Corpus of Modern Scottish Writing (CMSW) - www.scottishcorpus.ac.uk/cmsw/ Document : 243 Title: Letter from Hogg to Byron, 11 Oct 1814 Author(s): Hogg, James 1814 My good Lord [¿] I never were diverted by any corr -espondence so much as (your leaving the honour out of the question) which I think is chiefly owing to the frankness and unaffected [¿] so apparent throughout the whole. there is so much heart in the prays which you bistow and so little ill nature in your unique, though brought with the purity of truth, that even those blamed could hardly be offended although they might feel it-I am really ashamed and blame myself much for having drawn so much of your attention and occupied so much of your precious time of late, therefore I lay my commands upon you not to [¿] this letter which I only send in acknowledgment of your last so rekind and benevolent are which infound on my arrival here on the 8th. I will not harass nor teaze about poetry anymore but will most the movements of the spirit within you with a partner and a resignation of which you shall do forced to approve and to put your heart perfectly at ease with regard to the time, now, only it shall be welcome when it comes to that when I will Concerning myself and prospects I have no good account to give your t [¿] ship at present - the truth it seems with me one of fortunes most auspious moments-every penn of the little foundations that I had laid on which to man a tiny independence is by the failure of the d- bookseller you name vanished the third edition of the work on which I [¿] depended is looked up till much time as this book [¿] affair permit it to be brought to the hammer- The review of it part of which was read to me in Mr.Gefforys [¿] 5 months ago and which is a case what saviour has again been deffered for what [¿] I have yet to learn I told you, I had [¿] an edition of a new poem to constable and Millar-an my return to town after an absence of 9 weeks, by which time it was to have been published, I found it in the name same in which I left it, and the most taken out of the [¿] and passing this all the notable blues. I went to the that in a tremendous rage, threatened Miller with, a prosecution and took the MJ out of his hands- said that if Murray and I do not agree I am in a fine [¿]- but I have the far west thing of all to relate, and which in my own eyes crowns my misfortune, and upon the whole renders my situation to whin just that I cannot help laughing at it, for nothing of that nature makes me cry. I have difference with Scott actually and previously I hear, for I hear he has informed some of his friends of it- I have after heard facts in general blamed for want of [¿] [¿] yet I know that Scott has a great deal of it but I fear he has had to do with [¿] had little or none at all I have never mentioned this to any living soul nor would I if I had not heard last night that Scott had men-tioned it in a company and that it was like to become publicly known therefore I must tell you all how it will out though I cannot explain it. At our last meeting it was most cordially agreed that he was not to appear in the first No. of the Repository but to exert himself for the heard “The first said he is proud of Lord Byron finds a piece of any length with those which you already have I shall take in hand to get you £500 for the number. The difficulty will be in keeping it up therefore depend on it I shall do my best to support the Second “All this was very well till of late we had a correspondence about a drama that I was attem pting. He sent a sheet of criticisms in his own shrewd sensible manner and most friendly. But in this last page he broke off and attacked me about some jealousness and compared between him and me so [¿] that I was driven completely out of myself myself and without asking any explanaton (for I knew no more than the man in the move what he adverted to) I took the pen and wrote a letter of the most bitter and reverse [¿] shee I have quite forgot what in my wrath I said but I beleive I went so far as to say every thing which I knew to be the reverse of truth, and which you in part well know - you to state that I had never been obliged to him (it was a great he) and never would be obliged to him for any things, and I fear I expressed the utmost contemt for both himself and his poetry. This is all true, and yet I cannot beleive that I am a madman either. The truth is that I must have used in formating so as to have deserved the reflection he cast upon me but I was to consious of never having in all my life laid one word or thought one thought prejudicial to Scott that I was hurt extremly.I support some unfortunate lives near the end of the Queens'wake which haply he did not know know I had altered in the latter edition gave spice to it - or perhaps some adious [¿] which my admirable bookseller had picked up out of some shabby [¿] and published in the papers and in which I had no more hand than you had.Thus one of the best images of the Respository is irrevocably lost if the other should [¿] [¿] a bruised need.Why every [¿] must have by its own head. When you said to me once that your poetical days were having to a close. I had not the slightest idea that there was fair Millbank in the question. I send at [¿] you for poetry now, faith you will be smilled well enough for a time -but I hope by the time you have tried the avocatious of a [¿] for a month or two that you will then begin jittling with the [¿] again- believe the time of vigour health and [¿] is a precious time for the for the children of savey and of fovy and ought not to be neglected and here I cannot [¿] help advantage to an advantage to an old [¿] [¿] prevents though I nearly know how to apply it “there's much to water ruins while the millers 1 cups”- By the by I hope yours brings a good certain with herewith and sustain them, then she will in truth be a Mill and a bank with- I would not be ill to [¿] prepare to try the grinding too as a last and desperate [¿] in these hard and evil times I wish you would advise me of your day of entry if it is not already [¿] and by heaven if my fair West Indian [¿] [¿] [¿] as the promises I will pay for the first post for the profits of our next new productions those against the other I have not a word of literary news from this, having new very few [¿] since my return Wordsmitths new poem is very little talked of these yet and soncurges not at all I beleive I told you my sentiments of them at considerable with regard to Mr [¿] expected one the public I perceive are hanging in a curious [¿] - good [¿] has he to be anxious about its fate - By it he is established or falls.I know it will be excellent and the scenes and were names of the [¿]. he can shape to much of. Mine is but one thing against it and that is this being so much of a [¿] in this stale language and character that is not there in verse or [¿] a partial reader thinks he is always reading the same thing. My fixed belief is that the public will receive it with great caution and a vanish sale but that will finally prevail.It is one of my greatest faults my lord that I always speak and write previously as I had but your own fondness to me encourages me to [¿] of all [¿] when writing to you which I hope you will excape. Murray is probably be this time in [¿] if so you shall here frome me in few days till then I [¿] your Lordship's most affectionate and faithfull [¿] James [¿]