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MS untraced; text is taken from John Wood Warter (ed.), Selections from the Letters of Robert Southey, 4 vols (London, 1856). Previously published: John Wood Warter (ed.), Selections from the Letters of Robert Southey, 4 vols (London, 1856), II, pp. 407–409.
These letters were edited with the assistance of Carol Bolton, Tim Fulford and Ian Packer
For permission to publish the text of MSS in their possession, the editor wishes to thank the Beinecke Rare Books and Manuscript Library, Yale University; Berg Collection of English and American Literature, The New York Public Library, Astor, Lenox and Tilden Foundations; the Bodleian Library Oxford University; the British Library; Boston Public Library; the Syndics of Cambridge University Library; the Syndics of the Fitzwilliam Museum Cambridge; Haverford College, Connecticut; the Historical Society of Pennsylvania; the Hornby Library, Liverpool Libraries and Information Services; the Houghton Library, Harvard University; the John Rylands Library, Manchester; the Kenneth Spencer Research Library, University of Kansas; Luton Museum (Bedfordshire County Council); Massachusetts Historical Society; McGill University Library; the National Library of Scotland; the Newberry Library, Chicago; the New York Public Library (Pforzheimer Collections); the Pierpont Morgan Library, New York; the Public Record Offices of Bedford, Suffolk (Bury St Edmunds) and Northumberland, the Master and Fellows of Trinity College, Cambridge; the Society of Antiquaries of Newcastle upon Tyne; the Trustees of the William Salt Library, Stafford, the Wisbech and Fenland Museum; the University of Virginia Library.
A research grant from the British Academy made much of the archival work possible, as did support from the English Department of Nottingham Trent University.
Any dashes occurring in line breaks have been removed.
Because of web browser variability, all hyphens have been typed on the U.S. keyboard.
Dashes have been rendered as a variable number of hyphens to give a more exact rendering of their length.
Southey’s spelling has not been regularized.
Writing in other hands appearing on these manuscripts has been indicated as such, the content recorded in brackets.
& has been used for the ampersand sign.
£ has been used for £, the pound sign
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I had resolved upon writing to you this evening, and, alas! my
thoughts are drawn towards you very mournfully by a letter which this post has
brought, informing me of poor Dusautoy’s
death. The fever at Cambridge has proved fatal to him, and he, too, like Henry, rests in the cloister of his own
college!he has escaped this danger, and I pray God the
pestilence (for so it may be called) may not spread. My letter (which is from
Tillbrooke
Hartley is by this time at
Oxford, and probably settled at Merton. What will his fate be? I hardly dare ask
myself the question. He goes with the invaluable advantage of having a cousin
This has been a sickly season; my young ones have all been affected
with an endemic cold and cough, from which they are not yet thoroughly recovered,
though, thank God, they are recovering. The “Eclectic” has not reached me yet. If the
article be written by Montgomery,
I am working on in the old horse-in-a-mill way at reviewing, with
intervals of worthier employment upon the “Brazilian History,”