Robert Southey

From New World Encyclopedia

Robert Southey

Robert Southey (August 12, 1774 – March 21, 1843) was an English poet and writer of the Romantic school. Southey was intimately linked to all the major figures of English Romantic poetry; he was a close friend and neighbor of William Wordsworth, and attended college with Samuel Taylor Coleridge. Ironically, however, for a man so intimately connected to poetic developments in England, Southey never achieved major success as a poet. Although he wrote a number of poems which critics consider very successful, and although he was most certainly talented, Southey's poetry suffered from excessive mythologizing and allusion, at the expense of poetic clarity.

Ironically, Southey's fame now rests not on his poetry but on his prose. Although many of Southey's contemporaries (including, eventually, Coleridge) would voice their doubts about his talents as a poet, Southey's genius for prose-writing was never questioned even by his severest critics. As a close friend and confidante to so many important poets and writers of his generation, Southey's prolific prose work and correspondence is an invaluable record for one of the most important eras in English poetry. Moreover, Southey wrote a number of non-fiction books, many of which are still popular today, including biographies of Admiral Lord Nelson, John Bunyan, and John Wesley, and a historical study of Portugal and Spain where Southey rather famously "thanked God [he was] an Englishman." A master of the essay and an accomplished if not spectacular poet, Southey is an invaluable witness to the historical and literary developments of the early nineteenth-century who not only recorded the Romantic movement but also played a critical part in it.

Life

Southey was born in Bristol to Thomas Southey, a linen draper, and Margaret Hill, although Southey spent much of his childhood in the care of his aunt Elizabeth. Southey was educated at Westminster School in London, but was expelled after writing an article (published in the school periodical) that criticized the school's practice of excessive whippings. After his expulsion, Southey's youthful political sentiments turned markedly radical; he became a rather vocal champion of the French Revolution and began writing an epic poem Joan of Arc (published in 1796) that expressed his enthusiasm for democratic revolution and radical politics.

Southey entered Balliol College, Oxford, in 1792, shortly after his father's death and bankruptcy. Of his time at Oxford, Southey was later to say "All I learnt was a little swimming ... and a little boating..." At Oxford, Southey did, however, meet Coleridge, who at the time was also a young man who burned with political fire and had a weakness for poetry. The two collaborated on a verse drama The Fall of Robespierre that was completed the same year, though both men would later distance themselves from the juvenile work.

Having met a kindred soul in Southey, Coleridge proposed a plan to set up a "pantisocracy," a utopian community of self-subsisting farmers on the banks of the Susquehanna River in Pennsylvania. Southey initially expressed great enthusiasm for this plan, writing later:

Their wants would be simple and natural; their toil need not be such as the slaves of luxury endure; where possessions were held in common, each would work for all; in their cottages the best books would have a place; literature and science, bathed anew in the invigorating stream of life and nature, could not but rise reanimated and purified. Each young man should take to himself a mild and lovely woman for his wife; it would be her part to prepare their innocent food, and tend their hardy and beautiful race.

In 1795 Southey married Edith Fricker, and, shortly thereafter, Coleridge married Edith's sister, Sara Fricker. The two poets, now brothers-in-law, continued to plan quite seriously to develop their utopian community, having convinced several other friends to join the project. Shortly thereafter in the same year, however, Southey began to have his doubts; he suggested the community be moved from America to Wales, and then, shortly thereafter, completely backed away from the plan, calling it "unworkable." Without Southey's enthusiasm the utopian plan collapsed, and for a time Coleridge and Southey's friendship suffered as a result.

Thereafter Southey traveled with his uncle, who was the British chaplain in Lisbon, to Portugal and Spain. He would remain there nearly two years, and publishing his first major prose piece, Letters Written During a Short Residence in Spain and Portugal in 1797. The book was quite a success, and Southey followed it up with the publication of the second version of collected Poems in 1799 (the first version, published during his college years with Coleridge, had not received nearly as much attention). Supported financially by Charles Wynn, a college friend, Southey returned to England determined to make his living as a poet and writer.

Beginning in 1800, Southey entered the most successful period of his career. He became a regular contributor to a number of periodicals and newspapers; he did a number of volumes of translations, principally from Spanish and Portuguese; he edited the complete works of Thomas Chatterton; and he also published two epic poems Thalaba the Destroyer (1801) and Madoc (1805) which gained positive reviews in his time, though they are almost completely unread today.

In 1803 Southey visited Coleridge, who was living at Greta Hall, Keswick, in the Lake District. Coleridge's home was only a short walk from Wordsworth's. The two "Lake Poets" were at that time at the height of their creative output, and Southey was so impressed with his friend (and with the stunning countryside of the Lake District) that he decided to stay. Southey would live at Greta Hall for the rest of his life, partly so that Edith and Sara Fricker could remain together and partly because he wished to participate in the poetic activity he had discovered in the Lake District. Southey became fast friends with Wordsworth, and contributed poems to their growing Romantic movement.

