Kingsdown Parade, Bristol
Southey lived there December 1799–February 1800, close to Charles Danvers.
Southey lived there December 1799–February 1800, close to Charles Danvers.
Market town in the Lake District. From 1800, the home of Samuel Taylor Coleridge and his family. Southey and his wife visited in August 1801 and made it their permanent residence from September 1803.
The London home of the Hispanist Lord Holland, and a centre for Whig political, social and cultural life.
House on the outskirts of Keswick. From 1800, the home of Samuel Taylor Coleridge and his family. Southey and his wife visited in August 1801 and made it their permanent residence from September 1803.
Southey sought to qualify as a barrister between 1797 and 1801. This required him to register at one of the Inns of Court and occasionally attend formal dinners there. Southey chose Grays Inn, at the intersection of High Holborn and Grays Inn Road.
Home of William Wordsworth and his family, from December 1799 to May 1808.
Ruined abbey to the southwest of the Lakes; much admired by Southey and Wordsworth.
The house rented by Tom Southey and his family in 1819. It was in Newlands, a valley running southwest from Greta Hall to Buttermere. Southey was a frequent visitor and enjoyed swimming in the beck near Tom’s home.
The city home of Isaac Corry, Southey’s employer in 1801–1802.
The residence of Southeys’ parents, given up in early 1793 after the death of his father in December 1792.