend="noCount"> Metaphysicians have become less mischievous but a good deal more
                    troublesome. There was some excuse for them when they believed their opinions
                    were necessary to salvation — &amp; it was certainly better for plain people
                    like you &amp; I that they should write by the folio, than talk by the hour.
                    What a happy thing would it have been for Stoddart<note n="6" place="foot"
                        resp="editor">John Stoddart (1773-1856), lawyer, Tory journalist,
                        acquaintance of Southey and of Coleridge in Malta.</note> had he been born
                    in those ages when transubstantion [sic] was <del>xxx</del> philosophically
                    explained, &amp; the divine &amp; human natures subjected to synthesis &amp;
                    analysis in the crucible of a metaphysicians skull.</p>
                <p rend="noCount"> The reign of fabulous Xtianity must be drawing to its end. In
                    France it is over, unless Bonaparte should take it in his head to endow the
                    church better, — for which I do not think he wants inclination so much as money.
                    In Germany the thing is done. the clergy are philosophizing Xtians, or
                    Xtianizing philosophers. In my countries Spain &amp; Portugal the old house
                    stands, but there is the dry rot in its timbers, the foundations are undermined,
                    &amp; the next earthquake will bring it down. Here I do not like the
                    prospects,—sooner or later a hungry government will snap at the tithes;—the
                    clergy will then become state pensioners, or parish pensioners, <del>x</del> in
                    the latter case more odious to the farmers than they are now, in the former the
                    first pensioners to be ame[MS torn] of their stipends. Meantime the damned
                    system of Calvinism spreads like a pestilence among the lower classes. I have
                    not the slightest doubt that the Calvinists will be the majority in less than
                    half a century;—we see how catching the distemper is &amp; do not see any means
                    of stopping it. There is a good opening for a new religion, but the founder must
                    start up in some of the darker parts of the world—it is Americas turn to send
                    out apostles. A new one there must be when the old one is worn out —I am a
                    believer in the truth of Christianity, but truth will never do for the
                    multitude; there is an appetite for faith in us, which if it be not duly
                    indulged turns to green sickness &amp; <add>xxxx</add> feeds upon chalk &amp;
                    cinders. The truth is man is not made for this world alone, &amp; speculations
                    concerning the next will be found at last the most interesting to all of us—</p>
                <ab rendition="#horizontalRule" />
                <list><head>
                    <hi rend="bold">Robert Southey to Charles Watkin Williams Wynn</hi>
                </head>
                <item>Date: <date when="1806-09-03">3 September 1806</date></item>
                <item>Address: To CWWilliams Wynn Esq<hi rend="sup">r</hi> M P./Wynnstay/ Wrexham</item>
                <item>Location: National Library of Wales MS 4812D </item>
                <item>Published: <title>New Letters of Robert Southey</title>, ed. Kenneth Curry (New
                    York, 1965).</item></list>
                <p rend="noCount">I have just finished an account of Joanna Southcott, which, if you are not well
                    informed upon the subject – will surprize you. You will hardly <del>credit</del>
                    believe that such blasphemies should be tolerated, or such credulity be found in
                    England at this time. It would be a fit thing to ship her &amp; a ship load of
                    her disciples off for Botany Bay.</p>
                <ab rendition="#horizontalRule" />
                <list><head>
                    <hi rend="bold">Robert Southey to Charles Watkin Williams Wynn </hi>
                </head>
                <item>Date: <date when="1807-03">[March-April 1807]</date></item>
                <item>Address: None</item>
                <item>Location: National Library of Wales MS 4813D </item>
                <item>Unpublished. </item></list>
                <p rend="noCount">My dear Wynn . . . </p>
                <p rend="noCount"> . . . This is a very miscellaneous cargo, &amp; the dullest part
                    it – <del>that is</del> the account of Animal Magnetism – is the most
                    extraordinary. That &amp; the accounts of Swedenborgianism &amp; of Joanna
                    Southcott which are yet to come will show you that nothing is too monstrous to
                    find believers in this enlightened age.</p>
                
                <ab rendition="#horizontalRule" />
                
                <list><head>
                    <hi rend="bold">Robert Southey to William Taylor</hi>
                </head>
                <item>Date: <date when="1807-07">[July 1807?]</date></item>
                <item>Address: To/ W<hi rend="sup">m</hi> Taylor Jun<hi rend="sup">r</hi> Esq<hi
                        rend="sup">r-</hi>/ Surry Street/ Norwich/ Single</item>
                <item>Location: Huntington Library, HM 4856 </item>
                <item>Published: <title>A Memoir of the Life and Writings of the late William Taylor,
                        of Norwich</title>, ed. J. W. Robberds, 2 vols (London, 1843).</item></list>
                <p rend="noCount"><ref target="people.html#PugheWilliamOwen">Owen</ref> lent me when I was last in
                    town a tale of King Arthurs Court from the Mabinogion, truly Welsh &amp; savage.
