Corpus of Modern Scottish Writing (CMSW) - www.scottishcorpus.ac.uk/cmsw/ Document : 246 Title: Letter from Hogg to Byron, 26 Feb 1816 Author(s): Hogg, James Grieve & Scott's Edinr. Febr. 26 (1816) My Lord After an absence of 5 months in Yarrow I returned here the night before last when for the first time I found a copy of your two last poems kindly sent to me by Murray, the perusal of which have so much renewed my love and admiration of you as a poet that I can no longer resist the inclination of once more writing to you Among the last times that I wrote you I bade you not think of answering me at all times for that I sometimes wrote very often and at other times not at all just as it came in my head. You have at this time complyed with my request to the utmost of my wishes and I thank you, but at the same time I must inform you that I rue my injunctions and long very much to hear from you again. — The truth is that I believe your Lordship is very angry at something that I have done or written I remember [¿] [using] much freedom with you but not the least what it was about. I never keep a copy of any letter nor ever read one over after it is written for fear of being obliged to expunge, but I am sure that either these letters themselves or the distinct remembrance of them may show that I am an uncultivated fellow and know nothing of the world but to a certainty will never manifest a design to give offence. And besides tho' you are angry and have very good reasons for it, there is no occassion of remaining always so. It is great nonsense for two people that must always be friends at heart from the very nature of things — from their conginiality of feelings and pursuits pretending to be otherwise. For me I have just one principle on which I invariably act, unless I love and approve of a man I hold no intimacy or communication with him but I always take a poet as he is. I am highly delighted with your two last little poems. They breathe a vein of poetry which you never once touched before and there is something in The Siege Of Corrinth at last which convinces me that you have loved my own stile of poetry better than you ever acknowledged to me. Some of the people here complain of the inadequacy of the tales to the poetry I am perfectly mad at them and at Mr Jeffery among the rest for such an insinuation. I look upon them both as descriptive poems descriptive of some of the finest and [boldest] scenes of nature and of the most powerful emotions of the human heart. Perdition to the scanty discernment that would read such poems as they would do a novel for the sake of the plot to the disgrace of the age however be it spoken in the light romantic narrative which our mutual friend Scott has made popular this is the predominant ingredient expected and to a certainty the reviewers will harp upon the the shortcoming of it in your poems as a fault. — If you ever see Murray give my kindest respects to him he has as you said dealt very fairly with me and very friendly though as yet he has made no profit of me which is in general the bookseller's great inducement to friendship. I would fain have a neat cheap 12mo edition of my principle poems this spring for I have much need of it and the poems have likewise some need of it to give them some new impulse. I would have it in three vols one of them to consist of original and hitherto unpublished poetry Mr. Scott thinks it would do extremely well. Pray my Lord what do you think? if you approve of it stand my friend with Murray as you formerly did for without it I cannot get to London to see you where I have a great desire to be. In truth I have a literary scheme unconnected with publishing which has made me very anxious to be in London for a month or two the two last years but my finances would never admit of it. I am always so miserably scarce of money and so good a fellow of the little that I have that I am certain that unless I take the first chance of the first tolerable sum which I receive I shall never see the metropolis. If ever I do reach it I intend to place myself principally under the patronage of your Lordship. Wilson is publishing a poem entitled The City of the Plague. It is in the dramatic form and a perfect anomaly in literature. Wilson is a man of great genius and fancy but he is intoxicated with Wordsworth and a perfect dreamer of moons ships seas and solitudes were it not for this antihydrophobia (forgive my mangling of that long Greek word) I do not know what he might not be capable of. I have nothing you see of importance to say to you my Lord, but may God bless you. You have changed your mode of life since I last addressed you and are by this time sensible that it must have its pains as well as pleasures but if the mountain torrent of passion is at all descended into the calm and still vale of common life pray deign a line or two to one than whom none alive more admires your genius or values your friendship I am my lord with the highest respect Yours most truly James Hogg FEB B 27 1816 [FREE] MR 1816 The Rt. Honbl Lord Byron London Addl 1 2 Hogg 1816