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<title TEIform="title">"Letters to Mrs. J. Taylor" <date TEIform="date">(1785-1818)</date>
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<name reg="Barbauld, Mrs. (Anna Letitia)" date="1743-1825" place="UK" TEIform="name">Anna Letitia Barbauld</name>
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<p TEIform="p"> Miami University makes a claim of copyright only to original contributions
                        made by the Poetess Archive participants and other members of the university
                        community. Miami University makes no claim of copyright to the original
                        text. Permission is granted to download, transmit or otherwise reproduce,
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<addrLine TEIform="addrLine">Judith Session, Dean</addrLine>
<addrLine TEIform="addrLine">King Library</addrLine>
<addrLine TEIform="addrLine">Miami University</addrLine>
<addrLine TEIform="addrLine">Oxford, OH 45056</addrLine>
<addrLine TEIform="addrLine">United States of America</addrLine>
<addrLine TEIform="addrLine">EMail: sessioja@muohio.edu</addrLine>
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<title TEIform="title">The Poetess Archive: An Electronic Resource</title>
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<name reg="Barbauld, Mrs. (Anna Letitia)" date="1743-1825" place="UK" TEIform="name">Anna Letitia Barbauld</name>
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<title level="a" TEIform="title">Letters to Mrs. J. Taylor</title>
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<name reg="Barbauld, Mrs. (Anna Letitia)" date="1743-1825" place="UK" TEIform="name">Anna Letitia Barbauld</name>
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<p TEIform="p">This copy is transcribed from the volume held by the University of Cincinnati,
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<hi TEIform="hi">Letters to Mrs. J. Taylor</hi>
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<title TEIform="title">
<name type="place" TEIform="name">Yarmouth,</name>
<date TEIform="date">Sept. 1st, 1785.</date>
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<p TEIform="p">Dear Madam,</p>
<p TEIform="p"> Though I have had the pleasure (it was a very real one) of a glimpse of Mr.
                    Taylor, yet I cannot prevail on myself to entrust either him or Mr. Barbauld
                    with those affectionate wishes and grateful acknowledgements of your friendship
                    which, before I leave England, I wish to convey to you with my own hand. Mr.
                    Barbauld will tell you our route. -- Now it comes to the point, I cannot help
                    feeling it a solemn thing to leave England, and all our dear connexions in it,
                    for so many months. Often will they be in our minds; and when we recollect those
                    who hold the highest places in our esteem and affection, Mrs. Taylor will always
                    be presented to our thoughts. Allow me, dear madam, again to thank you for your
                    kindness to us at Norwich, and the pleasure we enjoyed in that short but
                    delightful intercourse with you and your family. On that family may health and
                    every blessing ever rest. </p>
<pb n="103" TEIform="pb"/>
<p TEIform="p">By the time we return, I think I shall have had a sufficient draught of idleness,
                    and be very ready to engage again in some active pursuit; but at present, Avaunt
                    care! and <emph TEIform="emph">Vive la bagatelle!</emph> for we are bound for France.</p>
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<name type="place" TEIform="name">Paris,</name>
<date TEIform="date">June 7th, 1786.</date>
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<p TEIform="p">Dear Madam,</p>
<p TEIform="p"> Though we expect now very soon to finish our long pilgrimage, I cannot quit this
                    country without giving you a little testimonial that in it we think of those
                    beloved English friends from whom the sea now divides us: they are often
                    recalled to my mind by different and opposite trains of thinking, -- for
                    contrast, you know, is one source of association; and when I see the Parisian
                    ladies covered with rouge and enslaved by fashion, cold to the claims of
                    maternal tenderness, and covering licentiousness with the thin veil of a certain
                    factitious decency of manners, my thoughts turn away from the scene, and delight
                    to contemplate the charming union formed by deep affection and lasting esteem,
                    -- the mother endowed with talents and graces to draw the attention of polite
