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+<title>The Project Gutenberg eBook of Boswell's, Johnson V4</title>
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+<body>
+<div>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 10357 ***</div>
+
+<h2>BOSWELL'S</h2>
+<h1>LIFE OF JOHNSON</h1>
+
+<br /><br />
+<center>INCLUDING BOSWELL'S JOURNAL OF A TOUR TO THE HEBRIDES <br>AND
+JOHNSON'S DIARY OF A JOURNEY INTO NORTH WALES</center>
+<center>EDITED BY</center>
+<center>GEORGE BIRKBECK HILL, D.C.L.</center>
+<center>PEMBROKE COLLEGE, OXFORD</center>
+<center>IN SIX VOLUMES</center>
+<center>VOLUME IV.&mdash;LIFE (1780-1784)</center>
+<br /><br />
+<hr>
+<br /><br />
+
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+
+
+<p class="toc"><a href="#2H_TOC">CONTENTS OF VOL. IV.</a></p>
+<p class="toc"><a href="#2H_4_1"><i>THE LIFE OF SAMUEL JOHNSON,
+LL.D.</i></a></p>
+<p class="toc"><a href="#2HAPP3">APPENDIX A.</a></p>
+<p class="toc"><a href="#2HAPP4">APPENDIX B.</a></p>
+<p class="toc"><a href="#2HAPP5">APPENDIX C.</a></p>
+<p class="toc"><a href="#2HAPP6">APPENDIX D.</a></p>
+<p class="toc"><a href="#2HAPP7">APPENDIX E.</a></p>
+<p class="toc"><a href="#2HAPP8">APPENDIX F.</a></p>
+<p class="toc"><a href="#2HAPP9">APPENDIX G.</a></p>
+<p class="toc"><a href="#2HAPP10">APPENDIX H.</a></p>
+<p class="toc"><a href="#2HAPP11">APPENDIX I.</a></p>
+<p class="toc"><a href="#2HFOO12">FOOTNOTES:</a></p>
+
+
+
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+
+
+
+<br /><br />
+<hr>
+
+
+<a name="2H_TOC"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+<p> </p>
+<p> </p>
+<h2>CONTENTS OF VOL. IV.</h2>
+
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+
+
+LIFE OF SAMUEL JOHNSON, LL.D. (1780-DEC. 13, 1784)<br>
+<br>
+APPENDICES:<br>
+A. ALTERCATION BETWEEN DR. JOHNSON AND DEAN BARNARD.<br>
+B. JOHNSON AND PRIESTLEY.<br>
+C. THE CLUB IN IVY-LANE. <br>
+D. THE ESSEX HEAD CLUB. <br>
+E.MISS BURNEY'S ACCOUNT OF JOHNSON'S LAST DAYS. <br>
+F. NOTES ON JOHNSON'S WILL, ETC. <br>
+G. NOTES ON BOSWELL'S NOTE. <br>
+H. NOTES ON BOSWELL'S NOTE. <br>
+I. PARR'S EPITAPH ON JOHNSON. <br>
+<br>
+FOOTNOTES. <br>
+
+
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+
+
+
+<br /><br /><br /><br />
+<a name=
+"2H_4_1"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+<p> </p>
+<p> </p>
+<p> </p>
+<p> </p>
+<h2><i>THE LIFE OF SAMUEL JOHNSON, LL.D.</i></h2>
+<br />
+<p>Being disappointed in my hopes of meeting Johnson this year,
+so that I could hear none of his admirable sayings, I shall
+compensate for this want<a href=
+"#note-1">[1]</a> by inserting a
+collection of them, for which I am indebted to my worthy friend
+Mr. Langton, whose kind communications have been separately
+interwoven in many parts of this work. Very few articles of this
+collection were committed to writing by himself, he not having
+that habit; which he regrets, and which those who know the
+numerous opportunities he had of gathering the rich fruits of
+<i>Johnsonian</i> wit and wisdom, must ever regret. I however
+found, in conversations with him, that a good store of
+<i>Johnsoniana</i> treasured in his mind<a href=
+"#note-2">[2]</a>; and I compared it to
+Herculaneum, or some old Roman field, which when dug, fully
+rewards the labour employed. The authenticity of every article is
+unquestionable. For the expression, I, who wrote them down in his
+presence, am partly answerable.</p>
+<p>'Theocritus is not deserving of very high respect as a writer;
+as to the pastoral part, Virgil is very evidently superiour. He
+wrote when there had been a larger influx of knowledge into the
+world than when Theocritus lived. Theocritus does not abound in
+description, though living in a beautiful country: the manners
+painted are coarse and gross. Virgil has much more description,
+more sentiment, more of Nature, and more of art. Some of the most
+excellent parts of Theocritus are, where Castor and Pollux, going
+with the other Argonauts, land on the Bebrycian coast, and there
+fall into a dispute with Amycus, the King of that country; which
+is as well conducted as Euripides could have done it; and the
+battle is well related. Afterwards they carry off a woman, whose
+two brothers come to recover her, and expostulate with Castor and
+Pollux on their injustice; but they pay no regard to the
+brothers, and a battle ensues, where Castor and his brother are
+triumphant. Theocritus seems not to have seen that the brothers
+have the advantage in their argument over his Argonaut heroes.
+<i>The Sicilian Gossips</i> is a piece of merit.'</p>
+<p>'Callimachus is a writer of little excellence. The chief thing
+to be learned from him is his account of Rites and Mythology;
+which, though desirable to be known for the sake of understanding
+other parts of ancient authours, is the least pleasing or
+valuable part of their writings.'</p>
+<p>'Mattaire's account of the Stephani<a href=
+"#note-3">[3]</a> is a heavy book. He
+seems to have been a puzzle-headed man, with a large share of
+scholarship, but with little geometry or logick in his head,
+without method, and possessed of little genius. He wrote Latin
+verses from time to time, and published a set in his old age,
+which he called '<i>Senilia</i>;' in which he shews so little
+learning or taste in writing, as to make <i>Carteret</i> a
+dactyl<a href="#note-4">[4]</a>. In
+matters of genealogy it is necessary to give the bare names as
+they are; but in poetry, and in prose of any elegance in the
+writing, they require to have inflection given to them. His book
+of the Dialects<a href="#note-5">[5]</a>
+is a sad heap of confusion; the only way to write on them is to
+tabulate them with Notes, added at the bottom of the page, and
+references.'</p>
+<p>'It may be questioned, whether there is not some mistake as to
+the methods of employing the poor, seemingly on a supposition
+that there is a certain portion of work left undone for want of
+persons to do it; but if that is otherwise, and all the materials
+we have are actually worked up, or all the manufactures we can
+use or dispose of are already executed, then what is given to the
+poor, who are to be set at work, must be taken from some who now
+have it; as time must be taken for learning, according to Sir
+William Petty's observation, a certain part of those very
+materials that, as it is, are properly worked up, must be spoiled
+by the unskilfulness of novices. We may apply to well-meaning,
+but misjudging persons in particulars of this nature, what
+Giannone<a href="#note-6">[6]</a> said to
+a monk, who wanted what he called to <i>convert</i> him: <i>"Tu
+sei santo, ma tu non sei filosofo"</i>&mdash;It is an unhappy
+circumstance that one might give away five hundred pounds in a
+year to those that importune in the streets, and not do any
+good<a href="#note-7">[7]</a>.'</p>
+<p>'There is nothing more likely to betray a man into absurdity
+than <i>condescension</i>; when he seems to suppose his
+understanding too powerful for his company<a href=
+"#note-8">[8]</a>.'</p>
+<p>'Having asked Mr. Langton if his father and mother had sat for
+their pictures, which he thought it right for each generation of
+a family to do, and being told they had opposed it, he said,
+"Sir, among the anfractuosities<a href=
+"#note-9">[9]</a> of the human mind, I
+know not if it may not be one, that there is a superstitious
+reluctance to sit for a picture."'</p>
+<p>'John Gilbert Cooper<a href=
+"#note-10">[10]</a> related, that soon
+after the publication of his <i>Dictionary</i>, Garrick being
+asked by Johnson what people said of it, told him, that among
+other animadversions, it was objected that he cited authorities
+which were beneath the dignity of such a work, and mentioned
+Richardson. "Nay, (said Johnson,) I have done worse than that: I
+have cited <i>thee</i>, David<a href=
+"#note-11">[11]</a>."'</p>
+<p>'Talking of expence, he observed, with what munificence a
+great merchant will spend his money, both from his having it at
+command, and from his enlarged views by calculation of a good
+effect upon the whole. "Whereas (said he) you will hardly ever
+find a country gentleman who is not a good deal disconcerted at
+an unexpected occasion for his being obliged to lay out ten
+pounds<a href="#note-12">[12]</a>."'</p>
+<p>'When in good humour he would talk of his own writings with a
+wonderful frankness and candour, and would even criticise them
+with the closest severity. One day, having read over one of his
+Ramblers, Mr. Langton asked him, how he liked that paper; he
+shook his head, and answered, "too wordy." At another time, when
+one was reading his tragedy of <i>Irene</i> to a company at a
+house in the country, he left the room; and somebody having asked
+him the reason of this, he replied, Sir, I thought it had been
+better<a href="#note-13">[13]</a>.'</p>
+<p>'Talking of a point of delicate scrupulosity<a href=
+"#note-14">[14]</a> of moral conduct, he
+said to Mr. Langton, "Men of harder minds than ours will do many
+things from which you and I would shrink; yet, Sir, they will
+perhaps do more good in life than we. But let us try to help one
+another. If there be a wrong twist it may be set right. It is not
+probable that two people can be wrong the same way."'</p>
+<p>'Of the Preface to Capel's <i>Shakspeare</i>, he said, "If the
+man would have come to me, I would have endeavoured to endow his
+purposes with words; for as it is, he doth gabble monstrously<a
+href="#note-15">[15]</a>."'</p>
+<p>'He related, that he had once in a dream a contest of wit with
+some other person, and that he was very much mortified by
+imagining that his opponent had the better of him. "Now, (said
+he,) one may mark here the effect of sleep in weakening the power
+of reflection; for had not my judgement failed me, I should have
+seen, that the wit of this supposed antagonist, by whose
+superiority I felt myself depressed, was as much furnished by me,
+as that which I thought I had been uttering in my own
+character."'</p>
+<p>'One evening in company, an ingenious and learned gentleman
+read to him a letter of compliment which he had received from one
+of the Professors of a foreign University. Johnson, in an
+irritable fit, thinking there was too much ostentation, said, "I
+never receive any of these tributes of applause from abroad. One
+instance I recollect of a foreign publication, in which mention
+is made of <i>l'illustre Lockman</i><a href=
+"#note-16">[16]</a>."'</p>
+<p>'Of Sir Joshua Reynolds, he said, "Sir, I know no man who has
+passed through life with more observation than Reynolds."'</p>
+<p>'He repeated to Mr. Langton, with great energy, in the Greek,
+our SAVIOUR'S gracious expression concerning the forgiveness of
+Mary Magdalen, "[Greek: Ae pistis sou sesoke se poreuou eis
+eiraeuaeu.] Thy faith hath saved thee; go in peace<a href=
+"#note-17">[17]</a>." He said, "the
+manner of this dismission is exceedingly affecting."'</p>
+<p>'He thus defined the difference between physical and moral
+truth; "Physical truth, is, when you tell a thing as it actually
+is. Moral truth, is, when you tell a thing sincerely and
+precisely as it appears to you. I say such a one walked across
+the street; if he really did so, I told a physical truth. If I
+thought so, though I should have been mistaken, I told a moral
+truth."'</p>
+<p>'Huggins, the translator of Ariosto, and Mr. Thomas Warton, in
+the early part of his literary life, had a dispute concerning
+that poet, of whom Mr. Warton in his <i>Observations on Spenser's
+Fairy Queen</i>, gave some account, which Huggins attempted to
+answer with violence, and said, "I will <i>militate</i> no longer
+against his <i>nescience</i>." Huggins was master of the subject,
+but wanted expression. Mr. Warton's knowledge of it was then
+imperfect, but his manner lively and elegant<a href=
+"#note-18">[18]</a>. Johnson said, "It
+appears to me, that Huggins has ball without powder, and Warton
+powder without ball."'</p>
+<p>'Talking of the Farce of <i>High Life below Stairs</i><a href=
+"#note-19">[19]</a>, he said, "Here is a
+Farce, which is really very diverting when you see it acted; and
+yet one may read it, and not know that one has been reading any
+thing at all."'</p>
+<p>'He used at one time to go occasionally to the green room of
+Drury-lane Theatre<a href=
+"#note-20">[20]</a>, where he was much
+regarded by the players, and was very easy and facetious with
+them. He had a very high opinion of Mrs. Clive's comick powers,
+and conversed more with her than with any of them. He said,
+"Clive, Sir, is a good thing to sit by; she always understands
+what you say<a href="#note-21">[21]</a>."
+And she said of him, "I love to sit by Dr. Johnson; he always
+entertains me." One night, when <i>The Recruiting Officer</i> was
+acted, he said to Mr. Holland<a href=
+"#note-22">[22]</a>, who had been
+expressing an apprehension that Dr. Johnson would disdain the
+works of Farquhar; "No, Sir, I think Farquhar a man whose
+writings have considerable merit."'</p>
+<p>'His friend Garrick was so busy in conducting the drama, that
+they could not have so much intercourse as Mr. Garrick used to
+profess an anxious wish that there should be<a href=
+"#note-23">[23]</a>. There might, indeed,
+be something in the contemptuous severity as to the merit of
+acting, which his old preceptor nourished in himself, that would
+mortify Garrick after the great applause which he received from
+the audience. For though Johnson said of him, "Sir, a man who has
+a nation to admire him every night, may well be expected to be
+somewhat elated<a href=
+"#note-24">[24]</a>;" yet he would treat
+theatrical matters with a ludicrous slight. He mentioned one
+evening, "I met David coming off the stage, drest in a woman's
+riding-hood, when he acted in <i>The Wonder</i><a href=
+"#note-25">[25]</a>; I came full upon
+him, and I believe he was not pleased."'</p>
+<p>'Once he asked Tom Davies, whom he saw drest in a fine suit of
+clothes, "And what art thou to-night?" Tom answered, "The Thane
+of Ross<a href="#note-26">[26]</a>;"
+(which it will be recollected is a very inconsiderable
+character.) "O brave!" said Johnson.'</p>
+<p>'Of Mr. Longley, at Rochester, a gentleman of very
+considerable learning, whom Dr. Johnson met there, he said, "My
+heart warms towards him. I was surprised to find in him such a
+nice acquaintance with the metre in the learned languages; though
+I was somewhat mortified that I had it not so much to myself, as
+I should have thought<a href=
+"#note-27">[27]</a>."'</p>
+<p>'Talking of the minuteness with which people will record the
+sayings of eminent persons, a story was told, that when Pope was
+on a visit to Spence<a href=
+"#note-28">[28]</a> at Oxford, as they
+looked from the window they saw a Gentleman Commoner, who was
+just come in from riding, amusing himself with whipping at a
+post. Pope took occasion to say, "That young gentleman seems to
+have little to do." Mr. Beauclerk observed, "Then, to be sure,
+Spence turned round and wrote that down;" and went on to say to
+Dr. Johnson, "Pope, Sir, would have said the same of you, if he
+had seen you distilling<a href=
+"#note-29">[29]</a>." JOHNSON. "Sir, if
+Pope had told me of my distilling, I would have told him of his
+grotto<a href="#note-30">[30]</a>."'</p>
+<p>'He would allow no settled indulgence of idleness upon
+principle, and always repelled every attempt to urge excuses for
+it, A friend one day suggested, that it was not wholesome to
+study soon after dinner. JOHNSON. "Ah, Sir, don't give way to
+such a fancy. At one time of my life I had taken it into my head
+that it was not wholesome to study between breakfast and dinner<a
+href="#note-31">[31]</a>."'</p>
+<p>'Mr. Beauclerk one day repeated to Dr. Johnson Pope's
+lines,</p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ "Let modest Foster, if he will, excel
+ Ten metropolitans in preaching well:" <a href=
+"#note-32">32</a>
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>Then asked the Doctor, "Why did Pope say this?" JOHNSON. 'Sir,
+he hoped it would vex somebody.'</p>
+<p>'Dr. Goldsmith, upon occasion of Mrs. Lennox's bringing out a
+play<a href="#note-33">[33]</a>, said to
+Dr. Johnson at the CLUB, that a person had advised him to go and
+hiss it, because she had attacked Shakspeare in her book called
+<i>Shakspeare Illustrated</i><a href=
+"#note-34">[34]</a>. JOHNSON. "And did
+not you tell him he was a rascal<a href=
+"#note-35">[35]</a>?" GOLDSMITH. "No,
+Sir, I did not. Perhaps he might not mean what he said." JOHNSON.
+"Nay, Sir, if he lied, it is a different thing." Colman slily
+said, (but it is believed Dr. Johnson did not hear him,) "Then
+the proper expression should have been,&mdash;Sir, if you don't
+lie, you're a rascal."'</p>
+<p>'His affection for Topham Beauclerk was so great, that when
+Beauclerk was labouring under that severe illness which at last
+occasioned his death, Johnson said, (with a voice faultering with
+emotion,) "Sir, I would walk to the extent of the diameter of the
+earth to save Beauclerk<a href=
+"#note-36">[36]</a>."'</p>
+<p>'One night at the CLUB he produced a translation of an Epitaph
+which Lord Elibank had written in English, for his Lady, and
+requested of Johnson to turn into Latin for him. Having read
+<i>Domina de North et Gray</i>, he said to Dyer, "You see, Sir,
+what barbarisms we are compelled to make use of, when modern
+titles are to be specifically mentioned in Latin inscriptions."
+When he had read it once aloud, and there had been a general
+approbation expressed by the company, he addressed himself to Mr.
+Dyer in particular, and said, "Sir, I beg to have your judgement,
+for I know your nicety<a href=
+"#note-37">[37]</a>." Dyer then very
+properly desired to read it over again; which having done, he
+pointed out an incongruity in one of the sentences. Johnson
+immediately assented to the observation, and said, "Sir, this is
+owing to an alteration of a part of the sentence, from the form
+in which I had first written it; and I believe, Sir, you may have
+remarked, that the making a partial change, without a due regard
+to the general structure of the sentence, is a very frequent
+cause of errour in composition."'</p>
+<p>'Johnson was well acquainted with Mr. Dossie, authour of a
+treatise on Agriculture<a href=
+"#note-38">[38]</a>; and said of him,
+"Sir, of the objects which the Society of Arts have chiefly in
+view, the chymical effects of bodies operating upon other bodies,
+he knows more than almost any man." Johnson, in order to give Mr.
+Dossie his vote to be a member of this Society, paid up an arrear
+which had run on for two years. On this occasion he mentioned a
+circumstance as characteristick of the Scotch. One of that
+nation, (said he,) who had been a candidate, against whom I had
+voted, came up to me with a civil salutation. Now, Sir, this is
+their way. An Englishman would have stomached it, and been sulky,
+and never have taken further notice of you; but a Scotchman, Sir,
+though you vote nineteen times against him, will accost you with
+equal complaisance after each time, and the twentieth time, Sir,
+he will get your vote.'</p>
+<p>'Talking on the subject of toleration, one day when some
+friends were with him in his study, he made his usual remark,
+that the State has a right to regulate the religion of the
+people, who are the children of the State<a href=
+"#note-39">[39]</a>. A clergyman having
+readily acquiesced in this, Johnson, who loved discussion,
+observed, "But, Sir, you must go round to other States than our
+own. You do not know what a Bramin has to say for himself<a href=
+"#note-40">[40]</a>. In short, Sir, I
+have got no further than this: Every man has a right to utter
+what he thinks truth, and every other man has a right to knock
+him down for it. Martyrdom is the test<a href=
+"#note-41">[41]</a>."'</p>
+<p>'A man, he observed, should begin to write soon; for, if he
+waits till his judgement is matured, his inability, through want
+of practice to express his conceptions, will make the
+disproportion so great between what he sees, and what he can
+attain, that he will probably be discouraged from writing at
+all<a href="#note-42">[42]</a>. As a
+proof of the justness of this remark, we may instance what is
+related of the great Lord Granville<a href=
+"#note-43">[43]</a>; that after he had
+written his letter, giving an account of the battle of Dettingen,
+he said, "Here is a letter, expressed in terms not good enough
+for a tallow-chandler to have used.'"</p>
+<p>'Talking of a Court-martial that was sitting upon a very
+momentous publick occasion, he expressed much doubt of an
+enlightened decision; and said, that perhaps there was not a
+member of it, who in the whole course of his life, had ever spent
+an hour by himself in balancing probabilities<a href=
+"#note-44">[44]</a>.'</p>
+<p>'Goldsmith one day brought to the CLUB a printed Ode, which
+he, with others, had been hearing read by its authour in a
+publick room at the rate of five shillings each for admission<a
+href="#note-45">[45]</a>. One of the
+company having read it aloud, Dr. Johnson said, "Bolder words and
+more timorous meaning, I think never were brought together."'</p>
+<p>'Talking of Gray's <i>Odes</i>, he said, "They are forced
+plants raised in a hot-bed<a href=
+"#note-46">[46]</a>; and they are poor
+plants; they are but cucumbers after all." A gentleman present,
+who had been running down Ode-writing in general, as a bad
+species of poetry, unluckily said, "Had they been literally
+cucumbers, they had been better things than Odes."&mdash;"Yes,
+Sir, (said Johnson,) for a <i>hog</i>."'</p>
+<p>'His distinction of the different degrees of attainment of
+learning was thus marked upon two occasions. Of Queen Elizabeth
+he said, "She had learning enough to have given dignity to a
+bishop;" and of Mr. Thomas Davies he said, "Sir, Davies has
+learning enough to give credit to a clergyman<a href=
+"#note-47">[47]</a>."'</p>
+<p>'He used to quote, with great warmth, the saying of Aristotle
+recorded by Diogenes Laertius<a href=
+"#note-48">[48]</a>; that there was the
+same difference between one learned and unlearned, as between the
+living and the dead.'</p>
+<p>'It is very remarkable, that he retained in his memory very
+slight and trivial, as well as important things<a href=
+"#note-49">[49]</a>. As an instance of
+this, it seems that an inferiour domestick of the Duke of Leeds
+had attempted to celebrate his Grace's marriage in such homely
+rhimes as he could make; and this curious composition having been
+sung to Dr. Johnson he got it by heart, and used to repeat it in
+a very pleasant manner. Two of the stanzas were these:&mdash;</p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ "When the Duke of Leeds shall married be
+ To a fine young lady of high quality,
+ How happy will that gentlewoman be
+ In his Grace of Leeds's good company.
+ She shall have all that's fine and fair,
+ And the best of silk and sattin shall wear;
+ And ride in a coach to take the air,
+ And have a house in St. James's-square<a href=
+"#note-50">50</a>."
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>To hear a man, of the weight and dignity of Johnson, repeating
+such humble attempts at poetry, had a very amusing effect. He,
+however, seriously observed of the last stanza repeated by him,
+that it nearly comprized all the advantages that wealth can
+give.'</p>
+<p>'An eminent foreigner, when he was shewn the British Museum,
+was very troublesome with many absurd inquiries. "Now there, Sir,
+(said he,) is the difference between an Englishman and a
+Frenchman. A Frenchman must be always talking, whether he knows
+any thing of the matter or not; an Englishman is content to say
+nothing, when he has nothing to say."'</p>
+<p>'His unjust contempt for foreigners was, indeed, extreme. One
+evening, at old Slaughter's coffee-house<a href=
+"#note-51">[51]</a>, when a number of
+them were talking loud about little matters, he said, "Does not
+this confirm old Meynell's<a href=
+"#note-52">[52]</a>
+observation&mdash;<i>For any thing I see, foreigners are
+fools</i><a href=
+"#note-53">[53]</a>."'</p>
+<p>'He said, that once, when he had a violent tooth-ach, a
+Frenchman accosted him thus:&mdash;<i>Ah, Monsieur vous etudiez
+trop</i><a href="#note-54">[54]</a>.'</p>
+<p>'Having spent an evening at Mr. Langton's with the Reverend
+Dr. Parr, he was much pleased with the conversation of that
+learned gentleman; and after he was gone, said to Mr. Langton,
+"Sir, I am obliged to you for having asked me this evening. Parr
+is a fair man. I do not know when I have had an occasion of such
+free controversy. It is remarkable how much of a man's life may
+pass without meeting with any instance of this kind of open
+discussion<a href=
+"#note-55">[55]</a>."'</p>
+<p>'We may fairly institute a criticism between Shakspeare and
+Corneille<a href="#note-56">[56]</a>, as
+they both had, though in a different degree, the lights of a
+latter age. It is not so just between the Greek dramatick writers
+and Shakspeare. It may be replied to what is said by one of the
+remarkers on Shakspeare, that though Darius's shade<a href=
+"#note-57">[57]</a> had
+<i>prescience</i>, it does not necessarily follow that he had all
+<i>past</i> particulars revealed to him.'</p>
+<p>'Spanish plays, being wildly and improbably farcical, would
+please children here, as children are entertained with stories
+full of prodigies; their experience not being sufficient to cause
+them to be so readily startled at deviations from the natural
+course of life<a href=
+"#note-58">[58]</a>. The machinery of the
+Pagans is uninteresting to us<a href=
+"#note-59">[59]</a>: when a Goddess
+appears in Homer or Virgil, we grow weary; still more so in the
+Grecian tragedies, as in that kind of composition a nearer
+approach to Nature is intended. Yet there are good reasons for
+reading romances; as&mdash;the fertility of invention, the beauty
+of style and expression, the curiosity of seeing with what kind
+of performances the age and country in which they were written
+was delighted: for it is to be apprehended, that at the time when
+very wild improbable tales were well received, the people were in
+a barbarous state, and so on the footing of children, as has been
+explained.'</p>
+<p>'It is evident enough that no one who writes now can use the
+Pagan deities and mythology; the only machinery, therefore, seems
+that of ministering spirits, the ghosts of the departed,
+witches<a href="#note-60">[60]</a>, and
+fairies, though these latter, as the vulgar superstition
+concerning them (which, while in its force, infected at least the
+imagination of those that had more advantage in education, though
+their reason set them free from it,) is every day wearing out,
+seem likely to be of little further assistance in the machinery
+of poetry. As I recollect, Hammond introduces a hag or witch into
+one of his love elegies, where the effect is unmeaning and
+disgusting<a href=
+"#note-61">[61]</a>.'</p>
+<p>'The man who uses his talent of ridicule in creating or
+grossly exaggerating the instances he gives, who imputes
+absurdities that did not happen, or when a man was a little
+ridiculous describes him as having been very much so, abuses his
+talents greatly. The great use of delineating absurdities is,
+that we may know how far human folly can go; the account,
+therefore, ought of absolute necessity to be faithful. A certain
+character (naming the person) as to the general cast of it, is
+well described by Garrick, but a great deal of the phraseology he
+uses in it, is quite his own, particularly in the proverbial
+comparisons, "obstinate as a pig," &amp;c., but I don't know
+whether it might not be true of Lord &mdash;&mdash;&mdash;<a
+href="#note-62">[62]</a>, that from a too
+great eagerness of praise and popularity, and a politeness
+carried to a ridiculous excess, he was likely, after asserting a
+thing in general, to give it up again in parts. For instance, if
+he had said Reynolds was the first of painters, he was capable
+enough of giving up, as objections might happen to be severally
+made, first his outline,&mdash;then the grace in form,&mdash;then
+the colouring,&mdash;and lastly, to have owned that he was such a
+mannerist, that the disposition of his pictures was all
+alike.'</p>
+<p>'For hospitality, as formerly practised, there is no longer
+the same reason; heretofore the poorer people were more numerous,
+and from want of commerce, their means of getting a livelihood
+more difficult; therefore the supporting them was an act of great
+benevolence; now that the poor can find maintenance for
+themselves, and their labour is wanted, a general undiscerning
+hospitality tends to ill, by withdrawing them from their work to
+idleness and drunkenness. Then, formerly rents were received in
+kind, so that there was a great abundance of provisions in
+possession of the owners of the lands, which, since the plenty of
+money afforded by commerce, is no longer the case.'</p>
+<p>'Hospitality to strangers and foreigners in our country is now
+almost at an end, since, from the increase of them that come to
+us, there have been a sufficient number of people that have found
+an interest in providing inns and proper accommodations, which is
+in general a more expedient method for the entertainment of
+travellers. Where the travellers and strangers are few, more of
+that hospitality subsists, as it has not been worth while to
+provide places of accommodation. In Ireland there is still
+hospitality to strangers, in some degree; in Hungary and Poland
+probably more.'</p>
+<p>'Colman, in a note on his translation of <i>Terence</i>,
+talking of Shakspeare's learning, asks, "What says Farmer to
+this? What says Johnson<a href=
+"#note-63">[63]</a>?" Upon this he
+observed, "Sir, let Farmer answer for himself: <i>I</i> never
+engaged in this controversy. I always said, Shakspeare had Latin
+enough to grammaticise his English<a href=
+"#note-64">[64]</a>."'</p>
+<p>'A clergyman, whom he characterised as one who loved to say
+little oddities, was affecting one day, at a Bishop's table, a
+sort of slyness and freedom not in character, and repeated, as if
+part of <i>The Old Mans Wish</i>, a song by Dr. Walter Pope, a
+verse bordering on licentiousness. Johnson rebuked him in the
+finest manner, by first shewing him that he did not know the
+passage he was aiming at, and thus humbling him: "Sir, that is
+not the song: it is thus." And he gave it right. Then looking
+stedfastly on him, "Sir, there is a part of that song which I
+should wish to exemplify in my own life:&mdash;</p>
+<p>"May I govern my passions with absolute sway<a href=
+"#note-65">[65]</a>!"'</p>
+<p>'Being asked if Barnes knew a good deal of Greek, he answered,
+"I doubt, Sir, he was <i>unoculus inter caecos<a href=
+"#note-66">[66]</a></i>."'</p>
+<p>'He used frequently to observe, that men might be very eminent
+in a profession, without our perceiving any particular power of
+mind in them in conversation. "It seems strange (said he) that a
+man should see so far to the right, who sees so short a way to
+the left. Burke is the only man whose common conversation
+corresponds with the general fame which he has in the world. Take
+up whatever topick you please, he is ready to meet you<a href=
+"#note-67">[67]</a>."'</p>
+<p>'A gentleman, by no means deficient in literature, having
+discovered less acquaintance with one of the Classicks than
+Johnson expected, when the gentleman left the room, he observed,
+"You see, now, how little any body reads." Mr. Langton happening
+to mention his having read a good deal in Clenardus's <i>Greek
+Grammar</i>, "Why, Sir, (said he,) who is there in this town who
+knows any thing of Clenardus but you and I?" And upon Mr.
+Langton's mentioning that he had taken the pains to learn by
+heart the Epistle of St. Basil, which is given in that Grammar as
+a praxis, "Sir, (said he,) I never made such an effort to attain
+Greek<a href="#note-68">[68]</a>."'</p>
+<p>'Of Dodsley's <i>Publick Virtue, a Poem</i>, he said, "It was
+fine <i>blank</i> (meaning to express his usual contempt for
+blank verse<a href="#note-69">[69]</a>);
+however, this miserable poem did not sell, and my poor friend
+Doddy said, Publick Virtue was not a subject to interest the
+age."'</p>
+<p>'Mr. Langton, when a very young man, read Dodsley's <i>Cleone
+a Tragedy</i><a href="#note-70">[70]</a>,
+to him, not aware of his extreme impatience to be read to. As it
+went on he turned his face to the back of his chair, and put
+himself into various attitudes, which marked his uneasiness. At
+the end of an act, however, he said, "Come let's have some more,
+let's go into the slaughter-house again, Lanky. But I am afraid
+there is more blood than brains." Yet he afterwards said, "When I
+heard you read it, I thought higher of its power of language:
+when I read it myself, I was more sensible of its pathetick
+effect;" and then he paid it a compliment which many will think
+very extravagant. "Sir, (said he,) if Otway had written this
+play, no other of his pieces would have been remembered." Dodsley
+himself, upon this being repeated to him, said, "It was too
+much:" it must be remembered, that Johnson always appeared not to
+be sufficiently sensible of the merit of Otway<a href=
+"#note-71">[71]</a>.'</p>
+<p>'Snatches of reading (said he) will not make a Bentley or a
+Clarke. They are, however, in a certain degree advantageous. I
+would put a child into a library (where no unfit books are) and
+let him read at his choice. A child should not be discouraged
+from reading any thing that he takes a liking to, from a notion
+that it is above his reach. If that be the case, the child will
+soon find it out and desist; if not, he of course gains the
+instruction; which is so much the more likely to come, from the
+inclination with which he takes up the study<a href=
+"#note-72">[72]</a>.'</p>
+<p>'Though he used to censure carelessness with great vehemence,
+he owned, that he once, to avoid the trouble of locking up five
+guineas, hid them, he forgot where, so that he could not find
+them.'</p>
+<p>'A gentleman who introduced his brother to Dr. Johnson was
+earnest to recommend him to the Doctor's notice, which he did by
+saying, "When we have sat together some time, you'll find my
+brother grow very entertaining."&mdash;"Sir, (said Johnson,) I
+can wait."'</p>
+<p>'When the rumour was strong that we should have a war, because
+the French would assist the Americans, he rebuked a friend with
+some asperity for supposing it, saying, "No, Sir, national faith
+is not yet sunk so low."'</p>
+<p>'In the latter part of his life, in order to satisfy himself
+whether his mental faculties were impaired, he resolved that he
+would try to learn a new language, and fixed upon the Low Dutch,
+for that purpose, and this he continued till he had read about
+one half of <i>Thomas &agrave; Kempis</i>; and finding that there
+appeared no abatement of his power of acquisition, he then
+desisted, as thinking the experiment had been duly tried<a href=
+"#note-73">[73]</a>. Mr. Burke justly
+observed, that this was not the most vigorous trial, Low Dutch
+being a language so near to our own; had it been one of the
+languages entirely different, he might have been very soon
+satisfied.'</p>
+<p>'Mr. Langton and he having gone to see a Freemason's funeral
+procession, when they were at Rochester<a href=
+"#note-74">[74]</a>, and some solemn
+musick being played on French horns, he said, "This is the first
+time that I have ever been affected by musical sounds;" adding,
+"that the impression made upon him was of a melancholy kind." Mr.
+Langton saying, that this effect was a fine one,&mdash;JOHNSON.
+"Yes, if it softens the mind, so as to prepare it for the
+reception of salutary feelings, it may be good: but inasmuch as
+it is melancholy <i>per se</i>, it is bad<a href=
+"#note-75">[75]</a>."'</p>
+<p>'Goldsmith had long a visionary project, that some time or
+other when his circumstances should be easier, he would go to
+Aleppo, in order to acquire a knowledge as far as might be of any
+arts peculiar to the East, and introduce them into Britain. When
+this was talked of in Dr. Johnson's company, he said, "Of all men
+Goldsmith is the most unfit to go out upon such an inquiry; for
+he is utterly ignorant of such arts as we already possess, and
+consequently could not know what would be accessions to our
+present stock of mechanical knowledge. Sir, he would bring home a
+grinding barrow, which you see in every street in London, and
+think that he had furnished a wonderful improvement<a href=
+"#note-76">[76]</a>."'</p>
+<p>'Greek, Sir, (said he,) is like lace; every man gets as much
+of it as he can<a href=
+"#note-77">[77]</a>.'</p>
+<p>'When Lord Charles Hay<a href=
+"#note-78">[78]</a>, after his return
+from America, was preparing his defence to be offered to the
+Court-Martial which he had demanded, having heard Mr. Langton as
+high in expressions of admiration of Johnson, as he usually was,
+he requested that Dr. Johnson might be introduced to him; and Mr.
+Langton having mentioned it to Johnson, he very kindly and
+readily agreed; and being presented by Mr. Langton to his
+Lordship, while under arrest, he saw him several times; upon one
+of which occasions Lord Charles read to him what he had prepared,
+which Johnson signified his approbation of, saying, "It is a very
+good soldierly defence." Johnson said, that he had advised his
+Lordship, that as it was in vain to contend with those who were
+in possession of power, if they would offer him the rank of
+Lieutenant-General, and a government, it would be better judged
+to desist from urging his complaints. It is well known that his
+Lordship died before the sentence was made known.'</p>
+<p>'Johnson one day gave high praise to Dr. Bentley's verses<a
+href="#note-79">[79]</a> in Dodsley's
+<i>Collection</i>, which he recited with his usual energy. Dr.
+Adam Smith, who was present, observed in his decisive
+professorial manner, "Very well&mdash;Very well." Johnson however
+added, "Yes, they <i>are</i> very well, Sir; but you may observe
+in what manner they are well. They are the forcible verses of a
+man of a strong mind, but not accustomed to write verse<a href=
+"#note-80">[80]</a>; for there is some
+uncouthness in the expression[81]."'</p>
+<p>'Drinking tea one day at Garrick's with Mr. Langton, he was
+questioned if he was not somewhat of a heretick as to Shakspeare;
+said Garrick, "I doubt he is a little of an infidel<a href=
+"#note-82">[82]</a>."&mdash;"Sir, (said
+Johnson) I will stand by the lines I have written on Shakspeare
+in my Prologue at the opening of your Theatre<a href=
+"#note-83">[83]</a>." Mr. Langton
+suggested, that in the line</p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ "And panting Time toil'd after him in vain,"
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>Johnson might have had in his eye the passage in <i>The
+Tempest</i>, where Prospero says of Miranda,</p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ "&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;-She will outstrip all praise,
+ And make it halt behind her<a href=
+"#note-84">84</a>."
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>Johnson said nothing. Garrick then ventured to observe, "I do
+not think that the happiest line in the praise of Shakspeare."
+Johnson exclaimed (smiling,) "Prosaical rogues! next time I
+write, I'll make both time and space pant<a href=
+"#note-85">[85]</a>."'</p>
+<p>'It is well known that there was formerly a rude custom for
+those who were sailing upon the Thames, to accost each other as
+they passed, in the most abusive language they could invent,
+generally, however, with as much satirical humour as they were
+capable of producing. Addison gives a specimen of this ribaldry,
+in Number 383 of <i>The Spectator</i>, when Sir Roger de Coverly
+and he are going to Spring-garden<a href=
+"#note-86">[86]</a>. Johnson was once
+eminently successful in this species of contest; a fellow having
+attacked him with some coarse raillery, Johnson answered him
+thus, "Sir, your wife, <i>under pretence of keeping a
+bawdy-house</i>, is a receiver of stolen goods<a href=
+"#note-87">[87]</a>." One evening when he
+and Mr. Burke and Mr. Langton were in company together, and the
+admirable scolding of Timon of Athens was mentioned, this
+instance of Johnson's was quoted, and thought to have at least
+equal excellence.'</p>
+<p>'As Johnson always allowed the extraordinary talents of Mr.
+Burke, so Mr. Burke was fully sensible of the wonderful powers of
+Johnson. Mr. Langton recollects having passed an evening with
+both of them, when Mr. Burke repeatedly entered upon topicks
+which it was evident he would have illustrated with extensive
+knowledge and richness of expression; but Johnson always seized
+upon the conversation, in which, however, he acquitted himself in
+a most masterly manner. As Mr. Burke and Mr. Langton were walking
+home, Mr. Burke observed that Johnson had been very great that
+night; Mr. Langton joined in this, but added, he could have
+wished to hear more from another person; (plainly intimating that
+he meant Mr. Burke.) "O, no (said Mr. Burke) it is enough for me
+to have rung the bell to him<a href=
+"#note-88">[88]</a>."'</p>
+<p>'Beauclerk having observed to him of one of their friends,
+that he was aukward at counting money, "Why, Sir, said Johnson, I
+am likewise aukward at counting money. But then, Sir, the reason
+is plain; I have had very little money to count."'</p>
+<p>'He had an abhorrence of affectation<a href=
+"#note-89">[89]</a>. Talking of old Mr.
+Langton, of whom he said, "Sir, you will seldom see such a
+gentleman, such are his stores of literature, such his knowledge
+in divinity, and such his exemplary life;" he added, "and Sir, he
+has no grimace, no gesticulation, no bursts of admiration on
+trivial occasions; he never embraces you with an overacted
+cordiality<a href=
+"#note-90">[90]</a>."'</p>
+<p>'Being in company with a gentleman who thought fit to maintain
+Dr. Berkeley's ingenious philosophy, that nothing exists but as
+perceived by some mind<a href=
+"#note-91">[91]</a>; when the gentleman
+was going away, Johnson said to him, "Pray, Sir, don't leave us;
+for we may perhaps forget to think of you, and then you will
+cease to exist<a href=
+"#note-92">[92]</a>."'</p>
+<p>'Goldsmith, upon being visited by Johnson one day in the
+Temple, said to him with a little jealousy of the appearance of
+his accommodation, "I shall soon be in better chambers than
+these." Johnson at the same time checked him and paid him a
+handsome compliment, implying that a man of his talents should be
+above attention to such distinctions,&mdash;'Nay, Sir, never mind
+that. <i>Nil te quaesiveris extra</i><a href=
+"#note-93">[93]</a>.'</p>
+<p>'At the time when his pension was granted to him, he said,
+with a noble literary ambition, "Had this happened twenty years
+years ago, I should have gone to Constantinople to learn Arabick,
+as Pococke did<a href=
+"#note-94">[94]</a>."'</p>
+<p>'As an instance of the niceness of his taste, though he
+praised West's translation of Pindar, he pointed out the
+following passage as faulty, by expressing a circumstance so
+minute as to detract from the general dignity which should
+prevail:</p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ "Down then from thy glittering nail,
+ Take, O Muse, thy Dorian <i>lyre</i><a href=
+"#note-95">95</a>.'"
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>'When Mr. Vesey<a href=
+"#note-96">[96]</a> was proposed as a
+member of the LITERARY CLUB, Mr. Burke began by saying that he
+was a man of gentle manners. "Sir, said Johnson, you need say no
+more. When you have said a man of gentle manners; you have said
+enough."'</p>
+<p>'The late Mr. Fitzherbert<a href=
+"#note-97">[97]</a> told Mr. Langton that
+Johnson said to him, "Sir, a man has no more right to <i>say</i>
+an uncivil thing, than to <i>act</i> one; no more right to say a
+rude thing to another than to knock him down."'</p>
+<p>'My dear friend Dr. Bathurst<a href=
+"#note-98">[98]</a>, (said he with a
+warmth of approbation) declared he was glad that his father, who
+was a West-Indian planter, had left his affairs in total ruin,
+because having no estate, he was not under the temptation of
+having slaves.'</p>
+<p>'Richardson had little conversation<a href=
+"#note-99">[99]</a>, except about his own
+works, of which Sir Joshua Reynolds said he was always willing to
+talk, and glad to have them introduced. Johnson when he carried
+Mr. Langton to see him, professed that he could bring him out
+into conversation, and used this allusive expression, "Sir, I can
+make him <i>rear.</i>" But he failed; for in that interview
+Richardson said little else than that there lay in the room a
+translation of his <i>Clarissa</i> into German<a href=
+"#note-100">[100]</a>.'</p>
+<p>'Once when somebody produced a newspaper in which there was a
+letter of stupid abuse of Sir Joshua Reynolds, of which Johnson
+himself came in for a share,&mdash;"Pray," said he, "let us have
+it read aloud from beginning to end;" which being done, he with a
+ludicrous earnestness, and not directing his look to any
+particular person, called out, "Are we alive after all this
+satire!"'</p>
+<p>'He had a strong prejudice against the political character of
+Seeker<a href="#note-101">[101]</a>, one
+instance of which appeared at Oxford, where he expressed great
+dissatisfaction at his varying the old established toast, "Church
+and King." "The Archbishop of Canterbury, said he (with an
+affected smooth smiling grimace) drinks,' Constitution in Church
+and State.'" Being asked what difference there was between the
+two toasts, he said, "Why, Sir, you may be sure he meant
+something." Yet when the life of that prelate, prefixed to his
+sermons by Dr. Porteus and Dr. Stinton his chaplains, first came
+out, he read it with the utmost avidity, and said, "It is a life
+well written, and that well deserves to be recorded."'</p>
+<p>'Of a certain noble Lord, he said, "Respect him, you could
+not; for he had no mind of his own. Love him you could not; for
+that which you could do with him, every one else could<a href=
+"#note-102">[102]</a>."'</p>
+<p>'Of Dr. Goldsmith he said, "No man was more foolish when he
+had not a pen in his hand, or more wise when he had<a href=
+"#note-103">[103]</a>."'</p>
+<p>'He told in his lively manner the following literary anecdote:
+"Green and Guthrie<a href=
+"#note-104">[104]</a>, an Irishman and a
+Scotchman, undertook a translation of Duhalde's <i>History of
+China</i>. Green said of Guthrie, that he knew no English, and
+Guthrie of Green, that he knew no French; and these two undertook
+to translate Duhalde's <i>History of China</i>. In this
+translation there was found 'the twenty-sixth day of the new
+moon.' Now as the whole age of the moon is but twenty-eight days,
+the moon instead of being new, was nearly as old as it could be.
+Their blunder arose from their mistaking the word
+<i>neuvi&egrave;me</i> ninth, for <i>nouvelle</i> or
+<i>neuve</i>, new."'</p>
+<p>'Talking of Dr. Blagden's copiousness and precision of
+communication, Dr. Johnson said, "Blagden, Sir, is a delightful
+fellow<a href=
+"#note-105">[105]</a>."'</p>
+<p>'On occasion of Dr. Johnson's publishing his pamphlet of
+<i>The False Alarm</i><a href=
+"#note-106">[106]</a>, there came out a
+very angry answer (by many supposed to be by Mr. Wilkes). Dr.
+Johnson determined on not answering it; but, in conversation with
+Mr. Langton, mentioned a particular or two, which if he
+<i>had</i> replied to it, he might perhaps have inserted. In the
+answerer's pamphlet, it had been said with solemnity, "Do you
+consider, Sir, that a House of Commons is to the people as a
+Creature is to its Creator<a href=
+"#note-107">[107]</a>?" To this question,
+said Dr. Johnson, I could have replied, that&mdash;in the first
+place&mdash;the idea of a CREATOR must be such as that he has a
+power to unmake or annihilate his creature.'</p>
+<p>'Then it cannot be conceived that a creature can make laws for
+its</p>
+<center>CREATOR<a href=
+"#note-108">[108]</a>.'</center>
+<p>'Depend upon it, said he, that if a man <i>talks</i> of his
+misfortunes, there is something in them that is not disagreeable
+to him; for where there is nothing but pure misery, there never
+is any recourse to the mention of it<a href=
+"#note-109">[109]</a>.'</p>
+<p>'A man must be a poor beast that should <i>read</i> no more in
+quantity than he could <i>utter</i> aloud.'</p>
+<p>'Imlac in <i>Rasselas</i>, I spelt with a <i>c</i> at the end,
+because it is less like English, which should always have the
+Saxon <i>k</i> added to the <i>c</i><a href=
+"#note-110">[110]</a>.'</p>
+<p>'Many a man is mad in certain instances, and goes through life
+without having it perceived<a href=
+"#note-111">[111]</a>: for example, a
+madness has seized a person of supposing himself obliged
+literally to pray continually<a href=
+"#note-112">[112]</a>&mdash;had the
+madness turned the opposite way and the person thought it a crime
+ever to pray, it might not improbably have continued
+unobserved.'</p>
+<p>'He apprehended that the delineation of <i>characters</i> in
+the end of the first Book of the <i>Retreat of the Ten
+Thousand</i> was the first instance of the kind that was
+known.'</p>
+<p>'Supposing (said he) a wife to be of a studious or
+argumentative turn, it would be very troublesome<a href=
+"#note-113">[113]</a>: for
+instance,&mdash;if a woman should continually dwell upon the
+subject of the Arian heresy.'</p>
+<p>'No man speaks concerning another, even suppose it be in his
+praise, if he thinks he does not hear him, exactly as he would,
+if he thought he was within hearing.'</p>
+<p>'The applause of a single human being is of great
+consequence<a href="#note-114">[114]</a>:
+This he said to me with great earnestness of manner, very near
+the time of his decease, on occasion of having desired me to read
+a letter addressed to him from some person in the North of
+England; which when I had done, and he asked me what the contents
+were, as I thought being particular upon it might fatigue him, it
+being of great length, I only told him in general that it was
+highly in his praise;&mdash;and then he expressed himself as
+above.'</p>
+<p>'He mentioned with an air of satisfaction what Baretti had
+told him; that, meeting, in the course of his studying English,
+with an excellent paper in the <i>Spectator</i>, one of four<a
+href="#note-115">[115]</a> that were
+written by the respectable Dissenting Minister, Mr. Grove of
+Taunton, and observing the genius and energy of mind that it
+exhibits, it greatly quickened his curiosity to visit our
+country; as he thought if such were the lighter periodical essays
+of our authours, their productions on more weighty occasions must
+be wonderful indeed!'</p>
+<p>'He observed once, at Sir Joshua Reynolds's, that a beggar in
+the street will more readily ask alms from a <i>man</i>, though
+there should be no marks of wealth in his appearance, than from
+even a well-dressed woman<a href=
+"#note-116">[116]</a>; which he accounted
+for from the greater degree of carefulness as to money that is to
+be found in women; saying farther upon it, that the opportunities
+in general that they possess of improving their condition are
+much fewer than men have; and adding, as he looked round the
+company, which consisted of men only,&mdash;there is not one of
+us who does not think he might be richer if he would use his
+endeavour.'</p>
+<p>'He thus characterised an ingenious writer of his
+acquaintance: "Sir, he is an enthusiast by rule<a href=
+"#note-117">[117]</a>."'</p>
+<p>'<i>He may hold up that SHIELD against all his
+enemies</i>;'&mdash;was an observation on Homer, in reference to
+his description of the shield of Achilles, made by Mrs.
+Fitzherbert, wife to his friend Mr. Fitzherbert of Derbyshire,
+and respected by Dr. Johnson as a very fine one<a href=
+"#note-118">[118]</a>. He had in general
+a very high opinion of that lady's understanding.'</p>
+<p>'An observation of Bathurst's may be mentioned, which Johnson
+repeated, appearing to acknowledge it to be well founded, namely,
+it was somewhat remarkable how seldom, on occasion of coming into
+the company of any new person, one felt any wish or inclination
+to see him again<a href=
+"#note-119">[119]</a>.'</p>
+<p>This year the Reverend Dr. Franklin<a href=
+"#note-120">[120]</a> having published a
+translation of <i>Lucian</i>, inscribed to him the <i>Demonax</i>
+thus:&mdash;</p>
+<p>'To DR. SAMUEL JOHNSON, the Demonax of the present age, this
+piece is inscribed by a sincere admirer of his respectable<a
+href="#note-121">[121]</a> talents,</p>
+<center>'THE TRANSLATOR.'</center>
+<p>Though upon a particular comparison of Demonax and Johnson,
+there does not seem to be a great deal of similarity between
+them, this Dedication is a just compliment from the general
+character given by Lucian of the ancient Sage, '[Greek: ariston
+on oida ego philosophon genomenon], the best philosopher whom I
+have ever seen or known.'</p>
+<p>1781: AETAT. 72.&mdash;In 1781 Johnson at last completed his
+<i>Lives of the Poets</i>, of which he gives this account: 'Some
+time in March I finished the <i>Lives of the Poets</i>, which I
+wrote in my usual way, dilatorily and hastily, unwilling to work,
+and working with vigour and haste<a href=
+"#note-122">[122]</a>.' In a memorandum
+previous to this, he says of them: 'Written, I hope, in such a
+manner as may tend to the promotion of piety<a href=
+"#note-123">[123]</a>.'</p>
+<p>This is the work which of all Dr. Johnson's writings will
+perhaps be read most generally, and with most pleasure. Philology
+and biography<a href=
+"#note-124">[124]</a> were his favourite
+pursuits, and those who lived most in intimacy with him, heard
+him upon all occasions, when there was a proper opportunity, take
+delight in expatiating upon the various merits of the English
+Poets: upon the niceties of their characters, and the events of
+their progress through the world which they contributed to
+illuminate. His mind was so full of that kind of information, and
+it was so well arranged in his memory, that in performing what he
+had undertaken in this way, he had little more to do than to put
+his thoughts upon paper, exhibiting first each Poet's life, and
+then subjoining a critical examination of his genius and works.
+But when he began to write, the subject swelled in such a manner,
+that instead of prefaces to each poet, of no more than a few
+pages, as he had originally intended<a href=
+"#note-125">[125]</a>, he produced an
+ample, rich, and most entertaining view of them in every respect.
+In this he resembled Quintilian, who tells us, that in the
+composition of his <i>Institutions of Oratory<a href=
+"#note-126">[126]</a>, Lati&ugrave;s se
+tamen aperiente materi&acirc;, plus qu&agrave;m imponebatur
+oneris sponte suscepi.</i> The booksellers, justly sensible of
+the great additional value of the copy-right, presented him with
+another hundred pounds, over and above two hundred, for which his
+agreement was to furnish such prefaces as he thought fit<a href=
+"#note-127">[127]</a>.</p>
+<p>This was, however, but a small recompense for such a
+collection of biography, and such principles and illustrations of
+criticism, as, if digested and arranged in one system, by some
+modern Aristotle or Longinus, might form a code upon that
+subject, such as no other nation can shew. As he was so good as
+to make me a present of the greatest part of the original and
+indeed only<a href="#note-128">[128]</a>
+manuscript of this admirable work, I have an opportunity of
+observing with wonder, the correctness with which he rapidly
+struck off such glowing composition. He may be assimilated to the
+Lady in Waller, who could impress with 'Love at first sight:'</p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'Some other nymphs with colours faint,
+ And pencil slow may Cupid paint,
+ And a weak heart in time destroy;
+ She has a stamp, and prints the boy<a href=
+"#note-129">129</a>.'
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>That he, however, had a good deal of trouble, and some anxiety
+in carrying on the work<a href=
+"#note-130">[130]</a>, we see from a
+series of letters to Mr. Nichols the printer<a href=
+"#note-131">[131]</a>, whose variety of
+literary inquiry and obliging disposition, rendered him useful to
+Johnson. Mr. Steevens appears, from the papers in my possession,
+to have supplied him with some anecdotes and quotations; and I
+observe the fair hand of Mrs. Thrale as one of his copyists of
+select passages. But he was principally indebted to my steady
+friend Mr. Isaac Reed, of Staple-inn, whose extensive and
+accurate knowledge of English literary history I do not express
+with exaggeration, when I say it is wonderful; indeed his
+labours<a href="#note-132">[132]</a> have
+proved it to the world; and all who have the pleasure of his
+acquaintance can bear testimony to the frankness of his
+communications in private society.</p>
+<p>It is not my intention to dwell upon each of Johnson's
+<i>Lives of the Poets</i>, or attempt an analysis of their
+merits, which, were I able to do it, would take up too much room
+in this work; yet I shall make a few observations upon some of
+them, and insert a few various readings.</p>
+<p>The Life of COWLEY he himself considered as the best of the
+whole, on account of the dissertation which it contains on the
+<i>Metaphysical Poets</i>. Dryden, whose critical abilities were
+equal to his poetical, had mentioned them in his excellent
+Dedication of his Juvenal, but had barely mentioned them<a href=
+"#note-133">[133]</a>. Johnson has
+exhibited them at large, with such happy illustration from their
+writings, and in so luminous a manner, that indeed he may be
+allowed the full merit of novelty, and to have discovered to us,
+as it were, a new planet in the poetical hemisphere<a href=
+"#note-134">[134]</a>.</p>
+<p>It is remarked by Johnson, in considering the works of a
+poet<a href="#note-135">[135]</a>, that
+'amendments are seldom made without some token of a rent;' but I
+do not find that this is applicable to prose<a href=
+"#note-136">[136]</a>. We shall see that
+though his amendments in this work are for the better, there is
+nothing of the <i>pannus assutus</i><a href=
+"#note-137">[137]</a>; the texture is
+uniform: and indeed, what had been there at first, is very seldom
+unfit to have remained.</p>
+<p><i>Various Readings<a href=
+"#note-138">[138]</a> in the Life of
+COWLEY.</i></p>
+<p>'All [future votaries of] <i>that may hereafter pant for</i>
+solitude.</p>
+<p>'To conceive and execute the [agitation or perception]
+<i>pains and the pleasures</i> of other minds.</p>
+<p>'The wide effulgence of [the blazing] a <i>summer</i>
+noon.'</p>
+<p>In the Life of WALLER, Johnson gives a distinct and animated
+narrative of publick affairs in that variegated period, with
+strong yet nice touches of character; and having a fair
+opportunity to display his political principles, does it with an
+unqualified manly confidence, and satisfies his readers how nobly
+he might have executed a <i>Tory History</i> of his country.</p>
+<p>So easy is his style in these Lives, that I do not recollect
+more than three uncommon or learned words<a href=
+"#note-139">[139]</a>; one, when giving
+an account of the approach of Waller's mortal disease, he says,
+'he found his legs grow <i>tumid</i>;' by using the expression
+his legs <i>swelled</i>, he would have avoided this; and there
+would have been no impropriety in its being followed by the
+interesting question to his physician, 'What that <i>swelling</i>
+meant?' Another, when he mentions that Pope had <i>emitted</i>
+proposals; when <i>published</i> or <i>issued</i> would have been
+more readily understood; and a third, when he calls Orrery and
+Dr. Delany<a href="#note-140">[140]</a>,
+writers both undoubtedly <i>veracious</i><a href=
+"#note-141">[141]</a>, when <i>true,
+honest</i>, or <i>faithful</i>, might have been used. Yet, it
+must be owned, that none of these are <i>hard</i> or <i>too
+big</i> words; that custom would make them seem as easy as any
+others; and that a language is richer and capable of more beauty
+of expression, by having a greater variety of synonimes.</p>
+<p>His dissertation<a href=
+"#note-142">[142]</a> upon the unfitness
+of poetry for the aweful subjects of our holy religion, though I
+do not entirely agree with with him, has all the merit of
+originality, with uncommon force and reasoning.</p>
+<p><i>Various Readings in the Life of</i> WALLER.</p>
+<p>'Consented to [the insertion of their names] <i>their own
+nomination</i>.</p>
+<p>'[After] <i>paying</i> a fine of ten thousand pounds.</p>
+<p>'Congratulating Charles the Second on his [coronation]
+<i>recovered right</i>.</p>
+<p>'He that has flattery ready for all whom the vicissitudes of
+the world happen to exalt, must be [confessed to degrade his
+powers] <i>scorned as a prostituted mind</i>.</p>
+<p>'The characters by which Waller intended to distinguish his
+writings are [elegance] <i>sprightliness</i> and dignity.</p>
+<p>'Blossoms to be valued only as they [fetch] <i>foretell</i>
+fruits.</p>
+<p>'Images such as the superficies of nature [easily]
+<i>readily</i> supplies.</p>
+<p>'[His] Some applications [are sometimes] <i>may be thought</i>
+too remote and unconsequential.</p>
+<p>'His images are [sometimes confused] <i>not always
+distinct</i>?</p>
+<p>Against his Life of MILTON, the hounds of Whiggism have opened
+in full cry<a href="#note-143">[143]</a>.
+But of Milton's great excellence as a poet, where shall we find
+such a blazon as by the hand of Johnson? I shall select only the
+following passage concerning <i>Paradise Lost</i><a href=
+"#note-144">[144]</a>:</p>
+<p>'Fancy can hardly forbear to conjecture with what temper
+Milton surveyed the silent progress of his work, and marked his
+reputation stealing its way in a kind of subterraneous current,
+through fear and silence. I cannot but conceive him calm and
+confident, little disappointed, not at all dejected, relying on
+his own merit with steady consciousness, and waiting without
+impatience the vicissitudes of opinion, and the impartiality of a
+future generation<a href=
+"#note-145">[145]</a>.'</p>
+<p>Indeed even Dr. Towers, who may be considered as one of the
+warmest zealots of <i>The Revolution Society</i><a href=
+"#note-146">[146]</a> itself, allows,
+that 'Johnson has spoken in the highest terms of the abilities of
+that great poet, and has bestowed on his principal poetical
+compositions the most honourable encomiums<a href=
+"#note-147">[147]</a>.'</p>
+<p>That a man, who venerated the Church and Monarchy as Johnson
+did, should speak with a just abhorrence of Milton as a
+politician, or rather as a daring foe to good polity, was surely
+to be expected; and to those who censure him, I would recommend
+his commentary on Milton's celebrated complaint of his situation,
+when by the lenity of Charles the Second, 'a lenity of which (as
+Johnson well observes) the world has had perhaps no other
+example, he, who had written in justification of the murder of
+his Sovereign, was safe under an Act of Oblivion<a href=
+"#note-148">[148]</a>.'</p>
+<p>'No sooner is he safe than he finds himself in danger,
+<i>fallen on evil days and evil tongues</i>, [and] <i>with
+darkness and with danger compassed round</i><a href=
+"#note-149">[149]</a>. This darkness, had
+his eyes been better employed, had undoubtedly deserved
+compassion; but to add the mention of danger, was ungrateful and
+unjust. He was fallen, indeed, on <i>evil days</i>; the time was
+come in which regicides could no longer boast their wickedness.
+But of <i>evil tongues</i> for Milton to complain, required
+impudence at least equal to his other powers; Milton, whose
+warmest advocates must allow, that he never spared any asperity
+of reproach, or brutality of insolence<a href=
+"#note-150">[150]</a>.'</p>
+<p>I have, indeed, often wondered how Milton, 'an acrimonious and
+surly Republican<a href=
+"#note-151">[151]</a>,'&mdash;'a man who
+in his domestick relations was so severe and arbitrary<a href=
+"#note-152">[152]</a>,' and whose head
+was filled with the hardest and most dismal tenets of Calvinism<a
+href="#note-153">[153]</a>, should have
+been such a poet; should not only have written with sublimity,
+but with beauty, and even gaiety; should have exquisitely painted
+the sweetest sensations of which our nature is capable; imaged
+the delicate raptures of connubial love; nay, seemed to be
+animated with all the spirit of revelry. It is a proof that in
+the human mind the departments of judgement and imagination,
+perception and temper, may sometimes be divided by strong
+partitions; and that the light and shade in the same character
+may be kept so distinct as never to be blended<a href=
+"#note-154">[154]</a>.</p>
+<p>In the Life of Milton, Johnson took occasion to maintain his
+own and the general opinion of the excellence of rhyme over blank
+verse, in English poetry<a href=
+"#note-155">[155]</a>; and quotes this
+apposite illustration of it by 'an ingenious critick,' that <i>it
+seems to be verse only to the eye</i><a href=
+"#note-156">[156]</a>. The gentleman whom
+he thus characterises, is (as he told Mr. Seward) Mr. Lock<a
+href="#note-157">[157]</a>, of Norbury
+Park, in Surrey, whose knowledge and taste in the fine arts is
+universally celebrated; with whose elegance of manners the writer
+of the present work has felt himself much impressed, and to whose
+virtues a common friend, who has known him long, and is not much
+addicted to flattery, gives the highest testimony.</p>
+<p><i>Various Readings in the Life of</i> MILTON.</p>
+<p>'I cannot find any meaning but this which [his most bigotted
+advocates] <i>even kindness and reverence</i> can give.</p>
+<p>'[Perhaps no] <i>scarcely any</i> man ever wrote so much, and
+praised so few.</p>
+<p>'A certain [rescue] <i>perservative</i> from oblivion.</p>
+<p>'Let me not be censured for this digression, as [contracted]
+<i>pedantick</i> or paradoxical.</p>
+<p>'Socrates rather was of opinion, that what we had to learn was
+how to [obtain and communicate happiness] <i>do good and avoid
+evil</i>.</p>
+<p>'Its elegance [who can exhibit?] <i>is less
+attainable.</i>'</p>
+<p>I could, with pleasure, expatiate upon the masterly execution
+of the Life of DRYDEN, which we have seen<a href=
+"#note-158">[158]</a> was one of
+Johnson's literary projects at an early period, and which it is
+remarkable, that after desisting from it, from a supposed
+scantiness of materials, he should, at an advanced age, have
+exhibited so amply.</p>
+<p>His defence<a href=
+"#note-159">[159]</a> of that great poet
+against the illiberal attacks upon him, as if his embracing the
+Roman Catholick communion had been a time-serving measure, is a
+piece of reasoning at once able and candid. Indeed, Dryden
+himself, in his <i>Hind and Panther</i>, has given such a picture
+of his mind, that they who know the anxiety for repose as to the
+aweful subject of our state beyond the grave, though they may
+think his opinion ill-founded, must think charitably of his
+sentiment:&mdash;</p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'But, gracious GOD, how well dost thou provide
+ For erring judgements an unerring guide!
+ Thy throne is darkness in the abyss of light,
+ A blaze of glory that forbids the sight.
+ O! teach me to believe thee thus conceal'd,
+ And search no farther than thyself reveal'd;
+ But Her alone for my director take,
+ Whom thou hast promis'd never to forsake.
+ My thoughtless youth was wing'd with vain desires;
+ My manhood long misled by wand'ring fires,
+ Follow'd false lights; and when their glimpse was gone,
+ My pride struck out new sparkles of her own.
+ Such was I, such by Nature still I am;
+ Be thine the glory, and be mine the shame.
+ Good life be now my task: my doubts are done;
+ What more could shock<a href=
+"#note-160">160</a> my faith than Three in One?'
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>In drawing Dryden's character, Johnson has given, though I
+suppose unintentionally, some touches of his own.
+Thus:&mdash;'The power that predominated in his intellectual
+operations was rather strong reason than quick sensibility. Upon
+all occasions that were presented, he studied rather than felt;
+and produced sentiments not such as Nature enforces, but
+meditation supplies. With the simple and elemental passions as
+they spring separate in the mind, he seems not much acquainted.
+He is, therefore, with all his variety of excellence, not often
+pathetick; and had so little sensibility of the power of
+effusions purely natural, that he did not esteem them in others<a
+href="#note-161">[161]</a>.' It may
+indeed be observed, that in all the numerous writings of Johnson,
+whether in prose or verse, and even in his Tragedy, of which the
+subject is the distress of an unfortunate Princess, there is not
+a single passage that ever drew a tear<a href=
+"#note-162">[162]</a>.</p>
+<p><i>Various Readings in the Life of</i> DRYDEN.</p>
+<p>'The reason of this general perusal, Addison has attempted to
+[find in] <i>derive from</i> the delight which the mind feels in
+the investigation of secrets.</p>
+<p>'His best actions are but [convenient] <i>inability of</i>
+wickedness.</p>
+<p>'When once he had engaged himself in disputation, [matter]
+<i>thoughts</i> flowed in on either side.</p>
+<p>'The abyss of an un-ideal [emptiness] <i>vacancy</i>.</p>
+<p>'These, like [many other harlots,] <i>the harlots of other
+men</i>, had his love though not his approbation.</p>
+<p>'He [sometimes displays] <i>descends to display</i> his
+knowledge with pedantick ostentation.</p>
+<p>'French words which [were then used in] <i>had then crept
+into</i> conversation.'</p>
+<p>The Life of POPE<a href=
+"#note-163">[163]</a> was written by
+Johnson <i>con amore</i>, both from the early possession which
+that writer had taken of his mind, and from the pleasure which he
+must have felt, in for ever silencing all attempts to lessen his
+poetical fame, by demonstrating his excellence, and pronouncing
+the following triumphant eulogium<a href=
+"#note-164">[164]</a>:&mdash;'After all
+this, it is surely superfluous to answer the question that has
+once been asked, Whether Pope was a poet? otherwise than by
+asking in return, If Pope be not a poet, where is poetry to be
+found? To circumscribe poetry by a definition, will only shew the
+narrowness of the definer; though a definition which shall
+exclude Pope will not easily be made. Let us look round upon the
+present time, and back upon the past; let us enquire to whom the
+voice of mankind has decreed the wreath of poetry; let their
+productions be examined, and their claims stated, and the
+pretensions of Pope will be no more disputed.'</p>
+<p>I remember once to have heard Johnson say, 'Sir, a thousand
+years may elapse before there shall appear another man with a
+power of versification equal to that of Pope.' That power must
+undoubtedly be allowed its due share in enhancing the value of
+his captivating composition.</p>
+<p>Johnson, who had done liberal justice to Warburton in his
+edition of <i>Shakspeare</i><a href=
+"#note-165">[165]</a>, which was
+published during the life of that powerful writer, with still
+greater liberality<a href=
+"#note-166">[166]</a> took an
+opportunity, in the Life of Pope, of paying the tribute due to
+him when he was no longer in 'high place,' but numbered with the
+dead<a href="#note-167">[167]</a>.</p>
+<p>It seems strange, that two such men as Johnson and Warburton,
+who lived in the same age and country, should not only not have
+been in any degree of intimacy, but been almost personally
+unacquainted. But such instances, though we must wonder at them,
+are not rare. If I am rightly informed, after a careful enquiry,
+they never met but once, which was at the house of Mrs. French,
+in London, well known for her elegant assemblies, and bringing
+eminent characters together. The interview proved to be mutually
+agreeable<a href=
+"#note-168">[168]</a>.</p>
+<p>I am well informed, that Warburton said of Johnson, 'I admire
+him, but I cannot bear his style:' and that Johnson being told of
+this, said, 'That is exactly my case as to him<a href=
+"#note-169">[169]</a>.' The manner in
+which he expressed his admiration of the fertility of Warburton's
+genius and of the variety of his materials was, 'The table is
+always full, Sir. He brings things from the north, and the south,
+and from every quarter. In his <i>Divine Legation</i>, you are
+always entertained. He carries you round and round, without
+carrying you forward to the point; but then you have no wish to
+be carried forward.' He said to the Reverend Mr. Strahan,
+'Warburton is perhaps the last man who has written with a mind
+full of reading and reflection<a href=
+"#note-170">[170]</a>.'</p>
+<p>It is remarkable, that in the Life of Broome<a href=
+"#note-171">[171]</a>, Johnson takes
+notice of Dr. Warburton using a mode of expression which he
+himself used, and that not seldom, to the great offence of those
+who did not know him. Having occasion to mention a note, stating
+the different parts which were executed by the associated
+translators of <i>The Odyssey</i>, he says, 'Dr. Warburton told
+me, in his warm language, that he thought the relation given in
+the note <i>a lie</i>. The language is <i>warm</i> indeed; and, I
+must own, cannot be justified in consistency with a decent regard
+to the established forms of speech. Johnson had accustomed
+himself to use the word <i>lie</i><a href=
+"#note-172">[172]</a>, to express a
+mistake or an errour in relation; in short, when the <i>thing was
+not so as told</i>, though the relator did not <i>mean</i> to
+deceive. When he thought there was intentional falsehood in the
+relator, his expression was, 'He <i>lies</i>, and he <i>knows</i>
+he <i>lies</i>.'</p>
+<p>Speaking of Pope's not having been known to excel in
+conversation, Johnson observes, that 'traditional memory retains
+no sallies of raillery, or<a href=
+"#note-173">[173]</a> sentences of
+observation; nothing either pointed or solid, wise or merry<a
+href="#note-174">[174]</a>; and that one
+apophthegm only is recorded<a href=
+"#note-175">[175]</a>.' In this respect,
+Pope differed widely from Johnson, whose conversation was,
+perhaps, more admirable than even his writings, however
+excellent. Mr. Wilkes has, however, favoured me with one repartee
+of Pope, of which Johnson was not informed. Johnson, after justly
+censuring him for having 'nursed in his mind a foolish dis-esteem
+of Kings,' tells us, 'yet a little regard shewn him by the Prince
+of Wales melted his obduracy; and he had not much to say when he
+was asked by his Royal Highness, <i>how he could love a Prince,
+while he disliked Kings</i><a href=
+"#note-176">[176]</a>?' The answer which
+Pope made, was, 'The young lion is harmless, and even playful;
+but when his claws are full grown he becomes cruel, dreadful, and
+mischievous.'</p>
+<p>But although we have no collection of Pope's sayings, it is
+not therefore to be concluded, that he was not agreeable in
+social intercourse; for Johnson has been heard to say, that 'the
+happiest conversation is that of which nothing is distinctly
+remembered but a general effect of pleasing impression.' The late
+Lord Somerville<a href=
+"#note-177">[177]</a>, who saw much both
+of great and brilliant life, told me, that he had dined in
+company with Pope, and that after dinner the <i>little man</i>,
+as he called him, drank his bottle of Burgundy, and was
+exceedingly gay and entertaining.</p>
+<p>I cannot withhold from my great friend a censure of at least
+culpable inattention, to a nobleman, who, it has been shewn<a
+href="#note-178">[178]</a>, behaved to
+him with uncommon politeness. He says, 'Except Lord Bathurst,
+none of Pope's noble friends were such as that a good man would
+wish to have his intimacy with them known to posterity<a href=
+"#note-179">[179]</a>.' This will not
+apply to Lord Mansfield, who was not ennobled in Pope's
+life-time; but Johnson should have recollected, that Lord
+Marchmont was one of those noble friends. He includes his
+Lordship along with Lord Bolingbroke, in a charge of neglect of
+the papers which Pope left by his will; when, in truth, as I
+myself pointed out to him, before he wrote that poet's life, the
+papers were 'committed to <i>the sole care and judgement</i> of
+Lord Bolingbroke, unless he (Lord Bolingbroke) shall not survive
+me;' so that Lord Marchmont had no concern whatever with them<a
+href="#note-180">[180]</a>. After the
+first edition of the <i>Lives</i>, Mr. Malone, whose love of
+justice is equal to his accuracy, made, in my hearing, the same
+remark to Johnson; yet he omitted to correct the erroneous
+statement<a href="#note-181">[181]</a>.
+These particulars I mention, in the belief that there was only
+forgetfulness in my friend; but I owe this much to the Earl of
+Marchmont's reputation, who, were there no other memorials, will
+be immortalised by that line of Pope, in the verses on his
+Grotto:</p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'And the bright flame was shot through Marchmont's soul.'