Starting in 1809 Southey produced a prolific amount of prose, partly out of necessity; the expenses of Greta Hall proved to be quite steep, and Southey struggled to produce enough work to pay the bills. He began contributing to the Quarterly Review—the major publication for emerging poets in England. By 1813 Southey's fame as a poet had grown to such proportion that he was appointed as poet laureate.

In 1819, through a mutual friend, Southey met leading civil engineer Thomas Telford and struck up a strong friendship. From mid-August to October 1, 1819, Southey accompanied Telford on an extensive tour of his engineering projects in the Scottish Highlands, keeping a diary of his observations. This was published posthumously in 1929 as Journal of a tour in Scotland in 1819. The volume offers a fascinating glimpse at England's rapid industrialization from the point of view of a self-professed "poet of nature."

By this time Southey's political opinions had completely changed from his early radicalism; he had become a devoted Tory and despised the French Revolution and the ensuing chaos it had caused. Southey's reputation among some of his poets suffered because of his conservative views, and in the early 1810s matters came to a head when Southey and the poet Lord Byron became involved in a long public quarrel. Byron dedicated the first cantos of Don Juan, his great satire on hypocrisy, to Southey. Southey responded by publishing a poem, A Vision of Judgment which decried Byron and the flamboyant poets like him as belonging to the "Satanic school" of poetry. Byron immediately rebutted by publishing a masterful satire of Southey, entitled The Vision of Judgment. The quarrel with Byron was sadly never resolved, and the ugliness displayed on both sides tarnished Southey's late reputation and distracted him from accomplishing poetic work that might have been of higher merit.

In 1838, Edith died and Southey married Caroline Anne Bowles, also a poet. By this time, however, Southey's health was already failing, and his productivity had come to a stand-still. He died in relative obscurity in 1843.

Many of his poems are still read by British schoolchildren, the best-known being The Inchcape Rock and After Blenheim, possibly one of the earliest war poems, and easily one of his most famous:

After Blenheim
IT was a summer evening,
Old Kaspar's work was done,
And he before his cottage door
Was sitting in the sun;
And by him sported on the green
His little grandchild Wilhelmine.
She saw her brother Peterkin
Roll something large and round,
Which he beside the rivulet
In playing there had found:
He came to ask what he had found
That was so large and smooth and round.
Old Kaspar took it from the boy,
Who stood expectant by;
And then the old man shook his head,
And with a natural sigh—
"'Tis some poor fellow's skull," said he,
"Who fell in the great victory.
"I find them in the garden,
For there's many here about;
And often when I go to plough
The ploughshare turns them out.
For many thousand men," said he,
"Were slain in that great victory."
"Now tell us what 'twas all about,"
Young Peterkin he cries;
And little Wilhelmine looks up
With wonder-waiting eyes;
"Now tell us all about the war,
And what they fought each other for."
"It was the English," Kaspar cried,
"Who put the French to rout;
But what they fought each other
I could not well make out.
But everybody said," quoth he,
"That 'twas a famous victory.
"My father lived at Blenheim then,
Yon little stream hard by;
They burnt his dwelling to the ground,
And he was forced to fly:
So with his wife and child he fled,
Nor had he where to rest his head.
"With fire and sword the country round
Was wasted far and wide,
And many a childing mother then
And newborn baby died:
But things like that, you know, must be
At every famous victory.
"They say it was a shocking sight
After the field was won,
For many thousand bodies here
Lay rotting in the sun;
But things like that, you know, must be
After a famous victory.
"Great praise the Duke of Marlbro' won,
And our good Prince Eugene"—
"Why 'twas a very wicked thing!"
Said little Welhelmine;
"Nay—nay, my little girl," quoth he,
"It was a famous victory.
"And everybody praised the Duke
Who this great fight did win"—
"But what good came of it at last?"
Quoth little Peterkin.
"Why that I cannot tell," said he,
"But 'twas a famous victory."

Major works

Robert Southey
  • Fall of Robespierre (1794)
  • Joan of Arc: An Epic Poem (1796)
  • Poems (1797–1799)
  • Letters from Spain (1797)
  • Devil's Thoughts (1799)
  • Thalaba the Destroyer (1801)
  • Amadis de Gaula (1803)
  • Madoc (1805)
  • Letters from England (1807)
  • Palmerin of England (1807; translation)
  • The Cid (1808; translation)
  • The Curse of Kehama (1810)
  • The Life of Nelson (1813)
  • Roderick, the Last of the Goths (1814)
  • Wat Tyler: A Dramatic Poem (1817)
  • Journal of a Tour in Scotland in 1819 (1929, posthumous)
  • The Life of Wesley, and the rise and progress of Methodism (c. 1820)
  • A Vision of Judgment (1821)
  • Life of Cromwell (1821)
  • Thomas More (1829)
  • The Pilgrim's Progress with a Life of John Bunyan (1830)
  • Cowper (1833)
  • The Doctors (1834) – Includes the first published version of the fairy tale-like "Goldilocks and the Three Bears"
  • Select Lives of Cromwell and Bunyan (1846)
  • The Inchcape Rock

External links

All links retrieved December 15, 2022.


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