                    circles, yet devoting her time and cares to her family and children -- English
                    delicacy, unspoiled beauty, and unaffected sentiment, -- when I think of these,
                    (and <emph TEIform="emph">your</emph> friends will not be at a loss to guess where I look for
                    them,) it gives the <pb n="104" TEIform="pb"/>same relief to my mind as it would to my eye
                    when wearied and dazzled by their sand-walks and terraces, if it could repose
                    upon the cheerful and soft green of our lawny turf. I would not, however, have
                    you imagine that I am out of humour with Paris, where we have enjoyed much
                    pleasure; only it is the result of our tour, that taking in all things, manners
                    and government as well as climate, we like our own country best: and this is an
                    opinion certainly favourable to our happiness, who shall probably never leave
                    England again. The weather with us is, and has been, extremely hot. The trees
                    are in their freshest green; but one sees that the grass will soon be burnt if
                    we have not rain. Indeed they are obliged every day to water the turf in all
                    their gardens where they are solicitous about verdure. The environs of Paris are
                    charming, yet I think evidently inferior to those of London. Yesterday
                    (Whitsunday) we were gratified with a view of all the magnificence of
                    Versailles. in compliment to the day the water-works played, and there was the
                    brilliant procession of the <emph TEIform="emph">cordon blue;</emph> in consequence of which
                    all Paris in a manner was poured into Versailles; and I was ready to forgive the
                    enormous expense and ostentation of this palace, when I saw a numerous people of
                    all sorts and degrees filling the rooms and wandering in the gardens, full of
                    admiration, and deriving both <pb n="105" TEIform="pb"/>pleasure and pride from their
                    national magnificence; and many a one, I dare say, exulted in the thought that
                    the <emph TEIform="emph">grand monarque's</emph> horses are better lodged than is the king of
                    England himself. The grand gallery filled with Le Brun's paintings is of a
                    striking beauty; the gardens are full of water thrown up in artificial
                    fountains, and glittering through artificial <emph TEIform="emph">bosquets;</emph> the walks
                    are adorned with whole quarries of marble wrought into statues. In short, art
                    and symmetry reign entirely; and I hope they will never attempt to modernize
                    these gardens, because they are a model of magnificence in their kind, and Art
                    appears with so much imposing grandeur, that she seems to have a right to reign.
                    The <emph TEIform="emph">petit Trianon</emph> belonging to the queen is in another style; with
                    cottages and green lawns and winding walks of flowering shrubs in the English
                    mode, which indeed prevails very much at present.</p>
<p TEIform="p"> There is a person here, the Abbe d'Hauy, who teaches the blind to read by means
                    of books printed expressly for them in a relief of white. The undertaking is
                    curious; but they are at present somewhat in the state of the blind men brought
                    up for painters in the island of Laputa, who were not so perfect in the mixing
                    their colours but that they sometimes mistook blue for red.</p>
<p TEIform="p"> The French stage is not, I think, at present very brilliant; three of their best
                    actors have lately <pb n="106" TEIform="pb"/>left it. But at the Italian theatre they have a
                    delightful little piece, which under the name of a comic opera draws tears from
                    all the world. It is called Nina, or <emph TEIform="emph">La Folle d'Amour,</emph> and
                    Mademoiselle du Gazon acts the part of Nina; and does it with such enchanting
                    grace, such sweet and delicate touches of sensibility and passion, as I never
                    saw upon any theatre. It is the <emph TEIform="emph">sweet bells jangled out of tune,</emph>
                    but not <emph TEIform="emph">harsh:</emph> no raving, no disorder of dress; but every look and
                    gesture showed an unsettled mind, and a tenderness inimitable. At the Opera they
                    have likewise an actress full of grace beyond mere nature. Everybody (that is
