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Robert Southey (1774–1843)

Author of The Life of Nelson

109+ Works 744 Members 13 Reviews

About the Author

Robert Southey was born on August 12, 1774. In 1788, Southey entered the Westminster school at the expense of his uncle. One year after his admission to Westminster, the French Revolution began. Southey was fifteen years old at the time, and like many young people of his day, he passionately show more sympathized with the high ideals of the French cause. During these years, Southey befriended both Charles W. W. Wynn and Grosvenor Charles Bedford. Bedford and Wynn began a publication in 1792, The Flagellant, which Southey later joined as writer and co-editor. He submitted an anonymous article on "Flogging," in which he claimed that the school's disciplinary practice of flogging students was satanic. Dr. Vincent, the headmaster at the school, viewed the essay not as the product of a boy's imagination, but as a direct attack on both the school and the British Constitution. Eventually, Southey came forward and offered his apology, but was nonetheless expelled from school. Southey was of course then refused admission at Christ Church and had to attend Balliol College at Oxford. In order to escape life at Oxford and postpone making his decision to join the clergy, Southey took some time off from school in the autumn of 1793. Southey eventually left Oxford after his second term to be married. Shortly after leaving, he crossed paths with Samuel Taylor Coleridge, with whom he formed a friendship which would mold his early life and continue until his later years. In 1794, Southey, Coleridge, and several mutual friends came up with the idea of "Pantisocracy," or "equal rule of all." Their goal was to emigrate to America to practice Pantisocracy by forming a communal, utopian settlement where everyone would live in harmony and brotherhood. In order to raise money for this, Southey and Coleridge joined to write drama and political propaganda, and to write and deliver weekly lectures on politics and history. At this time, they co-wrote the drama entitled "The Fall of Robespierre," which was published by a radical printer at Cambridge under Coleridge's name. This same year Southey wrote Wat Tyler, based on the Peasant's Revolt of 1381. Unfortunately, Wat Tyler was not published, the scheme to emigrate to America to practice "Pantisocracy" never came to fruition, and his friendship with Coleridge became increasingly strained. The relationship deteriorated further when Coleridge and his wife began having marital difficulties. Coleridge eventually left his wife and Southey was forced to support both families. Southey then accepted Charles Wynn's offer to set up an annuity for him if he would study law. Southey began to study law by day and write poetry and prose at night. He drifted entirely away from his legal studies and began to concentrate solely on his writing. Between 1796 and 1805 Southey wrote Joan of Arc: An Epic Poem, Thalaba the Destroyer, Madoc, and several volumes of shorter verse. He also wrote numerous ballads, made frequent contributions to The Monthly Magazine and published the popular Letters Written During a Short Residence in Spain and Portugal. After several years of estrangement from Coleridge, the two poets collaborated on the Devil's Walk in 1799. Although Southey remained a champion of the poor and became an outspoken adversary of slavery, he began to cherish the maintenance of social order. After becoming an outspoken member of the Tory party, Southey's changing views led him to accept a position as Britain's Poet Laureate in 1813, a position that he held for 30 years. Twenty-three years after Wat Tyler was written, it suddenly resurfaced into a highly charged political atmosphere in which an older, more conservative Southey was at the forefront. Upon learning that Southey was the author, his adversaries, such as William Hazlitt and William Smith, seized upon the play as an example of his hypocrisy, while his friends, Wynn, Coleridge, and Wordsworth, defended him vehemently. Despite the effects of Wat Tyler's appearance on Southey's reputation, it sold over 60,000 copies and was reprinted, making it one of his most well-read and commercially successful works. Southey eventually incorporated the play into his complete works in 1838. Although the reappearance of the poem forced Southey to confront the dissipation of his youthful ideals, it did not significantly affect his career as an esteemed poet and writer. Southey remained Poet Laureate of Britain for 30 years, and eventually died in 1843. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
Image credit: From Wikipedia

Works by Robert Southey

The Life of Nelson (1812) 282 copies
The Cataract of Lodore (1991) — Author — 38 copies
Letters from England (1984) 27 copies
Omniana (Centaur Classics) (1969) 14 copies
Poems of Robert Southey (1909) 13 copies
Poems (1895) 11 copies
Joan of Arc, an epic poem (1817) 10 copies
The Remains of Henry Kirke White (1807) — Editor — 9 copies
The Book of the Church (1825) 9 copies
History of Brazil (1969) 8 copies
Thalaba the destroyer (1991) 8 copies
Poems By Robert Southey (1880) 6 copies
The doctor, &c (1848) 6 copies
The curse of Kehama (2005) 4 copies
English Seamen (1897) 4 copies
Palmerin of England (2010) 3 copies
Madoc (2021) 3 copies
Poems, 1799 (1997) 2 copies
The Life Of Wesley (2022) 1 copy
The Cid 1 copy
The annual anthology (1997) 1 copy
select prose (2007) 1 copy
New Letters: v. 2 (1989) 1 copy
Robin Hood: A Fragment (2010) 1 copy