                    If it be possible to make him get thro this work Turner<note n="7" place="foot"
                        resp="editor">Sharon Turner (1768-1847): lawyer and historian of English
                        and Welsh culture who lived at Red Lion square near the British Museum and
                        used the manuscripts thus accessible to him to compile a <title>History of
                            the Anglo-Saxons,</title> 4 vols (1799-1805), on which Southey drew in
                            <title>Madoc</title> (1805).</note> will do it, but poor Owen is one of
                    Joanna Southcotts four &amp; twenty Elders, – to whom Espriella will soon
                    introduce you, if you <del>x</del> are yet ignorant of this mystery of fatuity
                    rather than iniquity. You will find too an account of the Swedenborgian
                    mythology there, – if you make a Decameron take some of these wild heresies for
                    the creed of a tale, &amp; let us see a Swedenborgian romance, a Manichæan one
                    &amp;c –</p>
                <ab rendition="#horizontalRule" />
                <list><head>
                    <hi rend="bold">Robert Southey to John May</hi>
                </head>
                <item>Date: <date when="1807-07-07">7 July 1807</date></item>
                <item>Address: To/ John May Esqr-/ Richmond/ Surry</item>
                <item>Location: Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center, University of Texas,
                    Austin</item>
                <item>Published: <title>The Letters of Robert Southey to John May</title>, ed. Charles
                    Ramos (Austin TX, 1976).</item></list>
                <p rend="noCount">In reading this book you will easily distinguish what is written for Espriella
                    from what is written <hi rend="ital">thro</hi> him. Those letters which relate
                    to the state of sectarianism contain some curious matter. <ref
                        target="people.html#BryanWilliam">Bryan</ref> I knew personally, &amp; heard
                    from his own lips his history, &amp; his explanation of the system of Brothers.
                    He it was who took the knife to stab Brothers, as he himself told me. Where
                    these letters are not written from personal knowledge the materials have cost me
                    some money &lt;in&gt; <del>x</del> procuring them, &amp; some time in examining
                    them — the facts are not affected by the Catholic colouring. It is the genuine
                    heretical history of our own times.</p>
                <ab rendition="#horizontalRule" />
                <list><head>
                    <hi rend="bold">Robert Southey to James Grahame</hi>
                </head>
                <item>Date: <date when="1808-01-04">4 January 1808</date></item>
                <item>Address: None</item>
                <item>Location: National Library of Scotland, MS 20768</item></list>
                <p rend="noCount">I should perhaps call myself a Quaker. But I have no Quaker superstitions, &amp;
                    can see their errors with a strong eye. All sects appear to think unworthily of
                    man &amp; his maker. You may recognise their opinions thro the assumed character
                    of a thorough Papist. – As for Joanna Southcote surely that such a woman can
                    find believers is an extraordinary fact in the history of the present times.
