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This person is mentioned in the diary a total of 94 times, but was not at home (N) 16 times, and was a venue (V) 29 times.
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17 August 1798 (NV) 8 September 1798 (V)
12 September 1799 18 September 1799 26 September 1799 (V) 13 October 1799 (V) 1 November 1799 18 November 1799 (NV)
3 March 1800 (N) 14 April 1800 6 September 1800 (V) 17 October 1800 23 November 1800 7 December 1800 (V) 7 December 1800 19 December 1800 19 December 1800
15 January 1801 19 February 1801 10 March 1801 4 May 1801 20 May 1801 10 June 1806 (V) 26 June 1801 22 October 1801 (NV) 29 November 1801 (N)
9 March 1802 22 May 1802 (NV) 1 September 1802 (N) 2 September 1802 1 November 1802
2 January 1803 (N) 25 February 1803 12 June 1803 (V) 23 June 1803 10 July 1803 (V) 20 July 1803 (N)
13 March 1804 (V) 26 March 1804 27 March 1804 16 May 1804 17 May 1804 26 June 1804
25 February 1805 (V) 11 March 1805 (V) 28 April 1805 (V) 24 May 1805 (V) 19 June 1805 5 July 1805 6 August 1805 8 August 1805 (V) 20 August 1805 25 August 1805 14 September 1805 (N) 3 October 1805 28 October 1805 16 November 1805
19 March 1806 5 April 1806 (V) 30 May 1806 18 June 1806 26 June 1806 (N) 4 July 1806 (NV) 5 July 1806 (V) 21 August 1806 (V) 11 September 1806 (V) 15 September 1806 17 October 1806
15 March 1807 (NV) 13 April 1807 (V) 14 April 1807 2 June 1807 7 July 1807 18 October 1807 (V)
19 January 1808 21 January 1808
19 June 1810 (NV)
3 November 1814 4 November 1814
2 November 1819 (V) 8 November 1819 12 November 1819 16 November 1819 23 December 1819
11 March 1820 (N) 25 May 1820 (NV) 3 June 1820 17 October 1820
18 January 1825 19 January 1825
The identification is tentative but is firm around Keir's death, and the absence of Keir entries subsequently suggest that this Keir accounts for earlier entries. There are C Keir entries also, but these have not been identified or coded. There are over a hundred references to Keir between 1798-1832. The first is a call when Keir is nah, calls on him succesfully a few weeks later. The great majority of the entries are 1798-1808. There is nothing in any of the biographies, or anything to suggest Godwin meets Robert keir, whom J Ann Hone identifies as an apprentice axle- maker, and one of the LCS members who were arrested in 1798 and imprisoned without trial for nearly 3 years (J Ann Hone, For the Cause of Truth, pp. 48-9).
The death of Keir is well documented:
The Times, 8 December 1832:
'Yesterday morning, about 11 o'clock, the neighbourhood of Camden town was thrown
into a great state of alarm in consequence of a report that Mr. Peter Keir, engineer, of
College-street, had terminated his existence by shooting himself through the head, the
particulars of which are as follows. The unfortunate gentleman, who was 72 years of
age, had been often heard to say that when his property was all gone he would shoot
himself; yesterday morning, at breakfast time, his wife remarked to him that the
gloominess of the day was enough to make any one destroy themselves; of that he
took no notice, but at 10 o'clock retired to his dressing-room, about half an hour after
which his wife heard a very heavy fall, and on going up stairs to see the cause,
discovered the deceased lying at full length at the entrance of the bed-room, his head
literally shattered to pieces; in his right hand he held an air pistol, which had been
discharged, and on the floor the fellow one lay, loaded, both of which were
immediately taken possession of by the parish beadle. The body now awaits a coroner's
inquest.'
and on 11 December 1832:
'CORONER's INQUEST.-MELANCHOLY SUICIDE.-Yesterday afternoon an inquest was
held at the Bell and Crown, King's-road, Camden-town, before Mr. Stirling and a highly
respectable jury, on view of the body of Mr. Peter Keir, engineer, of College-street, who
terminated his existence on Friday last by shooting himself through the head (the
particulars of which appeared in our paper of Saturday.) It appeared from the evidence
now adduced, that the deceased had been formerly in very good circumstances, but
from various untoward misfortunes had latterly been reduced to the greatest state of
exigency, which preyed heavily on his mind, and it is supposed cause him to commit
the above-mentioned and dreadful act. The jury after viewing the body returned a verdict
of "Temporary insanity."'
The dates match Godwin's final ref to Keir - 7.12.1832 'Peter Keir dies' - and it is on this basis that we identity him as the primary Keir in the diary. There is no reason to think Godwin would note his death if they had not been friends (given that he was not a prominent public figure), no mentions of Keir appear after this date, the fact that he was a fairly undistinguished engineer explains why he is not mentioned in any other sources, his age at death - 72 - suggests he was born in 1760, which makes him 38 when he first appears in the diary, and the hard times he had fallen on perhaps explains why he had disappeared from the diary in the seven years before his death.
This table lists the people this person is most frequently noted with in the diary.
Name | Number of Meetings |
---|---|
Godwin, Mary Jane (Clairmont) (née de Vial) | 8 |
Marshall, James | 4 |
Turner, Thomas | 3 |
Fenwick, Elizabeth (Eliza) (née Jaco, pseudonym Reverend David Blair) | 2 |
Fenwick, Eliza Anne | 2 |
Uwins, David | 1 |
Aldis, Charles | 1 |
Hazlitt, William | 1 |
Mulready, William | 1 |
Masters, M. K. | 1 |
Wolcot, Dr John (pseudonym Peter Pindar) | 1 |
Wollstonecraft, James | 1 |
Barham, Richard Harris | 1 |