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p><i>Various Readings in the Life of POPE.</i></p>
+<p>'[Somewhat free] <i>sufficiently bold</i> in his
+criticism.</p>
+<p>'All the gay [niceties] <i>varieties</i> of diction.</p>
+<p>'Strikes the imagination with far [more] <i>greater</i>
+force.</p>
+<p>'It is [probably] <i>certainly</i> the noblest version of
+poetry which the world has ever seen.</p>
+<p>'Every sheet enabled him to write the next with [less trouble]
+<i>more facility</i>.</p>
+<p>'No man sympathizes with [vanity, depressed] <i>the sorrows of
+vanity</i>.</p>
+<p>'It had been [criminal] <i>less easily excused</i>.</p>
+<p>'When he [threatened to lay down] <i>talked of laying down</i>
+his pen.</p>
+<p>'Society [is so named emphatically in opposition to]
+<i>politically regulated, is a state contra-distinguished
+from</i> a state of nature.</p>
+<p>'A fictitious life of an [absurd] <i>infatuated</i>
+scholar.</p>
+<p>'A foolish [contempt, disregard,] <i>disesteem</i> of
+Kings.</p>
+<p>'His hopes and fears, his joys and sorrows [were like those of
+other mortals] <i>acted strongly upon his mind</i>.</p>
+<p>'Eager to pursue knowledge and attentive to [accumulate]
+<i>retain it</i>.</p>
+<p>'A mind [excursive] <i>active</i>, ambitious, and
+adventurous.</p>
+<p>'In its [noblest] <i>widest</i> researches still longing to go
+forward.</p>
+<p>'He wrote in such a manner as might expose him to few
+[neglects] <i>hazards</i>.</p>
+<p>'The [reasonableness] <i>justice</i> of my determination.</p>
+<p>'A [favourite] <i>delicious</i> employment of the poets.</p>
+<p>'More terrifick and more powerful [beings] <i>phantoms</i>
+perform on the stormy ocean.</p>
+<p>'The inventor of [those] <i>this</i> petty [beings]
+<i>nation</i>.</p>
+<p>'The [mind] <i>heart</i> naturally loves truth.'</p>
+<p>In the Life of ADDISON we find an unpleasing account of his
+having lent Steele a hundred pounds, and 'reclaimed his loan by
+an execution<a href=
+"#note-182">[182]</a>.' In the new
+edition of the <i>Biographia Britannica</i>, the authenticity of
+this anecdote is denied. But Mr. Malone has obliged me with the
+following note concerning it:&mdash;</p>
+<p>'Many persons having doubts concerning this fact, I applied to
+Dr. Johnson to learn on what authority he asserted it. He told
+me, he had it from Savage, who lived in intimacy with Steele, and
+who mentioned, that Steele told him the story with tears in his
+eyes.&mdash;Ben Victor<a href=
+"#note-183">[183]</a>, Dr. Johnson said,
+likewise informed him of this remarkable transaction, from the
+relation of Mr. Wilkes<a href=
+"#note-184">[184]</a> the comedian, who
+was also an intimate of Steele's.&mdash;Some in defence of
+Addison, have said, that "the act was done with the good natured
+view of rousing Steele, and correcting that profusion which
+always made him necessitous."&mdash;"If that were the case, (said
+Johnson,) and that he only wanted to alarm Steele, he would
+afterwards have <i>returned</i> the money to his friend, which it
+is not pretended he did."&mdash;"This too, (he added,) might be
+retorted by an advocate for Steele, who might alledge, that he
+did not repay the loan <i>intentionally</i>, merely to see
+whether Addison would be mean and ungenerous enough to make use
+of legal process to recover it. But of such speculations there is
+no end: we cannot dive into the hearts of men; but their actions
+are open to observation<a href=
+"#note-185">[185]</a>."</p>
+<p>'I then mentioned to him that some people thought that Mr.
+Addison's character was so pure, that the fact, <i>though
+true</i>, ought to have been suppressed<a href=
+"#note-186">[186]</a>. He saw no reason
+for this[187]. "If nothing but the bright side of characters
+should be shewn, we should sit down in despondency, and think it
+utterly impossible to imitate them in <i>any thing</i>. The
+sacred writers (he observed) related the vicious as well as the
+virtuous actions of men; which had this moral effect, that it
+kept mankind from <i>despair</i>, into which otherwise they would
+naturally fall, were they not supported by the recollection that
+others had offended like themselves, and by penitence and
+amendment of life had been restored to the favour of Heaven."</p>
+<center>'E.M.'</center>
+<p>'March 15, 1782.'</p>
+<p>The last paragraph of this note is of great importance; and I
+request that my readers may consider it with particular
+attention. It will be afterwards referred to in this work<a href=
+"#note-188">[188]</a>.</p>
+<p><i>Various Readings in the Life of</i> ADDISON.</p>
+<p>'[But he was our first great example] <i>He was, however, one
+of our earliest examples</i> of correctness.</p>
+<p>And [overlook] <i>despise</i> their masters.</p>
+<p>His instructions were such as the [state] <i>character</i> of
+his [own time] <i>readers</i> made [necessary] <i>proper</i>.</p>
+<p>His purpose was to [diffuse] <i>infuse</i> literary curiosity
+by gentle and unsuspected conveyance [among] <i>into</i> the gay,
+the idle, and the wealthy.</p>
+<p>Framed rather for those that [wish] <i>are learning</i> to
+write.</p>
+<p>Domestick [manners] <i>scenes</i>.'</p>
+<p>In his Life of PARNELL, I wonder that Johnson omitted to
+insert an Epitaph which he had long before composed for that
+amiable man, without ever writing it down, but which he was so
+good as, at my request, to dictate to me, by which means it has
+been preserved.</p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ '<i>Hic requiescit</i> THOMAS PARNELL, <i>S.T.P.
+ Qui sacerdos pariter et poeta,
+ Utrasque partes ita implevit,
+ Ut neque sacerdoti suavitas poetae,
+ Neo poetae sacerdotis sanctitas</i><a href=
+"#note-189">189</a>, <i>deesset</i>.'
+ <i>Various Readings in the Life of</i> PARNELL.
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>'About three years [after] <i>afterwards</i>.</p>
+<p>[Did not much want] <i>was in no great need of</i>
+improvement.</p>
+<p>But his prosperity <i>did not last long</i> [was clouded by
+that which took away all his powers of enjoying either profit or
+pleasure, the death of his wife, whom he is said to have lamented
+with such sorrow, as hastened his end<a href=
+"#note-190">[190]</a>.] His end, whatever
+was the cause, was now approaching.</p>
+<p>In the Hermit, the [composition] <i>narrative</i>, as it is
+less airy, is less pleasing.'</p>
+<p>In the Life of BLACKMORE, we find that writer's reputation
+generously cleared by Johnson from the cloud of prejudice which
+the malignity of contemporary wits had raised around it<a href=
+"#note-191">[191]</a>. In this spirited
+exertion of justice, he has been imitated by Sir Joshua Reynolds,
+in his praise of the architecture of Vanburgh<a href=
+"#note-192">[192]</a>.</p>
+<p>We trace Johnson's own character in his observations on
+Blackmore's 'magnanimity as an authour.' 'The incessant attacks
+of his enemies, whether serious or merry, are never discovered to
+have disturbed his quiet, or to have lessened his confidence in
+himself.' Johnson, I recollect, once told me, laughing heartily,
+that he understood it had been said of him, 'He <i>appears</i>
+not to feel; but when he is <i>alone</i>, depend upon it, he
+<i>suffers sadly</i>.' I am as certain as I can be of any man's
+real sentiments, that he <i>enjoyed</i> the perpetual shower of
+little hostile arrows as evidences of his fame.</p>
+<p><i>Various Readings in the Life of</i> BLACKMORE.</p>
+<p>To [set] <i>engage</i> poetry [on the side] <i>in the
+cause</i> of virtue.</p>
+<p>He likewise [established] <i>enforced</i> the truth of
+Revelation.</p>
+<p>[Kindness] <i>benevolence</i> was ashamed to favour.</p>
+<p>His practice, which was once [very extensive] <i>invidiously
+great</i>. There is scarcely any distemper of dreadful name [of]
+which he has not [shewn] <i>taught his reader</i> how [it is to
+be opposed] <i>to oppose</i>.</p>
+<p>Of this [contemptuous] <i>indecent</i> arrogance.</p>
+<p>[He wrote] <i>but produced</i> likewise a work of a different
+kind.</p>
+<p>At least [written] <i>compiled</i> with integrity.</p>
+<p>Faults which many tongues [were desirous] <i>would have made
+haste</i> to publish.</p>
+<p>But though he [had not] <i>could not boast of</i> much
+critical knowledge.</p>
+<p>He [used] <i>waited for</i> no felicities of fancy.</p>
+<p>Or had ever elevated his [mind] <i>views</i> to that ideal
+perfection which every [mind] <i>genius</i> born to excel is
+condemned always to pursue and never overtake.</p>
+<p>The [first great] <i>fundamental</i> principle of wisdom and
+of virtue.'</p>
+<p><i>Various Readings in the Life of</i> PHILIPS.</p>
+<p>'His dreaded [rival] <i>antagonist</i> Pope.</p>
+<p>They [have not often much] <i>are not loaded with</i>
+thought.</p>
+<p>In his translations from Pindar, he [will not be denied to
+have reached] <i>found the art of reaching</i> all the obscurity
+of the Theban bard.'</p>
+<p><i>Various Readings in the Life of</i> CONGREVE.</p>
+<p>'Congreve's conversation must surely have been <i>at least</i>
+equally pleasing with his writings.</p>
+<p>It apparently [requires] <i>pre-supposes</i> a familiar
+knowledge of many characters.</p>
+<p>Reciprocation of [similes] <i>conceits</i>.</p>
+<p>The dialogue is quick and [various] <i>sparkling</i>.</p>
+<p>Love for Love; a comedy [more drawn from life] <i>of nearer
+alliance to life</i>.</p>
+<p>The general character of his miscellanies is, that they shew
+little wit and [no] <i>little</i> virtue.</p>
+<p>[Perhaps] <i>certainly</i> he had not the fire requisite for
+the higher species of lyrick poetry.'</p>
+<p><i>Various Readings in the Life of</i> TICKELL.</p>
+<p>'[Longed] <i>long wished</i> to peruse it.</p>
+<p>At the [accession] <i>arrival</i> of King George.</p>
+<p>Fiction [unnaturally] <i>unskilfully</i> compounded of Grecian
+deities and Gothick fairies.'</p>
+<p><i>Various Readings in the Life of</i> AKENSIDE.</p>
+<p>'For [another] <i>a different</i> purpose.</p>
+<p>[A furious] <i>an unnecessary</i> and outrageous zeal.</p>
+<p>[Something which] <i>what</i> he called and thought
+liberty.</p>
+<p>A [favourer of innovation] <i>lover of contradiction</i>.</p>
+<p>Warburton's [censure] <i>objections</i>.</p>
+<p>His rage [for liberty] <i>of patriotism</i>.</p>
+<p>Mr. Dyson with [a zeal] <i>an ardour</i> of friendship.'</p>
+<p>In the Life of LYTTELTON, Johnson seems to have been not
+favourably disposed towards that nobleman<a href=
+"#note-193">[193]</a>. Mrs. Thrale
+suggests that he was offended by <i>Molly Aston's</i><a href=
+"#note-194">[194]</a> preference of his
+Lordship to him[195]. I can by no means join in the censure
+bestowed by Johnson on his Lordship, whom he calls 'poor
+Lyttelton,' for returning thanks to the Critical Reviewers for
+having 'kindly commended' his <i>Dialogues of the Dead</i>. Such
+'acknowledgements (says my friend) never can be proper, since
+they must be paid either for flattery or for justice.' In my
+opinion, the most upright man, who has been tried on a false
+accusation, may, when he is acquitted, make a bow to his jury.
+And when those who are so much the arbiters of literary merit, as
+in a considerable degree to influence the publick opinion, review
+an authour's work, <i>placido lumine</i><a href=
+"#note-196">[196]</a>, when I am afraid
+mankind in general are better pleased with severity, he may
+surely express a grateful sense of their civility<a href=
+"#note-197">[197]</a>.</p>
+<p><i>Various Readings in the Life of</i> LYTTELTON.</p>
+<p>'He solaced [himself] <i>his grief</i> by writing a long poem
+to her memory.</p>
+<p>The production rather [of a mind that means well than thinks
+vigorously] <i>as it seems of leisure than of study, rather
+effusions than compositions</i>.</p>
+<p>His last literary [work] <i>production</i>.</p>
+<p>[Found the way] <i>undertook</i> to persuade.'</p>
+<p>As the introduction to his critical examination of the genius
+and writings of YOUNG, he did Mr. Herbert Croft<a href=
+"#note-198">[198]</a>, then a Barrister
+of Lincoln's-inn, now a clergyman, the honour to adopt<a href=
+"#note-199">[199]</a> a <i>Life of
+Young</i> written by that gentleman, who was the friend of Dr.
+Young's son, and wished to vindicate him from some very erroneous
+remarks to his prejudice. Mr. Croft's performance was subjected
+to the revision of Dr. Johnson, as appears from the following
+note to Mr. John Nichols<a href=
+"#note-200">[200]</a>:&mdash;</p>
+<p>'This <i>Life of Dr. Young</i> was written by a friend of his
+son. What is crossed with black is expunged by the authour, what
+is crossed with red is expunged by me. If you find any thing more
+that can be well omitted, I shall not be sorry to see it yet
+shorter<a href="#note-201">[201]</a>'</p>
+<p>It has always appeared to me to have a considerable share of
+merit, and to display a pretty successful imitation of Johnson's
+style. When I mentioned this to a very eminent literary
+character<a href="#note-202">[202]</a>,
+he opposed me vehemently, exclaiming, 'No, no, it is <i>not</i> a
+good imitation of Johnson; it has all his pomp without his force;
+it has all the nodosities of the oak without its strength.' This
+was an image so happy, that one might have thought he would have
+been satisfied with it; but he was not. And setting his mind
+again to work, he added, with exquisite felicity, 'It has all the
+contortions of the Sybil, without the inspiration.'</p>
+<p>Mr. Croft very properly guards us against supposing that Young
+was a gloomy man<a href=
+"#note-203">[203]</a>; and mentions, that
+'his parish was indebted to the good-humour of the authour of the
+<i>Night Thoughts</i> for an Assembly and a Bowling-Green<a href=
+"#note-204">[204]</a>.' A letter from a
+noble foreigner is quoted, in which he is said to have been 'very
+pleasant in conversation<a href=
+"#note-205">[205]</a>.'</p>
+<p>Mr. Langton, who frequently visited him, informs me, that
+there was an air of benevolence in his manner, but that he could
+obtain from him less information than he had hoped to receive
+from one who had lived so much in intercourse with the brightest
+men of what has been called the Augustan age of England; and that
+he shewed a degree of eager curiosity concerning the common
+occurrences that were then passing, which appeared somewhat
+remarkable in a man of such intellectual stores, of such an
+advanced age, and who had retired from life with declared
+disappointment in his expectations.</p>
+<p>An instance at once of his pensive turn of mind, and his
+cheerfulness of temper, appeared in a little story which he
+himself told to Mr. Langton, when they were walking in his
+garden: 'Here (said he) I had put a handsome sun-dial, with this
+inscription, <i>Eheu fugaces!</i><a href=
+"#note-206">[206]</a> which (speaking
+with a smile) was sadly verified, for by the next morning my dial
+had been carried off.'<a href=
+"#note-207">[207]</a></p>
+<p>'It gives me much pleasure to observe, that however Johnson
+may have casually talked,<a href=
+"#note-208">[208]</a> yet when he sits,
+as "an ardent judge zealous to his trust, giving sentence" <a
+href="#note-209">[209]</a> upon the
+excellent works of Young, he allows them the high praise to which
+they are justly entitled. "The <i>Universal Passion</i> (says he)
+is indeed a very great performance,&mdash;his distichs have the
+weight of solid sentiment, and his points the sharpness of
+resistless truth."'<a href=
+"#note-210">[210]</a></p>
+<p>But I was most anxious concerning Johnson's decision upon
+<i>Night Thoughts</i>, which I esteem as a mass of the grandest
+and richest poetry that human genius has ever produced; and was
+delighted to find this character of that work: 'In his <i>Night
+Thoughts</i>, he has exhibited a very wide display of original
+poetry, variegated with deep reflections and striking allusions;
+a wilderness of thought, in which the fertility of fancy scatters
+flowers of every hue and of every odour. This is one of the few
+poems in which blank verse could not be changed for rhime but
+with disadvantage.'<a href=
+"#note-211">[211]</a> And afterwards,
+'Particular lines are not to be regarded; the power is in the
+whole; and in the whole there is a magnificence like that
+ascribed to Chinese plantation<a href=
+"#note-212">[212]</a>, the magnificence
+of vast extent and endless diversity.'</p>
+<p>But there is in this Poem not only all that Johnson so well
+brings in view, but a power of the <i>Pathetick</i> beyond almost
+any example that I have seen. He who does not feel his nerves
+shaken, and his heart pierced by many passages in this
+extraordinary work, particularly by that most affecting one,
+which describes the gradual torment suffered by the contemplation
+of an object of affectionate attachment, visibly and certainly
+decaying into dissolution, must be of a hard and obstinate
+frame<a href="#note-213">[213]</a>.</p>
+<p>To all the other excellencies of <i>Night Thoughts</i> let me
+add the great and peculiar one, that they contain not only the
+noblest sentiments of virtue, and contemplations on immortality,
+but the <i>Christian Sacrifice</i>, the <i>Divine
+Propitiation</i>, with all its interesting circumstances, and
+consolations to 'a wounded spirit<a href=
+"#note-214">[214]</a>,' solemnly and
+poetically displayed in such imagery and language, as cannot fail
+to exalt, animate, and soothe the truly pious. No book whatever
+can be recommended to young persons, with better hopes of
+seasoning their minds with <i>vital religion</i>, than YOUNG'S
+<i>Night Thoughts</i>.</p>
+<p>In the Life of SWIFT, it appears to me that Johnson had a
+certain degree of prejudice against that extraordinary man, of
+which I have elsewhere had occasion to speak<a href=
+"#note-215">[215]</a>. Mr. Thomas
+Sheridan imputed it to a supposed apprehension in Johnson, that
+Swift had not been sufficiently active in obtaining for him an
+Irish degree when it was solicited<a href=
+"#note-216">[216]</a>, but of this there
+was not sufficient evidence; and let me not presume to charge
+Johnson with injustice, because he did not think so highly of the
+writings of this authour, as I have done from my youth upwards.
+Yet that he had an unfavourable bias is evident, were it only
+from that passage in which he speaks of Swift's practice of
+saving, as, 'first ridiculous and at last detestable;' and yet
+after some examination of circumstances, finds himself obliged to
+own, that 'it will perhaps appear that he only liked one mode of
+expence better than another, and saved merely that he might have
+something to give<a href=
+"#note-217">[217]</a>.'</p>
+<p>One observation which Johnson makes in Swift's life should be
+often inculcated:&mdash;</p>
+<p>'It may be justly supposed, that there was in his conversation
+what appears so frequently in his letters, an affectation of
+familiarity with the great, an ambition of momentary equality,
+sought and enjoyed by the neglect of those ceremonies which
+custom has established as the barriers between one order of
+society and another. This transgression of regularity was by
+himself and his admirers termed greatness of soul; but a great
+mind disdains to hold any thing by courtesy, and therefore never
+usurps what a lawful claimant may take away. He that encroaches
+on another's dignity puts himself in his power; he is either
+repelled with helpless indignity, or endured by clemency and
+condescension<a href=
+"#note-218">[218]</a>.'</p>
+<p><i>Various Readings in the Life of Swift</i>.</p>
+<p>'Charity may be persuaded to think that it might be written by
+a man of <i>a</i> peculiar [opinions] <i>character</i>, without
+ill intention.</p>
+<p>He did not [disown] <i>deny</i> it.</p>
+<p>'[To] <i>by</i> whose kindness it is not unlikely that he was
+[indebted for] <i>advanced to</i> his benefices.</p>
+<p>[With] <i>for</i> this purpose he had recourse to Mr.
+Harley.</p>
+<p>Sharpe, whom he [represents] <i>describes</i> as "the harmless
+tool of others' hate."</p>
+<p>Harley was slow because he was [irresolute]
+<i>doubtful</i>.</p>
+<p>When [readers were not many] <i>we were not yet a nation of
+readers</i>.</p>
+<p>[Every man who] <i>he that could say he</i> knew him.</p>
+<p>Every man of known influence has so many [more] petitions
+[than] <i>which</i> he [can] <i>cannot</i> grant, that he must
+necessarily offend more than he [can gratify]
+<i>gratifies</i>.</p>
+<p>Ecclesiastical [preferments] <i>benefices</i>.</p>
+<p>'Swift [procured] <i>contrived</i> an interview.</p>
+<p>[As a writer] <i>In his works</i> he has given very different
+specimens.</p>
+<p>On all common occasions he habitually [assumes] <i>affects</i>
+a style of [superiority] <i>arrogance</i>.</p>
+<p>By the [omission] <i>neglect</i> of those ceremonies.</p>
+<p>That their merits filled the world [and] <i>or that</i> there
+was no [room for] <i>hope of</i> more.'</p>
+<p>I have not confined myself to the order of the <i>Lives</i>,
+in making my few remarks. Indeed a different order is observed in
+the original publication, and in the collection of Johnson's
+<i>Works</i>. And should it be objected, that many of my various
+readings are inconsiderable, those who make the objection will be
+pleased to consider, that such small particulars are intended for
+those who are nicely critical in composition, to whom they will
+be an acceptable selection<a href=
+"#note-219">[219]</a>.</p>
+<p><i>Spence's Anecdotes</i>, which are frequently quoted and
+referred to in Johnson's <i>Lives of the Poets</i>, are in a
+manuscript collection, made by the Reverend Mr. Joseph Spence<a
+href="#note-220">[220]</a>, containing a
+number of particulars concerning eminent men. To each anecdote is
+marked the name of the person on whose authority it is mentioned.
+This valuable collection is the property of the Duke of
+Newcastle, who upon the application of Sir Lucas Pepys, was
+pleased to permit it to be put into the hands of Dr. Johnson, who
+I am sorry to think made but an aukward return. 'Great assistance
+(says he) has been given me by Mr. Spence's Collection, of which
+I consider the communication as a favour worthy of publick
+acknowledgement<a href=
+"#note-221">[221]</a>;' but he has not
+owned to whom he was obliged; so that the acknowledgement is
+unappropriated to his Grace.</p>
+<p>While the world in general was filled with admiration of
+Johnson's <i>Lives of the Poets</i>, there were narrow circles in
+which prejudice and resentment were fostered, and from which
+attacks of different sorts issued against him<a href=
+"#note-222">[222]</a>. By some violent
+Whigs he was arraigned of injustice to Milton; by some Cambridge
+men of depreciating Gray; and his expressing with a dignified
+freedom what he really thought of George, Lord Lyttelton, gave
+offence to some of the friends of that nobleman, and particularly
+produced a declaration of war against him from Mrs. Montagu, the
+ingenious Essayist on Shakspeare, between whom and his Lordship a
+commerce of reciprocal compliments had long been carried on<a
+href="#note-223">[223]</a>. In this war
+the smaller powers in alliance with him were of course led to
+engage, at least on the defensive, and thus I for one was
+excluded from the enjoyment of 'A Feast of Reason,' such as Mr.
+Cumberland has described, with a keen, yet just and delicate pen,
+in his <i>Observer</i><a href=
+"#note-224">[224]</a>. These minute
+inconveniencies gave not the least disturbance to Johnson. He
+nobly said, when I talked to him of the feeble, though shrill
+outcry which had been raised, 'Sir, I considered myself as
+entrusted with a certain portion of truth. I have given my
+opinion sincerely; let them shew where they think me wrong<a
+href="#note-225">[225]</a>.'</p>
+<p>While my friend is thus contemplated in the splendour derived
+from his last and perhaps most admirable work, I introduce him
+with peculiar propriety as the correspondent of WARREN HASTINGS!
+a man whose regard reflects dignity even upon JOHNSON; a man, the
+extent of whose abilities was equal to that of his power; and
+who, by those who are fortunate enough to know him in private
+life, is admired for his literature and taste, and beloved for
+the candour, moderation, and mildness of his character. Were I
+capable of paying a suitable tribute of admiration to him, I
+should certainly not withhold it at a moment<a href=
+"#note-226">[226]</a> when it is not
+possible that I should be suspected of being an interested
+flatterer. But how weak would be my voice after that of the
+millions whom he governed. His condescending and obliging
+compliance with my solicitation, I with humble gratitude
+acknowledge; and while by publishing his letter to me,
+accompanying the valuable communication, I do eminent honour to
+my great friend, I shall entirely disregard any invidious
+suggestions, that as I in some degree participate in the honour,
+I have, at the same time, the gratification of my own vanity in
+view.</p>
+<p>'TO JAMES BOSWELL, ESQ. Park Lane, Dec. 2, 1790.</p>
+<center>SIR,</center>
+<p>I have been fortunately spared the troublesome suspense of a
+long search, to which, in performance of my promise, I had
+devoted this morning, by lighting upon the objects of it among
+the first papers that I laid my hands on: my veneration for your
+great and good friend, Dr. Johnson, and the pride, or I hope
+something of a better sentiment, which I indulged in possessing
+such memorials of his good will towards me, having induced me to
+bind them in a parcel containing other select papers, and
+labelled with the titles appertaining to them. They consist but
+of three letters, which I believe were all that I ever received
+from Dr. Johnson. Of these, one, which was written in
+quadruplicate, under the different dates of its respective
+dispatches, has already been made publick<a href=
+"#note-227">[227]</a>, but not from any
+communication of mine. This, however, I have joined to the rest;
+and have now the pleasure of sending them to you for the use to
+which you informed me it was your desire to destine them.</p>
+<p>'My promise was pledged with the condition, that if the
+letters were found to contain any thing which should render them
+improper for the publick eye, you would dispense with the
+performance of it. You will have the goodness, I am sure, to
+pardon my recalling this stipulation to your recollection, as I
+should be both to appear negligent of that obligation which is
+always implied in an epistolary confidence. In the reservation of
+that right I have read them over with the most scrupulous
+attention, but have not seen in them the slightest cause on that
+ground to withhold them from you. But, though not on that, yet on
+another ground I own I feel a little, yet but a little,
+reluctance to part with them: I mean on that of my own credit,
+which I fear will suffer by the information conveyed by them,
+that I was early in the possession of such valuable instructions
+for the beneficial employment of the influence of my late
+station, and (as it may seem) have so little availed myself of
+them. Whether I could, if it were necessary, defend myself
+against such an imputation, it little concerns the world to know.
+I look only to the effect which these relicks may produce,
+considered as evidences of the virtues of their authour: and
+believing that they will be found to display an uncommon warmth
+of private friendship, and a mind ever attentive to the
+improvement and extension of useful knowledge, and solicitous for
+the interests of mankind, I can cheerfully submit to the little
+sacrifice of my own fame, to contribute to the illustration of so
+great and venerable a character. They cannot be better applied,
+for that end, than by being entrusted to your hands. Allow me,
+with this offering, to infer from it a proof of the very great
+esteem with which I have the honour to profess myself, Sir,</p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ Your most obedient
+ And most humble servant,
+ 'WARREN HASTINGS.'
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>'<i>P.S</i>. At some future time, and when you have no further
+occasion for these papers, I shall be obliged to you if you would
+return them.'</p>
+<p>The last of the three letters thus graciously put into my
+hands, and which has already appeared in publick, belongs to this
+year; but I shall previously insert the first two in the order of
+their dates. They altogether form a grand group in my
+biographical picture.</p>
+<center>TO THE HONOURABLE WARREN HASTINGS, ESQ.</center>
+<center>'SIR,</center>
+<p>Though I have had but little personal knowledge of you, I have
+had enough to make me wish for more; and though it be now a long
+time since I was honoured by your visit, I had too much pleasure
+from it to forget it. By those whom we delight to remember, we
+are unwilling to be forgotten; and therefore I cannot omit this
+opportunity of reviving myself in your memory by a letter which
+you will receive from the hands of my friend Mr. Chambers<a href=
+"#note-228">[228]</a>; a man, whose
+purity of manners and vigour of mind are sufficient to make every
+thing welcome that he brings.</p>
+<p>That this is my only reason for writing, will be too apparent
+by the uselessness of my letter to any other purpose. I have no
+questions to ask; not that I want curiosity after either the
+ancient or present state of regions in which have been seen all
+the power and splendour of wide-extended empire; and which, as by
+some grant of natural superiority, supply the rest of the world
+with almost all that pride desires and luxury enjoys. But my
+knowledge of them is too scanty to furnish me with proper topicks
+of enquiry; I can only wish for information; and hope, that a
+mind comprehensive like yours will find leisure, amidst the cares
+of your important station, to enquire into many subjects of which
+the European world either thinks not at all, or thinks with
+deficient intelligence and uncertain conjecture. I shall hope,
+that he who once intended to increase the learning of his country
+by the introduction of the Persian language<a href=
+"#note-229">[229]</a>, will examine
+nicely the traditions and histories of the East; that he will
+survey the wonders of its ancient edifices, and trace the
+vestiges of its ruined cities; and that, at his return, we shall
+know the arts and opinions of a race of men, from whom very
+little has been hitherto derived.</p>
+<p>You, Sir, have no need of being told by me, how much may be
+added by your attention and patronage to experimental knowledge
+and natural history. There are arts of manufacture practised in
+the countries in which you preside, which are yet very
+imperfectly known here, either to artificers or philosophers. Of
+the natural productions, animate and inanimate, we yet have so
+little intelligence, that our books are filled, I fear, with
+conjectures about things which an Indian peasant knows by his
+senses.</p>
+<p>Many of those things my first wish is to see; my second to
+know, by such accounts as a man like you will be able to
+give.</p>
+<p>As I have not skill to ask proper questions, I have likewise
+no such access to great men as can enable me to send you any
+political information. Of the agitations of an unsettled
+government, and the struggles of a feeble ministry<a href=
+"#note-230">[230]</a>, care is doubtless
+taken to give you more exact accounts than I can obtain. If you
+are inclined to interest yourself much in publick transactions,
+it is no misfortune to you to be so distant from them.</p>
+<p>That literature is not totally forsaking us, and that your
+favourite language is not neglected, will appear from the book<a
+href="#note-231">[231]</a>, which I
+should have pleased myself more with sending, if I could have
+presented it bound: but time was wanting. I beg, however, Sir,
+that you will accept it from a man very desirous of your regard;
+and that if you think me able to gratify you by any thing more
+important you will employ me.</p>
+<p>I am now going to take leave, perhaps a very long leave, of my
+dear Mr. Chambers. That he is going to live where you govern, may
+justly alleviate the regret of parting; and the hope of seeing
+both him and you again, which I am not willing to mingle with
+doubt, must at present comfort as it can, Sir, Your most humble
+servant,</p>
+<center>SAM. JOHNSON.</center>
+<p>March 30, 1774.'</p>
+<p>To THE SAME.</p>
+<center>'SIR,</center>
+<p>Being informed that by the departure of a ship, there is now
+an opportunity of writing to Bengal, I am unwilling to slip out
+of your memory by my own negligence, and therefore take the
+liberty of reminding you of my existence, by sending you a book
+which is not yet made publick.</p>
+<p>I have lately visited a region less remote, and less
+illustrious than India, which afforded some occasions for
+speculation; what has occurred to me, I have put into the
+volume<a href="#note-232">[232]</a>, of
+which I beg your acceptance.</p>
+<p>Men in your station seldom have presents totally
+disinterested; my book is received, let me now make my
+request.</p>
+<p>There is, Sir, somewhere within your government, a young
+adventurer, one Chauncey Lawrence, whose father is one of my
+oldest friends. Be pleased to shew the young man what countenance
+is fit, whether he wants to be restrained by your authority, or
+encouraged by your favour. His father is now President of the
+College of Physicians, a man venerable for his knowledge, and
+more venerable for his virtue<a href=
+"#note-233">[233]</a>.</p>
+<p>I wish you a prosperous government, a safe return, and a long
+enjoyment of plenty and tranquillity.</p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ I am, Sir,
+ Your most obedient
+ And most humble servant,
+ SAM. JOHNSON<a href=
+"#note-234">234</a>.
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>London, Dec. 20, 1774.'</p>
+<center>TO THE SAME.</center>
+<p>'Jan. 9, 1781.</p>
+<p>Sir,</p>
+<p>Amidst the importance and multiplicity of affairs in which
+your great office engages you, I take the liberty of recalling
+your attention for a moment to literature, and will not prolong
+the interruption by an apology which your character makes
+needless.</p>
+<p>Mr. Hoole, a gentleman long known, and long esteemed in the
+India-House, after having translated Tasso<a href=
+"#note-235">[235]</a>, has undertaken
+Ariosto. How well he is qualified for his undertaking he has
+already shewn. He is desirous, Sir, of your favour in promoting
+his proposals, and flatters me by supposing that my testimony may
+advance his interest.</p>
+<p>It is a new thing for a clerk of the India-House to translate
+poets; &mdash;it is new for a Governour of Bengal to patronize
+learning. That he may find his ingenuity rewarded, and that
+learning may flourish under your protection, is the wish of, Sir,
+Your most humble servant,</p>
+<center>SAM. JOHNSON.'</center>
+<p>I wrote to him in February, complaining of having been
+troubled by a recurrence of the perplexing question of Liberty
+and Necessity;&mdash;and mentioning that I hoped soon to meet him
+again in London.</p>
+<p>'To JAMES BOSWELL, ESQ.</p>
+<center>DEAR SIR,</center>
+<p>I hoped you had got rid of all this hypocrisy of misery. What
+have you to do with Liberty and Necessity<a href=
+"#note-236">[236]</a>? Or what more than
+to hold your tongue about it? Do not doubt but I shall be most
+heartily glad to see you here again, for I love every part about
+you but your affectation of distress.</p>
+<p>I have at last finished my <i>Lives</i>, and have laid up for
+you a load of copy<a href=
+"#note-237">[237]</a>, all out of order,
+so that it will amuse you a long time to set it right. Come to
+me, my dear Bozzy, and let us be as happy as we can. We will go
+again to the Mitre, and talk old times over.</p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ I am, dear Sir,
+ Yours affectionately,
+ 'SAM. JOHNSON.'
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>March, 14, 1781.</p>
+<p>On Monday, March 19, I arrived in London, and on Tuesday, the
+20th, met him in Fleet-street, walking, or rather indeed moving
+along; for his peculiar march is thus described in a very just
+and picturesque manner, in a short Life<a href=
+"#note-238">[238]</a> of him published
+very soon after his death:&mdash;'When he walked the streets,
+what with the constant roll of his head, and the concomitant
+motion of his body, he appeared to make his way by that motion,
+independent of his feet.' That he was often much stared at while
+he advanced in this manner, may easily be believed; but it was
+not safe to make sport of one so robust as he was. Mr. Langton
+saw him one day, in a fit of absence, by a sudden start, drive
+the load off a porter's back, and walk forward briskly, without
+being conscious of what he had done.</p>
+<p>The porter was very angry, but stood still, and eyed the huge
+figure with much earnestness, till he was satisfied that his
+wisest course was to be quiet, and take up his burthen again.</p>
+<p>Our accidental meeting in the street after a long separation
+was a pleasing surprize to us both. He stepped aside with me into
+Falcon-court, and made kind inquiries about my family, and as we
+were in a hurry going different ways, I promised to call on him
+next day; he said he was engaged to go out in the morning.
+'Early, Sir?' said I. JOHNSON: 'Why, Sir, a London morning does
+not go with the sun.'</p>
+<p>I waited on him next evening, and he gave me a great portion
+of his original manuscript of his <i>Lives of the Poets</i>,
+which he had preserved for me.</p>
+<p>I found on visiting his friend, Mr. Thrale, that he was now
+very ill, and had removed, I suppose by the solicitation of Mrs.
+Thrale, to a house in Grosvenor-square<a href=
+"#note-239">[239]</a>. I was sorry to see
+him sadly changed in his appearance.</p>
+<p>He told me I might now have the pleasure to see Dr. Johnson
+drink wine again, for he had lately returned to it. When I
+mentioned this to Johnson, he said, 'I drink it now sometimes,
+but not socially.' The first evening that I was with him at
+Thrale's, I observed he poured a large quantity of it into a
+glass, and swallowed it greedily. Every thing about his character
+and manners was forcible and violent; there never was any
+moderation; many a day did he fast, many a year did he refrain
+from wine; but when he did eat, it was voraciously; when he did
+drink wine, it was copiously. He could practise abstinence, but
+not temperance<a href=
+"#note-240">[240]</a>.</p>
+<p>Mrs. Thrale and I had a dispute, whether Shakspeare or Milton
+had drawn the most admirable picture of a man<a href=
+"#note-241">[241]</a>. I was for
+Shakspeare; Mrs. Thrale for Milton; and after a fair hearing,
+Johnson decided for my opinion.</p>
+<p>I told him of one of Mr. Burke's playful sallies upon Dean
+Marlay<a href="#note-242">[242]</a>: 'I
+don't like the Deanery of <i>Ferns</i>, it sounds so like a
+<i>barren</i> title.'&mdash;'Dr. Heath should have it;' said I.
+Johnson laughed, and condescending to trifle in the same mode of
+conceit, suggested Dr. <i>Moss</i><a href=
+"#note-243">[243]</a>.</p>
+<p>He said, 'Mrs. Montagu has dropt me. Now, Sir, there are
+people whom one should like very well to drop, but would not wish
+to be dropped by<a href=
+"#note-244">[244]</a>.' He certainly was
+vain of the society of ladies, and could make himself very
+agreeable to them, when he chose it; Sir Joshua Reynolds agreed
+with me that he could. Mr. Gibbon, with his usual sneer,
+controverted it, perhaps in resentment of Johnson's having talked
+with some disgust of his ugliness<a href=
+"#note-245">[245]</a>, which one would
+think a <i>philosopher</i> would not mind. Dean Marlay wittily
+observed, 'A lady may be vain, when she can turn a wolf-dog into
+a lap-dog.'</p>
+<p>The election for Ayrshire, my own county, was this spring
+tried upon a petition, before a Committee of the House of
+Commons. I was one of the Counsel for the sitting member, and
+took the liberty of previously stating different points to
+Johnson, who never failed to see them clearly, and to supply me
+with some good hints. He dictated to me the following note upon
+the registration of deeds:&mdash;</p>
+<p>'All laws are made for the convenience of the community: what
+is legally done, should be legally recorded, that the state of
+things may be known, and that wherever evidence is requisite,
+evidence may be had. For this reason, the obligation to frame and
+establish a legal register is enforced by a legal penalty, which
+penalty is the want of that perfection and plentitude of right
+which a register would give. Thence it follows, that this is not
+an objection merely legal: for the reason on which the law stands
+being equitable, makes it an equitable objection.'</p>
+<p>'This (said he) you must enlarge on, when speaking to the
+Committee. You must not argue there as if you were arguing in the
+schools<a href="#note-246">[246]</a>;
+close reasoning will not fix their attention; you must say the
+same thing over and over again, in different words. If you say it
+but once, they miss it in a moment of inattention. It is unjust,
+Sir, to censure lawyers for multiplying words when they argue; it
+is often necessary for them to multiply words<a href=
+"#note-247">[247]</a>.' His notion of the
+duty of a member of Parliament, sitting upon an
+election-committee<a href=
+"#note-248">[248]</a>, was very high; and
+when he was told of a gentleman upon one of those committees, who
+read the newspapers part of the time, and slept the rest, while
+the merits of a vote were examined by the counsel; and as an
+excuse, when challenged by the chairman for such behaviour,
+bluntly answered, 'I had made up my mind upon that
+case;'&mdash;Johnson, with an indignant contempt, said, 'If he
+was such a rogue as to make up his mind upon a case without
+hearing it, he should not have been such a fool as to tell it.'
+'I think (said Mr. Dudley Long<a href=
+"#note-249">[249]</a>, now North) the
+Doctor has pretty plainly made him out to be both rogue and
+fool.'</p>
+<p>Johnson's profound reverence for the Hierarchy<a href=
+"#note-250">[250]</a> made him expect
+from bishops the highest degree of decorum; he was offended even
+at their going to taverns; 'A bishop (said he) has nothing to do
+at a tippling-house. It is not indeed immoral in him to go to a
+tavern; neither would it be immoral in him to whip a top in
+Grosvenor-square. But, if he did, I hope the boys would fall upon
+him, and apply the whip to <i>him</i>. There are gradations in
+conduct; there is morality,&mdash;decency,&mdash;propriety. None
+of these should be violated by a bishop. A bishop should not go
+to a house where he may meet a young fellow leading out a wench.'
+BOSWELL. 'But, Sir, every tavern does not admit women.' JOHNSON.
+'Depend upon it, Sir, any tavern will admit a well-drest man and
+a well-drest woman; they will not perhaps admit a woman whom they
+see every night walking by their door, in the street. But a
+well-drest man may lead in a well-drest woman to any tavern in
+London. Taverns sell meat and drink, and will sell them to any
+body who can eat and can drink. You may as well say that a mercer
+will not sell silks to a woman of the town.'</p>
+<p>He also disapproved of bishops going to routs, at least of
+their staying at them longer than their presence commanded
+respect. He mentioned a particular bishop. 'Poh! (said Mrs.
+Thrale) the Bishop of &mdash;&mdash;<a href=
+"#note-251">[251]</a> is never minded at
+a rout.' BOSWELL. 'When a bishop places himself in a situation
+where he has no distinct character, and is of no consequence, he
+degrades the dignity of his order.' JOHNSON. 'Mr. Boswell, Madam,
+has said it as correctly as it could be.'</p>
+<p>Nor was it only in the dignitaries of the Church that Johnson
+required a particular decorum and delicacy of behaviour; he
+justly considered that the clergy, as persons set apart for the
+sacred office of serving at the altar, and impressing the minds
+of men with the aweful concerns of a future state, should be
+somewhat more serious than the generality of mankind, and have a
+suitable composure of manners. A due sense of the dignity of
+their profession, independent of higher motives, will ever
+prevent them from losing their distinction in an indiscriminate
+sociality; and did such as affect this, know how much it lessens
+them in the eyes of those whom they think to please by it, they
+would feel themselves much mortified.</p>
+<p>Johnson and his friend, Beauclerk, were once together in
+company with several clergymen, who thought that they should
+appear to advantage, by assuming the lax jollity of <i>men of the
+world;</i> which, as it may be observed in similar cases, they
+carried to noisy excess. Johnson, who they expected would be
+<i>entertained,</i> sat grave and silent for some time; at last,
+turning to Beauclerk, he said, by no means in a whisper, 'This
+merriment of parsons is mighty offensive.'</p>
+<p>Even the dress of a clergyman should be in character, and
+nothing can be more despicable than conceited attempts at
+avoiding the appearance of the clerical order; attempts, which
+are as ineffectual as they are pitiful. Dr. Porteus, now Bishop
+of London, in his excellent charge when presiding over the
+diocese of Chester, justly animadverts upon this subject; and
+observes of a reverend fop, that he 'can be but <i>half a
+beau</i><a href=
+"#note-252">[252]</a>.'</p>
+<p>Addison, in <i>The Spectator</i><a href=
+"#note-253">[253]</a>, has given us a
+fine portrait of a clergyman, who is supposed to be a member of
+his <i>Club</i>; and Johnson has exhibited a model, in the
+character of Mr. Mudge<a href=
+"#note-254">[254]</a>, which has escaped
+the collectors of his works, but which he owned to me, and which
+indeed he shewed to Sir Joshua Reynolds at the time when it was
+written. It bears the genuine marks of Johnson's best manner, and
+is as follows<a href=
+"#note-255">[255]</a>:&mdash;</p>
+<p>'The Reverend Mr. <i>Zacariah Mudge</i>, Prebendary of Exeter,
+and Vicar of St. Andrew's in Plymouth; a man equally eminent for
+his virtues and abilities, and at once beloved as a companion and
+reverenced as a pastor. He had that general curiosity to which no
+kind of knowledge is indifferent or superfluous; and that general
+benevolence by which no order of men is hated or despised.</p>
+<p>His principles both of thought and action were great and
+comprehensive. By a solicitous examination of objections, and
+judicious comparison of opposite arguments, he attained what
+enquiry never gives but to industry and perspicuity, a firm and
+unshaken settlement of conviction. But his firmness was without
+asperity; for, knowing with how much difficulty truth was
+sometimes found, he did not wonder that many missed it.</p>
+<p>The general course of his life was determined by his
+profession; he studied the sacred volumes in the original
+languages; with what diligence and success, his <i>Notes upon the
+Psalms</i> give sufficient evidence. He once endeavoured to add
+the knowledge of Arabick to that of Hebrew; but finding his
+thoughts too much diverted from other studies, after some time
+desisted from his purpose.</p>
+<p>His discharge of parochial duties was exemplary. How his
+<i>Sermons</i><a href=
+"#note-256">[256]</a> were composed, may
+be learned from the excellent volume which he has given to the
+publick; but how they were delivered, can be known only to those
+that heard them; for as he appeared in the pulpit, words will not
+easily describe him. His delivery, though unconstrained was not
+negligent, and though forcible was not turbulent; disdaining
+anxious nicety of emphasis, and laboured artifice of action, it
+captivated the hearer by its natural dignity, it roused the
+sluggish, and fixed the volatile, and detained the mind upon the
+subject, without directing it to the speaker.</p>
+<p>The grandeur and solemnity of the preacher did not intrude
+upon his general behaviour; at the table of his friends he was a
+companion communicative and attentive, of unaffected manners, of
+manly cheerfulness, willing to please, and easy to be pleased.
+His acquaintance was universally solicited, and his presence
+obstructed no enjoyment which religion did not forbid. Though
+studious he was popular; though argumentative he was modest;
+though inflexible he was candid; and though metaphysical yet
+orthodox<a href=
+"#note-257">[257]</a>.'</p>
+<p>On Friday, March 30, I dined with him at Sir Joshua
+Reynolds's, with the Earl of Charlemont, Sir Annesley Stewart,
+Mr. Eliot of Port-Eliot, Mr. Burke, Dean Marlay, Mr. Langton; a
+most agreeable day, of which I regret that every circumstance is
+not preserved; but it is unreasonable to require such a
+multiplication of felicity.</p>
+<p>Mr. Eliot, with whom Dr. Walter Harte had travelled<a href=
+"#note-258">[258]</a>, talked to us of
+his <i>History of Gustavus Adolphus</i>, which he said was a very
+good book in the German translation. JOHNSON. 'Harte was
+excessively vain. He put copies of his book in manuscript into
+the hands of Lord Chesterfield and Lord Granville, that they
+might revise it. Now how absurd was it to suppose that two such
+noblemen would revise so big a manuscript. Poor man! he left
+London the day of the publication of his book, that he might be
+out of the way of the great praise he was to receive; and he was
+ashamed to return, when he found how ill his book had succeeded.
+It was unlucky in coming out on the same day with Robertson's
+<i>History of Scotland</i><a href=
+"#note-259">[259]</a>. His
+husbandry[260], however, is good.' BOSWELL. 'So he was fitter for
+that than for heroick history: he did well, when he turned his
+sword into a plough-share.'</p>
+<p>Mr. Eliot mentioned a curious liquor peculiar to his country,
+which the Cornish fishermen drink. They call it <i>Mahogany</i>;
+and it is made of two parts gin, and one part treacle, well
+beaten together. I begged to have some of it made, which was done
+with proper skill by Mr. Eliot. I thought it very good liquor;
+and said it was a counterpart of what is called <i>Athol
+Porridge</i> in the Highlands of Scotland, which is a mixture of
+whisky and honey. Johnson said, 'that must be a better liquor
+than the Cornish, for both its component parts are better.' He
+also observed, '<i>Mahogany</i> must be a modern name; for it is
+not long since the wood called mahogany was known in this
+country.' I mentioned his scale of liquors<a href=
+"#note-261">[261]</a>;&mdash;claret for
+boys&mdash;port for men&mdash;brandy for heroes. 'Then (said Mr.
+Burke) let me have claret: I love to be a boy; to have the
+careless gaiety of boyish days.' JOHNSON. 'I should drink claret
+too, if it would give me that; but it does not: it neither makes
+boys men, nor men boys. You'll be drowned by it, before it has
+any effect upon you.'</p>
+<p>I ventured to mention a ludicrous paragraph in the newspapers,
+that Dr. Johnson was learning to dance of Vestris<a href=
+"#note-262">[262]</a>. Lord Charlemont,
+wishing to excite him to talk, proposed in a whisper, that he
+should be asked, whether it was true. 'Shall I ask him?' said his
+Lordship. We were, by a great majority, clear for the experiment.
+Upon which his Lordship very gravely, and with a courteous air
+said, 'Pray, Sir, is it true that you are taking lessons of
+Vestris?' This was risking a good deal, and required the boldness
+of a General of Irish Volunteers to make the attempt. Johnson was
+at first startled, and in some heat answered, 'How can your
+Lordship ask so simple a question?' But immediately recovering
+himself, whether from unwillingness to be deceived, or to appear
+deceived, or whether from real good humour, he kept up the joke:
+'Nay, but if any body were to answer the paragraph, and
+contradict it, I'd have a reply, and would say, that he who
+contradicted it was no friend either to Vestris or me. For why
+should not Dr.<a href=
+"#note-263">[263]</a> Johnson add to his
+other powers a little corporeal agility? Socrates learnt to dance
+at an advanced age, and Cato learnt Greek at an advanced age.
+Then it might proceed to say, that this Johnson, not content with
+dancing on the ground, might dance on the rope; and they might
+introduce the elephant dancing on the rope. A nobleman<a href=
+"#note-264">[264]</a> wrote a play,
+called <i>Love in a hollow Tree</i>. He found out that it was a
+bad one, and therefore wished to buy up all the copies, and burn
+them. The Duchess of Marlborough had kept one; and when he was
+against her at an election, she had a new edition of it printed,
+and prefixed to it, as a frontispiece, an elephant dancing on a
+rope; to shew, that his Lordship's writing comedy was as aukward
+as an elephant dancing on a rope<a href=
+"#note-265">[265]</a>.'</p>
+<p>On Sunday, April 1, I dined with him at Mr. Thrale's, with Sir
+Philip Jennings Clerk and Mr. Perkins<a href=
+"#note-266">[266]</a>, who had the
+superintendence of Mr. Thrale's brewery, with a salary of five
+hundred pounds a year. Sir Philip had the appearance of a
+gentleman of ancient family, well advanced in life. He wore his
+own white hair in a bag of goodly size, a black velvet coat, with
+an embroidered waistcoat, and very rich laced ruffles; which Mrs.
+Thrale said were old fashioned, but which, for that reason, I
+thought the more respectable, more like a Tory; yet Sir Philip
+was then in Opposition in Parliament<a href=
+"#note-267">[267]</a>. 'Ah, Sir, (said
+Johnson,) ancient ruffles and modern principles do not agree.'
+Sir Philip defended the Opposition to the American war ably and
+with temper, and I joined him. He said, the majority of the
+nation was against the ministry. JOHNSON. '<i>I</i>, Sir, am
+against the ministry<a href=
+"#note-268">[268]</a>; but it is for
+having too little of that, of which Opposition thinks they have
+too much. Were I minister, if any man wagged his finger against
+me, he should be turned out<a href=
+"#note-269">[269]</a>; for that which it
+is in the power of Government to give at pleasure to one or to
+another, should be given to the supporters of Government. If you
+will not oppose at the expence of losing your place, your
+opposition will not be honest, you will feel no serious
+grievance; and the present opposition is only a contest to get
+what others have. Sir Robert Walpole acted as I would do. As to
+the American war, the <i>sense</i> of the nation is <i>with</i>
+the ministry. The majority of those who can <i>understand</i> is
+with it; the majority of those who can only <i>hear</i>, is
+against it; and as those who can only hear are more numerous than
+those who can understand, and Opposition is always loudest, a
+majority of the rabble will be for Opposition.'</p>
+<p>This boisterous vivacity entertained us; but the truth in my
+opinion was, that those who could understand the best were
+against the American war, as almost every man now is, when the
+question has been coolly considered.</p>
+<p>Mrs. Thrale gave high praise to Mr. Dudley Long, (now North).
+JOHNSON. 'Nay, my dear lady, don't talk so. Mr. Long's character
+is very <i>short</i>. It is nothing. He fills a chair. He is a
+man of genteel appearance, and that is all<a href=
+"#note-270">[270]</a>. I know nobody who
+blasts by praise as you do: for whenever there is exaggerated
+praise, every body is set against a character. They are provoked
+to attack it. Now there is Pepys<a href=
+"#note-271">[271]</a>; you praised that
+man with such disproportion, that I was incited to lessen him,
+perhaps more than he deserves<a href=
+"#note-272">[272]</a>. His blood is upon
+your head<a href="#note-273">[273]</a>.
+By the same principle, your malice defeats itself; for your
+censure is too violent. And yet (looking to her with a leering
+smile) she is the first woman in the world, could she but
+restrain that wicked tongue of hers;&mdash;she would be the only
+woman, could she but command that little whirligig<a href=
+"#note-274">[274]</a>.'</p>
+<p>Upon the subject of exaggerated praise I took the liberty to
+say, that I thought there might be very high praise given to a
+known character which deserved it, and therefore it would not be
+exaggerated. Thus, one might say of Mr. Edmund Burke, He is a
+very wonderful man. JOHNSON. 'No, Sir, you would not be safe if
+another man had a mind perversely to contradict. He might answer,
+"Where is all the wonder? Burke is, to be sure, a man of uncommon
+abilities, with a great quantity of matter in his mind, and a
+great fluency of language in his mouth. But we are not to be
+stunned and astonished by him." So you see, Sir, even Burke would
+suffer, not from any fault of his own, but from your folly.'</p>
+<p>Mrs. Thrale mentioned a gentleman who had acquired a fortune
+of four thousand a year in trade, but was absolutely miserable,
+because he could not talk in company; so miserable, that he was
+impelled to lament his situation in the street to
+&mdash;&mdash;<a href=
+"#note-275">[275]</a>, whom he hates, and
+who he knows despises him. 'I am a most unhappy man (said he). I
+am invited to conversations. I go to conversations; but, alas! I
+have no conversation.' JOHNSON. 'Man commonly cannot be
+successful in different ways. This gentleman has spent, in
+getting four thousand pounds a year, the time in which he might
+have learnt to talk; and now he cannot talk.' Mr. Perkins made a
+shrewd and droll remark: 'If he had got his four thousand a year
+as a mountebank, he might have learnt to talk at the same time
+that he was getting his fortune.'</p>
+<p>Some other gentlemen came in. The conversation concerning the
+person whose character Dr. Johnson had treated so slightingly, as
+he did not know his merit, was resumed. Mrs. Thrale said, 'You
+think so of him, Sir, because he is quiet, and does not exert
+himself with force. You'll be saying the same thing of Mr.
+&mdash;&mdash; there, who sits as quiet&mdash;.' This was not
+well-bred; and Johnson did not let it pass without correction.
+'Nay, Madam, what right have you to talk thus? Both Mr.
+&mdash;&mdash; and I have reason to take it ill. <i>You</i> may
+talk so of Mr. &mdash;&mdash;; but why do you make <i>me</i> do
+it. Have I said anything against Mr. &mdash;&mdash;? You have
+<i>set</i> him, that I might shoot him: but I have not shot
+him.'</p>
+<p>One of the gentlemen said, he had seen three folio volumes of
+Dr. Johnson's sayings collected by me. 'I must put you right,
+Sir, (said I;) for I am very exact in authenticity. You could not
+see folio volumes, for I have none: you might have seen some in
+quarto and octavo. This is inattention which one should guard
+against.' JOHNSON. 'Sir, it is a want of concern about veracity.
+He does not know that he saw <i>any</i> volumes. If he had seen
+them he could have remembered their size<a href=
+"#note-276">[276]</a>.'</p>
+<p>Mr. Thrale appeared very lethargick to-day. I saw him again on
+Monday evening, at which time he was not thought to be in
+immediate danger; but early in the morning of Wednesday, the
+4th<a href="#note-277">[277]</a>, he
+expired[278]. Johnson was in the house, and thus mentions the
+event: 'I felt almost the last flutter of his pulse, and looked
+for the last time upon the face that for fifteen years had never
+been turned upon me but with respect and benignity<a href=
+"#note-279">[279]</a>.' Upon that day
+there was a Call of the LITERARY CLUB; but Johnson apologised for
+his absence by the following note:&mdash;</p>
+<p>'MR. JOHNSON knows that Sir Joshua Reynolds and the other
+gentlemen will excuse his incompliance with the call, when they
+are told that Mr. Thrale died this morning.' Wednesday.'</p>
+<p>Mr. Thrale's death was a very essential loss to Johnson<a
+href="#note-280">[280]</a>, who, although
+he did not foresee all that afterwards happened, was sufficiently
+convinced that the comforts which Mr. Thrale's family afforded
+him, would now in a great measure cease. He, however continued to
+shew a kind attention to his widow and children as long as it was
+acceptable; and he took upon him, with a very earnest concern,
+the office of one of his executors, the importance of which
+seemed greater than usual to him, from his circumstances having
+been always such, that he had scarcely any share in the real
+business of life<a href=
+"#note-281">[281]</a>. His friends of the
+CLUB were in hopes that Mr. Thrale might have made a liberal
+provision for him for his life, which, as Mr. Thrale left no son,
+and a very large fortune, it would have been highly to his honour
+to have done; and, considering Dr. Johnson's age, could not have
+been of long duration; but he bequeathed him only two hundred
+pounds, which was the legacy given to each of his executors<a
+href="#note-282">[282]</a>. I could not
+but be somewhat diverted by hearing Johnson talk in a pompous
+manner of his new office, and particularly of the concerns of the
+brewery, which it was at last resolved should be sold<a href=
+"#note-283">[283]</a>. Lord Lucan[284]
+tells a very good story, which, if not precisely exact, is
+certainly characteristic: that when the sale of Thrale's brewery
+was going forward, Johnson appeared bustling about, with an
+ink-horn and pen in his button-hole, like an excise-man; and on
+being asked what he really considered to be the value of the
+property which was to be disposed of, answered, 'We are not here
+to sell a parcel of boilers and vats but the potentiality of
+growing rich, beyond the dreams of avarice<a href=
+"#note-285">[285]</a>.'</p>
+<p>On Friday, April 6, he carried me to dine at a club, which, at
+his desire, had been lately formed at the Queen's Arms, in St.
+Paul's Church-yard. He told Mr. Hoole, that he wished to have a
+<i>City Club</i>, and asked him to collect one; but, said he,
+'Don't let them be <i>patriots</i><a href=
+"#note-286">[286]</a>.' The company were
+to-day very sensible, well-behaved men. I have preserved only two
+particulars of his conversation. He said he was glad Lord George
+Gordon had escaped<a href=
+"#note-287">[287]</a>, rather than that a
+precedent should be established for hanging a man for
+<i>constructive treason</i>; which, in consistency with his true,
+manly, constitutional Toryism, he considered would be a dangerous
+engine of arbitrary power. And upon its being mentioned that an
+opulent and very indolent Scotch nobleman, who totally resigned
+the management of his affairs to a man of knowledge and
+abilities, had claimed some merit by saying, 'The next best thing
+to managing a man's own affairs well is being sensible of
+incapacity, and not attempting it, but having full confidence in
+one who can do it:' JOHNSON. 'Nay, Sir, this is paltry. There is
+a middle course. Let a man give application; and depend upon it
+he will soon get above a despicable state of helplessness, and
+attain the power of acting for himself.'</p>
+<p>On Saturday, April 7, I dined with him at Mr. Hoole's with
+Governour Bouchier and Captain Orme, both of whom had been long
+in the East-Indies; and being men of good sense and observation,
+were very entertaining. Johnson defended the oriental regulation
+of different <i>casts</i> of men, which was objected to as
+totally destructive of the hopes of rising in society by personal
+merit. He shewed that there was a <i>principle</i> in it
+sufficiently plausible by analogy. 'We see (said he) in metals
+that there are different species; and so likewise in animals,
+though one species may not differ very widely from another, as in
+the species of dogs,&mdash;the cur, the spaniel, the mastiff. The
+Bramins are the mastiffs of mankind.'</p>
+<p>On Thursday, April 12, I dined with him at a Bishop's, where
+were Sir Joshua Reynolds, Mr. Berrenger, and some more company.
+He had dined the day before at another Bishop's. I have
+unfortunately recorded none of his conversation at the Bishop's
+where we dined together<a href=
+"#note-288">[288]</a>: but I have
+preserved his ingenious defence of his dining twice abroad in
+Passion-week<a href=
+"#note-289">[289]</a>; a laxity, in which
+I am convinced he would not have indulged himself at the time
+when he wrote his solemn paper in <i>The Rambler</i><a href=
+"#note-290">[290]</a>, upon that aweful
+season. It appeared to me, that by being much more in company,
+and enjoying more luxurious living, he had contracted a keener
+relish of pleasure, and was consequently less rigorous in his
+religious rites. This he would not acknowledge; but he reasoned
+with admirable sophistry, as follows: 'Why, Sir, a Bishop's
+calling company together in this week is, to use the vulgar
+phrase, not <i>the thing</i>. But you must consider laxity is a
+bad thing; but preciseness is also a bad thing; and your general
+character may be more hurt by preciseness than by dining with a
+Bishop in Passion-week. There might be a handle for reflection.
+It might be said, 'He refused to dine with a Bishop in
+Passion-week, but was three Sundays absent from Church.' BOSWELL.
+'Very true, Sir. But suppose a man to be uniformly of good
+conduct, would it not be better that he should refuse to dine
+with a Bishop in this week, and so not encourage a bad practice
+by his example?' JOHNSON. 'Why, Sir, you are to consider whether
+you might not do more harm by lessening the influence of a
+Bishop's character by your disapprobation in refusing him, than
+by going to him.'</p>
+<center>TO MRS. LUCY PORTER, IN LICHFIELD.</center>
+<center>'DEAR MADAM,</center>
+<p>'Life is full of troubles. I have just lost my dear friend
+Thrale. I hope he is happy; but I have had a great loss. I am
+otherwise pretty well. I require some care of myself, but that
+care is not ineffectual; and when I am out of order, I think it
+often my own fault.</p>
+<p>'The spring is now making quick advances. As it is the season
+in which the whole world is enlivened and invigorated, I hope
+that both you and I shall partake of its benefits. My desire is
+to see Lichfield; but being left executor to my friend, I know
+not whether I can be spared; but I will try, for it is now long
+since we saw one another, and how little we can promise ourselves
+many more interviews, we are taught by hourly examples of
+mortality. Let us try to live so as that mortality may not be an
+evil. Write to me soon, my dearest; your letters will give me
+great pleasure.</p>
+<p>'I am sorry that Mr. Porter has not had his box; but by
+sending it to Mr. Mathias, who very readily undertook its
+conveyance, I did the best I could, and perhaps before now he has
+it.</p>
+<p>'Be so kind as to make my compliments to my friends; I have a
+great value for their kindness, and hope to enjoy it before
+summer is past. Do write to me. I am, dearest love,</p>
+<p>'Your most humble servant,</p>
+<center>'SAM. JOHNSON.'</center>
+<p>'London, April 12, 1781.'</p>
+<p>On Friday, April 13, being Good-Friday, I went to St.
+Clement's church with him as usual. There I saw again his old
+fellow-collegian, Edwards<a href=
+"#note-291">[291]</a>, to whom I said, 'I
+think, Sir, Dr. Johnson and you meet only at Church.'&mdash;'Sir,
+(said he,) it is the best place we can meet in, except Heaven,
+and I hope we shall meet there too.' Dr. Johnson told me, that
+there was very little communication between Edwards and him,
+after their unexpected renewal of acquaintance. 'But (said he,
+smiling) he met me once, and said, "I am told you have written a
+very pretty book called <i>The Rambler</i>." I was unwilling that
+he should leave the world in total darkness, and sent him a
+set.'</p>
+<p>Mr. Berrenger<a href=
+"#note-292">[292]</a> visited him to-day,
+and was very pleasing. We talked of an evening society for
+conversation at a house in town, of which we were all members,
+but of which Johnson said, 'It will never do, Sir. There is
+nothing served about there, neither tea, nor coffee, nor
+lemonade, nor any thing whatever; and depend upon it, Sir, a man
+does not love to go to a place from whence he comes out exactly
+as he went in.' I endeavoured, for argument's sake, to maintain
+that men of learning and talents might have very good
+intellectual society, without the aid of any little
+gratifications of the senses. Berrenger joined with Johnson, and
+said, that without these any meeting would be dull and insipid.
+He would therefore have all the slight refreshments; nay, it
+would not be amiss to have some cold meat, and a bottle of wine
+upon a side-board. 'Sir, (said Johnson to me, with an air of
+triumph,) Mr. Berrenger knows the world. Every body loves to have
+good things furnished to them without any trouble. I told Mrs.
+Thrale once, that as she did not choose to have card tables, she
+should have a profusion of the best sweetmeats, and she would be
+sure to have company enough come to her<a href=
+"#note-293">[293]</a>.' I agreed with my
+illustrious friend upon this subject; for it has pleased GOD to
+make man a composite animal, and where there is nothing to
+refresh the body, the mind will languish.</p>
+<p>On Sunday, April 15, being Easter-day, after solemn worship in
+St. Paul's church, I found him alone; Dr. Scott of the Commons
+came in. He talked of its having been said that Addison wrote
+some of his best papers in <i>The Spectator</i> when warm with
+wine<a href="#note-294">[294]</a>. Dr.
+Johnson did not seem willing to admit this. Dr. Scott, as a
+confirmation of it, related, that Blackstone, a sober man,
+composed his <i>Commentaries</i> with a bottle of port before
+him; and found his mind invigorated and supported in the fatigue
+of his great work, by a temperate use of it<a href=
+"#note-295">[295]</a>.</p>
+<p>I told him, that in a company where I had lately been, a
+desire was expressed to know his authority for the shocking story
+of Addison's sending an execution into Steele's house<a href=
+"#note-296">[296]</a>. 'Sir, (said he,)
+it is generally known, it is known to all who are acquainted with
+the literary history of that period. It is as well known, as that
+he wrote <i>Cato</i>.' Mr. Thomas Sheridan once defended Addison
+to me, by alledging that he did it in order to cover Steele's
+goods from other creditors, who were going to seize them.</p>
+<p>We talked of the difference between the mode of education at
+Oxford, and that in those Colleges where instruction is chiefly
+conveyed by lectures<a href=
+"#note-297">[297]</a>. JOHNSON. 'Lectures
+were once useful; but now, when all can read, and books are so
+numerous, lectures are unnecessary. If your attention fails, and
+you miss a part of a lecture, it is lost; you cannot go back as
+you do upon a book.' Dr. Scott agreed with him. 'But yet (said
+I), Dr. Scott, you yourself gave lectures at Oxford<a href=
+"#note-298">[298]</a>.' He smiled. 'You
+laughed (then said I) at those who came to you.'</p>
+<p>Dr. Scott left us, and soon afterwards we went to dinner. Our
+company consisted of Mrs. Williams, Mrs. Desmoulins, Mr. Levett,
+Mr. Allen, the printer, and Mrs. Hall<a href=
+"#note-299">[299]</a>, sister of the
+Reverend Mr. John Wesley, and resembling him, as I thought, both
+in figure and manner. Johnson produced now, for the first time,
+some handsome silver salvers, which he told me he had bought
+fourteen years ago; so it was a great day. I was not a little
+amused by observing Allen perpetually struggling to talk in the
+manner of Johnson, like the little frog in the fable blowing
+himself up to resemble the stately ox<a href=
+"#note-300">[300]</a>.</p>
+<p>I mentioned a kind of religious Robinhood Society<a href=
+"#note-301">[301]</a>, which met every
+Sunday evening, at Coachmakers'-hall, for free debate; and that
+the subject for this night was, the text which relates, with
+other miracles, which happened at our SAVIOUR'S death, 'And the
+graves were opened, and many bodies of the saints which slept
+arose, and came out of the graves after his resurrection, and
+went into the holy city, and appeared unto many<a href=
+"#note-302">[302]</a>.' Mrs. Hall said it
+was a very curious subject, and she should like to hear it
+discussed. JOHNSON, (somewhat warmly) 'One would not go to such a
+place to hear it,&mdash;one would not be seen in such a
+place&mdash;to give countenance to such a meeting.' I, however,
+resolved that I would go. 'But, Sir, (said she to Johnson,) I
+should like to hear <i>you</i> discuss it.' He seemed reluctant
+to engage in it. She talked of the resurrection of the human race
+in general, and maintained that we shall be raised with the same
+bodies. JOHNSON. 'Nay, Madam, we see that it is not to be the
+same body; for the Scripture uses the illustration of grain sown,
+and we know that the grain which grows is not the same with what
+is sown<a href="#note-303">[303]</a>. You
+cannot suppose that we shall rise with a diseased body; it is
+enough if there be such a sameness as to distinguish identity of
+person.' She seemed desirous of knowing more, but he left the
+question in obscurity.</p>
+<p>Of apparitions<a href=
+"#note-304">[304]</a>, he observed, 'A
+total disbelief of them is adverse to the opinion of the
+existence of the soul between death and the last day; the
+question simply is, whether departed spirits ever have the power
+of making themselves perceptible to us; a man who thinks he has
+seen an apparition, can only be convinced himself; his authority
+will not convince another, and his conviction, if rational, must
+be founded on being told something which cannot be known but by
+supernatural means.'</p>
+<p>He mentioned a thing as not unfrequent, of which I had never
+heard before,&mdash;being <i>called</i>, that is, hearing one's
+name pronounced by the voice of a known person at a great
+distance, far beyond the possibility of being reached by any
+sound uttered by human organs. 'An acquaintance, on whose
+veracity I can depend, told me, that walking home one evening to
+Kilmarnock, he heard himself called from a wood, by the voice of
+a brother who had gone to America; and the next packet brought
+accounts of that brother's death.' Macbean<a href=
+"#note-305">[305]</a> asserted that this
+inexplicable <i>calling</i> was a thing very well known. Dr.
+Johnson said, that one day at Oxford, as he was turning the key
+of his chamber, he heard his mother distinctly call Sam. She was
+then at Lichfield; but nothing ensued<a href=
+"#note-306">[306]</a>. This phaenomenon
+is, I think, as wonderful as any other mysterious fact, which
+many people are very slow to believe, or rather, indeed, reject
+with an obstinate contempt.</p>
+<p>Some time after this, upon his making a remark which escaped
+my attention, Mrs. Williams and Mrs. Hall were both together
+striving to answer him. He grew angry, and called out loudly,
+'Nay, when you both speak at once, it is intolerable.' But
+checking himself, and softening, he said, 'This one may say,
+though you <i>are</i> ladies.' Then he brightened into gay
+humour, and addressed them in the words of one of the songs in
+<i>The Beggar's Opera</i><a href=
+"#note-307">[307]</a>:&mdash;</p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'But two at a time there's no mortal can bear.'
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>'What, Sir, (said I,) are you going to turn Captain Macheath?'
+There was something as pleasantly ludicrous in this scene as can
+be imagined. The contrast between Macheath, Polly, and
+Lucy&mdash;and Dr. Samuel Johnson, blind, peevish Mrs. Williams,
+and lean, lank, preaching Mrs. Hall, was exquisite.</p>
+<p>I stole away to Coachmakers'-hall, and heard the difficult
+text of which we had talked, discussed with great decency, and
+some intelligence, by several speakers. There was a difference of
+opinion as to the appearance of ghosts in modern times, though
+the arguments for it, supported by Mr. Addison's authority<a
+href="#note-308">[308]</a>,
+preponderated. The immediate subject of debate was embarrassed by
+the <i>bodies</i> of the saints having been said to rise, and by
+the question what became of them afterwards; did they return
+again to their graves? or were they translated to heaven? Only
+one evangelist mentions the fact<a href=
+"#note-309">[309]</a>, and the
+commentators whom I have looked at, do not make the passage
+clear. There is, however, no occasion for our understanding it
+farther, than to know that it was one of the extraordinary
+manifestations of divine power, which accompanied the most
+important event that ever happened.</p>
+<p>On Friday, April 20, I spent with him one of the happiest days
+that I remember to have enjoyed in the whole course of my life.
+Mrs. Garrick, whose grief for the loss of her husband was, I
+believe, as sincere as wounded affection and admiration could
+produce, had this day, for the first time since his death, a
+select party of his friends to dine with her<a href=
+"#note-310">[310]</a>. The company was
+Miss Hannah More, who lived with her, and whom she called her
+Chaplain<a href="#note-311">[311]</a>;
+Mrs. Boscawen[312], Mrs. Elizabeth Carter, Sir Joshua Reynolds,
+Dr. Burney, Dr. Johnson, and myself. We found ourselves very
+elegantly entertained at her house in the Adelphi<a href=
+"#note-313">[313]</a>, where I have
+passed many a pleasing hour with him 'who gladdened life<a href=
+"#note-314">[314]</a>.' She looked well,
+talked of her husband with complacency, and while she cast her
+eyes on his portrait, which hung over the chimney-piece, said,
+that 'death was now the most agreeable object to her<a href=
+"#note-315">[315]</a>.' The very
+semblance of David Garrick was cheering. Mr. Beauclerk, with
+happy propriety, inscribed under that fine portrait of him, which
+by Lady Diana's kindness is now the property of my friend Mr.
+Langton, the following passage from his beloved
+Shakspeare:&mdash;</p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'A merrier man,
+ Within the limit of becoming mirth,
+ I never spent an hour's talk withal.
+ His eye begets occasion for his wit;
+ For every object that the one doth catch,
+ The other turns to a mirth-moving jest;
+ Which his fair tongue (Conceit's expositor)
+ Delivers in such apt and gracious words,
+ That aged ears play truant at his tales,
+ And younger hearings are quite ravished:
+ So sweet and voluble is his discourse<a href=
+"#note-316">316</a>.'
