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Department of Rare Books, Special Collections and Preservation, River Campus Libraries, University of Rochester, Robert Southey Papers A.S727. AL; 4p. . Previously published: Charles Cuthbert Southey (ed.), Life and Correspondence of Robert Southey, 6 vols (London, 1849–1850), I, pp. 41–51.
These letters were edited with the assistance of Ian Packer and Lynda Pratt
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The Bath & Bristol Theatres were then & for many years afterwards what in trade language is called ‘one
concern.”s of orders for free admission; she was exceedingly fond
of theatrical representations, & there was no subject of which I heard so much, from my earliest childhood. <It xxxx
<<brought upon>> me once a most severe reprehension for innocently applying to the Church, a phrase which I then learnt to my cost
belonged only to the Playhouse, – & saying one Sunday on our return from morning-service, that it had been a very full House.> When I was taken to the theatre for the first time I perfectly well remember my surprize at not finding the Pit
literally a deep hole, into which I had often puzzled myself to think how, or why, any people could possibly go. You may judge by this
how very young I must have been. I recollect nothing more of that first visit, except that the play was the Fathers, a comedy of
Fieldings, which was acted not more than one season, & the farce was Coxheath Camp: – this recollection however, by the help of
that useful book the Biographia Dramatica, fixes the date to 1778, – when I was four years old.
A half sheet of reminiscences written one & twenty years ago at Lisbon, has recallen this & a few other
circumstances to my recollection, which might otherwise have been quite obliterated. Yet it surprizes me to perceive how many things
come to mind which had been for years & years forgotten! It is said that when earth is flung to the surface in digging a
pit well plants will generally spring up then which are not found in the surrounding country, seeds
having quickened which had been buried there during unknown ages: – no unapt illustration for the way in which forgotten things are
thus brought up from the bottom of ones memory.
I was then introduced to the Theatre before it was possible for me to comprehend the nature of the drama so
as to derive any pleasure from it, except from the mere spectacle. What was going on upon the stage, as far as I understood it,
appeared real to me & I have been told that upon one night when the Criticxxxx river in the ferry boat at Walcot, or at the
South Parade. Short as the passage was I have not yet forgotten the delight which it used to give me. There were three points beyond
all others which I was desirous of reaching, the sham-Castle on Claverton Hill, & a summer-house on Beechen clift,
xxxx & the grave of a young man, whom <a gambler by name> Count Rice (I think) had killed in a duel.xxxx only
xxxxxx thxx xxxx; – but they were up-hill, & my Aunt regarded it
as an impossibility to walk so far. I did not reach them therefore till I was old enough to be in some degree master of my own
movements. The grave was at Bath Weston, & we reached it once: but the usual extent of our walks into the country (which were very
rare) was to a cottage in an orchard about half way. It was always a great joy <to me> when I was sent for home, tho my fathers house stood <was> in then <one of the busiest> streets of a
crowded city. I had more liberty, & was under no capricious restrictions; – & I had more walks into the fields, tho still too
few. My Mother sometimes, & sometimes my Aunt Mary, would walk with me to Kingsdown, – to Brandon Hill, – Clifton, or that <bank of
the river which> is called the Sea Banks, I know nobody. And we often went to my grandmothers,
Miss Tyler whose ascendency over my Mother was always that of an imperious elder sister, would not suffer me to be
breeched till I was six years old, tho I was tall of my age. I had a fantastic dress <costume> of nankeen, for highdays
& holydays, trimmed with green fringe, – it was called a vest & tunic, – or a jam. When at last I changed my dress it was for
coat waistcoat & breeches, – for there was no intermediate form of dress <apparel> in use. I was then sent as a day
scholar to a school on the top of S Michaels hill, which was then esteemed the best in Bristol, kept by Mr Foot, a
dissenting minister.a General Baptist of that community who are called General Baptists, in
contradistinction to the Particular Baptists, & like most of his denomination had passed into a sort of Low Arianism, if indeed he
were not a Socinian. With this however I had nothing to do, nor did my parents regard it. He was an very old man, & if
the school had ever been a good one, it had woefully deteriorated. I was one of the least boys there, – I believe the very least, &
certainly both as willing & as apt to learn, as any teacher could have desired: yet it was the only school where I was ever treated
with severity. The Lessons in the grammar which I did not comprehend, & yet would have learned well enough by rote under
gentle discipline, were frightened out of my head, & then I was shut up in a closet at the top of the stairs, with just light
enough thro some bars to see my lesson by. Once he caned me cruelly, – the only time that any master ever laid his hand upon me: –
& I am sure he deserved a beating much more than I did. There was a great deal of tyranny in the school, from the worst of which I
was exempted because I went home at in the evening: but I stood in great fear of the big boys, & saw much more of the
evil side of human nature than I should ever have learnt in the course of domestic education.
I had been there not more than twelve months when the master died. He was succeeded by Mr Estlin, a Socinian Minister, with whom I in after years
I was well acquainted, – a good scholar, & an excellent man. Had I continued at the school, he would have grounded me well.
