3390. Robert Southey to
[Humphrey Senhouse](people.html#SenhouseHumphrey),
17 November 1819Address: To/ Humphrey
Senhouse Esqre/ Fingest Grove/ Stoken Church/ Oxfordshire
Stamped: KESWICK/ 298
Seal: red wax, design illegible
Watermark: G W/ 1816; embossed seal with crown, BATH
MS: Department of
Rare Books, Special Collections and Preservation, River Campus Libraries, University of Rochester, Robert Southey
Papers A.S727. ALS; 4p.
Unpublished.[Keswick](places.html#Keswick).17 Nov. 1819. My dear
Senhouse You will probably have heard or seen that an Address of Mr Wallace’s
composition has been substituted for that which I sent to you, -Following
the ‘Peterloo’ Massacre of 16 August 1819, Whigs in Cumberland organised a County Meeting on 13 October 1819 to
protest at the local authorities’ actions and send an Address to the Prince Regent. Southey drew up a conservative
response – an Address to the Prince Regent denouncing the radicals and calling for curbs on the press; see Southey
to Humphrey Senhouse, [15 October 1819], Letter 3366. The tone and content of the Address were objected to by
moderate supporters of the government in the Lake District, led by Thomas Wallace (1768–1844; DNB),
MP for various seats 1790–1828, including Cockermouth 1813–1818, member of the Board of Control 1807–1816,
Vice-President of the Board of Trade 1818–1823, and later 1st Baron Wallace. Southey’s Address was suppressed and
Wallace drew up a replacement, which was published in the Morning Chronicle on 29 October 1819; it
was notably circumspect in its reference to events at ‘Peterloo’. the objections which struck you having
occurred to him, & to others also. It is not therefore worth while to enter into an explanation of what was
laid aside: – in all such cases to need explanation is fault enough. The fault at Manchester, according to what I
have heard, was in employing the yeomanry instead of the regular troops.When the Manchester magistrates ordered the arrest of the main speakers at the meeting at St Peter’s Field on 16
August 1819, the task was delegated to the Manchester and Salford Yeomanry, a body of upper-class local
volunteers; they began to attack the crowd indiscriminately, and the crowd responded by throwing brickbats at the
Yeomanry. Finally, the meeting was dispersed by regular troops, primarily the 15th Hussars. This was
obviously done as appearing the least obnoxious But after bearing a great deal of outrage & injury,
they lost their temper, which disciplined soldiers would not have done, & did more mischief than was necessary
in dispersing the rascally rabble. This account is probable, & came to me upon good authority. I do not believe
that the Magistrates committed any other error. The illegality of the meeting, if any meeting can be illegal, is
plain; & the civil power was not sufficient to execute the warrant. But enough of this. Whether the crisis of
this distemper is at hand we shall soon see. The sooner it comes the better, for I have not that confidence either
in the foresight, or in the resolution of the Ministers to believe that that they will take such measures as might
avert it. My advice would be not to suspend the Habeas Corpus,Habeas corpus
is the legal principle that prevents detention without trial; it was suspended for one year from March
1817. because it can only be a temporary measure, & therefore the good which it might produce would be
temporary also; but to make banishment the punishment for sedition & blasphemy, & to prosecute libels as
fast as they appear, to make new laws with regard to seditious meetings, & to prevent all delay in bringing
offenders to trial.When parliament reassembled on 23 November 1819, the
government produced its proposals for the ‘Six Acts’ to suppress radical agitation. Among this legislation, the
Criminal Libel Act (1819) made banishment the punishment for a second offence and anyone breaching the sentence
was to be transported for 14 years. The original version of the Bill had made transportation for seven years the
punishment for a second offence and death the punishment of last resort. The government also produced a new
Seditious Meetings Act (1819). The press might then be kept within some bounds, & if that evil were
checked there might be some hope that the country would recover xx a healthy state of feeling.
I have been at Whitehaven, for the first time.Whitehaven
Castle, a mansion owned by William Lowther, Earl of Lonsdale. Southey visited in mid-October 1819. Sir
Joseph SenhouseSir Joseph Senhouse (1743–1829), Senhouse’s uncle. He had
spent time as Comptroller of Customs in Dominica, acquired a small coffee plantation on the island, and returned
to England in 1779. At this time he managed the Lowther family’s electoral interests in Carlisle. dined at
the Castle while I was there, – a fine old man. He told me that [Netherhall](places.html#Netherhall) had never been forsaken before,While Netherhall was
being renovated, Senhouse had been living abroad and at Fingest House in Buckinghamshire. & said so
with a subdued feeling which set him high in my good graces. If other nations have no word for home, we have no single one which can convey the meaning of the solar of the Spaniards,
in which as many good feelings have their root, & those of a high order. Yours is unquestionably one of the
oldest in this kingdom. – Nothing in ScotlandSouthey’s tour of Scotland had
lasted from 17 August until 1 October 1819. For his comments on Highland burial grounds, see Journal of a
Tour in Scotland in 1819, ed. Charles Harold Herford (London, 1929), pp. 127–128, 176. pleased me
more than the family burial grounds in the Highlands, – there is something about them so sacred & solitary, –
& so well in keeping with the severe xxxxx character of the country. But I admired them also as
tending to keep up that love of the natal soil, which all the circumstances of society in this age tend to
weaken.
We are in daily expectation of seeing [Kenyon](people.html#KenyonJohn)
here. He buried his wife at Naples, in the spring.Susan Kenyon (d.
