The Life and Correspondence of Robert Southey
Robert Southey to an anonymous correspondent, 8 February 1822
“Keswick, Feb. 8. 1822.
“My dear ——,
“I heard with sorrow of your ill health. Perhaps you
are at this time a happier man than if you were in the enjoyment of vigorous
health, and had never known sickness or sorrow. Any price is cheap for
religious hope. The evidence for Christianity is as demonstrative as the
subject admits: the more it is investigated, the stronger it appears. But the
root
112 | LIFE AND CORRESPONDENCE | Ætat. 48. |
of belief is in the heart, rather than in the
understanding; and when it is rooted there, it derives from the understanding
nutriment and support. Against Atheism, Materialism, and the mortality of the
soul, there is the reductio ad
absurdum in full force; and for revealed religion there is
the historical evidence, strong beyond the conception of those who have not
examined it; and there is that perfect adaptation to the nature and wants of
man, which, if such a revelation had not already been made, would induce a wise
and pious man to expect it, as fully as a Jew expects the Messiah. For many
years my belief has not been clouded with the shadow of a doubt.
“When we observe what things men will believe, who will
not believe Christianity, it is impossible not to acknowledge how much belief
depends upon the will.
“I shall have a large share of abuse in the course of
this year. In the first place, my Book of the Church, which I am writing con amore and with great diligence, will strike both
the Catholics and the Puritans harder blows than they have been of late years
accustomed to receive. The Emancipationists, therefore, and the Dissenters will
not be pleased; and you know the temper of the latter. My History of the War smites the Whigs,
and will draw upon me, sans doubt, as much hatred from
the Buonapartists in France, as I have the satisfaction of enjoying from their
friends in England. This volume is in great forwardness; more than five hundred
pages are printed. As for Lord Byron and his
coadjutors in the Times, Chronicle, &c. &c., I shall
of course not
Ætat. 48. | OF ROBERT SOUTHEY. | 113 |
notice the latter, and deal with his
lordship as he may deserve and as I may feel inclined. I have the better cause
and the stronger hand.
“God bless you!
Yours affectionately,
R. Southey.”
Morning Chronicle. (1769-1862). James Perry was proprietor of this London daily newspaper from 1789-1821; among its many
notable poetical contributors were Coleridge, Southey, Lamb, Rogers, and Campbell.
The Times. (1785-). Founded by John Walter, The Times was edited by Thomas Barnes from 1817 to 1841. In the
romantic era it published much less literary material than its rival dailies, the
Morning Chronicle and the
Morning
Post.