                        <ref target="people.html#PugheWilliamOwen">William Owen</ref> the Welsh
                    Scolar is one of her four and twenty elders! Bedlam is the place for such half
                    lunatic half-imposters because they infect others. I have seen instances of the
                    mischief Brothers did in making tradesmen leave their business &amp; their
                    families, all that relates to him &amp; Bryan is written from personal
                    knowledge. I knew Bryan &amp; heard the whole system from his own mouth, &amp;
                    he it was who went with the knife to stab Brothers &amp; told me the fact
                    himself. The main value of the book is its thorough veracity. To the best of my
                    knowledge I have good authority for every single thing which it asserts.</p>
                <ab rendition="#horizontalRule" />
                <list><head>
                    <hi rend="bold">Robert Southey to John Rickman</hi>
                </head>
                <item>Date: <date when="1808-07">[July 1808]</date> [dating from JR’s endorsement]</item>
                <item>Address: To/ John Rickman Esq<hi rend="sup">r</hi>./ S<hi rend="sup">t</hi>
                    Stephens Court/ New Palace Yard/ Westminster </item>
                <item>Location: Huntington Library, RS 131</item>
                <item>Published: <title>The Life and Correspondence of Robert Southey</title>, ed. C.
                    C. Southey, 6 vols (London, 1849-50)</item></list>
                <p rend="noCount">Bonaparte has one benefit more to confer upon the Spaniards — to put both their
                    King &amp; their Prince out of the way, — which I doubt not he will do. His work
                    of destruction is not quite completed, I hoped &amp; expected to have seen him
                    destroy the House of Austria &amp; the Turkish Empire. two great evils which
                    cumber the earth. He may perhaps turn upon these as an excuse for leaving Spain
                    alone, — but in Spain the fire has <del>broken</del> burst out which will
                    consume. — Well done my friend William Bryan the Prophet, you certainly did
                    prophecy to me in S<hi rend="sup">t</hi> Stephen Court concerning Spain, as
                    truly as <del>Moore</del> Francis Moore did in his Almanach last year concerning
                    the Grand Turk.<note n="8" place="foot" resp="editor">Francis Moore
                        (1657-1715), founder of <title>Moore’s Almanac</title>, in which the
                        downfall of the Sultan Selim III was forecast. Selim (1761-July 1808) was
                        assassinated.</note></p>
                <ab rendition="#horizontalRule" />
                <list><head>
                    <hi rend="bold">Manuscript Draft of <title>Letters from England</title></hi>
                </head>
                <item>Date: <date from="1805" to="1807">1805-7</date></item>
                <item>Location: Chetham’s Library, Manchester. Mun. A.4.2.</item>
                <item>[cf. Letter LIV of the 1807 first edition]</item></list>
                <p rend="noCount">But there is another class to whom it is pernicious:—these are they who having
                    read without knowledge think themselves qualified to explain difficult texts,
                    &amp; meddle with the edged tools of theological controversy. One man reading
                    that my father is greater than I becomes without farther consideration an Arian.
                    The phrase Son of Man makes another a Socinian, a third extracts Calvinism out
                    of St Paul. There is a sect called the Jumpers who run out of their conventicle
                    into the streets shouting out Glory be to God in their own language, &amp;
                    jumping the while with incessant vehemence—till their strength is literally
                    exhausted. If you ask the reason of their frantic devotion they can give you xxx
                    for it, the blind man whom Peter &amp; John healed leaped &amp; praised God,
                    &amp; David danced before the Ark! These fanatics are confined to Wales, where
                    the people are half savages.<note n="9" place="foot" resp="editor">A practice
                        among some Calvinistic Methodists in Caernarvon, North Wales, beginning in
                        the 1740s, and spreading through Cardiganshire, persisting into the early
                        nineteenth century.</note></p>
                <p rend="noCount">Many of the higher class as you may suppose live so entirely
                    without God in the world, that to them it would be of no consequence if the
                    Scripture <del>xxx</del> was in no other language than the original Hebrew. But
                    in all ranks of society there are numbers of persons to whom the perusal of Gods
                    own word is an inestimable comfort, in sickness &amp; in old age, in resignation
                    under sorrow or in thankfulness for <del>xxx</del> the blessing vouchsafed. the
                    Bible is to them in stead of beads or masses—they go it [sic] with humble hearts
                    &amp; perfect faith, &amp; fervently feel all that they understand, &amp;
                    devoutly believe all which is above their comprehension. Father Antonio these
                    persons are schismatic because they are born so. it is their misfortune—not
                    their crime--&amp; I hope I may be permitted to hope that in this case the sins
                    of the fathers may not be visited upon the children.</p>
                <p rend="noCount"><del>How far then</del> Do I then think, from what <del>I have
                        learnt</del> &lt;it has produced&gt; in England, that the domestic use of
                    the Holy Scriptures would be beneficial in Spain? speaking with due diffidence
                    &amp; perfect submission to <del>xxx</del> the Holy Catholic Church I am of