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>We were all in fine spirits; and I whispered to Mrs. Boscawen,
+'I believe this is as much as can be made of life.' In addition
+to a splendid entertainment, we were regaled with Lichfield ale<a
+href="#note-317">[317]</a>, which had a
+peculiar appropriated value. Sir Joshua, and Dr. Burney, and I,
+drank cordially of it to Dr. Johnson's health; and though he
+would not join us, he as cordially answered, 'Gentlemen, I wish
+you all as well as you do me.'</p>
+<p>The general effect of this day dwells upon my mind in fond
+remembrance; but I do not find much conversation recorded. What I
+have preserved shall be faithfully given.</p>
+<p>One of the company mentioned Mr. Thomas Hollis, the strenuous
+Whig, who used to send over Europe presents of democratical
+books, with their boards stamped with daggers and caps of
+liberty. Mrs. Carter said, 'He was a bad man. He used to talk
+uncharitably.' JOHNSON. 'Poh! poh! Madam; who is the worse for
+being talked of uncharitably? Besides, he was a dull poor
+creature as ever lived: And I believe he would not have done harm
+to a man whom he knew to be of very opposite principles to his
+own. I remember once at the Society of Arts, when an
+advertisement was to be drawn up, he pointed me out as the man
+who could do it best. This, you will observe, was kindness to me.
+I however slipt away, and escaped it.'</p>
+<p>Mrs. Carter having said of the same person, 'I doubt he was an
+Atheist<a href="#note-318">[318]</a>.'
+JOHNSON. 'I don't know that. He might perhaps have become one, if
+he had had time to ripen, (smiling.) He might have
+<i>exuberated</i> into an Atheist.'</p>
+<p>Sir Joshua Reynolds praised <i>Mudge's Sermons</i><a href=
+"#note-319">[319]</a>. JOHNSON. 'Mudge's
+Sermons are good, but not practical. He grasps more sense than he
+can hold; he takes more corn than he can make into meal; he opens
+a wide prospect, but it is so distant, it is indistinct. I love
+<i>Blair's Sermons</i>. Though the dog is a Scotchman, and a
+Presbyterian, and every thing he should not be, I was the first
+to praise them<a href=
+"#note-320">[320]</a>. Such was my
+candour.' (smiling.) MRS. BOSCAWEN. 'Such his great merit to get
+the better of all your prejudices.' JOHNSON. 'Why, Madam, let us
+compound the matter; let us ascribe it to my candour, and his
+merit.'</p>
+<p>In the evening we had a large company in the drawing-room,
+several ladies, the Bishop of Killaloe, Dr. Percy, Mr.
+Chamberlayne<a href=
+"#note-321">[321]</a>, of the Treasury,
+&amp;c. &amp;c. Somebody said the life of a mere literary man
+could not be very entertaining. JOHNSON. 'But it certainly may.
+This is a remark which has been made, and repeated, without
+justice; why should the life of a literary man be less
+entertaining than the life of any other man? Are there not as
+interesting varieties in such a life<a href=
+"#note-322">[322]</a>? As <i>a literary
+life</i> it may be very entertaining.' BOSWELL. 'But it must be
+better surely, when it is diversified with a little active
+variety&mdash; such as his having gone to Jamaica; or&mdash;his
+having gone to the Hebrides.' Johnson was not displeased at
+this.</p>
+<p>Talking of a very respectable authour, he told us a curious
+circumstance in his life, which was, that he had married a
+printer's devil. REYNOLDS. 'A printer's devil, Sir! Why, I
+thought a printer's devil was a creature with a black face and in
+rags.' JOHNSON. 'Yes, Sir. But I suppose, he had her face washed,
+and put clean clothes on her. (Then looking very serious, and
+very earnest.) And she did not disgrace him; the woman had a
+bottom of good sense. The word <i>bottom</i> thus introduced, was
+so ludicrous when contrasted with his gravity, that most of us
+could not forbear tittering and laughing; though I recollect that
+the Bishop of Killaloe kept his countenance with perfect
+steadiness, while Miss Hannah More slyly hid her face behind a
+lady's back who sat on the same settee with her. His pride could
+not bear that any expression of his should excite ridicule, when
+he did not intend it; he therefore resolved to assume and
+exercise despotick power, glanced sternly around, and called out
+in a strong tone, 'Where's the merriment?' Then collecting
+himself, and looking aweful, to make us feel how he could impose
+restraint, and as it were searching his mind for a still more
+ludicrous word, he slowly pronounced, 'I say the <i>woman</i> was
+<i>fundamentally</i> sensible;' as if he had said, hear this now,
+and laugh if you dare. We all sat composed as at a funeral<a
+href="#note-323">[323]</a>.</p>
+<p>He and I walked away together; we stopped a little while by
+the rails of the Adelphi, looking on the Thames, and I said to
+him with some emotion that I was now thinking of two friends we
+had lost, who once lived in the buildings behind us, Beauclerk
+and Garrick. 'Ay, Sir, (said he, tenderly) and two such friends
+as cannot be supplied<a href=
+"#note-324">[324]</a>.'</p>
+<p>For some time after this day I did not see him very often, and
+of the conversation which I did enjoy, I am sorry to find I have
+preserved but little. I was at this time engaged in a variety of
+other matters, which required exertion and assiduity, and
+necessarily occupied almost all my time.</p>
+<p>One day having spoken very freely of those who were then in
+power, he said to me, 'Between ourselves, Sir, I do not like to
+give opposition the satisfaction of knowing how much I disapprove
+of the ministry.' And when I mentioned that Mr. Burke had boasted
+how quiet the nation was in George the Second's reign, when Whigs
+were in power, compared with the present reign, when Tories
+governed;&mdash;'Why, Sir, (said he,) you are to consider that
+Tories having more reverence for government, will not oppose with
+the same violence as Whigs, who being unrestrained by that
+principle, will oppose by any means.'</p>
+<p>This month he lost not only Mr. Thrale, but another friend,
+Mr. William Strahan, Junior, printer, the eldest son of his old
+and constant friend, Printer to his Majesty.</p>
+<center>'TO MRS. STRAHAN.</center>
+<center>'DEAR MADAM,</center>
+<p>'The grief which I feel for the loss of a very kind friend is
+sufficient to make me know how much you suffer by the death of an
+amiable son; a man, of whom I think it may truly be said, that no
+one knew him who does not lament him. I look upon myself as
+having a friend, another friend, taken from me.</p>
+<p>'Comfort, dear Madam, I would give you if I could, but I know
+how little the forms of consolation can avail. Let me, however,
+counsel you not to waste your health in unprofitable sorrow, but
+go to Bath, and endeavour to prolong your own life; but when we
+have all done all that we can, one friend must in time lose the
+other.</p>
+<p>'I am, dear Madam,</p>
+<p>'Your most humble servant,</p>
+<center>'SAM. JOHNSON.'</center>
+<p>'April 23, 1781.'</p>
+<p>On Tuesday, May 8<a href=
+"#note-325">[325]</a>, I had the pleasure
+of again dining with him and Mr. Wilkes, at Mr. Billy's<a href=
+"#note-326">[326]</a>. No
+<i>negociation</i> was now required to bring them together; for
+Johnson was so well satisfied with the former interview, that he
+was very glad to meet Wilkes again, who was this day seated
+between Dr. Beattie and Dr. Johnson; (between <i>Truth</i><a
+href="#note-327">[327]</a> and
+<i>Reason</i>, as General Paoli said, when I told him of it.)
+WILKES. 'I have been thinking, Dr. Johnson, that there should be
+a bill brought into parliament that the controverted elections
+for Scotland should be tried in that country, at their own Abbey
+of Holy-Rood House, and not here; for the consequence of trying
+them here is, that we have an inundation of Scotchmen, who come
+up and never go back again. Now here is Boswell, who is come up
+upon the election for his own county, which will not last a
+fortnight.' JOHNSON. 'Nay, Sir, I see no reason why they should
+be tried at all; for, you know, one Scotchman is as good as
+another.' WILKES. 'Pray, Boswell, how much may be got in a year
+by an Advocate at the Scotch bar?' BOSWELL. 'I believe two
+thousand pounds.' WlLKES. 'How can it be possible to spend that
+money in Scotland?' JOHNSON. 'Why, Sir, the money may be spent in
+England: but there is a harder question. If one man in Scotland
+gets possession of two thousand pounds, what remains for all the
+rest of the nation?' WILKES. 'You know, in the last war, the
+immense booty which Thurot<a href=
+"#note-328">[328]</a> carried off by the
+complete plunder of seven Scotch isles; he re-embarked with
+<i>three and six-pence</i>.' Here again Johnson and Wilkes joined
+in extravagant sportive raillery upon the supposed poverty of
+Scotland, which Dr. Beattie and I did not think it worth our
+while to dispute.</p>
+<p>The subject of quotation being introduced, Mr. Wilkes censured
+it as pedantry<a href=
+"#note-329">[329]</a>. JOHNSON. 'No, Sir,
+it is a good thing; there is a community of mind in it. Classical
+quotation is the <i>parole</i> of literary men all over the
+world.' WlLKES. 'Upon the continent they all quote the vulgate
+Bible. Shakspeare is chiefly quoted here; and we quote also Pope,
+Prior, Butler, Waller, and sometimes Cowley<a href=
+"#note-330">[330]</a>.'</p>
+<p>We talked of Letter-writing. JOHNSON. 'It is now become so
+much the fashion to publish letters, that in order to avoid it, I
+put as little into mine as I can.<a href=
+"#note-331">[331]</a>' BOSWELL. 'Do what
+you will, Sir, you cannot avoid it. Should you even write as ill
+as you can, your letters would be published as curiosities:</p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ "Behold a miracle! instead of wit,
+ See two dull lines with Stanhope's pencil writ<a href=
+"#note-332">332</a>."'
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>He gave us an entertaining account of <i>Bet Flint</i><a href=
+"#note-333">[333]</a>, a woman of the
+town, who, with some eccentrick talents and much effrontery,
+forced herself upon his acquaintance. 'Bet (said he) wrote her
+own Life in verse<a href=
+"#note-334">[334]</a>, which she brought
+to me, wishing that I would furnish her with a Preface to it.
+(Laughing.) I used to say of her that she was generally slut and
+drunkard; occasionally, whore and thief. She had, however,
+genteel lodgings, a spinnet on which she played, and a boy that
+walked before her chair. Poor Bet was taken up on a charge of
+stealing a counterpane, and tried at the Old Bailey. Chief
+Justice &mdash;&mdash;&mdash;<a href=
+"#note-335">[335]</a>, who loved a wench,
+summed up favourably, and she was acquitted. After which Bet
+said, with a gay and satisfied air, 'Now that the counterpane is
+<i>my own</i>, I shall make a petticoat of it.'</p>
+<p>Talking of oratory, Mr. Wilkes described it as accompanied
+with all the charms of poetical expression. JOHNSON. 'No, Sir;
+oratory is the power of beating down your adversary's arguments,
+and putting better in their place.' WlLKES. 'But this does not
+move the passions.' JOHNSON. 'He must be a weak man, who is to be
+so moved.' WlLKES. (naming a celebrated orator) 'Amidst all the
+brilliancy of &mdash;&mdash;'s<a href=
+"#note-336">[336]</a> imagination, and
+the exuberance of his wit, there is a strange want of
+<i>taste</i>. It was observed of Apelles's Venus<a href=
+"#note-337">[337]</a>, that her flesh
+seemed as if she had been nourished by roses: his oratory would
+sometimes make one suspect that he eats potatoes and drinks
+whisky.'</p>
+<p>Mr. Wilkes observed, how tenacious we are of forms in this
+country, and gave as an instance, the vote of the House of
+Commons for remitting money to pay the army in America <i>in
+Portugal pieces</i><a href=
+"#note-338">[338]</a>, when, in reality,
+the remittance is made not in Portugal money, but in our own
+specie. JOHNSON. 'Is there not a law, Sir, against exporting the
+current coin of the realm?' WlLKES. 'Yes, Sir: but might not the
+House of Commons, in case of real evident necessity, order our
+own current coin to be sent into our own colonies?' Here Johnson,
+with that quickness of recollection which distinguished him so
+eminently, gave the <i>Middlesex Patriot</i> an admirable retort
+upon his own ground. 'Sure, Sir, <i>you</i> don't think a
+<i>resolution of the House of Commons</i> equal to <i>the law of
+the land</i><a href=
+"#note-339">[339]</a>.' WlLKES. (at once
+perceiving the application) 'GOD forbid, Sir.' To hear what had
+been treated with such violence in <i>The False Alarm</i>, now
+turned into pleasant repartee, was extremely agreeable. Johnson
+went on;&mdash;'Locke observes well, that a prohibition to export
+the current coin is impolitick; for when the balance of trade
+happens to be against a state, the current coin must be
+exported<a href=
+"#note-340">[340]</a>.'</p>
+<p>Mr. Beauclerk's great library<a href=
+"#note-341">[341]</a> was this season
+sold in London by auction. Mr. Wilkes said, he wondered to find
+in it such a numerous collection of sermons; seeming to think it
+strange that a gentleman of Mr. Beauclerk's character in the gay
+world should have chosen to have many compositions of that kind.
+JOHNSON. 'Why, Sir, you are to consider, that sermons make a
+considerable branch of English literature<a href=
+"#note-342">[342]</a>; so that a library
+must be very imperfect if it has not a numerous collection of
+sermons<a href="#note-343">[343]</a>: and
+in all collections, Sir, the desire of augmenting it grows
+stronger in proportion to the advance in acquisition; as motion
+is accelerated by the continuance of the <i>impetus</i>. Besides,
+Sir, (looking at Mr. Wilkes with a placid but significant smile)
+a man may collect sermons with intention of making himself better
+by them. I hope Mr. Beauclerk intended, that some time or other
+that should be the case with him.'</p>
+<p>Mr. Wilkes said to me, loud enough for Dr. Johnson to hear,
+'Dr. Johnson should make me a present of his <i>Lives of the
+Poets</i>, as I am a poor patriot, who cannot afford to buy
+them.' Johnson seemed to take no notice of this hint; but in a
+little while, he called to Mr. Dilly, 'Pray, Sir, be so good as
+to send a set of my <i>Lives</i> to Mr. Wilkes, with my
+compliments.' This was accordingly done; and Mr. Wilkes paid Dr.
+Johnson a visit, was courteously received, and sat with him a
+long time.</p>
+<p>The company gradually dropped away. Mr. Dilly himself was
+called down stairs upon business; I left the room for some time;
+when I returned, I was struck with observing Dr. Samuel Johnson
+and John Wilkes, Esq., literally
+<i>t&ecirc;te-&agrave;-t&ecirc;te</i>; for they were reclined
+upon their chairs, with their heads leaning almost close to each
+other, and talking earnestly, in a kind of confidential whisper,
+of the personal quarrel between George the Second and the King of
+Prussia<a href="#note-344">[344]</a>.
+Such a scene of perfectly easy sociality between two such
+opponents in the war of political controversy, as that which I
+now beheld, would have been an excellent subject for a picture.
+It presented to my mind the happy days which are foretold in
+Scripture, when the lion shall lie down with the kid<a href=
+"#note-345">[345]</a>.</p>
+<p>After this day there was another pretty long interval, during
+which Dr. Johnson and I did not meet. When I mentioned it to him
+with regret, he was pleased to say, 'Then, Sir, let us live
+double.'</p>
+<p>About this time it was much the fashion for several ladies to
+have evening assemblies, where the fair sex might participate in
+conversation with literary and ingenious men, animated by a
+desire to please. These societies were denominated
+<i>Blue-stocking Clubs</i>, the origin of which title being
+little known, it may be worth while to relate it. One of the most
+eminent members of those societies, when they first commenced,
+was Mr. Stillingfleet<a href=
+"#note-346">[346]</a>, whose dress was
+remarkably grave, and in particular it was observed, that he wore
+blue stockings<a href=
+"#note-347">[347]</a>. Such was the
+excellence of his conversation, that his absence was felt as so
+great a loss, that it used to be said, 'We can do nothing without
+the <i>blue stockings</i>;' and thus by degrees the title was
+established. Miss Hannah More has admirably described a
+<i>Blue-stocking Club</i>, in her <i>Bas Bleu</i><a href=
+"#note-348">[348]</a>, a poem in which
+many of the persons who were most conspicuous there are
+mentioned.</p>
+<p>Johnson was prevailed with to come sometimes into these
+circles, and did not think himself too grave even for the lively
+Miss Monckton<a href=
+"#note-349">[349]</a> (now Countess of
+Corke), who used to have the finest <i>bit of blue</i> at the
+house of her mother, Lady Galway. Her vivacity enchanted the
+Sage, and they used to talk together with all imaginable ease. A
+singular instance happened one evening, when she insisted that
+some of Sterne's writings were very pathetick. Johnson bluntly
+denied it. 'I am sure (said she) they have affected <i>me</i>.'
+'Why (said Johnson, smiling, and rolling himself about,) that is,
+because, dearest, you're a dunce<a href=
+"#note-350">[350]</a>.' When she some
+time afterwards mentioned this to him, he said with equal truth
+and politeness; 'Madam, if I had thought so, I certainly should
+not have said it.'</p>
+<p>Another evening Johnson's kind indulgence towards me had a
+pretty difficult trial. I had dined at the Duke of Montrose's
+with a very agreeable party, and his Grace, according to his
+usual custom, had circulated the bottle very freely. Lord
+Graham<a href="#note-351">[351]</a> and I
+went together to Miss Monckton's, where I certainly was in
+extraordinary spirits, and above all fear or awe. In the midst of
+a great number of persons of the first rank, amongst whom I
+recollect with confusion, a noble lady of the most stately
+decorum, I placed myself next to Johnson, and thinking myself now
+fully his match, talked to him in a loud and boisterous manner,
+desirous to let the company know how I could contend with
+<i>Ajax</i>. I particularly remember pressing him upon the value
+of the pleasures of the imagination, and as an illustration of my
+argument, asking him, 'What, Sir, supposing I were to fancy that
+the&mdash;(naming the most charming Duchess in his Majesty's
+dominions) were in love with me, should I not be very happy?' My
+friend with much address evaded my interrogatories, and kept me
+as quiet as possible; but it may easily be conceived how he must
+have felt<a href="#note-352">[352]</a>.
+However, when a few days afterwards I waited upon him and made an
+apology, he behaved with the most friendly gentleness<a href=
+"#note-353">[353]</a>.</p>
+<p>While I remained in London this year<a href=
+"#note-354">[354]</a>, Johnson and I
+dined together at several places. I recollect a placid day at Dr.
+Butter's<a href="#note-355">[355]</a>,
+who had now removed from Derby to Lower Grosvenor-street, London;
+but of his conversation on that and other occasions during this
+period, I neglected to keep any regular record<a href=
+"#note-356">[356]</a>, and shall
+therefore insert here some miscellaneous articles which I find in
+my Johnsonian notes.</p>
+<p>His disorderly habits, when 'making provision for the day that
+was passing over him<a href=
+"#note-357">[357]</a>,' appear from the
+following anecdote, communicated to me by Mr. John
+Nichols:&mdash;'In the year 1763, a young bookseller, who was an
+apprentice to Mr. Whiston, waited on him with a subscription to
+his <i>Shakspeare</i>: and observing that the Doctor made no
+entry in any book of the subscriber's name, ventured diffidently
+to ask, whether he would please to have the gentleman's address,
+that it might be properly inserted in the printed list of
+subscribers. '<i>I shall print no list of subscribers</i>;' said
+Johnson, with great abruptness: but almost immediately
+recollecting himself, added, very complacently, 'Sir, I have two
+very cogent reasons for not printing any list of
+subscribers;&mdash;one, that I have lost all the names,&mdash;the
+other, that I have spent all the money.'</p>
+<p>Johnson could not brook appearing to be worsted in argument,
+even when he had taken the wrong side, to shew the force and
+dexterity of his talents. When, therefore, he perceived that his
+opponent gained ground, he had recourse to some sudden mode of
+robust sophistry. Once when I was pressing upon him with visible
+advantage, he stopped me thus:&mdash;'My dear Boswell, let's have
+no more of this; you'll make nothing of it. I'd rather have you
+whistle a Scotch tune.'</p>
+<p>Care, however, must be taken to distinguish between Johnson
+when he 'talked for victory<a href=
+"#note-358">[358]</a>,' and Johnson when
+he had no desire but to inform and illustrate. 'One of Johnson's
+principal talents (says an eminent friend of his)<a href=
+"#note-359">[359]</a> was shewn in
+maintaining the wrong side of an argument, and in a splendid
+perversion of the truth. If you could contrive to have his fair
+opinion on a subject, and without any bias from personal
+prejudice, or from a wish to be victorious in argument, it was
+wisdom itself, not only convincing, but overpowering.'</p>
+<p>He had, however, all his life habituated himself to consider
+conversation as a trial of intellectual vigour and skill<a href=
+"#note-360">[360]</a>; and to this, I
+think, we may venture to ascribe that unexampled richness and
+brilliancy which appeared in his own. As a proof at once of his
+eagerness for colloquial distinction, and his high notion of this
+eminent friend, he once addressed him thus:-'&mdash;&mdash;, we
+now have been several hours together; and you have said but one
+thing for which I envied you.'</p>
+<p>He disliked much all speculative desponding considerations,
+which tended to discourage men from diligence and exertion. He
+was in this like Dr. Shaw, the great traveller<a href=
+"#note-361">[361]</a>, who Mr. Daines
+Barrington[362] told me, used to say, 'I hate a <i>cui bono</i>
+man.' Upon being asked by a friend<a href=
+"#note-363">[363]</a> what he should
+think of a man who was apt to say <i>non est tanti</i>;-'That
+he's a stupid fellow, Sir; (answered Johnson): What would these
+<i>tanti</i> men be doing the while?' When I in a low-spirited
+fit, was talking to him with indifference of the pursuits which
+generally engage us in a course of action, and inquiring a
+<i>reason</i> for taking so much trouble; 'Sir (said he, in an
+animated tone) it is driving on the system of life.'</p>
+<p>He told me, that he was glad that I had, by General
+Oglethorpe's means, become acquainted with Dr. Shebbeare. Indeed
+that gentleman, whatever objections were made to him, had
+knowledge and abilities much above the class of ordinary writers,
+and deserves to be remembered as a respectable name in
+literature, were it only for his admirable <i>Letters on the
+English Nation</i>, under the name of 'Battista Angeloni, a
+Jesuit<a href="#note-364">[364]</a>.'</p>
+<p>Johnson and Shebbeare<a href=
+"#note-365">[365]</a> were frequently
+named together, as having in former reigns had no predilection
+for the family of Hanover. The authour of the celebrated
+<i>Heroick Epistle to Sir William Chambers</i>, introduces them
+in one line, in a list of those 'who tasted the sweets of his
+present Majesty's reign<a href=
+"#note-366">[366]</a>.' Such was
+Johnson's candid relish of the merit of that satire, that he
+allowed Dr. Goldsmith, as he told me, to read it to him from
+beginning to end, and did not refuse his praise to its
+execution<a href=
+"#note-367">[367]</a>.</p>
+<p>Goldsmith could sometimes take adventurous liberties with him,
+and escape unpunished. Beauclerk told me that when Goldsmith
+talked of a project for having a third Theatre in London, solely
+for the exhibition of new plays, in order to deliver authours
+from the supposed tyranny of managers, Johnson treated it
+slightingly; upon which Goldsmith said, 'Ay, ay, this may be
+nothing to you, who can now shelter yourself behind the corner of
+a pension;' and that Johnson bore this with good-humour.</p>
+<p>Johnson praised the Earl of Carlisle's Poems<a href=
+"#note-368">[368]</a>, which his Lordship
+had published with his name, as not disdaining to be a candidate
+for literary fame. My friend was of opinion, that when a man of
+rank appeared in that character, he deserved to have his merit
+handsomely allowed<a href=
+"#note-369">[369]</a>. In this I think he
+was more liberal than Mr. William Whitehead<a href=
+"#note-370">[370]</a>, in his <i>Elegy to
+Lord Villiers</i>, in which under the pretext of 'superiour
+toils, demanding all their care,' he discovers a jealousy of the
+great paying their court to the Muses:&mdash;</p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ '&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;to the chosen few
+ Who dare excel, thy fost'ring aid afford,
+ Their arts, their magick powers, with honours due
+ Exalt;&mdash;but be thyself what they record<a href=
+"#note-371">371</a>.'
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>Johnson had called twice on the Bishop of Killaloe<a href=
+"#note-372">[372]</a> before his Lordship
+set out for Ireland, having missed him the first time. He said,
+'It would have hung heavy on my heart if I had not seen him. No
+man ever paid more attention to another than he has done to me<a
+href="#note-373">[373]</a>; and I have
+neglected him, not wilfully, but from being otherwise occupied.
+Always, Sir, set a high value on spontaneous kindness. He whose
+inclination prompts him to cultivate your friendship of his own
+accord, will love you more than one whom you have been at pains
+to attach to you.'</p>
+<p>Johnson told me, that he was once much pleased to find that a
+carpenter, who lived near him, was very ready to shew him some
+things in his business which he wished to see: 'It was paying
+(said he) respect to literature.'</p>
+<p>I asked him if he was not dissatisfied with having so small a
+share of wealth, and none of those distinctions in the state
+which are the objects of ambition. He had only a pension of three
+hundred a year. Why was he not in such circumstances as to keep
+his coach? Why had he not some considerable office? JOHNSON,
+'Sir, I have never complained of the world<a href=
+"#note-374">[374]</a>; nor do I think
+that I have reason to complain. It is rather to be wondered at
+that I have so much. My pension is more out of the usual course
+of things than any instance that I have known. Here, Sir, was a
+man avowedly no friend to Government at the time, who got a
+pension without asking for it. I never courted the great; they
+sent for me; but I think they now give me up. They are satisfied;
+they have seen enough of me.' Upon my observing that I could not
+believe this, for they must certainly be highly pleased by his
+conversation; conscious of his own superiority, he answered, 'No,
+Sir; great lords and great ladies don't love to have their mouths
+stopped<a href="#note-375">[375]</a>.'
+This was very expressive of the effect which the force of his
+understanding and brilliancy of his fancy could not but produce;
+and, to be sure, they must have found themselves strangely
+diminished in his company. When I warmly declared how happy I was
+at all times to hear him;&mdash;'Yes, Sir, (said he); but if you
+were Lord Chancellor, it would not be so: you would then consider
+your own dignity.'</p>
+<p>There was much truth and knowledge of human nature in this
+remark. But certainly one should think, that in whatever elevated
+state of life a man who <i>knew</i> the value of the conversation
+of Johnson might be placed, though he might prudently avoid a
+situation in which he might appear lessened by comparison; yet he
+would frequently gratify himself in private with the
+participation of the rich intellectual entertainment which
+Johnson could furnish. Strange, however, it is, to consider how
+few of the great sought his society<a href=
+"#note-376">[376]</a>; so that if one
+were disposed to take occasion for satire on that account, very
+conspicuous objects present themselves. His noble friend, Lord
+Elibank, well observed, that if a great man procured an interview
+with Johnson, and did not wish to see him more, it shewed a mere
+idle curiosity, and a wretched want of relish for extraordinary
+powers of mind<a href=
+"#note-377">[377]</a>. Mrs. Thrale justly
+and wittily accounted for such conduct by saying, that Johnson's
+conversation was by much too strong for a person accustomed to
+obsequiousness and flattery; it was <i>mustard in a young child's
+mouth!</i></p>
+<p>One day, when I told him that I was a zealous Tory, but not
+enough 'according to knowledge<a href=
+"#note-378">[378]</a>,' and should be
+obliged to him for 'a reason<a href=
+"#note-379">[379]</a>,' he was so candid,
+and expressed himself so well, that I begged of him to repeat
+what he had said, and I wrote down as follows:&mdash;</p>
+<center>OF TORY AND WHIG.</center>
+<p>'A wise Tory and a wise Whig, I believe, will agree<a href=
+"#note-380">[380]</a>. Their principles
+are the same, though their modes of thinking are different. A
+high Tory makes government unintelligible: it is lost in the
+clouds. A violent Whig makes it impracticable: he is for allowing
+so much liberty to every man, that there is not power enough to
+govern any man. The prejudice of the Tory is for establishment;
+the prejudice of the Whig is for innovation. A Tory does not wish
+to give more real power to Government; but that Government should
+have more reverence. Then they differ as to the Church. The Tory
+is not for giving more legal power to the Clergy, but wishes they
+should have a considerable influence, founded on the opinion of
+mankind; the Whig is for limiting and watching them with a narrow
+jealousy.'</p>
+<p>To MR. PERKINS.</p>
+<center>'SIR,</center>
+<p>However often I have seen you, I have hitherto forgotten the
+note, but I have now sent it: with my good wishes for the
+prosperity of you and your partner<a href=
+"#note-381">[381]</a>, of whom, from our
+short conversation, I could not judge otherwise than
+favourably.</p>
+<p>I am, Sir,</p>
+<p>Your most humble servant,</p>
+<center>SAM. JOHNSON.</center>
+<p>June 2, 1781.'</p>
+<p>On Saturday, June 2, I set out for Scotland, and had promised
+to pay a visit in my way, as I sometimes did, at Southill, in
+Bedfordshire, at the hospitable mansion of 'Squire Dilly, the
+elder brother of my worthy friends, the booksellers, in the
+Poultry. Dr. Johnson agreed to be of the party this year, with
+Mr. Charles Dilly and me, and to go and see Lord Bute's seat at
+Luton Hoe. He talked little to us in the carriage, being chiefly
+occupied in reading Dr. Watson's<a href=
+"#note-382">[382]</a> second volume of
+<i>Chemical Essays</i><a href=
+"#note-383">[383]</a>, which he liked
+very well, and his own <i>Prince of Abyssinia</i>, on which he
+seemed to be intensely fixed; having told us, that he had not
+looked at it since it was first published. I happened to take it
+out of my pocket this day, and he seized upon it with avidity. He
+pointed out to me the following remarkable passage<a href=
+"#note-384">[384]</a>:&mdash;</p>
+<p>'By what means (said the prince) are the Europeans thus
+powerful; or why, since they can so easily visit Asia and Africa
+for trade or conquest, cannot the Asiaticks and Africans invade
+their coasts, plant colonies in their ports, and give laws to
+their natural princes? The same wind that carries them back would
+bring us thither.' 'They are more powerful, Sir, than we,
+(answered Imlac,) because they are wiser. Knowledge will always
+predominate over ignorance, as man governs the other animals. But
+why their knowledge is more than ours, I know not what reason can
+be given, but the unsearchable will of the Supreme Being.'</p>
+<p>He said, 'This, Sir, no man can explain otherwise.'</p>
+<p>We stopped at Welwyn, where I wished much to see, in company
+with Dr. Johnson, the residence of the authour of <i>Night
+Thoughts</i>, which was then possessed by his son, Mr. Young.
+Here some address was requisite, for I was not acquainted with
+Mr. Young, and had I proposed to Dr. Johnson that we should send
+to him, he would have checked my wish, and perhaps been offended.
+I therefore concerted with Mr. Dilly, that I should steal away
+from Dr. Johnson and him, and try what reception I could procure
+from Mr. Young; if unfavourable, nothing was to be said; but if
+agreeable, I should return and notify it to them. I hastened to
+Mr. Young's, found he was at home, sent in word that a gentleman
+desired to wait upon him, and was shewn into a parlour, where he
+and a young lady, his daughter, were sitting. He appeared to be a
+plain, civil, country gentleman; and when I begged pardon for
+presuming to trouble him, but that I wished much to see his
+place, if he would give me leave; he behaved very courteously,
+and answered, 'By all means, Sir; we are just going to drink tea;
+will you sit down?' I thanked him, but said, that Dr. Johnson had
+come with me from London, and I must return to the inn and drink
+tea with him; that my name was Boswell, I had travelled with him
+in the Hebrides. 'Sir, (said he) I should think it a great honour
+to see Dr. Johnson here. Will you allow me to send for him?'
+Availing myself of this opening, I said that 'I would go myself
+and bring him, when he had drunk tea; he knew nothing of my
+calling here.' Having been thus successful, I hastened back to
+the inn, and informed Dr. Johnson that 'Mr. Young, son of Dr.
+Young, the authour of <i>Night Thoughts</i>, whom I had just
+left, desired to have the honour of seeing him at the house where
+his father lived.' Dr. Johnson luckily made no inquiry how this
+invitation had arisen, but agreed to go, and when we entered Mr.
+Young's parlour, he addressed him with a very polite bow, 'Sir, I
+had a curiosity to come and see this place. I had the honour to
+know that great man<a href=
+"#note-385">[385]</a>, your father.' We
+went into the garden, where we found a gravel walk, on each side
+of which was a row of trees, planted by Dr. Young, which formed a
+handsome Gothick arch; Dr. Johnson called it a fine grove. I
+beheld it with reverence.</p>
+<p>We sat some time in the summer-house, on the outside wall of
+which was inscribed, <i>'Ambulantes in horto audiebant vocem
+Dei</i><a href="#note-386">[386]</a>;'
+and in reference to a brook by which it is situated, <i>'Vivendi
+rect&egrave; qui prorogat horam</i><a href=
+"#note-387">[387]</a>,' &amp;c. I said to
+Mr. Young, that I had been told his father was cheerful<a href=
+"#note-388">[388]</a>. 'Sir, (said he) he
+was too well-bred a man not to be cheerful in company; but he was
+gloomy when alone. He never was cheerful after my mother's death,
+and he had met with many disappointments.' Dr. Johnson observed
+to me afterwards, 'That this was no favourable account of Dr.
+Young; for it is not becoming in a man to have so little
+acquiescence in the ways of Providence, as to be gloomy because
+he has not obtained as much preferment as he expected<a href=
+"#note-389">[389]</a>; nor to continue
+gloomy for the loss of his wife. Grief has its time<a href=
+"#note-390">[390]</a>.' The last part of
+this censure was theoretically made. Practically, we know that
+grief for the loss of a wife may be continued very long, in
+proportion as affection has been sincere. No man knew this better
+than Dr. Johnson.</p>
+<p>We went into the church, and looked at the monument erected by
+Mr. Young to his father. Mr. Young mentioned an anecdote, that
+his father had received several thousand pounds of
+subscription-money for his <i>Universal Passion</i>, but had lost
+it in the South-Sea<a href=
+"#note-391">[391]</a>. Dr. Johnson
+thought this must be a mistake; for he had never seen a
+subscription-book.</p>
+<p>Upon the road we talked of the uncertainty of profit with
+which authours and booksellers engage in the publication of
+literary works. JOHNSON. 'My judgement I have found is no certain
+rule as to the sale of a book.' BOSWELL. 'Pray, Sir, have you
+been much plagued with authours sending you their works to
+revise?' JOHNSON. 'No, Sir; I have been thought a sour, surly
+fellow.' BOSWELL. 'Very lucky for you, Sir,&mdash;in that
+respect.' I must however observe, that notwithstanding what he
+now said, which he no doubt imagined at the time to be the fact,
+there was, perhaps, no man who more frequently yielded to the
+solicitations even of very obscure authours, to read their
+manuscripts, or more liberally assisted them with advice and
+correction<a href=
+"#note-392">[392]</a>.</p>
+<p>He found himself very happy at 'Squire Dilly's, where there is
+always abundance of excellent fare, and hearty welcome.</p>
+<p>On Sunday, June 3, we all went to Southill church, which is
+very near to Mr. Dilly's house. It being the first Sunday of the
+month, the holy sacrament was administered, and I staid to
+partake of it. When I came afterwards into Dr. Johnson's room, he
+said, 'You did right to stay and receive the communion; I had not
+thought of it.' This seemed to imply that he did not choose to
+approach the altar without a previous preparation, as to which
+good men entertain different opinions, some holding that it is
+irreverent to partake of that ordinance without considerable
+premeditation; others, that whoever is a sincere Christian, and
+in a proper frame of mind to discharge any other ritual duty of
+our religion, may, without scruple, discharge this most solemn
+one. A middle notion I believe to be the just one, which is, that
+communicants need not think a long train of preparatory forms
+indispensibly necessary; but neither should they rashly and
+lightly venture upon so aweful and mysterious an institution.
+Christians must judge each for himself, what degree of retirement
+and self-examination is necessary upon each occasion.</p>
+<p>Being in a frame of mind which, I hope for the felicity of
+human nature, many experience,&mdash;in fine weather,&mdash;at
+the country house of a friend,&mdash;consoled and elevated by
+pious exercises,&mdash;I expressed myself with an unrestrained
+fervour to my 'Guide, Philosopher, and Friend<a href=
+"#note-393">[393]</a>;' 'My dear Sir, I
+would fain be a good man; and I am very good now<a href=
+"#note-394">[394]</a>. I fear GOD, and
+honour the King, I wish to do no ill, and to be benevolent to all
+mankind.' He looked at me with a benignant indulgence; but took
+occasion to give me wise and salutary caution. 'Do not, Sir,
+accustom yourself to trust to <i>impressions</i>. There is a
+middle state of mind between conviction and hypocrisy, of which
+many are conscious<a href=
+"#note-395">[395]</a>. By trusting to
+impressions, a man may gradually come to yield to them, and at
+length be subject to them, so as not to be a free agent, or what
+is the same thing in effect, to <i>suppose</i> that he is not a
+free agent. A man who is in that state, should not be suffered to
+live; if he declares he cannot help acting in a particular way,
+and is irresistibly impelled, there can be no confidence in him,
+no more than in a tyger. But, Sir, no man believes himself to be
+impelled irresistibly; we know that he who says he believes it,
+lies. Favourable impressions at particular moments, as to the
+state of our souls, may be deceitful and dangerous. In general no
+man can be sure of his acceptance with God; some, indeed, may
+have had it revealed to them. St. Paul, who wrought miracles, may
+have had a miracle wrought on himself, and may have obtained
+supernatural assurance of pardon, and mercy, and beatitude; yet
+St. Paul, though he expresses strong hope, also expresses fear,
+lest having preached to others, he himself should be a
+cast-away<a href=
+"#note-396">[396]</a>.'</p>
+<p>The opinion of a learned Bishop of our acquaintance, as to
+there being merit in religious faith, being
+mentioned;&mdash;JOHNSON. 'Why, yes, Sir, the most licentious
+man, were hell open before him, would not take the most beautiful
+strumpet to his arms. We must, as the Apostle says, live by
+faith, not by sight<a href=
+"#note-397">[397]</a>.'</p>
+<p>I talked to him of original sin<a href=
+"#note-398">[398]</a>, in consequence of
+the fall of man, and of the atonement made by our SAVIOUR. After
+some conversation, which he desired me to remember, he, at my
+request, dictated to me as follows:&mdash;</p>
+<p>'With respect to original sin, the inquiry is not necessary;
+for whatever is the cause of human corruption, men are evidently
+and confessedly so corrupt, that all the laws of heaven and earth
+are insufficient to restrain them from crimes.</p>
+<p>'Whatever difficulty there may be in the conception of
+vicarious punishments, it is an opinion which has had possession
+of mankind in all ages. There is no nation that has not used the
+practice of sacrifices. Whoever, therefore, denies the propriety
+of vicarious punishments, holds an opinion which the sentiments
+and practice of mankind have contradicted, from the beginning of
+the world. The great sacrifice for the sins of mankind was
+offered at the death of the MESSIAH, who is called in scripture
+"The Lamb of God, that taketh away the sins<a href=
+"#note-399">[399]</a> of the world." To
+judge of the reasonableness of the scheme of redemption, it must
+be considered as necessary to the government of the universe,
+that GOD should make known his perpetual and irreconcileable
+detestation of moral evil. He might indeed punish, and punish
+only the offenders; but as the end of punishment is not revenge
+of crimes, but propagation of virtue, it was more becoming the
+Divine clemency to find another manner of proceeding, less
+destructive to man, and at least equally powerful to promote
+goodness. The end of punishment is to reclaim and warn.
+<i>That</i> punishment will both reclaim and warn, which shews
+evidently such abhorrence of sin in GOD, as may deter us from it,
+or strike us with dread of vengeance when we have committed it.
+This is effected by vicarious punishment. Nothing could more
+testify the opposition between the nature of GOD and moral evil,
+or more amply display his justice, to men and angels, to all
+orders and successions of beings, than that it was necessary for
+the highest and purest nature, even for DIVINITY itself, to
+pacify the demands of vengeance, by a painful death; of which the
+natural effect will be, that when justice is appeased, there is a
+proper place for the exercise of mercy; and that such
+propitiation shall supply, in some degree, the imperfections of
+our obedience, and the inefficacy of our repentance: for,
+obedience and repentance, such as we can perform, are still
+necessary. Our SAVIOUR has told us, that he did not come to
+destroy the law, but to fulfill; to fulfill the typical law, by
+the performance of what those types had foreshewn; and the moral
+law, by precepts of greater purity and higher exaltation.'</p>
+<p>[Here he said, 'GOD bless you with it.' I acknowledged myself
+much obliged to him; but I begged that he would go on as to the
+propitiation being the chief object of our most holy faith. He
+then dictated this one other paragraph.]</p>
+<p>'The peculiar doctrine of Christianity is, that of an
+universal sacrifice, and perpetual propitiation. Other prophets
+only proclaimed the will and the threatenings of GOD. CHRIST
+satisfied his justice<a href=
+"#note-400">[400]</a>.'</p>
+<p>The Reverend Mr. Palmer<a href=
+"#note-401">[401]</a>, Fellow of Queen's
+College, Cambridge, dined with us. He expressed a wish that a
+better provision were made for parish-clerks. JOHNSON. 'Yes, Sir,
+a parish-clerk should be a man who is able to make a will, or
+write a letter for any body in the parish.'</p>
+<p>I mentioned Lord Monboddo's notion<a href=
+"#note-402">[402]</a> that the ancient
+Egyptians, with all their learning, and all their arts, were not
+only black, but woolly-haired. Mr. Palmer asked how did it appear
+upon examining the mummies? Dr. Johnson approved of this test<a
+href="#note-403">[403]</a>.</p>
+<p>Although upon most occasions<a href=
+"#note-404">[404]</a> I never heard a
+more strenuous advocate for the advantages of wealth, than Dr.
+Johnson: he this day, I know not from what caprice, took the
+other side. 'I have not observed (said he) that men of very large
+fortunes enjoy any thing extraordinary that makes happiness. What
+has the Duke of Bedford? What has the Duke of Devonshire? The
+only great instance that I have ever known of the enjoyment of
+wealth was, that of Jamaica Dawkins, who, going to visit Palmyra,
+and hearing that the way was infested by robbers, hired a troop
+of Turkish horse to guard him<a href=
+"#note-405">[405]</a>.'</p>
+<p>Dr. Gibbons<a href=
+"#note-406">[406]</a>, the Dissenting
+minister, being mentioned, he said, 'I took to Dr. Gibbons.' And
+addressing himself to Mr. Charles Dilly, added, 'I shall be glad
+to see him. Tell him, if he'll call on me, and dawdle<a href=
+"#note-407">[407]</a> over a dish of tea
+in an afternoon, I shall take it kind.'</p>
+<p>The Reverend Mr. Smith, Vicar of Southill, a very respectable
+man, with a very agreeable family, sent an invitation to us to
+drink tea. I remarked Dr. Johnson's very respectful<a href=
+"#note-408">[408]</a> politeness. Though
+always fond of changing the scene, he said, 'We must have Mr.
+Dilly's leave. We cannot go from your house, Sir, without your
+permission.' We all went, and were well satisfied with our visit.
+I however remember nothing particular, except a nice distinction
+which Dr. Johnson made with respect to the power of memory,
+maintaining that forgetfulness was a man's own fault<a href=
+"#note-409">[409]</a>. 'To remember and
+to recollect (said he) are different things. A man has not the
+power to recollect what is not in his mind; but when a thing is
+in his mind he may remember it.' The remark was occasioned by my
+leaning back on a chair, which a little before I had perceived to
+be broken, and pleading forgetfulness as an excuse. 'Sir, (said
+he,) its being broken was certainly in your mind<a href=
+"#note-410">[410]</a>.'</p>
+<p>When I observed that a housebreaker was in general very
+timorous; JOHNSON. 'No wonder, Sir; he is afraid of being shot
+getting <i>into</i> a house, or hanged when he has got <i>out</i>
+of it.'</p>
+<p>He told us, that he had in one day written six sheets of a
+translation from the French<a href=
+"#note-411">[411]</a>, adding, 'I should
+be glad to see it now. I wish that I had copies of all the
+pamphlets written against me, as it is said Pope had. Had I known
+that I should make so much noise in the world, I should have been
+at pains to collect them. I believe there is hardly a day in
+which there is not something about me in the newspapers.'</p>
+<p>On Monday, June 4, we all went to Luton-Hoe, to see Lord
+Bute's magnificent seat<a href=
+"#note-412">[412]</a>, for which I had
+obtained a ticket. As we entered the park, I talked in a high
+style of my old friendship with Lord Mountstuart<a href=
+"#note-413">[413]</a>, and said, 'I shall
+probably be much at this place.' The Sage, aware of human
+vicissitudes, gently checked me: 'Don't you be too sure of that.'
+He made two or three peculiar observations; as when shewn the
+botanical garden, 'Is not every garden a botanical garden?' When
+told that there was a shrubbery to the extent of several miles:
+'That is making a very foolish use of the ground; a little of it
+is very well.' When it was proposed that we should walk on the
+pleasure-ground; 'Don't let us fatigue ourselves. Why should we
+walk there? Here's a fine tree, let's get to the top of it.' But
+upon the whole, he was very much pleased. He said, 'This is one
+of the places I do not regret having come to see. It is a very
+stately place, indeed; in the house magnificence is not
+sacrificed to convenience, nor convenience to magnificence. The
+library is very splendid: the dignity of the rooms is very great;
+and the quantity of pictures is beyond expectation, beyond
+hope.'</p>
+<p>It happened without any previous concert, that we visited the
+seat of Lord Bute upon the King's birthday; we dined and drank
+his Majesty's health at an inn, in the village of Luton.</p>
+<p>In the evening I put him in mind of his promise to favour me
+with a copy of his celebrated Letter to the Earl of Chesterfield,
+and he was at last pleased to comply with this earnest request,
+by dictating it to me from his memory; for he believed that he
+himself had no copy<a href=
+"#note-414">[414]</a>. There was an
+animated glow in his countenance while he thus recalled his
+high-minded indignation.</p>
+<p>He laughed heartily at a ludicrous action in the Court of
+Session, in which I was Counsel. The Society of
+<i>Procurators</i>, or Attornies, entitled to practise in the
+inferiour courts at Edinburgh, had obtained a royal charter, in
+which they had taken care to have their ancient designation of
+Procurators changed into that of <i>Solicitors</i>, from a
+notion, as they supposed, that it was more genteel<a href=
+"#note-415">[415]</a>; and this new title
+they displayed by a publick advertisement for a <i>General
+Meeting</i> at their HALL.</p>
+<p>It has been said, that the Scottish nation is not
+distinguished for humour; and, indeed, what happened on this
+occasion may in some degree justify the remark: for although this
+society had contrived to make themselves a very prominent object
+for the ridicule of such as might stoop to it, the only joke to
+which it gave rise, was the following paragraph, sent to the
+newspaper called <i>The Caledonian Mercury</i>:&mdash;</p>
+<p>'A correspondent informs us, that the Worshipful Society of
+<i>Chaldeans</i>, <i>Cadies</i><a href=
+"#note-416">[416]</a>, or <i>Running
+Stationers</i> of this city are resolved, in imitation, and
+encouraged by the singular success of their brethren, of an
+equally respectable Society, to apply for a Charter of their
+Privileges, particularly of the sole privilege of PROCURING, in
+the most extensive sense of the word<a href=
+"#note-417">[417]</a>, exclusive of
+chairmen, porters, penny-post men, and other <i>inferiour</i>
+ranks; their brethren the R&mdash;Y&mdash;L S&mdash;LL&mdash;RS,
+<i>alias</i> P&mdash;C&mdash;RS, <i>before the</i> INFERIOUR
+Courts of this City, always excepted.</p>
+<p>'Should the Worshipful Society be successful, they are farther
+resolved not to be <i>puffed up</i> thereby, but to demean
+themselves with more equanimity and decency than their
+<i>R&mdash;y&mdash;l, learned</i>, and <i>very modest</i>
+brethren above mentioned have done, upon their late dignification
+and exaltation.'</p>
+<p>A majority of the members of the Society prosecuted Mr.
+Robertson, the publisher of the paper, for damages; and the first
+judgement of the whole Court very wisely dismissed the action:
+<i>Solventur risu tabulae, tu missus abibis</i><a href=
+"#note-418">[418]</a>. But a new trial or
+review was granted upon a petition, according to the forms in
+Scotland. This petition I was engaged to answer, and Dr. Johnson
+with great alacrity furnished me this evening with what
+follows:&mdash;</p>
+<p>'All injury is either of the person, the fortune, or the fame.
+Now it is a certain thing, it is proverbially known, that <i>a
+jest breaks no bones</i>. They never have gained half-a-crown
+less in the whole profession since this mischievous paragraph has
+appeared; and, as to their reputation, What is their reputation
+but an instrument of getting money? If, therefore, they have lost
+no money, the question upon reputation may be answered by a very
+old position,&mdash;<i>De minimis non curat Praetor</i>.</p>
+<p>'Whether there was, or was not, an <i>animus injuriandi</i>,
+is not worth inquiring, if no <i>injuria</i> can be proved. But
+the truth is, there was no <i>animus injuriandi</i>. It was only
+an <i>animus irritandi<a href=
+"#note-419">[419]</a></i>, which,
+happening to be exercised upon a <i>genus irritabile</i>,
+produced unexpected violence of resentment. Their irritability
+arose only from an opinion of their own importance, and their
+delight in their new exaltation. What might have been borne by a
+<i>Procurator</i> could not be borne by a <i>Solicitor</i>. Your
+Lordships well know, that <i>honores mutant mores</i>. Titles and
+dignities play strongly on the fancy. As a madman is apt to think
+himself grown suddenly great, so he that grows suddenly great is
+apt to borrow a little from the madman. To co-operate with their
+resentment would be to promote their phrenzy; nor is it possible
+to guess to what they might proceed, if to the new title of
+Solicitor, should be added the elation of victory and
+triumph.</p>
+<p>'We consider your Lordships as the protectors of our rights,
+and the guardians of our virtues; but believe it not included in
+your high office, that you should flatter our vices, or solace
+our vanity: and, as vanity only dictates this prosecution, it is
+humbly hoped your Lordships will dismiss it.</p>
+<p>'If every attempt, however light or ludicrous, to lessen
+another's reputation, is to be punished by a judicial sentence,
+what punishment can be sufficiently severe for him who attempts
+to diminish the reputation of the Supreme Court of Justice, by
+reclaiming upon a cause already determined, without any change in
+the state of the question? Does it not imply hopes that the
+Judges will change their opinion? Is not uncertainty and
+inconstancy in the highest degree disreputable to a Court? Does
+it not suppose, that the former judgement was temerarious or
+negligent? Does it not lessen the confidence of the publick? Will
+it not be said, that <i>jus est aut incognitum aut vagum?</i> and
+will not the consequence be drawn, <i>misera est servitus<a href=
+"#note-420">[420]</a>?</i> Will not the
+rules of action be obscure? Will not he who knows himself wrong
+to-day, hope that the Courts of Justice will think him right
+to-morrow? Surely, my Lords, these are attempts of dangerous
+tendency, which the Solicitors, as men versed in the law, should
+have foreseen and avoided. It was natural for an ignorant printer
+to appeal from the Lord Ordinary; but from lawyers, the
+descendants of lawyers, who have practised for three hundred
+years, and have now raised themselves to a higher denomination,
+it might be expected, that they should know the reverence due to
+a judicial determination; and, having been once dismissed, should
+sit down in silence.'</p>
+<p>I am ashamed to mention, that the Court, by a plurality of
+voices, without having a single additional circumstance before
+them, reversed their own judgement, made a serious matter of this
+dull and foolish joke, and adjudged Mr. Robertson to pay to the
+Society five pounds (sterling money) and costs of suit. The
+decision will seem strange to English lawyers.</p>
+<p>On Tuesday, June 5, Johnson was to return to London. He was
+very pleasant at breakfast; I mentioned a friend of mine having
+resolved never to marry a pretty woman. JOHNSON. 'Sir, it is a
+very foolish resolution to resolve not to marry a pretty woman.
+Beauty is of itself very estimable. No, Sir, I would prefer a
+pretty woman, unless there are objections to her. A pretty woman
+may be foolish; a pretty woman may be wicked; a pretty woman may
+not like me. But there is no such danger in marrying a pretty
+woman as is apprehended: she will not be persecuted if she does
+not invite persecution. A pretty woman, if she has a mind to be
+wicked, can find a readier way than another; and that is
+all.'</p>
+<p>I accompanied him in Mr. Dilly's chaise to Shefford, where
+talking of Lord Bute's never going to Scotland, he said, 'As an
+Englishman, I should wish all the Scotch gentlemen should be
+educated in England; Scotland would become a province; they would
+spend all their rents in England.' This is a subject of much
+consequence, and much delicacy. The advantage of an English
+education is unquestionably very great to Scotch gentlemen of
+talents and ambition; and regular visits to Scotland, and perhaps
+other means, might be effectually used to prevent them from being
+totally estranged from their native country, any more than a
+Cumberland or Northumberland gentleman who has been educated in
+the South of England. I own, indeed, that it is no small
+misfortune for Scotch gentlemen, who have neither talents nor
+ambition, to be educated in England, where they may be perhaps
+distinguished only by a nick-name, lavish their fortune in giving
+expensive entertainments to those who laugh at them, and saunter
+about as mere idle insignificant hangers on even upon the foolish
+great; when if they had been judiciously brought up at home, they
+might have been comfortable and creditable members of
+society.</p>
+<p>At Shefford I had another affectionate parting from my revered
+friend, who was taken up by the Bedford coach and carried to the
+metropolis. I went with Messieurs Dilly, to see some friends at
+Bedford; dined with the officers of the militia of the county,
+and next day proceeded on my journey.</p>
+<p>'To BENNET LANGTON, ESQ.</p>
+<center>'DEAR SIR,</center>
+<p>'How welcome your account of yourself and your invitation to
+your new house was to me, I need not tell you, who consider our
+friendship not only as formed by choice, but as matured by time.
+We have been now long enough acquainted to have many images in
+common, and therefore to have a source of conversation which
+neither the learning nor the wit of a new companion can
+supply.</p>
+<p>'My <i>Lives</i> are now published; and if you will tell me
+whither I shall send them, that they may come to you, I will take
+care that you shall not be without them.</p>
+<p>'You will, perhaps, be glad to hear, that Mrs. Thrale is
+disencumbered of her brewhouse; and that it seemed to the
+purchaser so far from an evil, that he was content to give for it
+an hundred and thirty-five thousand pounds. Is the nation
+ruined?</p>
+<p>'Please to make my respectful compliments to Lady Rothes, and
+keep me in the memory of all the little dear family, particularly
+pretty Mrs. Jane.<a href=
+"#note-421">[421]</a></p>
+<p>'I am, Sir,</p>
+<p>'Your affectionate humble servant, 'SAM. JOHNSON.'</p>
+<p>'Bolt-Court, June 16, 1781.'</p>
+<p>Johnson's charity to the poor was uniform and extensive, both
+from inclination and principle. He not only bestowed liberally
+out of his own purse, but what is more difficult as well as rare,
+would beg from others, when he had proper objects in view. This
+he did judiciously as well as humanely. Mr. Philip Metcalfe<a
+href="#note-422">[422]</a> tells me, that
+when he has asked him for some money for persons in distress, and
+Mr. Metcalfe has offered what Johnson thought too much, he
+insisted on taking less, saying 'No, no, Sir; we must not
+<i>pamper</i> them.'</p>
+<p>I am indebted to Mr. Malone, one of Sir Joshua Reynolds's
+executors, for the following note, which was found among his
+papers after his death, and which, we may presume, his unaffected
+modesty prevented him from communicating to me with the other
+letters from Dr. Johnson with which he was pleased to furnish me.
+However slight in itself, as it does honour to that illustrious
+painter, and most amiable man, I am happy to introduce it.</p>
+<p>'To SIR JOSHUA REYNOLDS. 'DEAR SIR,</p>
+<p>'It was not before yesterday that I received your splendid
+benefaction. To a hand so liberal in distributing, I hope nobody
+will envy the power of acquiring.</p>
+<p>'I am, dear Sir,</p>
+<p>Your obliged and most humble servant, SAM, JOHNSON. June 23,
+1781.'</p>
+<p>'To THOMAS ASTLE, Esq.<a href=
+"#note-423">[423]</a></p>
+<center>'SIR,</center>
+<p>'I am ashamed that you have been forced to call so often for
+your books, but it has been by no fault on either side. They have
+never been out of my hands, nor have I ever been at home without
+seeing you; for to see a man so skilful in the antiquities of my
+country, is an opportunity of improvement not willingly to be
+missed.</p>
+<p>'Your notes on Alfred<a href=
+"#note-424">[424]</a> appear to me very
+judicious and accurate, but they are too few. Many things
+familiar to you, are unknown to me, and to most others; and you
+must not think too favourably of your readers: by supposing them
+knowing, you will leave them ignorant. Measure of land, and value
+of money, it is of great importance to state with care. Had the
+Saxons any gold coin?</p>
+<p>'I have much curiosity after the manners and transactions of
+the middle ages, but have wanted either diligence or opportunity,
+or both. You, Sir, have great opportunities, and I wish you both
+diligence and success.</p>
+<p>'I am, Sir, &amp;c. SAM. JOHNSON. July 17, 1781.'</p>
+<p>The following curious anecdote I insert in Dr. Burney's own
+words:&mdash;</p>
+<p>'Dr. Burney related to Dr. Johnson the partiality which his
+writings had excited in a friend of Dr. Burney's, the late Mr.
+Bewley, well known in Norfolk by the name of the <i>Philosopher
+of Massingham</i><a href=
+"#note-425">[425]</a>: who, from the
+<i>Ramblers</i> and Plan of his <i>Dictionary</i>, and long
+before the authour's fame was established by the
+<i>Dictionary</i> itself, or any other work, had conceived such a
+reverence for him, that he urgently begged Dr. Burney to give him
+the cover of the first letter he had received from him, as a
+relick of so estimable a writer. This was in 1755. In 1760<a
+href="#note-426">[426]</a>, when Dr.
+Burney visited Dr. Johnson at the Temple in London, where he had
+then Chambers, he happened to arrive there before he was up; and
+being shewn into the room where he was to breakfast, finding
+himself alone, he examined the contents of the apartment, to try
+whether he could undiscovered steal any thing to send to his
+friend Bewley, as another relick of the admirable Dr. Johnson.
+But finding nothing better to his purpose, he cut some bristles
+off his hearth-broom, and enclosed them in a letter to his
+country enthusiast, who received them with due reverence. The
+Doctor was so sensible of the honour done him by a man of genius
+and science, to whom he was an utter stranger, that he said to
+Dr. Burney, "Sir, there is no man possessed of the smallest
+portion of modesty, but must be flattered with the admiration of
+such a man. I'll give him a set of my <i>Lives</i>, if he will do
+me the honour to accept of them<a href=
+"#note-427">[427]</a>." In this he kept
+his word; and Dr. Burney had not only the pleasure of gratifying
+his friend with a present more worthy of his acceptance than the
+segment from the hearth-broom, but soon after of introducing him
+to Dr. Johnson himself in Bolt-court, with whom he had the
+satisfaction of conversing a considerable time, not a fortnight
+before his death; which happened in St. Martin's-street, during
+his visit to Dr. Burney, in the house where the great Sir Isaac
+Newton had lived and died before.'</p>
+<p>In one of his little memorandum-books is the following
+minute:&mdash;</p>
+<p>'August 9, 3 P.M., aetat. 72, in the summer-house at
+Streatham. After innumerable resolutions formed and neglected, I
+have retired hither, to plan a life of greater diligence, in hope
+that I may yet be useful, and be daily better prepared to appear
+before my Creator and my Judge, from whose infinite mercy I
+humbly call for assistance and support.</p>
+<p>'My purpose is,</p>
+<p>'To pass eight hours every day in some serious employment.</p>
+<p>'Having prayed, I purpose to employ the next six weeks upon
+the Italian language, for my settled study.'</p>
+<p>How venerably pious does he appear in these moments of
+solitude, and how spirited are his resolutions for the
+improvement of his mind, even in elegant literature, at a very
+advanced period of life, and when afflicted with many
+complaints<a href=
+"#note-428">[428]</a>.</p>
+<p>In autumn he went to Oxford, Birmingham, Lichfield, and
+Ashbourne, for which very good reasons might be given in the
+conjectural yet positive manner of writers, who are proud to
+account for every event which they relate<a href=
+"#note-429">[429]</a>. He himself,
+however, says,</p>
+<p>'The motives of my journey I hardly know; I omitted it last
+year, and am not willing to miss it again<a href=
+"#note-430">[430]</a>.'</p>
+<p>But some good considerations arise, amongst which is the
+kindly recollection of Mr. Hector, surgeon at Birmingham:</p>
+<p>'Hector is likewise an old friend, the only companion of my
+childhood that passed through the school with me. We have always
+loved one another; perhaps we may be made better by some serious
+conversation, of which however I have no distinct hope.'</p>
+<p>He says too,</p>
+<p>'At Lichfield, my native place, I hope to shew a good example
+by frequent attendance on publick worship.'</p>
+<p>My correspondence with him during the rest of this year was I
+know not why very scanty, and all on my side. I wrote him one
+letter to introduce Mr. Sinclair (now Sir John), the member for
+Caithness, to his acquaintance; and informed him in another that
+my wife had again been affected with alarming symptoms of
+illness.</p>
+<p>1782: AETAT. 73.&mdash;In 1782, his complaints increased, and
+the history of his life this year, is little more than a mournful
+recital of the variations of his illness, in the midst of which,
+however, it will appear from his letters, that the powers of his
+mind were in no degree impaired.</p>
+<center>'TO JAMES BOSWELL, ESQ.</center>
+<center>'DEAR SIR,</center>
+<p>'I sit down to answer your letter on the same day in which I
+received it, and am pleased that my first letter of the year is
+to you. No man ought to be at ease while he knows himself in the
+wrong; and I have not satisfied myself with my long silence. The
+letter relating to Mr. Sinclair, however, was, I believe, never
+brought.</p>
+<p>'My health has been tottering this last year; and I can give
+no very laudable account of my time. I am always hoping to do
+better than I have ever hitherto done.</p>
+<p>'My journey to Ashbourne and Staffordshire was not pleasant;
+for what enjoyment has a sick man visiting the sick<a href=
+"#note-431">[431]</a>?&mdash;Shall we
+ever have another frolick like our journey to the Hebrides?</p>
+<p>'I hope that dear Mrs. Boswell will surmount her complaints;
+in losing her you would lose your anchor, and be tost, without
+stability, by the waves of life<a href=
+"#note-432">[432]</a>. I wish both her
+and you very many years, and very happy.</p>
+<p>'For some months past I have been so withdrawn from the world,
+that I can send you nothing particular. All your friends,
+however, are well, and will be glad of your return to London.</p>
+<p>'I am, dear Sir,</p>
+<p>'Yours most affectionately,</p>
+<center>'SAM. JOHNSON.'</center>
+<p>'January 5, 1782.'</p>
+<p>At a time when he was less able than he had once been to
+sustain a shock, he was suddenly deprived of Mr. Levett, which
+event he thus communicated to Dr. Lawrence:&mdash;</p>
+<center>'SIR,</center>
+<p>'Our old friend, Mr. Levett, who was last night eminently
+cheerful, died this morning. The man who lay in the same room,
+hearing an uncommon noise, got up and tried to make him speak,
+but without effect. He then called Mr. Holder, the apothecary,
+who, though when he came he thought him dead, opened a vein, but
+could draw no blood. So has ended the long life of a very useful
+and very blameless man.</p>
+<p>'I am, Sir,</p>
+<p>'Your most humble servant,</p>
+<center>'SAM. JOHNSON.'</center>
+<p>'Jan. 17, 1782.'</p>
+<p>In one of his memorandum-books in my possession, is the
+following entry:&mdash;</p>
+<p>'January 20, Sunday. Robert Levett was buried in the
+church-yard of Bridewell, between one and two in the afternoon.
+He died on Thursday 17, about seven in the morning, by an
+instantaneous death. He was an old and faithful friend; I have
+known him from about 46. <i>Commendavi</i>. May GOD have mercy on
+him. May he have mercy on me.'</p>
+<p>Such was Johnson's affectionate regard for Levett<a href=
+"#note-433">[433]</a>, that he honoured
+his memory with the following pathetick verses:&mdash;</p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'Condemd'd to Hope's delusive mine,
+ As on we toil from day to day,
+ By sudden blast or slow decline
+ Our social comforts drop away.
+ Well try'd through many a varying year,
+ See LEVETT to the grave descend;
+ Officious, innocent, sincere,
+ Of every friendless name the friend<a href=
+"#note-434">434</a>.
+ Yet still he fills affection's eye,
+ Obscurely wise<a href=
+"#note-435">435</a>, and coarsely kind;
+ Nor, letter'd arrogance<a href=
+"#note-436">436</a>, deny
+ Thy praise to merit unrefin'd.
+ When fainting Nature call'd for aid,
+ And hov'ring Death prepar'd the blow,
+ His vigorous remedy display'd
+ The power of art without the show.
+ In Misery's darkest caverns known,
+ His ready help was ever nigh,
+ Where hopeless Anguish pour'd his groan,
+ And lonely want retir'd to die<a href=
+"#note-437">437</a>.
+ No summons mock'd by chill delay,
+ No petty gains disdain'd by pride;
+ The modest wants of every day
+ The toil of every day supply'd.
+ His virtues walk'd their narrow round,
+ Nor made a pause, nor left a void;
+ And sure the Eternal Master found
+ His single talent well employ'd.
+ The busy day, the peaceful night<a href=
+"#note-438">438</a>,
+ Unfelt, uncounted, glided by;
+ His frame was firm, his powers were bright,
+ Though now his eightieth year was nigh<a href=
+"#note-439">439</a>.
+ Then, with no throbs of fiery pain,
+ No cold gradations of decay,
+ Death broke at once the vital chain,
+ And freed his soul the nearest way.'
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>In one of Johnson's registers of this year, there occurs the
+following curious passage:&mdash;</p>
+<p>'Jan. 20<a href="#note-440">[440]</a>.
+The Ministry is dissolved. I prayed with Francis and gave
+thanks<a href="#note-441">[441]</a>.'</p>
+<p>It has been the subject of discussion, whether there are two
+distinct particulars mentioned here? or that we are to understand
+the giving of thanks to be in consequence of the dissolution of
+the Ministry? In support of the last of these conjectures may be
+urged his mean opinion of that Ministry, which has frequently
+appeared in the course of this work<a href=
+"#note-442">[442]</a>; and it is strongly
+confirmed by what he said on the subject to Mr. Seward:&mdash;'I
+am glad the Ministry is removed. Such a bunch of imbecility never
+disgraced a country<a href=
+"#note-443">[443]</a>. If they sent a
+messenger into the City to take up a printer, the messenger was
+taken up instead of the printer, and committed by the sitting
+Alderman<a href="#note-444">[444]</a>. If
+they sent one army to the relief of another, the first army was
+defeated and taken before the second arrived<a href=
+"#note-445">[445]</a>. I will not say
+that what they did was always wrong; but it was always done at a
+wrong time<a href=
+"#note-446">[446]</a>.'</p>
+<center>'TO MRS. STRAHAN.</center>
+<center>'DEAR MADAM,</center>
+<p>'Mrs. Williams shewed me your kind letter. This little
+habitation is now but a melancholy place, clouded with the gloom
+of disease and death. Of the four inmates, one has been suddenly
+snatched away; two are oppressed by very afflictive and dangerous
+illness; and I tried yesterday to gain some relief by a third
+bleeding, from a disorder which has for some time distressed me,
+and I think myself to-day much better.</p>
+<p>'I am glad, dear Madam, to hear that you are so far recovered
+as to go to Bath. Let me once more entreat you to stay till your
+health is not only obtained, but confirmed. Your fortune is such
+as that no moderate expence deserves your care; and you have a
+husband, who, I believe, does not regard it. Stay, therefore,
+till you are quite well. I am, for my part, very much deserted;
+but complaint is useless. I hope GOD will bless you, and I desire
+you to form the same wish for me.</p>
+<p>'I am, dear Madam,</p>
+<p>'Your most humble servant,</p>
+<center>'SAM. JOHNSON.'</center>
+<p>'Feb. 4, 1782.'</p>
+<p>'To EDMOND MALONE, ESQ.</p>
+<center>'SIR,</center>
+<p>'I have for many weeks been so much out of order, that I have
+gone out only in a coach to Mrs. Thrale's, where I can use all
+the freedom that sickness requires. Do not, therefore, take it
+amiss, that I am not with you and Dr. Farmer. I hope hereafter to
+see you often.</p>
+<p>'I am, Sir,</p>
+<p>'Your most humble servant,</p>
+<center>'SAM. JOHNSON.'</center>
+<p>'Feb. 27, 1782.'</p>
+<p>To THE SAME.</p>
+<center>'DEAR SIR,</center>
+<p>'I hope I grow better, and shall soon be able to enjoy the
+kindness of my friends. I think this wild adherence to
+Chatterton<a href="#note-447">[447]</a>
+more unaccountable than the obstinate defence of Ossian. In
+Ossian there is a national pride, which may be forgiven, though
+it cannot be applauded. In Chatterton there is nothing but the
+resolution to say again what has once been said.</p>
+<p>'I am, Sir,</p>
+<p>'Your humble servant,</p>
+<center>'SAM. JOHNSON.'</center>
+<p>'March 7, 1782.'</p>
+<p>These short letters shew the regard which Dr. Johnson
+entertained for Mr. Malone, who the more he is known is the more
+highly valued. It is much to be regretted that Johnson was
+prevented from sharing the elegant hospitality of that
+gentleman's table, at which he would in every respect have been
+fully gratified. Mr. Malone, who has so ably succeeded him as an
+Editor of Shakspeare, has, in his Preface, done great and just
+honour to Johnson's memory.</p>
+<center>'TO MRS. LUCY PORTER, IN LICHFIELD.</center>
+<center>'DEAR MADAM,</center>
+<p>'I went away from Lichfield ill, and have had a troublesome
+time with my breath; for some weeks I have been disordered by a
+cold, of which I could not get the violence abated, till I had
+been let blood three times. I have not, however, been so bad but
+that I could have written, and am sorry that I neglected it.</p>
+<p>'My dwelling is but melancholy; both Williams, and Desmoulins,
+and myself, are very sickly: Frank is not well; and poor Levett
+died in his bed the other day, by a sudden stroke; I suppose not
+one minute passed between health and death; so uncertain are
+human things.</p>
+<p>'Such is the appearance of the world about me; I hope your
+scenes are more cheerful. But whatever befalls us, though it is
+wise to be serious, it is useless and foolish, and perhaps
+sinful, to be gloomy. Let us, therefore, keep ourselves as easy
+as we can; though the loss of friends will be felt, and poor
+Levett had been a faithful adherent for thirty years.</p>
+<p>'Forgive me, my dear love, the omission of writing; I hope to
+mend that and my other faults. Let me have your prayers.</p>
+<p>'Make my compliments to Mrs. Cobb, and Miss Adey, and Mr.
+Pearson, and the whole company of my friends.</p>
+<p>I am, my dear,</p>
+<p>'Your most humble servant,</p>
+<center>'SAM. JOHNSON.'</center>
+<p>'London, March 2, 1782.'</p>
+<center>TO THE SAME.</center>
+<center>'DEAR MADAM,</center>
+<p>'My last was but a dull letter, and I know not that this will
+be much more cheerful; I am, however, willing to write, because
+you are desirous to hear from me.</p>
+<p>'My disorder has now begun its ninth week, for it is not yet
+over. I was last Thursday blooded for the fourth time, and have
+since found myself much relieved, but I am very tender and easily
+hurt; so that since we parted I have had but little comfort, but
+I hope that the spring will recover me; and that in the summer I
+shall see Lichfield again, for I will not delay my visit another
+year to the end of autumn.</p>
+<p>'I have, by advertising, found poor Mr. Levett's brothers in
+Yorkshire, who will take the little he has left: it is but
+little, yet it will be welcome, for I believe they are of very
+low condition.</p>
+<p>'To be sick, and to see nothing but sickness and death, is but
+a gloomy state; but I hope better times, even in this world, will
+come, and whatever this world may withhold or give, we shall be
+happy in a better state. Pray for me, my dear Lucy.</p>
+<p>'Make my compliments to Mrs. Cobb, and Miss Adey, and my old
+friend Hetty Baily, and to all the Lichfield ladies.</p>
+<p>'I am, dear Madam,</p>
+<p>'Yours, affectionately,</p>
+<center>'SAM. JOHNSON.'</center>
+<p>'Bolt-court, Fleet-street,</p>
+<p>March 19, 1782.'</p>
+<p>On the day on which this letter was written, he thus feelingly
+mentions his respected friend and physician, Dr.
+Lawrence:&mdash;</p>
+<p>'Poor Lawrence has almost lost the sense of hearing; and I
+have lost the conversation of a learned, intelligent, and
+communicative companion, and a friend whom long familiarity has
+much endeared. Lawrence is one of the best men whom I have
+known.&mdash;<i>Nostrum omnium miserere Deus</i><a href=
+"#note-448">[448]</a>.'</p>
+<p>It was Dr. Johnson's custom when he wrote to Dr. Lawrence
+concerning his own health, to use the Latin language<a href=
+"#note-449">[449]</a>. I have been
+favoured by Miss Lawrence with one of these letters as a
+specimen:&mdash;</p>
+<p>'T. LAWRENCIO, <i>Medico, S</i>.</p>
+<p>'NOVUM <i>frigus, nova tussis, nova spirandi difficultas,
+novam sanguinis missionem suadent, quam tamen te inconsulto nolim
+fieri. Ad te venire vix possum, nec est cur ad me venias. Licere
+vel non licere uno verbo dicendum est; catera mihi et Holdero<a
+href="#note-450">[450]</a> reliqueris. Si
+per te licet, imperatur<a href=
+"#note-451">[451]</a> nuncio Holderum ad
+me deducere.</i></p>
+<p>'Maiis Calendis, 1782.</p>
+<p>'Postqu&agrave;m tu discesseris, qu&ograve; me vertam<a href=
+"#note-452">[452]</a>?'</p>
+<center>TO CAPTAIN LANGTON<a href=
+"#note-453">[453]</a>, IN
+ROCHESTER.</center>
+<center>'DEAR SIR,</center>
+<p>'It is now long since we saw one another; and whatever has
+been the reason neither you have written to me, nor I to you. To
+let friendship die away by negligence and silence, is certainly
+not wise. It is voluntarily to throw away one of the greatest
+comforts of this weary pilgrimage, of which when it is, as it
+must be, taken finally away, he that travels on alone, will
+wonder how his esteem could be so little. Do not forget me; you
+see that I do not forget you. It is pleasing in the silence of
+solitude to think, that there is one at least, however distant,
+of whose benevolence there is little doubt, and whom there is yet
+hope of seeing again<a href=
+"#note-454">[454]</a>.</p>
+<p>'Of my life, from the time we parted, the history is mournful.
