3899. Robert Southey to Grosvenor Charles Bedford, 30 September 1822
Endorsement: 30 Septr. 1822./ Horsemangander
MS: Bodleian Libraries, University of Oxford, MS. Eng. lett. c. 26. ALS; 2p.
Unpublished.
I found your letter to day with its inclosure, on our return from Skiddaw with Sirius, being my third ascent this season. If tomorrow be favourable (which the barometer seems to indicate it will not) we are to breakfast with Tom & ascend Causey Pike, – & on Wednesday Sirius takes his departure for London to our sorrow. I shall then be left to myself, & to my needful occupations, which have been very long interrupted. – Great bodily exercise is incompatible with much mental exertion, & I am so circumstanced as to stand in need of both. I must compromise the matter thro the winter as well as I can
Have you seen a series of Costumes etched by Lewis as Illustrations of Dibdins Tour.
If you have not, look for them & in the 25th print, you will find as perfect a likeness as ever was produced of – John Cockbaine.
Lewis avers it to be a faithful portrait, observing at the same time that few artists could have resisted the temptation of taking it.
It appears therefore that Nature did not break the mould in which the Perfect Taylor was made. She was so pleased with it, that she made two pers who could only be paralleled by each other, – & gave one to England another to France.
Alas Johnny is growing old & is no longer what he was in his prime. As a Taylor he must always remain unequalled, – the fair ideal of that character: but in ugliness he is rivalled by Wells Fisher the nephew & successor of poor old John Fisher:
a curious personage in his way, to whom you must be introduced.
I have Will you tell Murray or Gifford that I have not had the last number of the QR,
– so that it may come with the forthcoming one
in the next parcel. I shall write to G. with the next portion of MSS.
Meantime tell him that I have not given up James 1st but have been preparing for him.
Sirius will tell you of our goings on, – of your godson, – of our Saddleback expedition & the descent of that mountain by Mrs Coleridge & how Edith-May horsemanganders Mrs Coleridge. I wish you were here to see it. Your godson has determined upon being an Archbishop, & I have instructed him that when he has attained the object of his ambitions, he may play at drafts, backgammon, & chess but that he must never play the fool. Cupn who knows that his father means to play the fool as long as he lives, does not relish the prohibition, but x is somewhat reconciled to it by hearing that he may play the fool with his Cupns if he has any. – He sees that my bells are going all day long.
God bless you
RS.