Book contents
- Frontmatter
- CONTENTS
- Dedication
- Contributors
- Abbreviations
- Introduction
- 1 Plotting the Success of the Quarterly Review
- 2 ‘Sardonic grins’ and ‘paranoid politics’: Religion, Economics, and Public Policy in the Quarterly Review
- 3 A Plurality of Voices in the Quarterly Review
- 4 Politics, Culture, and Scholarship: Classics in the Quarterly Review
- 5 Walter Scott and the Quarterly Review
- 6 John Barrow, the Quarterly Review's Imperial Reviewer
- 7 Hung, Drawn and Quarterlyed: Robert Southey, Poetry, Poets and the Quarterly Review
- 8 Robert Southey's Contribution to the Quarterly Review
- Appendix A List of Letters
- Appendix B Transcription of Key Letters
- Notes
- Works Cited
- Index
Appendix B - Transcription of Key Letters
- Frontmatter
- CONTENTS
- Dedication
- Contributors
- Abbreviations
- Introduction
- 1 Plotting the Success of the Quarterly Review
- 2 ‘Sardonic grins’ and ‘paranoid politics’: Religion, Economics, and Public Policy in the Quarterly Review
- 3 A Plurality of Voices in the Quarterly Review
- 4 Politics, Culture, and Scholarship: Classics in the Quarterly Review
- 5 Walter Scott and the Quarterly Review
- 6 John Barrow, the Quarterly Review's Imperial Reviewer
- 7 Hung, Drawn and Quarterlyed: Robert Southey, Poetry, Poets and the Quarterly Review
- 8 Robert Southey's Contribution to the Quarterly Review
- Appendix A List of Letters
- Appendix B Transcription of Key Letters
- Notes
- Works Cited
- Index
Summary
This appendix consists of the editor's transcription of a number of letters that are often quoted and cited in the present volume. The transcribed letters are, by serial number, QR Letters 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 7, 8, 28, 29, 40, 51, 58, 59 and 66. (Concerning the serial numbers, see Appendix A.)
1. John Murray to George Canning
Bookseller – / 32 Fleet Street / London / 25 September 1807
Sir
I venture to address you upon a subject that is not perhaps undeserving of one moment of your attention.
There is a work entitled the Edinburgh Review, written with such unquestionable talent that it has already obtained an extent of circulation not equalled by any similar publication. The principles of this work are however so radically bad, that I have been led to consider the effect which such sentiments so generally diffused, are likely to produce; and to think that some means equally popular ought to be adopted to counteract their dangerous tendency. But the publication in question is conducted with such high and decisive authority by the Party of whose opinions it is the organ, that there is little hope of producing against it any effectual opposition, unless it arise from you Sir, and your friends – Should you Sir think the idea worthy of encouragement I should with equal pride and willingness engage my arduous exertions to promote its success, but as my object is nothing short of producing a work of the greatest talent and importance, I shall entertain it no longer if it be not so fortunate as to obtain the high patronage which I have thus Sir taken the liberty to solicit.
Permit me sir to add that the person who thus addresses you is no adventurer, but a man of some property inheriting a business that has been established for nearly a century. I therefore trust that my application will be attributed to its proper motives, and that your goodness will at least pardon its intrusion.
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- Conservatism and the Quarterly ReviewA Critical Analysis, pp. 189 - 216Publisher: Pickering & ChattoFirst published in: 2014