Associated Works

The Pilgrim's Progress (1678) — Editor, some editions — 17,586 copies
The Poem of the Cid (1140) — Translator, some editions — 2,451 copies
English Poetry, Volume II: From Collins to Fitzgerald (1910) — Contributor — 508 copies
The Penguin Book of War (1999) — Contributor — 452 copies
Fairy Tales from Around the World (2014) — Contributor — 302 copies
Men at War: The Best War Stories of All Time (1942) — Contributor — 288 copies
The Portable Conservative Reader (1982) — Contributor — 211 copies
Great Stories of the Sea & Ships (1940) — Contributor — 174 copies
Best Remembered Poems (1992) — Contributor — 159 copies
Vampires, Wine, and Roses (1997) — Contributor — 156 copies
The Standard Book of British and American Verse (1932) — Contributor — 116 copies
Byron's Poetry and Prose [Norton Critical Edition] (2009) — Contributor — 94 copies
The Mammoth Book of True War Stories (1992) — Contributor — 87 copies
Victorian Fairy Tales (2014) — Contributor — 87 copies
The Fairies' Ring (1999) — Contributor — 48 copies
The Lakeland Poets: An Illustrated Collection (1991) — Contributor — 29 copies
Amadis of Gaul (2010) — Translator — 27 copies
100 Story Poems (1951) — Contributor — 21 copies
A Treasury of Sea Stories (1948) — Contributor — 20 copies
Masters of British Literature, Volume B (2007) — Contributor — 17 copies
Fairy Poems (2023) — Contributor — 15 copies
Oxford and Oxfordshire in Verse (1982) — Contributor — 12 copies
Cat Encounters: A Cat-Lover's Anthology (1979) — Contributor — 11 copies
The Poetry of Snowdonia (1989) — Contributor — 7 copies
Hauska satukirja (1975) — Contributor — 3 copies
The Children's Own Treasure Book (1947) — Contributor — 2 copies
Ferdinand Freiligraths Werke - Neue Pracht-Ausgabe (1900) — Contributor — 1 copy
George Riddle's Readings — Contributor — 1 copy

Tagged

17th century (238) allegory (687) anthology (179) biography (97) British (77) British literature (124) Bunyan (108) Christian (395) Christian Classics (115) Christian fiction (282) Christian living (336) Christianity (472) classic (455) classics (585) English (83) English literature (189) epic (85) fantasy (78) fiction (1,738) history (219) John Bunyan (108) Kindle (88) literature (664) medieval (110) military history (94) non-fiction (118) novel (179) poetry (580) Puritan (105) Puritans (149) read (112) religion (540) short stories (108) Spain (95) Spanish (103) Spanish literature (126) spirituality (90) Theology (198) to-read (456) unread (92)

Common Knowledge

Canonical name
Southey, Robert
Birthdate
1774-08-12
Date of death
1843-03-21
Burial location
Crosthwaite Parish Church, Cumbria, England, UK
Gender
male
Nationality
UK
Country (for map)
England, UK
Birthplace
Bristol, Gloucestershire, England, UK
Place of death
Keswick, Cumberland, England, UK
Places of residence
Keswick, Cumberland, England, UK
Education
University of Oxford (Balliol College)
Occupations
poet
translator
essayist
biographer
Relationships
Southey, Caroline Anne (wife)
Warter, John Wood (son-in-law and editor)
Awards and honors
Poet Laureate of the United Kingdom (1813-1843)
Southey Lectures (Bristol|1979)
Short biography
The Southey Lectures, promoted by the Rector and Church Council of Old Bristol Parish Church (Christ Church with St Ewen and All Saints, City), are intended to consider Bristolians who have made a major contribution to the Arts, Literature, Philosophy, Science, Politics and Religion, and are named after Robert Southey, who was baptized in Christ Church in 1774. The first lecture, on Robert Southey and Bristol, was delivered in 1979 and published in 1980.

Members

Reviews

I really enjoyed this, but the versification (irregularly long unrhymed iambics in stanzas of varying length) seemed disruptive to me. I'm not sure if blank verse or regular, rhymed stanzas would have been the better choice to improve the poem, but since Shelley took obvious (and copious) influence from this poem for his Revolt of Islam in Spenserian stanzas, I'd bet on the latter. Better, I think, than Southey's Joan of Arc, which was in blank verse. It's easy to see why Southey had the reputation he did at the time, but why is he so neglected today?… (more)
 
Flagged
judeprufrock | 1 other review | Jul 4, 2023 |
A fun little tale. I liked the poetic version a lot, and found the original, pre-Goldilocks story pretty interesting, especially in regards to the ending.
 
Flagged
Faith_Murri | 1 other review | Dec 9, 2019 |
A fun little tale. I liked the poetic version a lot, and found the original, pre-Goldilocks story pretty interesting, especially in regards to the ending.
 
Flagged
Faith_Murri | 1 other review | Jul 28, 2019 |
Surprisingly good. The verse isn't anything to write home about, but there's an enjoyable story in there; kind of an Arabian Nights thing with a splash of Conan the Barbarian.
½
 
Flagged
amanda4242 | 1 other review | Jun 19, 2019 |

Awards

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Statistics

Works
109
Also by
35
Members
744
Popularity
#34,144
Rating
½ 3.7
Reviews
13
ISBNs
154
Languages
3

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