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Wordsworth, Dora (1804-1847). - Letter, from Rydal Mount, to Edward Quillinan (1791-1851), at Sur Le Rampart, Bologne, dated 20 February 1834. WLL / Wordsworth, Dora / 1 / 57
Rydal Mount My dear Mr Quillinan
I fear I cannot send you the extracts you wish for. We have not Campbell's Poem of the Rainbow - It & its counterpart were transcribed for my Father by Mr Archer & I have hunted the house round & cannot find them & he is not in the country. We are right well pleased to hear that mischief is finished indeed your whole letter gave us sincere pleasure as we gather from the tone of it that you are more tranquil in mind & body than you have been for months past. Your Darlings too must be so very happy than even we who mourned over the departure from the shores of old England would mourn over their return if that return were to separate them from their Father. As I have nothing but good news to tell I must e'en run the risk of giving you a second edition of the Rydal bulletin - but it shall be abridged. My We had heard of your being in Cambridge from Chris who past a part of his Xmas Vacation at Rydal much to poor Aunty's satisfaction he did indeed diffuse sunshine & gladness over her sick room & he must have felt himself amply rewarded for this little sacrifice of his valuable time. But all this I know I told to Rotha I wish now I had not troubled the Darling with that letter but I felt so very anxious at your silence I could not wait any longer. & the oculists speak very favorably as to the result. Aunt left them all well at Brinsop. My Uncle has taken a Nephew of Sir R: Peels as a pupil in farming - a disagreeable addition to a fireside circle I should think. & Aunt Hutchinson felt it so I believe in expectation. As for Mr Monkhouse he seems to be so full of his Sheep & Sheep Shows that I suspect he is a little out of Aunt Sarah's good graces as she names him but seldom in her letters. Tom & George are both returned to Sedbergh we shall have them I hope at Midsummer - You ask after Willy he is quite well & seems in better spirits than heretofore - tho' his Love affair in statu quo - Cupid smiling - but Fortune frowning still. An intimate friend of his goes up to town in April to bring home his bride & much wishes Willy to accompany him thither to officiate as bridegroom's Man - but Willy is poor & cant afford to go & William the Elder thinks the younger has been somewhat extravagant in the spending of his little income & therefore declines forwarding his wishes on this occasion thinking the lesson which the staying at home must teach will do him more good than the any pleasure which the going abroad could produce. this is a little cruel I think.
content
object:
Mischief
content
person:
Wordsworth, William (1770-1850)
person:
Wordsworth, William (1810-1883)
state of being:
parent/offspring relationship
You ask after Mrs Luff - she I believe is quite well. I say believe as she is now at Greystone she left Fox Ghyll the day your letter arrived & means to remain with the Askews till Spring. Lady Farquhar as we see by the papers was married to Mr Hamilton last Saturday - Mrs Luff heard from the Lady a few days ago they were going first to Cheltenham & then coming to the Ivy Cottage where they expected to be in about a fortnight. My opinion is that they wont long remain in this country tho' I have no grounds but my own opinion for thinking so. The house as it is cannot do for them - he has no love for the country he neither cares nor indeed professes to care for beautiful scenery - & none of either his or her old friends, Mrs Luff excepted, are in the neighbourhood or at all within reach [page break (3)]Our Keswick friends are quite well. The Flower of that Flock is at last married & gone - I was at her wedding & a doleful wedding it was to me
content
person:
Wordsworth, Dora (1804-1847)
person:
Southey, Edith May (1804-1871)
state of being:
friendship
* Ballasalla Abbey Isle of Man Broken in fortune but of mind entire And sound in principle I seek repose Where ancient trees this convent pile enclose In ruin beautiful. When vain desire Intrudes on peace I pray the eternal Sire To cast a soul-subduing Shade on me A grey-haired, pensive thankful Refugee; A shade but with such sparks of holy fire As once were cherished here. And when I note The old tower's brow yellowed as with the beams Of sunset ever there albeit that streams Of stormy weather - stains that semblance wrought I thank the silent Monitor and say Shine so my aged brow at all hours of the day * near to which Mr Cookson's cottage stood Burn's Daisy "There" said a Stripling, pointing with meet pride Towards a low roof with green trees half concealed "Is Mosgiel Farm, & that's the very field "Where Burns ploughed up the daisy." Far & wide A plain below stretched seaward while descried Above sea clouds the Peaks of Arran rose And by that simple notice the repose Of earth sky sea & air was vivified. Beneath "the random field of clod or stone" Myriads of daisies have shone forth in flower Near the larks nest & in their natural hour Have past away less happy than the One That by the unwilling ploughshare died to prove The tender charm of Poetry & Love I will give you some more sonnets which will
