Letter 1: 6 June 1798

  • Physical form: One sheet folded into 2 leaves (20 x 24.8 cm)
  • Cover: Miss Rickards / At Mrs Hunts' / [in a different hand] Crescent [tear] / near / Birmingham
  • PM: [inner circle] 6 [outer circle] 98
  • WM: H & T SALMON / [17]94
  • SM: Misc MS 4337
My dear Lydia,

I thank you for your pretty French letter, which I would send back corrected if I had any frank;

(2)
frank: a cover signed by a member of Parliament, so that it could be sent free of postage.

as it is, I will keep it till we meet—Your observations on the history you have read are very just, & shew that you not only treasure up facts in your memory, but that your mind receives the impressions those facts are calculated to make— Nothing exercises the moral feelings more profitably than History. Whe[n] we study those parts of science which relate to inanimate nature, our sagacity is called forth & our taste is gratified, but that lively interest is wanting which results from contemplating the actions & fortunes of our fellow creatures. On the other hand when we enter with vivacity into the transactions which pass before our eyes, our feelings are apt to be mingled with the bitterness of party or tinged with private partialities & resentments. In History alone nothing checks the freedom of discussion [written over “dissension”?] you may take the side of the Greeks or of the Persians,
without

[fol 1v] without giving offence to any body, & if you can pick up any anecdotes relative to the coterie of Aspasia or the toilette of Semiramis they may be circulated without occasioning any scandal—

(3)
Aspasia of Miletus: simultaneously a respected rhetorician and a socially dubious ‘hetaira’, her relationship with Pericles was the source of gossip and invective; see Athenaeus, The Deipnosophists Book XIII, trans. C. D. Yonge (1854). Semiramis: the legendary Assyrian-Babylonian wife of Onnes and Ninus, the ruler of Assyria and Babylon. According to Diodorus Siculus, Semiramis built the walls and gates of Babylon (The Library of History, Book II).

I hope you are all enjoying the country as much as we do, but begging your pardon I doubt whether you have so fine a one to enjoy, & this I may say without any disparage^ment^ of yours for the face of the country about Box Hill is I believe allowed to be one of the finest in England. Add to this that its beautiful swells & hollows are improved to the best advantage in the numerous gentlemen’s seats which every where embellish the prospect. Amongst these Mr Locke’s

(4)
William Lock(e) (1732–1810), "art connoisseur and patron" (ODNB).

has the preeminence for the admirable disposition of the walks & points of view, & the artful manner in which the different shades of green relieve one another so as to produce the most picturesque effect. Indeed modern English Gardening is the art of Landscape painting only the artist uses real trees & turf & water instead of canvass & a box of colours but he considers every effect of light & shade the disposition of every tree & almost of every bough. His keeping,

(5)
"keeping": In painting, "the maintenance of the proper relation between the representation of nearer and more distant objects in a picture" (OED, “Keeping,” 9.a).

his foregrounds & his back-grounds are all disposed by the same rules of art which the Painter observes. Mr Locke had a consultation of Painters to determine in what spot of the grounds his house should would be built to most advantage—I wish you would give me

[fol 2r] [your] opinion in your next letter what constitutes that beauty, in a landscape with which we are all so much charmed; how much of it is owing to colour, to form, to contrast, to motion &c—This is a very good country for botanizing. We have had several specimens of the various species of the Orchis, many of which (formed it should seem in the sportiveness of nature) bear a whimsical resemblance to some animal or part of animal. There is the bee Orchis & the [tear] Orchis, each of which [m]ight deceive the eye with [rese]mblance of those insects whose name they [bear] & there is another, the root of which is exactly like a child’s, or if you will, a fairy’s hand. I hardly know what to tell you about my Brother; a while ago we thought him mending, he is just now not so well, vicica Vicissitudes more anxious than uniform illness! He seems to take comfort in our company. I will wait therefore till I have another letter fr[heavy crossout]before I fix our return, as it is possible you may have plans which may delay you[.] Remember me affectionately to Mrs Rickards & Miss H.

(6)
"Miss H": Miss Harrup or Harrop, mentioned several times in these letters but not identified. On 9 June 1802 she took tea with the Barbaulds (RB, Diary", 1–22 June 1802. MS. Estate of Lady Rodgers. Cited hereafter as 'RB, Diary.').

tell Mrs Rickards she has had an escape of increasing her family by the servant she dismissed . She has acknowledged to Mrs Carr

(7)
"Mrs Carr": Frances Carr, of Hampstead, whose family were friends with the Barbaulds.

that she is five months gone with child. Excuse me [for not] having written sooner, &

believe [tear] Lydia Your very affte friend
AL Barbauld

Notes

1. Dorking: a town in Surrey, near Box Hill (so called from groves of box trees that grew on it). ALB was at Dorking to be near her brother, JA, who spent the spring and summer of 1798 there to recover from a serious illness. [back]
2. frank: a cover signed by a member of Parliament, so that it could be sent free of postage. [back]
3. Aspasia of Miletus: simultaneously a respected rhetorician and a socially dubious ‘hetaira’, her relationship with Pericles was the source of gossip and invective; see Athenaeus, The Deipnosophists Book XIII, trans. C. D. Yonge (1854). Semiramis: the legendary Assyrian-Babylonian wife of Onnes and Ninus, the ruler of Assyria and Babylon. According to Diodorus Siculus, Semiramis built the walls and gates of Babylon (The Library of History, Book II). [back]
4. William Lock(e) (1732–1810), "art connoisseur and patron" (ODNB). [back]
5. "keeping": In painting, "the maintenance of the proper relation between the representation of nearer and more distant objects in a picture" (OED, “Keeping,” 9.a). [back]
6. "Miss H": Miss Harrup or Harrop, mentioned several times in these letters but not identified. On 9 June 1802 she took tea with the Barbaulds (RB, Diary", 1–22 June 1802. MS. Estate of Lady Rodgers. Cited hereafter as 'RB, Diary.'). [back]
7. "Mrs Carr": Frances Carr, of Hampstead, whose family were friends with the Barbaulds. [back]
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