+The spring of last year deprived me of Thrale, a man whose eye
+for fifteen years had scarcely been turned upon me but with
+respect or tenderness<a href=
+"#note-455">[455]</a>; for such another
+friend, the general course of human things will not suffer man to
+hope. I passed the summer at Streatham, but there was no Thrale;
+and having idled away the summer with a weakly body and neglected
+mind, I made a journey to Staffordshire on the edge of winter.
+The season was dreary, I was sickly, and found the friends sickly
+whom I went to see. After a sorrowful sojourn, I returned to a
+habitation possessed for the present by two sick women, where my
+dear old friend, Mr. Levett, to whom as he used to tell me, I owe
+your acquaintance<a href=
+"#note-456">[456]</a>, died a few weeks
+ago, suddenly in his bed; there passed not, I believe, a minute
+between health and death. At night, as at Mrs. Thrale's I was
+musing in my chamber, I thought with uncommon earnestness, that
+however I might alter my mode of life, or whithersoever I might
+remove<a href="#note-457">[457]</a>, I
+would endeavour to retain Levett about me; in the morning my
+servant brought me word that Levett was called to another state,
+a state for which, I think, he was not unprepared, for he was
+very useful to the poor. How much soever I valued him, I now wish
+that I had valued him more<a href=
+"#note-458">[458]</a>.</p>
+<p>'I have myself been ill more than eight weeks of a disorder,
+from which at the expence of about fifty ounces of blood, I hope
+I am now recovering.</p>
+<p>'You, dear Sir, have, I hope, a more cheerful scene; you see
+George fond of his book, and the pretty misses airy and lively,
+with my own little Jenny<a href=
+"#note-459">[459]</a> equal to the
+best[460]: and in whatever can contribute to your quiet or
+pleasure, you have Lady Rothes ready to concur. May whatever you
+enjoy of good be encreased, and whatever you suffer of evil be
+diminished.</p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ I am, dear Sir,
+ Your humble servant,
+ 'SAM. JOHNSON.'
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+'Bolt-court, Fleet-street,
+ March 20, 1782.'
+ 'To MR. HECTOR, IN BIRMINGHAM<a href=
+"#note-461">461</a>.
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<center>'DEAR SIR,</center>
+<p>'I hope I do not very grossly flatter myself to imagine that
+you and dear Mrs. Careless<a href=
+"#note-462">[462]</a> will be glad to
+hear some account of me. I performed the journey to London with
+very little inconvenience, and came safe to my habitation, where
+I found nothing but ill health, and, of consequence, very little
+cheerfulness. I then went to visit a little way into the country,
+where I got a complaint by a cold which has hung eight weeks upon
+me, and from which I am, at the expence of fifty ounces of blood,
+not yet free. I am afraid I must once more owe my recovery to
+warm weather, which seems to make no advances towards us.</p>
+<p>'Such is my health, which will, I hope, soon grow better. In
+other respects I have no reason to complain. I know not that I
+have written any thing more generally commended than the <i>Lives
+of the Poets</i>; and have found the world willing enough to
+caress me, if my health had invited me to be in much company; but
+this season I have been almost wholly employed in nursing
+myself.</p>
+<p>'When summer comes I hope to see you again, and will not put
+off my visit to the end of the year. I have lived so long in
+London, that I did not remember the difference of seasons.</p>
+<p>'Your health, when I saw you, was much improved. You will be
+prudent enough not to put it in danger. I hope, when we meet
+again, we shall all congratulate each other upon fair prospects
+of longer life; though what are the pleasures of the longest
+life, when placed in comparison with a happy death?</p>
+<p>'I am, dear Sir,</p>
+<p>'Yours most affectionately,</p>
+<center>'SAM. JOHNSON.'</center>
+<p>'London, March 21, 1782.'</p>
+<p>To THE SAME.</p>
+<p>[Without a date, but supposed to be about this time.][463]</p>
+<center>'DEAR SIR,</center>
+<p>'That you and dear Mrs. Careless should have care or curiosity
+about my health, gives me that pleasure which every man feels
+from finding himself not forgotten. In age we feel again that
+love of our native place and our early friends, which in the
+bustle or amusements of middle life were overborne and suspended.
+You and I should now naturally cling to one another: we have
+outlived most of those who could pretend to rival us in each
+other's kindness. In our walk through life we have dropped our
+companions, and are now to pick up such as chance may offer us,
+or to travel on alone<a href=
+"#note-464">[464]</a>. You, indeed, have
+a sister, with whom you can divide the day: I have no natural
+friend left; but Providence has been pleased to preserve me from
+neglect; I have not wanted such alleviations of life as
+friendship could supply. My health has been, from my twentieth
+year, such as has seldom afforded me a single day of ease<a href=
+"#note-465">[465]</a>; but it is at least
+not worse: and I sometimes make myself believe that it is better.
+My disorders are, however, still sufficiently oppressive.</p>
+<p>'I think of seeing Staffordshire again this autumn, and intend
+to find my way through Birmingham, where I hope to see you and
+dear Mrs. Careless well. I am Sir,</p>
+<p>'Your affectionate friend,</p>
+<center>'SAM. JOHNSON.'</center>
+<p>I wrote to him at different dates; regretted that I could not
+come to London this spring, but hoped we should meet somewhere in
+the summer; mentioned the state of my affairs, and suggested
+hopes of some preferment; informed him, that as <i>The Beauties
+of Johnson</i> had been published in London, some obscure
+scribbler had published at Edinburgh what he called <i>The
+deformities of Johnson</i>.</p>
+<p>'To JAMES BOSWELL, ESQ.</p>
+<center>'DEAR SIR,</center>
+<p>'The pleasure which we used to receive from each other on
+Good-Friday and Easter-day<a href=
+"#note-466">[466]</a>, we must be this
+year content to miss. Let us, however, pray for each other, and
+hope to see one another yet from time to time with mutual
+delight. My disorder has been a cold, which impeded the organs of
+respiration, and kept me many weeks in a state of great
+uneasiness; but by repeated phlebotomy it is now relieved; and
+next to the recovery of Mrs. Boswell, I flatter myself, that you
+will rejoice at mine.</p>
+<p>'What we shall do in the summer it is yet too early to
+consider. You want to know what you shall do now; I do not think
+this time of bustle and confusion<a href=
+"#note-467">[467]</a> likely to produce
+any advantage to you. Every man has those to reward and gratify
+who have contributed to his advancement. To come hither with such
+expectations at the expence of borrowed money, which, I find, you
+know not where to borrow, can hardly be considered as prudent. I
+am sorry to find, what your solicitation seems to imply, that you
+have already gone the whole length of your credit. This is to set
+the quiet of your whole life at hazard. If you anticipate your
+inheritance, you can at last inherit nothing; all that you
+receive must pay for the past. You must get a place, or pine in
+penury, with the empty name of a great estate. Poverty, my dear
+friend, is so great an evil, and pregnant with so much
+temptation, and so much misery, that I cannot but earnestly
+enjoin you to avoid it<a href=
+"#note-468">[468]</a>. Live on what you
+have; live if you can on less; do not borrow either for vanity or
+pleasure; the vanity will end in shame, and the pleasure in
+regret: stay therefore at home, till you have saved money for
+your journey hither.</p>
+<p><i>The Beauties of Johnson</i> are said to have got money to
+the collector; if the <i>Deformities</i> have the same success, I
+shall be still a more extensive benefactor.</p>
+<p>'Make my compliments to Mrs. Boswell, who is, I hope,
+reconciled to me; and to the young people whom I never have
+offended.</p>
+<p>'You never told me the success of your plea against the
+Solicitors<a href=
+"#note-469">[469]</a>.</p>
+<p>'I am, dear Sir,</p>
+<p>'Your most affectionate,</p>
+<center>'SAM. JOHNSON.'</center>
+<p>'London, March 28, 1782.'</p>
+<p>Notwithstanding his afflicted state of body<a href=
+"#note-470">[470]</a> and mind this year,
+the following correspondence affords a proof not only of his
+benevolence and conscientious readiness to relieve a good man
+from errour, but by his cloathing one of the sentiments in his
+<i>Rambler</i> in different language, not inferiour to that of
+the original, shews his extraordinary command of clear and
+forcible expression.</p>
+<p>A clergyman at Bath wrote to him, that in <i>The Morning
+Chronicle</i>, a passage in <i>The Beauties of Johnson</i><a
+href="#note-471">[471]</a>, article
+DEATH, had been pointed out as supposed by some readers to
+recommend suicide, the words being, 'To die is the fate of man;
+but to die with lingering anguish is generally his folly;' and
+respectfully suggesting to him, that such an erroneous notion of
+any sentence in the writings of an acknowledged friend of
+religion and virtue, should not pass uncontradicted.</p>
+<p>Johnson thus answered the clergyman's letter:&mdash;</p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ To THE REVEREND MR. &mdash;&mdash;, AT BATH.
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<center>'SIR,</center>
+<p>'Being now<a href=
+"#note-472">[472]</a> in the country in a
+state of recovery, as I hope, from a very oppressive disorder, I
+cannot neglect the acknowledgement of your Christian letter. The
+book called <i>The Beauties of Johnson</i> is the production of I
+know not whom: I never saw it but by casual inspection, and
+considered myself as utterly disengaged from its consequences. Of
+the passage you mention, I remember some notice in some paper;
+but knowing that it must be misrepresented, I thought of it no
+more, nor do I know where to find it in my own books. I am
+accustomed to think little of newspapers; but an opinion so
+weighty and serious as yours has determined me to do, what I
+should, without your seasonable admonition, have omitted; and I
+will direct my thought to be shewn in its true state<a href=
+"#note-473">[473]</a>. If I could find
+the passage, I would direct you to it. I suppose the tenour is
+this:&mdash;'Acute diseases are the immediate and inevitable
+strokes of Heaven; but of them the pain is short, and the
+conclusion speedy; chronical disorders, by which we are suspended
+in tedious torture between life and death, are commonly the
+effect of our own misconduct and intemperance. To die,
+&amp;c.'&mdash;This, Sir, you see is all true and all blameless.
+I hope, some time in the next week, to have all rectified. My
+health has been lately much shaken: if you favour me with any
+answer, it will be a comfort to me to know that I have your
+prayers.</p>
+<p>'I am, &amp;c.,</p>
+<center>'SAM. JOHNSON.'</center>
+<p>'May 15, 1782.'</p>
+<p>This letter, as might be expected, had its full effect, and
+the clergyman acknowledged it in grateful and pious terms<a href=
+"#note-474">[474]</a>.</p>
+<p>The following letters require no extracts from mine to
+introduce them:&mdash;</p>
+<center>'TO JAMES BOSWELL, ESQ.</center>
+<center>'DEAR SIR,</center>
+<p>'The earnestness and tenderness of your letter is such, that I
+cannot think myself shewing it more respect than it claims by
+sitting down to answer it the day on which I received it.</p>
+<p>'This year has afflicted me with a very irksome and severe
+disorder. My respiration has been much impeded, and much blood
+has been taken away. I am now harrassed by a catarrhous cough,
+from which my purpose is to seek relief by change of air; and I
+am, therefore, preparing to go to Oxford<a href=
+"#note-475">[475]</a>.</p>
+<p>'Whether I did right in dissuading you from coming to London
+this spring, I will not determine. You have not lost much by
+missing my company; I have scarcely been well for a single week.
+I might have received comfort from your kindness; but you would
+have seen me afflicted, and, perhaps, found me peevish. Whatever
+might have been your pleasure or mine, I know not how I could
+have honestly advised you to come hither with borrowed money. Do
+not accustom yourself to consider debt only as an inconvenience;
+you will find it a calamity. Poverty takes away so many means of
+doing good, and produces so much inability to resist evil, both
+natural and moral, that it is by all virtuous means to be
+avoided. Consider a man whose fortune is very narrow; whatever be
+his rank by birth, or whatever his reputation by intellectual
+excellence, what good can he do? or what evil can he prevent?
+That he cannot help the needy is evident; he has nothing to
+spare. But, perhaps, his advice or admonition may be useful. His
+poverty will destroy his influence: many more can find that he is
+poor, than that he is wise; and few will reverence the
+understanding that is of so little advantage to its owner. I say
+nothing of the personal wretched-ness of a debtor, which,
+however, has passed into a proverb<a href=
+"#note-476">[476]</a>. Of riches, it is
+not necessary to write the praise<a href=
+"#note-477">[477]</a>. Let it, however,
+be remembered, that he who has money to spare, has it always in
+his power to benefit others; and of such power a good man must
+always be desirous.</p>
+<p>'I am pleased with your account of Easter<a href=
+"#note-478">[478]</a>. We shall meet, I
+hope in Autumn, both well and both cheerful; and part each the
+better for the other's company.</p>
+<p>'Make my compliments to Mrs. Boswell, and to the young
+charmers.</p>
+<p>'I am, &amp;c.</p>
+<p>'SAM. JOHNSON.' 'London, June 3, 1782.'</p>
+<p>'To MR. PERKINS<a href=
+"#note-479">[479]</a>.</p>
+<center>'DEAR SIR,</center>
+<p>I am much pleased that you are going a very long journey,
+which may by proper conduct restore your health and prolong your
+life.</p>
+<p>'Observe these rules:</p>
+<p>1. Turn all care out of your head as soon as you mount the
+chaise.</p>
+<p>2. Do not think about frugality; your health is worth more
+than it can cost.</p>
+<p>3. Do not continue any day's journey to fatigue.</p>
+<p>4. Take now and then a day's rest.</p>
+<p>5. Get a smart sea-sickness, if you can.</p>
+<p>6. Cast away all anxiety, and keep your mind easy.</p>
+<p>'This last direction is the principal; with an unquiet mind,
+neither exercise, nor diet, nor physick, can be of much use.</p>
+<p>'I wish you, dear Sir, a prosperous journey, and a happy
+recovery.</p>
+<p>I am, dear Sir,</p>
+<p>'Your most affectionate, humble servant,</p>
+<center>'SAM. JOHNSON.'</center>
+<p>'July 28, 1782.'</p>
+<p>'To JAMES BOSWELL, ESQ.</p>
+<center>'DEAR SIR,</center>
+<p>'Being uncertain whether I should have any call this autumn
+into the country, I did not immediately answer your kind letter.
+I have no call; but if you desire to meet me at Ashbourne, I
+believe I can come thither; if you had rather come to London, I
+can stay at Streatham; take your choice.</p>
+<p>'This year has been very heavy. From the middle of January to
+the middle of June I was battered by one disorder after another!
+I am now very much recovered, and hope still to be better. What
+happiness it is that Mrs. Boswell has escaped.</p>
+<p>'My <i>Lives</i> are reprinting, and I have forgotten the
+authour of Gray's character<a href=
+"#note-480">[480]</a>: write immediately,
+and it may be perhaps yet inserted.</p>
+<p>'Of London or Ashbourne you have your free choice; at any
+place I shall be glad to see you. I am, dear Sir,</p>
+<p>'Yours &amp;c.</p>
+<center>'SAM. JOHNSON.'</center>
+<p>'Aug. 24, 1782.'</p>
+<p>On the 3Oth of August, I informed him that my honoured father
+had died that morning; a complaint under which he had long
+laboured having suddenly come to a crisis, while I was upon a
+visit at the seat of Sir Charles Preston, from whence I had
+hastened the day before, upon receiving a letter by express.</p>
+<center>'TO JAMES BOSWELL, ESQ.</center>
+<center>'DEAR SIR,</center>
+<p>'I have struggled through this year with so much infirmity of
+body, and such strong impressions of the fragility of life, that
+death, whenever it appears, fills me with melancholy; and I
+cannot hear without emotion, of the removal of any one, whom I
+have known, into another state.</p>
+<p>'Your father's death had every circumstance that could enable
+you to bear it; it was at a mature age, and it was expected; and
+as his general life had been pious, his thoughts had doubtless
+for many years past been turned upon eternity. That you did not
+find him sensible must doubtless grieve you; his disposition
+towards you was undoubtedly that of a kind, though not of a fond
+father. Kindness, at least actual, is in our power, but fondness
+is not; and if by negligence or imprudence you had extinguished
+his fondness, he could not at will rekindle it. Nothing then
+remained between you but mutual forgiveness of each other's
+faults, and mutual desire of each other's happiness.</p>
+<p>'I shall long to know his final disposition of his fortune<a
+href="#note-481">[481]</a>.</p>
+<p>'You, dear Sir, have now a new station, and have therefore new
+cares, and new employments. Life, as Cowley seems to say, ought
+to resemble a well-ordered poem<a href=
+"#note-482">[482]</a>; of which one rule
+generally received is, that the exordium should be simple, and
+should promise little. Begin your new course of life with the
+least show, and the least expence possible; you may at pleasure
+encrease both, but you cannot easily diminish them. Do not think
+your estate your own, while any man can call upon you for money
+which you cannot pay; therefore, begin with timorous parsimony.
+Let it be your first care not to be in any man's debt.</p>
+<p>'When the thoughts are extended to a future state, the present
+life seems hardly worthy of all those principles of conduct, and
+maxims of prudence, which one generation of men has transmitted
+to another; but upon a closer view, when it is perceived how much
+evil is produced, and how much good is impeded by embarrassment
+and distress, and how little room the expedients of poverty leave
+for the exercise of virtue, it grows manifest that the boundless
+importance of the next life enforces some attention to the
+interests of this.</p>
+<p>'Be kind to the old servants, and secure the kindness of the
+agents and factors; do not disgust them by asperity, or unwelcome
+gaiety, or apparent suspicion. From them you must learn the real
+state of your affairs, the characters of your tenants, and the
+value of your lands<a href=
+"#note-483">[483]</a>.</p>
+<p>'Make my compliments to Mrs. Boswell; I think her expectations
+from air and exercise are the best that she can form. I hope she
+will live long and happily.</p>
+<p>'I forget whether I told you that Rasay<a href=
+"#note-484">[484]</a> has been here; we
+dined cheerfully together. I entertained lately a young gentleman
+from Corrichatachin<a href=
+"#note-485">[485]</a>.</p>
+<p>'I received your letters only this morning. I am, dear
+Sir,</p>
+<p>'Yours &amp;c.</p>
+<center>'SAM. JOHNSON.'</center>
+<p>'London, Sept. 7, 1782.'</p>
+<p>In answer to my next letter, I received one from him,
+dissuading me from hastening to him as I had proposed<a href=
+"#note-486">[486]</a>; what is proper for
+publication is the following paragraph, equally just and
+tender:&mdash;</p>
+<p>'One expence, however, I would not have you to spare: let
+nothing be omitted that can preserve Mrs. Boswell, though it
+should be necessary to transplant her for a time into a softer
+climate. She is the prop and stay of your life. How much must
+your children suffer by losing her.'</p>
+<p>My wife was now so much convinced of his sincere friendship
+for me, and regard for her, that, without any suggestion on my
+part, she wrote him a very polite and grateful letter:&mdash;</p>
+<center>'DR. JOHNSON TO MRS. BOSWELL.</center>
+<center>'DEAR LADY,</center>
+<p>'I have not often received so much pleasure as from your
+invitation to Auchinleck. The journey thither and back is,
+indeed, too great for the latter part of the year; but if my
+health were fully recovered, I would suffer no little heat and
+cold, nor a wet or a rough road to keep me from you. I am,
+indeed, not without hope of seeing Auchinleck again; but to make
+it a pleasant place I must see its lady well, and brisk, and
+airy. For my sake, therefore, among many greater reasons, take
+care, dear Madam, of your health, spare no expence, and want no
+attendance that can procure ease, or preserve it. Be very careful
+to keep your mind quiet; and do not think it too much to give an
+account of your recovery to, Madam,</p>
+<p>'Yours, &amp;c.</p>
+<center>'SAM. JOHNSON.'</center>
+<p>'London, Sept. 7, 1782.'</p>
+<p>'To JAMES BOSWELL, ESQ.</p>
+<center>'DEAR SIR,</center>
+<p>'Having passed almost this whole year in a succession of
+disorders, I went in October to Brighthelmston, whither I came in
+a state of so much weakness, that I rested four times in walking
+between the inn and the lodging. By physick and abstinence I grew
+better, and am now reasonably easy, though at a great distance
+from health<a href="#note-487">[487]</a>.
+I am afraid, however, that health begins, after seventy, and long
+before, to have a meaning different from that which it had at
+thirty. But it is culpable to murmur at the established order of
+the creation, as it is vain to oppose it. He that lives must grow
+old; and he that would rather grow old than die, has GOD to thank
+for the infirmities of old age<a href=
+"#note-488">[488]</a>.</p>
+<p>'At your long silence I am rather angry. You do not, since now
+you are the head of your house, think it worth your while to try
+whether you or your friend can live longer without writing<a
+href="#note-489">[489]</a>, nor suspect
+that after so many years of friendship, that when I do not write
+to you, I forget you. Put all such useless jealousies out of your
+head, and disdain to regulate your own practice by the practice
+of another, or by any other principle than the desire of doing
+right.</p>
+<p>'Your oeconomy, I suppose, begins now to be settled; your
+expences are adjusted to your revenue, and all your people in
+their proper places. Resolve not to be poor: whatever you have,
+spend less. Poverty is a great enemy to human happiness; it
+certainly destroys liberty, and it makes some virtues
+impracticable, and others extremely difficult.</p>
+<p>'Let me know the history of your life, since your accession to
+your estate. How many houses, how many cows, how much land in
+your own hand, and what bargains you make with your tenants.</p>
+<hr>
+<p>'Of my <i>Lives of the Poets</i>, they have printed a new
+edition in octavo, I hear, of three thousand. Did I give a set to
+Lord Hailes? If I did not, I will do it out of these. What did
+you make of all your copy<a href=
+"#note-490">[490]</a>?</p>
+<p>'Mrs. Thrale and the three Misses<a href=
+"#note-491">[491]</a> are now for the
+winter in Argyll-street. Sir Joshua Reynolds has been out of
+order, but is well again; and I am, dear Sir,</p>
+<p>'Your affectionate humble servant,</p>
+<center>'SAM. JOHNSON.'</center>
+<p>'London, Dec. 7, 1782.'</p>
+<p>'To DR. SAMUEL JOHNSON.</p>
+<p>'Edinburgh, Dec. 20, 1782.</p>
+<center>'DEAR SIR,</center>
+<p>'I was made happy by your kind letter, which gave us the
+agreeable hopes of seeing you in Scotland again.</p>
+<p>'I am much flattered by the concern you are pleased to take in
+my recovery. I am better, and hope to have it in my power to
+convince you by my attention of how much consequence I esteem
+your health to the world and to myself. I remain, Sir, with
+grateful respect,</p>
+<p>'Your obliged and obedient servant,</p>
+<center>'MARGARET BOSWELL.'</center>
+<p>The death of Mr. Thrale had made a very material alteration
+with respect to Johnson's reception in that family. The manly
+authority of the husband no longer curbed the lively exuberance
+of the lady; and as her vanity had been fully gratified, by
+having the Colossus of Literature attached to her for many years,
+she gradually became less assiduous to please him. Whether her
+attachment to him was already divided by another object, I am
+unable to ascertain; but it is plain that Johnson's penetration
+was alive to her neglect or forced attention; for on the eth of
+October this year, we find him making a 'parting use of the
+library<a href="#note-492">[492]</a>' at
+Streatham, and pronouncing a prayer, which he composed on leaving
+Mr. Thrale's family<a href=
+"#note-493">[493]</a>:&mdash;</p>
+<p>'Almighty God, Father of all mercy, help me by thy grace, that
+I may, with humble and sincere thankfulness, remember the
+comforts and conveniences which I have enjoyed at this place; and
+that I may resign them with holy submission, equally trusting in
+thy protection when thou givest, and when thou takest away. Have
+mercy upon me, Lord, have mercy upon me.</p>
+<p>'To thy fatherly protection, O Lord, I commend this family.
+Bless, guide, and defend them, that they may so pass through this
+world, as finally to enjoy in thy presence everlasting happiness,
+for Jesus Christ's sake. Amen<a href=
+"#note-494">[494]</a>.'</p>
+<p>One cannot read this prayer, without some emotions not very
+favourable to the lady whose conduct occasioned it<a href=
+"#note-495">[495]</a>.</p>
+<p>In one of his memorandum-books I find, 'Sunday, went to church
+at Streatham. <i>Templo valedixi cum osculo</i><a href=
+"#note-496">[496]</a>.'</p>
+<p>He met Mr. Philip Metcalfe<a href=
+"#note-497">[497]</a> often at Sir Joshua
+Reynolds's, and other places, and was a good deal with him at
+Brighthelmston<a href=
+"#note-498">[498]</a> this autumn, being
+pleased at once with his excellent table and animated
+conversation. Mr. Metcalfe shewed him great respect, and sent him
+a note that he might have the use of his carriage whenever he
+pleased. Johnson (3d October, 1782) returned this polite
+answer:&mdash;'Mr. Johnson is very much obliged by the kind offer
+of the carriage, but he has no desire of using Mr. Metcalfe's
+carriage, except when he can have the pleasure of Mr. Metcalfe's
+company.' Mr. Metcalfe could not but be highly pleased that his
+company was thus valued by Johnson, and he frequently attended
+him in airings. They also went together to Chichester<a href=
+"#note-499">[499]</a>, and they visited
+Petworth, and Cowdry, the venerable seat of the Lords Montacute.
+'Sir, (said Johnson,) I should like to stay here four-and-twenty
+hours. We see here how our ancestors lived.'</p>
+<p>That his curiosity was still unabated, appears from two
+letters to Mr. John Nichols, of the 10th and 20th<a href=
+"#note-500">[500]</a> of October this
+year. In one he says, 'I have looked into your <i>Anecdotes</i>,
+and you will hardly thank a lover of literary history for telling
+you, that he has been much informed and gratified. I wish you
+would add your own discoveries and intelligence to those of Dr.
+Rawlinson, and undertake the Supplement to Wood<a href=
+"#note-501">[501]</a>'. Think of it.' In
+the other, 'I wish, Sir, you could obtain some fuller information
+of Jortin<a href="#note-502">[502]</a>,
+Markland[503], and Thirlby[504]. They were three contemporaries
+of great eminence.'</p>
+<center>'TO SIR JOSHUA REYNOLDS.</center>
+<center>'DEAR SIR,</center>
+<p>'I heard yesterday of your late disorder<a href=
+"#note-505">[505]</a>, and should think
+ill of myself if I had heard of it without alarm. I heard
+likewise Of your recovery, which I sincerely wish to be complete
+and permanent. Your country has been in danger of losing one of
+its brightest ornaments, and I of losing one of my oldest and
+kindest friends: but I hope you will still live long, for the
+honour of the nation: and that more enjoyment of your elegance,
+your intelligence, and your benevolence, is still reserved for,
+dear Sir, your most affectionate, &amp;c.</p>
+<center>'SAM. JOHNSON.'</center>
+<p>'Brighthelmston,</p>
+<p>Nov. 14, 1782.'</p>
+<p>The Reverend Mr. Wilson having dedicated to him his
+<i>Archaeological Dictionary</i><a href=
+"#note-506">[506]</a>, that mark of
+respect was thus acknowledged:&mdash;</p>
+<center>'TO THE REVEREND MR. WILSON, CLITHEROE,
+LANCASHIRE.</center>
+<center>'REVEREND SIR,</center>
+<p>'That I have long omitted to return you thanks for the honour
+conferred upon me by your Dedication, I entreat you with great
+earnestness not to consider as more faulty than it is. A very
+importunate and oppressive disorder has for some time debarred me
+from the pleasures, and obstructed me in the duties of life. The
+esteem and kindness of wise and good men is one of the last
+pleasures which I can be content to lose; and gratitude to those
+from whom this pleasure is received, is a duty of which I hope
+never to be reproached with the final neglect. I therefore now
+return you thanks for the notice which I have received from you,
+and which I consider as giving to my name not only more bulk, but
+more weight; not only as extending its superficies, but as
+increasing its value. Your book was evidently wanted, and will, I
+hope, find its way into the school, to which, however, I do not
+mean to confine it; for no man has so much skill in ancient rites
+and practices as not to want it. As I suppose myself to owe part
+of your kindness to my excellent friend, Dr. Patten, he has
+likewise a just claim to my acknowledgements, which I hope you,
+Sir, will transmit. There will soon appear a new edition of my
+Poetical Biography; if you will accept of a copy to keep me in
+your mind, be pleased to let me know how it may be conveniently
+conveyed to you. The present is small, but it is given with good
+will by, Reverend Sir,</p>
+<p>'Your most, &amp;c.</p>
+<center>'SAM. JOHNSON.'</center>
+<p>'December 31, 1782<a href=
+"#note-507">[507]</a>.'</p>
+<p>1783: AETAT. 74.&mdash;In 1783, he was more severely afflicted
+than ever, as will appear in the course of his correspondence<a
+href="#note-508">[508]</a>; but still the
+same ardour for literature, the same constant piety, the same
+kindness for his friends, and the same vivacity, both in
+conversation and writing, distinguished him.</p>
+<p>Having given Dr. Johnson a full account of what I was doing at
+Auchinleck, and particularly mentioned what I knew would please
+him,&mdash;my having brought an old man of eighty-eight from a
+lonely cottage to a comfortable habitation within my enclosures,
+where he had good neighbours near to him,&mdash;I received an
+answer in February, of which I extract what follows:&mdash;</p>
+<p>'I am delighted with your account of your activity at
+Auchinleck, and wish the old gentleman, whom you have so kindly
+removed, may live long to promote your prosperity by his prayers.
+You have now a new character and new duties: think on them and
+practise them.</p>
+<p>'Make an impartial estimate of your revenue, and whatever it
+is, live upon less. Resolve never to be poor. Frugality is not
+only the basis of quiet, but of beneficence. No man can help
+others that wants help himself; we must have enough before we
+have to spare.</p>
+<p>'I am glad to find that Mrs. Boswell grows well; and hope that
+to keep her well, no care nor caution will be omitted. May you
+long live happily together.</p>
+<p>'When you come hither, pray bring with you Baxter's
+<i>Anacreon</i><a href=
+"#note-509">[509]</a>. I cannot get that
+edition in London.'</p>
+<p>On Friday, March 31, having arrived in London the night
+before, I was glad to find him at Mrs. Thrale's house, in
+Argyll-street, appearances of friendship between them being still
+kept up. I was shewn into his room, and after the first
+salutation he said, 'I am glad you are come. I am very ill.' He
+looked pale, and was distressed with a difficulty of breathing;
+but after the common inquiries he assumed his usual strong
+animated style of conversation. Seeing me now for the first time
+as a <i>Laird</i>, or proprietor of land, he began thus: 'Sir,
+the superiority of a country-gentleman over the people upon his
+estate is very agreeable; and he who says he does not feel it to
+be agreeable, lies; for it must be agreeable to have a casual
+superiority over those who are by nature equal with us<a href=
+"#note-510">[510]</a>.' BOSWELL. 'Yet,
+Sir, we see great proprietors of land who prefer living in
+London.' JOHNSON. 'Why, Sir, the pleasure of living in London,
+the intellectual superiority that is enjoyed there, may
+counter-balance the other. Besides, Sir, a man may prefer the
+state of the country-gentleman upon the whole, and yet there may
+never be a moment when he is willing to make the change to quit
+London for it.' He said, 'It is better to have five <i>per
+cent</i>. out of land than out of money, because it is more
+secure; but the readiness of transfer, and promptness of
+interest, make many people rather choose the funds. Nay, there is
+another disadvantage belonging to land, compared with money. A
+man is not so much afraid of being a hard creditor, as of being a
+hard landlord.' BOSWELL. 'Because there is a sort of kindly
+connection between a landlord and his tenants.' JOHNSON. 'No,
+Sir; many landlords with us never see their tenants. It is
+because if a landlord drives away his tenants, he may not get
+others; whereas the demand for money is so great, it may always
+be lent.'</p>
+<p>He talked with regret and indignation of the factious
+opposition to Government at this time<a href=
+"#note-511">[511]</a>, and imputed it in
+a great measure to the Revolution. 'Sir, (said he, in a low
+voice, having come nearer to me, while his old prejudices seemed
+to be fermenting in his mind,) this Hanoverian family is
+<i>isol&eacute;e</i> here<a href=
+"#note-512">[512]</a>. They have no
+friends. Now the Stuarts had friends who stuck by them so late as
+1745. When the right of the King is not reverenced, there will
+not be reverence for those appointed by the King.'</p>
+<p>His observation that the present royal family has no friends,
+has been too much justified by the very ungrateful behaviour of
+many who were under great obligations to his Majesty; at the same
+time there are honourable exceptions; and the very next year
+after this conversation, and ever since, the King has had as
+extensive and generous support as ever was given to any monarch,
+and has had the satisfaction of knowing that he was more and more
+endeared to his people<a href=
+"#note-513">[513]</a>.</p>
+<p>He repeated to me his verses on Mr. Levett, with an emotion
+which gave them full effect<a href=
+"#note-514">[514]</a>; and then he was
+pleased to say, 'You must be as much with me as you can. You have
+done me good. You cannot think how much better I am since you
+came in.'</p>
+<p>He sent a message to acquaint Mrs. Thrale that I was arrived.
+I had not seen her since her husband's death. She soon appeared,
+and favoured me with an invitation to stay to dinner, which I
+accepted. There was no other company but herself and three of her
+daughters, Dr. Johnson, and I. She too said, she was very glad I
+was come, for she was going to Bath, and should have been sorry
+to leave Dr. Johnson before I came. This seemed to be attentive
+and kind; and I who had not been informed of any change, imagined
+all to be as well as formerly. He was little inclined to talk at
+dinner, and went to sleep after it; but when he joined us in the
+drawing-room, he seemed revived, and was again himself.</p>
+<p>Talking of conversation, he said, 'There must, in the first
+place, be knowledge, there must be materials; in the second
+place, there must be a command of words; in the third place,
+there must be imagination, to place things in such views as they
+are not commonly seen in; and in the fourth place, there must be
+presence of mind, and a resolution that is not to be overcome by
+failures: this last is an essential requisite; for want of it
+many people do not excel in conversation. Now <i>I</i> want it: I
+throw up the game upon losing a trick.' I wondered to hear him
+talk thus of himself, and said, 'I don't know, Sir, how this may
+be; but I am sure you beat other people's cards out of their
+hands.' I doubt whether he heard this remark. While he went on
+talking triumphantly, I was fixed in admiration, and said to Mrs.
+Thrale, 'O, for short-hand to take this down!' 'You'll carry it
+all in your head; (said she;) a long head is as good as
+short-hand.'</p>
+<p>It has been observed and wondered at, that Mr. Charles Fox
+never talked with any freedom in the presence of Dr. Johnson<a
+href="#note-515">[515]</a>, though it is
+well known, and I myself can witness, that his conversation is
+various, fluent, and exceedingly agreeable. Johnson's own
+experience, however, of that gentleman's reserve was a sufficient
+reason for his going on thus: 'Fox never talks in private
+company; not from any determination not to talk, but because he
+has not the first motion<a href=
+"#note-516">[516]</a>. A man who is used
+to the applause of the House of Commons, has no wish for that of
+a private company. A man accustomed to throw for a thousand
+pounds, if set down to throw for sixpence, would not be at the
+pains to count his dice. Burke's talk is the ebullition of his
+mind; he does not talk from a desire of distinction, but because
+his mind is full<a href=
+"#note-517">[517]</a>.</p>
+<p>He thus curiously characterised one of our old acquaintance:
+'&mdash;&mdash;<a href=
+"#note-518">[518]</a> is a good man, Sir;
+but he is a vain man and a liar. He, however, only tells lies of
+vanity; of victories, for instance, in conversation, which never
+happened.' This alluded to a story which I had repeated from that
+gentleman, to entertain Johnson with its wild bravado: 'This
+Johnson, Sir, (said he,) whom you are all afraid of will shrink,
+if you come close to him in argument and roar as loud as he. He
+once maintained the paradox, that there is no beauty but in
+utility<a href="#note-519">[519]</a>.
+"Sir, (said I,) what say you to the peacock's tail, which is one
+of the most beautiful objects in nature, but would have as much
+utility if its feathers were all of one colour." He <i>felt</i>
+what I thus produced, and had recourse to his usual expedient,
+ridicule; exclaiming, "A peacock has a tail, and a fox has a
+tail;" and then he burst out into a laugh. "Well, Sir, (said I,
+with a strong voice, looking him full in the face,) you have
+unkennelled your fox; pursue him if you dare." He had not a word
+to say, Sir.' Johnson told me, that this was a fiction from
+beginning to end<a href=
+"#note-520">[520]</a>.</p>
+<p>After musing for some time, he said, 'I wonder how I should
+have any enemies; for I do harm to nobody<a href=
+"#note-521">[521]</a>.' BOSWELL. 'In the
+first place, Sir, you will be pleased to recollect, that you set
+out with attacking the Scotch; so you got a whole nation for your
+enemies.' JOHNSON. 'Why, I own, that by my definition of
+<i>oats</i><a href="#note-522">[522]</a>
+I meant to vex them.' BOSWELL. 'Pray, Sir, can you trace the
+cause of your antipathy to the Scotch.' JOHNSON. 'I cannot, Sir<a
+href="#note-523">[523]</a>.' BOSWELL.
+'Old Mr. Sheridan says, it was because they sold Charles the
+First.' JOHNSON. 'Then, Sir, old Mr. Sheridan has found out a
+very good reason.'</p>
+<p>Surely the most obstinate and sulky nationality, the most
+determined aversion to this great and good man, must be cured,
+when he is seen thus playing with one of his prejudices, of which
+he candidly admitted that he could not tell the reason. It was,
+however, probably owing to his having had in his view the worst
+part of the Scottish nation, the needy adventurers, many of whom
+he thought were advanced above their merits by means which he did
+not approve. Had he in his early life been in Scotland, and seen
+the worthy, sensible, independent gentlemen, who live rationally
+and hospitably at home, he never could have entertained such
+unfavourable and unjust notions of his fellow-subjects. And
+accordingly we find, that when he did visit Scotland, in the
+latter period of his life, he was fully sensible of all that it
+deserved, as I have already pointed out, when speaking of his
+<i>Journey to the Western Islands</i>.<a href=
+"#note-524">[524]</a></p>
+<p>Next day, Saturday, March 22, I found him still at Mrs.
+Thrale's, but he told me that he was to go to his own house in
+the afternoon<a href=
+"#note-525">[525]</a>. He was better, but
+I perceived he was but an unruly patient, for Sir Lucas Pepys,
+who visited him, while I was with him said, 'If you were
+<i>tractable</i>, Sir, I should prescribe for you.'</p>
+<p>I related to him a remark which a respectable friend had made
+to me, upon the then state of Government, when those who had been
+long in opposition had attained to power, as it was supposed,
+against the inclination of the Sovereign<a href=
+"#note-526">[526]</a>. 'You need not be
+uneasy (said this gentleman) about the King. He laughs at them
+all; he plays them one against another.' JOHNSON. 'Don't think
+so, Sir. The King is as much oppressed as a man can be. If he
+plays them one against another, he <i>wins</i> nothing.'</p>
+<p>I had paid a visit to General Oglethorpe in the morning, and
+was told by him that Dr. Johnson saw company on Saturday
+evenings, and he would meet me at Johnson's that night. When I
+mentioned this to Johnson, not doubting that it would please him,
+as he had a great value for Oglethorpe, the fretfulness of his
+disease unexpectedly shewed itself; his anger suddenly kindled,
+and he said, with vehemence, 'Did not you tell him not to come?
+Am I to be <i>hunted</i> in this manner?' I satisfied him that I
+could not divine that the visit would not be convenient, and that
+I certainly could not take it upon me of my own accord to forbid
+the General.</p>
+<p>I found Dr. Johnson in the evening in Mrs. Williams's room, at
+tea and coffee with her and Mrs. Desmoulins, who were also both
+ill; it was a sad scene, and he was not in very good humour. He
+said of a performance that had lately come out, 'Sir, if you
+should search all the madhouses in England, you would not find
+ten men who would write so, and think it sense.'</p>
+<p>I was glad when General Oglethorpe's arrival was announced,
+and we left the ladies. Dr. Johnson attended him in the parlour,
+and was as courteous as ever. The General said he was busy
+reading the writers of the middle age. Johnson said they were
+very curious. OGLETHORPE. 'The House of Commons has usurped the
+power of the nation's money, and used it tyrannically. Government
+is now carried on by corrupt influence, instead of the inherent
+right in the King.' JOHNSON. 'Sir, the want of inherent right in
+the King occasions all this disturbance. What we did at the
+Revolution was necessary: but it broke our constitution<a href=
+"#note-527">[527]</a>.' OGLETHORPE. 'My
+father did not think it necessary.'</p>
+<p>On Sunday, March 23, I breakfasted with Dr. Johnson, who
+seemed much relieved, having taken opium the night before. He
+however protested against it, as a remedy that should be given
+with the utmost reluctance, and only in extreme necessity. I
+mentioned how commonly it was used in Turkey, and that therefore
+it could not be so pernicious as he apprehended. He grew warm and
+said, 'Turks take opium, and Christians take opium; but Russel,
+in his <i>Account of Aleppo</i><a href=
+"#note-528">[528]</a>, tells us, that it
+is as disgraceful in Turkey to take too much opium, as it is with
+us to get drunk. Sir, it is amazing how things are exaggerated. A
+gentleman was lately telling in a company where I was present,
+that in France as soon as a man of fashion marries, he takes an
+opera girl into keeping; and this he mentioned as a general
+custom. 'Pray, Sir, (said I,) how many opera girls may there be?'
+He answered, 'About fourscore.' Well then, Sir, (said I,) you see
+there can be no more than fourscore men of fashion who can do
+this<a href="#note-529">[529]</a>.'</p>
+<p>Mrs. Desmoulins made tea; and she and I talked before him upon
+a topick which he had once borne patiently from me when we were
+by ourselves<a href=
+"#note-530">[530]</a>,&mdash;his not
+complaining of the world, because he was not called to some great
+office, nor had attained to great wealth. He flew into a violent
+passion, I confess with some justice, and commanded us to have
+done. 'Nobody, (said he) has a right to talk in this manner, to
+bring before a man his own character, and the events of his life,
+when he does not choose it should be done. I never have sought
+the world; the world was not to seek me. It is rather wonderful
+that so much has been done for me. All the complaints which are
+made of the world are unjust<a href=
+"#note-531">[531]</a>. I never knew a man
+of merit neglected[532]: it was generally by his own fault that
+he failed of success. A man may hide his head in a hole: he may
+go into the country, and publish a book now and then, which
+nobody reads, and then complain he is neglected<a href=
+"#note-533">[533]</a>. There is no reason
+why any person should exert himself for a man who has written a
+good book: he has not written it for any individual. I may as
+well make a present to the postman who brings me a letter. When
+patronage was limited, an authour expected to find a Maecenas,
+and complained if he did not find one. Why should he complain?
+This Maecenas has others as good as he, or others who have got
+the start of him.' BOSWELL. 'But surely, Sir, you will allow that
+there are men of merit at the bar, who never get practice.'
+JOHNSON. 'Sir, you are sure that practice is got from an opinion
+that the person employed deserves it best; so that if a man of
+merit at the bar does not get practice, it is from errour, not
+from injustice. He is not neglected. A horse that is brought to
+market may not be bought, though he is a very good horse: but
+that is from ignorance, not from intention<a href=
+"#note-534">[534]</a>.'</p>
+<p>There was in this discourse much novelty, ingenuity, and
+discrimination, such as is seldom to be found. Yet I cannot help
+thinking that men of merit, who have no success in life, may be
+forgiven for <i>lamenting</i>, if they are not allowed to
+<i>complain</i>. They may consider it as <i>hard</i> that their
+merit should not have its suitable distinction. Though there is
+no intentional injustice towards them on the part of the world,
+their merit not having been perceived, they may yet repine
+against <i>fortune</i>, or <i>fate</i>, or by whatever name they
+choose to call the supposed mythological power of <i>Destiny</i>.
+It has, however, occurred to me, as a consolatory thought, that
+men of merit should consider thus:-How much harder would it be if
+the same persons had both all the merit and all the prosperity.
+Would not this be a miserable distribution for the poor dunces?
+Would men of merit exchange their intellectual superiority, and
+the enjoyments arising from it, for external distinction and the
+pleasures of wealth? If they would not, let them not envy others,
+who are poor where they are rich, a compensation which is made to
+them. Let them look inwards and be satisfied; recollecting with
+conscious pride what Virgil finely says of the <i>Corycius
+Senex</i>, and which I have, in another place<a href=
+"#note-535">[535]</a>, with truth and
+sincerity applied to Mr. Burke:&mdash;</p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ '<i>Regum aequabat opes animis<a href=
+"#note-536">536</a>.'</i>
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>On the subject of the right employment of wealth, Johnson
+observed, 'A man cannot make a bad use of his money, so far as
+regards Society, if he does not hoard it; for if he either spends
+it or lends it out, Society has the benefit. It is in general
+better to spend money than to give it away; for industry is more
+promoted by spending money than by giving it away. A man who
+spends his money is sure he is doing good with it: he is not so
+sure when he gives it away. A man who spends ten thousand a year
+will do more good than a man who spends two thousand and gives
+away eight<a href=
+"#note-537">[537]</a>.'</p>
+<p>In the evening I came to him again. He was somewhat fretful
+from his illness. A gentleman<a href=
+"#note-538">[538]</a> asked him, whether
+he had been abroad to-day. 'Don't talk so childishly, (said he.)
+You may as well ask if I hanged myself to-day.' I mentioned
+politicks. JOHNSON. 'Sir, I'd as soon have a man to break my
+bones as talk to me of publick affairs, internal or external. I
+have lived to see things all as bad as they can be.'</p>
+<p>Having mentioned his friend the second Lord Southwell, he
+said, 'Lord Southwell was the highest-bred man without insolence
+that I ever was in company with; the most <i>qualified</i> I ever
+saw. Lord Orrery<a href=
+"#note-539">[539]</a> was not dignified:
+Lord Chesterfield was, but he was insolent<a href=
+"#note-540">[540]</a>. Lord
+&mdash;&mdash;<a href=
+"#note-541">[541]</a> is a man of coarse
+manners, but a man of abilities and information. I don't say he
+is a man I would set at the head of a nation, though perhaps he
+may be as good as the next Prime Minister that comes; but he is a
+man to be at the head of a Club; I don't say <i>our</i> CLUB; for
+there's no such Club.' BOSWELL. 'But, Sir, was he not once a
+factious man?' JOHNSON. 'O yes, Sir; as factious a fellow as
+could be found: one who was for sinking us all into the mob<a
+href="#note-542">[542]</a>.' BOSWELL.
+'How then, Sir, did he get into favour with the King?' JOHNSON.
+'Because, Sir, I suppose he promised the King to do whatever the
+King pleased.'</p>
+<p>He said, 'Goldsmith's blundering speech to Lord Shelburne,
+which has been so often mentioned, and which he really did make
+to him, was only a blunder in emphasis: "I wonder they should
+call your Lordship <i>Malagrida</i><a href=
+"#note-543">[543]</a>, for Malagrida was
+a very good man;" meant, I wonder they should use
+<i>Malagrida</i> as a term of reproach<a href=
+"#note-544">[544]</a>.'</p>
+<p>Soon after this time I had an opportunity of seeing, by means
+of one of his friends<a href=
+"#note-545">[545]</a>, a proof that his
+talents, as well as his obliging service to authours, were ready
+as ever. He had revised <i>The Village</i>, an admirable poem, by
+the Reverend Mr. Crabbe. Its sentiments as to the false notions
+of rustick happiness and rustick virtue were quite congenial with
+his own<a href="#note-546">[546]</a>; and
+he had taken the trouble not only to suggest slight corrections
+and variations, but to furnish some lines, when he thought he
+could give the writer's meaning better than in the words of the
+manuscript<a href=
+"#note-547">[547]</a>.</p>
+<p>On Sunday, March 30, I found him at home in the evening, and
+had the pleasure to meet with Dr. Brocklesby<a href=
+"#note-548">[548]</a>, whose reading, and
+knowledge of life, and good spirits, supply him with a
+never-failing source of conversation. He mentioned a respectable
+gentleman, who became extremely penurious near the close of his
+life. Johnson said there must have been a degree of madness about
+him. 'Not at all, Sir, (said Dr. Brocklesby,) his judgement was
+entire.' Unluckily, however, he mentioned that although he had a
+fortune of twenty-seven thousand pounds, he denied himself many
+comforts, from an apprehension that he could not afford them.
+'Nay, Sir, (cried Johnson,) when the judgement is so disturbed
+that a man cannot count, that is pretty well.'</p>
+<p>I shall here insert a few of Johnson's sayings, without the
+formality of dates, as they have no reference to any particular
+time or place.</p>
+<p>'The more a man extends and varies his acquaintance the
+better.' This, however, was meant with a just restriction; for,
+he on another occasion said to me, 'Sir, a man may be so much of
+every thing, that he is nothing of any thing.'</p>
+<p>'Raising the wages of day-labourers is wrong<a href=
+"#note-549">[549]</a>; for it does not
+make them live better, but only makes them idler, and idleness is
+a very bad thing for human nature.'</p>
+<p>'It is a very good custom to keep a journal<a href=
+"#note-550">[550]</a> for a man's own
+use; he may write upon a card a day all that is necessary to be
+written, after he has had experience of life. At first there is a
+great deal to be written, because there is a great deal of
+novelty; but when once a man has settled his opinions, there is
+seldom much to be set down.'</p>
+<p>'There is nothing wonderful in the journal which we see Swift
+kept in London, for it contains slight topicks, and it might soon
+be written<a href=
+"#note-551">[551]</a>.'</p>
+<p>I praised the accuracy of an account-book of a lady whom I
+mentioned. JOHNSON. 'Keeping accounts, Sir, is of no use when a
+man is spending his own money, and has nobody to whom he is to
+account. You won't eat less beef to-day, because you have written
+down what it cost yesterday.' I mentioned another lady who
+thought as he did, so that her husband could not get her to keep
+an account of the expence of the family, as she thought it enough
+that she never exceeded the sum allowed her. JOHNSON. 'Sir, it is
+fit she should keep an account, because her husband wishes it;
+but I do not see its use<a href=
+"#note-552">[552]</a>.' I maintained that
+keeping an account has this advantage, that it satisfies a man
+that his money has not been lost or stolen, which he might
+sometimes be apt to imagine, were there no written state of his
+expence; and beside, a calculation of oeconomy so as not to
+exceed one's income, cannot be made without a view of the
+different articles in figures, that one may see how to retrench
+in some particulars less necessary than others. This he did not
+attempt to answer.</p>
+<p>Talking of an acquaintance of ours<a href=
+"#note-553">[553]</a>, whose narratives,
+which abounded in curious and interesting topicks, were unhappily
+found to be very fabulous; I mentioned Lord Mansfield's having
+said to me, 'Suppose we believe one <i>half</i> of what he
+tells.' JOHNSON. 'Ay; but we don't know <i>which</i> half to
+believe. By his lying we lose not only our reverence for him, but
+all comfort in his conversation.' BOSWELL. 'May we not take it as
+amusing fiction?' JOHNSON. 'Sir, the misfortune is, that you will
+insensibly believe as much of it as you incline to believe.'</p>
+<p>It is remarkable, that notwithstanding their congeniality in
+politicks, he never was acquainted with a late eminent noble
+judge<a href="#note-554">[554]</a>, whom
+I have heard speak of him as a writer, with great respect<a href=
+"#note-555">[555]</a>. Johnson, I know
+not upon what degree of investigation, entertained no exalted
+opinion of his Lordship's intellectual character<a href=
+"#note-556">[556]</a>. Talking of him to
+me one day, he said, 'It is wonderful, Sir, with how little real
+superiority of mind men can make an eminent figure in publick
+life.' He expressed himself to the same purpose concerning
+another law-Lord, who, it seems, once took a fancy to associate
+with the wits of London; but with so little success, that Foote
+said, 'What can he mean by coming among us? He is not only dull
+himself, but the cause of dullness in others<a href=
+"#note-557">[557]</a>.' Trying him by the
+test of his colloquial powers, Johnson had found him very
+defective. He once said to Sir Joshua Reynolds, 'This man now has
+been ten years about town, and has made nothing of it;' meaning
+as a companion<a href=
+"#note-558">[558]</a>. He said to me, 'I
+never heard any thing from him in company that was at all
+striking; and depend upon it, Sir, it is when you come close to a
+man in conversation, that you discover what his real abilities
+are; to make a speech in a publick assembly is a knack. Now I
+honour Thurlow, Sir; Thurlow is a fine fellow; he fairly puts his
+mind to yours<a href=
+"#note-559">[559]</a>.'</p>
+<p>After repeating to him some of his pointed, lively sayings, I
+said, 'It is a pity, Sir, you don't always remember your own good
+things, that you may have a laugh when you will.' JOHNSON. 'Nay,
+Sir, it is better that I forget them, that I may be reminded of
+them, and have a laugh on their being brought to my
+recollection.'</p>
+<p>When I recalled to him his having said as we sailed up
+Loch-lomond<a href="#note-560">[560]</a>,
+'That if he wore any thing fine, it should be <i>very</i> fine;'
+I observed that all his thoughts were upon a great scale.
+JOHNSON. 'Depend upon it, Sir, every man will have as fine a
+thing as he can get; as a large diamond for his ring.' BOSWELL.
+'Pardon me, Sir: a man of a narrow mind will not think of it, a
+slight trinket will satisfy him:</p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ "<i>Nee sufferre queat majoris pondera gemmae</i><a href=
+"#note-561">561</a>."'
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>I told him I should send him some Essays which I had written<a
+href="#note-562">[562]</a>, which I hoped
+he would be so good as to read, and pick out the good ones.
+JOHNSON. 'Nay, Sir, send me only the good ones; don't make
+<i>me</i> pick them.'</p>
+<p>I heard him once say, 'Though the proverb <i>Nullum numen
+abest, si sit prudentia<a href=
+"#note-563">[563]</a>, does not always
+prove true, we may be certain of the converse of it,</i> Nullum
+numen adest, si sit imprudentia<i>.'</i></p>
+<p>Once, when Mr. Seward was going to Bath, and asked his
+commands, he said, 'Tell Dr. Harrington that I wish he would
+publish another volume of the Nugae antiquae<i><a href=
+"#note-564">[564]</a>; it is a very
+pretty book[565].' Mr. Seward seconded this wish, and recommended
+to Dr. Harrington to dedicate it to Johnson, and take for his
+motto, what Catullus says to Cornelius Nepos:&mdash;</i></p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ '&mdash;&mdash;namque tu solebas,
+ Meas esse aliquid putare<i> NUGAS<a href=
+"#note-566">566</a>.'
+</i>
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>As a small proof of his kindliness and delicacy of feeling,
+the following circumstance may be mentioned: One evening when we
+were in the street together, and I told him I was going to sup at
+Mr. Beauclerk's, he said, 'I'll go with you.' After having walked
+part of the way, seeming to recollect something, he suddenly
+stopped and said, 'I cannot go,&mdash;but I do not love Beauclerk
+the less<i>.'</i></p>
+<p>On the frame of his portrait, Mr. Beauclerk had
+inscribed,&mdash;</p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ '&mdash;&mdash;Ingenium ingens
+ Inculto latet hoc sub corpore<i><a href=
+"#note-567">567</a>.'
+</i>
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>After Mr. Beauclerk's death, when it became Mr. Langton's
+property, he made the inscription be defaced. Johnson said
+complacently, 'It was kind in you to take it off;' and then after
+a short pause, added, 'and not unkind in him to put it on.'</p>
+<p>He said, 'How few of his friends' houses would a man choose to
+be at when he is sick.' He mentioned one or two. I recollect only
+Thrale's<a href=
+"#note-568">[568]</a>.</p>
+<p>He observed, 'There is a wicked inclination in most people to
+suppose an old man decayed in his intellects. If a young or
+middle-aged man, when leaving a company, does not recollect where
+he laid his hat, it is nothing; but if the same inattention is
+discovered in an old man, people will shrug up their shoulders,
+and say, 'His memory is going<a href=
+"#note-569">[569]</a>.'</p>
+<p>When I once talked to him of some of the sayings which every
+body repeats, but nobody knows where to find, such as Quos DEUS
+vult perdere, prius dementat<i><a href=
+"#note-570">[570]</a>; he told me that he
+was once offered ten guineas to point out from whence</i> Semel
+insanivimus omnes <i>was taken. He could not do it; but many
+years afterwards met with it by chance in</i> Johannes Baptista
+Mantuanus<i><a href=
+"#note-571">[571]</a>.</i></p>
+<p>I am very sorry that I did not take a note of an eloquent
+argument in which he maintained that the situation of Prince of
+Wales was the happiest of any person's in the kingdom, even
+beyond that of the Sovereign. I recollect only&mdash;the
+enjoyment of hope<a href=
+"#note-572">[572]</a>,&mdash;the high
+superiority of rank, without the anxious cares of
+government,&mdash;and a great degree of power, both from natural
+influence wisely used, and from the sanguine expectations of
+those who look forward to the chance of future favour.</p>
+<p>Sir Joshua Reynolds communicated to me the following
+particulars:&mdash;</p>
+<p>Johnson thought the poems published as translations from
+Ossian had so little merit, that he said, 'Sir, a man might write
+such stuff for ever, if he would abandon <i>his mind to it<a
+href="#note-573">[573]</a>.'</i></p>
+<p>He said, 'A man should pass a part of his time with the
+laughers<i>, by which means any thing ridiculous or particular
+about him might be presented to his view, and corrected.' I
+observed, he must have been a bold laugher who would have
+ventured to tell Dr. Johnson of any of his particularities<a
+href="#note-574">[574]</a>.</i></p>
+<p>Having observed the vain ostentatious importance of many
+people in quoting the authority of Dukes and Lords, as having
+been in their company, he said, he went to the other extreme, and
+did not mention his authority when he should have done it, had it
+not been that of a Duke or a Lord<a href=
+"#note-575">[575]</a>.</p>
+<p>Dr. Goldsmith said once to Dr. Johnson, that he wished for
+some additional members to the LITERARY CLUB, to give it an
+agreeable variety; for (said he,) there can now be nothing new
+among us: we have travelled over one another's minds. Johnson
+seemed a little angry, and said, 'Sir, you have not travelled
+over my <i>mind, I promise you.' Sir Joshua, however, thought
+Goldsmith right; observing, that 'when people have lived a great
+deal together, they know what each of them will say on every
+subject. A new understanding, therefore, is desirable; because
+though it may only furnish the same sense upon a question which
+would have been furnished by those with whom we are accustomed to
+live, yet this sense will have a different colouring; and
+colouring is of much effect in every thing else as well as in
+painting.'</i></p>
+<p>Johnson used to say that he made it a constant rule to talk as
+well as he could both as to sentiment and expression, by which
+means, what had been originally effort became familiar and easy<a
+href="#note-576">[576]</a>. The
+consequence of this, Sir Joshua observed, was, that his common
+conversation in all companies was such as to secure him universal
+attention, as something above the usual colloquial style was
+expected<a href=
+"#note-577">[577]</a>.</p>
+<p>Yet, though Johnson had this habit in company, when another
+mode was necessary, in order to investigate truth, he could
+descend to a language intelligible to the meanest capacity. An
+instance of this was witnessed by Sir Joshua Reynolds, when they
+were present at an examination of a little blackguard boy, by Mr.
+Saunders Welch<a href=
+"#note-578">[578]</a>, the late
+Westminster Justice. Welch, who imagined that he was exalting
+himself in Dr. Johnson's eyes by using big words, spoke in a
+manner that was utterly unintelligible to the boy; Dr. Johnson
+perceiving it, addressed himself to the boy, and changed the
+pompous phraseology into colloquial language. Sir Joshua
+Reynolds, who was much amused by this procedure, which seemed a
+kind of reversing of what might have been expected from the two
+men, took notice of it to Dr. Johnson, as they walked away by
+themselves. Johnson said, that it was continually the case; and
+that he was always obliged to translate <i>the Justice's swelling
+diction, (smiling,) so as that his meaning might be understood by
+the vulgar, from whom information was to be obtained<a href=
+"#note-579">[579]</a>.</i></p>
+<p>Sir Joshua once observed to him, that he had talked above the
+capacity of some people with whom they had been in company
+together. 'No matter, Sir, (said Johnson); they consider it as a
+compliment to be talked to, as if they were wiser than they are.
+So true is this, Sir, that Baxter made it a rule in every sermon
+that he preached, to say something that was above the capacity of
+his audience<a href=
+"#note-580">[580]</a>.'</p>
+<p>Johnson's dexterity in retort, when he seemed to be driven to
+an extremity by his adversary, was very remarkable. Of his power
+in this respect, our common friend, Mr. Windham, of Norfolk, has
+been pleased to furnish me with an eminent instance. However
+unfavourable to Scotland, he uniformly gave liberal praise to
+George Buchanan<a href=
+"#note-581">[581]</a>, as a writer. In a
+conversation concerning the literary merits of the two countries,
+in which Buchanan was introduced, a Scotchman, imagining that on
+this ground he should have an undoubted triumph over him,
+exclaimed, 'Ah, Dr. Johnson, what would you have said of
+Buchanan, had he been an Englishman?' 'Why, Sir, (said Johnson,
+after a little pause,) I should not <i>have said of Buchanan, had
+he been an</i> Englishman<i>, what I will now say of him as a</i>
+Scotchman<i>,&mdash;that he was the only man of genius his
+country ever produced.'</i></p>
+<p>And this brings to my recollection another instance of the
+same nature. I once reminded him that when Dr. Adam Smith was
+expatiating on the beauty of Glasgow, he had cut him short by
+saying, 'Pray, Sir, have you ever seen Brentford?' and I took the
+liberty to add, 'My dear Sir, surely that was shocking<i>.' 'Why,
+then, Sir, (he replied,) YOU have never seen Brentford.'</i></p>
+<p>Though his usual phrase for conversation was talk<i><a href=
+"#note-582">[582]</a>, yet he made a
+distinction; for when he once told me that he dined the day
+before at a friend's house, with 'a very pretty company;' and I
+asked him if there was good conversation, he answered, 'No, Sir;
+we had</i> talk <i>enough, but no</i> conversation<i>; there was
+nothing</i> discussed<i>.'</i></p>
+<p>Talking of the success of the Scotch in London, he imputed it
+In a considerable degree to their spirit of nationality. 'You
+know, Sir, (said he,) that no Scotchman publishes a book, or has
+a play brought upon the stage, but there are five hundred people
+ready to applaud him.<a href=
+"#note-583">[583]</a>'</p>
+<p>He gave much praise to his friend, Dr. Burney's elegant and
+entertaining travels<a href=
+"#note-584">[584]</a>, and told Mr.
+Seward that he had them in his eye, when writing his Journey to
+the Western Islands of Scotland<i>.</i></p>
+<p>Such was his sensibility, and so much was he affected by
+pathetick poetry, that, when he was reading Dr. Beattie's Hermit
+<i>in my presence, it brought tears into his eyes<a href=
+"#note-585">[585]</a>.</i></p>
+<p>He disapproved much of mingling real facts with fiction. On
+this account he censured a book entitled Love and Madness<i><a
+href="#note-586">[586]</a>.</i></p>
+<p>Mr. Hoole told him, he was born in Moorfields, and had
+received part of his early instruction in Grub-street. 'Sir,
+(said Johnson, smiling) you have been regularly <i>educated.'
+Having asked who was his instructor, and Mr. Hoole having
+answered, 'My uncle, Sir, who was a taylor;' Johnson,
+recollecting himself, said, 'Sir, I knew him; we called him
+the</i> metaphysical taylor<i>. He was of a club in Old-street,
+with me and George Psalmanazar, and some others<a href=
+"#note-587">[587]</a>: but pray, Sir, was
+he a good taylor?' Mr. Hoole having answered that he believed he
+was too mathematical, and used to draw squares and triangles on
+his shop-board, so that he did not excel in the cut of a
+coat;&mdash;'I am sorry for it (said Johnson,) for I would have
+every man to be master of his own business.'</i></p>
+<p>In pleasant reference to himself and Mr. Hoole, as brother
+authours, he often said, 'Let you and I, Sir, go together, and
+eat a beef-steak in Grub-street<a href=
+"#note-588">[588]</a>.'</p>
+<p>Sir William Chambers, that great Architect<a href=
+"#note-589">[589]</a>, whose works shew a
+sublimity of genius, and who is esteemed by all who know him for
+his social, hospitable, and generous qualities, submitted the
+manuscript of his Chinese Architecture <i>to Dr. Johnson's
+perusal. Johnson was much pleased with it, and said, 'It wants no
+addition nor correction, but a few lines of introduction;' which
+he furnished, and Sir William adopted<a href=
+"#note-590">[590]</a>.</i></p>
+<p>He said to Sir William Scott, 'The age is running mad after
+innovation; all the business of the world is to be done in a new
+way; men are to be hanged in a new way; Tyburn itself is not safe
+from the fury of innovation<a href=
+"#note-591">[591]</a>.' It having been
+argued that this was an improvement,&mdash;'No, Sir, (said he,
+eagerly,) it is not <i>an improvement: they object that the old
+method drew together a number of spectators. Sir, executions are
+intended to draw spectators. If they do not draw spectators they
+don't answer their purpose. The old method was most satisfactory
+to all parties; the publick was gratified by a procession<a href=
+"#note-592">[592]</a>; the criminal was
+supported by it. Why is all this to be swept away?' I perfectly
+agree with Dr. Johnson upon this head, and am persuaded that
+executions now, the solemn procession being discontinued, have
+not nearly the effect which they formerly had<a href=
+"#note-593">[593]</a>. Magistrates both
+in London, and elsewhere, have, I am afraid, in this had too much
+regard to their own ease<a href=
+"#note-594">[594]</a>.</i></p>
+<p>Of Dr. Hurd, Bishop of Worcester, Johnson said to a friend,
+'Hurd, Sir, is one of a set of men who account for every thing
+systematically; for instance, it has been a fashion to wear
+scarlet breeches; these men would tell you, that according to
+causes and effects, no other wear could at that time have been
+chosen.' He, however, said of him at another time to the same
+gentleman, 'Hurd, Sir, is a man whose acquaintance is a valuable
+acquisition.'</p>
+<p>That learned and ingenious Prelate<a href=
+"#note-595">[595]</a> it is well known
+published at one period of his life Moral and Political
+Dialogues<i>, with a woefully whiggish cast. Afterwards, his
+Lordship having thought better, came to see his errour, and
+republished the work with a more constitutional spirit. Johnson,
+however, was unwilling to allow him full credit for his political
+conversion. I remember when his Lordship declined the honour of
+being Archbishop of Canterbury, Johnson said, 'I am glad he did
+not go to Lambeth; for, after all, I fear he is a Whig in his
+heart.'</i></p>
+<p>Johnson's attention to precision and clearness in expression
+was very remarkable. He disapproved of parentheses; and I believe
+in all his voluminous writings, not half a dozen of them will be
+found. He never used the phrases the former <i>and</i> the
+latter<i>, having observed, that they often occasioned obscurity;
+he therefore contrived to construct his sentences so as not to
+have occasion for them, and would even rather repeat the same
+words, in order to avoid them<a href=
+"#note-596">[596]</a>. Nothing is more
+common than to mistake surnames when we hear them carelessly
+uttered for the first time. To prevent this, he used not only to
+pronounce them slowly and distinctly, but to take the trouble of
+spelling them; a practice which I have often followed; and which
+I wish were general.</i></p>
+<p>Such was the heat and irritability of his blood, that not only
+did he pare his nails to the quick; but scraped the joints of his
+fingers with a pen-knife, till they seemed quite red and raw.</p>
+<p>The heterogeneous composition of human nature was remarkably
+exemplified in Johnson. His liberality in giving his money to
+persons in distress was extraordinary. Yet there lurked about him
+a propensity to paultry saving. One day I owned to him that 'I
+was occasionally troubled with a fit of narrowness<i>.' 'Why,
+Sir, (said he,) so am I.</i> But I do not tell it<i>.' He has now
+and then borrowed a shilling of me; and when I asked for it
+again, seemed to be rather out of humour. A droll little
+circumstance once occurred: as if he meant to reprimand my minute
+exactness as a creditor, he thus addressed
+me;&mdash;'Boswell,</i> lend <i>me sixpence&mdash;</i>not to be
+repaid<i><a href=
+"#note-597">[597]</a>.'</i></p>
+<p>This great man's attention to small things was very
+remarkable. As an instance of it, he one day said to me, 'Sir,
+when you get silver in change for a guinea, look carefully at it;
+you may find some curious piece of coin.'</p>
+<p>Though a stern true-born Englishman<i><a href=
+"#note-598">[598]</a>, and fully
+prejudiced against all other nations, he had discernment enough
+to see, and candour enough to censure, the cold reserve too
+common among Englishmen towards strangers: 'Sir, (said he,) two
+men of any other nation who are shewn into a room together, at a
+house where they are both visitors, will immediately find some
+conversation. But two Englishmen will probably go each to a
+different window, and remain in obstinate silence. Sir, we as yet
+do not enough understand the common rights of humanity<a href=
+"#note-599">[599]</a>.'</i></p>
+<p>Johnson was at a certain period of his life a good deal with
+the Earl of Shelburne<a href=
+"#note-600">[600]</a>, now Marquis of
+Lansdown, as he doubtless could not but have a due value for that
+nobleman's activity of mind, and uncommon acquisitions of
+important knowledge, however much he might disapprove of other
+parts of his Lordship's character, which were widely different
+from his own.</p>
+<p>Maurice Morgann, Esq., authour of the very ingenious Essay on
+the character of Falstaff<i><a href=
+"#note-601">[601]</a>, being a particular
+friend of his Lordship, had once an opportunity of entertaining
+Johnson for a day or two at Wickham, when its Lord was absent,
+and by him I have been favoured with two anecdotes.</i></p>
+<p>One is not a little to the credit of Johnson's candour. Mr.
+Morgann and he had a dispute pretty late at night, in which
+Johnson would not give up, though he had the wrong side, and in
+short, both kept the field. Next morning, when they met in the
+breakfasting-room, Dr. Johnson accosted Mr. Morgann
+thus:&mdash;'Sir, I have been thinking on our dispute last
+night&mdash;You were in the right<i><a href=
+"#note-602">[602]</a>.'</i></p>
+<p>The other was as follows:&mdash;Johnson, for sport perhaps, or
+from the spirit of contradiction, eagerly maintained that
+Derrick<a href="#note-603">[603]</a> had
+merit as a writer. Mr. Morgann argued with him directly, in vain.
+At length he had recourse to this device. 'Pray, Sir, (said he,)
+whether do you reckon Derrick or Smart<a href=
+"#note-604">[604]</a> the best poet?'
+Johnson at once felt himself roused; and answered, 'Sir, there is
+no settling the point of precedency between a louse and a
+flea.'</p>
+<p>Once, when checking my boasting too frequently of myself in
+company, he said to me, 'Boswell, you often vaunt so much, as to
+provoke ridicule. You put me in mind of a man who was standing in
+the kitchen of an inn with his back to the fire, and thus
+accosted the person next him, "Do you know, Sir, who I am?" "No,
+Sir, (said the other,) I have not that advantage." "Sir, (said
+he,) I am the great <i>TWALMLEY, who invented the New Floodgate
+Iron<a href="#note-605">[605]</a>."' The
+Bishop of Killaloe, on my repeating the story to him, defended
+Twalmley, by observing, that he was entitled to the epithet
+of</i> great<i>; for Virgil in his groupe of worthies in the
+Elysian fields&mdash;</i></p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ Hic manus ob patriam pugnando vulnera passi<i>, &amp;c.
+</i>
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>mentions</p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ Inventas aut qui vitam excoluere per artes<i><a href=
+"#note-606">606</a>.
+</i>
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>He was pleased to say to me one morning when we were left
+alone in his study, 'Boswell, I think I am easier with you than
+with almost any body.'</p>
+<p>He would not allow Mr. David Hume any credit for his political
+principles, though similar to his own; saying of him, 'Sir, he
+was a Tory by chance<a href=
+"#note-607">[607]</a>.'</p>
+<p>His acute observation of human life made him remark, 'Sir,
+there is nothing by which a man exasperates most people more,
+than by displaying a superiour ability or brilliancy in
+conversation. They seem pleased at the time; but their envy makes
+them curse him at their hearts<a href=
+"#note-608">[608]</a>.'</p>
+<p>My readers will probably be surprised to hear that the great
+Dr. Johnson could amuse himself with so slight and playful a
+species of composition as a Charade<i>. I have recovered one
+which he made on Dr.</i> Barnard<i>, now Lord Bishop of Killaloe;
+who has been pleased for many years to treat me with so much
+intimacy and social ease, that I may presume to call him not only
+my Right Reverend, but my very dear Friend. I therefore with
+peculiar pleasure give to the world a just and elegant compliment
+thus paid to his Lordship by Johnson<a href=
+"#note-609">[609]</a>.</i></p>
+<center>CHARADE.</center>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+'My first<i><a href=
+"#note-610">610</a> shuts out thieves from your house or your room,
+ My</i> second<i><a href=
+"#note-611">611</a> expresses a Syrian perfume.
+ My</i> whole<i><a href=
+"#note-612">612</a> is a man in whose converse is shar'd,
+ The strength of a Bar and the sweetness of Nard.'
