Burnett, George (c. 1776–1811)
George Burnett (c. 1776-1811): Writer. The son of John Burnett, a farmer, of Huntspill, Somerset. Educated at Balliol College, Oxford (matric. 1793).
George Burnett (c. 1776-1811): Writer. The son of John Burnett, a farmer, of Huntspill, Somerset. Educated at Balliol College, Oxford (matric. 1793).
Henry William Bunbury (1750-1811): Artist and caricaturist. He was the father of Southey’s schoolfriend from Westminster, Charles John Bunbury. In later life he settled in Keswick and from 1805 until his death became part of Southey’s social circle.
Henry Edward Bunbury, 7th Baronet (1778-1860): Army officer, uncle of Southey’s schoolfriend, Charles John Bunbury, and member of Southey’s circle in the Lake District. Bunbury was Under–Secretary of State for War and the Colonies 1809–1816 and provided Southey with information for his History of the Peninsular War (1823–1832).
Charles John Bunbury (1772-1798): Soldier. Educated at Westminster School, where he was a friend of Southey’s, and Trinity College, Cambridge. In 1789, Bunbury presented Southey with a copy of Thomas Warton’s Poems (3rd edn, 1779). Their friendship did not last. In 1793, Bunbury tried to avoid Southey when the latter was visiting Cambridge. Southey, in turn, claimed that Bunbury’s ‘debauchery’ was the direct result of his public school education. Bunbury joined the army and died at the Cape of Good Hope.
Antoine André Bruguière, Baron de Sorsum (1773-1823): French author and translator, who had served as secretary to Jérôme Bonaparte (1784–1860), when the latter was King of Westphalia (1807–1813). He produced translations of works by Byron, Sir William Jones, James Macpherson, and Shakespeare. In 1821 he translated Southey’s Roderick, the Last of the Goths (1814) into French.
William Bruce (fl. 1800s-1820s): Captain in the Bombay Marine service of the East India Company and British Resident at Bushire in Iran 1803–1807, 1808–1822. He met Southey at Buckland, the home of Caroline Bowles, and in 1826 sent Southey a case of Shiraz wine, for which Southey thanked him.
Wade Browne (1760-1821): Wealthy woollen merchant, who was Mayor of Leeds in 1791 and 1804, Justice of the Peace and Deputy Lieutenant for Yorkshire. He retired to Ludlow in 1807 and Southey came to know him in 1808 when Browne and his family spent one of several summers in the Lakes. The two continued to correspond until Browne’s death.
Sarah Browne (1793/1794-1860s): A daughter of Wade Browne by his first wife. In 1823 she married Charles Collins Crump (c. 1790–1876), Rector of Halford, Warwickshire from 1826. Southey visited the Browne family home in Ludlow when she was a young woman and later corresponded with her.
Elizabeth Browne (dates unknown): Unmarried daughter of Wade Browne by his first wife. Southey visited the family home in Ludlow when she was a young woman and later corresponded with her.
Elizabeth Browne (née Jones; dates unknown): The second wife of Wade Browne, by whom she had one daughter, Mary (1810–1892).