Unfortunately my father (I know not for what reason) thought proper to remove
me upon Mr Foots death, & placed me at a school nine miles from Bristol, in a village called Corston, about a
mile from the Globe at Newton, a well known public house on the road between Bath & Bristol. The stage was to drop me at that
public house, & my father to accompany it on horseback, & consign me
to the masters care. When the time for our departure drew nigh, I found my
Mother weeping in her chamber. It was the first time I had ever seen her shed tears; – the room (that wherein I was born) with
all its furniture, & her attitude <position> & look at that moment, are as distinct in my memory as if the scene had
occurred but yesterday; – & I can call to mind with how strong & painful an effort it was that I subdued my own feelings. I
allude to it in the Hymn to the Penates.
One of my earliest extant poems (the Retrospect) describes <this school, &> a visit which I made to this
school at the dozen years <it>, in the year 1794 <after it had ceased to be one>.x <pillars>
surmounted with huge balls of stone, a paddock, a large orchard, walnut trees, <yards &> outhouses upon an opulent scale. I felt
how mournful all this was in its fallen state, when the great walled garden was converted into a playground for the boys, the gateways
xxxxx broken, the summer houses falling to ruin, & grass growing in the interstices of the Lozenged pavement of the
fore court. The features within I do not so distinctly remember, not being so well able to understand their <symbols of better days>,
only I recollect a black oaken staircase <from the hall,> & that the school room was hung with faded tapestry, behind which we used
to hoard crabs.
Here one year of my life was past xxx unprofitably, & with a good deal of suffering. There could not be
a worse school in all respects. Xxxxxxx <Thomas xxxx> Flowerof <in> life, but utterly unfit for that in which he was placed. His whole delight was in
mathematics & astronomy; & he had constructed an orrery upon so large a scale, that it filled a room. What a misery it must
have been for such a man to teach a set of stupid boys, year after year, the rudiments of arithmetic! And a misery he seemed to feel
it; when he came into his desk, even there he was thinking of the stars, & seemed always <looked as if he were> out of
humour <not from ill-nature, but> because his calculations were interrupted. But for the most part he left the school to the care of
his son Charley,few small part of the boys
who learnt it, – of whom I was one. Duplaniera very good natured man. He
returned to France at the commencement of the Revolution, & a report obtained credit at one time that xx resuming his
own name there, he went into the army, & became no less a personage than General Menou, of Egyptian notoriety.
That sort of ornamental penmanship which now, I fear, is wholly gone out of use, was taught there. The father as well
as Charley excelled in it. They could adorn the heading of a rule in arithmetic in a cyphering book, not merely with common
flourishing, but with an angel, a serpent, a fish or a pen, formed with an ease & freedom of hand which was to me a great object of
admiration; but unluckily I was too young to acquire the art. In the course of my life I have seen two historical subjects
<pieces> produced in this manner by the pen <with worthy of remembrance as notable specimens of whimsical
dexterity>; one was David killing Goliah, -on the
xxxxxxx upon it>; – the other was a portrait of Joam 5by
Ladies in the age of our parents, – & engrossingly hand for <considering> the
use to which it is appropriated, but which I suppose was devised to insure distinctness & legibility) & some varieties of
German text, worthy for their square, massy, antique forms to have figured in an Antiquarians title page.
Twice during the twelve months of my stay, much great interest was excited throughout the school
<commonwealth> by a grand spelling match, for which poor Flower deserves some credit, if it was a device of his own, to save himself
trouble & amuse the boys. Two of the biggest boys chose for their party, boy by boy alternately, till the whole
number <school> was divided between them: they then hunted the Dictionary for words unusual enough in their orthography
to puzzle ill-taught lads, & having compared lists, that the same word might not be chosen by both, two words were delivered to
every boy, & kept by him profoundly secret from all on the other side till the time of trial. On a day appointed we all
were xxxx drawn up in battle array, quite as anxious for <on> the moment <occasion> as the members of
a Cricket Club for the xxxxx <xxxxxx result> of a grand match against all England, – ambition – that “last
infirmity of noble minds”victory <event>. The words were given out in due succession on each side from the biggest to the least,
& for every one which was spelt <rightly> in its progress down the enemys ranks, the enemy scored one. The party in which I was
engaged won <lost> one of these matches & won the other. I can still remember that my words for one of them
were Chrystallization & coterie, & that I was one of the most effective persons in the contest, which might very easily be.
Charley & his father frequently saved themselves some trouble by putting me to teach bigger boys than myself. I got
on with Latin here more by assisting others in their lessons than by <my> own, for Duplanier only <when the master> came
twice a week <so seldom>; this assistance was not voluntary on my part, it was a tax levied upon me by the law of the
strongest <a law which prevails as much in schools as it did in the cabinets of the Emperor Napoleon & of Louis 14,xx made as much
progress myself as if my lessons had been daily. At Mr Foots I read Cordery & Erasmus,designated indicated by figures in the margin. But I am at the end of my paper, & the slip beside me has items
enough concerning Corston for another letter.