+</i>
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>Johnson asked Richard Owen Cambridge, Esq., if he had read the
+Spanish translation of Sallust<i>, said to be written by a Prince
+of Spain<a href="#note-613">[613]</a>,
+with the assistance of his tutor, who is professedly the authour
+of a treatise annexed, on the Phoenician language.</i></p>
+<p>Mr. Cambridge commended the work, particularly as he thought
+the Translator understood his authour better than is commonly the
+case with Translators: but said, he was disappointed in the
+purpose for which he borrowed the book; to see whether a Spaniard
+could be better furnished with inscriptions from monuments,
+coins, or other antiquities which he might more probably find on
+a coast, so immediately opposite to Carthage, than the
+Antiquaries of any other countries. JOHNSON. 'I am very sorry you
+was<a href="#note-614">[614]</a> not
+gratified in your expectations.' CAMBRIDGE. 'The language would
+have been of little use, as there is no history existing in that
+tongue to balance the partial accounts which the Roman writers
+have left us.' JOHNSON. 'No, Sir. They have not been partial<i>,
+they have told their own story, without shame or regard to
+equitable treatment of their injured enemy; they had no
+compunction, no feeling for a Carthaginian. Why, Sir, they would
+never have borne Virgil's description of Aeneas's treatment of
+Dido, if she had not been a Carthaginian<a href=
+"#note-615">[615]</a>.'</i></p>
+<p>I gratefully acknowledge this and other communications from
+Mr. Cambridge, whom, if a beautiful villa on the banks of the
+Thames, a few miles distant from London, a numerous and excellent
+library, which he accurately knows and reads, a choice collection
+of pictures, which he understands and relishes, an easy fortune,
+an amiable family, an extensive circle of friends and
+acquaintance, distinguished by rank, fashion and genius, a
+literary fame, various, elegant and still increasing, colloquial
+talents rarely to be found<a href=
+"#note-616">[616]</a>, and with all these
+means of happiness, enjoying, when well advanced in years, health
+and vigour of body, serenity and animation of mind, do not
+entitle to be addressed fortunate senex!<i><a href=
+"#note-617">[617]</a> I know not to whom,
+in any age, that expression could with propriety have been used.
+Long may he live to hear and to feel it!</i></p>
+<p>Johnson's love of little children, which he discovered upon
+all occasions, calling them 'pretty dears,' and giving them
+sweetmeats, was an undoubted proof of the real humanity and
+gentleness of his disposition<a href=
+"#note-618">[618]</a>.</p>
+<p>His uncommon kindness to his servants, and serious concern,
+not only for their comfort in this world, but their happiness in
+the next, was another unquestionable evidence of what all, who
+were intimately acquainted with him, knew to be true.</p>
+<p>Nor would it be just, under this head, to omit the fondness
+which he shewed for animals which he had taken under his
+protection. I never shall forget the indulgence with which he
+treated Hodge, his cat: for whom he himself used to go out and
+buy oysters, lest the servants having that trouble should take a
+dislike to the poor creature. I am, unluckily, one of those who
+have an antipathy to a cat, so that I am uneasy when in the room
+with one; and I own, I frequently suffered a good deal from the
+presence of this same Hodge. I recollect him one day scrambling
+up Dr. Johnson's breast, apparently with much satisfaction, while
+my friend smiling and half-whistling, rubbed down his back, and
+pulled him by the tail; and when I observed he was a fine cat,
+saying, 'Why yes, Sir, but I have had cats whom I liked better
+than this;' and then as if perceiving Hodge to be out of
+countenance, adding, 'but he is a very fine cat, a very fine cat
+indeed.'</p>
+<p>This reminds me of the ludicrous account which he gave Mr.
+Langton, of the despicable state of a young Gentleman of good
+family. 'Sir, when I heard of him last, he was running about town
+shooting cats.' And then in a sort of kindly reverie, he
+bethought himself of his own favourite cat, and said, 'But Hodge
+shan't be shot; no, no, Hodge shall not be shot.'</p>
+<p>He thought Mr. Beauclerk made a shrewd and judicious' remark
+to Mr. Langton, who, after having been for the first time in
+company with a well-known wit about town, was warmly admiring and
+praising him, 'See him again,' said Beauclerk.</p>
+<p>His respect for the Hierarchy, and particularly the
+Dignitaries of the Church, has been more than once exhibited in
+the course of this work<a href=
+"#note-619">[619]</a>. Mr. Seward saw him
+presented to the Archbishop of York[620], and described his Bow
+to an ARCH-BISHOP<i>, as such a studied elaboration of homage,
+such an extension of limb, such a flexion of body, as have seldom
+or ever been equalled.</i></p>
+<p>I cannot help mentioning with much regret, that by my own
+negligence I lost an opportunity of having the history of my
+family from its founder Thomas Boswell, in 1504, recorded and
+illustrated by Johnson's pen. Such was his goodness to me, that
+when I presumed to solicit him for so great a favour, he was
+pleased to say, 'Let me have all the materials you can collect,
+and I will do it both in Latin and English; then let it be
+printed and copies of it be deposited in various places for
+security and preservation.' I can now only do the best I can to
+make up for this loss, keeping my great Master steadily in view.
+Family histories, like the imagines majorum <i>of the Ancients,
+excite to virtue; and I wish that they who really have blood,
+would be more careful to trace and ascertain its course. Some
+have affected to laugh at the history of the house of Yvery<a
+href="#note-621">[621]</a>: it would be
+well if many others would transmit their pedigrees to posterity,
+with the same accuracy and generous zeal with which the Noble
+Lord who compiled that work has honoured and perpetuated his
+ancestry.</i></p>
+<p>On Thursday, April 10<a href=
+"#note-622">[622]</a>, I introduced to
+him, at his house in Bolt-court, the Honourable and Reverend
+William Stuart, son of the Earl of Bute; a gentleman truly worthy
+of being known to Johnson; being, with all the advantages of high
+birth, learning, travel, and elegant manners, an exemplary parish
+priest in every respect.</p>
+<p>After some compliments on both sides, the tour which Johnson
+and I had made to the Hebrides was mentioned. JOHNSON. 'I got an
+acquisition of more ideas by it than by any thing that I
+remember. I saw quite a different system of life<a href=
+"#note-623">[623]</a>.' BOSWELL. 'You
+would not like to make the same journey again?' JOHNSON. 'Why no,
+Sir; not the same: it is a tale told. Gravina, an Italian
+critick, observes, that every man desires to see that of which he
+has read; but no man desires to read an account of what he has
+seen: so much does description fall short of reality. Description
+only excites curiosity: seeing satisfies it. Other people may go
+and see the Hebrides.' BOSWELL. 'I should wish to go and see some
+country totally different from what I have been used to; such as
+Turkey, where religion and every thing else are different.'
+JOHNSON. 'Yes, Sir; there are two objects of curiosity,&mdash;the
+Christian world, and the Mahometan world. All the rest may be
+considered as barbarous.' BOSWELL. 'Pray, Sir, is the Turkish
+Spy<i><a href="#note-624">[624]</a> a
+genuine book?' JOHNSON. 'No, Sir. Mrs. Manley, in her</i>
+Life<i>, says that her father wrote the first two volumes<a href=
+"#note-625">[625]</a>: and in another
+book,</i> Dunton's Life and Errours<i>, we find that the rest was
+written by one</i> Sault<i>, at two guineas a sheet, under the
+direction of Dr. Midgeley<a href=
+"#note-626">[626]</a>.</i></p>
+<p>BOSWELL. 'This has been a very factious reign, owing to the
+too great indulgence of Government.' JOHNSON. 'I think so, Sir.
+What at first was lenity, grew timidity<a href=
+"#note-627">[627]</a>. Yet this is
+reasoning &agrave; posteriori<i>, and may not be just. Supposing
+a few had at first been punished, I believe faction would have
+been crushed; but it might have been said, that it was a
+sanguinary reign. A man cannot tell</i> &agrave; priori <i>what
+will be best for Government to do. This reign has been very
+unfortunate. We have had an unsuccessful war; but that does not
+prove that we have been ill governed. One side or other must
+prevail in war, as one or other must win at play. When we beat
+Louis we were not better governed; nor were the French better
+governed when Louis beat us.'</i></p>
+<p>On Saturday, April 12, I visited him, in company with Mr.
+Windham, of Norfolk, whom, though a Whig, he highly valued. One
+of the best things he ever said was to this gentleman; who,
+before he set out for Ireland as Secretary to Lord Northington,
+when Lord Lieutenant, expressed to the Sage some modest and
+virtuous doubts, whether he could bring himself to practise those
+arts which it is supposed a person in that situation has occasion
+to employ. 'Don't be afraid, Sir, (said Johnson, with a pleasant
+smile,) you will soon make a very pretty rascal<a href=
+"#note-628">[628]</a>.</p>
+<p>He talked to-day a good deal of the wonderful extent and
+variety of London, and observed, that men of curious enquiry
+might see in it such modes of life as very few could even
+imagine. He in particular recommended to us to explore
+Wapping<i>, which we resolved to do<a href=
+"#note-629">[629]</a>.</i></p>
+<p>Mr. Lowe, the painter, who was with him, was very much
+distressed that a large picture which he had painted was refused
+to be received into the Exhibition of the Royal Academy. Mrs.
+Thrale knew Johnson's character so superficially, as to represent
+him as unwilling to do small acts of benevolence; and mentions in
+particular, that he would hardly take the trouble to write a
+letter in favour of his friends<a href=
+"#note-630">[630]</a>. The truth,
+however, is, that he was remarkable, in an extraordinary degree,
+for what she denies to him; and, above all, for this very sort of
+kindness, writing letters for those to whom his solicitations
+might be of service. He now gave Mr. Lowe the following, of which
+I was diligent enough, with his permission, to take copies at the
+next coffee-house, while Mr. Windham was so good as to stay by
+me.</p>
+<center>TO SIR JOSHUA REYNOLDS.</center>
+<center>'SIR,</center>
+<p>'Mr. Lowe considers himself as cut off from all credit and all
+hope, by the rejection of his picture from the Exhibition. Upon
+this work he has exhausted all his powers, and suspended all his
+expectations: and, certainly, to be refused an opportunity of
+taking the opinion of the publick, is in itself a very great
+hardship. It is to be condemned without a trial.</p>
+<p>If you could procure the revocation of this incapacitating
+edict, you would deliver an unhappy man from great affliction.
+The Council has sometimes reversed its own determination; and I
+hope, that by your interposition this luckless picture may be got
+admitted. I am, &amp;c.</p>
+<center>SAM. JOHNSON.</center>
+<p>April 12, 1783.</p>
+<p>To MR. BARRY.</p>
+<center>SIR,</center>
+<p>Mr. Lowe's exclusion from the exhibition gives him more
+trouble than you and the other gentlemen of the Council could
+imagine or intend. He considers disgrace and ruin as the
+inevitable consequence of your determination.</p>
+<p>He says, that some pictures have been received after
+rejection; and if there be any such precedent, I earnestly
+entreat that you will use your interest in his favour. Of his
+work I can say nothing; I pretend not to judge of painting; and
+this picture I never saw: but I conceive it extremely hard to
+shut out any man from the possibility of success; and therefore I
+repeat my request that you will propose the re-consideration of
+Mr. Lowe's case; and if there be any among the Council with whom
+my name can have any weight, be pleased to communicate to them
+the desire of, Sir, Your most humble servant, SAM. JOHNSON. April
+12, 1783.</p>
+<p>Such intercession was too powerful to be resisted; and Mr.
+Lowe's performance was admitted at Somerset Place<a href=
+"#note-631">[631]</a>. The subject, as I
+recollect, was the Deluge, at that point of time when the water
+was verging to the top of the last uncovered mountain. Near to
+the spot was seen the last of the antediluvian race, exclusive of
+those who were saved in the ark of Noah. This was one of those
+giants, then the inhabitants of the earth, who had still strength
+to swim, and with one of his hands held aloft his infant child.
+Upon the small remaining dry spot appeared a famished lion, ready
+to spring at the child and devour it. Mr. Lowe told me that
+Johnson said to him, 'Sir, your picture is noble and probable.'
+'A compliment, indeed, (said Mr. Lowe,) from a man who cannot
+lie, and cannot be mistaken.'</p>
+<p>About this time he wrote to Mrs. Lucy Porter, mentioning his
+bad health, and that he intended a visit to Lichfield. 'It is,
+(says he,) with no great expectation of amendment that I make
+every year a journey into the country; but it is pleasant to
+visit those whose kindness has been often experienced.'</p>
+<p>On April 18, (being Good-Friday,) I found him at breakfast, in
+his usual manner upon that day, drinking tea without milk, and
+eating a cross-bun to prevent faintness; we went to St. Clement's
+church, as formerly. When we came home from church, he placed
+himself on one of the stone-seats at his garden-door, and I took
+the other, and thus in the open air and in a placid frame of
+mind, he talked away very easily. JOHNSON. 'Were I a country
+gentleman, I should not be very hospitable, I should not have
+crowds in my house<a href=
+"#note-632">[632]</a>.' BOSWELL. 'Sir
+Alexander Dick[633] tells me, that he remembers having a thousand
+people in a year to dine at his house: that is, reckoning each
+person as one, each time that he dined there.' JOHNSON. 'That,
+Sir, is about three a day.' BOSWELL. 'How your statement lessens
+the idea.' JOHNSON. 'That, Sir, is the good of counting<a href=
+"#note-634">[634]</a>. It brings every
+thing to a certainty, which before floated in the mind
+indefinitely.' BOSWELL. 'But Omne ignotum pro magnifico est<a
+href="#note-635">[635]</a>: one is sorry
+to have this diminished.' JOHNSON. 'Sir, you should not allow
+yourself to be delighted with errour.' BOSWELL. 'Three a day seem
+but few.' JOHNSON. 'Nay, Sir, he who entertains three a day, does
+very liberally. And if there is a large family, the poor
+entertain those three, for they eat what the poor would get:
+there must be superfluous meat; it must be given to the poor, or
+thrown out.' BOSWELL. 'I observe in London, that the poor go
+about and gather bones, which I understand are manufactured.'
+JOHNSON. 'Yes, Sir; they boil them, and extract a grease from
+them for greasing wheels and other purposes. Of the best pieces
+they make a mock ivory, which is used for hafts to knives, and
+various other things; the coarser pieces they burn and pound, and
+sell the ashes.' BOSWELL. 'For what purpose, Sir?' JOHNSON. 'Why,
+Sir, for making a furnace for the chymists for melting iron. A
+paste made of burnt bones will stand a stronger heat than any
+thing else. Consider, Sir; if you are to melt iron, you cannot
+line your pot with brass, because it is softer than iron, and
+would melt sooner; nor with iron, for though malleable iron is
+harder than cast iron, yet it would not do; but a paste of
+burnt-bones will not melt.' BOSWELL. 'Do you know, Sir, I have
+discovered a manufacture to a great extent, of what you only
+piddle at,&mdash;scraping and drying the peel of oranges<a href=
+"#note-636">[636]</a>. At a place in
+Newgate-street, there is a prodigious quantity prepared, which
+they sell to the distillers.' JOHNSON. 'Sir, I believe they make
+a higher thing out of them than a spirit; they make what is
+called orange-butter, the oil of the orange inspissated, which
+they mix perhaps with common pomatum, and make it fragrant. The
+oil does not fly off in the drying.'</p>
+<p>BOSWELL. 'I wish to have a good walled garden.' JOHNSON. 'I
+don't think it would be worth the expence to you. We compute in
+England, a park wall at a thousand pounds a mile; now a
+garden-wall must cost at least as much. You intend your trees
+should grow higher than a deer will leap. Now let us see; for a
+hundred pounds you could only have forty-four square yards, which
+is very little; for two hundred pounds, you may have eighty-four
+square yards<a href=
+"#note-637">[637]</a>, which is very
+well. But when will you get the value of two hundred pounds of
+walls, in fruit, in your climate? No, Sir, such contention with
+Nature is not worth while. I would plant an orchard, and have
+plenty of such fruit as ripen well in your country. My friend,
+Dr. Madden<a href="#note-638">[638]</a>,
+of Ireland, said, that "in an orchard there should be enough to
+eat, enough to lay up, enough to be stolen, and enough to rot
+upon the ground." Cherries are an early fruit, you may have them;
+and you may have the early apples and pears.' BOSWELL. 'We cannot
+have nonpareils.' JOHNSON. 'Sir, you can no more have nonpareils
+than you can have grapes.' BOSWELL. 'We have them, Sir; but they
+are very bad.' JOHNSON. 'Nay, Sir, never try to have a thing
+merely to shew that you <i>cannot</i> have it. From ground that
+would let for forty shillings you may have a large orchard; and
+you see it costs you only forty shillings. Nay, you may graze the
+ground when the trees are grown up; you cannot while they are
+young.' BOSWELL. 'Is not a good garden a very common thing in
+England, Sir?' JOHNSON. 'Not so common, Sir, as you imagine<a
+href="#note-639">[639]</a>. In
+Lincolnshire there is hardly an orchard; in Staffordshire very
+little fruit.' BOSWELL. 'Has Langton no orchard?' JOHNSON. 'No,
+Sir.' BOSWELL. 'How so, Sir?' JOHNSON. 'Why, Sir, from the
+general negligence of the county. He has it not, because nobody
+else has it.' BOSWELL. 'A hot-house is a certain thing; I may
+have that.' JOHNSON. 'A hot-house is pretty certain; but you must
+first build it, then you must keep fires in it, and you must have
+a gardener to take care of it.' BOSWELL. 'But if I have a
+gardener at any rate?&mdash;' JOHNSON. 'Why, yes.' BOSWELL.' I'd
+have it near my house; there is no need to have it in the
+orchard.' JOHNSON. 'Yes, I'd have it near my house. I would plant
+a great many currants; the fruit is good, and they make a pretty
+sweetmeat.'</p>
+<p>I record this minute detail, which some may think trifling, in
+order to shew clearly how this great man, whose mind could grasp
+such large and extensive subjects, as he has shewn in his
+literary labours, was yet well-informed in the common affairs of
+life, and loved to illustrate them.</p>
+<p>Mr. Walker, the celebrated master of elocution<a href=
+"#note-640">[640]</a>, came in, and then
+we went up stairs into the study. I asked him if he had taught
+many clergymen. JOHNSON. 'I hope not.' WALKER. 'I have taught
+only one, and he is the best reader I ever heard, not by my
+teaching, but by his own natural talents.' JOHNSON. 'Were he the
+best reader in the world, I would not have it told that he was
+taught.' Here was one of his peculiar prejudices. Could it be any
+disadvantage to the clergyman to have it known that he was taught
+an easy and graceful delivery? BOSWELL. 'Will you not allow, Sir,
+that a man may be taught to read well?' JOHNSON. 'Why, Sir, so
+far as to read better than he might do without being taught, yes.
+Formerly it was supposed that there was no difference in reading,
+but that one read as well as another.' BOSWELL. 'It is wonderful
+to see old Sheridan as enthusiastick about oratory as ever<a
+href="#note-641">[641]</a>,' WALKER. 'His
+enthusiasm as to what oratory will do, may be too great: but he
+reads well.' JOHNSON. 'He reads well, but he reads low<a href=
+"#note-642">[642]</a>; and you know it is
+much easier to read low than to read high; for when you read
+high, you are much more limited, your loudest note can be but
+one, and so the variety is less in proportion to the loudness.
+Now some people have occasion to speak to an extensive audience,
+and must speak loud to be heard.' WALKER. 'The art is to read
+strong, though low.'</p>
+<p>Talking of the origin of language; JOHNSON. 'It must have come
+by inspiration. A thousand, nay, a million of children could not
+invent a language. While the organs are pliable, there is not
+understanding enough to form a language; by the time that there
+is understanding enough, the organs are become stiff. We know
+that after a certain age we cannot learn to pronounce a new
+language. No foreigner, who comes to England when advanced in
+life, ever pronounces English tolerably well; at least such
+instances are very rare. When I maintain that language must have
+come by inspiration, I do not mean that inspiration is required
+for rhetorick, and all the beauties of language; for when once
+man has language, we can conceive that he may gradually form
+modifications of it. I mean only that inspiration seems to me to
+be necessary to give man the faculty of speech; to inform him
+that he may have speech; which I think he could no more find out
+without inspiration, than cows or hogs would think of such a
+faculty.' WALKER. 'Do you think, Sir, that there are any perfect
+synonimes in any language?' JOHNSON. 'Originally there were not;
+but by using words negligently, or in poetry, one word comes to
+be confounded with another.'</p>
+<p>He talked of Dr. Dodd<a href=
+"#note-643">[643]</a>. 'A friend of mine,
+(said he,) came to me and told me, that a lady wished to have Dr.
+Dodd's picture in a bracelet, and asked me for a motto. I said, I
+could think of no better than <i>Currat Lex</i>. I was very
+willing to have him pardoned, that is, to have the sentence
+changed to transportation: but, when he was once hanged, I did
+not wish he should be made a saint.'</p>
+<p>Mrs. Burney, wife of his friend Dr. Burney, came in, and he
+seemed to be entertained with her conversation.</p>
+<p>Garrick's funeral was talked of as extravagantly expensive.
+Johnson, from his dislike to exaggeration, would not allow that
+it was distinguished by any extraordinary pomp. 'Were there not
+six horses to each coach?' said Mrs. Burney. JOHNSON. 'Madam,
+there were no more six horses than six phoenixes<a href=
+"#note-644">[644]</a>.'</p>
+<p>Mrs. Burney wondered that some very beautiful new buildings
+should be erected in Moorfields, in so shocking a situation as
+between Bedlam and St. Luke's Hospital; and said she could not
+live there. JOHNSON. 'Nay, Madam, you see nothing there to hurt
+you. You no more think of madness by having windows that look to
+Bedlam, than you think of death by having windows that look to a
+church-yard.' MRS. BURNEY. 'We may look to a church-yard, Sir;
+for it is right that we should be kept in mind of death.'
+JOHNSON. 'Nay, Madam, if you go to that, it is right that we
+should be kept in mind of madness, which is occasioned by too
+much indulgence of imagination. I think a very moral use may be
+made of these new buildings: I would have those who have heated
+imaginations live there, and take warning.' MRS. BURNEY. 'But,
+Sir, many of the poor people that are mad, have become so from
+disease, or from distressing events. It is, therefore, not their
+fault, but their misfortune; and, therefore, to think of them is
+a melancholy consideration.'</p>
+<p>Time passed on in conversation till it was too late for the
+service of the church at three o'clock. I took a walk, and left
+him alone for some time; then returned, and we had coffee and
+conversation again by ourselves.</p>
+<p>I stated the character of a noble friend of mine, as a curious
+case for his opinion:&mdash;'He is the most inexplicable man to
+me that I ever knew. Can you explain him, Sir? He is, I really
+believe, noble-minded, generous, and princely. But his most
+intimate friends may be separated from him for years, without his
+ever asking a question concerning them. He will meet them with a
+formality, a coldness, a stately indifference; but when they come
+close to him, and fairly engage him in conversation, they find
+him as easy, pleasant, and kind, as they could wish. One then
+supposes that what is so agreeable will soon be renewed; but stay
+away from him for half a year, and he will neither call on you,
+nor send to inquire about you.' JOHNSON. 'Why, Sir, I cannot
+ascertain his character exactly, as I do not know him; but I
+should not like to have such a man for my friend. He may love
+study, and wish not to be interrupted by his friends; <i>Amici
+fures temporis</i>. He may be a frivolous man, and be so much
+occupied with petty pursuits, that he may not want friends. Or he
+may have a notion that there is a dignity in appearing
+indifferent, while he in fact may not be more indifferent at his
+heart than another.'</p>
+<p>We went to evening prayers at St. Clement's, at seven, and
+then parted.</p>
+<p>On Sunday, April 20, being Easter-day, after attending solemn
+service at St. Paul's, I came to Dr. Johnson, and found Mr. Lowe,
+the painter, sitting with him. Mr. Lowe mentioned the great
+number of new buildings of late in London, yet that Dr. Johnson
+had observed, that the number of inhabitants was not increased.
+JOHNSON. 'Why, Sir, the bills of mortality prove that no more
+people die now than formerly; so it is plain no more live. The
+register of births proves nothing, for not one tenth of the
+people of London are born there.' BOSWELL. 'I believe, Sir, a
+great many of the children born in London die early.' JOHNSON.
+'Why, yes, Sir.' BOSWELL. 'But those who do live, are as stout
+and strong people as any<a href=
+"#note-645">[645]</a>: Dr. Price[646]
+says, they must be naturally stronger to get through.' JOHNSON.
+'That is system, Sir. A great traveller observes, that it is said
+there are no weak or deformed people among the Indians; but he
+with much sagacity assigns the reason of this, which is, that the
+hardship of their life as hunters and fishers does not allow weak
+or diseased children to grow up. Now had I been an Indian, I must
+have died early; my eyes would not have served me to get food. I
+indeed now could fish, give me English tackle; but had I been an
+Indian I must have starved, or they would have knocked me on the
+head, when they saw I could do nothing.' BOSWELL. 'Perhaps they
+would have taken care of you: we are told they are fond of
+oratory, you would have talked to them.' JOHNSON. 'Nay, Sir, I
+should not have lived long enough to be fit to talk; I should
+have been dead before I was ten years old. Depend upon it, Sir, a
+savage, when he is hungry, will not carry about with him a looby
+of nine years old, who cannot help himself. They have no
+affection, Sir.' BOSWELL. 'I believe natural affection, of which
+we hear so much, is very small.' JOHNSON. 'Sir, natural affection
+is nothing: but affection from principle and established duty is
+sometimes wonderfully strong.' LOWE. 'A hen, Sir, will feed her
+chickens in preference to herself.' JOHNSON. 'But we don't know
+that the hen is hungry; let the hen be fairly hungry, and I'll
+warrant she'll peck the corn herself. A cock, I believe, will
+feed hens instead of himself; but we don't know that the cock is
+hungry.' BOSWELL. 'And that, Sir, is not from affection but
+gallantry. But some of the Indians have affection.' JOHNSON.
+'Sir, that they help some of their children is plain; for some of
+them live, which they could not do without being helped.'</p>
+<p>I dined with him; the company were, Mrs. Williams, Mrs.
+Desmoulins, and Mr. Lowe. He seemed not to be well, talked
+little, grew drowsy soon after dinner, and retired, upon which I
+went away.</p>
+<p>Having next day gone to Mr. Burke's seat in the country, from
+whence I was recalled by an express, that a near relation of mine
+had killed his antagonist in a duel, and was himself dangerously
+wounded<a href="#note-647">[647]</a>, I
+saw little of Dr. Johnson till Monday, April 28, when I spent a
+considerable part of the day with him, and introduced the
+subject, which then chiefly occupied my mind. JOHNSON. 'I do not
+see, Sir, that fighting is absolutely forbidden in Scripture; I
+see revenge forbidden, but not self-defence.' BOSWELL. 'The
+Quakers say it is; "Unto him that smiteth thee on one cheek,
+offer him also the other<a href=
+"#note-648">[648]</a>."' JOHNSON. 'But
+stay, Sir; the text is meant only to have the effect of
+moderating passion; it is plain that we are not to take it in a
+literal sense. We see this from the context, where there are
+other recommendations, which I warrant you the Quaker will not
+take literally; as, for instance, "From him that would borrow of
+thee, turn thou not away<a href=
+"#note-649">[649]</a>." Let a man whose
+credit is bad, come to a Quaker, and say, "Well, Sir, lend me a
+hundred pounds;" he'll find him as unwilling as any other man.
+No, Sir, a man may shoot the man who invades his character, as he
+may shoot him who attempts to break into his house<a href=
+"#note-650">[650]</a>. So in 1745, my
+friend, Tom Cumming the Quaker<a href=
+"#note-651">[651]</a>, said, he would not
+fight, but he would drive an ammunition cart; and we know that
+the Quakers have sent flannel waistcoats to our soldiers, to
+enable them to fight better.' BOSWELL. 'When a man is the
+aggressor, and by ill-usage forces on a duel in which he is
+killed, have we not little ground to hope that he is gone into a
+state of happiness?' JOHNSON. 'Sir, we are not to judge
+determinately of the state in which a man leaves this life. He
+may in a moment have repented effectually, and it is possible may
+have been accepted by GOD. There is in <i>Camden's Remains</i>,
+an epitaph upon a very wicked man, who was killed by a fall from
+his horse, in which he is supposed to say,</p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ '"Between the stirrup and the ground,
+ I mercy ask'd, I mercy found<a href=
+"#note-652">652</a>."'
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>BOSWELL. 'Is not the expression in the Burial-service, "in the
+<i>sure</i> and <i>certain</i> hope of a blessed resurrection<a
+href="#note-653">[653]</a>," too strong
+to be used indiscriminately, and, indeed, sometimes when those
+over whose bodies it is said, have been notoriously profane?'
+JOHNSON. 'It is sure and certain <i>hope</i>, Sir; not
+<i>belief</i>.' I did not insist further; but cannot help
+thinking that less positive words would be more proper<a href=
+"#note-654">[654]</a>.</p>
+<p>Talking of a man who was grown very fat, so as to be
+incommoded with corpulency; he said, 'He eats too much, Sir.'
+BOSWELL. 'I don't know, Sir; you will see one man fat who eats
+moderately, and another lean who eats a great deal.' JOHNSON.
+'Nay, Sir, whatever may be the quantity that a man eats, it is
+plain that if he is too fat, he has eaten more than he should
+have done. One man may have a digestion that consumes food better
+than common; but it is certain that solidity is encreased by
+putting something to it.' BOSWELL. 'But may not solids swell and
+be distended?' JOHNSON. 'Yes, Sir, they may swell and be
+distended; but that is not fat.'</p>
+<p>We talked of the accusation against a gentleman for supposed
+delinquencies in India<a href=
+"#note-655">[655]</a>. JOHNSON. 'What
+foundation there is for accusation I know not, but they will not
+get at him. Where bad actions are committed at so great a
+distance, a delinquent can obscure the evidence till the scent
+becomes cold; there is a cloud between, which cannot be
+penetrated: therefore all distant power is bad. I am clear that
+the best plan for the government of India is a despotick
+governour; for if he be a good man, it is evidently the best
+government; and supposing him to be a bad man, it is better to
+have one plunderer than many. A governour whose power is checked,
+lets others plunder, that he himself may be allowed to plunder;
+but if despotick, he sees that the more he lets others plunder,
+the less there will be for himself, so he restrains them; and
+though he himself plunders, the country is a gainer, compared
+with being plundered by numbers.'</p>
+<p>I mentioned the very liberal payment which had been received
+for reviewing; and, as evidence of this, that it had been proved
+in a trial, that Dr. Shebbeare<a href=
+"#note-656">[656]</a> had received six
+guineas a sheet for that kind of literary labour. JOHNSON, 'Sir,
+he might get six guineas for a particular sheet, but not
+<i>communibus sheetibus</i><a href=
+"#note-657">[657]</a>.' BOSWELL. 'Pray,
+Sir, by a sheet of review is it meant that it shall be all of the
+writer's own composition? or are extracts, made from the book
+reviewed, deducted.' JOHNSON. 'No, Sir: it is a sheet, no matter
+of what.' BOSWELL. 'I think that it is not reasonable.' JOHNSON.
+'Yes, Sir, it is. A man will more easily write a sheet all his
+own, than read an octavo volume to get extracts<a href=
+"#note-658">[658]</a>.' To one of
+Johnson's wonderful fertility of mind I believe writing was
+really easier than reading and extracting; but with ordinary men
+the case is very different. A great deal, indeed, will depend
+upon the care and judgement with which the extracts are made. I
+can suppose the operation to be tedious and difficult: but in
+many instances we must observe crude morsels cut out of books as
+if at random; and when a large extract is made from one place, it
+surely may be done with very little trouble. One however, I must
+acknowledge, might be led, from the practice of reviewers, to
+suppose that they take a pleasure in original writing; for we
+often find, that instead of giving an accurate account of what
+has been done by the authour whose work they are reviewing, which
+is surely the proper business of a literary journal, they produce
+some plausible and ingenious conceits of their own, upon the
+topicks which have been discussed<a href=
+"#note-659">[659]</a>.</p>
+<p>Upon being told that old Mr. Sheridan, indignant at the
+neglect of his oratorical plans, had threatened to go to America;
+JOHNSON. 'I hope he will go to America.' BOSWELL. 'The Americans
+don't want oratory.' JOHNSON. 'But we can want Sheridan<a href=
+"#note-660">[660]</a>.'</p>
+<p>On Monday<a href=
+"#note-661">[661]</a>, April 29, I found
+him at home in the forenoon, and Mr. Seward with him. Horace
+having been mentioned; BOSWELL. 'There is a great deal of
+thinking in his works. One finds there almost every thing but
+religion.' SEWARD. 'He speaks of his returning to it, in his Ode
+<i>Parcus Deorum cultor et infrequens</i><a href=
+"#note-662">[662]</a> JOHNSON. 'Sir, he
+was not in earnest: this was merely poetical.' BOSWELL. 'There
+are, I am afraid, many people who have no religion at all.'
+SEWARD. 'And sensible people too.' JOHNSON. 'Why, Sir, not
+sensible in that respect. There must be either a natural or a
+moral stupidity, if one lives in a total neglect of so very
+important a concern.' SEWARD. 'I wonder that there should be
+people without religion.' JOHNSON. 'Sir, you need not wonder at
+this, when you consider how large a proportion of almost every
+man's life is passed without thinking of it. I myself was for
+some years totally regardless of religion. It had dropped out of
+my mind. It was at an early part of my life. Sickness brought it
+back, and I hope I have never lost it since<a href=
+"#note-663">[663]</a>.' BOSWELL. 'My dear
+Sir, what a man must you have been without religion! Why you must
+have gone on drinking, and swearing, and&mdash;<a href=
+"#note-664">[664]</a>' JOHNSON. (with a
+smile) 'I drank enough and swore enough, to be sure.' SEWARD.
+'One should think that sickness and the view of death would make
+more men religious.' JOHNSON. 'Sir, they do not know how to go
+about it: they have not the first notion. A man who has never had
+religion before, no more grows religious when he is sick, than a
+man who has never learnt figures can count when he has need of
+calculation.'</p>
+<p>I mentioned a worthy friend of ours<a href=
+"#note-665">[665]</a> whom we valued
+much, but observed that he was too ready to introduce religious
+discourse upon all occasions. JOHNSON. 'Why, yes, Sir, he will
+introduce religious discourse without seeing whether it will end
+in instruction and improvement, or produce some profane jest. He
+would introduce it in the company of Wilkes, and twenty more
+such.'</p>
+<p>I mentioned Dr. Johnson's excellent distinction between
+liberty of conscience and liberty of teaching<a href=
+"#note-666">[666]</a>. JOHNSON.
+'Consider, Sir; if you have children whom you wish to educate in
+the principles of the Church of England, and there comes a Quaker
+who tries to pervert them to his principles, you would drive away
+the Quaker. You would not trust to the predomination of right,
+which you believe is in your opinions; you would keep wrong out
+of their heads. Now the vulgar are the children of the State. If
+any one attempts to teach them doctrines contrary to what the
+State approves, the magistrate may and ought to restrain him.'
+SEWARD. 'Would you restrain private conversation, Sir?' JOHNSON.
+'Why, Sir, it is difficult to say where private conversation
+begins, and where it ends. If we three should discuss even the
+great question concerning the existence of a Supreme Being by
+ourselves, we should not be restrained; for that would be to put
+an end to all improvement. But if we should discuss it in the
+presence of ten boarding-school girls, and as many boys, I think
+the magistrate would do well to put us in the stocks, to finish
+the debate there.'</p>
+<p>Lord Hailes had sent him a present of a curious little printed
+poem, on repairing the University of Aberdeen, by David Malloch,
+which he thought would please Johnson, as affording clear
+evidence that Mallet had appeared even as a literary character by
+the name of <i>Malloch</i>; his changing which to one of softer
+sound, had given Johnson occasion to introduce him into his
+<i>Dictionary</i>, under the article <i>Alias</i><a href=
+"#note-667">[667]</a>. This piece was, I
+suppose, one of Mallet's first essays. It is preserved in his
+works, with several variations. Johnson having read aloud, from
+the beginning of it, where there were some common-place
+assertions as to the superiority of ancient times;&mdash;'How
+false (said he) is all this, to say that in ancient times
+learning was not a disgrace to a Peer as it is now. In ancient
+times a Peer was as ignorant as any one else. He would have been
+angry to have it thought he could write his name<a href=
+"#note-668">[668]</a>. Men in ancient
+times dared to stand forth with a degree of ignorance with which
+nobody would dare now to stand forth. I am always angry when I
+hear ancient times praised at the expence of modern times. There
+is now a great deal more learning in the world than there was
+formerly; for it is universally diffused. You have, perhaps, no
+man who knows as much Greek and Latin as Bentley<a href=
+"#note-669">[669]</a>; no man who knows
+as much mathematicks as Newton: but you have many more men who
+know Greek and Latin, and who know mathematicks<a href=
+"#note-670">[670]</a>.'</p>
+<p>On Thursday, May 1, I visited him in the evening along with
+young Mr. Burke. He said, 'It is strange that there should be so
+little reading in the world, and so much writing. People in
+general do not willingly read, if they can have any thing else to
+amuse them<a href="#note-671">[671]</a>.
+There must be an external impulse; emulation, or vanity, or
+avarice. The progress which the understanding makes through a
+book, has more pain than pleasure in it. Language is scanty, and
+inadequate to express the nice gradations and mixtures of our
+feelings. No man reads a book of science from pure inclination.
+The books that we do read with pleasure are light compositions,
+which contain a quick succession of events. However, I have this
+year read all Virgil through<a href=
+"#note-672">[672]</a>. I read a book of
+the <i>Aeneid</i> every night, so it was done in twelve nights,
+and I had great delight in it. The <i>Georgicks</i> did not give
+me so much pleasure, except the fourth book. The <i>Eclogues</i>
+I have almost all by heart. I do not think the story of the
+<i>Aeneid</i> interesting. I like the story of the <i>Odyssey</i>
+much better<a href="#note-673">[673]</a>;
+and this not on account of the wonderful things which it
+contains; for there are wonderful things enough in the
+<i>Aeneid</i>;&mdash;the ships of the Trojans turned to
+sea-nymphs,&mdash;the tree at Polydorus's tomb dropping blood.
+The story of the <i>Odyssey</i> is interesting, as a great part
+of it is domestick. It has been said, there is pleasure in
+writing, particularly in writing verses. I allow you may have
+pleasure from writing, after it is over, if you have written
+well; but you don't go willingly to it again<a href=
+"#note-674">[674]</a>. I know when I have
+been writing verses, I have run my finger down the margin, to see
+how many I had made, and how few I had to make<a href=
+"#note-675">[675]</a>.'</p>
+<p>He seemed to be in a very placid humour, and although I have
+no note of the particulars of young Mr. Burke's conversation, it
+is but justice to mention in general, that it was such that Dr.
+Johnson said to me afterwards, 'He did very well indeed; I have a
+mind to tell his father<a href=
+"#note-676">[676]</a>.'</p>
+<center>'TO SIR JOSHUA REYNOLDS.</center>
+<center>'DEAR SIR,</center>
+<p>'The gentleman who waits on you with this, is Mr.
+Cruikshanks<a href="#note-677">[677]</a>,
+who wishes to succeed his friend Dr. Hunter<a href=
+"#note-678">[678]</a> as Professor of
+Anatomy in the Royal Academy. His qualifications are very
+generally known, and it adds dignity to the institution that such
+men<a href="#note-679">[679]</a> are
+candidates.</p>
+<p>'I am, Sir,</p>
+<p>'Your most humble servant,</p>
+<center>'SAM. JOHNSON.'</center>
+<p>'May 2<a href="#note-680">[680]</a>,
+1783.'</p>
+<p>I have no minute of any interview with Johnson till Thursday,
+May 15, when I find what follows:&mdash;BOSWELL. 'I wish much to
+be in Parliament, Sir<a href=
+"#note-681">[681]</a>.' JOHNSON. 'Why,
+Sir, unless you come resolved to support any administration, you
+would be the worse for being in Parliament, because you would be
+obliged to live more expensively.' BOSWELL. 'Perhaps, Sir, I
+should be the less happy for being in Parliament. I never would
+sell my vote, and I should be vexed if things went wrong.'
+JOHNSON. 'That's cant, Sir. It would not vex you more in the
+house, than in the gallery: publick affairs vex no man.' BOSWELL.
+'Have not they vexed yourself a little, Sir? Have not you been
+vexed by all the turbulence of this reign, and by that absurd
+vote of the House of Commons, "That the influence of the Crown
+has increased, is increasing, and ought to be diminished<a href=
+"#note-682">[682]</a>?"' JOHNSON. 'Sir, I
+have never slept an hour less, nor eat an ounce less meat<a href=
+"#note-683">[683]</a>. I would have
+knocked the factious dogs on the head, to be sure; but I was not
+<i>vexed</i>.' BOSWELL. 'I declare, Sir, upon my honour, I did
+imagine I was vexed, and took a pride in it; but it <i>was</i>,
+perhaps, cant; for I own I neither ate less, nor slept less.'
+JOHNSON. 'My dear friend, clear your <i>mind</i> of cant<a href=
+"#note-684">[684]</a>. You may
+<i>talk</i> as other people do: you may say to a man, "Sir, I am
+your most humble servant." You are not his most humble servant.
+You may say, "These are bad times; it is a melancholy thing to be
+reserved to such times." You don't mind the times. You tell a
+man, "I am sorry you had such bad weather the last day of your
+journey, and were so much wet." You don't care six-pence whether
+he is wet or dry. You may <i>talk</i> in this manner; it is a
+mode of talking in Society<a href=
+"#note-685">[685]</a>; but don't
+<i>think</i> foolishly<a href=
+"#note-686">[686]</a>.'</p>
+<p>I talked of living in the country. JOHNSON. 'Don't set up for
+what is called hospitality; it is a waste of time, and a waste of
+money; you are eaten up, and not the more respected for your
+liberality. If your house be like an inn, nobody cares for you. A
+man who stays a week with another, makes him a slave for a
+week.'<a href="#note-687">[687]</a>
+BOSWELL. 'But there are people, Sir, who make their houses a home
+to their guests, and are themselves quite easy.' JOHNSON. 'Then,
+Sir, home must be the same to the guests, and they need not
+come.'</p>
+<p>Here he discovered a notion common enough in persons not much
+accustomed to entertain company, that there must be a degree of
+elaborate attention, otherwise company will think themselves
+neglected; and such attention is no doubt very fatiguing.<a href=
+"#note-688">[688]</a> He proceeded: 'I
+would not, however, be a stranger in my own county; I would visit
+my neighbours, and receive their visits; but I would not be in
+haste to return visits. If a gentleman comes to see me, I tell
+him he does me a great deal of honour. I do not go to see him
+perhaps for ten weeks; then we are very complaisant to each
+other. No, Sir, you will have much more influence by giving or
+lending money where it is wanted, than by hospitality<a href=
+"#note-689">[689]</a>.'</p>
+<p>On Saturday, May 17, I saw him for a short time. Having
+mentioned that I had that morning been with old Mr. Sheridan, he
+remembered their former intimacy with a cordial warmth, and said
+to me, 'Tell Mr. Sheridan, I shall be glad to see him, and shake
+hands with him<a href=
+"#note-690">[690]</a>.' BOSWELL. 'It is
+to me very wonderful that resentment should be kept up so long.'
+JOHNSON. 'Why, Sir, it is not altogether resentment that he does
+not visit me; it is partly falling out of the habit,&mdash;partly
+disgust, as one has at a drug that has made him sick. Besides, he
+knows that I laugh at his oratory<a href=
+"#note-691">[691]</a>.'</p>
+<p>Another day I spoke of one of our friends, of whom he, as well
+as I, had a very high opinion. He expatiated in his praise; but
+added, 'Sir, he is a cursed Whig, a <i>bottomless</i> Whig, as
+they all are now<a href=
+"#note-692">[692]</a>.'</p>
+<p>I mentioned my expectations from the interest of an eminent
+person<a href="#note-693">[693]</a> then
+in power; adding, 'but I have no claim but the claim of
+friendship; however, some people will go a great way from that
+motive.' JOHNSON. 'Sir, they will go all the way from that
+motive.' A gentleman talked of retiring. 'Never think of that,'
+said Johnson. The gentleman urged, 'I should then do no ill.'
+JOHNSON. Nor no good either. Sir, it would be a civil suicide<a
+href="#note-694">[694]</a>.'</p>
+<p>On Monday, May 26, I found him at tea, and the celebrated Miss
+Burney, the authour of <i>Evelina</i><a href=
+"#note-695">[695]</a> and <i>Cecilia</i>,
+with him. I asked if there would be any speakers in Parliament,
+if there were no places to be obtained. JOHNSON. 'Yes, Sir. Why
+do you speak here? Either to instruct and entertain, which is a
+benevolent motive; or for distinction, which is a selfish
+motive.' I mentioned <i>Cecilia</i>. JOHNSON. (with an air of
+animated satisfaction) 'Sir, if you talk of <i>Cecilia</i>, talk
+on<a href="#note-696">[696]</a>.'</p>
+<p>We talked of Mr. Barry's exhibition of his pictures. JOHNSON.
+'Whatever the hand may have done, the mind has done its part.
+There is a grasp of mind there which you find nowhere else<a
+href="#note-697">[697]</a>.'</p>
+<p>I asked whether a man naturally virtuous, or one who has
+overcome wicked inclinations, is the best. JOHNSON. 'Sir, to
+<i>you</i>, the man who has overcome wicked inclinations is not
+the best. He has more merit to <i>himself</i>: I would rather
+trust my money to a man who has no hands, and so a physical
+impossibility to steal, than to a man of the most honest
+principles. There is a witty satirical story of Foote. He had a
+small bust of Garrick placed upon his bureau, "You may be
+surprized (said he) that I allow him to be so near my
+gold;&mdash;but you will observe he has no hands."'</p>
+<p>On Friday, May 29<a href=
+"#note-698">[698]</a>, being to set out
+for Scotland next morning, I passed a part of the day with him in
+more than usual earnestness; as his health was in a more
+precarious state than at any time when I had parted from him. He,
+however, was quick and lively, and critical as usual. I mentioned
+one who was a very learned man. JOHNSON. 'Yes, Sir, he has a
+great deal of learning; but it never lies straight. There is
+never one idea by the side of another; 'tis all entangled: and
+then he drives it so aukwardly upon conversation.'</p>
+<p>I stated to him an anxious thought, by which a sincere
+Christian might be disturbed, even when conscious of having lived
+a good life, so far as is consistent with human infirmity; he
+might fear that he should afterwards fall away, and be guilty of
+such crimes as would render all his former religion vain. Could
+there be, upon this aweful subject, such a thing as balancing of
+accounts? Suppose a man who has led a good life for seven years,
+commits an act of wickedness, and instantly dies; will his former
+good life have any effect in his favour? JOHNSON. 'Sir, if a man
+has led a good life for seven years, and then is hurried by
+passion to do what is wrong, and is suddenly carried off, depend
+upon it he will have the reward of his seven years' good life;
+GOD will not take a catch of him. Upon this principle Richard
+Baxter believes that a Suicide may be saved. "If, (says he) it
+should be objected that what I maintain may encourage suicide, I
+answer, I am not to tell a lie to prevent it."' BOSWELL. 'But
+does not the text say, "As the tree falls, so it must lie<a href=
+"#note-699">[699]</a>?"' JOHNSON. 'Yes,
+Sir; as the tree falls: but,&mdash;(after a little
+pause)&mdash;that is meant as to the general state of the tree,
+not what is the effect of a sudden blast.' In short, he
+interpreted the expression as referring to condition, not to
+position. The common notion, therefore, seems to be erroneous;
+and Shenstone's witty remark on Divines trying to give the tree a
+jerk upon a death-bed, to make it lie favourably, is not well
+founded<a href="#note-700">[700]</a>.</p>
+<p>I asked him what works of Richard Baxter's I should read. He
+said, 'Read any of them; they are all good<a href=
+"#note-701">[701]</a>.'</p>
+<p>He said, 'Get as much force of mind as you can. Live within
+your income. Always have something saved at the end of the year.
+Let your imports be more than your exports, and you'll never go
+far wrong.'</p>
+<p>I assured him, that in the extensive and various range of his
+acquaintance there never had been any one who had a more sincere
+respect and affection for him than I had. He said, 'I believe it,
+Sir. Were I in distress, there is no man to whom I should sooner
+come than to you. I should like to come and have a cottage in
+your park, toddle about, live mostly on milk, and be taken care
+of by Mrs. Boswell. She and I are good friends now; are we
+not?'</p>
+<p>Talking of devotion, he said, 'Though it be true that "GOD
+dwelleth not in temples made with hands<a href=
+"#note-702">[702]</a>," yet in this state
+of being, our minds are more piously affected in places
+appropriated to divine worship, than in others. Some people have
+a particular room in their house, where they say their prayers;
+of which I do not disapprove, as it may animate their
+devotion.'</p>
+<p>He embraced me, and gave me his blessing, as usual when I was
+leaving him for any length of time. I walked from his door
+to-day, with a fearful apprehension of what might happen before I
+returned.</p>
+<p>'To THE RIGHT HONOURABLE WILLIAM WINDHAM.</p>
+<p>Sir, The bringer of this letter is the father of Miss
+Philips<a href="#note-703">[703]</a>, a
+singer, who comes to try her voice on the stage at Dublin.</p>
+<p>Mr. Philips is one of my old friends; and as I am of opinion
+that neither he nor his daughter will do any thing that can
+disgrace their benefactors, I take the liberty of entreating you
+to countenance and protect them so far as may be suitable to your
+station<a href="#note-704">[704]</a> and
+character; and shall consider myself as obliged by any favourable
+notice which they shall have the honour of receiving from
+you.</p>
+<p>I am, Sir, Your most humble servant,</p>
+<p>SAM JOHNSON. London, May 31, 1783.'</p>
+<p>The following is another instance of his active
+benevolence:&mdash;</p>
+<p>'To SIR JOSHUA REYNOLDS.</p>
+<p>DEAR SIR, I have sent you some of my god-son's<a href=
+"#note-705">[705]</a> performances, of
+which I do not pretend to form any opinion. When I took the
+liberty of mentioning him to you, I did not know what I have
+since been told, that Mr. Moser<a href=
+"#note-706">[706]</a> had admitted him
+among the Students of the Academy. What more can be done for him
+I earnestly entreat you to consider; for I am very desirous that
+he should derive some advantage from my connection with him. If
+you are inclined to see him, I will bring him to wait on you, at
+any time that you shall be pleased to appoint.</p>
+<p>I am, Sir, Your most humble servant,</p>
+<p>SAM. JOHNSON. June 2, 1783.'</p>
+<p>My anxious apprehensions at parting with him this year proved
+to be but too well founded; for not long afterwards he had a
+dreadful stroke of the palsy, of which there are very full and
+accurate accounts in letters written by himself, to shew with
+what composure of mind, and resignation to the Divine Will, his
+steady piety enabled him to behave.</p>
+<center>'TO MR. EDMUND ALLEN<a href=
+"#note-707">[707]</a>.</center>
+<p>DEAR SIR, It has pleased GOD, this morning, to deprive me of
+the powers of speech; and as I do not know but that it may be his
+further good pleasure to deprive me soon of my senses, I request
+you will on the receipt of this note, come to me, and act for me,
+as the exigencies of my case may require.</p>
+<p>I am, Sincerely yours,</p>
+<p>SAM. JOHNSON. June 17, 1783.'</p>
+<center>'TO THE REVEREND DR. JOHN TAYLOR.</center>
+<p>'DEAR SIR, It has pleased GOD, by a Paralytick stroke in the
+night, to deprive me of speech.</p>
+<p>I am very desirous of Dr. Heberden's<a href=
+"#note-708">[708]</a> assistance, as I
+think my case is not past remedy. Let me see you as soon as it is
+possible. Bring Dr. Heberden with you, if you can; but come
+yourself at all events. I am glad you are so well, when I am so
+dreadfully attacked.</p>
+<p>I think that by a speedy application of stimulants much may be
+done. I question if a vomit, vigorous and rough, would not rouse
+the organs of speech to action. As it is too early to send, I
+will try to recollect what I can, that can be suspected to have
+brought on this dreadful distress.</p>
+<p>I have been accustomed to bleed frequently for an asthmatick
+complaint; but have forborne for some time by Dr. Pepys's
+persuasion, who perceived my legs beginning to swell. I sometimes
+alleviate a painful, or more properly an oppressive, constriction
+of my chest, by opiates; and have lately taken opium frequently,
+but the last, or two last times, in smaller quantities. My
+largest dose is three grains, and last night I took but two<a
+href="#note-709">[709]</a>. You will
+suggest these things (and they are all that I can call to mind)
+to Dr. Heberden.</p>
+<p>I am, &amp;c. SAM. JOHNSON<a href=
+"#note-710">[710]</a>. June 17,
+1783.'</p>
+<p>Two days after he wrote thus to Mrs. Thrale<a href=
+"#note-711">[711]</a>:&mdash;</p>
+<p>'On Monday, the 16th, I sat for my picture<a href=
+"#note-712">[712]</a>, and walked a
+considerable way with little inconvenience. In the afternoon and
+evening I felt myself light and easy, and began to plan schemes
+of life. Thus I went to bed, and in a short time waked and sat
+up, as has been long my custom, when I felt a confusion and
+indistinctness in my head, which lasted, I suppose, about half a
+minute. I was alarmed, and prayed God, that however he might
+afflict my body, he would spare my understanding. This prayer,
+that I might try the integrity of my faculties, I made in Latin
+verse<a href="#note-713">[713]</a>. The
+lines were not very good, but I knew them not to be very good: I
+made them easily, and concluded myself to be unimpaired in my
+faculties.</p>
+<p>Soon after I perceived that I had suffered a paralytick
+stroke, and that my speech was taken from me. I had no pain, and
+so little dejection in this dreadful state, that I wondered at my
+own apathy, and considered that perhaps death itself, when it
+should come, would excite less horrour than seems now to attend
+it.</p>
+<p>In order to rouse the vocal organs, I took two drams. Wine has
+been celebrated for the production of eloquence. I put myself
+into violent motion, and I think repeated it; but all was vain. I
+then went to bed, and strange as it may seem, I think slept. When
+I saw light, it was time to contrive what I should do. Though God
+stopped my speech, he left me my hand; I enjoyed a mercy which
+was not granted to my dear friend Lawrence<a href=
+"#note-714">[714]</a>, who now perhaps
+overlooks me as I am writing, and rejoices that I have what he
+wanted. My first note was necessarily to my servant, who came in
+talking, and could not immediately comprehend why he should read
+what I put into his hands.</p>
+<p>I then wrote a card to Mr. Allen, that I might have a discreet
+friend at hand, to act as occasion should require. In penning
+this note, I had some difficulty; my hand, I knew not how nor
+why, made wrong letters. I then wrote to Dr. Taylor to come to
+me, and bring Dr. Heberden; and I sent to Dr. Brocklesby, who is
+my neighbour. My physicians are very friendly, and give me great
+hopes; but you may imagine my situation. I have so far recovered
+my vocal powers, as to repeat the Lord's Prayer with no very
+imperfect articulation. My memory, I hope, yet remains as it was;
+but such an attack produces solicitude for the safety of every
+faculty.'</p>
+<p>'To MR. THOMAS DAVIES.</p>
+<p>'DEAR SIR, I have had, indeed, a very heavy blow; but GOD, who
+yet spares my life, I humbly hope will spare my understanding,
+and restore my speech. As I am not at all helpless, I want no
+particular assistance, but am strongly affected by Mrs. Davies's
+tenderness; and when I think she can do me good, shall be very
+glad to call upon her. I had ordered friends to be shut out; but
+one or two have found the way in; and if you come you shall be
+admitted: for I know not whom I can see, that will bring more
+amusement on his tongue, or more kindness in his heart. I am,
+&amp;c.</p>
+<p>SAM. JOHNSON. June 18, 1783.'</p>
+<p>It gives me great pleasure to preserve such a memorial of
+Johnson's regard for Mr. Davies, to whom I was indebted for my
+introduction to him<a href=
+"#note-715">[715]</a>. He indeed loved
+Davies cordially, of which I shall give the following little
+evidence. One day when he had treated him with too much asperity.
+Tom, who was not without pride and spirit, went off in a passion;
+but he had hardly reached home, when Frank, who had been sent
+after him, delivered this note:&mdash;'Come, come, dear Davies, I
+am always sorry when we quarrel; send me word that we are
+friends.'</p>
+<p>'To JAMES BOSWELL, ESQ.</p>
+<p>DEAR SIR, Your anxiety about my health is very friendly, and
+very agreeable with your general kindness. I have, indeed, had a
+very frightful blow. On the 17th of last month, about three in
+the morning, as near as I can guess, I perceived myself almost
+totally deprived of speech. I had no pain. My organs were so
+obstructed, that I could say <i>no</i>, but could scarcely say
+<i>yes</i>. I wrote the necessary directions, for it pleased GOD
+to spare my hand, and sent for Dr. Heberden and Dr. Brocklesby.
+Between the time in which I discovered my own disorder, and that
+in which I sent for the doctors, I had, I believe, in spite of my
+surprize and solicitude, a little sleep, and Nature began to
+renew its operations. They came, and gave the directions which
+the disease required, and from that time I have been continually
+improving in articulation. I can now speak, but the nerves are
+weak, and I cannot continue discourse long; but strength, I hope,
+will return. The physicians consider me as cured. I was last
+Sunday at church. On Tuesday I took an airing to Hampstead, and
+dined with THE CLUB<a href=
+"#note-716">[716]</a>, where Lord
+Palmerston was proposed, and, against my opinion, was rejected<a
+href="#note-717">[717]</a>. I designed to
+go next week with Mr. Langton to Rochester, where I purpose to
+stay about ten days, and then try some other air. I have many
+kind invitations. Your brother has very frequently enquired after
+me. Most of my friends have, indeed, been very attentive<a href=
+"#note-718">[718]</a>. Thank dear Lord
+Hailes for his present.</p>
+<p>I hope you found at your return every thing gay and
+prosperous, and your lady, in particular, quite recovered and
+confirmed. Pay her my respects.</p>
+<p>I am, dear Sir, Your most humble servant, SAM. JOHNSON.
+London, July 3,</p>
+<center>1783.'</center>
+<p>'To MRS. LUCY PORTER, IN LICHFIELD.</p>
+<p>DEAR MADAM, The account which you give of your health is but
+melancholy. May it please GOD to restore you. My disease affected
+my speech, and still continues, in some degree, to obstruct my
+utterance; my voice is distinct enough for a while; but the
+organs being still weak are quickly weary: but in other respects
+I am, I think, rather better than I have lately been; and can let
+you know my state without the help of any other hand.</p>
+<p>In the opinion of my friends, and in my own, I am gradually
+mending. The Physicians consider me as cured; and I had leave,
+four days ago, to wash the cantharides from my head. Last Tuesday
+I dined at THE CLUB.</p>
+<p>I am going next week into Kent, and purpose to change the air
+frequently this summer; whether I shall wander so far as
+Staffordshire I cannot tell. I should be glad to come. Return my
+thanks to Mrs. Cobb, and Mr. Pearson, and all that have shewn
+attention to me.</p>
+<p>Let us, my dear, pray for one another, and consider our
+sufferings as notices mercifully given us to prepare ourselves
+for another state.</p>
+<p>I live now but in a melancholy way. My old friend Mr. Levett
+is dead, who lived with me in the house, and was useful and
+companionable; Mrs. Desmoulins is gone away<a href=
+"#note-719">[719]</a>; and Mrs. Williams
+is so much decayed, that she can add little to another's
+gratifications. The world passes away, and we are passing with
+it; but there is, doubtless, another world, which will endure for
+ever. Let us all fit ourselves for it.</p>
+<p>I am, &amp;c., SAM. JOHNSON. London, July 5, 1783.'</p>
+<p>Such was the general vigour of his constitution, that he
+recovered from this alarming and severe attack with wonderful
+quickness; so that in July he was able to make a visit to Mr.
+Langton at Rochester<a href=
+"#note-720">[720]</a>, where he passed
+about a fortnight, and made little excursions as easily as at any
+time of his life<a href=
+"#note-721">[721]</a>. In August he went
+as far as the neighbourhood of Salisbury, to Heale<a href=
+"#note-722">[722]</a>, the seat of
+William Bowles, Esq[723]., a gentleman whom I have heard him
+praise for exemplary religious order in his family. In his diary
+I find a short but honourable mention of this visit: 'August 28,
+I came to Heale without fatigue. 30. I am entertained quite to my
+mind.'</p>
+<p>'To DR. BROCKLESBY. Heale, near Salisbury, Aug. 29, 1783.</p>
+<p>DEAR SIR, Without appearing to want a just sense of your kind
+attention, I cannot omit to give an account of the day which
+seemed to appear in some sort perilous. I rose at five and went
+out at six, and having reached Salisbury about nine<a href=
+"#note-724">[724]</a>, went forward a few
+miles in my friend's chariot. I was no more wearied with the
+journey, though it was a high-hung, rough coach, than I should
+have been forty years ago. We shall now see what air will do. The
+country is all a plain; and the house in which I am, so far as I
+can judge from my window, for I write before I have left my
+chamber, is sufficiently pleasant.</p>
+<p>Be so kind as to continue your attention to Mrs. Williams; it
+is great consolation to the well, and still greater to the sick,
+that they find themselves not neglected; and I know that you will
+be desirous of giving comfort even where you have no great hope
+of giving help.</p>
+<p>Since I wrote the former part of the letter, I find that by
+the course of the post I cannot send it before the
+thirty-first.</p>
+<p>I am, &amp;c. SAM. JOHNSON.'</p>
+<p>While he was here he had a letter from Dr. Brocklesby,
+acquainting him of the death of Mrs. Williams, which affected him
+a good deal<a href="#note-725">[725]</a>.
+Though for several years her temper had not been complacent, she
+had valuable qualities, and her departure left a blank in his
+house<a href="#note-726">[726]</a>. Upon
+this occasion he, according to his habitual course of piety,
+composed a prayer<a href=
+"#note-727">[727]</a>.</p>
+<p>I shall here insert a few particulars concerning him, with
+which I have been favoured by one of his friends<a href=
+"#note-728">[728]</a>.</p>
+<p>'He had once conceived the design of writing the Life of
+Oliver Cromwell<a href=
+"#note-729">[729]</a>, saying, that he
+thought it must be highly curious to trace his extraordinary rise
+to the supreme power, from so obscure a beginning. He at length
+laid aside his scheme, on discovering that all that can be told
+of him is already in print; and that it is impracticable to
+procure any authentick information in addition to what the world
+is already possessed of<a href=
+"#note-730">[730]</a>.'</p>
+<p>'He had likewise projected, but at what part of his life is
+not known, a work to shew how small a quantity of REAL FICTION
+there is in the world; and that the same images, with very little
+variation, have served all the authours who have ever written<a
+href="#note-731">[731]</a>.'</p>
+<p>'His thoughts in the latter part of his life were frequently
+employed on his deceased friends. He often muttered these, or
+such like sentences: "Poor man! and then he died."'</p>
+<p>'Speaking of a certain literary friend, "He is a very pompous
+puzzling fellow, (said he); he lent me a letter once that
+somebody had written to him, no matter what it was about; but he
+wanted to have the letter back, and expressed a mighty value for
+it; he hoped it was to be met with again, he would not lose it
+for a thousand pounds. I layed my hand upon it soon afterwards,
+and gave it him. I believe I said, I was very glad to have met
+with it. O, then he did not know that it signified any thing. So
+you see, when the letter was lost it was worth a thousand pounds,
+and when it was found it was not worth a farthing."'</p>
+<p>'The style and character of his conversation is pretty
+generally known; it was certainly conducted in conformity with a
+precept of Lord Bacon, but it is not clear, I apprehend, that
+this conformity was either perceived or intended by Johnson. The
+precept alluded to is as follows: "In all kinds of speech, either
+pleasant, grave, severe, or ordinary, it is convenient to speak
+leisurely, and rather drawingly than hastily: because hasty
+speech confounds the memory, and oftentimes, besides the
+unseemliness, drives the man either to stammering, a non-plus, or
+harping on that which should follow; whereas a slow speech
+confirmeth the memory, addeth a conceit of wisdom to the hearers,
+besides a seemliness of speech and countenance<a href=
+"#note-732">[732]</a>." Dr. Johnson's
+method of conversation was certainly calculated to excite
+attention, and to amuse and instruct, (as it happened,) without
+wearying or confusing his company. He was always most perfectly
+clear and perspicuous; and his language was so accurate, and his
+sentences so neatly constructed, that his conversation might have
+been all printed without any correction. At the same time, it was
+easy and natural; the accuracy of it had no appearance of labour,
+constraint, or stiffness; he seemed more correct than others, by
+the force of habit, and the customary exercises of his powerful
+mind<a href="#note-733">[733]</a>.'</p>
+<p>'He spoke often in praise of French literature. "The French
+are excellent in this, (he would say,) they have a book on every
+subject<a href="#note-734">[734]</a>."
+From what he had seen of them he denied them the praise of
+superiour politeness<a href=
+"#note-735">[735]</a>, and mentioned,
+with very visible disgust, the custom they have of spitting on
+the floors of their apartments. "This, (said the Doctor) is as
+gross a thing as can well be done; and one wonders how any man,
+or set of men, can persist in so offensive a practice for a whole
+day together; one should expect that the first effort towards
+civilization would remove it even among savages<a href=
+"#note-736">[736]</a>."'</p>
+<p>'Baxter's <i>Reasons of the Christian Religion</i>, he thought
+contained the best collection of the evidences of the divinity of
+the Christian system.'</p>
+<p>'Chymistry<a href=
+"#note-737">[737]</a> was always an
+interesting pursuit with Dr. Johnson. Whilst he was in Wiltshire,
+he attended some experiments that were made by a physician at
+Salisbury, on the new kinds of air<a href=
+"#note-738">[738]</a>. In the course of
+the experiments frequent mention being made of Dr. Priestley, Dr.
+Johnson knit his brows, and in a stern manner enquired, "Why do
+we hear so much of Dr. Priestley<a href=
+"#note-739">[739]</a>?" He was very
+properly answered, "Sir, because we are indebted to him for these
+important discoveries." On this Dr. Johnson appeared well
+content; and replied, "Well, well, I believe we are; and let
+every man have the honour he has merited."'</p>
+<p>'A friend was one day, about two years before his death,
+struck with some instance of Dr. Johnson's great candour. "Well,
+Sir, (said he,) I will always say that you are a very candid
+man." "Will you," (replied the Doctor,) I doubt then you will be
+very singular. But, indeed, Sir, (continued he,) I look upon
+myself to be a man very much misunderstood. I am not an uncandid,
+nor am I a severe man. I sometimes say more than I mean, in jest;
+and people are apt to believe me serious: however, I am more
+candid than I was when I was younger. As I know more of mankind I
+expect less of them, and am ready now to call a man a <i>good
+man</i>, upon easier terms than I was formerly<a href=
+"#note-740">[740]</a>.'</p>
+<p>On his return from Heale he wrote to Dr. Burney:&mdash;</p>
+<p>'I came home on the 18th<a href=
+"#note-741">[741]</a> at noon to a very
+disconsolate house. You and I have lost our friends<a href=
+"#note-742">[742]</a>; but you have more
+friends at home. My domestick companion is taken from me. She is
+much missed, for her acquisitions were many, and her curiosity
+universal; so that she partook of every conversation<a href=
+"#note-743">[743]</a>. I am not well
+enough to go much out; and to sit, and eat, or fast alone, is
+very wearisome. I always mean to send my compliments to all the
+ladies.'</p>
+<p>His fortitude and patience met with severe trials during this
+year. The stroke of the palsy has been related circumstantially;
+but he was also afflicted with the gout, and was besides troubled
+with a complaint which not only was attended with immediate
+inconvenience, but threatened him with a chirurgical operation,
+from which most men would shrink. The complaint was a
+<i>sarcocele</i>, which Johnson bore with uncommon firmness, and
+was not at all frightened while he looked forward to amputation.
+He was attended by Mr. Pott and Mr. Cruikshank. I have before me
+a letter of the 30th of July this year, to Mr. Cruikshank, in
+which he says, 'I am going to put myself into your hands;' and
+another, accompanying a set of his <i>Lives of the Poets</i>, in
+which he says, 'I beg your acceptance of these volumes, as an
+acknowledgement of the great favours which you have bestowed on,
+Sir, your most obliged and most humble servant.' I have in my
+possession several more letters from him to Mr. Cruikshank, and
+also to Dr. Mudge at Plymouth, which it would be improper to
+insert, as they are filled with unpleasing technical details. I
+shall, however, extract from his letters to Dr. Mudge such
+passages as shew either a felicity of expression, or the
+undaunted state of his mind.</p>
+<p>'My conviction of your skill, and my belief of your
+friendship, determine me to intreat your opinion and
+advice.'&mdash;'In this state I with great earnestness desire you
+to tell me what is to be done. Excision is doubtless necessary to
+the cure, and I know not any means of palliation. The operation
+is doubtless painful; but is it dangerous? The pain I hope to
+endure with decency<a href=
+"#note-744">[744]</a>; but I am loth to
+put life into much hazard.'&mdash;'By representing the gout as an
+antagonist to the palsy, you have said enough to make it welcome.
+This is not strictly the first fit, but I hope it is as good as
+the first; for it is the second that ever confined me; and the
+first was ten years ago<a href=
+"#note-745">[745]</a>, much less fierce
+and fiery than this.'&mdash;'Write, dear Sir, what you can to
+inform or encourage me. The operation is not delayed by any fears
+or objections of mine.'</p>
+<p>To BENNET LANGTON, ESQ. 'Dear Sir, You may very reasonably
+charge me with insensibility of your kindness, and that of Lady
+Rothes, since I have suffered so much time to pass without paying
+any acknowledgement. I now, at last, return my thanks; and why I
+did it not sooner I ought to tell you. I went into Wiltshire as
+soon as I well could, and was there much employed in palliating
+my own malady. Disease produces much selfishness. A man in pain
+is looking after ease; and lets most other things go as chance
+shall dispose of them. In the mean time I have lost a companion<a
+href="#note-746">[746]</a>, to whom I
+have had recourse for domestick amusement for thirty years, and
+whose variety of knowledge never was exhausted; and now return to
+a habitation vacant and desolate. I carry about a very
+troublesome and dangerous complaint, which admits no cure but by
+the chirurgical knife. Let me have your prayers. I am,
+&amp;c.</p>
+<p>SAM. JOHNSON. London, Sept. 29, 1783.'</p>
+<p>Happily the complaint abated without his being put to the
+torture of amputation. But we must surely admire the manly
+resolution which he discovered while it hung over him.</p>
+<p>In a letter to the same gentleman he writes, 'The gout has
+within these four days come upon me with a violence which I never
+experienced before. It made me helpless as an infant.' And in
+another, having mentioned Mrs. Williams, he says,&mdash;'whose
+death following that of Levett, has now made my house a solitude.
+She left her little substance to a charity-school. She is, I
+hope, where there is neither darkness, nor want, nor sorrow.'</p>
+<p>I wrote to him, begging to know the state of his health, and
+mentioned that Baxter's <i>Anacreon</i><a href=
+"#note-747">[747]</a>, 'which is in the
+library at Auchinleck, was, I find, collated by my father in
+1727, with the MS. belonging to the University of Leyden, and he
+has made a number of Notes upon it. Would you advise me to
+publish a new edition of it?'</p>
+<p>His answer was dated September 30:&mdash;</p>
+<p>'You should not make your letters such rarities, when you
+know, or might know, the uniform state of my health. It is very
+long since I heard from you; and that I have not answered is a
+very insufficient reason for the silence of a friend. Your
+<i>Anacreon</i> is a very uncommon book; neither London nor
+Cambridge can supply a copy of that edition. Whether it should be
+reprinted, you cannot do better than consult Lord
+Hailes.&mdash;Besides my constant and radical disease, I have
+been for these ten days much harassed with the gout; but that has
+now remitted. I hope GOD will yet grant me a little longer life,
+and make me less unfit to appear before him.'</p>
+<p>He this autumn received a visit from the celebrated Mrs.
+Siddons. He gives this account of it in one of his letters<a
+href="#note-748">[748]</a> to Mrs.
+Thrale:&mdash;</p>
+<p>'Mrs. Siddons, in her visit to me, behaved with great modesty
+and propriety, and left nothing behind her to be censured or
+despised. Neither praise nor money, the two powerful corrupters
+of mankind, seem to have depraved her. I shall be glad to see her
+again. Her brother Kemble calls on me, and pleases me very well.
