Harper's New Monthly Magazine, Vol. 2, No. 8, January, 1851
A Table of Contents has been added to this version of the text.
No. VIII.—JANUARY, 1851.—VOL. II.
ROBERT SOUTHEY
Being the youngest of all his children, I had not the privilege of knowing my father in his best and most joyous years, nor of remembering Greta Hall when the happiness of its circle was unbroken. Much labor and anxiety, and many sorrows, had passed over him; and although his natural buoyancy of spirit had not departed, it was greatly subdued, and I chiefly remember its gradual diminution from year to year.
In appearance he was certainly a very striking looking person, and in early days he had by many been considered almost the beau idéal of a poet. Mr. Cottle describes him at the age of twenty-two as tall, dignified, possessing great suavity of manners, an eye piercing, a countenance full of genius, kindliness, and intelligence; and he continues, I had read so much of poetry, and sympathized so much with poets in all their eccentricities and vicissitudes, that to see before me the realization of a character which in the abstract so much absorbed my regards, gave me a degree of satisfaction which it would be difficult to express. Eighteen years later Lord Byron calls him a prepossessing looking person, and, with his usual admixture of satire, says, To have his head and shoulders I would almost have written his Sapphics; and elsewhere he speaks of his appearance as Epic, an expression which may be either a sneer or a compliment.
His forehead was very broad; his height was five feet eleven inches; his complexion rather dark, the eyebrows large and arched, the eye well shaped and dark brown, the mouth somewhat prominent, muscular, and very variously expressive, the chin small in proportion to the upper features of his face. He always, while in Keswick, wore a cap in his walks, and partly from habit, partly from the make of his head and shoulders, we never thought he looked well or like himself in a hat. He was of a very spare frame, but of great activity, and not showing any appearance of a weak constitution.
Various
---
Transcriber's note
HARPER'S NEW MONTHLY MAGAZINE.
FOOTNOTES:
MESMER AND HIS MAGNETISM.
THE EMPEROR ALEXANDER'S VISIT TO MADAME CAMPAN'S SCHOOL.
TO HER ONLY SON.
FOOTNOTES:
FOOTNOTES:
A SKETCH FROM CHILDHOOD.
FOOTNOTES:
CHAPTER XVIII.
CHAPTER XIX.
CHAPTER XX.
FOOTNOTES:
A WELSH TALE.
GENERAL CONDUCT.
FOOTNOTES:
HIS EARLY PURSUITS.
HIS ATTENTION TO DETAILS.
NAPOLEON'S POWERS OF MEMORY.
HIS KNOWLEDGE OF NAVAL AFFAIRS.
HIS INDUSTRY AND CURIOSITY.
HIS LITERARY TASTE AND ACQUIREMENTS.
HIS RELIGIOUS SENTIMENTS.
FOOTNOTES:
BOOK II.—CHAPTER VII.
CHAPTER VIII.
CHAPTER IX.
CHAPTER X.
CHAPTER XI.
CHAPTER XII.
FOOTNOTES:
POLITICAL AND GENERAL NEWS.
GREAT BRITAIN.
FRANCE.
UNITED STATES.
GREAT BRITAIN.
FRANCE.
GERMANY, Etc.
PREPARATORY SCHOOLS FOR YOUNG LADIES.
LADIES' ARITHMETIC
NETTING FOR LADIES.