Egerton, Thomas (fl. 1750–1830) and John (d. 1795)

Thomas (fl. 1750–1830) and John (d. 1795) Egerton: London publishers and booksellers. Southey and his collaborators Bedford and Wynn, employed the Egertons as printers for the first five numbers of the schoolboy magazine The Flagellant, which appeared between 1–29 March 1792. The fifth issue contained a controversial essay denouncing flogging as an invention of the devil. Under pressure from Dr William Vincent, the Head Master of Westminster School, the Egertons revealed that Southey was its author.

Edwards, Charles (1797–1868)

Charles Edwards (1797–1868): A Cambridge solicitor who later emigrated to New York. He was the author of Hofer, and Other Poems (1820), which quoted from Southey’s Letters Written During a Short Residence in Spain and Portugal (1797) (p. 74). In December 1819, Edwards approached Southey and asked for a favour (possibly a contribution to Hofer), which Southey declined to perform.

Dyer, George (1755–1841)

George Dyer (1755–1841): Author and advocate of political reform. Son of John Dyer, a shipwright of Bridewell, London. Educated at Christ’s Hospital and Emmanuel College, Cambridge (BA 1778). From the late 1780s to mid-1790s he was active in reformist causes, a member of the Constitutional Society and author of An Inquiry into the Nature of Subscription to the Thirty-Nine Articles (1789, 2nd revised edn 1792), Complaints of the Poor People of England (1793) and A Dissertation on the Theory and Practice of Benevolence (1795).

Dusautoy, James (c. 1797–1815)

James Dusautoy (c. 1797–1815): Son of a retired officer from Totnes, Devon. He cherished ambitions for a poetic career. As a schoolboy in 1811 he canvassed Walter Scott’s advice and was politely encouraged to improve his writing by gaining more knowledge. In 1813 Dusautoy sent some of his verses to Southey. The latter replied and a correspondence about Dusautoy’s career ensued. He took Southey’s advice and was admitted to Emmanuel College, Cambridge, in 1813. In 1814 he entered an ode, in Spenserian stanzas, for a university prize in English poetry.

Druitt, Mrs (née Lovell; dates unknown)

Mrs Druitt (née Lovell; dates unknown): A sister of Southey’s brother-in-law, Robert Lovell; probably either Deborah (1773–1859), Sarah (dates unknown), Lydia (1777–1830) or Rachael Lovell (dates unknown). She had moved to Dublin by 1816 and married Joseph Druitt (1767–1833), an official at the Friends School, Lisburn 1821–1833, probably in 1819. Southey corresponded with her intermittently.

D’Oyly, George (1778–1846)

George D’Oyly (1778–1846): Domestic Chaplain to the Archbishop of Canterbury 1813–1815. He was co–editor of an annotated Bible (1814) for the Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge meeting in Bartlett’s Buildings, an Anglican missionary society founded in 1701, and a frequent contributor to the Quarterly Review. He corresponded with Southey in the 1820s.