+Mrs. Siddons and I talked of plays; and she told me her intention
+of exhibiting this winter the characters of Constance, Catharine,
+and Isabella, in Shakspeare.'</p>
+<p>Mr. Kemble has favoured me with the following minute of what
+passed at this visit:&mdash;</p>
+<p>'When Mrs. Siddons came into the room, there happened to be no
+chair ready for her, which he observing, said with a smile,
+"Madam, you who so often occasion a want of seats to other
+people, will the more easily excuse the want of one yourself<a
+href="#note-749">[749]</a>."</p>
+<p>Having placed himself by her, he with great good-humour
+entered upon a consideration of the English drama; and, among
+other inquiries, particularly asked her which of Shakspeare's
+characters she was most pleased with. Upon her answering that she
+thought the character of Queen Catharine, in <i>Henry the
+Eighth</i>, the most natural:&mdash;"I think so too, Madam, (said
+he;) and whenever you perform it, I will once more hobble out to
+the theatre myself<a href=
+"#note-750">[750]</a>." Mrs. Siddons
+promised she would do herself the honour of acting his favourite
+part for him; but many circumstances happened to prevent the
+representation of <i>King Henry the Eighth</i> during the
+Doctor's life.</p>
+<p>'In the course of the evening he thus gave his opinion upon
+the merits of some of the principal performers whom he remembered
+to have seen upon the stage. "Mrs. Porter,<a href=
+"#note-751">[751]</a> in the vehemence of
+rage, and Mrs. Clive in the sprightliness of humour, I have never
+seen equalled. What Clive did best, she did better than Garrick;
+but could not do half so many things well; she was a better romp
+than any I ever saw in nature<a href=
+"#note-752">[752]</a>. Pritchard<a href=
+"#note-753">[753]</a>, in common life,
+was a vulgar ideot; she would talk of her <i>gownd</i>: but, when
+she appeared upon the stage, seemed to be inspired by gentility
+and understanding. I once talked with Colley Cibber<a href=
+"#note-754">[754]</a>, and thought him
+ignorant of the principles of his art. Garrick, Madam, was no
+declaimer; there was not one of his own scene-shifters who could
+not have spoken <i>To be, or not to be</i>, better than he did<a
+href="#note-755">[755]</a>; yet he was
+the only actor I ever saw, whom I could call a master both in
+tragedy and comedy<a href=
+"#note-756">[756]</a>; though I liked him
+best in comedy. A true conception of character, and natural
+expression of it, were his distinguished excellencies." Having
+expatiated, with his usual force and eloquence, on Mr. Garrick's
+extraordinary eminence as an actor, he concluded with this
+compliment to his social talents: "And after all, Madam, I
+thought him less to be envied on the stage than at the head of a
+table."'</p>
+<p>Johnson, indeed, had thought more upon the subject of acting
+than might be generally supposed<a href=
+"#note-757">[757]</a>. Talking of it one
+day to Mr. Kemble, he said, 'Are you, Sir, one of those
+enthusiasts who believe yourself transformed into the very
+character you represent?' Upon Mr. Kemble's answering that he had
+never felt so strong a persuasion himself<a href=
+"#note-758">[758]</a>; 'To be sure not,
+Sir, (said Johnson;) the thing is impossible. And if Garrick
+really believed himself to be that monster, Richard the Third, he
+deserved to be hanged every time he performed it<a href=
+"#note-759">[759]</a>.'</p>
+<p>A pleasing instance of the generous attention of one of his
+friends has been discovered by the publication of Mrs. Thrale's
+collection of <i>Letters</i>. In a letter to one of the Miss
+Thrales<a href="#note-760">[760]</a>, he
+writes,&mdash;</p>
+<p>'A friend, whose name I will tell when your mamma has tried to
+guess it, sent to my physician to enquire whether this long train
+of illness had brought me into difficulties for want of money,
+with an invitation to send to him for what occasion required. I
+shall write this night to thank him, having no need to
+borrow.'</p>
+<p>And afterwards, in a letter to Mrs. Thrale,&mdash;</p>
+<p>'Since you cannot guess, I will tell you, that the generous
+man was Gerard Hamilton. I returned him a very thankful and
+respectful letter<a href=
+"#note-761">[761]</a>.'</p>
+<p>I applied to Mr. Hamilton, by a common friend, and he has been
+so obliging as to let me have Johnson's letter to him upon this
+occasion, to adorn my collection.</p>
+<p>'To THE RIGHT HONOURABLE WILLIAM GERARD HAMILTON.</p>
+<center>'DEAR SIR,</center>
+<p>'Your kind enquiries after my affairs, and your generous
+offers, have been communicated to me by Dr. Brocklesby. I return
+thanks with great sincerity, having lived long enough to know
+what gratitude is due to such friendship; and entreat that my
+refusal may not be imputed to sullenness or pride. I am, indeed,
+in no want. Sickness is, by the generosity of my physicians, of
+little expence to me. But if any unexpected exigence should press
+me, you shall see, dear Sir, how cheerfully I can be obliged to
+so much liberality.</p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'I am, Sir,
+ Your most obedient
+ And most humble servant,
+ SAM. JOHNSON.'
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>'November, 19, 1783<a href=
+"#note-762">[762]</a>.'</p>
+<p>I find in this, as in former years, notices of his kind
+attention to Mrs. Gardiner<a href=
+"#note-763">[763]</a>, who, though in the
+humble station of a tallow-chandler upon Snow-hill, was a woman
+of excellent good sense, pious, and charitable. She told me, she
+had been introduced to him by Mrs. Masters<a href=
+"#note-764">[764]</a>, the poetess, whose
+volumes he revised, and, it is said, illuminated here and there
+with a ray of his own genius. Mrs. Gardiner was very zealous for
+the support of the Ladies' charity-school, in the parish of St.
+Sepulchre. It is confined to females; and, I am told, it afforded
+a hint for the story of <i>Betty Broom</i> in <i>The Idler</i><a
+href="#note-765">[765]</a>. Johnson this
+year, I find, obtained for it a sermon from the late Bishop of
+St. Asaph, Dr. Shipley, whom he, in one of his letters to Mrs.
+Thrale<a href="#note-766">[766]</a>,
+characterises as 'knowing and conversible;' and whom all who knew
+his Lordship, even those who differed from him in politicks,
+remember with much respect<a href=
+"#note-767">[767]</a>.</p>
+<p>The Earl of Carlisle having written a tragedy, entitled <i>The
+Fathers Revenge</i><a href=
+"#note-768">[768]</a>, some of his
+Lordship's friends applied to Mrs. Chapone<a href=
+"#note-769">[769]</a> to prevail on Dr.
+Johnson to read and give his opinion of it<a href=
+"#note-770">[770]</a>, which he
+accordingly did, in a letter to that lady. Sir Joshua Reynolds
+having informed me that this letter was in Lord Carlisle's
+possession, though I was not fortunate enough to have the honour
+of being known to his Lordship, trusting to the general courtesy
+of literature, I wrote to him, requesting the favour of a copy of
+it, and to be permitted to insert it in my <i>Life of Dr.
+Johnson</i>. His Lordship was so good as to comply with my
+request, and has thus enabled me to enrich my work with a very
+fine piece of writing, which displays both the critical skill and
+politeness of my illustrious friend; and perhaps the curiosity
+which it will excite, may induce the noble and elegant Authour to
+gratify the world by the publication<a href=
+"#note-771">[771]</a> of a performance,
+of which Dr. Johnson has spoken in such terms.</p>
+<p>'To MRS. CHAPONE.</p>
+<center>'MADAM,</center>
+<p>'By sending the tragedy to me a second time<a href=
+"#note-772">[772]</a>, I think that a
+very honourable distinction has been shewn me, and I did not
+delay the perusal, of which I am now to tell the effect.</p>
+<p>'The construction of the play is not completely regular; the
+stage is too often vacant, and the scenes are not sufficiently
+connected. This, however, would be called by Dryden only a
+mechanical defect<a href=
+"#note-773">[773]</a>; which takes away
+little from the power of the poem, and which is seen rather than
+felt.</p>
+<p>'A rigid examiner of the diction might, perhaps, wish some
+words changed, and some lines more vigorously terminated. But
+from such petty imperfections what writer was ever free?</p>
+<p>'The general form and force of the dialogue is of more
+importance. It seems to want that quickness of reciprocation
+which characterises the English drama, and is not always
+sufficiently fervid or animated.</p>
+<p>'Of the sentiments I remember not one that I wished omitted.
+In the imagery I cannot forbear to distinguish the comparison of
+joy succeeding grief to light rushing on the eye accustomed to
+darkness. It seems to have all that can be desired to make it
+please. It is new, just, and delightful<a href=
+"#note-774">[774]</a>.</p>
+<p>'With the characters, either as conceived or preserved, I have
+no fault to find; but was much inclined to congratulate a writer,
+who, in defiance of prejudice and fashion, made the Archbishop a
+good man, and scorned all thoughtless applause, which a vicious
+churchman would have brought him.</p>
+<p>'The catastrophe is affecting. The Father and Daughter both
+culpable, both wretched, and both penitent, divide between them
+our pity and our sorrow.</p>
+<p>'Thus, Madam, I have performed what I did not willingly
+undertake, and could not decently refuse. The noble writer will
+be pleased to remember, that sincere criticism ought to raise no
+resentment, because judgement is not under the controul of will;
+but involuntary criticism, as it has still less of choice, ought
+to be more remote from possibility of offence.</p>
+<p>'I am, &amp;c.,</p>
+<center>'SAM. JOHNSON.'</center>
+<p>'November 28, 1783.'</p>
+<p>I consulted him on two questions of a very different nature:
+one, whether the unconstitutional influence exercised by the
+Peers of Scotland in the election of the representatives of the
+Commons<a href="#note-775">[775]</a>, by
+means of fictitious qualifications, ought not to be
+resisted;&mdash;the other, What, in propriety and humanity,
+should be done with old horses unable to labour. I gave him some
+account of my life at Auchinleck: and expressed my satisfaction
+that the gentlemen of the county had, at two publick meetings,
+elected me their <i>Praeses</i> or Chairman<a href=
+"#note-776">[776]</a>.</p>
+<p>'To JAMES BOSWELL, ESQ.</p>
+<center>'DEAR SIR,</center>
+<p>'Like all other men who have great friends, you begin to feel
+the pangs of neglected merit; and all the comfort that I can give
+you is, by telling you that you have probably more pangs to feel,
+and more neglect to suffer. You have, indeed, begun to complain
+too soon; and I hope I am the only confidant of your discontent.
+Your friends have not yet had leisure to gratify personal
+kindness; they have hitherto been busy in strengthening their
+ministerial interest<a href=
+"#note-777">[777]</a>. If a vacancy
+happens in Scotland, give them early intelligence; and as you can
+serve Government as powerfully as any of your probable
+competitors, you may make in some sort a warrantable claim.</p>
+<p>'Of the exaltations and depressions of your mind you delight
+to talk, and I hate to hear. Drive all such fancies from you.</p>
+<p>'On the day when I received your letter, I think, the
+foregoing page was written; to which, one disease or another has
+hindered me from making any additions. I am now a little better.
+But sickness and solitude press me very heavily. I could bear
+sickness better, if I were relieved from solitude<a href=
+"#note-778">[778]</a>.</p>
+<p>'The present dreadful confusion of the publick<a href=
+"#note-779">[779]</a> ought to make you
+wrap yourself up in your hereditary possessions, which, though
+less than you may wish, are more than you can want; and in an
+hour of religious retirement return thanks to GOD, who has
+exempted you from any strong temptation to faction, treachery,
+plunder<a href="#note-780">[780]</a>, and
+disloyalty.</p>
+<p>'As your neighbours distinguish you by such honours as they
+can bestow, content yourself with your station, without
+neglecting your profession. Your estate and the Courts will find
+you full employment; and your mind, well occupied, will be
+quiet.</p>
+<p>'The usurpation of the nobility, for they apparently usurp all
+the influence they gain by fraud and misrepresentation, I think
+it certainly lawful, perhaps your duty, to resist. What is not
+their own they have only by robbery.</p>
+<p>'Your question about the horses gives me more perplexity. I
+know not well what advice to give you. I can only recommend a
+rule which you do not want;&mdash;give as little pain as you can.
+I suppose that we have a right to their service while their
+strength lasts; what we can do with them afterwards I cannot so
+easily determine. But let us consider. Nobody denies that man has
+a right first to milk the cow, and to sheer the sheep, and then
+to kill them for his table. May he not, by parity of reason,
+first work a horse, and then kill him the easiest way, that he
+may have the means of another horse, or food for cows and sheep?
+Man is influenced in both cases by different motives of
+self-interest. He that rejects the one must reject the other.</p>
+<p>'I am, &amp;c.</p>
+<center>'SAM. JOHNSON.'</center>
+<p>'London, Dec. 24, 1783.'</p>
+<p>'A happy and pious Christmas; and many happy years to you,
+your lady, and children.'</p>
+<p>The late ingenious Mr. Mickle<a href=
+"#note-781">[781]</a>, some time before
+his death, wrote me a letter concerning Dr. Johnson, in which he
+mentions,&mdash;</p>
+<p>'I was upwards of twelve years acquainted with him, was
+frequently in his company, always talked with ease to him, and
+can truly say, that I never received from him one rough
+word.'</p>
+<p>In this letter he relates his having, while engaged in
+translating the <i>Lusiad</i>, had a dispute of considerable
+length with Johnson, who, as usual, declaimed upon the misery and
+corruption of a sea life, and used this expression:&mdash;'It had
+been happy for the world, Sir, if your hero Gama, Prince Henry of
+Portugal, and Columbus, had never been born, or that their
+schemes had never gone farther than their own imaginations.'</p>
+<p>'This sentiment, (says Mr. Mickle,) which is to be found in
+his <i>Introduction to the World displayed</i><a href=
+"#note-782">[782]</a>, I, in my
+Dissertation prefixed to the <i>Lusiad</i>, have controverted;
+and though authours are said to be bad judges of their own
+works<a href="#note-783">[783]</a>, I am
+not ashamed to own to a friend, that that dissertation is my
+favourite above all that I ever attempted in prose. Next year,
+when the Lusiad was published, I waited on Dr. Johnson, who
+addressed me with one of his good-humoured smiles:&mdash;"Well,
+you have remembered our dispute about Prince Henry, and have
+cited me too. You have done your part very well indeed: you have
+made the best of your argument; but I am not convinced yet."</p>
+<p>'Before publishing the <i>Lusiad</i>, I sent Mr. Hoole a proof
+of that part of the introduction, in which I make mention of Dr.
+Johnson, yourself, and other well-wishers to the work, begging it
+might be shewn to Dr. Johnson. This was accordingly done; and in
+place of the simple mention of him which I had made, he dictated
+to Mr. Hoole the sentence as it now stands<a href=
+"#note-784">[784]</a>.</p>
+<p>'Dr. Johnson told me in 1772, that, about twenty years before
+that time, he himself had a design to translate the
+<i>Lusiad</i>, of the merit of which he spoke highly, but had
+been prevented by a number of other engagements.'</p>
+<p>Mr. Mickle reminds me in this letter of a conversation, at
+dinner one day at Mr. Hoole's with Dr. Johnson, when Mr. Nicol
+the King's bookseller and I attempted to controvert the maxim,
+'better that ten guilty should escape, than one innocent person
+suffer;' and were answered by Dr. Johnson with great power of
+reasoning and eloquence. I am very sorry that I have no record of
+that day<a href="#note-785">[785]</a>:
+but I well recollect my illustrious friend's having ably shewn,
+that unless civil institutions insure protection to the innocent,
+all the confidence which mankind should have in them would be
+lost.</p>
+<p>I shall here mention what, in strict chronological
+arrangement, should have appeared in my account of last year; but
+may more properly be introduced here, the controversy having not
+been closed till this. The Reverend Mr. Shaw<a href=
+"#note-786">[786]</a>, a native of one of
+the Hebrides, having entertained doubts of the authenticity of
+the poems ascribed to Ossian, divested himself of national
+bigotry; and having travelled in the Highlands and Islands of
+Scotland, and also in Ireland, in order to furnish himself with
+materials for a <i>Gaelick Dictionary</i>, which he afterwards
+compiled<a href="#note-787">[787]</a>,
+was so fully satisfied that Dr. Johnson was in the right upon the
+question, that he candidly published a pamphlet, stating his
+conviction and the proofs and reasons on which it was founded. A
+person at Edinburgh, of the name of Clark, answered this pamphlet
+with much zeal, and much abuse of its authour. Johnson took Mr.
+Shaw under his protection, and gave him his assistance in writing
+a reply, which has been admired by the best judges, and by many
+been considered as conclusive. A few paragraphs, which
+sufficiently mark their great Authour, shall be
+selected:&mdash;</p>
+<p>'My assertions are, for the most part, purely negative: I deny
+the existence of Fingal, because in a long and curious
+peregrination through the Gaelick regions I have never been able
+to find it. What I could not see myself I suspect to be equally
+invisible to others; and I suspect with the more reason, as among
+all those who have seen it no man can shew it.</p>
+<p>'Mr. Clark compares the obstinacy of those who disbelieve the
+genuineness of Ossian to a blind man, who should dispute the
+reality of colours, and deny that the British troops are cloathed
+in red. The blind man's doubt would be rational, if he did not
+know by experience that others have a power which he himself
+wants: but what perspicacity has Mr. Clark which Nature has
+withheld from me or the rest of mankind?</p>
+<p>'The true state of the parallel must be this. Suppose a man,
+with eyes like his neighbours, was told by a boasting corporal,
+that the troops, indeed, wore red clothes for their ordinary
+dress, but that every soldier had likewise a suit of black
+velvet, which he put on when the King reviews them. This he
+thinks strange, and desires to see the fine clothes, but finds
+nobody in forty thousand men that can produce either coat or
+waistcoat. One, indeed, has left them in his chest at Port Mahon;
+another has always heard that he ought to have velvet clothes
+somewhere; and a third has heard somebody say, that soldiers
+ought to wear velvet. Can the enquirer be blamed if he goes away
+believing that a soldier's red coat is all that he has?</p>
+<p>'But the most obdurate incredulity may be shamed or silenced
+by acts. To overpower contradictions, let the soldier shew his
+velvet-coat, and the Fingalist the original of Ossian<a href=
+"#note-788">[788]</a>.</p>
+<p>'The difference between us and the blind man is
+this:&mdash;the blind man is unconvinced, because he cannot see;
+and we, because though we can see, we find that nothing can be
+shown.'</p>
+<p>Notwithstanding the complication of disorders under which
+Johnson now laboured, he did not resign himself to despondency
+and discontent, but with wisdom and spirit endeavoured to console
+and amuse his mind with as many innocent enjoyments as he could
+procure. Sir John Hawkins has mentioned the cordiality with which
+he insisted that such of the members of the old club in
+Ivy-lane<a href="#note-789">[789]</a> as
+survived, should meet again and dine together, which they did,
+twice at a tavern and once at his house<a href=
+"#note-790">[790]</a>: and in order to
+insure himself society in the evening for three days in the
+week<a href="#note-791">[791]</a>, he
+instituted a club at the Essex Head, in Essex-street, then kept
+by Samuel Greaves, an old servant of Mr. Thrale's.</p>
+<p>'To SIR JOSHUA REYNOLDS.</p>
+<center>'DEAR SIR,</center>
+<p>'It is inconvenient to me to come out, I should else have
+waited on you with an account of a little evening Club which we
+are establishing in Essex-street, in the Strand, and of which you
+are desired to be one. It will be held at the Essex Head, now
+kept by an old servant of Thrale's. The company is numerous, and,
+as you will see by the list, miscellaneous. The terms are lax,
+and the expences light. Mr. Barry was adopted by Dr. Brocklesby,
+who joined with me in forming the plan. We meet thrice a week,
+and he who misses forfeits two-pence<a href=
+"#note-792">[792]</a>.</p>
+<p>'If you are willing to become a member, draw a line under your
+name. Return the list. We meet for the first time on Monday at
+eight.'</p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'I am, &amp;c.
+ 'SAM. JOHNSON.'
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>'Dec. 4, 1783.'</p>
+<p>It did not suit Sir Joshua to be one of this Club. But when I
+mention only Mr. Daines Barrington, Dr. Brocklesby, Mr. Murphy,
+Mr. John Nichols, Mr. Cooke, Mr. Joddrel, Mr. Paradise, Dr.
+Horsley, Mr. Windham<a href=
+"#note-793">[793]</a>, I shall
+sufficiently obviate the misrepresentation of it by Sir John
+Hawkins, as if it had been a low ale-house association, by which
+Johnson was degraded<a href=
+"#note-794">[794]</a>. Johnson himself,
+like his namesake Old Ben<a href=
+"#note-795">[795]</a>, composed the Rules
+of his Club[796].</p>
+<p>In the end of this year he was seized with a spasmodick asthma
+of such violence, that he was confined to the house in great
+pain, being sometimes obliged to sit all night in his chair, a
+recumbent posture being so hurtful to his respiration, that he
+could not endure lying in bed; and there came upon him at the
+same time that oppressive and fatal disease, a dropsy. It was a
+very severe winter, which probably aggravated his complaints; and
+the solitude in which Mr. Levett and Mrs. Williams had left him,
+rendered his life very gloomy. Mrs. Desmoulins<a href=
+"#note-797">[797]</a>, who still lived,
+was herself so very ill, that she could contribute very little to
+his relief<a href="#note-798">[798]</a>.
+He, however, had none of that unsocial shyness which we commonly
+see in people afflicted with sickness. He did not hide his head
+from the world, in solitary abstraction; he did not deny himself
+to the visits of his friends and acquaintances; but at all times,
+when he was not overcome by sleep, was ready for conversation as
+in his best days<a href=
+"#note-799">[799]</a>.</p>
+<p>'To MRS. LUCY PORTER, IN LICHFIELD.</p>
+<center>'DEAR MADAM,</center>
+<p>'You may perhaps think me negligent that I have not written to
+you again<a href="#note-800">[800]</a>
+upon the loss of your brother; but condolences and consolations
+are such common and such useless things, that the omission of
+them is no great crime: and my own diseases occupy my mind, and
+engage my care. My nights are miserably restless, and my days,
+therefore, are heavy. I try, however, to hold up my head as high
+as I can<a href=
+"#note-801">[801]</a>.</p>
+<p>'I am sorry that your health is impaired; perhaps the spring
+and the summer may, in some degree, restore it: but if not, we
+must submit to the inconveniences of time, as to the other
+dispensations of Eternal Goodness. Pray for me, and write to me,
+or let Mr. Pearson write for you.</p>
+<p>'I am, &amp;c.</p>
+<center>'SAM. JOHNSON.'</center>
+<p>'London, Nov. 29, 1783.'</p>
+<p>1784: Aetat. 75.&mdash;And now I am arrived at the last year
+of the life of SAMUEL JOHNSON, a year in which, although passed
+in severe indisposition, he nevertheless gave many evidences of
+the continuance of those wondrous powers of mind, which raised
+him so high in the intellectual world. His conversation and his
+letters of this year were in no respect inferiour to those of
+former years.</p>
+<p>The following is a remarkable proof of his being alive to the
+most minute curiosities of literature.</p>
+<p>'To MR. DILLY, BOOKSELLER, IN THE POULTRY.</p>
+<center>'SIR,</center>
+<p>'There is in the world a set of books which used to be sold by
+the booksellers on the bridge<a href=
+"#note-802">[802]</a>, and which I must
+entreat you to procure me. They are called <i>Burton's
+Books</i><a href="#note-803">[803]</a>;
+the title of one is <i>Admirable Curiosities, Rarities, and
+Wonders in England</i>. I believe there are about five or six of
+them; they seem very proper to allure backward readers; be so
+kind as to get them for me, and send me them with the best
+printed edition of <i>Baxter's Call to the Unconverted</i>.</p>
+<p>'I am, &amp;c.</p>
+<center>'SAM. JOHNSON.'</center>
+<p>'Jan. 6, 1784.'</p>
+<p>'To MR. PERKINS.</p>
+<center>'DEAR SIR,</center>
+<p>'I was very sorry not to see you when you were so kind as to
+call on me; but to disappoint friends, and if they are not very
+good natured, to disoblige them, is one of the evils of sickness.
+If you will please to let me know which of the afternoons in this
+week I shall be favoured with another visit by you and Mrs.
+Perkins, and the young people, I will take all the measures that
+I can to be pretty well at that time<a href=
+"#note-804">[804]</a>.</p>
+<p>'I am, dear Sir,</p>
+<p>'Your most humble servant,</p>
+<center>'SAM. JOHNSON.'</center>
+<p>'Jan. 21, 1784.'</p>
+<p>His attention to the Essex-Head Club appears from the
+following letter to Mr. Alderman Clark, a gentleman for whom he
+deservedly entertained a great regard.</p>
+<p>'To RICHARD CLARK, ESQ.</p>
+<center>'DEAR SIR,</center>
+<p>'You will receive a requisition, according to the rules of the
+Club, to be at the house as President of the night. This turn
+comes once a month, and the member is obliged to attend, or send
+another in his place. You were enrolled in the Club by my
+invitation, and I ought to introduce you; but as I am hindered by
+sickness, Mr. Hoole will very properly supply my place as
+introductor, or yours as President. I hope in milder weather to
+be a very constant attendant.</p>
+<p>'I am, Sir, &amp;c.</p>
+<center>'SAM. JOHNSON.'</center>
+<p>'Jan. 27, 1784.'</p>
+<p>'You ought to be informed that the forfeits began with the
+year, and that every night of non-attendance incurs the mulct of
+three-pence, that is, nine pence a week.'</p>
+<p>On the 8th of January I wrote to him, anxiously inquiring as
+to his health, and enclosing my <i>Letter to the People of
+Scotland, on the present state of the nation</i><a href=
+"#note-805">[805]</a>.</p>
+<p>'I trust, (said I,) that you will be liberal enough to make
+allowance for my differing from you on two points, (the Middlesex
+Election, and the American War<a href=
+"#note-806">[806]</a>) when my general
+principles of government are according to your own heart, and
+when, at a crisis of doubtful event, I stand forth with honest
+zeal as an ancient and faithful Briton. My reason for introducing
+those two points was, that as my opinions with regard to them had
+been declared at the periods when they were least favourable, I
+might have the credit of a man who is not a worshipper of
+ministerial power.'</p>
+<p>'To JAMES BOSWELL, ESQ.</p>
+<center>'DEAR SIR,</center>
+<p>'I hear of many enquiries which your kindness has disposed you
+to make after me<a href=
+"#note-807">[807]</a>. I have long
+intended you a long letter, which perhaps the imagination of its
+length hindered me from beginning. I will, therefore, content
+myself with a shorter.</p>
+<p>'Having promoted the institution of a new Club in the
+neighbourhood, at the house of an old servant of Thrale's, I went
+thither to meet the company, and was seized with a spasmodick
+asthma so violent, that with difficulty I got to my own house, in
+which I have been confined eight or nine weeks, and from which I
+know not when I shall be able to go even to church. The asthma,
+however, is not the worst. A dropsy gains ground upon me; my legs
+and thighs are very much swollen with water, which I should be
+content if I could keep there, but I am afraid that it will soon
+be higher. My nights are very sleepless and very tedious. And yet
+I am extremely afraid of dying.</p>
+<p>'My physicians try to make me hope, that much of my malady is
+the effect of cold, and that some degree at least of recovery is
+to be expected from vernal breezes and summer suns<a href=
+"#note-808">[808]</a>. If my life is
+prolonged to autumn, I should be glad to try a warmer climate;
+though how to travel with a diseased body, without a companion to
+conduct me, and with very little money, I do not well see. Ramsay
+has recovered his limbs in Italy<a href=
+"#note-809">[809]</a>; and Fielding was
+sent to Lisbon, where, indeed, he died; but he was, I believe,
+past hope when he went. Think for me what I can do.</p>
+<p>'I received your pamphlet, and when I write again may perhaps
+tell you some opinion about it; but you will forgive a man
+struggling with disease his neglect of disputes, politicks, and
+pamphlets<a href="#note-810">[810]</a>.
+Let me have your prayers. My compliments to your lady, and young
+ones. Ask your physicians about my case: and desire Sir Alexander
+Dick<a href="#note-811">[811]</a> to
+write me his opinion.</p>
+<p>'I am, dear Sir, &amp;c.</p>
+<center>'SAM. JOHNSON.'</center>
+<p>'Feb. 11, 1784.'</p>
+<center>'TO MRS. LUCY PORTER, IN LICHFIELD.</center>
+<center>'MY DEAREST LOVE,</center>
+<p>'I have been extremely ill of an asthma and dropsy, but
+received, by the mercy of GOD, sudden and unexpected relief last
+Thursday, by the discharge of twenty pints of water<a href=
+"#note-812">[812]</a>. Whether I shall
+continue free, or shall fill again, cannot be told. Pray for
+me.</p>
+<p>'Death, my dear, is very dreadful; let us think nothing worth
+our care but how to prepare for it: what we know amiss in
+ourselves let us make haste to amend, and put our trust in the
+mercy of GOD, and the intercession of our Saviour. I am, dear
+Madam,</p>
+<p>'Your most humble servant,</p>
+<center>'SAM. JOHNSON.'</center>
+<p>'Feb. 23, 1784.'</p>
+<center>TO JAMES BOSWELL, ESQ.</center>
+<center>'DEAR SIR,</center>
+<p>'I have just advanced so far towards recovery as to read a
+pamphlet; and you may reasonably suppose that the first pamphlet
+which I read was yours. I am very much of your opinion, and, like
+you, feel great indignation at the indecency with which the King
+is every day treated. Your paper contains very considerable
+knowledge of history and of the constitution, very properly
+produced and applied. It will certainly raise your character<a
+href="#note-813">[813]</a>, though
+perhaps it may not make you a Minister of State.</p>
+<p>'I desire you to see Mrs. Stewart once again, and tell her,
+that in the letter-case was a letter relating to me, for which I
+will give her, if she is willing to give it me, another guinea<a
+href="#note-814">[814]</a>. The letter is
+of consequence only to me.</p>
+<p>'I am, dear Sir, &amp;c. 'SAM. JOHNSON.' 'London, Feb. 27,
+1784.'</p>
+<p>In consequence of Johnson's request that I should ask our
+physicians about his case, and desire Sir Alexander Dick to send
+his opinion, I transmitted him a letter from that very amiable
+Baronet, then in his eighty-first year, with his faculties as
+entire as ever; and mentioned his expressions to me in the note
+accompanying it: 'With my most affectionate wishes for Dr.
+Johnson's recovery, in which his friends, his country, and all
+mankind have so deep a stake:' and at the same time a full
+opinion upon his case by Dr. Gillespie, who, like Dr. Cullen, had
+the advantage of having passed through the gradations of surgery
+and pharmacy, and by study and practice had attained to such
+skill, that my father settled on him two hundred pounds a year
+for five years, and fifty pounds a year during his life, as an
+<i>honorarium</i> to secure his particular attendance. The
+opinion was conveyed in a letter to me, beginning, 'I am
+sincerely sorry for the bad state of health your very learned and
+illustrious friend, Dr. Johnson, labours under at present.'</p>
+<center>'TO JAMES BOSWELL, ESQ. 'DEAR SIR,</center>
+<p>'Presently after I had sent away my last letter, I received
+your kind medical packet. I am very much obliged both to you and
+your physicians for your kind attention to my disease. Dr.
+Gillespie has sent me an excellent <i>consilium medicum</i>, all
+solid practical experimental knowledge. I am at present, in the
+opinion of my physicians, (Dr. Heberden and Dr. Brocklesby,) as
+well as my own, going on very hopefully. I have just begun to
+take vinegar of squills. The powder hurt my stomach so much, that
+it could not be continued.</p>
+<p>'Return Sir Alexander Dick my sincere thanks for his kind
+letter; and bring with you the rhubarb<a href=
+"#note-815">[815]</a> which he so
+tenderly offers me.</p>
+<p>'I hope dear Mrs. Boswell is now quite well, and that no evil,
+either real or imaginary, now disturbs you.</p>
+<p>'I am, &amp;c.</p>
+<center>'SAM. JOHNSON.'</center>
+<p>'London, March 2, 1784.'</p>
+<p>I also applied to three of the eminent physicians who had
+chairs in our celebrated school of medicine at Edinburgh, Doctors
+Cullen, Hope, and Monro, to each of whom I sent the following
+letter:&mdash;</p>
+<center>'DEAR SIR,</center>
+<p>'Dr. Johnson has been very ill for some time; and in a letter
+of anxious apprehension he writes to me, "Ask your physicians
+about my case."</p>
+<p>'This, you see, is not authority for a regular consultation:
+but I have no doubt of your readiness to give your advice to a
+man so eminent, and who, in his <i>Life of Garth</i>, has paid
+your profession a just and elegant compliment: "I believe every
+man has found in physicians great liberality and dignity of
+sentiment, very prompt effusions<a href=
+"#note-816">[816]</a> of beneficence, and
+willingness to exert a lucrative art, where there is no hope of
+lucre."</p>
+<p>'Dr. Johnson is aged seventy-four. Last summer he had a stroke
+of the palsy, from which he recovered almost entirely. He had,
+before that, been troubled with a catarrhous cough. This winter
+he was seized with a spasmodick asthma, by which he has been
+confined to his house for about three months. Dr. Brocklesby
+writes to me, that upon the least admission of cold, there is
+such a constriction upon his breast, that he cannot lie down in
+his bed, but is obliged to sit up all night, and gets rest and
+sometimes sleep, only by means of laudanum and syrup of poppies;
+and that there are oedematous tumours on his legs and thighs. Dr.
+Brocklesby trusts a good deal to the return of mild weather. Dr.
+Johnson says, that a dropsy gains ground upon him; and he seems
+to think that a warmer climate would do him good. I understand he
+is now rather better, and is using vinegar of squills. I am, with
+great esteem, dear Sir,</p>
+<p>'Your most obedient humble servant,</p>
+<center>'JAMES BOSWELL.'</center>
+<p>'March 7, 1784.'</p>
+<p>All of them paid the most polite attention to my letter, and
+its venerable object. Dr. Cullen's words concerning him were, 'It
+would give me the greatest pleasure to be of any service to a man
+whom the publick properly esteem, and whom I esteem and respect
+as much as I do Dr. Johnson.' Dr. Hope's, 'Few people have a
+better claim on me than your friend, as hardly a day passes that
+I do not ask his opinion about this or that word.' Dr. Monro's,
+'I most sincerely join you in sympathizing with that very worthy
+and ingenious character, from whom his country has derived much
+instruction and entertainment.'</p>
+<p>Dr. Hope corresponded with his friend Dr. Brocklesby. Doctors
+Cullen and Monro wrote their opinions and prescriptions to me,
+which I afterwards carried with me to London, and, so far as they
+were encouraging, communicated to Johnson. The liberality on one
+hand, and grateful sense of it on the other, I have great
+satisfaction in recording.</p>
+<center>'TO JAMES BOSWELL, ESQ.</center>
+<center>'DEAR SIR,</center>
+<p>'I am too much pleased with the attention which you and your
+dear lady<a href="#note-817">[817]</a>
+show to my welfare, not to be diligent in letting you know the
+progress which I make towards health. The dropsy, by GOD'S
+blessing, has now run almost totally away by natural evacuation;
+and the asthma, if not irritated by cold, gives me little
+trouble. While I am writing this, I have not any sensation of
+debility or disease. But I do not yet venture out, having been
+confined to the house from the thirteenth of December, now a
+quarter of a year.</p>
+<p>'When it will be fit for me to travel as far as Auchinleck, I
+am not able to guess; but such a letter as Mrs. Boswell's might
+draw any man, not wholly motionless, a great way. Pray tell the
+dear lady how much her civility and kindness have touched and
+gratified me.</p>
+<p>'Our parliamentary tumults have now begun to subside, and the
+King's authority is in some measure re-established<a href=
+"#note-818">[818]</a>. Mr. Pitt will have
+great power: but you must remember, that what he has to give
+must, at least for some time, be given to those who gave, and
+those who preserve, his power. A new minister can sacrifice
+little to esteem or friendship; he must, till he is settled,
+think only of extending his interest.</p>
+<hr>
+<p>'If you come hither through Edinburgh, send for Mrs. Stewart,
+and give from me another guinea for the letter in the old case,
+to which I shall not be satisfied with my claim, till she gives
+it me.</p>
+<p>'Please to bring with you Baxter's <i>Anacreon</i><a href=
+"#note-819">[819]</a>; and if you procure
+heads of <i>Hector Boece</i><a href=
+"#note-820">[820]</a>, the historian, and
+<i>Arthur Johnston</i>[821], the poet, I will put them in my
+room<a href="#note-822">[822]</a>; or any
+other of the fathers of Scottish literature.</p>
+<p>'I wish you an easy and happy journey, and hope I need not
+tell you that you will be welcome to, dear Sir,</p>
+<p>'Your most affectionate, humble servant,</p>
+<center>'SAM. JOHNSON.'</center>
+<p>'London, March 18, 1784.'</p>
+<p>I wrote to him, March 28, from York, informing him that I had
+a high gratification in the triumph of monarchical principles
+over aristocratical influence, in that great country, in an
+address to the King<a href=
+"#note-823">[823]</a>; that I was thus
+far on my way to him, but that news of the dissolution of
+Parliament having arrived, I was to hasten back to my own county,
+where I had carried an Address to his Majesty by a great
+majority, and had some intention of being a candidate to
+represent the county in Parliament.</p>
+<p>'To JAMES BOSWELL, ESQ.</p>
+<center>'DEAR SIR,</center>
+<p>'You could do nothing so proper as to haste back when you
+found the Parliament dissolved. With the influence which your
+Address must have gained you, it may reasonably be expected that
+your presence will be of importance, and your activity of
+effect.</p>
+<p>'Your solicitude for me gives me that pleasure which every man
+feels from the kindness of such a friend: and it is with delight
+I relieve it by telling, that Dr. Brocklesby's account is true,
+and that I am, by the blessing of GOD, wonderfully relieved.</p>
+<p>'You are entering upon a transaction which requires much
+prudence. You must endeavour to oppose without exasperating; to
+practise temporary hostility, without producing enemies for life.
+This is, perhaps, hard to be done; yet it has been done by many,
+and seems most likely to be effected by opposing merely upon
+general principles, without descending to personal or particular
+censures or objections. One thing I must enjoin you, which is
+seldom observed in the conduct of elections;&mdash;I must entreat
+you to be scrupulous in the use of strong liquors. One night's
+drunkenness may defeat the labours of forty days well employed.
+Be firm, but not clamorous; be active, but not malicious; and you
+may form such an interest, as may not only exalt yourself, but
+dignify your family.</p>
+<p>'We are, as you may suppose, all busy here. Mr. Fox resolutely
+stands for Westminster, and his friends say will carry the
+election<a href="#note-824">[824]</a>.
+However that be, he will certainly have a seat<a href=
+"#note-825">[825]</a>. Mr. Hoole has just
+told me, that the city leans towards the King.</p>
+<p>'Let me hear, from time to time, how you are employed, and
+what progress you make.</p>
+<p>'Make dear Mrs. Boswell, and all the young Boswells, the
+sincere compliments of, Sir, your affectionate humble
+servant,</p>
+<center>'SAM. JOHNSON.'</center>
+<p>'London, March 30, 1784.'</p>
+<p>To Mr. Langton he wrote with that cordiality which was
+suitable to the long friendship which had subsisted between him
+and that gentleman<a href=
+"#note-826">[826]</a>.</p>
+<p>March 27. 'Since you left me, I have continued in my own
+opinion, and in Dr, Brocklesby's, to grow better with respect to
+all my formidable and dangerous distempers: though to a body
+battered and shaken as mine has lately been, it is to be feared
+that weak attacks may be sometimes mischievous. I have, indeed,
+by standing carelessly at an open window, got a very troublesome
+cough, which it has been necessary to appease by opium, in larger
+quantities than I like to take, and I have not found it give way
+so readily as I expected; its obstinacy, however, seems at last
+disposed to submit to the remedy, and I know not whether I should
+then have a right to complain of any morbid sensation. My asthma
+is, I am afraid, constitutional and incurable; but it is only
+occasional, and unless it be excited by labour or by cold, gives
+me no molestation, nor does it lay very close siege to life; for
+Sir John Floyer<a href=
+"#note-827">[827]</a>, whom the physical
+race consider as authour of one of the best books upon it, panted
+on to ninety, as was supposed; and why were we content with
+supposing a fact so interesting, of a man so conspicuous? because
+he corrupted, at perhaps seventy or eighty, the register, that he
+might pass for younger than he was. He was not much less than
+eighty, when to a man of rank who modestly asked his age, he
+answered, "Go look;" though he was in general a man of civility
+and elegance.</p>
+<p>'The ladies, I find, are at your house all well, except Miss
+Langton, who will probably soon recover her health by light
+suppers. Let her eat at dinner as she will, but not take a full
+stomach to bed. Pay my sincere respects to dear Miss Langton in
+Lincolnshire, let her know that I mean not to break our league of
+friendship, and that I have a set of <i>Lives</i> for her, when I
+have the means of sending it.'</p>
+<p>April 8. 'I am still disturbed by my cough; but what thanks
+have I not to pay, when my cough is the most painful sensation
+that I feel? and from that I expect hardly to be released, while
+winter continues to gripe us with so much pertinacity. The year
+has now advanced eighteen days beyond the equinox, and still
+there is very little remission of the cold. When warm weather
+comes, which surely must come at last, I hope it will help both
+me and your young lady.</p>
+<p>'The man so busy about addresses is neither more nor less than
+our own Boswell, who had come as far as York towards London, but
+turned back on the dissolution, and is said now to stand for some
+place. Whether to wish him success, his best friends
+hesitate.</p>
+<p>'Let me have your prayers for the completion of my recovery: I
+am now better than I ever expected to have been. May GOD add to
+his mercies the grace that may enable me to use them according to
+his will. My compliments to all.'</p>
+<p>April 13. 'I had this evening a note from Lord Portmore<a
+href="#note-828">[828]</a>, desiring that
+I would give you an account of my health. You might have had it
+with less circumduction. I am, by GOD'S blessing, I believe, free
+from all morbid sensations, except a cough, which is only
+troublesome. But I am still weak, and can have no great hope of
+strength till the weather shall be softer. The summer, if it be
+kindly, will, I hope, enable me to support the winter. GOD, who
+has so wonderfully restored me, can preserve me in all
+seasons.</p>
+<p>'Let me enquire in my turn after the state of your family,
+great and little. I hope Lady Rothes and Miss Langton are both
+well. That is a good basis of content. Then how goes George on
+with his studies? How does Miss Mary? And how does my own Jenny?
+I think I owe Jenny a letter, which I will take care to pay. In
+the mean time tell her that I acknowledge the debt.</p>
+<p>'Be pleased to make my compliments to the ladies. If Mrs.
+Langton comes to London, she will favour me with a visit, for I
+am not well enough to go out.'</p>
+<p>'To OZIAS HUMPHRY<a href=
+"#note-829">[829]</a>, ESQ.</p>
+<center>'SIR,</center>
+<p>'Mr. Hoole has told me with what benevolence you listened to a
+request which I was almost afraid to make, of leave to a young
+painter<a href="#note-830">[830]</a> to
+attend you from time to time in your painting-room, to see your
+operations, and receive your instructions<a href=
+"#note-831">[831]</a>.</p>
+<p>'The young man has perhaps good parts, but has been without a
+regular education. He is my god-son, and therefore I interest
+myself in his progress and success, and shall think myself much
+favoured if I receive from you a permission to send him.</p>
+<p>'My health is, by GOD'S blessing, much restored, but I am not
+yet allowed by my physicians to go abroad; nor, indeed, do I
+think myself yet able to endure the weather.</p>
+<p>'I am, Sir,</p>
+<p>'Your most humble servant,</p>
+<center>'SAM. JOHNSON.'</center>
+<p>'April 5, 1784.'</p>
+<p>To THE SAME.</p>
+<center>'SIR,</center>
+<p>'The bearer is my god-son, whom I take the liberty of
+recommending to your kindness; which I hope he will deserve by
+his respect to your excellence, and his gratitude for your
+favours.</p>
+<p>'I am, Sir,</p>
+<p>'Your most humble servant,</p>
+<center>'SAM. JOHNSON.'</center>
+<p>'April 10, 1784.'</p>
+<p>To THE SAME.</p>
+<center>'SIR,</center>
+<p>'I am very much obliged by your civilities to my god-son, but
+must beg of you to add to them the favour of permitting him to
+see you paint, that he may know how a picture is begun, advanced
+and completed.</p>
+<p>'If he may attend you in a few of your operations, I hope he
+will shew that the benefit has been properly conferred, both by
+his proficiency and his gratitude. At least I shall consider you
+as enlarging your kindness to, Sir,</p>
+<p>'Your humble servant,</p>
+<center>'SAM. JOHNSON.'</center>
+<p>'May 31, 1784.'</p>
+<p>'To THE REVEREND DR. TAYLOR, ASHBOURNE, DERBYSHIRE.</p>
+<center>'DEAR SIR,</center>
+<p>'What can be the reason that I hear nothing from you? I hope
+nothing disables you from writing. What I have seen, and what I
+have felt, gives me reason to fear every thing. Do not omit
+giving me the comfort of knowing, that after all my losses I have
+yet a friend left.</p>
+<p>'I want every comfort. My life is very solitary and very
+cheerless. Though it has pleased GOD wonderfully to deliver me
+from the dropsy, I am yet very weak, and have not passed the door
+since the 13th of December<a href=
+"#note-832">[832]</a>. I hope for some
+help from warm weather, which will surely come in time.</p>
+<p>'I could not have the consent of the physicians to go to
+church yesterday; I therefore received the holy sacrament at
+home, in the room where I communicated with dear Mrs. Williams, a
+little before her death. O! my friend, the approach of death is
+very dreadful. I am afraid to think on that which I know I cannot
+avoid. It is vain to look round and round for that help which
+cannot be had. Yet we hope and hope, and fancy that he who has
+lived to-day may live to-morrow. But let us learn to derive our
+hope only from GOD.</p>
+<p>'In the mean time, let us be kind to one another. I have no
+friend now living but you and Mr. Hector, that was the friend of
+my youth. Do not neglect, dear Sir,</p>
+<p>'Yours affectionately,</p>
+<center>'SAM. JOHNSON<a href=
+"#note-833">[833]</a>.'</center>
+<p>'London, Easter-Monday,</p>
+<p>April 12, 1784.'</p>
+<p>What follows is a beautiful specimen of his gentleness and
+complacency to a young lady his god-child, one of the daughters
+of his friend Mr. Langton, then I think in her seventh year. He
+took the trouble to write it in a large round hand, nearly
+resembling printed characters, that she might have the
+satisfaction of reading it herself. The original lies before me,
+but shall be faithfully restored to her; and I dare say will be
+preserved by her as a jewel as long as she lives<a href=
+"#note-834">[834]</a>.</p>
+<p>'To Miss JANE LANGTON, IN ROCHESTER, KENT.</p>
+<center>'MY DEAREST MISS JENNY,</center>
+<p>'I am sorry that your pretty letter has been so long without
+being answered; but, when I am not pretty well, I do not always
+write plain enough for young ladies. I am glad, my dear, to see
+that you write so well, and hope that you mind your pen, your
+book, and your needle, for they are all necessary. Your books
+will give you knowledge, and make you respected; and your needle
+will find you useful employment when you do not care to read.
+When you are a little older, I hope you will be very diligent in
+learning arithmetick<a href=
+"#note-835">[835]</a>, and, above all,
+that through your whole life you will carefully say your prayers,
+and read your Bible.</p>
+<p>'I am, my dear,</p>
+<p>'Your most humble servant,</p>
+<center>'SAM. JOHNSON.'</center>
+<p>'May 10, 1784.'</p>
+<p>On Wednesday, May 5, I arrived in London, and next morning had
+the pleasure to find Dr. Johnson greatly recovered. I but just
+saw him; for a coach was waiting to carry him to Islington, to
+the house of his friend the Reverend Mr. Strahan, where he went
+sometimes for the benefit of good air, which, notwithstanding his
+having formerly laughed at the general opinion upon the subject,
+he now acknowledged was conducive to health.</p>
+<p>One morning afterwards, when I found him alone, he
+communicated to me, with solemn earnestness, a very remarkable
+circumstance which had happened in the course of his illness,
+when he was much distressed by the dropsy. He had shut himself
+up, and employed a day in particular exercises of
+religion,&mdash;fasting, humiliation, and prayer. On a sudden he
+obtained extraordinary relief, for which he looked up to Heaven
+with grateful devotion. He made no direct inference from this
+fact; but from his manner of telling it, I could perceive that it
+appeared to him as something more than an incident in the common
+course of events<a href=
+"#note-836">[836]</a>. For my own part, I
+have no difficulty to avow that cast of thinking, which by many
+modern pretenders to wisdom is called <i>superstitious</i>. But
+here I think even men of dry rationality may believe, that there
+was an intermediate<a href=
+"#note-837">[837]</a> interposition of
+Divine Providence, and that 'the fervent prayer of this righteous
+man<a href="#note-838">[838]</a>'
+availed[839].</p>
+<p>On Sunday, May 9, I found Colonel Valiancy, the celebrated
+antiquarian and Engineer of Ireland, with him. On Monday, the
+10th, I dined with him at Mr. Paradise's, where was a large
+company; Mr. Bryant, Mr. Joddrel, Mr. Hawkins Browne, &amp;c. On
+Thursday, the 13th, I dined with him at Mr. Joddrel's, with
+another large company; the Bishop of Exeter, Lord Monboddo<a
+href="#note-840">[840]</a>, Mr. Murphy,
+&amp;c.</p>
+<p>On Saturday, May 15<a href=
+"#note-841">[841]</a>, I dined with him
+at Dr. Brocklesby's, where were Colonel Vallancy, Mr. Murphy, and
+that ever-cheerful companion Mr. Devaynes, apothecary to his
+Majesty. Of these days, and others on which I saw him, I have no
+memorials, except the general recollection of his being able and
+animated in conversation, and appearing to relish society as much
+as the youngest man. I find only these three small
+particulars:&mdash;When a person was mentioned, who said, 'I have
+lived fifty-one years in this world without having had ten
+minutes of uneasiness;' he exclaimed, 'The man who says so, lies:
+he attempts to impose on human credulity.' The Bishop of Exeter
+in vain observed, that men were very different. His Lordship's
+manner was not impressive, and I learnt afterwards that Johnson
+did not find out that the person who talked to him was a Prelate;
+if he had, I doubt not that he would have treated him with more
+respect; for once talking of George Psalmanazar<a href=
+"#note-842">[842]</a>, whom he reverenced
+for his piety, he said, 'I should as soon think of contradicting
+a BISHOP<a href="#note-843">[843]</a>.'
+One of the company[844] provoked him greatly by doing what he
+could least of all bear, which was quoting something of his own
+writing, against what he then maintained. 'What, Sir, (cried the
+gentleman,) do you say to</p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ "The busy day, the peaceful night,
+ Unfelt, uncounted, glided by<a href=
+"#note-845">845</a>?"'&mdash;
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>Johnson finding himself thus presented as giving an instance
+of a man who had lived without uneasiness, was much offended, for
+he looked upon such a quotation as unfair. His anger burst out in
+an unjustifiable retort, insinuating that the gentleman's remark
+was a sally of ebriety; 'Sir, there is one passion I would advise
+you to command: when you have drunk out that glass, don't drink
+another<a href="#note-846">[846]</a>.'
+Here was exemplified what Goldsmith said of him, with the aid of
+a very witty image from one of Cibber's Comedies: 'There is no
+arguing with Johnson; for if his pistol misses fire, he knocks
+you down with the butt end of it<a href=
+"#note-847">[847]</a>.' Another was this:
+when a gentleman<a href=
+"#note-848">[848]</a> of eminence in the
+literary world was violently censured for attacking people by
+anonymous paragraphs in newspapers; he, from the spirit of
+contradiction as I thought, took up his defence, and said, 'Come,
+come, this is not so terrible a crime; he means only to vex them
+a little. I do not say that I should do it; but there is a great
+difference between him and me; what is fit for Hephaestion is not
+fit for Alexander.' Another, when I told him that a young and
+handsome Countess had said to me, 'I should think that to be
+praised by Dr. Johnson would make one a fool all one's life;' and
+that I answered, 'Madam, I shall make him a fool to-day, by
+repeating this to him,' he said, 'I am too old to be made a fool;
+but if you say I am made a fool, I shall not deny it. I am much
+pleased with a compliment, especially from a pretty woman.'</p>
+<p>On the evening of Saturday, May 15, he was in fine spirits, at
+our Essex-Head Club. He told us, 'I dined yesterday at Mrs.
+Garrick's, with Mrs. Carter<a href=
+"#note-849">[849]</a>, Miss Hannah More,
+and Miss Fanny Burney. Three such women are not to be found: I
+know not where I could find a fourth, except Mrs. Lennox, who is
+superiour to them all<a href=
+"#note-850">[850]</a>.' BOSWELL. 'What!
+had you them all to yourself, Sir?' JOHNSON. 'I had them all as
+much as they were had; but it might have been better had there
+been more company there.' BOSWELL. 'Might not Mrs. Montagu have
+been a fourth?' JOHNSON. 'Sir, Mrs. Montagu does not make a trade
+of her wit; but Mrs. Montagu is a very extraordinary woman; she
+has a constant stream of conversation, and it is always
+impregnated; it has always meaning<a href=
+"#note-851">[851]</a>.' BOSWELL. 'Mr.
+Burke has a constant stream of conversation.' JOHNSON. 'Yes, Sir;
+if a man were to go by chance at the same time with Burke under a
+shed, to shun a shower, he would say&mdash;"this is an
+extraordinary man." If Burke should go into a stable to see his
+horse drest, the ostler would say&mdash;we have had an
+extraordinary man here<a href=
+"#note-852">[852]</a>.' BOSWELL. 'Foote
+was a man who never failed in conversation. If he had gone into a
+stable&mdash;' JOHNSON. 'Sir, if he had gone into a stable, the
+ostler would have said, here has been a comical fellow; but he
+would not have respected him.' BOSWELL. 'And, Sir, the ostler
+would have answered him, would have given him as good as he
+brought, as the common saying is.' JOHNSON. 'Yes, Sir; and Foote
+would have answered the ostler.&mdash;When Burke does not descend
+to be merry, his conversation is very superiour indeed. There is
+no proportion between the powers which he shews in serious talk
+and in jocularity. When he lets himself down to that, he is in
+the kennel<a href="#note-853">[853]</a>.'
+I have in another place[854] opposed, and I hope with success,
+Dr. Johnson's very singular and erroneous notion as to Mr.
+Burke's pleasantry. Mr. Windham now said low to me, that he
+differed from our great friend in this observation; for that Mr.
+Burke was often very happy in his merriment. It would not have
+been right for either of us to have contradicted Johnson at this
+time, in a Society all of whom did not know and value Mr. Burke
+as much as we did. It might have occasioned something more rough,
+and at any rate would probably have checked the flow of Johnson's
+good-humour. He called to us with a sudden air of exultation, as
+the thought started into his mind, 'O! Gentlemen, I must tell you
+a very great thing. The Empress of Russia has ordered the
+<i>Rambler</i> to be translated into the Russian language<a href=
+"#note-855">[855]</a>: so I shall be read
+on the banks of the Wolga. Horace boasts that his fame would
+extend as far as the banks of the Rhone<a href=
+"#note-856">[856]</a>; now the Wolga is
+farther from me than the Rhone was from Horace.' BOSWELL. 'You
+must certainly be pleased with this, Sir.' JOHNSON. 'I am pleased
+Sir, to be sure. A man is pleased to find he has succeeded in
+that which he has endeavoured to do.'</p>
+<p>One of the company mentioned his having seen a noble person
+driving in his carriage, and looking exceedingly well,
+notwithstanding his great age. JOHNSON. 'Ah, Sir; that is
+nothing. Bacon observes, that a stout healthy old man is like a
+tower undermined.'</p>
+<p>On Sunday, May 16, I found him alone; he talked of Mrs. Thrale
+with much concern, saying, 'Sir, she has done every thing wrong,
+since Thrale's bridle was off her neck;' and was proceeding to
+mention some circumstances which have since been the subject of
+publick discussion<a href=
+"#note-857">[857]</a>, when he was
+interrupted by the arrival of Dr. Douglas, now Bishop of
+Salisbury.</p>
+<p>Dr. Douglas, upon this occasion, refuted a mistaken notion
+which is very common in Scotland, that the ecclesiastical
+discipline of the Church of England, though duly enforced, is
+insufficient to preserve the morals of the clergy, inasmuch as
+all delinquents may be screened by appealing to the Convocation,
+which being never authorized by the King to sit for the dispatch
+of business, the appeal never can be heard. Dr. Douglas observed,
+that this was founded upon ignorance; for that the Bishops have
+sufficient power to maintain discipline, and that the sitting of
+the Convocation was wholly immaterial in this respect, it being
+not a Court of judicature, but like a parliament, to make Canons
+and regulations as times may require.</p>
+<p>Johnson, talking of the fear of death, said, 'Some people are
+not afraid, because they look upon salvation as the effect of an
+absolute decree, and think they feel in themselves the marks of
+sanctification. Others, and those the most rational in my
+opinion, look upon salvation as conditional; and as they never
+can be sure that they have complied with the conditions, they are
+afraid<a href="#note-858">[858]</a>.'</p>
+<p>In one of his little manuscript diaries, about this time, I
+find a short notice, which marks his amiable disposition more
+certainly than a thousand studied declarations.&mdash;'Afternoon
+spent cheerfully and elegantly, I hope without offence to GOD or
+man; though in no holy duty, yet in the general exercise and
+cultivation of benevolence.'</p>
+<p>On Monday, May 17, I dined with him at Mr. Dilly's, where were
+Colonel Valiancy, the Reverend Dr. Gibbons<a href=
+"#note-859">[859]</a>, and Mr. Capel
+Lofft, who, though a most zealous Whig, has a mind so full of
+learning and knowledge, and so much exercised in various
+departments, and withal so much liberality, that the stupendous
+powers of the literary Goliath, though they did not frighten this
+little David of popular spirit, could not but excite his
+admiration<a href="#note-860">[860]</a>.
+There was also Mr. Braithwaite of the Post-office, that amiable
+and friendly man, who, with modest and unassuming manners, has
+associated with many of the wits of the age. Johnson was very
+quiescent to-day. Perhaps too I was indolent. I find nothing more
+of him in my notes, but that when I mentioned that I had seen in
+the King's library sixty-three editions of my favourite <i>Thomas
+&agrave; Kempis</i>, amongst which it was in eight languages,
+Latin, German, French, Italian, Spanish, English, Arabick, and
+Armenian, he said, he thought it unnecessary to collect many
+editions of a book, which were all the same, except as to the
+paper and print; he would have the original, and all the
+translations, and all the editions which had any variations in
+the text. He approved of the famous collection of editions of
+<i>Horace</i> by Douglas, mentioned by Pope<a href=
+"#note-861">[861]</a>, who is said to
+have had a closet filled with them; and he added, 'every man
+should try to collect one book in that manner, and present it to
+a publick library.'</p>
+<p>On Tuesday, May 18, I saw him for a short time in the morning.
+I told him that the mob had called out, as the King passed<a
+href="#note-862">[862]</a>, 'No
+Fox&mdash;No Fox,' which I did not like. He said, 'They were
+right, Sir.' I said, I thought not; for it seemed to be making
+Mr. Fox the King's competitor<a href=
+"#note-863">[863]</a>. There being no
+audience, so that there could be no triumph in a victory, he
+fairly agreed with me<a href=
+"#note-864">[864]</a>. I said it might do
+very well, if explained thus:&mdash;'Let us have no Fox;'
+understanding it as a prayer to his Majesty not to appoint that
+gentleman minister.</p>
+<p>On Wednesday, May 19, I sat a part of the evening with him, by
+ourselves. I observed, that the death of our friends might be a
+consolation against the fear of our own dissolution, because we
+might have more friends in the other world than in this. He
+perhaps felt this as a reflection upon his apprehension as to
+death; and said, with heat, 'How can a man know <i>where</i> his
+departed friends are, or whether they will be his friends in the
+other world<a href="#note-865">[865]</a>?
+How many friendships have you known formed upon principles of
+virtue? Most friendships are formed by caprice or by chance, mere
+confederacies in vice or leagues in folly.'</p>
+<p>We talked of our worthy friend Mr. Langton. He said, 'I know
+not who will go to Heaven if Langton does not. Sir, I could
+almost say, <i>Sit anima mea cum Langtono</i>' I mentioned a very
+eminent friend<a href=
+"#note-866">[866]</a> a virtuous man.
+JOHNSON. 'Yes, Sir; but &mdash;&mdash; has not the evangelical
+virtue of Langton. &mdash;&mdash;, I am afraid, would not scruple
+to pick up a wench.'</p>
+<p>He however charged Mr. Langton with what he thought want of
+judgement upon an interesting occasion. 'When I was ill, (said
+he) I desired he would tell me sincerely in what he thought my
+life was faulty. Sir, he brought me a sheet of paper, on which he
+had written down several texts of Scripture, recommending
+christian charity. And when I questioned him what occasion I had
+given for such an animadversion, all that he could say amounted
+to this,&mdash;that I sometimes contradicted people in
+conversation. Now what harm does it do to any man to be
+contradicted?' BOSWELL. 'I suppose he meant the <i>manner</i> of
+doing it; roughly,&mdash;and harshly.' JOHNSON. 'And who is the
+worse for that?' BOSWELL. 'It hurts people of weak nerves.'
+JOHNSON. 'I know no such weak-nerved people<a href=
+"#note-867">[867]</a>.' Mr. Burke, to
+whom I related this conference, said, 'It is well, if when a man
+comes to die, he has nothing heavier upon his conscience than
+having been a little rough in conversation.'</p>
+<p>Johnson, at the time when the paper was presented to him,
+though at first pleased with the attention of his friend, whom he
+thanked in an earnest manner, soon exclaimed, in a loud and angry
+tone, 'What is your drift, Sir?' Sir Joshua Reynolds pleasantly
+observed, that it was a scene for a comedy, to see a penitent get
+into a violent passion and belabour his confessor<a href=
+"#note-868">[868]</a>.</p>
+<p>I have preserved no more of his conversation at the times when
+I saw him during the rest of this month, till Sunday, the 30th of
+May, when I met him in the evening at Mr. Hoole's, where there
+was a large company both of ladies and gentlemen; Sir James
+Johnston<a href="#note-869">[869]</a>
+happened to say, that he paid no regard to the arguments of
+counsel at the bar of the House of Commons, because they were
+paid for speaking. 'JOHNSON. 'Nay, Sir, argument is argument. You
+cannot help paying regard to their arguments, if they are good.
+If it were testimony, you might disregard it, if you knew that it
+were purchased. There is a beautiful image in Bacon<a href=
+"#note-870">[870]</a> upon this subject:
+testimony is like an arrow shot from a long bow; the force of it
+depends on the strength of the hand that draws it. Argument is
+like an arrow from a cross-bow, which has equal force though shot
+by a child.'</p>
+<p>He had dined that day at Mr. Hoole's, and Miss Helen Maria
+Williams being expected in the evening, Mr. Hoole put into his
+hands her beautiful <i>Ode on the Peace</i><a href=
+"#note-871">[871]</a>: Johnson read it
+over, and when this elegant and accomplished young lady<a href=
+"#note-872">[872]</a> was presented to
+him, he took her by the hand in the most courteous manner, and
+repeated the finest stanza of her poem; this was the most
+delicate and pleasing compliment he could pay. Her respectable
+friend, Dr. Kippis, from whom I had this anecdote, was standing
+by, and was not a little gratified.</p>
+<p>Miss Williams told me, that the only other time she was
+fortunate enough to be in Dr. Johnson's company, he asked her to
+sit down by him, which she did, and upon her enquiring how he
+was, he answered, 'I am very ill indeed, Madam. I am very ill
+even when you are near me; what should I be were you at a
+distance?'<a href=
+"#note-873">[873]</a></p>
+<p>He had now a great desire to go to Oxford, as his first jaunt
+after his illness; we talked of it for some days, and I had
+promised to accompany him. He was impatient, and fretful
+to-night, because I did not at once agree to go with him on
+Thursday. When I considered how ill he had been, and what
+allowance should be made for the influence of sickness upon his
+temper, I resolved to indulge him, though with some inconvenience
+to myself, as I wished to attend the musical meeting in honour of
+Handel<a href="#note-874">[874]</a>, in
+Westminster-Abbey, on the following Saturday.</p>
+<p>In the midst of his own diseases and pains, he was ever
+compassionate to the distresses of others, and actively earnest
+in procuring them aid, as appears from a note to Sir Joshua
+Reynolds, of June, in these words:&mdash;'I am ashamed to ask for
+some relief for a poor man, to whom, I hope, I have given what I
+can be expected to spare. The man importunes me, and the blow
+goes round. I am going to try another air on Thursday.'</p>
+<p>On Thursday, June 3, the Oxford post-coach took us up in the
+morning at Bolt-court. The other two passengers were Mrs.
+Beresford and her daughter, two very agreeable ladies from
+America; they were going to Worcestershire, where they then
+resided. Frank had been sent by his master the day before to take
+places for us; and I found, from the way-bill, that Dr. Johnson
+had made our names be put down. Mrs. Beresford, who had read it,
+whispered me, 'Is this the great Dr. Johnson?' I told her it was;
+so she was then prepared to listen. As she soon happened to
+mention in a voice so low that Johnson did not hear it, that her
+husband had been a member of the American Congress, I cautioned
+her to beware of introducing that subject, as she must know how
+very violent Johnson was against the people of that country. He
+talked a great deal, but I am sorry I have preserved little of
+the conversation. Miss Beresford was so much charmed, that she
+said to me aside, 'How he does talk! Every sentence is an essay.'
+She amused herself in the coach with knotting; he would scarcely
+allow this species of employment any merit. 'Next to mere
+idleness (said he) I think knotting is to be reckoned in the
+scale of insignificance; though I once attempted to learn
+knotting. Dempster's sister (looking to me) endeavoured to teach
+me it; but I made no progress<a href=
+"#note-875">[875]</a>.'</p>
+<p>I was surprised at his talking without reserve in the publick
+post-coach of the state of his affairs; 'I have (said he) about
+the world I think above a thousand pounds, which I intend shall
+afford Frank an annuity of seventy pounds a year.' Indeed his
+openness with people at a first interview was remarkable. He said
+once to Mr. Langton, 'I think I am like Squire Richard in <i>The
+Journey to London, "I'm never strange in a strange place</i><a
+href="#note-876">[876]</a>."' He was
+truly <i>social</i>. He strongly censured what is much too common
+in England among persons of condition,&mdash;maintaining an
+absolute silence, when unknown to each other; as for instance,
+when occasionally brought together in a room before the master or
+mistress of the house has appeared. 'Sir, that is being so
+uncivilised as not to understand the common rights of humanity<a
+href="#note-877">[877]</a>.'</p>
+<p>At the inn where we stopped he was exceedingly dissatisfied
+with some roast mutton which we had for dinner. The ladies I saw
+wondered to see the great philosopher, whose wisdom and wit they
+had been admiring all the way, get into ill-humour from such a
+cause. He scolded the waiter, saying, 'It is as bad as bad can
+be: it is ill-fed, ill-killed, ill-kept, and ill-drest<a href=
+"#note-878">[878]</a>.'</p>
+<p>He bore the journey very well, and seemed to feel himself
+elevated as he approached Oxford, that magnificent and venerable
+seat of learning, Orthodoxy, and Toryism. Frank came in the heavy
+coach, in readiness to attend him; and we were received with the
+most polite hospitality at the house of his old friend Dr. Adams,
+Master of Pembroke College, who had given us a kind invitation.
+Before we were set down, I communicated to Johnson, my having
+engaged to return to London directly, for the reason I have
+mentioned, but that I would hasten back to him again. He was
+pleased that I had made this journey merely to keep him company.
+He was easy and placid, with Dr. Adams, Mrs. and Miss Adams, and
+Mrs. Kennicot, widow of the learned Hebraean<a href=
+"#note-879">[879]</a>, who was here on a
+visit. He soon dispatched the inquiries which were made about his
+illness and recovery, by a short and distinct narrative; and then
+assuming a gay air, repeated from Swift,&mdash;</p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'Nor think on our approaching ills,
+ And talk of spectacles and pills<a href=
+"#note-880">880</a>.'
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>Dr. Newton, the Bishop of Bristol, having been mentioned,
+Johnson, recollecting the manner in which he had been censured by
+that Prelate<a href=
+"#note-881">[881]</a>, thus retaliated:-'
+Tom knew he should be dead before what he has said of me would
+appear. He durst not have printed it while he was alive.' DR.
+ADAMS. 'I believe his <i>Dissertations on the Prophecies</i> is
+his great work.' JOHNSON. 'Why, Sir, it is Tom's great work; but
+how far it is great, or how much of it is Tom's, are other
+questions. I fancy a considerable part of it was borrowed.' DR.
+ADAMS. 'He was a very successful man.' JOHNSON. 'I don't think
+so, Sir. He did not get very high. He was late in getting what he
+did get; and he did not get it by the best means. I believe he
+was a gross flatterer<a href=
+"#note-882">[882]</a>.'</p>
+<p>I fulfilled my intention by going to London, and returned to
+Oxford on Wednesday the 9th of June, when I was happy to find
+myself again in the same agreeable circle at Pembroke College,
+with the comfortable prospect of making some stay. Johnson
+welcomed my return with more than ordinary glee.</p>
+<p>He talked with great regard of the Honourable Archibald
+Campbell, whose character he had given at the Duke of Argyll's
+table, when we were at Inverary<a href=
+"#note-883">[883]</a>; and at this time
+wrote out for me, in his own hand, a fuller account of that
+learned and venerable writer, which I have published in its
+proper place. Johnson made a remark this evening which struck me
+a good deal. 'I never (said he) knew a non-juror who could
+reason<a href="#note-884">[884]</a>.'
+Surely he did not mean to deny that faculty to many of their
+writers; to Hickes, Brett<a href=
+"#note-885">[885]</a>, and other eminent
+divines of that persuasion; and did not recollect that the seven
+Bishops, so justly celebrated for their magnanimous resistance of
+arbitrary power, were yet Nonjurors to the new Government<a href=
+"#note-886">[886]</a>. The nonjuring
+clergy of Scotland, indeed, who, excepting a few, have lately, by
+a sudden stroke, cut off all ties of allegiance to the house of
+Stuart, and resolved to pray for our present lawful Sovereign by
+name, may be thought to have confirmed this remark; as it may be
+said, that the divine indefeasible hereditary right which they
+professed to believe, if ever true, must be equally true still.
+Many of my readers will be surprized when I mention, that Johnson
+assured me he had never in his life been in a nonjuring
+meeting-house<a href=
+"#note-887">[887]</a>.</p>
+<p>Next morning at breakfast, he pointed out a passage in
+Savage's <i>Wanderer</i>, saying, 'These are fine verses.' 'If
+(said he) I had written with hostility of Warburton in my
+<i>Shakspeare</i>, I should have quoted this couplet:&mdash;</p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ "Here Learning, blinded first and then beguil'd,
+ Looks dark as Ignorance, as Fancy wild<a href=
+"#note-888">888</a>."
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>You see they'd have fitted him to a <i>T</i>,' (smiling.) DR.
+ADAMS. 'But you did not write against Warburton.' JOHNSON. 'No,
+Sir, I treated him with great respect both in my Preface and in
+my Notes<a href=
+"#note-889">[889]</a>.'</p>
+<p>Mrs. Kennicot spoke of her brother, the Reverend Mr.
+Chamberlayne, who had given up great prospects in the Church of
+England on his conversion to the Roman Catholick faith. Johnson,
+who warmly admired every man who acted from a conscientious
+regard to principle, erroneous or not, exclaimed fervently, 'GOD
+bless him.'</p>
+<p>Mrs. Kennicot, in confirmation of Dr. Johnson's opinion<a
+href="#note-890">[890]</a>, that the
+present was not worse than former ages, mentioned that her
+brother assured her, there was now less infidelity on the
+Continent than there had been; Voltaire and Rousseau were less
+read. I asserted, from good authority, that Hume's infidelity was
+certainly less read. JOHNSON. 'All infidel writers drop into
+oblivion, when personal connections and the floridness of novelty
+are gone; though now and then a foolish fellow, who thinks he can
+be witty upon them, may bring them again into notice. There will
+sometimes start up a College joker, who does not consider that
+what is a joke in a College will not do in the world. To such
+defenders of Religion I would apply a stanza of a poem which I
+remember to have seen in some old collection:&mdash;</p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ "Henceforth be quiet and agree,
+ Each kiss his empty brother;
+ Religion scorns a foe like thee,
+ But dreads a friend like t'other."
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>The point is well, though the expression is not correct;
+<i>one</i>, and not <i>thee, should be opposed to</i>
+t'other<i><a href=
+"#note-891">[891]</a>.'</i></p>
+<p>On the Roman Catholick religion he said, 'If you join the
+Papists externally, they will not interrogate you strictly as to
+your belief in their tenets. No reasoning Papist believes every
+article of their faith. There is one side on which a good man
+might be persuaded to embrace it. A good man of a timorous
+disposition, in great doubt of his acceptance with GOD, and
+pretty credulous, might be glad to be of a church where there,
+are so many helps to get to Heaven. I would be a Papist if I
+could. I have fear enough; but an obstinate rationality prevents
+me. I shall never be a Papist, unless on the near approach of
+death, of which I have a very great terrour. I wonder that women
+are not all Papists.' BOSWELL. 'They are not more afraid of death
+than men are.' JOHNSON. 'Because they are less wicked.' DR.
+ADAMS. 'They are more pious.' JOHNSON. 'No, hang 'em, they are
+not more pious. A wicked fellow is the most pious when he takes
+to it. He'll beat you all at piety.'</p>
+<p>He argued in defence of some of the peculiar tenets of the
+Church of Rome. As to the giving the bread only to the laity, he
+said, 'They may think, that in what is merely ritual, deviations
+from the primitive mode may be admitted on the ground of
+convenience, and I think they are as well warranted to make this
+alteration, as we are to substitute sprinkling in the room of the
+ancient baptism.' As to the invocation of saints<a href=
+"#note-892">[892]</a>, he said, 'Though I
+do not think it authorised, it appears to me, that "the communion
+of saints" in the Creed means the communion with the saints in
+Heaven, as connected with "The holy Catholick Church<a href=
+"#note-893">[893]</a>."' He admitted the
+influence of evil spirits[894] upon our minds, and said, 'Nobody
+who believes the New Testament can deny it.'</p>
+<p>I brought a volume of Dr. Hurd the Bishop of Worcester's
+Sermons<i>, and read to the company some passages from one of
+them, upon this text, '</i>Resist the Devil, and he will fly<a
+href="#note-895">[895]</a> from you.'
+James<i>, iv. 7. I was happy to produce so judicious and elegant
+a supporter<a href="#note-896">[896]</a>
+of a doctrine, which, I know not why, should, in this world of
+imperfect knowledge, and, therefore, of wonder and mystery in a
+thousand instances, be contested by some with an unthinking
+assurance and flippancy.</i></p>
+<p>After dinner, when one of us talked of there being a great
+enmity between Whig and Tory;&mdash;JOHNSON. 'Why not so much, I
+think, unless when they come into competition with each other.
+There is none when they are only common acquaintance, none when
+they are of different sexes. A Tory will marry into a Whig
+family, and a Whig into a Tory family, without any reluctance.
+But indeed, in a matter of much more concern than political
+tenets, and that is religion, men and women do not concern
+themselves much about difference of opinion; and ladies set no
+value on the moral character of men who pay their addresses to
+them; the greatest profligate will be as well received as the man
+of the greatest virtue, and this by a very good woman, by a woman
+who says her prayers three times a day.' Our ladies endeavoured
+to defend their sex from this charge; but he roared them down!