                    opinion that it would. Melius est aliquid nescire quam cum periculo discere—St
                    Jerome has said thus<note n="10" place="foot" resp="editor">‘It is better to
                        remain without knowledge, safe, than with danger to learn’, St Jerome,
                        Letter 22, <title>Ad Eustochium de custodia virginitatis</title>.</note>
                    &amp; St Basil compared the effect of the scriptures upon weak minds to that of
                    strong meat upon a sickly stomach—But the days of Julian Fernandez &amp;
                    Cypriano de Valera<note n="11" place="foot" resp="editor">Julian Fernandez, a
                        sixteenth-century Spanish Protestant who smuggled Protestant translations of
                        the Bible into Spain from Germany; Cypriano de Valera (1532?-1602?), editor
                        of a translation of the Bible into Spanish, 1602, who, in fear of
                        persecution in Spain, lived in exile in Britain.</note> are happily over—we
                    have an authorised translation free from perversion &amp; were it printed
                        <del>it</del> in a cheaper form, I think much of the good which it does in
                    England would be produced, &amp; <del>xxx</del> some of the evil, especially if
                    according to the decree of the Council of the Trent, no person were permitted to
                    have it in his possession without the permission of his Priest. It might also
                    have the useful effect of supplanting some of the books of devotion which savour
                    too much of credulity, &amp; do little honour to religion. But in saying this I
                    speak <del>with</del> humbly &amp; with perfect submission to authority.</p>
                <p rend="noCount"> The English Bible is regarded as one of the most beautiful
                    specimens of the language, &amp; the book which has fixed it. In order to
                    preserve the text correct the privilege of printing it is restricted to the two
                    universities, yet some impressions once got abroad wherein the negation in the
                        7<hi rend="sup">th</hi> commandment had been omitted, &amp; it was said Thou
                    shalt commit adultery. <del>Booksellers</del> There have &lt;been&gt; devised
                        <del>a</del> means of eluding this exclusive privilege by printing a
                    commentary with the text, &amp; in two magnificent Bibles—the price of the one
                    being about 30 pieces of eight! this was so openly practised as a mere evasion,
                    that the commentary consisted in a single line in every sheet, printed in the
                    smallest type, &amp; so <del>near</del> &lt;close to&gt; the bottom of the page
                    that it could be pared off in binding. These books it may be supposed are truly
                    magnificent &amp; honourable to the state of arts in the country, but there are
                    a set of booksellers in <del>xxx xxx</del> whose main business consists in
                    printing worthless &amp; catchpenny publications for the ignorant in the
                    country, &amp; they have always a great Family Bible as they call it in course
                    of publication, ornamented with faithful engravings &amp; published periodically
                    because most of the deluded people who purchase it could not pay for it in any
                    other manner. The cover of one of their number was wrapt round some trifling
                    article which I bought the other day at a stationers,—it professed to render the
                    most difficult passages clear &amp; familiar, to rectify mistranslations,
                    reconcile the doubtful, confound the infidel, establish the peace &amp;
                    happiness of Christian families in this world, &amp; secure their eternal salvation
                    in the next!</p>
                <p rend="noCount">[marginal note facing the Jumpers and the miracle of the blind man] ‘the Babe
                    leaped in Elizabeths womb when she heard the salutation of Mary</p>
                <p rend="noCount">.......................</p>
                <p rend="noCount">[f. 229v Southcott]</p>
                <p rend="noCount">If Adam she says had refused listening to a foolish ignorant woman at first, the
                    man might refuse listening to a foolish ignorant woman at last—</p>
                <p rend="noCount">with Rulers the age of anarchy—with the people the age of Oppression</p>
                <p rend="noCount">above all if we remember</p>
                <p rend="noCount">.......................</p>
                <p rend="noCount">[f. 230 a list of Southcott’s publications, indicating the extent of Southey’s
                    research and crossed through by him when cited in the text]</p>
                <p rend="noCount">Title at the end of the Book—</p>
                <p rend="noCount">Sealing 17.48 K.C&gt; 301 4<hi rend="sup">th</hi> Bible 1. Sound an alarm</p>
                <p rend="noCount">
                    <del>The Evening Star. 7 B with title at the end.</del>
                </p>
                <p rend="noCount">Sealed Prophecies – 9 D<hi rend="sup">o</hi></p>
                <p rend="noCount">Pomeroy. 18 D<hi rend="sup">o</hi> Josephs Book Trial 139 1<hi rend="sup">st</hi>
                    Bible 57 Jehovakim</p>
                <p rend="noCount">
                    <del>277. Sixth part – she a bone from Christ—as Eve was a bone from Adam.</del>
                </p>
                <p rend="noCount">
                    <del>285 D<hi rend="sup">o</hi> The Woman the 12 stars &amp; 24 Elders. Trial
                        xxxiii.</del>
                </p>
                <p rend="noCount">
                    <del>287. D<hi rend="sup">o</hi> her request that Satan might be set off hard[?]
