135- ) English Literature
Robert Southey- Summary
The son of a linen draper, Southey spent much of his childhood at Bath in the care of his aunt, Elizabeth Tyler. Educated at Westminster School and Balliol College, Oxford, Southey expressed his ardent sympathy for the French Revolution in the long poem Joan of Arc (published 1796). He first met Coleridge, who shared his views, in 1794, and together they wrote a verse drama, The Fall of Robespierre (1794). After leaving Oxford without a degree, Southey planned to carry out Coleridge’s project for a pantisocracy, or utopian agricultural community, to be located on the banks of the Susquehanna River, in the United States. But his interest in pantisocracy faded, causing a temporary breach with Coleridge.
In
1795 he secretly married Edith Fricker, whose sister, Sara, Coleridge was soon
to marry. That same year he went to Portugal with his uncle, who was the
British chaplain in Lisbon. While in Portugal he wrote the letters published as
Letters Written During a Short Residence in Spain and Portugal (1797), studied
the literature of those two countries, and learned to “thank God [he was] an
Englishman.” So began the change from revolutionary to Tory.
In
1797 he began to receive an annuity of £160 that was paid to him for nine years
by an old Westminster school friend, Charles Wynn, and in 1797–99 he published
a second volume of his Poems. In these years he composed many of his best short
poems and ballads and became a regular contributor to newspapers and reviews.
Southey also did translations, edited the works of Thomas Chatterton, completed
the epic Thalaba the Destroyer (1801), and worked on the epic poem Madoc
(1805).
In
1803 the Southeys visited the Coleridges, then living at Greta Hall, Keswick.
The Southeys remained at Greta Hall for life, partly so that Sara and Edith
could be together. Southey’s friendship with Wordsworth, then at nearby
Grasmere, dates from this time. The Southeys had seven children of their own,
and, after Coleridge left his family for Malta, the whole household was
economically dependent on Southey. He was forced to produce unremittingly—poetry,
criticism, history, biography, journalism, translations, and editions of
earlier writers. During 1809–38 he wrote, for the Tory Quarterly Review, 95
political articles, for each of which he received £100. Of most interest today
are those articles urging the state provision of “social services .” He also
worked on a projected history of Portugal that he was destined never to finish;
only his History of Brazil, 3 vol. (1810–19), was published. His edition (1817)
of Sir Thomas Malory’s 15th-century Le Morte Darthur played an important part
in generating renewed interest in the Middle Ages during the 19th century.
In
1813 Southey was appointed poet laureate through the influence of Sir Walter
Scott. But the unauthorized publication (1817) of Wat Tyler, an early verse
drama reflecting his youthful political opinions, enabled his enemies to remind
the public of his youthful republicanism. About this time he became involved in
a literary imbroglio with Lord Byron. Byron had already attacked Southey in
English Bards and Scotch Reviewers (1809) and had dedicated to him (1819) the
first cantos of Don Juan, a satire on hypocrisy. In his introduction to A
Vision of Judgement (1821), Southey continued the quarrel by denouncing Byron
as belonging to a “Satanic school” of poetry, and Byron replied by producing a
masterful parody of Southey’s own poem under the title The Vision of Judgment
(1822). The historian Thomas Macaulay unleashed a similarly devastating riposte
to Southey’s Sir Thomas More; or, Colloquies on the Progress and Prospects of
Society (1829), a major statement of 19th-century political medievalism.
Southey’s last years were clouded by his wife’s insanity, by family quarrels
resulting from his second marriage after her death (1837), and by his own failing
mental and physical health.
Except
for a few lyrics, ballads, and comic-grotesque poems—such as “My days among the
Dead are past,” “After Blenheim,” and “The Inchcape Rock”—Southey’s poetry is
little read today, though his “English Eclogues” (1799) anticipate Alfred
Tennyson’s “English Idyls” as lucid, relaxed, and observant verse accounts of
contemporary life. His prose style, however, has been long regarded as masterly
in its ease and clarity. These qualities are best seen in his Life of Nelson
(1813), still a classic; in the Life of Wesley; and the Rise and Progress of
Methodism (1820); in the lively Letters from England: By Don Manuel Alvarez
Espriella, the observations of a fictitious Spaniard (1807); and in the
anonymously published The Doctor, 7 vol. (1834–47), a rambling miscellany
packed with comment, quotations, and anecdotes (including the well-known
children’s classic “The Story of the Three Bears”). His less successful epic
poems are verse romances having a mythological or legendary subject matter set
in the past and in distant places. In his prose works and in his voluminous
correspondence, which gives a detailed picture of his literary surroundings and
friends, Southey’s effortless mastery of prose is clearly evident, a fact
attested to by such eminent contemporaries as William Hazlitt and Scott and
even by such an enemy as Byron.
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