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Keswick Museum and Art Gallery, KESMG 1996.5.109. ALS; 4p. . Previously published: John Wood Warter (ed.), Selections from the Letters of Robert Southey, 4 vols (London, 1856), III, pp. 185–187 [in part].
These letters were edited with the assistance of Ian Packer and Lynda Pratt
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We have lost poor Wilsey, – & I have this
day seen her laid in the grave. She had for some time been sinking gradually under the weight of seventy seven
years. Her memory with regard to recent occurrences was quite gone, tho, as usual in such cases, it retained
clearly all its early impressions. On Monday the 28th last she walked as far as the Church with
the children, & went down with them into the vault of the Stephenson family, which the representative of that
family chuses to have opened whenever he comes to Keswick, for the
purpose I suppose of airing his ancestors.rs C. & Edith went down to her, much
shaken, & in a tremulous state. However she made a good breakfast, & walked about. But there was a manifest
change in her countenance, which one of the maids had perceived before she fell out of bed & I have no doubt
that the fall xxxx was occasioned by a slight stroke in the head. The head was inclined all that day a
little on one side, & she was what they call in this country maffled, – that is, confused
in her intellect. Edmondson saw her, & said that she had
been younger or stronger he would have bled her, – but in her case bleeding might have produced death. She kept up
during the day, & was left when we went to bed sleeping apparently well, & breathing naturally. One of the
maids however slept in the room with her, as indeed she had always slept within call in case of necessity during
the winter. At one o clock she awoke, insisted that it was time to get up, & could not be persuaded to the
contrary, – drest herself, & made a good breakfast. Between six & seven we were xxxxxx with a
called, – she was very ill, & had had a one or two fits, – & was then violently convulsed. When
the convulsion left her, her sight, hearing & speech were gone. Edmondson did not suppose she would have lasted six hours. But she lived till the eighth day, the
convulsions returned more than once, & while they lasted she moaned like one in pain. But on the whole there
was little apparent suffering, & I believe no return of intellect, certainly not of any of the senses which she
has lost. The extraordinary thing is that so feeble & exhausted a body should have continued to struggle with
death so long, with no other sustenance than x now & then a tea spoonful of tea or coffee, – indeed
little more than merely wetting the lips.
For some time she has been among our cares rather than our comforts – but her death makes a
blank, xxx & both young & old will feel her loss. For there never lived a better creature. I
never knew any one with a more generous spirit, or a more affectionate heart.
She has left 20£ to Hartley, 20 to
Mr Christian of the Strand,
It was gratifying to see how much interest her illness excited among the respectable people of the place, – those who had been taught to respect her by their parents, & those who remembered her when she was the handsomest young woman in Keswick, & more “looked upon” than any of her contemporaries, – her good conduct thro life having been as remarkable, as her person was in her youth.
She had been beyond this circle of mountains, – but was never out of sight of them. Carlisle was
the farthest point of her travels, & there she had been but once. – The chance which brought us here
contributed very materially to the comfort of her age. We have been here nearly 17 years, Mrs C. 20. & in all that time I never knew her do
an unkind thing, or say an unkind word.
Love to Louisa. I shall be glad to see the
children, – the youngest will be old enough to be handled by male hands.
The packet from Windsor contains Peninsular documents,