+'No, no, a lady will take Jonathan Wild as readily as St. Austin,
+if he has three-pence more; and, what is worse, her parents will
+give her to him. Women have a perpetual envy of our vices; they
+are less vicious than we, not from choice, but because we
+restrict them; they are the slaves of order and fashion; their
+virtue is of more consequence to us than our own, so far as
+concerns this world.'</p>
+<p>Miss Adams mentioned a gentleman of licentious character, and
+said, 'Suppose I had a mind to marry that gentleman, would my
+parents consent?' JOHNSON. 'Yes, they'd consent, and you'd go.
+You'd go though they did not consent.' MISS ADAMS. 'Perhaps their
+opposing might make me go.' JOHNSON. 'O, very well; you'd take
+one whom you think a bad man, to have the pleasure of vexing your
+parents. You put me in mind of Dr. Barrowby<a href=
+"#note-897">[897]</a>, the physician, who
+was very fond of swine's flesh. One day, when he was eating it,
+he said, 'I wish I was a Jew.' 'Why so? (said somebody); the Jews
+are not allowed to eat your favourite meat.' 'Because, (said he,)
+I should then have the gust of eating it, with the pleasure of
+sinning.' Johnson then proceeded in his declamation.</p>
+<p>Miss Adams soon afterwards made an observation that I do not
+recollect, which pleased him much: he said with a good-humoured
+smile, 'That there should be so much excellence united with so
+much depravity<i>, is strange.'</i></p>
+<p>Indeed, this lady's good qualities, merit, and
+accomplishments, and her constant attention to Dr. Johnson, were
+not lost upon him. She happened to tell him that a little
+coffee-pot, in which she had made his coffee, was the only thing
+she could call her own. He turned to her with a complacent
+gallantry, 'Don't say so, my dear; I hope you don't reckon my
+heart as nothing.'</p>
+<p>I asked him if it was true as reported, that he had said
+lately, 'I am for the King against Fox; but I am for Fox against
+Pitt.' JOHNSON. 'Yes, Sir; the King is my master; but I do not
+know Pitt; and Fox is my friend<a href=
+"#note-898">[898]</a>.'</p>
+<p>'Fox, (added he,) is a most extraordinary man; here is a man
+(describing him in strong terms of objection in some respects
+according as he apprehended, but which exalted his abilities the
+more) who has divided the Kingdom with Caesar<a href=
+"#note-899">[899]</a>; so that it, was a
+doubt whether the nation should be ruled by the sceptre of George
+the Third, or the tongue of Fox.'</p>
+<p>Dr. Wall, physician at Oxford, drank tea with us. Johnson had
+in general a peculiar pleasure in the company of physicians,
+which was certainly not abated by the conversation of this
+learned, ingenious, and pleasing gentleman. Johnson said, 'It is
+wonderful how little good Radcliffe's travelling fellowships<a
+href="#note-900">[900]</a> have done. I
+know nothing that has been imported by them; yet many additions
+to our medical knowledge might be got in foreign countries.
+Inoculation, for instance, has saved more lives than war
+destroys<a href="#note-901">[901]</a>:
+and the cures performed by the Peruvian-bark are innumerable. But
+it is in vain to send our travelling physicians to France, and
+Italy, and Germany, for all that is known there is known here;
+I'd send them out of Christendom; I'd send them among barbarous
+nations.'</p>
+<p>On Friday, June 11, we talked at breakfast, of forms of
+prayer. JOHNSON. 'I know of no good prayers but those in the Book
+of Common Prayer<i>.' DR. ADAMS, (in a very earnest manner): 'I
+wish, Sir, you would compose some family prayers.' JOHNSON. 'I
+will not compose prayers for you, Sir, because you can do it for
+yourself. But I have thought of getting together all the books of
+prayers which I could, selecting those which should appear to me
+the best, putting out some, inserting others, adding some prayers
+of my own, and prefixing a discourse on prayer.' We all now
+gathered about him, and two or three of us at a time joined in
+pressing him to execute this plan. He seemed to be a little
+displeased at the manner of our importunity, and in great
+agitation called out, 'Do not talk thus of what is so aweful. I
+know not what time GOD will allow me in this world. There are
+many things which I wish to do.' Some of us persisted, and Dr.
+Adams said, 'I never was more serious about any thing in my
+life.' JOHNSON. 'Let me alone, let me alone; I am overpowered.'
+And then he put his hands before his face, and reclined for some
+time upon the table<a href=
+"#note-902">[902]</a>.</i></p>
+<p>I mentioned Jeremy Taylor's using, in his forms of prayer, 'I
+am the chief of sinners,' and other such self-condemning
+expressions<a href="#note-903">[903]</a>.
+'Now, (said I) this cannot be said with truth by every man, and
+therefore is improper for a general printed form. I myself cannot
+say that I am the worst of men; I will <i>not say so.' JOHNSON.
+'A man may know, that physically, that is, in the real state of
+things, he is not the worst man; but that morally he may be so.
+Law observes that "Every man knows something worse of himself,
+than he is sure of in others<a href=
+"#note-904">[904]</a>." You may not have
+committed such crimes as some men have done; but you do not know
+against what degree of light they have sinned. Besides, Sir, "the
+chief of sinners" is a mode of expression for "I am a great
+sinner." So St. Paul, speaking of our SAVIOUR'S having died to
+save sinners, says, "of whom I am the chief<a href=
+"#note-905">[905]</a>;" yet he certainly
+did not think himself so bad as Judas Iscariot.' BOSWELL. 'But,
+Sir, Taylor means it literally, for he founds a conceit upon it.
+When praying for the conversion of sinners, and of himself in
+particular, he says, "LORD, thou wilt not leave thy</i> chief
+<i>work undone." JOHNSON. 'I do not approve of figurative
+expressions in addressing the Supreme Being; and I never use
+them<a href="#note-906">[906]</a>. Taylor
+gives a very good advice: "Never lie in your prayers; never
+confess more than you really believe; never promise more than you
+mean to perform<a href=
+"#note-907">[907]</a>." I recollected
+this precept in his</i> Golden Grove<i>; but his</i> example
+<i>for prayer contradicts his</i> precept<i>.'</i></p>
+<p>Dr. Johnson and I went in Dr. Adams's coach to dine with Dr.
+Nowell, Principal of St. Mary Hall, at his beautiful villa at
+Iffley, on the banks of the Isis, about two miles from Oxford.
+While we were upon the road, I had the resolution to ask Johnson
+whether he thought that the roughness of his manner had been an
+advantage or not, and if he would not have done more good if he
+had been more gentle. I proceeded to answer myself thus: 'Perhaps
+it has been of advantage, as it has given weight to what you
+said: you could not, perhaps, have talked with such authority
+without it.' JOHNSON. 'No, Sir; I have done more good as I am.
+Obscenity and Impiety have always been repressed in my company<a
+href="#note-908">[908]</a>.' BOSWELL.
+'True, Sir; and that is more than can be said of every Bishop.
+Greater liberties have been taken in the presence of a Bishop,
+though a very good man, from his being milder, and therefore not
+commanding such awe. Yet, Sir, many people who might have been
+benefited by your conversation, have been frightened away. A
+worthy friend of ours<a href=
+"#note-909">[909]</a> has told me, that
+he has often been afraid to talk to you.' JOHNSON. 'Sir, he need
+not have been afraid, if he had any thing rational to say. If he
+had not, it was better he did not talk<a href=
+"#note-910">[910]</a>.</p>
+<p>Dr. Nowell is celebrated for having preached a sermon before
+the House of Commons, on the 3Oth of January, 1773, full of high
+Tory sentiments, for which he was thanked as usual, and printed
+it at their request; but, in the midst of that turbulence and
+faction which disgraced a part of the present reign, the thanks
+were afterwards ordered to be expunged<a href=
+"#note-911">[911]</a>. This strange
+conduct sufficiently exposes itself; and Dr. Nowell will ever
+have the honour which is due to a lofty friend of our monarchical
+constitution. Dr. Johnson said to me, 'Sir, the Court will be
+very much to blame, if he is not promoted.' I told this to Dr.
+Nowell, and asserting my humbler, though not less zealous
+exertions in the same cause, I suggested that whatever return we
+might receive, we should still have the consolation of being like
+Butler's steady and generous Royalist,</p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'True as the dial to the sun,
+ Although it be not shone upon<a href=
+"#note-912">912</a>.'
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>We were well entertained and very happy at Dr. Nowell's, where
+was a very agreeable company, and we drank 'Church and King'
+after dinner, with true Tory cordiality.</p>
+<p>We talked of a certain clergyman<a href=
+"#note-913">[913]</a> of extraordinary
+character, who by exerting his talents in writing on temporary
+topicks, and displaying uncommon intrepidity, had raised himself
+to affluence. I maintained that we ought not to be indignant at
+his success; for merit of every sort was entitled to reward.
+JOHNSON. 'Sir, I will not allow this man to have merit. No, Sir;
+what he has is rather the contrary; I will, indeed, allow him
+courage, and on this account we so far give him credit. We have
+more respect for a man who robs boldly on the highway, than for a
+fellow who jumps out of a ditch, and knocks you down behind your
+back. Courage is a quality so necessary for maintaining virtue,
+that it is always respected, even when it is associated with
+vice<a href="#note-914">[914]</a>.</p>
+<p>I censured the coarse invectives which were become fashionable
+in the House of Commons<a href=
+"#note-915">[915]</a>, and said that if
+members of parliament must attack each other personally in the
+heat of debate, it should be done more genteely. JOHNSON. 'No,
+Sir; that would be much worse. Abuse is not so dangerous when
+there is no vehicle of wit or delicacy, no subtle conveyance. The
+difference between coarse and refined abuse is as the difference
+between being bruised by a club, and wounded by a poisoned
+arrow.' I have since observed his position elegantly expressed by
+Dr. Young:&mdash;</p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'As the soft plume gives swiftness to the dart,
+ Good breeding sends the satire to the heart<a href=
+"#note-916">916</a>.'
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>On Saturday, June 12, there drank tea with us at Dr. Adams's,
+Mr. John Henderson, student of Pembroke-College, celebrated for
+his wonderful acquirements in Alchymy, Judicial Astrology, and
+other abstruse and curious learning<a href=
+"#note-917">[917]</a>; and the Reverend
+Herbert Croft, who, I am afraid, was somewhat mortified by Dr.
+Johnson's not being highly pleased with some Family
+Discourses<i>, which he had printed; they were in too familiar a
+style to be approved of by so manly a mind. I have no note of
+this evening's conversation, except a single fragment. When I
+mentioned Thomas Lord Lyttelton's vision<a href=
+"#note-918">[918]</a>, the prediction of
+the time of his death, and its exact fulfilment;&mdash;JOHNSON.
+'It is the most extraordinary thing that has happened in my day.
+I heard it with my own ears, from his uncle, Lord Westcote. I am
+so glad to have every evidence of the spiritual world, that I am
+willing to believe it.' DR. ADAMS. 'You have evidence enough;
+good evidence, which needs not such support.' JOHNSON. 'I like to
+have more<a href=
+"#note-919">[919]</a>.'</i></p>
+<p>Mr. Henderson, with whom I had sauntered in the venerable
+walks of Merton-College, and found him a very learned and pious
+man, supped with us. Dr. Johnson surprised him not a little, by
+acknowledging with a look of horrour, that he was much oppressed
+by the fear of death<a href=
+"#note-920">[920]</a>. The amiable Dr.
+Adams suggested that GOD was infinitely good. JOHNSON. 'That he
+is infinitely good, as far as the perfection of his nature will
+allow, I certainly believe; but it is necessary for good upon the
+whole, that individuals should be punished. As to an
+individual<i>, therefore, he is not infinitely good; and as I
+cannot be</i> sure <i>that I have fulfilled the conditions on
+which salvation is granted, I am afraid I may be one of those who
+shall be damned.' (looking dismally.) DR. ADAMS. 'What do you
+mean by damned?' JOHNSON. (passionately and loudly) 'Sent to
+Hell, Sir, and punished everlastingly<a href=
+"#note-921">[921]</a>.' DR. ADAMS. 'I
+don't believe that doctrine.' JOHNSON. 'Hold, Sir, do you believe
+that some will be punished at all?' DR. ADAMS. 'Being excluded
+from Heaven will be a punishment; yet there may be no great
+positive suffering.' JOHNSON. 'Well, Sir; but, if you admit any
+degree of punishment, there is an end of your argument for
+infinite goodness simply considered; for, infinite goodness would
+inflict no punishment whatever. There is not infinite goodness
+physically considered; morally there is.' BOSWELL. 'But may not a
+man attain to such a degree of hope as not to be uneasy from the
+fear of death?' JOHNSON. 'A man may have such a degree of hope as
+to keep him quiet. You see I am not quiet, from the vehemence
+with which I talk; but I do not despair.' MRS. ADAMS. 'You seem,
+Sir, to forget the merits of our Redeemer.' JOHNSON. 'Madam, I do
+not forget the merits of my Redeemer; but my Redeemer has said
+that he will set some on his right hand and some on his left.' He
+was in gloomy agitation, and said, 'I'll have no more on't<a
+href="#note-922">[922]</a>.' If what has
+now been stated should be urged by the enemies of Christianity,
+as if its influence on the mind were not benignant, let it be
+remembered, that Johnson's temperament was melancholy, of which
+such direful apprehensions of futurity are often a common effect.
+We shall presently see that when he approached nearer to his
+aweful change, his mind became tranquil, and he exhibited as much
+fortitude as becomes a thinking man in that situation.</i></p>
+<p>From the subject of death we passed to discourse of life,
+whether it was upon the whole more happy or miserable. Johnson
+was decidedly for the balance of misery<a href=
+"#note-923">[923]</a>: in confirmation of
+which I maintained, that no man would choose to lead over again
+the life which he had experienced. Johnson acceded to that
+opinion in the strongest terms<a href=
+"#note-924">[924]</a>. This is an inquiry
+often made; and its being a subject of disquisition is a proof
+that much misery presses upon human feelings; for those who are
+conscious of a felicity of existence, would never hesitate to
+accept of a repetition of it. I have met with very few who would.
+I have heard Mr. Burke make use of a very ingenious and plausible
+argument on this subject;&mdash;'Every man (said he) would lead
+his life over again; for, every man is willing to go on and take
+an addition to his life, which, as he grows older, he has no
+reason to think will be better, or even so good as what has
+preceded.' I imagine, however, the truth is, that there is a
+deceitful hope that the next part of life will be free from the
+pains, and anxieties, and sorrows, which we have already felt<a
+href="#note-925">[925]</a>. We are for
+wise purposes 'Condemn'd to Hope's delusive mine;' as Johnson
+finely says<a href="#note-926">[926]</a>;
+and I may also quote the celebrated lines of Dryden, equally
+philosophical and poetical:&mdash;</p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'When I consider life, 'tis all a cheat,
+ Yet fool'd with hope, men favour the deceit:
+ Trust on, and think to-morrow will repay;
+ To-morrow's falser than the former day;
+ Lies worse; and while it says we shall be blest
+ With some new joys, cuts off what we possest.
+ Strange cozenage! none would live past years again;
+ Yet all hope pleasure in what yet remain;
+ And from the dregs of life think to receive,
+ What the first sprightly running could not give<a href=
+"#note-927">927</a>.'
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>It was observed to Dr. Johnson, that it seemed strange that
+he, who has so often delighted his company by his lively and
+brilliant conversation, should say he was miserable. JOHNSON.
+'Alas! it is all outside; I may be cracking my joke<a href=
+"#note-928">[928]</a>, and cursing the
+sun. Sun, how I hate thy beams<i><a href=
+"#note-929">[929]</a>!' I knew not well
+what to think of this declaration; whether to hold it as a
+genuine picture of his mind<a href=
+"#note-930">[930]</a>, or as the effect
+of his persuading himself contrary to fact, that the position
+which he had assumed as to human unhappiness, was true. We may
+apply to him a sentence in Mr. Greville's<a href=
+"#note-931">[931]</a></i> Maxims,
+Characters, and Reflections<i><a href=
+"#note-932">[932]</a>; a book which is
+entitled to much more praise than it has received: 'ARISTARCHUS
+is charming: how full of knowledge, of sense, of sentiment. You
+get him with difficulty to your supper; and after having
+delighted every body and himself for a few hours, he is obliged
+to return home;&mdash;he is finishing his treatise, to prove that
+unhappiness is the portion of man<a href=
+"#note-933">[933]</a>.'</i></p>
+<p>On Sunday, June 13, our philosopher was calm at breakfast.
+There was something exceedingly pleasing in our leading a College
+life, without restraint, and with superiour elegance, in
+consequence of our living in the Master's house, and having the
+company of ladies. Mrs. Kennicot related, in his presence, a
+lively saying of Dr. Johnson to Miss Hannah More, who had
+expressed a wonder that the poet who had written Paradise Lost
+<i>should write such poor Sonnets:&mdash;' Milton, Madam, was a
+genius that could cut a Colossus from a rock; but could not carve
+heads upon cherry-stones<a href=
+"#note-934">[934]</a>.'</i></p>
+<p>We talked of the casuistical question, Whether it was
+allowable at any time to depart from Truth<i>? JOHNSON. 'The
+general rule is, that Truth should never be violated, because it
+is of the utmost importance to the comfort of life, that we
+should have a full security by mutual faith; and occasional
+inconveniences should be willingly suffered that we may preserve
+it. There must, however, be some exceptions. If, for instance, a
+murderer should ask you which way a man is gone, you may tell him
+what is not true, because you are under a previous obligation not
+to betray a man to a murderer<a href=
+"#note-935">[935]</a>.' BOSWELL.
+'Supposing the person who wrote</i> Junius <i>were asked whether
+he was the authour, might he deny it?' JOHNSON. 'I don't know
+what to say to this. If you were</i> sure <i>that he wrote</i>
+Junius<i>, would you, if he denied it, think as well of him
+afterwards? Yet it may be urged, that what a man has no right to
+ask, you may refuse to communicate<a href=
+"#note-936">[936]</a>; and there is no
+other effectual mode of preserving a secret and an important
+secret, the discovery of which may be very hurtful to you, but a
+flat denial; for if you are silent, or hesitate, or evade, it
+will be held equivalent to a confession. But stay, Sir; here is
+another case. Supposing the authour had told me confidentially
+that he had written</i> Junius<i>, and I were asked if he had, I
+should hold myself at liberty to deny it, as being under a
+previous promise, express or implied, to conceal it. Now what I
+ought to do for the authour, may I not do for myself? But I deny
+the lawfulness of telling a lie to a sick man for fear of
+alarming him. You have no business with consequences; you are to
+tell the truth. Besides, you are not sure what effect your
+telling him that he is in danger may have. It may bring his
+distemper to a crisis, and that may cure him. Of all lying, I
+have the greatest abhorrence of this, because I believe it has
+been frequently practised on myself.'</i></p>
+<p>I cannot help thinking that there is much weight in the
+opinion of those who have held, that Truth, as an eternal and
+immutable principle, ought, upon no account whatever, to be
+violated, from supposed previous or superiour obligations, of
+which every man being to judge for himself, there is great danger
+that we too often, from partial motives, persuade ourselves that
+they exist; and probably whatever extraordinary instances may
+sometimes occur, where some evil may be prevented by violating
+this noble principle, it would be found that human happiness
+would, upon the whole, be more perfect were Truth universally
+preserved.</p>
+<p>In the notes to the Dunciad<i><a href=
+"#note-937">[937]</a>, we find the
+following verses, addressed to Pope<a href=
+"#note-938">[938]</a>:&mdash;</i></p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'While malice, Pope, denies thy page
+ Its own celestial fire;
+ While criticks, and while bards in rage
+ Admiring, won't admire:
+ While wayward pens thy worth assail,
+ And envious tongues decry;
+ These times, though many a friend bewail,
+ These times bewail not I.
+ But when the world's loud praise is thine,
+ And spleen no more shall blame;
+ When with thy Homer thou shalt shine
+ In one establish'd fame!
+ When none shall rail, and every lay
+ Devote a wreath to thee:
+ That day (for come it will) that day
+ Shall I lament to see.'
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>It is surely not a little remarkable, that they should appear
+without a name. Miss Seward<a href=
+"#note-939">[939]</a>, knowing Dr.
+Johnson's almost universal and minute literary information,
+signified a desire that I should ask him who was the authour. He
+was prompt with his answer: 'Why, Sir, they were written by one
+Lewis, who was either under-master or an usher of
+Westminster-school, and published a Miscellany, in which Grongar
+Hill<i><a href="#note-940">[940]</a>
+first came out[941].' Johnson praised them highly, and repeated
+them with a noble animation. In the twelfth line, instead of 'one
+establish'd fame,' he repeated 'one unclouded flame,' which he
+thought was the reading in former editions: but I believe was a
+flash of his own genius. It is much more poetical than the
+other.</i></p>
+<p>On Monday, June 14, and Tuesday, 15, Dr. Johnson and I dined,
+on one of them, I forget which, with Mr. Mickle, translator of
+the Lusiad<i>, at Wheatley, a very pretty country place a few
+miles from Oxford; and on the other with Dr. Wetherell, Master of
+University-College. From Dr. Wetherell's he went to visit Mr.
+Sackville Parker, the bookseller; and when he returned to us,
+gave the following account of his visit, saying, 'I have been to
+see my old friend, Sack. Parker; I find he has married his maid;
+he has done right. She had lived with him many years in great
+confidence, and they had mingled minds; I do not think he could
+have found any wife that would have made him so happy. The woman
+was very attentive and civil to me; she pressed me to fix a day
+for dining with them, and to say what I liked, and she would be
+sure to get it for me. Poor Sack! He is very ill, indeed. We
+parted as never to meet again. It has quite broke me down.' This
+pathetic narrative was strangely diversified with the grave and
+earnest defence of a man's having married his maid. I could not
+but feel it as in some degree ludicrous.</i></p>
+<p>In the morning of Tuesday, June 15, while we sat at Dr.
+Adams's, we talked of a printed letter from the Reverend Herbert
+Croft<a href="#note-942">[942]</a>, to a
+young gentleman who had been his pupil, in which he advised him
+to read to the end of whatever books he should begin to read.
+JOHNSON. 'This is surely a strange advice; you may as well
+resolve that whatever men you happen to get acquainted with, you
+are to keep to them for life. A book may be good for nothing; or
+there may be only one thing in it worth knowing; are we to read
+it all through<a href=
+"#note-943">[943]</a>? These Voyages,
+(pointing to the three large volumes of Voyages to the South
+Sea<i><a href="#note-944">[944]</a>,
+which were just come out)</i> who <i>will read them through? A
+man had better work his way before the mast, than read them
+through; they will be eaten by rats and mice, before they are
+read through. There can be little entertainment in such books;
+one set of Savages is like another.' BOSWELL. 'I do not think the
+people of Otaheit&eacute; can be reckoned Savages.' JOHNSON.
+'Don't cant in defence of Savages<a href=
+"#note-945">[945]</a>.' BOSWELL. 'They
+have the art of navigation.' JOHNSON. 'A dog or a cat can swim.'
+BOSWELL. 'They carve very ingeniously.' JOHNSON. 'A cat can
+scratch, and a child with a nail can scratch.' I perceived this
+was none of the</i> mollia tempora fandi<i><a href=
+"#note-946">[946]</a>; so
+desisted.</i></p>
+<p>Upon his mentioning that when he came to College he wrote his
+first exercise twice over; but never did so afterwards<a href=
+"#note-947">[947]</a>; MISS ADAMS. 'I
+suppose, Sir, you could not make them better?' JOHNSON. 'Yes,
+Madam, to be sure, I could make them better. Thought is better
+than no thought.' MISS ADAMS. 'Do you think, Sir, you could make
+your Ramblers <i>better?' JOHNSON. 'Certainly I could.' BOSWELL.
+'I'll lay a bet, Sir, you cannot.' JOHNSON. 'But I will, Sir, if
+I choose. I shall make the best of them you shall pick out,
+better.' BOSWELL. 'But you may add to them. I will not allow of
+that.' JOHNSON. 'Nay, Sir, there are three ways of making them
+better;&mdash;putting out,&mdash;adding,&mdash;or correcting<a
+href="#note-948">[948]</a>.'</i></p>
+<p>During our visit at Oxford, the following conversation passed
+between him and me on the subject of my trying my fortune at the
+English bar<a href="#note-949">[949]</a>:
+Having asked whether a very extensive acquaintance in London,
+which was very valuable, and of great advantage to a man at
+large, might not be prejudicial to a lawyer, by preventing him
+from giving sufficient attention to his business;&mdash;JOHNSON.
+'Sir, you will attend to business, as business lays hold of you.
+When not actually employed, you may see your friends as much as
+you do now. You may dine at a Club every day, and sup with one of
+the members every night; and you may be as much at publick places
+as one who has seen them all would wish to be. But you must take
+care to attend constantly in Westminster-Hall; both to mind your
+business, as it is almost all learnt there, (for nobody reads
+now;) and to shew that you want to have business<a href=
+"#note-950">[950]</a>. And you must not
+be too often seen at publick places, that competitors may not
+have it to say, 'He is always at the Playhouse or at Ranelagh,
+and never to be found at his chambers.' And, Sir, there must be a
+kind of solemnity in the manner of a professional man. I have
+nothing particular to say to you on the subject. All this I
+should say to any one; I should have said it to Lord Thurlow
+twenty years ago.'</p>
+<p>The PROFESSION may probably think this representation of what
+is required in a Barrister who would hope for success, to be by
+much too indulgent; but certain it is, that as</p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'The wits of Charles found easier ways to fame<a href=
+"#note-951">951</a>,'
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>some of the lawyers of this age who have risen high, have by
+no means thought it absolutely necessary to submit to that long
+and painful course of study which a Plowden, a Coke, and a Hale
+considered as requisite. My respected friend, Mr. Langton, has
+shewn me in the hand-writing of his grandfather<a href=
+"#note-952">[952]</a>, a curious account
+of a conversation which he had with Lord Chief Justice Hale, in
+which that great man tells him, 'That for two years after he came
+to the inn of court, he studied sixteen hours a day; however (his
+Lordship added) that by this intense application he almost
+brought himself to his grave, though he were of a very strong
+constitution, and after reduced himself to eight hours; but that
+he would not advise any body to so much; that he thought six
+hours a day, with attention and constancy, was sufficient; that a
+man must use his body as he would his horse, and his stomach; not
+tire him at once, but rise with an appetite.<a href=
+"#note-953">[953]</a>'</p>
+<p>On Wednesday, June 19<a href=
+"#note-954">[954]</a>, Dr. Johnson and I
+returned to London; he was not well to-day, and said very little,
+employing himself chiefly in reading Euripides. He expressed some
+displeasure at me, for not observing sufficiently the various
+objects upon the road. 'If I had your eyes, Sir, (said he) I
+should count the passengers.' It was wonderful how accurate his
+observation of visual objects was, notwithstanding his imperfect
+eyesight, owing to a habit of attention<a href=
+"#note-955">[955]</a>. That he was much
+satisfied with the respect paid to him at Dr. Adams's is thus
+attested by himself: 'I returned last night from Oxford, after a
+fortnight's abode with Dr. Adams, who treated me as well as I
+could expect or wish; and he that contents a sick man, a man whom
+it is impossible to please, has surely done his part well<a href=
+"#note-956">[956]</a>.'</p>
+<p>After his return to London from this excursion, I saw him
+frequently, but have few memorandums: I shall therefore here
+insert some particulars which I collected at various times.</p>
+<p>The Reverend Mr. Astle, of Ashbourne, in Derbyshire, brother
+to the learned and ingenious Thomas Astle<a href=
+"#note-957">[957]</a>, Esq., was from his
+early years known to Dr. Johnson, who obligingly advised him as
+to his studies, and recommended to him the following books, of
+which a list which he has been pleased to communicate, lies
+before me in Johnson's own hand-writing:&mdash;</p>
+<p>Universal History (ancient.)&mdash;Rollin's Ancient
+History.&mdash;Puffendorf's Introduction to
+History.&mdash;Vertot's History of Knights of Malta.&mdash;
+Vertot's Revolution of Portugal.&mdash;Vertot's Revolutions of
+Sweden.&mdash; Carte's History of England.&mdash;Present State of
+England.&mdash;Geographical Grammar.&mdash;Prideaux's
+Connection.&mdash;Nelson's Feasts and Fasts.&mdash;Duty of
+Man.&mdash;Gentleman's Religion.&mdash;Clarendon's
+History.&mdash;Watts's Improvement of the Mind.&mdash;Watts's
+Logick.&mdash;Nature Displayed.&mdash;Lowth's English
+Grammar.&mdash;Blackwall on the Classicks.&mdash;Sherlock's
+Sermons.&mdash;Burnet's Life of Hale.&mdash;Dupin's History of
+the Church.&mdash;Shuckford's Connection.&mdash;Law's Serious
+Call.&mdash;Walton's Complete Angler.&mdash;Sandys's
+Travels.&mdash;Sprat's History of the Royal
+Society.&mdash;England's Gazetteer.&mdash;Goldsmith's Roman
+History.&mdash;Some Commentaries on the. Bible<i><a href=
+"#note-958">[958]</a>.</i></p>
+<p>It having been mentioned to Dr. Johnson that a gentleman who
+had a son whom he imagined to have an extreme degree of timidity,
+resolved to send him to a publick school, that he might acquire
+confidence;&mdash;' Sir, (said Johnson,) this is a preposterous
+expedient for removing his infirmity; such a disposition should
+be cultivated in the shade. Placing him at a publick school is
+forcing an owl upon day<a href=
+"#note-959">[959]</a>.'</p>
+<p>Speaking of a gentleman whose house was much frequented by low
+company; 'Rags, Sir, (said he,) will always make their appearance
+where they have a right to do it.'</p>
+<p>Of the same gentleman's mode of living, he said, 'Sir, the
+servants, instead of doing what they are bid, stand round the
+table in idle clusters, gaping upon the guests; and seem as unfit
+to attend a company, as to steer a man of war<a href=
+"#note-960">[960]</a>.'</p>
+<p>A dull country magistrate<a href=
+"#note-961">[961]</a> gave Johnson a long
+tedious account of his exercising his criminal jurisdiction, the
+result of which was his having sentenced four convicts to
+transportation. Johnson, in an agony of impatience to get rid of
+such a companion, exclaimed, 'I heartily wish, Sir, that I were a
+fifth.'</p>
+<p>Johnson was present when a tragedy was read, in which there
+occurred this line:&mdash;</p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'Who rules o'er freemen should himself be free<a href=
+"#note-962">962</a>.'
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>The company having admired it much, 'I cannot agree with you
+(said Johnson:) It might as well be said,&mdash;</p>
+<p>'Who drives fat oxen should himself be fat.'</p>
+<p>He was pleased with the kindness of Mr. Cator, who was joined
+with him in Mr. Thrale's important trust, and thus describes
+him<a href=
+"#note-963">[963]</a>:&mdash;'There is
+much good in his character, and much usefulness in his
+knowledge.' He found a cordial solace at that gentleman's seat at
+Beckenham, in Kent, which is indeed one of the finest places at
+which I ever was a guest; and where I find more and more a
+hospitable welcome.</p>
+<p>Johnson seldom encouraged general censure of any profession<a
+href="#note-964">[964]</a>; but he was
+willing to allow a due share of merit to the various departments
+necessary in civilised life. In a splenetick, sarcastical, or
+jocular frame, however, he would sometimes utter a pointed saying
+of that nature. One instance has been mentioned<a href=
+"#note-965">[965]</a>, where he gave a
+sudden satirical stroke to the character of an attorney<i>. The
+too indiscriminate admission to that employment, which requires
+both abilities and integrity, has given rise to injurious
+reflections, which are totally inapplicable to many very
+respectable men who exercise it with reputation and
+honour.</i></p>
+<p>Johnson having argued for some time with a pertinacious
+gentleman; his opponent, who had talked in a very puzzling
+manner, happened to say, 'I don't understand you, Sir:' upon
+which Johnson observed, 'Sir, I have found you an argument; but I
+am not obliged to find you an understanding<a href=
+"#note-966">[966]</a>.'</p>
+<p>Talking to me of Horry Walpole, (as Horace late Earl of Orford
+was often called<a href=
+"#note-967">[967]</a>,) Johnson allowed
+that he got together a great many curious little things, and told
+them in an elegant manner<a href=
+"#note-968">[968]</a>. Mr. Walpole
+thought Johnson a more amiable character after reading his
+Letters to Mrs. Thrale<i>: but never was one of the true admirers
+of that great man<a href=
+"#note-969">[969]</a>. We may suppose a
+prejudice conceived, if he ever heard Johnson's account to Sir
+George Staunton<a href=
+"#note-970">[970]</a>, that when he made
+the speeches in parliament for the</i> Gentleman's Magazine<i>,
+'he always took care to put Sir Robert Walpole in the wrong, and
+to say every thing he could against the electorate of Hanover<a
+href="#note-971">[971]</a>.' The
+celebrated</i> Heroick Epistle<i>, in which Johnson is
+satyrically introduced, has been ascribed both to Mr. Walpole and
+Mr. Mason. One day at Mr. Courtenay's, when a gentleman expressed
+his opinion that there was more energy in that poem than could be
+expected from Mr. Walpole; Mr. Warton, the late Laureat,
+observed, 'It may have been written by Walpole, and</i> buckram'd
+<i>by Mason<a href=
+"#note-972">[972]</a>.'</i></p>
+<p>He disapproved of Lord Hailes, for having modernised the
+language of the ever-memorable John Hales of Eton<a href=
+"#note-973">[973]</a>, in an edition
+which his Lordship published of that writer's works. 'An
+authour's language, Sir, (said he,) is a characteristical part of
+his composition, and is also characteristical of the age in which
+he writes. Besides, Sir, when the language is changed we are not
+sure that the sense is the same. No, Sir; I am sorry Lord Hailes
+has done this.'</p>
+<p>Here it may be observed, that his frequent use of the
+expression, No, Sir<i>, was not always to intimate contradiction;
+for he would say so, when he was about to enforce an affirmative
+proposition which had not been denied, as in the instance last
+mentioned. I used to consider it as a kind of flag of defiance;
+as if he had said, 'Any argument you may offer against this, is
+not just. No, Sir, it is not.' It was like Falstaff's 'I deny
+your Major<a href=
+"#note-974">[974]</a>.'</i></p>
+<p>Sir Joshua Reynolds having said that he took the altitude of a
+man's taste by his stories and his wit, and of his understanding
+by the remarks which he repeated; being always sure that he must
+be a weak man who quotes common things with an emphasis as if
+they were oracles; Johnson agreed with him; and Sir Joshua having
+also observed that the real character of a man was found out by
+his amusements,&mdash;Johnson added, 'Yes, Sir; no man is a
+hypocrite in his pleasures<a href=
+"#note-975">[975]</a>.'</p>
+<p>I have mentioned Johnson's general aversion to a pun<a href=
+"#note-976">[976]</a>. He once, however,
+endured one of mine. When we were talking of a numerous company
+in which he had distinguished himself highly, I said, 'Sir, you
+were a COD surrounded by smelts. Is not this enough for you? at a
+time too when you were not fishing <i>for a compliment?' He
+laughed at this with a complacent approbation. Old Mr. Sheridan
+observed, upon my mentioning it to him, 'He liked your compliment
+so well, he was willing to take it with</i> pun sauce<i>.' For my
+own part, I think no innocent species of wit or pleasantry should
+be suppressed; and that a good pun may be admitted among the
+smaller excellencies of lively conversation.</i></p>
+<p>Had Johnson treated at large De Claris Oratoribus<i><a href=
+"#note-977">[977]</a>, he might have
+given us an admirable work. When the Duke of Bedford attacked the
+ministry as vehemently as he could, for having taken upon them to
+extend the time for the importation of corn<a href=
+"#note-978">[978]</a>, Lord Chatham, in
+his first speech in the House of Lords, boldly avowed himself to
+be an adviser of that measure. 'My colleagues, (said he,) as I
+was confined by indisposition, did me the signal honour of coming
+to the bed-side of a sick man, to ask his opinion. But, had they
+not thus condescended, I should have</i> taken up my bed and
+walked<i>, in order to have delivered that opinion at the
+Council-Board.' Mr. Langton, who was present, mentioned this to
+Johnson, who observed, 'Now, Sir, we see that he took these words
+as he found them; without considering, that though the expression
+in Scripture,</i> take up thy bed and walk<i><a href=
+"#note-979">[979]</a>, strictly suited
+the instance of the sick man restored to health and strength, who
+would of course be supposed to carry his bed with him, it could
+not be proper in the case of a man who was lying in a state of
+feebleness, and who certainly would not add to the difficulty of
+moving at all, that of carrying his bed.'</i></p>
+<p>When I pointed out to him in the newspaper one of Mr.
+Grattan's animated and glowing speeches, in favour of the freedom
+of Ireland, in which this expression occurred (I know not if
+accurately taken): 'We will persevere, till there is not one link
+of the English chain left to clank upon the rags of the meanest
+beggar in Ireland;' 'Nay, Sir, (said Johnson,) don't you perceive
+that one <i>link cannot clank?'</i></p>
+<p>Mrs. Thrale has published<a href=
+"#note-980">[980]</a>, as Johnson's, a
+kind of parody or counterpart of a fine poetical passage in one
+of Mr. Burke's speeches on American Taxation. It is vigorously
+but somewhat coarsely executed; and I am inclined to suppose, is
+not quite correctly exhibited. I hope he did not use the words
+'vile agents' <i>for the Americans in the House of Parliament;
+and if he did so, in an extempore effusion, I wish the lady had
+not committed it to writing<a href=
+"#note-981">[981]</a>.</i></p>
+<p>Mr. Burke uniformly shewed Johnson the greatest respect; and
+when Mr. Townshend, now lord Sydney, at a period when he was
+conspicuous in opposition, threw out some reflection in
+parliament upon the grant of a pension to a man of such political
+principles as Johnson; Mr. Burke, though then of the same party
+with Mr. Townshend, stood warmly forth in defence of his friend,
+to whom, he justly observed, the pension was granted solely on
+account of his eminent literary merit. I am well assured, that
+Mr. Townshend's attack upon Johnson was the occasion of his
+'hitching in a rhyme<a href=
+"#note-982">[982]</a>;' for, that in the
+original copy of Goldsmith's character of Mr. Burke, in his
+Retaliation<i>, another person's name stood in the couplet where
+Mr. Townshend is now introduced<a href=
+"#note-983">[983]</a>:&mdash;</i></p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'Though fraught with all learning kept<a href=
+"#note-984">984</a> straining his throat,
+ To persuade Tommy Townshend<i> to lend him a vote.'
+</i>
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>It may be worth remarking, among the minutiae <i>of my
+collection, that Johnson was once drawn to serve in the militia,
+the Trained Bands of the City of London, and that Mr. Rackstrow,
+of the Museum in Fleet-street, was his Colonel. It may be
+believed he did not serve in person; but the idea, with all its
+circumstances, is certainly laughable. He upon that occasion
+provided himself with a musket, and with a sword and belt, which
+I have seen hanging in his closet.</i></p>
+<p>He was very constant to those whom he once employed, if they
+gave him no reason to be displeased. When somebody talked of
+being imposed on in the purchase of tea and sugar, and such
+articles: 'That will not be the case, (said he,) if you go to a
+stately shop<i>, as I always do. In such a shop it is not worth
+their while to take a petty advantage.'</i></p>
+<p>An authour of most anxious and restless vanity being
+mentioned, 'Sir, (said he,) there is not a young sapling upon
+Parnassus more severely blown about by every wind of criticism
+than that poor fellow.'</p>
+<p>The difference, he observed, between a well-bred and an
+ill-bred man is this: 'One immediately attracts your liking, the
+other your aversion. You love the one till you find reason to
+hate him; you hate the other till you find reason to love
+him.'</p>
+<p>The wife of one of his acquaintance had fraudulently made a
+purse for herself out of her husband's fortune. Feeling a proper
+compunction in her last moments, she confessed how much she had
+secreted; but before she could tell where it was placed, she was
+seized with a convulsive fit and expired. Her husband said, he
+was more hurt by her want of confidence in him, than by the loss
+of his money. 'I told him, (said Johnson,) that he should console
+himself: for perhaps <i>the money might be</i> found<i>, and he
+was</i> sure <i>that his wife was gone.'</i></p>
+<p>A foppish physician once reminded Johnson of his having been
+in company with him on a former occasion; 'I do not remember it,
+Sir.' The physician still insisted; adding that he that day wore
+so fine a coat that it must have attracted his notice. 'Sir,
+(said Johnson,) had you been dipt in Pactolus<a href=
+"#note-985">[985]</a> I should not have
+noticed you.'</p>
+<p>He seemed to take a pleasure in speaking in his own style; for
+when he had carelessly missed it, he would repeat the thought
+translated into it<a href=
+"#note-986">[986]</a>. Talking of the
+Comedy of The Rehearsal<i>[987], he said, 'It has not wit enough
+to keep it sweet.' This was easy; he therefore caught himself,
+and pronounced a more round sentence; 'It has not vitality enough
+to preserve it from putrefaction.'</i></p>
+<p>He censured a writer of entertaining Travels<a href=
+"#note-988">[988]</a> for assuming a
+feigned character, saying, (in his sense of the word<a href=
+"#note-989">[989]</a>,) 'He carries out
+one lye; we know not how many he brings back.'<a href=
+"#note-990">[990]</a> At another time,
+talking of the same person, he observed, 'Sir, your assent to a
+man whom you have never known to falsify, is a debt: but after
+you have known a man to falsify, your assent to him then is a
+favour.'</p>
+<p>Though he had no taste for painting, he admired much the
+manner in which Sir Joshua Reynolds treated of his art, in his
+Discourses to the Royal Academy<i><a href=
+"#note-991">[991]</a>. He observed one
+day of a passage in them, 'I think I might as well have said this
+myself: 'and once when Mr. Langton was sitting by him, he read
+one of them very eagerly, and expressed himself thus:&mdash;'Very
+well, Master Reynolds; very well, indeed. But it will not be
+understood.'</i></p>
+<p>When I observed to him that Painting was so far inferiour to
+Poetry, that the story or even emblem which it communicates must
+be previously known, and mentioned as a natural and laughable
+instance of this, that a little Miss on seeing a picture of
+Justice with the scales, had exclaimed to me, 'See, there's a
+woman selling sweetmeats;' he said, 'Painting, Sir, can
+illustrate, but cannot inform.'</p>
+<p>No man was more ready to make an apology when he had censured
+unjustly, than Johnson<a href=
+"#note-992">[992]</a>. When a proof-sheet
+of one of his works was brought to him, he found fault with the
+mode in which a part of it was arranged, refused to read it, and
+in a passion<a href="#note-993">[993]</a>
+desired that the compositor<a href=
+"#note-994">[994]</a> might be sent to
+him. The compositor was Mr. Manning, a decent sensible man, who
+had composed about one half of his Dictionary<i>, when in Mr.
+Strahan's printing-house; and a great part of his</i> Lives of
+the Poets<i>, when in that of Mr. Nichols; and who (in his
+seventy-seventh year), when in Mr. Baldwin's printing-house,
+composed a part of the first edition of this work concerning him.
+By producing the manuscript, he at once satisfied Dr. Johnson
+that he was not to blame. Upon which Johnson candidly and
+earnestly said to him, 'Mr. Compositor, I ask your pardon. Mr.
+Compositor, I ask your pardon, again and again.'</i></p>
+<p>His generous humanity to the miserable was almost beyond
+example. The following instance is well attested:&mdash;Coming
+home late one night, he found a poor woman lying in the street,
+so much exhausted that she could not walk; he took her upon his
+back, and carried her to his house, where he discovered that she
+was one of those wretched females who had fallen into the lowest
+state of vice, poverty, and disease. Instead of harshly
+upbraiding her, he had her taken care of with all tenderness for
+a long time, at considerable expence, till she was restored to
+health, and endeavoured to put her into a virtuous way of
+living<a href="#note-995">[995]</a>.</p>
+<p>He thought Mr. Caleb Whitefoord singularly happy in hitting on
+the signature of Papyrius Cursor<i>, to his ingenious and
+diverting cross-readings of the newspapers; it being a real name
+of an ancient Roman, and clearly expressive of the thing done in
+this lively conceit<a href=
+"#note-996">[996]</a>.</i></p>
+<p>He once in his life was known to have uttered what is called a
+bull<i>: Sir Joshua Reynolds, when they were riding together in
+Devonshire, complained that he had a very bad horse, for that
+even when going down hill he moved slowly step by step. 'Ay (said
+Johnson,) and when he</i> goes <i>up hill, he</i> stands
+still<i>.'</i></p>
+<p>He had a great aversion to gesticulating in company. He called
+once to a gentleman who offended him in that point, 'Don't
+attitudenise<i>.' And when another gentleman thought he was
+giving additional force to what he uttered, by expressive
+movements of his hands, Johnson fairly seized them, and held them
+down<a href=
+"#note-997">[997]</a>.</i></p>
+<p>An authour of considerable eminence<a href=
+"#note-998">[998]</a> having engrossed a
+good share of the conversation in the company of Johnson, and
+having said nothing but what was trifling and insignificant;
+Johnson when he was gone, observed to us, 'It is wonderful what a
+difference there sometimes is between a man's powers of writing
+and of talking. &mdash;&mdash; writes with great spirit, but is a
+poor talker; had he held his tongue we might have supposed him to
+have been restrained by modesty; but he has spoken a great deal
+to-day; and you have heard what stuff it was.'</p>
+<p>A gentleman having said that a cong&eacute;
+d'&eacute;lire<i><a href=
+"#note-999">[999]</a> has not, perhaps,
+the force of a command, but may be considered only as a strong
+recommendation; 'Sir, (replied Johnson, who overheard him,) it is
+such a recommendation, as if I should throw you out of a two-pair
+of stairs window, and recommend to you to fall soft<a href=
+"#note-1000">[1000]</a>.'</i></p>
+<p>Mr. Steevens, who passed many a social hour with him during
+their long acquaintance, which commenced when they both lived in
+the Temple, has preserved a good number of particulars concerning
+him, most of which are to be found in the department of
+Apothegms, &amp;c. in the Collection of Johnson's Works<i><a
+href="#note-1001">[1001]</a>. But he has
+been pleased to favour me with the following, which are
+original:&mdash;</i></p>
+<p>'One evening, previous to the trial of Barretti<a href=
+"#note-1002">[1002]</a>, a consultation
+of his friends was held at the house of Mr. Cox, the Solicitor,
+in Southampton-buildings, Chancery-lane. Among others present
+were, Mr. Burke and Dr. Johnson, who differed in sentiments
+concerning the tendency of some part of the defence the prisoner
+was to make. When the meeting was over, Mr. Steevens observed,
+that the question between him and his friend had been agitated
+with rather too much warmth. "It may be so, Sir, (replied the
+Doctor,) for Burke and I should have been of one opinion, if we
+had had no audience<a href=
+"#note-1003">[1003]</a>."</p>
+<p>'Dr. Johnson once assumed a character in which perhaps even
+Mr. Boswell never saw him. His curiosity having been excited by
+the praises bestowed on the celebrated Torr&eacute;'s fireworks
+at Marybone-Gardens, he desired Mr. Steevens to accompany him
+thither. The evening had proved showery; and soon after the few
+people present were assembled, publick notice was given, that the
+conductors to the wheels, suns, stars, &amp;c., were so
+thoroughly water-soaked, that it was impossible any part of the
+exhibition should be made. "This is a mere excuse, (says the
+Doctor,) to save their crackers for a more profitable company.
+Let us but hold up our sticks, and threaten to break those
+coloured lamps that surround the Orchestra, and we shall soon
+have our wishes gratified. The core of the fireworks cannot be
+injured; let the different pieces be touched in their respective
+centers, and they will do their offices as well as ever." Some
+young men who overheard him, immediately began the violence he
+had recommended, and an attempt was speedily made to fire some of
+the wheels which appeared to have received the smallest damage;
+but to little purpose were they lighted, for most of them
+completely failed. The authour of The Rambler<i>, however, may be
+considered, on this occasion, as the ringleader of a successful
+riot, though not as a skilful pyrotechnist.'</i></p>
+<p>'It has been supposed that Dr. Johnson, so far as fashion was
+concerned, was careless of his appearance in publick. But this is
+not altogether true, as the following slight instance may
+show:&mdash;Goldsmith's last Comedy was to be represented during
+some court-mourning<a href=
+"#note-1004">[1004]</a>: and Mr. Steevens
+appointed to call on Dr. Johnson, and carry him to the tavern
+where he was to dine with others of the Poet's friends. The
+Doctor was ready dressed, but in coloured cloaths; yet being told
+that he would find every one else in black, received the
+intelligence with a profusion of thanks, hastened to change his
+attire, all the while repeating his gratitude for the information
+that had saved him from an appearance so improper in the front
+row of a front box. "I would not (added he,) for ten pounds, have
+seemed so retrograde to any general observance<a href=
+"#note-1005">[1005]</a>."</p>
+<p>'He would sometimes found his dislikes on very slender
+circumstances. Happening one day to mention Mr. Flexman, a
+Dissenting Minister, with some compliment to his exact memory in
+chronological matters; the Doctor replied, "Let me hear no more
+of him, Sir. That is the fellow who made the Index to my
+Ramblers<i>, and set down the name of Milton thus: Milton,</i>
+Mr<i>. John<a href=
+"#note-1006">[1006]</a>."'</i></p>
+<p>Mr. Steevens adds this testimony:&mdash;</p>
+<p>'It is unfortunate, however, for Johnson, that his
+particularities and frailties can be more distinctly traced than
+his good and amiable exertions. Could the many bounties he
+studiously concealed, the many acts of humanity he performed in
+private, be displayed with equal circumstantiality, his defects
+would be so far lost in the blaze of his virtues, that the latter
+only would be regarded.'</p>
+<p>Though from my very high admiration of Johnson, I have
+wondered<a href="#note-1007">[1007]</a>
+that he was not courted by all the great and all the eminent
+persons of his time, it ought fairly to be considered, that no
+man of humble birth, who lived entirely by literature, in short
+no authour by profession, ever rose in this country into that
+personal notice which he did. In the course of this work a
+numerous variety of names has been mentioned, to which many might
+be added. I cannot omit Lord and Lady Lucan, at whose house he
+often enjoyed all that an elegant table and the best company can
+contribute to happiness; he found hospitality united with
+extraordinary accomplishments, and embellished with charms of
+which no man could be insensible<a href=
+"#note-1008">[1008]</a>.</p>
+<p>On Tuesday, June 22, I dined with him at THE LITERARY CLUB,
+the last time of his being in that respectable society. The other
+members present were the Bishop of St. Asaph, Lord Eliot, Lord
+Palmerston, Dr. Fordyce, and Mr. Malone. He looked ill; but had
+such a manly fortitude, that he did not trouble the company with
+melancholy complaints. They all shewed evident marks of kind
+concern about him, with which he was much pleased, and he exerted
+himself to be as entertaining as his indisposition allowed
+him.</p>
+<p>The anxiety of his friends to preserve so estimable a life, as
+long as human means might be supposed to have influence, made
+them plan for him a retreat from the severity of a British
+winter, to the mild climate of Italy<a href=
+"#note-1009">[1009]</a>. This scheme was
+at last brought to a serious resolution at General Paoli's, where
+I had often talked of it. One essential matter, however, I
+understood was necessary to be previously settled, which was
+obtaining such an addition to his income, as would be sufficient
+to enable him to defray the expence in a manner becoming the
+first literary character of a great nation, and, independent of
+all his other merits, the Authour of THE DICTIONARY OF THE
+ENGLISH LANGUAGE. The person to whom I above all others thought I
+should apply to negociate this business, was the Lord
+Chancellor<a href=
+"#note-1010">[1010]</a>, because I knew
+that he highly valued Johnson, and that Johnson highly valued his
+Lordship; so that it was no degradation of my illustrious friend
+to solicit for him the favour of such a man. I have mentioned<a
+href="#note-1011">[1011]</a> what Johnson
+said of him to me when he was at the bar; and after his Lordship
+was advanced to the seals<a href=
+"#note-1012">[1012]</a>, he said of him,
+'I would prepare myself for no man in England but Lord Thurlow.
+When I am to meet with him I should wish to know a day before<a
+href="#note-1013">[1013]</a>'. How he
+would have prepared himself I cannot conjecture. Would he have
+selected certain topicks, and considered them in every view so as
+to be in readiness to argue them at all points? and what may we
+suppose those topicks to have been? I once started the curious
+enquiry to the great man who was the subject of this compliment:
+he smiled, but did not pursue it.</p>
+<p>I first consulted with Sir Joshua Reynolds, who perfectly
+coincided in opinion with me; and I therefore, though personally
+very little known to his Lordship, wrote to him<a href=
+"#note-1014">[1014]</a>, stating the
+case, and requesting his good offices for Dr. Johnson. I
+mentioned that I was obliged to set out for Scotland early in the
+following week, so that if his Lordship should have any commands
+for me as to this pious negociation, he would be pleased to send
+them before that time; otherwise Sir Joshua Reynolds would give
+all attention to it.</p>
+<p>This application was made not only without any suggestion on
+the part of Johnson himself, but was utterly unknown to him, nor
+had he the smallest suspicion of it. Any insinuations, therefore,
+which since his death have been thrown out, as if he had stooped
+to ask what was superfluous, are without any foundation. But, had
+he asked it, it would not have been superfluous; for though the
+money he had saved proved to be more than his friends imagined,
+or than I believe he himself, in his carelessness concerning
+worldly matters, knew it to be, had he travelled upon the
+Continent, an augmentation of his income would by no means have
+been unnecessary.</p>
+<p>On Wednesday, June 23, I visited him in the morning, after
+having been present at the shocking sight of fifteen men executed
+before Newgate<a href=
+"#note-1015">[1015]</a>. I said to him, I
+was sure that human life was not machinery, that is to say, a
+chain of fatality planned and directed by the Supreme Being, as
+it had in it so much wickedness and misery, so many instances of
+both, as that by which my mind was now clouded. Were it machinery
+it would be better than it is in these respects, though less
+noble, as not being a system of moral government. He agreed with
+me now, as he always did<a href=
+"#note-1016">[1016]</a>, upon the great
+question of the liberty of the human will, which has been in all
+ages perplexed with so much sophistry. 'But, Sir, as to the
+doctrine of Necessity, no man believes it. If a man should give
+me arguments that I do not see, though I could not answer them,
+should I believe that I do not see?' It will be observed, that
+Johnson at all times made the just distinction between doctrines
+contrary <i>to reason, and doctrines</i> above <i>reason.</i></p>
+<p>Talking of the religious discipline proper for unhappy
+convicts, he said, 'Sir, one of our regular clergy will probably
+not impress their minds sufficiently: they should be attended by
+a Methodist preacher<a href=
+"#note-1017">[1017]</a>; or a Popish
+priest.' Let me however observe, in justice to the Reverend Mr.
+Vilette, who has been Ordinary of Newgate for no less than
+eighteen years, in the course of which he has attended many
+hundreds of wretched criminals, that his earnest and humane
+exhortations have been very effectual. His extraordinary
+diligence is highly praiseworthy, and merits a distinguished
+reward<a href=
+"#note-1018">[1018]</a>.</p>
+<p>On Thursday, June 24, I dined with him at Mr. Dilly's, where
+were the Rev. Mr. (now Dr.) Knox, master of Tunbridge-school, Mr.
+Smith, Vicar of Southill, Dr. Beattie, Mr. Pinkerton, authour of
+various literary performances, and the Rev. Dr. Mayo. At my
+desire old Mr. Sheridan was invited, as I was earnest to have
+Johnson and him brought together again by chance, that a
+reconciliation might be effected. Mr. Sheridan happened to come
+early, and having learned that Dr. Johnson was to be there, went
+away<a href="#note-1019">[1019]</a>; so I
+found, with sincere regret, that my friendly intentions were
+hopeless. I recollect nothing that passed this day, except
+Johnson's quickness, who, when Dr. Beattie observed, as something
+remarkable which had happened to him, that he had chanced to see
+both No. 1, and No. 1000, of the hackney-coaches, the first and
+the last; 'Why, Sir, (said Johnson,) there is an equal chance for
+one's seeing those two numbers as any other two.' He was clearly
+right; yet the seeing of the two extremes, each of which is in
+some degree more conspicuous than the rest, could not but strike
+one in a stronger manner than the sight of any other two numbers.
+Though I have neglected to preserve his conversation, it was
+perhaps at this interview that Dr. Knox formed the notion of it
+which he has exhibited in his Winter Evenings<i><a href=
+"#note-1020">[1020]</a>.</i></p>
+<p>On Friday, June 25, I dined with him at General Paoli's,
+where, he says in one of his letters to Mrs. Thrale, 'I love to
+dine<a href="#note-1021">[1021]</a>.'
+There was a variety of dishes much to his taste, of all which he
+seemed to me to eat so much, that I was afraid he might be hurt
+by it<a href="#note-1022">[1022]</a>; and
+I whispered to the General my fear, and begged he might not press
+him. 'Alas! (said the General,) see how very ill he looks; he can
+live but a very short time. Would you refuse any slight
+gratifications to a man under sentence of death? There is a
+humane custom in Italy, by which persons in that melancholy
+situation are indulged with having whatever they like best to eat
+and drink, even with expensive delicacies.'</p>
+<p>I shewed him some verses on Lichfield by Miss Seward, which I
+had that day received from her, and had the pleasure to hear him
+approve of them. He confirmed to me the truth of a high
+compliment which I had been told he had paid to that lady, when
+she mentioned to him The Colombiade<i>, an epick poem, by Madame
+du Boccage<a href=
+"#note-1023">[1023]</a>:&mdash;'Madam,
+there is not any thing equal to your description of the sea round
+the North Pole, in your Ode on the death of Captain Cook<a href=
+"#note-1024">[1024]</a>.'</i></p>
+<p>On Sunday, June 27, I found him rather better. I mentioned to
+him a young man who was going to Jamaica with his wife and
+children, in expectation of being provided for by two of her
+brothers settled in that island, one a clergyman, and the other a
+physician. JOHNSON. 'It is a wild scheme, Sir, unless he has a
+positive and deliberate invitation. There was a poor girl, who
+used to come about me, who had a cousin in Barbadoes, that, in a
+letter to her, expressed a wish she should come out to that
+Island, and expatiated on the comforts and happiness of her
+situation. The poor girl went out: her cousin was much surprised,
+and asked her how she could think of coming. "Because, (said
+she,) you invited me." "Not I," answered the cousin. The letter
+was then produced. "I see it is true, (said she,) that I did
+invite you: but I did not think you would come." They lodged her
+in an out-house, where she passed her time miserably; and as soon
+as she had an opportunity she returned to England. Always tell
+this, when you hear of people going abroad to relations, upon a
+notion of being well received. In the case which you mention, it
+is probable the clergyman spends all he gets, and the physician
+does not know how much he is to get.'</p>
+<p>We this day dined at Sir Joshua Reynolds's, with General
+Paoli, Lord Eliot, (formerly Mr. Eliot, of Port Eliot,) Dr.
+Beattie, and some other company. Talking of Lord
+Chesterfield;&mdash;JOHNSON. 'His manner was exquisitely
+elegant<a href="#note-1025">[1025]</a>,
+and he had more knowledge than I expected.' BOSWELL. 'Did you
+find, Sir, his conversation to be of a superiour style?' JOHNSON.
+'Sir, in the conversation which I had with him I had the best
+right to superiority, for it was upon philology and literature.'
+Lord Eliot, who had travelled at the same time with Mr.
+Stanhope<a href="#note-1026">[1026]</a>,
+Lord Chesterfield's natural son, justly observed, that it was
+strange that a man who shewed he had so much affection for his
+son as Lord Chesterfield did, by writing so many long and anxious
+letters to him, almost all of them when he was Secretary of
+State<a href="#note-1027">[1027]</a>,
+which certainly was a proof of great goodness of disposition,
+should endeavour to make his son a rascal. His Lordship told us,
+that Foote had intended to bring on the stage a father who had
+thus tutored his son, and to shew the son an honest man to every
+one else, but practising his father's maxims upon him, and
+cheating him<a href=
+"#note-1028">[1028]</a>. JOHNSON. 'I am
+much pleased with this design; but I think there was no occasion
+to make the son honest at all. No; he should be a consummate
+rogue: the contrast between honesty and knavery would be the
+stronger. It should be contrived so that the father should be the
+only sufferer by the son's villainy, and thus there would be
+poetical justice.'</p>
+<p>He put Lord Eliot in mind of Dr. Walter Harte<a href=
+"#note-1029">[1029]</a>. 'I know (said
+he,) Harte was your Lordship's tutor, and he was also tutor to
+the Peterborough family. Pray, my Lord, do you recollect any
+particulars that he told you of Lord Peterborough? He is a
+favourite of mine, and is not enough known; his character has
+been only ventilated in party pamphlets<a href=
+"#note-1030">[1030]</a>.' Lord Eliot
+said, if Dr. Johnson would be so good as to ask him any
+questions, he would tell what he could recollect. Accordingly
+some things were mentioned. 'But, (said his Lordship,) the best
+account of Lord Peterborough that I have happened to meet with,
+is in Captain Carleton's Memoirs<i>. Carleton was descended of an
+ancestor who had distinguished himself at the siege of Derry<a
+href="#note-1031">[1031]</a>. He was an
+officer; and, what was rare at that time, had some knowledge of
+engineering<a href=
+"#note-1032">[1032]</a>.' Johnson said,
+he had never heard of the book. Lord Eliot had it at Port Eliot;
+but, after a good deal of enquiry, procured a copy in London, and
+sent it to Johnson, who told Sir Joshua Reynolds that he was
+going to bed when it came, but was so much pleased with it, that
+he sat up till he had read it through<a href=
+"#note-1033">[1033]</a>, and found in it
+such an air of truth, that he could not doubt of its
+authenticity<a href=
+"#note-1034">[1034]</a>; adding, with a
+smile, (in allusion to Lord Eliot's having recently been raised
+to the peerage,) 'I did not think a</i> young Lord <i>could have
+mentioned to me a book in the English history that was not known
+to me<a href=
+"#note-1035">[1035]</a>.'</i></p>
+<p>An addition to our company came after we went up to the
+drawing-room; Dr. Johnson seemed to rise in spirits as his
+audience increased. He said, 'He wished Lord Orford's pictures<a
+href="#note-1036">[1036]</a>, and Sir
+Ashton Lever's Museum<a href=
+"#note-1037">[1037]</a>, might be
+purchased by the publick, because both the money, and the
+pictures, and the curiosities, would remain in the country;
+whereas, if they were sold into another kingdom, the nation would
+indeed get some money, but would lose the pictures and
+curiosities, which it would be desirable we should have, for
+improvement in taste and natural history. The only question was,
+as the nation was much in want of money, whether it would not be
+better to take a large price from a foreign State?'</p>
+<p>He entered upon a curious discussion of the difference between
+intuition and sagacity; one being immediate in its effect, the
+other requiring a circuitous process; one he observed was the eye
+<i>of the mind, the other the</i> nose <i>of the mind<a href=
+"#note-1038">[1038]</a>.</i></p>
+<p>A young gentleman<a href=
+"#note-1039">[1039]</a> present took up
+the argument against him, and maintained that no man ever thinks
+of the nose of the mind<i>, not adverting that though that
+figurative sense seems strange to us, as very unusual, it is
+truly not more forced than Hamlet's 'In my</i> mind's eye<i>,
+Horatio<a href="#note-1040">[1040]</a>.'
+He persisted much too long, and appeared to Johnson as putting
+himself forward as his antagonist with too much presumption; upon
+which he called to him in a loud tone, 'What is it you are
+contending for, if you</i> be <i>contending?' And afterwards
+imagining that the gentleman retorted upon him with a kind of
+smart drollery, he said, 'Mr. &mdash;&mdash;, it does not become
+you to talk so to me. Besides, ridicule is not your talent; you
+have</i> there <i>neither intuition nor sagacity.' The gentleman
+protested that he had intended no improper freedom, but had the
+greatest respect for Dr. Johnson. After a short pause, during
+which we were somewhat uneasy,&mdash;JOHNSON. 'Give me your hand,
+Sir. You were too tedious, and I was too short.' MR.
+&mdash;&mdash;. 'Sir, I am honoured by your attention in any
+way.' JOHNSON. 'Come, Sir, let's have no more of it. We offended
+one another by our contention; let us not offend the company by
+our compliments.'</i></p>
+<p>He now said, 'He wished much to go to Italy, and that he
+dreaded passing the winter in England.' I said nothing; but
+enjoyed a secret satisfaction in thinking that I had taken the
+most effectual measures to make such a scheme practicable.</p>
+<p>On Monday, June 28, I had the honour to receive from the Lord
+Chancellor the following letter:&mdash;</p>
+<center>'TO JAMES BOSWELL, ESQ. SIR,</center>
+<p>I should have answered your letter immediately, if, (being
+much engaged when I received it) I had not put it in my pocket,
+and forgot to open it till this morning.</p>
+<p>I am much obliged to you for the suggestion; and I will adopt
+and press it as far as I can. The best argument, I am sure, and I
+hope it is not likely to fail, is Dr. Johnson's merit. But it
+will be necessary, if I should be so unfortunate as to miss
+seeing you, to converse with Sir Joshua on the sum it will be
+proper to ask,&mdash;it short, upon the means of setting him out.
+It would be a reflection on us all, if such a man should perish
+for want of the means to take care of his health.</p>
+<p>Yours, &amp;c. THURLOW.'</p>
+<p>This letter gave me a very high satisfaction; I next day went
+and shewed it to Sir Joshua Reynolds, who was exceedingly pleased
+with it. He thought that I should now communicate the negociation
+to Dr. Johnson, who might afterwards complain if the attention
+with which he had been honoured, should be too long concealed
+from him. I intended to set out for Scotland next morning; but
+Sir Joshua cordially insisted that I should stay another day,
+that Johnson and I might dine with him, that we three might talk
+of his Italian Tour, and, as Sir Joshua expressed himself, 'have
+it all out.' I hastened to Johnson, and was told by him that he
+was rather better to-day. BOSWELL. 'I am very anxious about you,
+Sir, and particularly that you should go to Italy for the winter,
+which I believe is your own wish.' JOHNSON. 'It is, Sir.'
+BOSWELL. 'You have no objection, I presume, but the money it
+would require.' JOHNSON. 'Why, no, Sir.' Upon which I gave him a
+particular account of what had been done, and read to him the
+Lord Chancellor's letter. He listened with much attention; then
+warmly said, 'This is taking prodigious pains about a man.' 'O!
+Sir, (said I, with most sincere affection,) your friends would do
+every thing for you.' He paused, grew more and more agitated,
+till tears started into his eyes, and he exclaimed with fervent
+emotion, 'GOD bless you all.' I was so affected that I also shed
+tears. After a short silence, he renewed and extended his
+grateful benediction, 'GOD bless you all, for JESUS CHRIST'S
+sake.' We both remained for some time unable to speak. He rose
+suddenly and quitted the room, quite melted in tenderness. He
+staid but a short time, till he had recovered his firmness; soon
+after he returned I left him, having first engaged him to dine at
+Sir Joshua Reynolds's, next day. I never was again under that
+roof which I had so long reverenced.</p>
+<p>On Wednesday, June 30, the friendly confidential dinner with
+Sir Joshua Reynolds took place, no other company being present.
+Had I known that this was the last time that I should enjoy in
+this world, the conversation of a friend whom I so much
+respected, and from whom I derived so much instruction and
+entertainment, I should have been deeply affected. When I now
+look back to it, I am vexed that a single word should have been
+forgotten.</p>
+<p>Both Sir Joshua and I were so sanguine in our expectations,
+that we expatiated with confidence on the liberal provision which
+we were sure would be made for him, conjecturing whether
+munificence would be displayed in one large donation, or in an
+ample increase of his pension. He himself catched so much of our
+enthusiasm, as to allow himself to suppose it not impossible that
+our hopes might in one way or other be realised. He said that he
+would rather have his pension doubled than a grant of a thousand
+pounds; 'For, (said he,) though probably I may not live to
+receive as much as a thousand pounds, a man would have the
+consciousness that he should pass the remainder of his life in
+splendour, how long soever it might be.' Considering what a
+moderate proportion an income of six hundred pounds a year bears
+to innumerable fortunes in this country, it is worthy of remark,
+that a man so truly great should think it splendour<a href=
+"#note-1041">[1041]</a>.</p>
+<p>As an instance of extraordinary liberality of friendship, he
+told us, that Dr. Brocklesby had upon this occasion offered him a
+hundred a year for his life<a href=
+"#note-1042">[1042]</a>. A grateful tear
+started into his eye, as he spoke this in a faultering tone.</p>
+<p>Sir Joshua and I endeavoured to flatter his imagination with
+agreeable prospects of happiness in Italy. 'Nay, (said he,) I
+must not expect much of that; when a man goes to Italy merely to
+feel how he breathes the air, he can enjoy very little.'</p>
+<p>Our conversation turned upon living in the country, which
+Johnson, whose melancholy mind required the dissipation of quick
+successive variety, had habituated himself to consider as a kind
+of mental imprisonment<a href=
+"#note-1043">[1043]</a>. 'Yet, Sir, (said
+I,) there are many people who are content to live in the
+country.' JOHNSON. 'Sir, it is in the intellectual world as in
+the physical world; we are told by natural philosophers that a
+body is at rest in the place that is fit for it; they who are
+content to live in the country, are fit <i>for the
+country.'</i></p>
+<p>Talking of various enjoyments, I argued that a refinement of
+taste was a disadvantage, as they who have attained to it must be
+seldomer pleased than those who have no nice discrimination, and
+are therefore satisfied with every thing that comes in their way.
+JOHNSON. 'Nay, Sir; that is a paltry notion. Endeavour to be as
+perfect as you can in every respect.'</p>
+<p>I accompanied him in Sir Joshua Reynolds's coach, to the entry
+of Bolt-court. He asked me whether I would not go with him to his
+house; I declined it, from an apprehension that my spirits would
+sink. We bade adieu to each other affectionately in the carriage.
+When he had got down upon the foot-pavement, he called out, 'Fare
+you well;' and without looking back, sprung away with a kind of
+pathetick briskness, if I may use that expression, which seemed
+to indicate a struggle to conceal uneasiness, and impressed me
+with a foreboding of our long, long separation.</p>
+<p>I remained one day more in town, to have the chance of talking
+over my negociation with the Lord Chancellor; but the
+multiplicity of his Lordship's important engagements did not
+allow of it; so I left the management of the business in the
+hands of Sir Joshua Reynolds.</p>
+<p>Soon after this time Dr. Johnson had the mortification of
+being informed by Mrs. Thrale, that, 'what she supposed he never
+believed<a href="#note-1044">[1044]</a>,'
+was true; namely, that she was actually going to marry Signor
+Piozzi, an Italian musick-master<a href=
+"#note-1045">[1045]</a>. He endeavoured
+to prevent it; but in vain. If she would publish the whole of the
+correspondence that passed between Dr. Johnson and her on the
+subject, we should have a full view of his real sentiments. As it
+is, our judgement must be biassed by that characteristick
+specimen which Sir John Hawkins has given us: 'Poor Thrale! I
+thought that either her virtue or her vice would have restrained
+her from such a marriage. She is now become a subject for her
+enemies to exult over; and for her friends, if she has any left,
+to forget, or pity<a href=
+"#note-1046">[1046]</a>.'</p>
+<p>It must be admitted that Johnson derived a considerable
+portion of happiness from the comforts and elegancies which he
+enjoyed in Mr. Thrale's family<a href=
+"#note-1047">[1047]</a>; but Mrs. Thrale
+assures us he was indebted for these to her husband alone, who
+certainly respected him sincerely. Her words are,&mdash;</p>
+<p>'Veneration for his virtue, reverence for his talents<i>,
+delight</i> in his conversation, and <i>habitual endurance of a
+yoke my husband first put upon me,</i> and of which he
+contentedly bore his share for sixteen or seventeen years, made
+me go on so long with <i>Mr. Johnson;</i> but the perpetual
+confinement I will own to have been <i>terrifying</i> in the
+first years of our friendship, and <i>irksome</i> in the last;
+nor could I pretend to support <i>it without help, when my
+coadjutor was no more</i><a href=
+"#note-1048">[1048]</a>.'</p>
+<p>Alas! how different is this from the declarations which I have
+heard Mrs. Thrale make in his life-time, without a single murmur
+against any peculiarities, or against any one circumstance which
+attended their intimacy<a href=
+"#note-1049">[1049]</a>.</p>
+<p>As a sincere friend of the great man whose <i>Life</i> I am
+writing, I think it necessary to guard my readers against the
+mistaken notion of Dr. Johnson's character, which this lady's
+<i>Anecdotes</i> of him suggest; for from the very nature and
+form of her book, 'it lends deception lighter wings to fly'.<a
+href="#note-1050">[1050]</a></p>
+<p>'Let it be remembered, (says an eminent critick<a href=
+"#note-1051">[1051]</a>,) that she has
+comprised in a small volume all that she could recollect of Dr.
+Johnson in <i>twenty years</i>, during which period, doubtless,
+some severe things were said by him; and they who read the book
+in <i>two hours</i>, naturally enough suppose that his whole
+conversation was of this complexion. But the fact is, I have been
+often in his company, and never <i>once</i> heard him say a
+severe thing to any one; and many others can attest the same<a
+href="#note-1052">[1052]</a>. When he did
+say a severe thing, it was generally extorted by ignorance
+pretending to knowledge, or by extreme vanity or affectation.</p>
+<p>'Two instances of inaccuracy, (adds he,) are peculiarly worthy
+of notice:</p>
+<p>'It is said, <i>"That natural<a href=
+"#note-1053">[1053]</a> roughness of his
+manner so often mentioned, would, notwithstanding the regularity
+of his notions, burst through them all from time to time; and he
+once bade a very celebrated lady, who praised him with too much
+zeal perhaps, or perhaps too strong an emphasis, (which always
+offended him,) consider what her flattery was worth, before she
+choaked him with it."</i></p>
+<p>'Now let the genuine anecdote be contrasted with this. The
+person thus represented as being harshly treated, though a very
+celebrated lady<a href=
+"#note-1054">[1054]</a>, was <i>then</i>
+just come to London from an obscure situation in the country. At
+Sir Joshua Reynolds's one evening, she met Dr. Johnson. She very
+soon began to pay her court to him in the most fulsome strain.
