The Poetry of Mary Robinson: Form and Fame

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Bell’s Laureates II 67

temporarily in its assaults, as all of the quarreling Whigs (Burke, Fox,
and Sheridan) had a stake in the Prince’s aggrandizement. In oppo-
sition to Fox, Pitt supported a new bill that would severely curtail
the Prince’s authority as Regent. The shifting of the leading Whigs
to more or less the same side put the World in more direct compe-
tition with the Morning Post, the leading opposition paper for the
same West End readers. A round this time, in December of 1788, Bell
decided to sell his share in the World to Topham, while the Prince
bought control of the Morning Post, to which Sheridan immediately
defected. In response, Topham sold political control of the World to
the Treasury for the huge sum of £600 per annum, which Lucyle
Werkmeister notes is the most the government ever had paid to inf lu-
ence a newspaper (Werkmeister 105, 166). Certainly, this is a testa-
ment to the popularity of the World if not to Topham’s integrity.
Topham’s political oscillation, motivated by money, made the World
the enemy of the opposition, and his inf luence on the public was
a matter of concern to committed liberals. When Topham reneged
on his promise to continue employing Bell’s printing services, Bell
responded by establishing the pointedly entitled Oracle, or Bell’s New
World on 1 June 1789.^2 Robinson adroitly followed Bell, who also
took the Della Crusca and Anna Matilda avatars with him. Her brief
stint with the World as Laura would lead to a more substantial rela-
tionship with Bell, resulting in the creation of her Laura Maria avatar
and the publication of her first books.
Robinson’s professional associations before the Revolution contro-
versy are moderate and cautious, tending toward the government and
away from the extreme, Foxite opposition. Her Laura poems, discussed
in the previous chapter, appear in the World during the Regency Crisis,
and her direct engagement of Leonardo/Della Crusca and Anna Matilda
takes place after the paper becomes an organ of Pitt’s government. She
was willing to stay with the paper as long as Bell was printing it. The
publication of her poem “The Bee and the Butterf ly” further compli-
cates our understanding of her political allegiances. This poem, her
first publication as “Mrs. Robinson” in over a decade, appeared in the
Star and Evening Advertiser just after the paper’s owners removed edi-
tor Peter Stuart for supposedly publishing antiministerial propaganda
during the crisis and, as he claimed, for refusing to slander the Prince
and Mrs. Fitzherbert. When “The Bee and the Butterf ly” appeared,
Stuart had already established his own, nearly identical paper called
Stuart’s Star and Evening Advertiser, which began printing under that
name the week before. Robinson’s poem appears in the original Star,
however, which was unambiguous in its support of Pitt (Werkmeister,

9780230100251_04_ch02.indd 679780230100251_04_ch02.indd 67 12/28/2010 11:08:26 AM12/28/2010 11:08:26 AM


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