Capitolo 33
worse." The letter ends up with a serious appeal to Burke helping him/it to
some honest occupation that can train to live him/it without being a load
on the slender resources of the family of Miss Elmy. Crabbe is full of
the gratitude for that whole Burke has done so distant for him. He has helped
him to complete and to evidently publish his/her poem but Crabbe is aware that
poetry doesn't intend a maintenance, and that its future is as dark color as
never. The letter has been together from the old lodging of Crabbe with the Vickerys in
Road of Bishopsgate, and he was lately being with the Elmys to
Beccles. He was not therefore as he/she anchors a visitor under the roof of Burke. This
it was to still come with all the happy results that were to follow. It is able
you still seem strange that all these details remained to be said to Burke
four months later their knowledge you/they had started. An explanation of this
you/he/she can be found in the autobiographic matter that Crabbe late in the life
handled the Monthly _New Magazine_ in 1816. He announces there that
after Burke had generously assisted him in the other ways, besides training
him to publish _The Library_, the question had been discussed of
The to shout future of Crabbe. "The Mr. Crabbe was encouraged placed opens his
sights, past and present; to visualize whatever reading and acquisitions him
possessed, to explain the causes of his/her disappointments and the
the cloudiness of his/her perspectives; in short he didn't conceal anything from a friend
so able to drive the inexperience, and so it will forgive inadvertence."
Evidently it was in answer to such invitations of Burke that the
letter of June 26 th 1781 was written.
It was soon probably after the publication of _The Library_ that Crabbe
paid his/her first visit to Beaconsfield, and you/he/she was cordially welcomed as a guest from
The wife of Burke and his/her nephew as cordially as from the man of is same.
Here he met Charles James Fox and Mr. Joshua Reynolds before, and through