‘On
my return here, I found, to my no small surprise, a letter tendering to me the
laurel vacant by the death of the poetical Pye. I have declined the
appointment.... Will you forgive me, my friend, if I own I had you in my
recollection? I have given Croker the hint, and otherwise endeavored to throw
the office into your option. I am uncertain if you will like it, for the laurel
has certainly been tarnished by some of its wearers, and, as at present
managed, its duties are inconvenient and somewhat liable to ridicule. But the
latter might be amended, as I think the Regent's good sense would lead him to
lay aside these regular commemorations; and as to the former point, it has been
worn by Dryden of old, and by Warton in modern days.’
The text above comes from a letter Walter Scott wrote to
Robert Southey (September 4, 1813). Scott recommended Southey for the honor of
Poet Laureate for Britain. Southey held
the post form 1813 to 1843. Robert
Southey died on March 21st, 1843.
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