3911. Robert Southey to [John Murray], 1 November [1822]
Endorsement: [deletion and correction in another hand] <1 Nov> July 1822/ Robert Southey
MS: National Library of Scotland, MS 42552. ALS; 4p.
Previously published: Kenneth Curry (ed.), New Letters of Robert Southey, 2 vols (London and New York, 1965), II, pp. 238–239.
The mistake concerning the two sheets which I now return, may very possibly have been this, that when they were sent me a second time, I supposed them to be clean sheets, & laid them aside accordingly.
Three such sheets, I have with their correspondent proofs; – please to send me the others which have been struck off, that I may have them at hand to refer to.
Herewith you have a farther portion of copy. I am steadily proceeding with it, & shall go on without interruption till it is compleated.
When do you publish the first vol. of the Peninsular War?
I ha Let me know, because I have some letters to write with it. I am working at those papers from Mr B. Frere which you sent me, & have worked two or three hours every day since they arrived. As soon as I have got thro them we may go to press with the second volume. They bring me down most satisfactorily to the time when the papers which I obtained from another quarter commence. Some time ago I requested you to procure a “History of the War in Catalonia,” & also “Anecdotes of Chiefs employed in the Catalonian War”, by Francisco de Olivarez, both in Spanish – printed at Seville.
You may easily have overlooked this in the multiplicity of your concerns, – but you will see how necessary it is that I should have them, – the author being himself a Catalan, & having served actively in that province.
Your last number has some very good papers, the second is that which pleases me best.
The 7th is an important one,
& has very little of that tone respecting America which has given so much offence. I very much regret that that tone was ever taken. It gives great pain to those Americans who are friendly to England, – alienates some of them, & produces nothing but mischief, without the possibility of its doing any good. I am at this time reading a new American work (Dr Dwights Travels in New England & New York)
from which I could make an exceedingly interesting paper, were it not for that the spirit in which I should write would form such a total contrast to that of these unlucky articles which have preceded it:
The work is in four octavo volumes containing as much as so many English quartos There are not many readers who would go thro it with as much patience & pleasure as I am doing. But it contains a compleat view of society in that country, & a great number of curious facts, – & the facts as well as the opinions of the author all come in aid of those principles & institutions, – which, God knows, stand in need at this time of all the aid that can be found for them.
I am grieved to hear of Giffords state. When he hints to me said to me that he feared he should soon become unable to conduct the Review, & knew not where to look for a successor, John Coleridge occurred to me as a person in whom all the main requisites were to be found, – acquirements, talents, discretion, sound judgement, & a character upon which the most entire reliance may be placed. – Your interests, & those of the country, could not be in safer hands, – & both are seriously concerned in the decision.
farewell my dear Sir & believe me
yours faithfully
Robert Southey.
Keswick. Nov. 1.
I am desired to request that you will send a copy of Dobrizhoffer
to Lady Beaumont (Grosvenor Square) – with from the Translator. The Translator herself will be in London shortly.
I have not had No 53.