Mismanagement by a guardian left Bowles in financial straits after her mother's death in 1817. These were alleviated partly by an annuity of £150 from an adopted son of her father, Colonel Bruce. The problem spurred her to seek publication for a "metrical verse tale" she had written. She wrote for advice first to the
poet laureate,
Robert Southey, her future husband, but his publisher,
John Murray was discouraging, then to the poet and editor
James Montgomery. The work was published by
Longman in 1820 as
Ellen Fitzarthur: a Poem in Five Cantos and reached a second edition in 1822. Much of her work was published initially in ''
Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine'', after she had struck up a lively correspondence with
William Blackwood. Bowles's first meeting with Southey in 1820 led to a proposal that they jointly write an epic poem about
Robin Hood, although this only yielded
Robin Hood: A Fragment after Southey's death. From the outset she could not work in the curious metre Southey chose: "I have been at work trying that metre of [Southey's poem] 'Thalaba', a fine work I make of it! It is to me just like attempting to drive a
tilbury in a
tram-road," she wrote to him. Most of the fragment eventually published in 1847 was the work of Caroline Southey, including some fine sonnets on their marriage, which took place only on 4 June 1839, after the death of his first wife. There was a second edition of her mixed volume of verse and prose,
Solitary Hours (1826), in that year. The marriage caused dismay among Southey's grown-up children, except for his eldest daughter Edith. Within three months of the marriage, Southey began to succumb to senile dementia. He died in March 1843. The wrangles spilled over into gossip, and lost Caroline Southey the support of
Wordsworth, for example. Caroline Southey had to leave Southey's home,
Greta Hall, immediately after his death, and move back to Buckland Cottage, where she ceased to write. Her marriage had lost her the Bruce annuity, but she was awarded a civil list pension of £200 in 1852. She died at home on 20 July 1854. ==Satire and protest==