Letter from Samuel Taylor Coleridge, place not identified, to Robert Southey, 1801 November 9 : autograph manuscript signed.

Record ID: 
415359
Accession number: 
MA 1848.43
Author: 
Coleridge, Samuel Taylor, 1772-1834.
Created: 
Place not identified, 1801 November 9.
Credit: 
Purchased from Joanna Langlais, 1957.
Description: 
1 item (3 pages, with address) ; 19.4 x 12.3 cm
Notes: 

This collection, MA 1848, is comprised of 92 letters from Samuel Taylor Coleridge to Robert Southey, written between 1794 and 1819. See the collection-level record for more information (MA 1848.1-92).
This letter is from the Joanna Langlais Collection, a large collection of letters written by Samuel Taylor Coleridge to various recipients. The collection has been divided into subsets, based primarily on Coleridge's addressees, and these sub-collections have been cataloged as MA 1848-1857.
Address panel: "R. Southey Esq."

Summary: 

Saying that there is a thorn in his leg and the wound is not healing; writing that he is nevertheless leaving tomorrow for "Eusemere, Mr Clarkson's Residence, whither Mrs Coleridge & my beloved children are already gone"; asking Southey to write Daniel Stuart, inform him of his plans, and tell him that he will write very soon; sending love to Edith; telling him that Hartley was put in breeches last Sunday and "looks far better than in his petticoats. He ran to & fro in a sort of dance to the Jingle of the Load of Money, that had been put his breeches pockets: but he did [not] roll & tumble over and over in his old joyous way -- No! it was an eager & solemn gladness, as if he felt it to be an awful æra in his Life. -- O bless him! bless him! bless him!"; ending the letter "If my wife loved me, and I my wife, half as well as we both love our children, I should be the happiest man alive -- but this is not -- will not be!"

Provenance: 
Purchased from Joanna Langlais in 1957 as a gift of the Fellows, with the special assistance of Mrs. W. Murray Crane, Mr. Homer D. Crotty, Mr. and Mrs. Donald F. Hyde, Mr. Robert H. Taylor and Mrs. Landon K. Thorne. Formerly in the possession of Ernest Hartley Coleridge and Thomas Burdett Money-Coutts, Baron Latymer.