                        on the altar</del>
                </p>
                <p rend="noCount">Dreams <del>28. &lt;23.&gt; J.S. how she killed the Devil</del>.—Cont. of
                    Prophec. 35.</p>
                <p rend="noCount">30. D<hi rend="sup">o</hi> Drunk by the Lord</p>
                <p rend="noCount">
                    <del>38 D<hi rend="sup">o</hi>
                        <hi rend="ital">Mr Leach</hi></del>
                </p>
                <p rend="noCount">70 D<hi rend="sup">o</hi> Day of Judgement begun</p>
                <p rend="noCount">
                    <del>80 D<hi rend="sup">o</hi>
                        <hi rend="ital">Sanderson</hi> D<hi rend="sup">o</hi> 101.</del>
                </p>
                <p rend="noCount">46. Cont. of Proph. the Rampant Witness</p>
                <p rend="noCount">
                    <del>Sound an alarm. 11. J’s visitation—</del>
                </p>
                <p rend="noCount">
                    <del>--22. 23. The Devil</del>
                </p>
                <p rend="noCount">
                    <del>--36. four people call themselves Christ!</del>
                </p>
                <p rend="noCount">--61 The Woman</p>
                <p rend="noCount">
                    <del>Word to the Wise. 20-- D<hi rend="sup">o</hi></del>
                </p>
                <table rows="5" cols="2" width="500">
                    <row>
                        <cell width="250">Divine &amp; Spiritual Letters.</cell>
                            <cell width="250">50. D<hi rend="sup">o</hi></cell>
                    </row>
                    <row>
                        <cell width="250"></cell>
                        <cell width="250">60- D<hi rend="sup">o</hi></cell>
                    </row>
                    <row>
                        <cell width="250"></cell>
                        <cell width="250">
                            <del>84. The Devil is with Moon</del>
                        </cell>
                    </row>
                    <row>
                        <cell width="250">
                            <hi rend="strikethrough"/>
                        </cell>
                        <cell width="250">
                            <del>92- D<hi rend="sup">o</hi></del>
                        </cell>
                    </row>
                    <row>
                        <cell width="250">
                            <hi rend="strikethrough"/>
                        </cell>
                        <cell width="250">
                            <del>94- D<hi rend="sup">o</hi></del>
                        </cell>
                    </row>
                </table>
                <p rend="noCount">2<hi rend="sup">d</hi> Book of S Prophecies—71. not lengthen the cushions[?]</p>
                <p rend="noCount">..................</p>
                <p rend="noCount">[f. 232v: a list of phrases on Southcott, crossed through by Southey when they
                    had been incorporated into the main text]</p>
                <p rend="noCount">
                    <del>Her handwriting was illegible—so at last she found it convenient to receive
                        an order to throw the pen away--&amp; dictate--&amp; she says—or the Spirit
                        for her, that her words flow faster than her scribes can pen them</del>
                </p>
                <p rend="noCount">
                    <del> they believe that she hath claimed the promise in the creation for the
                        woman to be the helpmate to man.</del>
                </p>
                <p rend="noCount"> Trial. 115. The Woman &amp; the Devil</p>
                <p rend="noCount">
                    <del> Now as the man was betrayed by the Woman, &amp; cast his blame on me for
                        giving him the Woman, it is to man I must clear myself that I did not give
                        him the Woman in vain. Thus say they the Promise that Woman should be the
                        Helpmate of Man is fulfilled.</del>
                </p>
                <p rend="noCount">....................</p>
                <p rend="noCount">[f. 233 the narrative begins differently for the first few lines from the 1807
                    first edition, letter LXX:]</p>