                    everybody who follows the fashion) leaves Paris in the summer, which was not the
                    case some years ago. We stay now for a fine show, -- the procession on the
                        <emph TEIform="emph">Fete Dieu,</emph> in which all the tapestry of the Gobelins is exposed
                    in the streets. We shall return by Calais and proceed immediately to London,
                    where we shall take lodgings for some time.</p>
<p TEIform="p"> Will you do me the favour to remember us with grateful affection to all our
                    friends at Norwich? there are so many that claim our esteem, I do not attempt to
                    enumerate them; but do not forget to give a kiss for us to each of your dear
                    boys, and to assure Mr. Taylor of Mr. Barbauld's and my affectionate esteem.</p>
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<title TEIform="title">
<date TEIform="date">1806.</date>
</title>
</head>
<p TEIform="p">I am now reading Mr. Johnes's Froissart, and I think I never was more struck with
                    the horrors of war, -- simply because <emph TEIform="emph">he</emph> seems not at all struck
                    with them; and I feel ashamed at my heart having ever beat with pleasure at the
                    names of Cressy and Poitiers. He tells you the English marched into such a
                    district; the barns were full, and cattle and corn plentiful; they burned and
                    destroyed all the villages, and laid the country bare; such an English earl took
                    a town, and killed men, women, and little children; -- and he never makes a
                    remark, but shows he looks upon it as the usual mode of proceeding.</p>
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<date TEIform="date">May, 1813.</date>
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</head>
<p TEIform="p"> ..... There is certainly at present a great deal of zeal in almost every
                    persuasion; -- certainly much more in England, as far as I am able to judge,
                    than when I was young. I often speculate upon what it will produce, -- not
                    uniformity of opinion certainly; that is a blessing we seem not destined here to
                    enjoy, if indeed it would be a blessing. But will it tend to universal
                    toleration and enlarged liberality of thinking? or, with increase of zeal, will
                    the church spirit of bigotry revive, and unite with the increasing power of
                    government to crush the spirit of research and <pb n="108" TEIform="pb"/>freedom of opinion?
                    Bible societies, missionary schemes, lectures, schools for the poor, are set on
                    foot and spread, not so much from a sense of duty as from being the real taste
                    of the times; and I am told that Mrs. Siddons's readings are much patronized by
                    the evangelical people, as they are called of fashion, who will not enter the
                    doors of a theatre. Would that with all this there could be seen some little
                    touch of feeling for the miseries of war, that are desolating the earth without
                    end or measure! One should be glad to see some <emph TEIform="emph">suspicion</emph> arise that
                    it was not consistent with the spirit of the Gospel; but this you do not see
                    even in good people.</p>
<p TEIform="p"> ..... Friends at a distance do not want some medium of sympathy though they do
                    not meet. I have sometimes looked upon new books in that light. When I peruse a
                    book of merit to be generally read, I feel sure, though not informed of it, that
                    precisely the same stream of ideas which is flowing through my mind is flowing
                    through my friend's also; and without any communication, either by work or
                    letter, I know that he has admired and criticized, and laughed and wept as I
                    have done.</p>
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<pb n="109" TEIform="pb"/>
<title TEIform="title">
<date TEIform="date">June 18, 1810.</date>
</title>
</head>
<p TEIform="p"> My dear Mrs. Taylor,</p>
<p TEIform="p">A thousand thanks for your kind letter; still more for the very kind visit that
                    preceded it; -- though short, too short, it has left indelible impressions on my
                    mind; my heart has truly had communion with yours, -- your sympathy has been
                    balm to it; and I feel that there is no one <emph TEIform="emph">now</emph> on earth to whom I
                    could pour out that heart more readily, I may say so readily, as to yourself.
