The Life and Correspondence of Robert Southey
Robert Southey to Edith Southey, 28 September 1813
“Tuesday night, Sept. 28. 1813,
“I have stolen away from a room full of people, that I
might spend an hour in writing to you instead of wasting it at the card-table.
Sunday I went by appointment to Lord William
Gordon, who wanted to take me to see a young lady. Who should
this prove to be but Miss Booth; the
very actress whom we saw at Liverpool play so sweetly in Kotzebue’s comedy of the Birth-day. There was I taken to
hear her recite Mary the Maid of the
Inn! and if I had not interfered in aid of her own better sense.
Lord W. and her mother and sisters would have made her
act as well as recite it. As I know you defy the monster, I may venture to say
that she is a sweet little girl, though a little spoilt by circumstances which
would injure anybody; but what think you of this old lord asking permission for
me to repeat my visit, and urging me to ‘take her under my
protection,’ and show her what to recite, and instruct her how to
recite it? And all this upon a Sunday! So I shall give her a book, and tell her
what parts she should choose to appear in. And if she goes again to Edinburgh,
be civil to her if she touches at the Lakes; she supports a mother and brother,
and two or three sisters. When I returned to Queen Anne Street from the visit,
I found Davy sitting with the Doctor, and
awaiting my return. I could not dine with him to-morrow,
44 | LIFE AND CORRESPONDENCE | Ætat. 39. |
having an engagement, but we promised to go in the evening and take Coleridge with us, and Elmsley, if they would go. It will be a party
of lions, where the Doctor must for that evening perform the part of
Daniel in the lion’s den.
“I dined on Sunday at Holland House, with some
eighteen or twenty persons. Sharp was
there, who introduced me with all due form to Rogers and to Sir James
Mackintosh, who seems to be in a bad state of health. In the
evening Lord Byron came in.* He had asked
Rogers if I was ‘magnanimous,’ and
requested him to make for him all sorts of amends honourable for having tried
his wit upon me at the expense of his discretion; and in full confidence of the
success of the apology, had been provided with a letter of introduction to me
in case he had gone to the Lakes, as he intended to have done. As for me, you
know how I regard things of this kind; so we met with all becoming courtesy on
both sides, and I saw a man whom in voice, manner, and countenance I liked very
much more than either his character or his writings had given me reason to
expect. Rogers wanted me to dine with him on Tuesday (this
day): only Lord Byron and Sharp were
to have been of the party, but I had a pending engagement here, and was sorry
for it.
“Holland House is a most interesting building.
* The following is Lord
Byron’s account of this
meeting:—“Yesterday, at Holland House, I was
introduced to Southey, the
best looking bard I have seen for some time. To have that
poet’s head and shoulders I would almost have written his
Sapphics. He is certainly a prepossessing-looking person to look
at, and a man of talent and all that, and—there is his
eulogy.”—Life of Byron, vol ii. p. 244.
|
Ætat. 39. | OF ROBERT SOUTHEY. | 45 |
The library is a sort of gallery, 109 feet in length; and,
like my study, serves for drawing-room also. The dinner-room is pannelled with
wood, and the pannels emblazoned with coats of arms, like the ceiling of one
room in the palace at Cintra. The house is of Henry the
Eighth’s time. Good night, my dear Edith.
“We had a very pleasant dinner at Madame de Stael’s. Davy and his wife, a Frenchman whose name I never heard, and the Portuguese
ambassador, the Conde de Palmella, a
gentlemanly and accomplished man. I wish you had seen the animation with which
she exclaimed against Davy and Mackintosh for their notions about peace.
“Once more farewell!
Sarah Booth (1793-1867)
English actree who made her first appearance at Covent Garden in 1810; she died
unmarried.
Samuel Taylor Coleridge (1772-1834)
English poet and philosopher who projected
Lyrical Ballads (1798)
with William Wordsworth; author of
Biographia Literaria (1817),
On the Constitution of the Church and State (1829) and other
works.
Sir Humphry Davy, baronet (1778-1829)
English chemist and physicist, inventor of the safety lamp; in Bristol he knew Cottle,
Wordsworth, Coleridge, and Southey; he was president of the Royal Society (1820).
Lady Jane Davy [née Kerr] (1780-1855)
Society hostess who in 1798 married Shuckburgh Ashby Apreece (d. 1807) and Humphry Davy
in 1812.
Peter Elmsley (1774-1825)
Classical scholar educated at Christ Church, Oxford, who published in the
Edinburgh Review and
Quarterly Review.
Southey described him to W. S. Landor as “the fattest under-graduate in your time and
mine.”
Lord William Gordon (1761-1823)
The second son of the third duke of Gordon; educated at Harrow, he was MP for Elginshire,
Invernessshire, and Horsham, and held the office of deputy-ranger of St. James's
Park.
August von Kotzebue (1761-1819)
German playwright mistakenly assassinated by a student believing that he was a Russian
agent. His play
Lovers' Vows figures prominently in Jane Austen's
Mansfield Park.
Sir James Mackintosh (1765-1832)
Scottish philosopher and man of letters who defended the French Revolution in
Vindiciae Gallicae (1791); he was Recorder of Bombay (1803-1812) and
MP for Knaresborough (1819-32).
Samuel Rogers (1763-1855)
English poet, banker, and aesthete, author of the ever-popular
Pleasures of Memory (1792),
Columbus (1810),
Jaqueline (1814), and
Italy (1822-28).
Richard Sharp [Conversation Sharp] (1759-1835)
English merchant, Whig MP, and member of the Holland House set; he published
Letters and Essays in Poetry and Prose (1834).
Edith Southey [née Fricker] (1774-1837)
The daughter of Stephen Fricker, she was the first wife of Robert Southey and the mother
of his children; they married in secret in 1795.
Robert Southey (1774-1843)
Poet laureate and man of letters whose contemporary reputation depended upon his prose
works, among them the
Life of Nelson, 2 vols (1813),
History of the Peninsular War, 3 vols (1823-32) and
The Doctor, 7 vols (1834-47).
Germaine de Staël (1766-1817)
French woman of letters; author of the novel
Corinne, ou L'Italie
(1807) and
De l'Allemagne (1811); banned from Paris by Napoleon, she
spent her later years living in Germany, Britain, and Switzerland.