1818). This is but an unfavourable season for revisiting <coming into> the country after an
interval of thirteen or fourteen years;Kenyon had visited Southey in 1804;
see Southey to Henry Herbert Southey, 21 November 1804, The Collected Letters of Robert Southey. Part
Three, Letter 991. but a sunshiny day will do wonders even in November; – & long as that
interval is, he is not yet far enough advanced into the yellow leaf of lifeMacbeth, Act 5, scene 3, line 23. to feel more of pain than of pleasure
in revisiting scenes which he formerly enjoyed.
Fisher of Cockspur StreetIsaac Fisher (c. 1773–1819),
member of a Borrowdale farming family and a gold and silversmith in Cockspur Street, London, had bought Greta Hall
in June 1817. However, legal complications arising from the previous landlord’s debts had halted the
purchase. whose purchase of [this house](places.html#GretaHall) was suspended by
proceedings in Chancery, is dead; – & has left 50,000£ to his brother at Seatoller – in Borrodale.John Fisher (c. 1760–1835), a wealthy farmer, of Seatoller House in Borrowdale.
This enormous accession of wealth has turned his head; – the care I suppose, & the bustle of thought which it
brought with it, having called into action a constitutional tendency to mental derangement. – My landlordSamuel Tolson, Junr (dates unknown). He had been imprisoned for debt in
Carlisle gaol in 1817, leading to the abortive sale of Greta Hall to Isaac Fisher. However, Tolson retained the
ownership of Greta Hall until after Southey’s death. is out of jail. I know not by what means, – &
I app it is not unlikely that another sale of the property may take place, as Chancery suits cannot be
kept up without considerable expence. – I have myself the <some> prospect of an evil of this kind,
arising from the death of Lord Somerville.John Southey Somerville, 15th
Lord Somerville (1765–1819; DNB), agricultural reformer and third cousin of Southey, had died on 5
October 1819. This produced a further round of legal tangles over the Fitzhead estate in Somerset that Somerville
had inherited. Estates of about a thousand a year were bequeathed to him in his infancy by his mothers
Uncle; with the intention that they should revert to the Southeys in case of his dying without issue.Somerville’s mother was Elizabeth Cannon Lethbridge (d. 1765), the daughter of Mary
Southey (1704–1789) and niece of John Cannon Southey (d. 1768). The latter had inherited the Fitzhead estate from
his mother Mary Cannon (1678–1738). On his death, John Cannon Southey had left a complex, ill-advised will which
named Somerville as his primary heir, and, if he should die without heirs, Southey’s father and two uncles as the
residuary legatees, their rights passing, in turn, to their children. Of the three Southey brothers only Southey’s
father married, leading the poet to believe (after the death of his father and paternal uncles) that he and his
brothers were now the rightful heirs to the Fitzhead estate. Lord Somerville notwithstanding the entail
sold the whole property, & I have now to ascertain whether or not it can be recovered. The will in question has
been more than once pronounced to be one of the most confused that ever was made.John Cannon Southey’s will had been the subject of earlier judicial hearings, all of which had
struggled with the will’s complexities; for example, on 27 March 1807, Thomas Erskine, 1st Baron Erskine
(1750–1823; DNB), Lord Chancellor 1806–1807, had delivered a judgment in the Court of Chancery in
the case of Southey v. Lord Somerville. At present I am seeking advice upon the subject, –
& certainly I must be very strongly advised before I shall venture to incur the great & certain evil of
engaging in law.Southey eventually decided not to pursue legal
action. Lord S. died at Vevay,Lord Somerville died ‘At Vevay, in
Switzerland, on his return home, having spent the previous winter in Italy, and the last summer in France, for the
recovery of his health’, Gentleman’s Magazine, 89 (October 1819), 370. – his life would have
been thought a better one than mine. My relationship to him is very remote, – that of third cousin, – but he had no
nearer in that line. – I had xxxxxxxxx & xxxxxx that my
I saw Scotland to the best advantage, – in delightful weather, & every where with persons in
our suite who knew every thing about the country.Southey’s companions
included [John Rickman](people.html#RickmanJohn) and [Thomas Telford](people.html#TelfordThomas). How strikingly the character of the country
seems to accord with that of the people! – Have you seen Peters Letters?Lockhart was the author of Peter’s Letters to His Kinsfolk (1819), no. 2223 in the sale catalogue
of Southey’s library. Southey had been given his copy in Edinburgh on 17 August 1819, Journal of a Tour in
Scotland in 1819, ed. Charles Harold Herford (London, 1929), p. 4. – the joint composition of [Wilson of Ellory](people.html#WilsonJohn), & the Isle of Palms,Wilson’s The Isle of Palms, and Other Poems (1812). & a [M](people.html#LockhartJohnG)r Lockhart, – both also being the great writers in
Blackwoods Magazine.Blackwood’s Edinburgh Magazine
(1817–1980); it had originally been named the Edinburgh Monthly Magazine. It was owned and managed
by William Blackwood. It is a clever book, written with very considerable talents, but there is something
hateful to me in serving up living characters, at the table of whether they are peppered & grilled
for satire, or have the oil of flattery for their sauce.Peter’s
Letters was narrated by the fictional Welshman Peter Morris, and provided pen-portraits of key
individuals in contemporary Scottish cultural life, including Francis Jeffrey and Walter Scott.
Remember us to the Miss Woods & the children, xSenhouse’s cousins, Mary Anne Wood (1781–1860) and Frances Wood (dates unknown); and Senhouse’s
children, Elizabeth (1805–1890), Catherine (d. 1853), Ellen (1808–1838) and Humphrey (1809–1834).
& believe me Yrs affectionately Robert Southey. Can you learn where I may direct to [Landor](people.html#LandorWalterSavage), – which I have neglected so long that I know not where to find him now.