                <p rend="noCount">An arch-heretic of the same sex is now establishing a sect in England, founded
                    upon the same portentous blasphemy. &lt;the name of this woman is J S&gt; she
                    however neither boasts of the charms of her forerunner—nor needs them--&lt;she
                    is&gt; old, vulgar &amp; illiterate, -- <del>xxx</del> in <del>all the</del>
                    innumerable volumes which she has published there are not three
                    &lt;connected&gt; sentences of commonsense in sequence &lt;in sequence&gt; &amp;
                    the matter &amp; the language are alike in contempt of common sense &amp; common
                    syntax. <del>When Poets feign an enchantress &lt;Then if the Poets&gt; they
                        place a golden goblet in her hand, &amp; the draught is &lt;magic</del>&gt;
                    Yet this woman has her followers in England—in the educated classes--&amp; even
                    among the beneficed clergy! * [mark indicating quotation to be inserted here]
                    The enchanted fountains which are <del>described</del> in romance flow with such
                    clear &amp; sparkling water &lt;<del>streams water</del>&gt; <del>which</del>
                    tempting the traveller to thirst—here there may be a magic in the draught but he
                    who can drink of so foul a stream must &lt;first previously&gt; have lost his
                    senses <del>xxx</del> the filth &amp; the abominations of daemonical witchcraft
                    are emblematical of such delusions—not the golden goblet &amp; the bewitching
                    allurement of Circe &amp; Armida.</p>
                <p rend="noCount">(And these things are believed in England! in England where Catholick Xtians are
                    so heartily despised for their superstitions—in England where the people think
                    themselves so enlightened in the country of reason &amp; philosophy &amp; free
                    enquiry.—It is amusing to observe how this life of ours is denominated by every
                    writer as it suits his own views—with the Infidel it is the Age of Reason, with
                    the churchman the Age of Infidelity, with the chemist the Age of Philosophy –
                    with the speculator the Age of Free Enquiry &amp; Every man beholding the
                    prospect thro a coloured glass &amp; <del>making</del> &lt;giving&gt; it
                    sunshine or <del>shade</del> &lt;shade&gt; frost or verdure, according to his
                    own fancy—none looking round him &amp; seeing <del>things</del> &lt;it&gt;
                    fairly as <del>they are</del> &lt;it is&gt;. Truly there never was an age or
                    country so favourable for the success of imposture &amp; the growth of
                    superstition as this very age &amp; this very England. If we remember the
                    unlimited toleration which the law allows, the contemptuous indifference of the
                    clergy to all opinions &lt;any blasphemy&gt; which does not immediately threaten
                    themselves—the want of anchorage for the ignorance of the great majority of the
                    people, &amp; that mere knowledge of reading &amp; writing which makes them
                    satisfied then with their own knowledge because they can read the delusive books
                    which are addressed to them &amp; compare them with the bible—of which they are
                    instructed to consider themselves competent expounders—the want of anchorage for
                    their faith—the want of able direction for their souls, <del>so that</del> – the
                    rapidity with which news of every kind false as well as true is circulated thro
                    the kingdom—the eagerness with which they who are disposed to credit imposture
                    listen to any new blasphemy. the contemptuous &amp;c--&amp; the unlimited &amp;c
                    we must acknowledge that there never was any &amp;c)<lb /> 
                    
                    [this paragraph appears in parenthesis--marked
                    for transposition. It appears at the end of Letter LXX of the 1807 edition:]</p>
            </div>
        </body>
    </text>
</TEI>
