Bath, Sunday morning.
Compare, also, letter to Thomas Southey, dated October 19, 1794. Southey’s Life and Correspondence, i. 222.
[78] Poems, 1795, p. 123.
[79] See Southey’s Poetical Works, 1837, ii. 91:—
“If heavily creep on one little day,
The medley crew of travellers among.”
[80] Poems, 1795, p. 67.
[81] Poetical Works, 1837, ii. 92.
[82] “Rosamund to Henry; written after she had taken the veil.” Poems, 1795, p. 85.
[83] Poetical Works, 1837, ii. 216. Southey appears to have accepted Coleridge’s emendations. The variations between the text of the “Pauper’s Funeral” and the editio purgata of the letter are slight and unimportant.
[84] In a letter from Southey to his brother Thomas, dated October 21, 1794, this sonnet “on the subject of our emigration” is attributed to Favell, a convert to pantisocracy who was still at Christ’s Hospital. The first eight lines are included in the “Monody on Chatterton.” See Poetical Works, p. 63, and Editor’s Note, p. 563.