“My brother has written to dissuade me strongly from
                                    proceeding in this business. My own opinion is, that if I do not act now the
                                    men who have published the work will compel me to do so at last, by inserting
                                    my name in such a manner as to render the measure unavoidable. Indeed it was
                                    inserted as a paragraph in the Chronicle, which I suppose they paid for as an advertisment.
                                    Therefore I think it best to take the short and open course, believing that 
| Ætat. 43. | OF ROBERT SOUTHEY. | 247 | 
 “I fully assent to what you say concerning political
                                    discussions, and intermeddle with them no farther than as they are connected
                                    not only with the future good, but as appears to me with the immediate safety
                                    of society. It is not for any men, or set of men, that I am interested; nor for
                                    any particular measures. But with regard to the fearful aspect of these times,
                                    you may perhaps have traced the ground of my apprehensions in Espriella, in the Edinburgh Register, and in the Quarterly, more especially in a
                                        paper upon the Poor
                                    about four years ago. It is now come to this question,—Can we educate the
                                    people in moral and religious habits, and better the condition of the poor, so
                                    as to secure ourselves from a mob-revolution; or has this duty been neglected
                                    so long, that the punishment will overtake us before this only remediable means
                                    can take effect? The papers which I shall write upon the real evils of society
                                    will, I hope, work for posterity, and not be 
| 248 | LIFE AND CORRESPONDENCE | Ætat. 43. | 
“My spirits, rather than my disposition, have undergone a great change. They used to be exuberant beyond those of almost every other person; my heart seemed to possess a perpetual fountain of hilarity; no circumstances of study, or atmosphere, or solitude affected it; and the ordinary vexations and cares of life, even when they showered upon me, fell off like hail from a pent-house. That spring is dried up; I cannot now preserve an appearance of serenity at all times without an effort, and no prospect In this world delights me except that of the next. My heart and my hopes are there.
“I have a scheme to throw out somewhere for taking the Methodists into the Church; or borrowing from Methodism so much of it as is good, and thereby regenerating the Establishment. There is little hope in such schemes, except that in process of time they may produce some effect. But were it effected now, and would the Church accept the volunteer services of lay coadjutors, I should feel strongly inclined to volunteer mine. This is a dream, and I fear the whole fabric will fall to pieces even in our days.