are to make a part of a series of a Staffa Ye shadowy Beings, that have rights & claims In every cell of Fingall's mystic Grot, Where are ye? Driven or venturing to the spot, Our Father's glimpses caught of your thin Frames, And by your mien & bearing knew your names; And they could hear his ghostly song who trod Earth till till the flesh lay on him like a load While he struck his desolate Harp without hopes or aims. Vanished ye are, but subject to recall Why keep we else the instincts whose dread law Ruled here of yore, till what man felt they saw, Not by black Arts but magic natural. If eyes be still sworn Vassals of belief Yon Light shapes forth a Bard, that Shade a Chief The Spirit of Cockermouth Castle to the Author Thou lookst upon me & dost fondly think Poet! that stricken as both are by years We differing once so much, are now compeers Prepared when each has stood his time to sink Into the dust. Erewhile a sterner link United us, when thou, in boyish play Entering my dungeon, didst become a prey To soul appalling darkness: not a blink Of light was there, & thus did I thy Tutor Make thy young thoughts acquainted with the grave While thou wert chasing the winged butterfly Thro' my green courts, or climbing, a bold suitor, Up to the flowers whose golden progeny Still round my shattered brow in beauty wave [page break (4)]Pastor & Patriot at whose bidding rise These modest walls amid a Flock who need For One who comes to watch them & to feed A fixed Abode keep down foreboding sighs. Threats which the unthinking only can despise Perplex the Church - but be thou [[-?-]] firm - be true To thy first hope, & this good work pursue Poor as thou art. A welcome sacrifice To Him who dwells in Heaven will be the smoke Of thy new Hearth; & sooner shall its wreaths Mounting while Earth her morning incense breathes From wandering fiends of air receive a yoke And staitway cease to aspire - that God disadain This humble tribute as ill timed or vain. The Flower Love lies Bleeding They call it Love lies bleeding rather say That in this crimson flower Love bleeding droops A Flower how rich in Sadness! thus it stoops With languid head unpropped from day to day From month to month, life passing not away Even so the dying Gladiator leans On Mother earth & from his patience gleans Relics of tenderest thought regrets that stay A moment & are gone - O fate bowed flower Fair as Adonis bathed in sanguine dew Of his death wound, that Lover's heart was true As heaven, who pierced by scorn in some lone bower Could press thy semblance of unpitied smart Into the service of his constant heart This was addressed to John whose spirit failed him somewhat on finding he should be obliged to lay out so much money on his parsonage which might be taken from him any day by the reformed parliament. but it will do for any poor parson who is building for his parish.
content
person:
Wordsworth, William (1770-1850)
person:
Wordsworth, John (1803-1875)
state of being:
parent/offspring relationship
I have been again to hunt for Archers M.S. but grieve to say I cannot find it - I have found the Andes passage & I have sent far & wide to try to procure the Journey's Rainbow but cannot succeed. Pleasures of Hope in the Ist Part. "Angel of life' thy glittering wings explore "Earth's loneliest bounds, & Ocean's wildest shore. "Lo! to the wintry winds the pilot yields "His bulk careering o'er unfathomed fields; "Now on Atlantic waves he rides afar "Where Andes, giant of the western star. "With meteor - standard to the winds unfurl'd, 'looks form his throne of clouds o'er half the world!" [page break (1 crossed writing)]Father bids me say if you want one of Tom's most bare faced Plagiarisms here it is - in Blairs "Grave" - "Alas! too well he sped: the good he scorn'd "Stalk'd off reluctant, like an ill-us'd ghost "Not to return; or if it did, its visits "Like those of Angels short, & far between" - Now for Tom: Pleasures of Hope Part II Cease, every joy to glimmer on my mind But leave oh! leave the light of Hope behind What though my winged hours of bliss have been Like Angel visits, few & far between" &c &c We have none of the old Poet Henry Vaughan's Verses he was born in 1614 died 1695. I am quite ashamed to send such a dirty blundering letter in return for yours which has neither spot nor blot nor erasure of any kind I wish you would not be so very tidy - Best love to your Darlings one bit of intelligence which your last letter contained did comfort a God mothers heart & thank you kindly for it - Best love & best wishes from all Ever yours faithfully & affectionately Hartley Coleridge is quite well & going on as usual now at home for a week or two now off on the ramble. At present he is at Kendal on a visit to the Editor of the Kendal radical Paper as vile & low a paper as comes from the press - [page break (2 crossed writing)]his Sister is much the same. Pray never be so long in letting us hear from you - I dare say it is very foolish but I cannot help being anxious - thinking one or the other of you must be ill - I am sorry I can procure no paper thinner than this - Cyril promised me some but he forgot to give it me before he left home - indeed Love ran away with his Memory completely when he was to dine with us we had always to send after him when dinner ought to have been on the table. Edward Quillinan Esqe No. 9 Sur le Rempart Boulogne sur Mer <Received at Boulogne February 24. 1834>
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Object summary: WLL / Wordsworth, Dora / 1 / 57
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Ref. wll-wordsworth-dora-1.57
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