                    Very good also has my dear amiable Mrs. Beecroft been to me, whose lively
                    sweetness and agreeable conversation has at times won me to forget that my heart
                    is heavy.</p>
<p TEIform="p">I am now alone again, and feel like a person who has been sitting by a cheerful
                    fire, not sensible at the time of the temperature of the air, but the fire
                    removed, he finds the season is still <emph TEIform="emph">winter.</emph> Day after day passes,
                    and I do not know what I do with my time; and my mind has no energy, nor power
                    or application. I can tell you, however, what I have done with some hours of it,
                    which have been agreeably employed in reading Mrs. Montague's Letters. I think
                    her nephew has made a very agreeable present to the public; and I was greatly
                    edified to see them printed in modest octavo, with Mrs. Montague's sweet face
                    (for it is a very pretty face) at the head. <pb n="11o" TEIform="pb"/>They certainly show a
                    very extraordinary mind, full of wit, and also of deep thought and sound
                    judgement. She seems to have liked not a little to divert herself with the odd
                    and the ludicrous, and show herself in the earlier letters passionately found of
                    balls and races and London company; this was natural enough at eighteen. Perhaps
                    you may not so easily pardon her for having early settled her mind, as she
                    evidently had, not to marry except for an establishment. This seems to show a
                    want of some of those fine feelings that one expects in youth: but when it is
                    considered that she was the daughter of a country gentleman with a large family,
                    and no fortune to expect, and her connexions all in high life, one is disposed
                    to pardon her, especially as I dare say she would never have married a fool or a
                    profligate. I heard her say, -- what I suppose very few can say, -- that she
                    never was in love in her life. Many of the letters are in fact essays; and I
                    think had she turned her thoughts to write in that way, she would have excelled
                    Johnson.</p>
<p TEIform="p">I have also turned over Lamb's Specimens of Old Plays, and am much pleased with
                    them. I make a discovery there, that La Motte's fable of Genius, Virtue, and
                    Redemption, which has been so much praised for its ingenious turn, is borrowed
                    from Webster, an author of the age of Shakespear; or they have taken it from
                    some common <pb n="111" TEIform="pb"/>source, for a Frenchman was not very likely to light
                    upon an English poet of that age; they knew about as much of us then, as we did
                    fifty years ago of the Germans. It is surprising how little invention there is
                    in the world; no <emph TEIform="emph">very</emph> good story was ever invented. It is perhaps
                    originally some fact a little enlarged; then, by some other hand, embellished
                    with circumstances; then, by somebody else, a century after, refined, drawn to a
                    point, and furnished with a moral. When shall we see the moral of the world's
                    great story, which astonishes by its events, interests by the numerous agents it
                    puts in motion, but of which we cannot understand the bearings, or predict the
                    catastrophe? It is a tangled web, of which we have not the clue. I do not know
                    how to rejoice at this victory, splendid as it is, over Buonaparte, when I
                    consider the horrible waste of life, the mass of misery, which such gigantic
                    combats must occasion. I will think no more of it; let me rather contemplate
                    your family: there the different threads all wind evenly, smoothly, and
                    brightly. </p>
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<name type="place" TEIform="name">Stoke Newington,</name>
<date TEIform="date">Dec. 8th, 1818.</date>
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<p TEIform="p"> I will write now my dear friend is better, is recovering, is, I hope, in a fair
                    way to be soon quite well, and all herself again; and she will ac- <pb n="112" TEIform="pb"/>cept, and so will Mr. T. and Mrs. R. my warmest congratulations. To tell you
                    how anxious we have been, would, I trust, be superfluous, or how much joy we
                    have felt in being relieved from that anxiety. It is pleasant to have some one
                    to share pleasure with; and though I could have had that satisfaction in a
                    degree with every one who knows you, it is more particularly agreeable to me at
                    this time to have your dear Sarah to sympathize with and talk to about you.
                    Among other things we say, that you must not let <emph TEIform="emph">mind</emph> wear out
                        <emph TEIform="emph">body,</emph> which I suspect you are a little inclined to do. Mind is
                    often very hard upon his humble yoke-fellow, sometimes speaking contemptuously
                    of her, as being of a low, mean family, in comparison with himself; often
                    abridging her food or natural rest for his whims. Many a headache has he given
                    her when, but for him, she would be quietly resting in her bed. Sometimes he
                    fancies that she hangs as a dead weight upon him, and impedes all his motions;
                    yet it is well known, that though he gives himself such airs of superiority, he
                    can in fact do nothing without her; and since, however they came together, they
                    are united for better for worse, it is for his interest as well as hers, that
                    she should be nursed and cherished, and taken care of. -- And so ends my
                sermon.</p>
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