The Life and Correspondence of Robert Southey
Robert Southey to Nicholas Lightfoot, 16 September 1822
“Keswick, Sept. 16. 1822.
“The General has
lately had a narrow, though ludicrous escape. He upset himself with an umbrella
in a little skiff which Sir Frederick
Moreshead had given him. It was within hearing of his own
island. The skiff was corked so that it could not sink, but being half full of
water after he had righted it, it was not possible for him to get in, and he
being well buttoned up against a stormy day in a thick great coat was in no
plight for swimming, so he held on
Ætat. 48. | OF ROBERT SOUTHEY. | 123 |
and holload stoutly for
assistance. His two men hastened off in his little boat, the large one
happening to be on the opposite shore. The General had presence of mind enough
to consider that if he attempted to get into the little boat he should in all
likelihood pull her under water, and that neither of the men could swim; he
therefore very coolly directed them to take the rope of the skiff and tow it to
the island with him at the end; and in this way he came in like a Triton,
waving his hat round his head, and huzzaing as he approached his own shores. I
ought to have told you that there came an invitation from him for you to dinner
the day after your departure.
“John May left me
this day fortnight, and Dr. Bell departed
some days after him. The exercise which I took with him completed the good work
which was begun with you, and has left me in a better state than I had been in
for the two last years. By way of keeping it up while the season permits
(nothing being so salutary to me as vigorous exercise) I went up Skiddaw Dod
this morning—one of the expeditions which is reserved for your next visit; on
my return I found a letter from my brother Henry, saying he shall be here on Wednesday. This will give me
ten days more of laking and mountaineering, if the weather permit.
“The temptation which the country holds out to that
exercise which is peculiarly necessary for me must be weighed among the many
reasons for remaining in it. For with my sedentary habits and inactive
inclinations I require every inducement to draw me out. But whether I remain or
remove
124 | LIFE AND CORRESPONDENCE | Ætat. 48. |
I shall see you, my dear Lightfoot, often again (God willing) both in
Devonshire and wherever I may be. I shall certainly come down to you when next
I visit London, which will probably be in February or March.
“During the little time I had for business I have
written about half a paper
for the Quarterly, upon a history of the Religious
Sects of the last century, by the ex-Bishop Gregoire. The book is curious for its strange mixture
of revolutionary feelings with Catholic bigotry, and for the account which it
gives of irreligion in France. It gives me matter for an interesting paper, to
be wound-up with some seasonable observations upon the progress of infidelity
at home. God bless you, my dear Lightfoot!
Yours affectionately,
Robert Southey.”
Andrew Bell (1753-1832)
Scottish Episcopalian educated at St. Andrews University; he was the founder of the
“Madras” system of education by mutual instruction; Robert Southey was his
biographer.
Nicholas Lightfoot (1771 c.-1847)
The son of Nicholas Lightfoot, Devon, he was educated at Balliol College, Oxford and was
curate of Churcheton, Devon (1795) and rector of Pomeroy, Devonshire (1831-47). He
corresponded with his schoolmate, Robert Southey.
John May (1775-1856)
Wine merchant and close friend of Robert Southey; after the failure of the family
business in Portuguese wines he was a bank manager in the 1820s.
Sir Frederick Treise Morshead, second baronet (1783-1828)
Of Trennant Park in Cornwall, the son of Sir John Morshead MP (d. 1813); in 1821 he
married Jane Warwick, daughter of Robert Warwick of Warwick Hall in Northumberland.
William Peachey (1763 c.-1838)
Of Gosport, educated at Trinity College, Oxford; he was lieutenant-general in the 10th
Hussars and was a Tory MP for Yarmouth (1797-1802) and Taunton (1826-30). He corresponded
with W. L. Bowles and Robert Southey.
Henry Herbert Southey (1783-1865)
The younger brother of Robert Southey; educated at Edinburgh University, he was physician
to George IV, Gresham Professor of Medicine, and friend of Sir Walter Scott.
The Quarterly Review. (1809-1967). Published by John Murray, the
Quarterly was instigated by Walter
Scott as a Tory rival to the
Edinburgh Review. It was edited by
William Gifford to 1824, and by John Gibson Lockhart from 1826 to 1853.