He was born in Wine Street,
Bristol,
England, to
Thomas Southey and
Margaret Hill and educated at
Westminster School, London, (from which he was expelled for writing a magazine article in The Flagellant condemning
flogging) and
Balliol College,
Oxford (of his time at Oxford Southey was later to say "All I learnt was a little swimming ... and a little boating."). After experimenting with a writing partnership with
Samuel Taylor Coleridge, he published his first collection of poems in 1794.
The same year, he, Coleridge and a few others discussed setting up an idealistic community in America ("pantisocracy"):
:Their wants would be simple and natural; their toil need not be such as the slaves of luxury endure; where possessions were held in common, each would work for all; in their cottages the best books would have a place; literature and science, bathed anew in the invigorating stream of life and nature, could not but rise reanimated and purified. Each young man should take to himself a mild and lovely woman for his wife; it would be her part to prepare their innocent food, and tend their hardy and beautiful race.
Later iterations of the plan moved the commune to Wales, but Southey was later the first of the group to reject the idea as unworkable.
Southey's wife, Edith Fricker whom he married at
St. Mary Redcliffe, Bristol, on November 14, 1795, was the sister of Coleridge's wife
Sarah Fricker. The Southeys set up home at Greta Hall,
Keswick (pronounced Kesick), in the
Lake District, living on a tiny income. In 1808 he became acquainted with
Walter Savage Landor whose early work he had admired, and the two developed mutual admiration of each other's work and became close friends. From 1809, Southey contributed to the
Quarterly Review, and had become so well-known by 1813 that he was appointed
Poet Laureate after
Sir Walter Scott refused the post.
In 1819, through a mutual friend (
John Rickman), Southey met leading
civil engineer Thomas Telford and struck up a strong friendship. From mid-August to 1 October 1819, Southey accompanied Telford on an extensive tour of his engineering projects in the
Scottish Highlands, keeping a diary of his observations. This was published posthumously in 1929 as
Journal of a tour in Scotland in 1819.
In 1838, Edith died and Southey married
Caroline Anne Bowles, also a poet. Southey's mind was giving way when he wrote a last letter to his friend Landor in 1839, but he continued to mention Landor's name when generally incapable of mentioning any one. Many of his poems are still read by British schoolchildren, the best-known being
The Inchcape Rock,
After Blenheim (possibly one of the earliest anti-war poems) and
The Cataract of Lodore.