A Publisher and His Friends eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 557 pages of information about A Publisher and His Friends.

A Publisher and His Friends eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 557 pages of information about A Publisher and His Friends.

Ever, my dear Canning,

Faithfully and affectionately yours,

WILLIAM GIFFORD.

This state of matters could not be allowed to go on much longer; sometimes a quarter passed without a number appearing; in 1824 only two Quarterlies appeared—­No. 60, due in January, but only published in August; and No. 61, due in April, but published in December.  An expostulation came from Croker to Murray (January 23, 1824): 

“Have you made up your mind about an editor?  Southey has written to me on the subject, as if you had, and as if he knew your choice; I do not like to answer him before I know what I am to say.  Will you dine at Kensington on Sunday at 6?”

Southey had long been meditating about the editorship.  It never appears to have been actually offered to him, but his name, as we have already seen, was often mentioned in connection with it.  He preferred, however, going on with his own works and remaining a contributor only.  Politics, too, may have influenced him, for we find him writing to Mr. Murray on December 15, 1824:  “The time cannot be far distant when the Q.R. must take its part upon a most momentous subject, and choose between Mr. Canning and the Church.  I have always considered it as one of the greatest errors in the management of the Review that it should have been silent upon that subject so long.”  So far as regarded his position as a contributor, Southey expressed his opinion to Murray explicitly: 

Mr. Southey to John Murray.

October 25, 1824.

“No future Editor, be he who he may, must expect to exercise the same discretion over my papers which Mr. Gifford has done.  I will at any time curtail what may be deemed too long, and consider any objections that may be made, with a disposition to defer to them when it can be done without sacrificing my own judgment upon points which may seem to me important.  But my age and (I may add without arrogance) the rank which I hold in literature entitle me to say that I will never again write under the correction of any one.”

Gifford’s resignation is announced in the following letter to Canning
(September 8, 1824): 

Mr. W. Gifford to the Rt.  Hon. G. Canning.

September 8, 1824.

MY DEAR CANNING,

I have laid aside my Regalia, and King Gifford, first of the name, is now no more, as Sir Andrew Aguecheek says, “than an ordinary mortal or a Christian.”  It is necessary to tell you this, for, with the exception of a dark cloud which has come over Murray’s brow, no prodigies in earth or air, as far as I have heard, have announced it.

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A Publisher and His Friends from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.