+"Spare me, I beseech you, dear Madam," was his reply. She still
+<i>laid it on</i>. "Pray, Madam, let us have no more of this;" he
+rejoined. Not paying any attention to these warnings, she
+continued still her eulogy. At length, provoked by this
+indelicate and vain obtrusion of compliment, he exclaimed,
+"Dearest lady, consider with yourself what your flattery is
+worth, before you bestow it so freely<a href=
+"#note-1055">[1055]</a>."</p>
+<p>'How different does this story appear, when accompanied with
+all these circumstances which really belong to it, but which Mrs.
+Thrale either did not know, or has suppressed.</p>
+<p>'She says, in another place<a href=
+"#note-1056">[1056]</a>, <i>"One
+gentleman, however, who dined at a nobleman's house in his
+company, and that of</i> Mr. Thrale, <i>to whom I was obliged for
+the anecdote, was willing to enter the lists in defence of</i>
+King William's <i>character; and having opposed and
+contradicted</i> Johnson <i>two or three times, petulantly
+enough, the master of the house began to feel uneasy, and expect
+disagreeable consequences; to avoid which, he said, loud enough
+for the Doctor to hear,&mdash;'Our friend here has no meaning now
+in all this, except just to relate at club to-morrow how he
+teized</i> Johnson <i>at dinner to-day; this is all to do
+himself</i> honour.' <i>No, upon my word, (replied the other,') I
+see no</i> honour <i>in it, whatever you may do. Well, Sir,
+(returned</i> Mr. Johnson, <i>sternly,) if you do not</i> see
+<i>the honour, I am sure I</i> feel <i>the disgrace</i>."</p>
+<p>'This is all sophisticated. Mr. Thrale was <i>not</i> in the
+company, though he might have related the story to Mrs. Thrale. A
+friend, from whom I had the story, was present; and it was
+<i>not</i> at the house of a nobleman. On the observation being
+made by the master of the house on a gentleman's contradicting
+Johnson, that he had talked for the honour, &amp;c., the
+gentleman muttered in a low voice, "I see no honour in it;" and
+Dr. Johnson said nothing: so all the rest, (though <i>bien
+trouv&eacute;e</i>) is mere garnish.'</p>
+<p>I have had occasion several times, in the course of this work,
+to point out the incorrectness of Mrs. Thrale, as to particulars
+which consisted with my own knowledge<a href=
+"#note-1057">[1057]</a>. But indeed she
+has, in flippant terms enough, expressed her disapprobation of
+that anxious desire of authenticity which prompts a person who is
+to record conversations, to write them down <i>at the
+moment</i><a href=
+"#note-1058">[1058]</a>. Unquestionably,
+if they are to be recorded at all, the sooner it is done the
+better. This lady herself says<a href=
+"#note-1059">[1059]</a>,&mdash;</p>
+<p><i>'To recollect, however, and to repeat the sayings of</i>
+Dr. Johnson, <i>is almost all that can be done by the writers of
+his Life; as his life, at least since my acquaintance with him,
+consisted in little else than talking, when he was not
+[absolutely] employed in some serious piece of work.'</i></p>
+<p>She boasts of her having kept a common-place book<a href=
+"#note-1060">[1060]</a>; and we find she
+noted, at one time or other, in a very lively manner, specimens
+of the conversation of Dr. Johnson, and of those who talked with
+him; but had she done it recently, they probably would have been
+less erroneous; and we should have been relieved from those
+disagreeable doubts of their authenticity, with which we must now
+peruse them.</p>
+<p>She says of him<a href=
+"#note-1061">[1061]</a>,&mdash;</p>
+<p><i>'He was the most charitable of mortals, without being what
+we call an</i> active friend. <i>Admirable at giving counsel; no
+man saw his way so clearly; but he</i> would not stir a finger
+<i>for the assistance of those to whom he was willing enough to
+give advice.'</i> And again on the same page, <i>'If you wanted a
+slight favour, you must apply to people of other dispositions;
+for</i> not a step would Johnson move <i>to obtain a man a vote
+in a society, to repay a compliment which might be useful or
+pleasing, to write a letter of request, &amp;c., or to obtain a
+hundred pounds a year more for a friend who, perhaps, had already
+two or three. No force could urge him to diligence, no
+importunity could conquer his resolution to stand still.'</i></p>
+<p>It is amazing that one who had such opportunities of knowing
+Dr. Johnson, should appear so little acquainted with his real
+character. I am sorry this lady does not advert, that she herself
+contradicts the assertion of his being obstinately defective in
+the <i>petites morales</i>, in the little endearing charities of
+social life, in conferring smaller favours; for she says<a href=
+"#note-1062">[1062]</a>,&mdash;</p>
+<p>'Dr. Johnson <i>was liberal enough in granting literary
+assistance to others, I think; and innumerable are the Prefaces,
+Sermons, Lectures, and Dedications which he used to make for
+people who begged of him.</i>'</p>
+<p>I am certain that a <i>more active friend</i> has rarely been
+found in any age<a href=
+"#note-1063">[1063]</a>. This work, which
+I fondly hope will rescue his memory from obloquy, contains a
+thousand instances of his benevolent exertions in almost every
+way that can be conceived; and particularly in employing his pen
+with a generous readiness for those to whom its aid could be
+useful. Indeed his obliging activity in doing little offices of
+kindness, both by letters and personal application, was one of
+the most remarkable features in his character; and for the truth
+of this I can appeal to a number of his respectable friends: Sir
+Joshua Reynolds, Mr. Langton, Mr. Hamilton, Mr. Burke, Mr.
+Windham, Mr. Malone, the Bishop of Dromore, Sir William Scott,
+Sir Robert Chambers. And can Mrs. Thrale forget the
+advertisements which he wrote for her husband at the time of his
+election contest<a href=
+"#note-1064">[1064]</a>; the epitaphs on
+him and her mother[1065]; the playful and even trifling verses,
+for the amusement of her and her daughters; his corresponding
+with her children<a href=
+"#note-1066">[1066]</a>, and entering
+into their minute concerns<a href=
+"#note-1067">[1067]</a>, which shews him
+in the most amiable light? She relates<a href=
+"#note-1068">[1068]</a>,&mdash;</p>
+<p>That Mr. Ch-lm-ley unexpectedly rode up to Mr. Thrale's
+carriage, in which Mr. Thrale and she, and Dr. Johnson were
+travelling; that he paid them all his proper compliments, but
+observing that Dr. Johnson, who was reading, did not see him,
+<i>'tapt him gently on the shoulder. "'Tis</i> Mr. Ch-lm-ley;"
+<i>says my husband. "Well, Sir&mdash;and what if it is</i> Mr.
+Ch-lm-ley;" <i>says the other, sternly, just lifting his eyes a
+moment from his book, and returning to it again, with renewed
+avidity.'</i></p>
+<p>This surely conveys a notion of Johnson, as if he had been
+grossly rude to Mr. Cholmondeley<a href=
+"#note-1069">[1069]</a>, a gentleman whom
+he always loved and esteemed. If, therefore, there was an
+absolute necessity for mentioning the story at all, it might have
+been thought that her tenderness for Dr. Johnson's character
+would have disposed her to state any thing that could soften it.
+Why then is there a total silence as to what Mr. Cholmondeley
+told her?&mdash;that Johnson, who had known him from his earliest
+years, having been made sensible of what had doubtless a strange
+appearance, took occasion, when he afterwards met him, to make a
+very courteous and kind apology. There is another little
+circumstance which I cannot but remark. Her book was published in
+1785, she had then in her possession a letter from Dr. Johnson,
+dated in 1777<a href=
+"#note-1070">[1070]</a>, which begins
+thus:&mdash;'Cholmondeley's story shocks me, if it be true, which
+I can hardly think, for I am utterly unconscious of it: I am very
+sorry, and very much ashamed<a href=
+"#note-1071">[1071]</a>.' Why then
+publish the anecdote? Or if she did, why not add the
+circumstances, with which she was well acquainted!</p>
+<p>In his social intercourse she thus describes him<a href=
+"#note-1072">[1072]</a>:&mdash;</p>
+<p>'<i>Ever musing till he was called out to converse, and
+conversing till the fatigue of his friends, or the promptitude of
+his own temper to take offence, consigned him back again to
+silent meditation</i>.'</p>
+<p>Yet, in the same book<a href=
+"#note-1073">[1073]</a>, she tells
+us,&mdash;</p>
+<p>'<i>He was, however, seldom inclined to be silent, when any
+moral or literary question was started; and it was on such
+occasions that, like the Sage in</i> "Rasselas<a href=
+"#note-1074">[1074]</a>," <i>he spoke,
+and attention watched his lips; he reasoned, and conviction
+closed his periods</i>.'</p>
+<p>His conversation, indeed, was so far from ever
+<i>fatiguing</i> his friends, that they regretted when it was
+interrupted, or ceased, and could exclaim in Milton's
+language,&mdash;</p>
+<p>'With thee conversing, I forget all time<a href=
+"#note-1075">[1075]</a>.'</p>
+<p>I certainly, then, do not claim too much in behalf of my
+illustrious friend in saying, that however smart and entertaining
+Mrs. Thrale's <i>Anecdotes</i> are, they must not be held as good
+evidence against him; for wherever an instance of harshness and
+severity is told, I beg leave to doubt its perfect authenticity;
+for though there may have been <i>some</i> foundation for it,
+yet, like that of his reproof to the 'very celebrated lady,' it
+may be so exhibited in the narration as to be very unlike the
+real fact.</p>
+<p>The evident tendency of the following anecdote<a href=
+"#note-1076">[1076]</a> is to represent
+Dr. Johnson as extremely deficient in affection, tenderness, or
+even common civility:&mdash;</p>
+<p><i>'When I one day lamented the loss of a first cousin killed
+in</i> America,&mdash;"<i>Prithee, my dear, (said he,) have done
+with canting; how would the world be the worse for it, I may ask,
+if all your relations were at once spitted like larks, and
+roasted for</i> Presto's <i>supper?"</i>&mdash;Presto<a href=
+"#note-1077">[1077]</a> <i>was the dog
+that lay under the table while we talked.</i>'</p>
+<p>I suspect this too of exaggeration and distortion. I allow
+that he made her an angry speech; but let the circumstances
+fairly appear, as told by Mr. Baretti, who was
+present:&mdash;</p>
+<p>'Mrs. Thrale, while supping very heartily upon larks, laid
+down her knife and fork, and abruptly exclaimed, "O, my dear Mr.
+Johnson, do you know what has happened? The last letters from
+abroad have brought us an account that our poor cousin's head was
+taken off by a cannon-ball." Johnson, who was shocked both at the
+fact, and her light unfeeling manner of mentioning it, replied,
+"Madam, it would give <i>you</i> very little concern if all your
+relations were spitted like those larks, and drest for Presto's
+supper<a href=
+"#note-1078">[1078]</a>."'</p>
+<p>It is with concern that I find myself obliged to animadvert on
+the inaccuracies of Mrs. Piozzi's <i>Anecdotes</i>, and perhaps I
+may be thought to have dwelt too long upon her little collection.
+But as from Johnson's long residence under Mr. Thrale's roof, and
+his intimacy with her, the account which she has given of him may
+have made an unfavourable and unjust impression, my duty, as a
+faithful biographer, has obliged me reluctantly to perform this
+unpleasing task.</p>
+<p>Having left the <i>pious negotiation</i>, as I called it, in
+the best hands, I shall here insert what relates to it. Johnson
+wrote to Sir Joshua Reynolds on July 6, as follows:&mdash;</p>
+<p>'I am going, I hope, in a few days, to try the air of
+Derbyshire, but hope to see you before I go. Let me, however,
+mention to you what I have much at heart. If the Chancellor
+should continue his attention to Mr. Boswell's request, and
+confer with you on the means of relieving my languid state, I am
+very desirous to avoid the appearance of asking money upon false
+pretences. I desire you to represent to his Lordship, what, as
+soon as it is suggested, he will perceive to be
+reasonable,&mdash;That, if I grow much worse, I shall be afraid
+to leave my physicians, to suffer the inconveniences of travel,
+and pine in the solitude of a foreign country; That, if I grow
+much better, of which indeed there is now little appearance, I
+shall not wish to leave my friends and my domestick comforts; for
+I do not travel for pleasure or curiosity; yet if I should
+recover, curiosity would revive. In my present state, I am
+desirous to make a struggle for a little longer life, and hope to
+obtain some help from a softer climate. Do for me what you
+can.'</p>
+<p>He wrote to me July 26:&mdash;</p>
+<p>'I wish your affairs could have permitted a longer and
+continued exertion of your zeal and kindness. They that have your
+kindness may want your ardour. In the mean time I am very feeble
+and very dejected.'</p>
+<p>By a letter from Sir Joshua Reynolds I was informed, that the
+Lord Chancellor had called on him, and acquainted him that the
+application had not been successful; but that his Lordship, after
+speaking highly in praise of Johnson, as a man who was an honour
+to his country, desired Sir Joshua to let him know, that on
+granting a mortgage of his pension, he should draw on his
+Lordship to the amount of five or six hundred pounds; and that
+his Lordship explained the meaning of the mortgage to be, that he
+wished the business to be conducted in such a manner, that Dr.
+Johnson should appear to be under the least possible obligation.
+Sir Joshua mentioned, that he had by the same post communicated
+all this to Dr. Johnson.</p>
+<p>How Johnson was affected upon the occasion will appear from
+what he wrote to Sir Joshua Reynolds:&mdash;</p>
+<p>'Ashbourne, Sept. 9. Many words I hope are not necessary
+between you and me, to convince you what gratitude is excited in
+my heart by the Chancellor's liberality, and your kind
+offices....<a href=
+"#note-1079">[1079]</a> I have enclosed a
+letter to the Chancellor, which, when you have read it, you will
+be pleased to seal with a head, or any other general seal, and
+convey it to him: had I sent it directly to him, I should have
+seemed to overlook the favour of your intervention.'</p>
+<p>'To THE LORD HIGH CHANCELLOR<a href=
+"#note-1080">[1080]</a>.</p>
+<p>MY LORD, After a long and not inattentive observation of
+mankind, the generosity of your Lordship's offer raises in me not
+less wonder than gratitude<a href=
+"#note-1081">[1081]</a>. Bounty, so
+liberally bestowed, I should gladly receive, if my condition made
+it necessary; for, to such a mind, who would not be proud to own
+his obligations? But it has pleased GOD to restore me to so great
+a measure of health, that if I should now appropriate so much of
+a fortune destined to do good, I could not escape from myself the
+charge of advancing a false claim. My journey to the continent,
+though I once thought it necessary, was never much encouraged by
+my physicians; and I was very desirous that your Lordship should
+be told of it by Sir Joshua Reynolds, as an event very uncertain;
+for if I grew much better, I should not be willing, if much
+worse, not able, to migrate. Your Lordship was first solicited
+without my knowledge; but, when I was told that you were pleased
+to honour me with your patronage, I did not expect to hear of a
+refusal; yet, as I have had no long time to brood hope, and have
+not rioted in imaginary opulence, this cold reception has been
+scarce a disappointment; and, from your Lordship's kindness, I
+have received a benefit, which only men like you are able to
+bestow. I shall now live <i>mihi carior</i>, with a higher
+opinion of my own merit.</p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'I am, my Lord,
+ Your Lordship's most obliged,
+ Most grateful, and
+ Most humble servant,
+ SAM. JOHNSON.'
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>'September, 1784.'</p>
+<p>Upon this unexpected failure I abstain from presuming to make
+any remarks, or to offer any conjectures.<a href=
+"#note-1082">[1082]</a></p>
+<p>Having after repeated reasonings<a href=
+"#note-1083">[1083]</a>, brought Dr.
+Johnson to agree to my removing to London, and even to furnish me
+with arguments in favour of what he had opposed; I wrote to him
+requesting he would write them for me; he was so good as to
+comply, and I shall extract that part of his letter to me of June
+11<a href="#note-1084">[1084]</a>, as a
+proof how well he could exhibit a cautious yet encouraging view
+of it:&mdash;</p>
+<p>'I remember, and intreat you to remember, that <i>virtus est
+vitium fugere</i><a href=
+"#note-1085">[1085]</a>; the first
+approach to riches is security from poverty. The condition on
+which you have my consent to settle in London is, that your
+expence never exceeds your annual income. Fixing this basis of
+security, you cannot be hurt, and you may be very much advanced.
+The loss of your Scottish business, which is all that you can
+lose, is not to be reckoned as any equivalent to the hopes and
+possibilities that open here upon you. If you succeed, the
+question of prudence is at an end; every body will think that
+done right which ends happily; and though your expectations, of
+which I would not advise you to talk too much, should not be
+totally answered, you can hardly fail to get friends who will do
+for you all that your present situation allows you to hope; and
+if, after a few years, you should return to Scotland, you will
+return with a mind supplied by various conversation, and many
+opportunities of enquiry, with much knowledge, and materials for
+reflection and instruction.'</p>
+<p>Let us now contemplate Johnson thirty years after the death of
+his wife, still retaining for her all the tenderness of
+affection.</p>
+<center>'TO THE REVEREND MR. BAGSHAW, AT BROMLEY<a href=
+"#note-1086">[1086]</a>.</center>
+<center>'SIR,</center>
+<p>'Perhaps you may remember, that in the year 1753<a href=
+"#note-1087">[1087]</a>, you committed to
+the ground my dear wife. I now entreat your permission to lay a
+stone upon her; and have sent the inscription, that, if you find
+it proper, you may signify your allowance.</p>
+<p>'You will do me a great favour by showing the place where she
+lies, that the stone may protect her remains.</p>
+<p>'Mr. Ryland<a href=
+"#note-1088">[1088]</a> will wait on you
+for the inscription[1089], and procure it to be engraved. You
+will easily believe that I shrink from this mournful office. When
+it is done, if I have strength remaining, I will visit Bromley
+once again, and pay you part of the respect to which you have a
+right from, Reverend Sir,</p>
+<p>'Your most humble servant,</p>
+<center>'SAM. JOHNSON<a href=
+"#note-1090">[1090]</a>.'</center>
+<p>'July 12, 1784.'</p>
+<p>On the same day he wrote to Mr. Langton:&mdash;</p>
+<p>'I cannot but think that in my languid and anxious state, I
+have some reason to complain that I receive from you neither
+enquiry nor consolation. You know how much I value your
+friendship, and with what confidence I expect your kindness, if I
+wanted any act of tenderness that you could perform; at least, if
+you do not know it, I think your ignorance is your own fault. Yet
+how long is it that I have lived almost in your neighbourhood
+without the least notice. I do not, however, consider this
+neglect as particularly shown to me; I hear two of your most
+valuable friends make the same complaint. But why are all thus
+overlooked? You are not oppressed by sickness, you are not
+distracted by business; if you are sick, you are sick of
+leisure:&mdash;And allow yourself to be told, that no disease is
+more to be dreaded or avoided. Rather to do nothing than to do
+good, is the lowest state of a degraded mind. Boileau says to his
+pupil,</p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ '<i>Que les vers ne soient pas votre &eacute;ternel emploi,
+ Cultivez vos amis</i><a href=
+"#note-1091">1091</a>.'&mdash;
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>That voluntary debility, which modern language is content to
+term indolence, will, if it is not counteracted by resolution,
+render in time the strongest faculties lifeless, and turn the
+flame to the smoke of virtue. I do not expect nor desire to see
+you, because I am much pleased to find that your mother stays so
+long with you, and I should think you neither elegant nor
+grateful, if you did not study her gratification. You will pay my
+respects to both the ladies, and to all the young people. I am
+going Northward for a while, to try what help the country can
+give me; but, if you will write, the letter will come after
+me.'</p>
+<p>Next day he set out on a jaunt to Staffordshire and
+Derbyshire, flattering himself that he might be in some degree
+relieved.</p>
+<p>During his absence from London he kept up a correspondence
+with several of his friends, from which I shall select what
+appears to me proper for publication, without attending nicely to
+chronological order.</p>
+<p>To Dr. BROCKLESBY, he writes, Ashbourne, July 20:&mdash;</p>
+<p>'The kind attention which you have so long shewn to my health
+and happiness, makes it as much a debt of gratitude as a call of
+interest, to give you an account of what befals me, when accident
+recovers<a href="#note-1092">[1092]</a>
+me from your immediate care. The journey of the first day was
+performed with very little sense of fatigue; the second day
+brought me to Lichfield, without much lassitude; but I am afraid
+that I could not have borne such violent agitation for many days
+together. Tell Dr. Heberden, that in the coach I read
+<i>Ciceronianus</i> which I concluded as I entered Lichfield. My
+affection and understanding went along with Erasmus, except that
+once or twice he somewhat unskilfully entangles Cicero's civil or
+moral, with his rhetorical, character. I staid five days at
+Lichfield, but, being unable to walk, had no great pleasure, and
+yesterday (19th) I came hither, where I am to try what air and
+attention can perform. Of any improvement in my health I cannot
+yet please myself with the perception.&mdash;The asthma has no
+abatement. Opiates stop the fit, so as that I can sit and
+sometimes lie easy, but they do not now procure me the power of
+motion; and I am afraid that my general strength of body does not
+encrease. The weather indeed is not benign; but how low is he
+sunk whose strength depends upon the weather<a href=
+"#note-1093">[1093]</a>! I am now looking
+into Floyer<a href=
+"#note-1094">[1094]</a> who lived with
+his asthma to almost his ninetieth year. His book by want of
+order is obscure, and his asthma, I think, not of the same kind
+with mine. Something however I may perhaps learn. My appetite
+still continues keen enough; and what I consider as a symptom of
+radical health, I have a voracious delight in raw summer fruit,
+of which I was less eager a few years ago<a href=
+"#note-1095">[1095]</a>. You will be
+pleased to communicate this account to Dr. Heberden, and if any
+thing is to be done, let me have your joint opinion.
+Now&mdash;<i>abite curoe</i>;&mdash;let me enquire after the
+Club<a href="#note-1096">[1096]</a>.'</p>
+<p>July 31. 'Not recollecting that Dr. Heberden might be at
+Windsor, I thought your letter long in coming. But, you know,
+<i>nocitura petuntur</i><a href=
+"#note-1097">[1097]</a>, the letter which
+I so much desired, tells me that I have lost one of my best and
+tenderest friends<a href=
+"#note-1098">[1098]</a>. My comfort is,
+that he appeared to live like a man that had always before his
+eyes the fragility of our present existence, and was therefore, I
+hope, not unprepared to meet his judge. Your attention, dear Sir,
+and that of Dr. Heberden, to my health, is extremely kind. I am
+loth to think that I grow worse; and cannot fairly prove even to
+my own partiality, that I grow much better.'</p>
+<p>August 5. 'I return you thanks, dear Sir, for your unwearied
+attention, both medicinal and friendly, and hope to prove the
+effect of your care by living to acknowledge it.'</p>
+<p>August 12<a href=
+"#note-1099">[1099]</a>. 'Pray be so kind
+as to have me in your thoughts, and mention my case to others as
+you have opportunity. I seem to myself neither to gain nor lose
+strength. I have lately tried milk, but have yet found no
+advantage, and am afraid of it merely as a liquid. My appetite is
+still good, which I know is dear Dr. Heberden's criterion of the
+<i>vis vitoe</i>. As we cannot now see each other, do not omit to
+write, for you cannot think with what warmth of expectation I
+reckon the hours of a post-day.'</p>
+<p>August 14. 'I have hitherto sent you only melancholy letters,
+you will be glad to hear some better account. Yesterday the
+asthma remitted, perceptibly remitted, and I moved with more ease
+than I have enjoyed for many weeks. May GOD continue his mercy.
+This account I would not delay, because I am not a lover of
+complaints, or complainers, and yet I have since we parted
+uttered nothing till now but terrour and sorrow. Write to me,
+dear Sir.'</p>
+<p>August 16. 'Better I hope, and better. My respiration gets
+more and more ease and liberty. I went to church yesterday, after
+a very liberal dinner, without any inconvenience; it is indeed no
+long walk, but I never walked it without difficulty, since I
+came, before.&mdash;the intention was only to overpower the
+seeming <i>vis inertioe</i> of the pectoral and pulmonary
+muscles. I am favoured with a degree of ease that very much
+delights me, and do not despair of another race upon the stairs
+of the Academy<a href=
+"#note-1100">[1100]</a>. If I were,
+however, of a humour to see, or to shew the state of my body, on
+the dark side, I might say,</p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ <i>"Quid te exempta juvat spinis de pluribus una<a href=
+"#note-1101">1101</a>?"</i>
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>The nights are still sleepless, and the water rises, though it
+does not rise very fast. Let us, however, rejoice in all the good
+that we have. The remission of one disease will enable nature to
+combat the rest. The squills I have not neglected; for I have
+taken more than a hundred drops a day, and one day took two
+hundred and fifty, which, according to the popular equivalence of
+a drop to a grain, is more than half an ounce. I thank you, dear
+Sir, for your attention in ordering the medicines; your attention
+to me has never failed. If the virtue of medicines could be
+enforced by the benevolence of the prescriber, how soon should I
+be well.'</p>
+<p>August 19. 'The relaxation of the asthma still continues, yet
+I do not trust it wholly to itself, but soothe it now and then
+with an opiate. I not only perform the perpetual act of
+respiration with less labour, but I can walk with fewer intervals
+of rest, and with greater freedom of motion. I never thought well
+of Dr. James's compounded medicines<a href=
+"#note-1102">[1102]</a>; his ingredients
+appeared to me sometimes inefficacious and trifling, and
+sometimes heterogeneous and destructive of each other. This
+prescription exhibits a composition of about three hundred and
+thirty grains, in which there are four grains of emetick tartar,
+and six drops [of] thebaick tincture. He that writes thus, surely
+writes for show. The basis of his medicine is the gum ammoniacum,
+which dear Dr. Lawrence used to give, but of which I never saw
+any effect. We will, if you please, let this medicine alone. The
+squills have every suffrage, and in the squills we will rest for
+the present.'</p>
+<p>August 21. 'The kindness which you shew by having me in your
+thoughts upon all occasions, will, I hope, always fill my heart
+with gratitude. Be pleased to return my thanks to Sir George
+Baker<a href="#note-1103">[1103]</a>, for
+the consideration which he has bestowed upon me. Is this the
+balloon that has been so long expected, this balloon to which I
+subscribed, but without payment<a href=
+"#note-1104">[1104]</a>? It is pity that
+philosophers have been disappointed, and shame that they have
+been cheated; but I know not well how to prevent either. Of this
+experiment I have read nothing; where was it exhibited? and who
+was the man that ran away with so much money? Continue, dear Sir,
+to write often and more at a time; for none of your prescriptions
+operate to their proper uses more certainly than your letters
+operate as cordials.'</p>
+<p>August 26. 'I suffered you to escape last post without a
+letter, but you are not to expect such indulgence very often; for
+I write not so much because I have any thing to say, as because I
+hope for an answer; and the vacancy of my life here makes a
+letter of great value. I have here little company and little
+amusement, and thus abandoned to the contemplation of my own
+miseries, I am sometimes gloomy and depressed; this too I resist
+as I can, and find opium, I think, useful, but I seldom take more
+than one grain. Is not this strange weather? Winter absorbed the
+spring, and now autumn is come before we have had summer. But let
+not our kindness for each other imitate the inconstancy of the
+seasons.'</p>
+<p>Sept. 2. 'Mr. Windham has been here to see me; he came, I
+think, forty miles out of his way, and staid about a day and a
+half, perhaps I make the time shorter than it was. Such
+conversation I shall not have again till I come back to the
+regions of literature; and there Windham is, <i>inter
+stellas</i><a href=
+"#note-1105">[1105]</a> <i>Luna
+minores</i>[1106].' He then mentions the effects of certain
+medicines, as taken; that 'Nature is recovering its original
+powers, and the functions returning to their proper state. God
+continue his mercies, and grant me to use them rightly.'</p>
+<p>Sept. 9. 'Do you know the Duke and Duchess of Devonshire? And
+have you ever seen Chatsworth? I was at Chatsworth on Monday: I
+had indeed seen it before<a href=
+"#note-1107">[1107]</a>, but never when
+its owners were at home; I was very kindly received, and honestly
+pressed to stay: but I told them that a sick man is not a fit
+inmate of a great house. But I hope to go again some time.'</p>
+<p>Sept. 11. 'I think nothing grows worse, but all rather better,
+except sleep, and that of late has been at its old pranks. Last
+evening, I felt what I had not known for a long time, an
+inclination to walk for amusement; I took a short walk, and came
+back again neither breathless nor fatigued. This has been a
+gloomy, frigid, ungenial summer, but of late it seems to mend; I
+hear the heat sometimes mentioned, but I do not feel it:</p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ "Praterea minimus gelido jam in corpore sanguis
+ Febre calet sol&aacute;<a href=
+"#note-1108">1108</a>.&mdash;&mdash;"
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>I hope, however, with good help, to find means of supporting a
+winter at home, and to hear and tell at the Club what is doing,
+and what ought to be doing in the world. I have no company here,
+and shall naturally come home hungry for conversation. To wish
+you, dear Sir, more leisure, would not be kind; but what leisure
+you have, you must bestow upon me.'</p>
+<p>Sept. 16. 'I have now let you alone for a long time, having
+indeed little to say. You charge me somewhat unjustly with
+luxury. At Chatsworth, you should remember, that I have eaten but
+once; and the Doctor, with whom I live, follows a milk diet. I
+grow no fatter, though my stomach, if it be not disturbed by
+physick, never fails me. I now grow weary of solitude, and think
+of removing next week to Lichfield, a place of more society, but
+otherwise of less convenience. When I am settled, I shall write
+again. Of the hot weather that you mention, we have [not] had in
+Derbyshire very much, and for myself I seldom feel heat, and
+suppose that my frigidity is the effect of my distemper; a
+supposition which naturally leads me to hope that a hotter
+climate may be useful. But I hope to stand another English
+winter.'</p>
+<p>Lichfield, Sept. 29. 'On one day I had three letters about the
+air-balloon<a href=
+"#note-1109">[1109]</a>: yours was far
+the best, and has enabled me to impart to my friends in the
+country an idea of this species of amusement. In amusement, mere
+amusement, I am afraid it must end, for I do not find that its
+course can be directed so as that it should serve any purposes of
+communication; and it can give no new intelligence of the state
+of the air at different heights, till they have ascended above
+the height of mountains, which they seem never likely to do. I
+came hither on the 27th. How long I shall stay I have not
+determined. My dropsy is gone, and my asthma much remitted, but I
+have felt myself a little declining these two days, or at least
+to-day; but such vicissitudes must be expected. One day may be
+worse than another; but this last month is far better than the
+former; if the next should be as much better than this, I shall
+run about the town on my own legs.'</p>
+<p>October 6. 'The fate of the balloon I do not much lament<a
+href="#note-1110">[1110]</a>: to make new
+balloons, is to repeat the jest again. We now know a method of
+mounting into the air, and, I think, are not likely to know more.
+The vehicles can serve no use till we can guide them; and they
+can gratify no curiosity till we mount with them to greater
+heights than we can reach without; till we rise above the tops of
+the highest mountains, which we have yet not done. We know the
+state of the air in all its regions, to the top of Teneriffe, and
+therefore, learn nothing from those who navigate a balloon below
+the clouds. The first experiment, however, was bold, and deserved
+applause and reward. But since it has been performed, and its
+event is known, I had rather now find a medicine that can ease an
+asthma.'</p>
+<p>October 25. 'You write to me with a zeal that animates, and a
+tenderness that melts me. I am not afraid either of a journey to
+London, or a residence in it. I came down with little fatigue,
+and am now not weaker. In the smoky atmosphere I was delivered
+from the dropsy, which I consider as the original and radical
+disease. The town is my element<a href=
+"#note-1111">[1111]</a>; there are my
+friends, there are my books, to which I have not yet bid
+farewell, and there are my amusements. Sir Joshua told me long
+ago that my vocation was to publick life, and I hope still to
+keep my station, till GOD shall bid me <i>Go in peace</i><a href=
+"#note-1112">[1112]</a>.'</p>
+<p>To MR. HOOLE:&mdash;</p>
+<p>Ashbourne, Aug. 7. 'Since I was here I have two little letters
+from you, and have not had the gratitude to write. But every man
+is most free with his best friends, because he does not suppose
+that they can suspect him of intentional incivility. One reason
+for my omission is, that being in a place to which you are wholly
+a stranger, I have no topicks of correspondence. If you had any
+knowledge of Ashbourne, I could tell you of two Ashbourne men,
+who, being last week condemned at Derby to be hanged for a
+robbery, went and hanged themselves in their cell<a href=
+"#note-1113">[1113]</a>. But this,
+however it may supply us with talk, is nothing to you. Your
+kindness, I know, would make you glad to hear some good of me,
+but I have not much good to tell; if I grow not worse, it is all
+that I can say. I hope Mrs. Hoole receives more help from her
+migration. Make her my compliments, and write again to, dear Sir,
+your affectionate servant.'</p>
+<p>Aug. 13. 'I thank you for your affectionate letter. I hope we
+shall both be the better for each other's friendship, and I hope
+we shall not very quickly be parted. Tell Mr. Nicholls that I
+shall be glad of his correspondence, when his business allows him
+a little remission; though to wish him less business, that I may
+have more pleasure, would be too selfish. To pay for seats at the
+balloon is not very necessary, because in less than a minute,
+they who gaze at a mile's distance will see all that can be seen.
+About the wings<a href=
+"#note-1114">[1114]</a> I am of your
+mind; they cannot at all assist it, nor I think regulate its
+motion. I am now grown somewhat easier in my body, but my mind is
+sometimes depressed. About the Club I am in no great pain. The
+forfeitures go on, and the house, I hear, is improved for our
+future meetings. I hope we shall meet often and sit long.'</p>
+<p>Sept. 4. 'Your letter was, indeed, long in coming, but it was
+very welcome. Our acquaintance has now subsisted long<a href=
+"#note-1115">[1115]</a> and our
+recollection of each other involves a great space, and many
+little occurrences, which melt the thoughts to tenderness. Write
+to me, therefore, as frequently as you can. I hear from Dr.
+Brocklesby and Mr. Ryland, that the Club is not crouded. I hope
+we shall enliven it when winter brings us together.'</p>
+<p>To DR. BURNEY:&mdash;</p>
+<p>August 2. 'The weather, you know, has not been balmy; I am now
+reduced to think, and am at last content to talk of the weather.
+Pride must have a fall<a href=
+"#note-1116">[1116]</a>. I have lost dear
+Mr. Allen, and wherever I turn, the dead or the dying meet my
+notice, and force my attention upon misery and mortality. Mrs.
+Burney's escape from so much danger, and her ease after so much
+pain, throws, however, some radiance of hope upon the gloomy
+prospect. May her recovery be perfect, and her continuance long.
+I struggle hard for life. I take physick, and take air; my
+friend's chariot is always ready. We have run this morning
+twenty-four miles, and could run forty-eight more. <i>But who can
+run the race with death?</i>'</p>
+<p>'Sept. 4. [Concerning a private transaction, in which his
+opinion was asked, and after giving it he makes the following
+reflections, which are applicable on other occasions.] Nothing
+deserves more compassion than wrong conduct with good meaning;
+than loss or obloquy suffered by one who, as he is conscious only
+of good intentions, wonders why he loses that kindness which he
+wishes to preserve; and not knowing his own fault, if, as may
+sometimes happen, nobody will tell him, goes on to offend by his
+endeavours to please. I am delighted by finding that our opinions
+are the same. You will do me a real kindness by continuing to
+write. A post-day has now been long a day of recreation.'</p>
+<p>Nov. 1. 'Our correspondence paused for want of topicks. I had
+said what I had to say on the matter proposed to my
+consideration; and nothing remained but to tell you, that I waked
+or slept; that I was more or less sick. I drew my thoughts in
+upon myself, and supposed yours employed upon your book. That
+your book<a href="#note-1117">[1117]</a>
+has been delayed I am glad, since you have gained an opportunity
+of being more exact. Of the caution necessary in adjusting
+narratives there is no end. Some tell what they do not know, that
+they may not seem ignorant, and others from mere indifference
+about truth. All truth is not, indeed, of equal importance; but,
+if little violations are allowed, every violation will in time be
+thought little; and a writer should keep himself vigilantly on
+his guard against the first temptations to negligence or
+supineness. I had ceased to write, because respecting you I had
+no more to say, and respecting myself could say little good. I
+cannot boast of advancement, and in cases of convalescence it may
+be said, with few exceptions, <i>non progredi, est regredi</i>. I
+hope I may be excepted. My great difficulty was with my sweet
+Fanny<a href="#note-1118">[1118]</a>,
+who, by her artifice of inserting her letter in yours, had given
+me a precept of frugality<a href=
+"#note-1119">[1119]</a> which I was not
+at liberty to neglect; and I know not who were in town under
+whose cover I could send my letter<a href=
+"#note-1120">[1120]</a>. I rejoice to
+hear that you are all so well, and have a delight particularly
+sympathetick in the recovery of Mrs. Burney.'</p>
+<p>To MR. LANGTON:&mdash;</p>
+<p>Aug. 25. 'The kindness of your last letter, and my omission to
+answer it, begins to give you, even in my opinion, a right to
+recriminate, and to charge me with forgetfulness for the absent.
+I will, therefore, delay no longer to give an account of myself,
+and wish I could relate what would please either myself or my
+friend. On July 13, I left London, partly in hope of help from
+new air and change of place, and partly excited by the sick man's
+impatience of the present. I got to Lichfield in a stage vehicle,
+with very little fatigue, in two days, and had the consolation<a
+href="#note-1121">[1121]</a> to find,
+that since my last visit my three old acquaintance are all dead.
+July 20, I went to Ashbourne, where I have been till now; the
+house in which we live is repairing. I live in too much solitude,
+and am often deeply dejected: I wish we were nearer, and rejoice
+in your removal to London. A friend, at once cheerful and
+serious, is a great acquisition. Let us not neglect one another
+for the little time which Providence allows us to hope. Of my
+health I cannot tell you, what my wishes persuaded me to expect,
+that it is much improved by the season or by remedies. I am
+sleepless; my legs grow weary with a very few steps, and the
+water breaks its boundaries in some degree. The asthma, however,
+has remitted; my breath is still much obstructed, but is more
+free than it was. Nights of watchfulness produce torpid days; I
+read very little, though I am alone; for I am tempted to supply
+in the day what I lost in bed. This is my history; like all other
+histories, a narrative of misery. Yet am I so much better than in
+the beginning of the year, that I ought to be ashamed of
+complaining. I now sit and write with very little sensibility of
+pain or weakness; but when I rise, I shall find my legs betraying
+me. Of the money which you mentioned, I have no immediate need;
+keep it, however, for me, unless some exigence requires it. Your
+papers I will shew you certainly when you would see them, but I
+am a little angry at you for not keeping minutes of your own
+<i>acceptum et expensum</i><a href=
+"#note-1122">[1122]</a>, and think a
+little time might be spared from Aristophanes, for the <i>res
+familiares</i>. Forgive me for I mean well. I hope, dear Sir,
+that you and Lady Rothes, and all the young people, too many to
+enumerate, are well and happy. GOD bless you all.'</p>
+<p>To MR. WINDHAM:&mdash;</p>
+<p>August. 'The tenderness with which you have been pleased to
+treat me, through my long illness, neither health nor sickness
+can, I hope, make me forget; and you are not to suppose, that
+after we parted you were no longer in my mind. But what can a
+sick man say, but that he is sick? His thoughts are necessarily
+concentered in himself; he neither receives nor can give delight;
+his enquiries are after alleviations of pain, and his efforts are
+to catch some momentary comfort. Though I am now in the
+neighbourhood of the Peak, you must expect no account of its
+wonders, of its hills, its waters, its caverns, or its mines; but
+I will tell you, dear Sir, what I hope you will not hear with
+less satisfaction, that, for about a week past, my asthma has
+been less afflictive.'</p>
+<p>Lichfield. October 2<a href=
+"#note-1123">[1123]</a>. 'I believe you
+have been long enough acquainted with the <i>phoenomena</i> of
+sickness, not to be surprised that a sick man wishes to be where
+he is not, and where it appears to every body but himself that he
+might easily be, without having the resolution to remove. I
+thought Ashbourne a solitary place, but did not come hither till
+last Monday. I have here more company, but my health has for this
+last week not advanced; and in the languor of disease how little
+can be done? Whither or when I shall make my next remove I cannot
+tell; but I entreat you, dear Sir, to let me know, from time to
+time, where you may be found, for your residence is a very
+powerful attractive to, Sir, your most humble servant.'</p>
+<p>'To MR. PERKINS. 'DEAR SIR,</p>
+<p>'I cannot but flatter myself that your kindness for me will
+make you glad to know where I am, and in what state.</p>
+<p>'I have been struggling very hard with my diseases. My breath
+has been very much obstructed, and the water has attempted to
+encroach upon me again. I past the first part of the summer at
+Oxford, afterwards I went to Lichfield, thence to Ashbourne, in
+Derbyshire, and a week ago I returned to Lichfield.</p>
+<p>'My breath is now much easier, and the water is in a great
+measure run away, so that I hope to see you again before
+winter.</p>
+<p>'Please to make my compliments to Mrs. Perkins, and to Mr. and
+Mrs. Barclay.</p>
+<p>'I am, dear Sir, 'Your most humble servant, 'SAM. JOHNSON.'
+'Lichfield, Oct. 4, 1784.'</p>
+<p>'To THE RIGHT HON. WILLIAM GERARD HAMILTON. 'DEAR SIR,</p>
+<p>'Considering what reason<a href=
+"#note-1124">[1124]</a> you gave me in
+the spring to conclude that you took part in whatever good or
+evil might befal me, I ought not to have omitted so long the
+account which I am now about to give you. My diseases are an
+asthma and a dropsy, and, what is less curable, seventy-five. Of
+the dropsy, in the beginning of the summer, or in the spring, I
+recovered to a degree which struck with wonder both me and my
+physicians: the asthma now is likewise, for a time, very much
+relieved. I went to Oxford, where the asthma was very tyrannical,
+and the dropsy began again to threaten me; but seasonable physick
+stopped the inundation: I then returned to London, and in July
+took a resolution to visit Staffordshire and Derbyshire, where I
+am yet struggling with my diseases. The dropsy made another
+attack, and was not easily ejected, but at last gave way. The
+asthma suddenly remitted in bed, on the 13th of August, and,
+though now very oppressive, is, I think, still something gentler
+than it was before the remission. My limbs are miserably
+debilitated, and my nights are sleepless and tedious. When you
+read this, dear Sir, you are not sorry that I wrote no sooner. I
+will not prolong my complaints. I hope still to see you <i>in a
+happier hour</i><a href=
+"#note-1125">[1125]</a>, to talk over
+what we have often talked, and perhaps to find new topicks of
+merriment, or new incitements to curiosity. I am, dear Sir,
+&amp;c. SAM. JOHNSON. Lichfield, Oct. 20, 1784.'</p>
+<center>'TO JOHN PARADISE, ESQ.<a href=
+"#note-1126">[1126]</a></center>
+<center>DEAR SIR,</center>
+<p>Though in all my summer's excursion I have given you no
+account of myself, I hope you think better of me than to imagine
+it possible for me to forget you, whose kindness to me has been
+too great and too constant not to have made its impression on a
+harder breast than mine. Silence is not very culpable when
+nothing pleasing is suppressed. It would have alleviated none of
+your complaints to have read my vicissitudes of evil. I have
+struggled hard with very formidable and obstinate maladies; and
+though I cannot talk of health, think all praise due to my
+Creator and Preserver for the continuance of my life. The dropsy
+has made two attacks, and has given way to medicine; the asthma
+is very oppressive, but that has likewise once remitted. I am
+very weak, and very sleepless; but it is time to conclude the
+tale of misery. I hope, dear Sir, that you grow better, for you
+have likewise your share of human evil, and that your lady and
+the young charmers are well.</p>
+<p>I am, dear Sir, &amp;c. SAM. JOHNSON.</p>
+<p>Lichfield, Oct. 20, 1784.'</p>
+<p>'To Mr. George Nicol<a href=
+"#note-1127">[1127]</a>.</p>
+<p>'Dear Sir, 'Since we parted, I have been much oppressed by my
+asthma, but it has lately been less laborious. When I sit I am
+almost at ease, and I can walk, though yet very little, with less
+difficulty for this week past, than before. I hope I shall again
+enjoy my friends, and that you and I shall have a little more
+literary conversation. Where I now am, every thing is very
+liberally provided for me but conversation. My friend is sick
+himself, and the reciprocation of complaints and groans affords
+not much of either pleasure or instruction. What we have not at
+home this town does not supply, and I shall be glad of a little
+imported intelligence, and hope that you will bestow, now and
+then, a little time on the relief and entertainment of, Sir,
+'Yours, &amp;c. 'Sam. Johnson.'</p>
+<p>'Ashbourne, Aug. 19, 1784.'</p>
+<p>'To Mr. Cruikshank.</p>
+<p>'Dear Sir,</p>
+<p>'Do not suppose that I forget you; I hope I shall never be
+accused of forgetting my benefactors<a href=
+"#note-1128">[1128]</a>. I had, till
+lately, nothing to write but complaints upon complaints, of
+miseries upon miseries; but within this fortnight I have received
+great relief. Have your Lectures any vacation? If you are
+released from the necessity of daily study, you may find time for
+a letter to me. [In this letter he states the particulars of his
+case.] In return for this account of my health, let me have a
+good account of yours, and of your prosperity in all your
+undertakings.</p>
+<p>'I am, dear Sir, yours, &amp;c. 'Sam. Johnson.' 'Ashbourne,
+Sept. 4, 1784.'</p>
+<p>To Mr. Thomas Davies:&mdash;</p>
+<p>August 14. 'The tenderness with which you always treat me,
+makes me culpable in my own eyes for having omitted to write in
+so long a separation; I had, indeed, nothing to say that you
+could wish to hear. All has been hitherto misery accumulated upon
+misery, disease corroborating disease, till yesterday my asthma
+was perceptibly and unexpectedly mitigated. I am much comforted
+with this short relief, and am willing to flatter myself that it
+may continue and improve. I have at present, such a degree of
+ease, as not only may admit the comforts, but the duties of life.
+Make my compliments to Mrs. Davies. Poor dear Allen, he was a
+good man.'</p>
+<p>To SIR JOSHUA REYNOLDS:&mdash;</p>
+<p>Ashbourne, July 21. 'The tenderness with which I am treated by
+my friends, makes it reasonable to suppose that they are desirous
+to know the state of my health, and a desire so benevolent ought
+to be gratified. I came to Lichfield in two days without any
+painful fatigue, and on Monday came hither, where I purpose to
+stay: and try what air and regularity will effect. I cannot yet
+persuade myself that I have made much progress in recovery. My
+sleep is little, my breath is very much encumbered, and my legs
+are very weak. The water has encreased a little, but has again
+run off. The most distressing symptom is want of sleep.'</p>
+<p>August 19. 'Having had since our separation, little to say
+that could please you or myself by saying, I have not been lavish
+of useless letters; but I flatter myself that you will partake of
+the pleasure with which I can now tell you that about a week ago,
+I felt suddenly a sensible remission of my asthma, and
+consequently a greater lightness of action and motion. Of this
+grateful alleviation I know not the cause, nor dare depend upon
+its continuance, but while it lasts I endeavour to enjoy it, and
+am desirous of communicating, while it lasts, my pleasure to my
+friends. Hitherto, dear Sir, I had written before the post, which
+stays in this town but a little while, brought me your letter.
+Mr. Davies seems to have represented my little tendency to
+recovery in terms too splendid. I am still restless, still weak,
+still watery, but the asthma is less oppressive. Poor Ramsay<a
+href="#note-1129">[1129]</a>! On which
+side soever I turn, mortality presents its formidable frown. I
+left three old friends at Lichfield when I was last there, and
+now found them all dead. I no sooner lose sight of dear Allen,
+than I am told that I shall see him no more. That we must all
+die, we always knew; I wish I had sooner remembered it. Do not
+think me intrusive or importunate, if I now call, dear Sir, on
+you to remember it.'</p>
+<p>Sept. 2. 'I am glad that a little favour from the court has
+intercepted your furious purposes<a href=
+"#note-1130">[1130]</a>. I could not in
+any case have approved such publick violence of resentment, and
+should have considered any who encouraged it, as rather seeking
+sport for themselves, than honour for you. Resentment gratifies
+him who intended an injury, and pains him unjustly who did not
+intend it. But all this is now superfluous. I still continue by
+GOD'S mercy to mend. My breath is easier, my nights are quieter,
+and my legs are less in bulk, and stronger in use. I have,
+however, yet a great deal to overcome, before I can yet attain
+even an old man's health. Write, do write to me now and then; we
+are now old acquaintance, and perhaps few people have lived so
+much and so long together, with less cause of complaint on either
+side. The retrospection of this is very pleasant, and I hope we
+shall never think on each other with less kindness.'</p>
+<p>Sept. 9. 'I could not answer your letter<a href=
+"#note-1131">[1131]</a> before this day,
+because I went on the sixth to Chatsworth, and did not come back
+till the post was gone. Many words, I hope, are not necessary
+between you and me, to convince you what gratitude is excited in
+my heart, by the Chancellor's liberality and your kind offices. I
+did not indeed expect that what was asked by the Chancellor would
+have been refused<a href=
+"#note-1132">[1132]</a>, but since it
+has, we will not tell that any thing has been asked. I have
+enclosed a letter to the Chancellor which, when you have read it,
+you will be pleased to seal with a head, or other general seal,
+and convey it to him; had I sent it directly to him, I should
+have seemed to overlook the favour of your intervention. My last
+letter told you of my advance in health, which, I think, in the
+whole still continues. Of the hydropick tumour there is now very
+little appearance; the asthma is much less troublesome, and seems
+to remit something day after day. I do not despair of supporting
+an English winter. At Chatsworth, I met young Mr. Burke, who led
+me very commodiously into conversation with the Duke and Duchess.
+We had a very good morning. The dinner was publick<a href=
+"#note-1133">[1133]</a>.'</p>
+<p>Sept. 18. 'I flattered myself that this week would have given
+me a letter from you, but none has come. Write to me now and
+then, but direct your next to Lichfield. I think, and I hope, am
+sure, that I still grow better; I have sometimes good nights; but
+am still in my legs weak, but so much mended, that I go to
+Lichfield in hope of being able to pay my visits on foot, for
+there are no coaches. I have three letters this day, all about
+the balloon, I could have been content with one. Do not write
+about the balloon, whatever else you may think proper to say<a
+href="#note-1134">[1134]</a>.'</p>
+<p>October 2. 'I am always proud of your approbation, and
+therefore was much pleased that you liked my letter. When you
+copied it<a href="#note-1135">[1135]</a>,
+you invaded the Chancellor's right rather than mine. The refusal
+I did not expect, but I had never thought much about it, for I
+doubted whether the Chancellor had so much tenderness for me as
+to ask. He, being keeper of the King's conscience, ought not to
+be supposed capable of an improper petition. All is not gold that
+glitters, as we have often been told; and the adage is verified
+in your place<a href=
+"#note-1136">[1136]</a> and my favour;
+but if what happens does not make us richer, we must bid it
+welcome, if it makes us wiser. I do not at present grow better,
+nor much worse; my hopes, however, are somewhat abated, and a
+very great loss is the loss of hope, but I struggle on as I
+can.'</p>
+<center>TO MR. JOHN NICHOLS:&mdash;</center>
+<p>Lichfield, Oct. 20. 'When you were here, you were pleased, as
+I am told, to think my absence an inconvenience. I should
+certainly have been very glad to give so skilful a lover of
+antiquities any information about my native place, of which,
+however, I know not much, and have reason to believe that not
+much is known. Though I have not given you any amusement, I have
+received amusement from you. At Ashbourne, where I had very
+little company, I had the luck to borrow <i>Mr. Bowyer's
+Life</i><a href="#note-1137">[1137]</a>;
+a book so full of contemporary history, that a literary man must
+find some of his old friends. I thought that I could, now and
+then, have told you some hints<a href=
+"#note-1138">[1138]</a> worth your
+notice; and perhaps we may talk a life over. I hope we shall be
+much together; you must now be to me what you were before, and
+what dear Mr. Allen was, besides. He was taken unexpectedly away,
+but I think he was a very good man. I have made little progress
+in recovery. I am very weak, and very sleepless; but I live on
+and hope<a href=
+"#note-1139">[1139]</a>.'</p>
+<p>This various mass of correspondence, which I have thus brought
+together, is valuable, both as an addition to the store which the
+publick already has of Johnson's writings, and as exhibiting a
+genuine and noble specimen of vigour and vivacity of mind, which
+neither age nor sickness could impair or diminish.</p>
+<p>It may be observed, that his writing in every way, whether for
+the publick, or privately to his friends, was by fits and starts;
+for we see frequently, that many letters are written on the same
+day. When he had once overcome his aversion to begin, he was, I
+suppose, desirous to go on, in order to relieve his mind from the
+uneasy reflection of delaying what he ought to do<a href=
+"#note-1140">[1140]</a>.</p>
+<p>While in the country, notwithstanding the accumulation of
+illness which he endured, his mind did not lose its powers. He
+translated an Ode of Horace<a href=
+"#note-1141">[1141]</a>, which is printed
+in his <i>Works</i>, and composed several prayers. I shall insert
+one of them, which is so wise and energetick, so philosophical
+and so pious, that I doubt not of its affording consolation to
+many a sincere Christian, when in a state of mind to which I
+believe the best are sometimes liable<a href=
+"#note-1142">[1142]</a>.</p>
+<p>And here I am enabled fully to refute a very unjust
+reflection, by Sir John Hawkins<a href=
+"#note-1143">[1143]</a>, both against Dr.
+Johnson, and his faithful servant, Mr. Francis Barber<a href=
+"#note-1144">[1144]</a>; as if both of
+them had been guilty of culpable neglect towards a person of the
+name of Heely, whom Sir John chooses to call a <i>relation</i> of
+Dr. Johnson's. The fact is, that Mr. Heely was not his relation;
+he had indeed been married to one of his cousins, but she had
+died without having children, and he had married another woman;
+so that even the slight connection which there once had been by
+<i>alliance</i> was dissolved. Dr. Johnson, who had shewn very
+great liberality to this man while his first wife was alive, as
+has appeared in a former part of this work<a href=
+"#note-1145">[1145]</a>, was humane and
+charitable enough to continue his bounty to him occasionally; but
+surely there was no strong call of duty upon him or upon his
+legatee, to do more. The following letter, obligingly
+communicated to me by Mr. Andrew Strahan, will confirm what I
+have stated:&mdash;</p>
+<p>'TO MR. HEELY, No. 5, IN PYE-STREET, WESTMINSTER.</p>
+<center>'SIR,</center>
+<p>'As necessity obliges you to call so soon again upon me, you
+should at least have told the smallest sum that will supply your
+present want; you cannot suppose that I have much to spare. Two
+guineas is as much as you ought to be behind with your creditor.
+If you wait on Mr. Strahan, in New-street, Fetter-lane, or in his
+absence, on Mr. Andrew Strahan, shew this, by which they are
+entreated to advance you two guineas, and to keep this as a
+voucher.</p>
+<p>'I am, Sir,</p>
+<p>'Your humble servant,</p>
+<center>'SAM. JOHNSON.'</center>
+<p>'Ashbourne, Aug. 12, 1784.'</p>
+<p>Indeed it is very necessary to keep in mind that Sir John
+Hawkins has unaccountably viewed Johnson's character and conduct
+in almost every particular, with an unhappy prejudice<a href=
+"#note-1146">[1146]</a>.</p>
+<p>We now behold Johnson for the last time, in his native city,
+for which he ever retained a warm affection, and which, by a
+sudden apostrophe, under the word <i>Lich</i><a href=
+"#note-1147">[1147]</a>, he introduces
+with reverence, into his immortal Work, THE ENGLISH
+DICTIONARY:&mdash;<i>Salve, magna parens!<a href=
+"#note-1148">[1148]</a> While here, he
+felt a revival of all the tenderness of filial affection, an
+instance of which appeared in his ordering the grave-stone and
+inscription over Elizabeth Blaney<a href=
+"#note-1149">[1149]</a> to be
+substantially and carefully renewed.</i></p>
+<p>To Mr. Henry White<a href=
+"#note-1150">[1150]</a>, a young
+clergyman, with whom he now formed an intimacy, so as to talk to
+him with great freedom, he mentioned that he could not in general
+accuse himself of having been an undutiful son. 'Once, indeed,
+(said he,) I was disobedient; I refused to attend my father to
+Uttoxeter-market. Pride was the source of that refusal, and the
+remembrance of it was painful. A few years ago, I desired to
+atone for this fault; I went to Uttoxeter in very bad weather,
+and stood for a considerable time bareheaded in the rain, on the
+spot where my father's stall used to stand. In contrition I
+stood, and I hope the penance was expiatory<a href=
+"#note-1151">[1151]</a>.'</p>
+<p>'I told him (says Miss Seward) in one of my latest visits to
+him, of a wonderful learned pig, which I had seen at Nottingham;
+and which did all that we have observed exhibited by dogs and
+horses. The subject amused him. 'Then, (said he,) the pigs are a
+race unjustly calumniated. Pig <i>has, it seems, not been wanting
+to</i> man<i>, but</i> man <i>to</i> pig<i>. We do not allow</i>
+time <i>for his education, we kill him at a year old.' Mr. Henry
+White, who was present, observed that if this instance had
+happened in or before Pope's time, he would not have been
+justified in instancing the swine as the lowest degree of
+groveling instinct<a href=
+"#note-1152">[1152]</a>. Dr. Johnson
+seemed pleased with the observation, while the person who made it
+proceeded to remark, that great torture must have been employed,
+ere the indocility of the animal could have been subdued.
+'Certainly, (said the Doctor;) but, (turning to me,) how old is
+your pig?' I told him, three years old. 'Then, (said he,) the pig
+has no cause to complain; he would have been killed the first
+year if he had not been</i> educated<i>, and protracted existence
+is a good recompence for very considerable degrees of torture<a
+href="#note-1153">[1153]</a>.'</i></p>
+<p>As Johnson had now very faint hopes of recovery, and as Mrs.
+Thrale was no longer devoted to him, it might have been supposed
+that he would naturally have chosen to remain in the comfortable
+house of his beloved wife's daughter, and end his life where he
+began it. But there was in him an animated and lofty spirit<a
+href="#note-1154">[1154]</a>, and however
+complicated diseases might depress ordinary mortals, all who saw
+him, beheld and acknowledged the invictum animum Catonis<i><a
+href="#note-1155">[1155]</a>. Such was
+his intellectual ardour even at this time, that he said to one
+friend, 'Sir, I look upon every day to be lost, in which I do not
+make a new acquaintance<a href=
+"#note-1156">[1156]</a>;' and to another,
+when talking of his illness, 'I will be conquered; I will not
+capitulate<a href=
+"#note-1157">[1157]</a>.' And such was
+his love of London, so high a relish had he of its magnificent
+extent, and variety of intellectual entertainment, that he
+languished when absent from it, his mind having become quite
+luxurious from the long habit of enjoying the metropolis; and,
+therefore, although at Lichfield, surrounded with friends, who
+loved and revered him, and for whom he had a very sincere
+affection, he still found that such conversation as London
+affords, could be found no where else. These feelings, joined,
+probably, to some flattering hopes of aid from the eminent
+physicians and surgeons in London, who kindly and generously
+attended him without accepting fees, made him resolve to return
+to the capital. From Lichfield he came to Birmingham, where he
+passed a few days with his worthy old schoolfellow, Mr. Hector,
+who thus writes to me:&mdash;</i></p>
+<p>'He was very solicitous with me to recollect some of our most
+early transactions, and transmit them to him, for I perceive
+nothing gave him greater pleasure than calling to mind those days
+of our innocence. I complied with his request, and he only
+received them a few days before his death. I have transcribed for
+your inspection, exactly the minutes I wrote to him.'</p>
+<p>This paper having been found in his repositories after his
+death, Sir John Hawkins has inserted it entire<a href=
+"#note-1158">[1158]</a>, and I have made
+occasional use of it and other communications from Mr. Hector<a
+href="#note-1159">[1159]</a>, in the
+course of this Work. I have both visited and corresponded with
+him since Dr. Johnson's death, and by my inquiries concerning a
+great variety of particulars have obtained additional
+information. I followed the same mode with the Reverend Dr.
+Taylor, in whose presence I wrote down a good deal of what he
+could tell; and he, at my request, signed his name, to give it
+authenticity. It is very rare to find any person who is able to
+give a distinct account of the life even of one whom he has known
+intimately, without questions being put to them. My friend Dr.
+Kippis<a href="#note-1160">[1160]</a> has
+told me, that on this account it is a practice with him to draw
+out a biographical catechism.</p>
+<p>Johnson then proceeded to Oxford, where he was again kindly
+received by Dr. Adams<a href=
+"#note-1161">[1161]</a>, who was pleased
+to give me the following account in one of his letters, (Feb.
+17th, 1785):&mdash;</p>
+<p>'His last visit was, I believe, to my house, which he left,
+after a stay of four or five days. We had much serious talk
+together, for which I ought to be the better as long as I live.
+You will remember some discourse which we had in the summer upon
+the subject of prayer, and the difficulty of this sort of
+composition<a href=
+"#note-1162">[1162]</a>. He reminded me
+of this, and of my having wished him to try his hand, and to give
+us a specimen of the style and manner that he approved. He added,
+that he was now in a right frame of mind, and as he could not
+possibly employ his time better, he would in earnest set about
+it. But I find upon enquiry, that no papers of this sort were
+left behind him, except a few short ejaculatory forms suitable to
+his present situation.'</p>
+<p>Dr. Adams had not then received accurate information on this
+subject; for it has since appeared that various prayers had been
+composed by him at different periods, which, intermingled with
+pious resolutions, and some short notes of his life, were
+entitled by him Prayers and Meditations<i>, and have, in
+pursuance of his earnest requisition, in the hopes of doing good,
+been published, with a judicious well-written Preface, by the
+Reverend Mr. Strahan, to whom he delivered them<a href=
+"#note-1163">[1163]</a>. This admirable
+collection, to which I have frequently referred in the course of
+this Work, evinces, beyond all his compositions for the publick,
+and all the eulogies of his friends and admirers, the sincere
+virtue and piety of Johnson. It proves with unquestionable
+authenticity, that amidst all his constitutional infirmities, his
+earnestness to conform his practice to the precepts of
+Christianity was unceasing, and that he habitually endeavoured to
+refer every transaction of his life to the will of the Supreme
+Being.</i></p>
+<p>He arrived in London on the 16th of November, and next day
+sent to Dr. Burney the following note, which I insert as the last
+token of his remembrance of that ingenious and amiable man, and
+as another of the many proofs of the tenderness and benignity of
+his heart:&mdash;</p>
+<p>'MR. JOHNSON, who came home last night, sends his respects to
+dear Dr. Burney, and all the dear Burneys, little and great<a
+href="#note-1164">[1164]</a>.'</p>
+<center>'TO MR. HECTOR, IN BIRMINGHAM.</center>
+<center>'DEAR SIR,</center>
+<p>'I did not reach Oxford until Friday morning, and then I sent
+Francis to see the balloon fly, but could not go myself. I staid
+at Oxford till Tuesday, and then came in the common vehicle
+easily to London. I am as I was, and having seen Dr. Brocklesby,
+am to ply the squills; but, whatever be their efficacy, this
+world must soon pass away. Let us think seriously on our duty. I
+send my kindest respects to dear Mrs. Careless<a href=
+"#note-1165">[1165]</a>: let me have the
+prayers of both. We have all lived long, and must soon part. GOD
+have mercy on us, for the sake of our Lord JESUS CHRIST.
+Amen.</p>
+<p>'I am, &amp;c.</p>
+<center>'SAM. JOHNSON.'</center>
+<p>'London, Nov. 17, 1784.'</p>
+<p>His correspondence with me, after his letter on the subject of
+my settling in London, shall now, so far as is proper, be
+produced in one series:&mdash;</p>
+<p>July 26, he wrote to me from Ashbourne:&mdash;</p>
+<p>'On the 14th I came to Lichfield, and found every body glad
+enough to see me. On the 20th, I came hither, and found a house
+half-built, of very uncomfortable appearance; but my own room has
+not been altered. That a man worn with diseases, in his
+seventy-second or third year, should condemn part of his
+remaining life to pass among ruins and rubbish, and that no
+inconsiderable part, appears to me very strange. I know that your
+kindness makes you impatient to know the state of my health, in
+which I cannot boast of much improvement. I came through the
+journey without much inconvenience, but when I attempt
+self-motion I find my legs weak, and my breath very short; this
+day I have been much disordered. I have no company; the Doctor<a
+href="#note-1166">[1166]</a> is busy in
+his fields, and goes to bed at nine, and his whole system is so
+different from mine, that we seem formed for different elements<a
+href="#note-1167">[1167]</a>; I have,
+therefore, all my amusement to seek within myself.'</p>
+<p>Having written to him, in bad spirits, a letter filled with
+dejection and fretfulness, and at the same time expressing
+anxious apprehensions concerning him, on account of a dream which
+had disturbed me; his answer was chiefly in terms of reproach,
+for a supposed charge of 'affecting discontent, and indulging the
+vanity of complaint.' It, however, proceeded,&mdash;</p>
+<p>'Write to me often, and write like a man. I consider your
+fidelity and tenderness as a great part of the comforts which are
+yet left me, and sincerely wish we could be nearer to each
+other.... My dear friend, life is very short and very uncertain;
+let us spend it as well as we can. My worthy neighbour, Allen, is
+dead. Love me as well as you can. Pay my respects to dear Mrs.
+Boswell. Nothing ailed me at that time; let your superstition at
+last have an end.'</p>
+<p>Feeling very soon, that the manner in which he had written
+might hurt me, he two days afterwards, July 28, wrote to me
+again, giving me an account of his sufferings; after which, he
+thus proceeds:&mdash;</p>
+<p>'Before this letter, you will have had one which I hope you
+will not take amiss; for it contains only truth, and that truth
+kindly intended.... Spartam quam nactus es orna<i><a href=
+"#note-1168">[1168]</a>; make the most
+and best of your lot, and compare yourself not with the few that
+are above you, but with the multitudes which are below you.... Go
+steadily forward with lawful business or honest diversions.</i>
+Be <i>(as Temple says of the Dutchmen)</i> well when you are not
+ill, and pleased when you are not angry<i><a href=
+"#note-1169">[1169]</a>.... This may seem
+but an ill return for your tenderness; but I mean it well, for I
+love you with great ardour and sincerity. Pay my respects to dear
+Mrs. Boswell, and teach the young ones to love me.'</i></p>
+<p>I unfortunately was so much indisposed during a considerable
+part of the year, that it was not, or at least I thought it was
+not in my power to write to my illustrious friend as formerly, or
+without expressing such complaints as offended him. Having
+conjured him not to do me the injustice of charging me with
+affectation, I was with much regret long silent. His last letter
+to me then came, and affected me very tenderly:&mdash;</p>
+<center>'TO JAMES BOSWELL, ESQ.</center>
+<center>'DEAR SIR,</center>
+<p>'I have this summer sometimes amended, and sometimes relapsed,
+but, upon the whole, have lost ground, very much. My legs are
+extremely weak, and my breath very short, and the water is now
+encreasing upon me. In this uncomfortable state your letters used
+to relieve; what is the reason that I have them no longer? Are
+you sick, or are you sullen? Whatever be the reason, if it be
+less than necessity, drive it away; and of the short life that we
+have, make the best use for yourself and for your friends.... I
+am sometimes afraid that your omission to write has some real
+cause, and shall be glad to know that you are not sick, and that
+nothing ill has befallen dear Mrs. Boswell, or any of your
+family.</p>
+<p>'I am, Sir, your, &amp;c.</p>
+<center>'SAM. JOHNSON.'</center>
+<p>'Lichfield, Nov. 5, 1784.'</p>
+<p>Yet it was not a little painful to me to find, that in a
+paragraph of this letter, which I have omitted, he still
+persevered in arraigning me as before, which was strange in him
+who had so much experience of what I suffered. I, however, wrote
+to him two as kind letters as I could; the last of which came too
+late to be read by him, for his illness encreased more rapidly
+upon him than I had apprehended; but I had the consolation of
+being informed that he spoke of me on his death-bed, with
+affection, and I look forward with humble hope of renewing our
+friendship in a better world.</p>
+<p>I now relieve the readers of this Work from any farther
+personal notice of its authour, who if he should be thought to
+have obtruded himself too much upon their attention, requests
+them to consider the peculiar plan of his biographical
+undertaking.</p>
+<p>Soon after Johnson's return to the metropolis, both the asthma
+and dropsy became more violent and distressful. He had for some
+time kept a journal in Latin of the state of his illness, and the
+remedies which he used, under the title of Aegri Ephemeris<i>,
+which he began on the 6th of July, but continued it no longer
+than the 8th of November; finding, I suppose, that it was a
+mournful and unavailing register. It is in my possession; and is
+written with great care and accuracy.</i></p>
+<p>Still his love of literature<a href=
+"#note-1170">[1170]</a> did not fail. A
+very few days before his death he transmitted to his friend Mr.
+John Nichols, a list of the authours of the Universal History<i>,
+mentioning their several shares in that work. It has, according
+to his direction, been deposited in the British Museum, and is
+printed in the</i> Gentleman's Magazine <i>for December,
+1784.</i></p>
+<p>During his sleepless nights he amused himself by translating
+into Latin verse, from the Greek, many of the epigrams in the
+Anthologica<a href=
+"#note-1171">[1171]</a>. These
+translations, with some other poems by him in Latin, he gave to
+his friend Mr. Langton, who, having added a few notes, sold them
+to the booksellers for a small sum, to be given to some of
+Johnson's relations, which was accordingly done; and they are
+printed in the collection of his works.</p>
+<p>A very erroneous notion has circulated as to Johnson's
+deficiency in the knowledge of the Greek language, partly owing
+to the modesty with which, from knowing how much there was to be
+learnt, he used to mention his own comparative acquisitions. When
+Mr. Cumberland<a href=
+"#note-1172">[1172]</a> talked to him of
+the Greek fragments which are so well illustrated in The
+Observer<a href="#note-1173">[1173]</a>,
+and of the Greek dramatists in general, he candidly acknowledged
+his insufficiency in that particular branch of Greek literature.
+Yet it may be said, that though not a great, he was a good Greek
+scholar. Dr. Charles Burney<a href=
+"#note-1174">[1174]</a>, the younger, who
+is universally acknowledged by the best judges to be one of the
+few men of this age who are very eminent for their skill in that
+noble language, has assured me, that Johnson could give a Greek
+word for almost every English one; and that although not
+sufficiently conversant in the niceties of the language, he upon
+some occasions discovered, even in these, a considerable degree
+of critical acumen. Mr. Dalzel, Professor of Greek at Edinburgh,
+whose skill in it is unquestionable, mentioned to me, in very
+liberal terms, the impression which was made upon him by Johnson,
+in a conversation which they had in London concerning that
+language. As Johnson, therefore, was undoubtedly one of the first
+Latin scholars in modern times, let us not deny to his fame some
+additional splendour from Greek<a href=
+"#note-1175">[1175]</a>.</p>
+<p>I shall now fulfil my promise<a href=
+"#note-1176">[1176]</a> of exhibiting
+specimens of various sorts of imitation of Johnson's style.</p>
+<p>In the Transactions of the Royal Irish Academy<i>, 1787, there
+is an 'Essay on the Style of Dr. Samuel Johnson,' by the Reverend
+Robert Burrowes, whose respect for the great object of his
+criticism<a href="#note-1177">[1177]</a>
+is thus evinced in the concluding paragraph:&mdash;</i></p>
+<p>'I have singled him out from the whole body of English
+writers, because his universally-acknowledged beauties would be
+most apt to induce imitation; and I have treated rather on his
+faults than his perfections, because an essay might comprize all
+the observations I could make upon his faults, while volumes
+would not be sufficient for a treatise on his perfections.'</p>
+<p>Mr. BURROWES has analysed the composition of Johnson, and
+pointed out its peculiarities with much acuteness; and I would
+recommend a careful perusal of his Essay to those, who being
+captivated by the union of perspicuity and splendour which the
+writings of Johnson contain, without having a sufficient portion
+of his vigour of mind, may be in danger of becoming bad copyists
+of his manner. I, however, cannot but observe, and I observe it
+to his credit, that this learned gentleman has himself caught no
+mean degree of the expansion and harmony, which, independent of
+all other circumstances, characterise the sentences of Johnson.
+Thus, in the Preface to the volume in which his Essay appears, we
+find,&mdash;</p>
+<p>'If it be said that in societies of this sort, too much
+attention is frequently bestowed on subjects barren and
+speculative, it may be answered, that no one science is so little
+connected with the rest, as not to afford many principles whose
+use may extend considerably beyond the science to which they
+primarily belong; and that no proposition is so purely
+theoretical as to be totally incapable of being applied to
+practical purposes. There is no apparent connection between
+duration and the cycloidal arch, the properties of which duly
+attended to, have furnished us with our best regulated methods of
+measuring time: and he who has made himself master of the nature
+and affections of the logarithmick curve, is not aware that he
+has advanced considerably towards ascertaining the proportionable
+density of the air at its various distances from the surface of
+the earth.'</p>
+<p>The ludicrous imitators of Johnson's style are innumerable.
+Their general method is to accumulate hard words, without
+considering, that, although he was fond of introducing them
+occasionally, there is not a single sentence in all his writings
+where they are crowded together, as in the first verse of the
+following imaginary Ode by him to Mrs. Thrale<a href=
+"#note-1178">[1178]</a>, which appeared
+in the newspapers:&mdash;</p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'Cervisial coctor's viduate <i>dame,
+ </i> Opin'st <i>thou this gigantick frame,
+ </i> Procumbing <i>at thy shrine:
+ Shall,</i> catenated <i>by thy charms,
+ A captive in thy</i> ambient <i>arms,
+ </i> Perennially<i> be thine?'
+</i>
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>This, and a thousand other such attempts, are totally unlike
+the original, which the writers imagined they were turning into
+ridicule. There is not similarity enough for burlesque, or even
+for caricature.</p>
+<p>Mr. COLMAN, in his Prose on several occasions<i>, has</i> A
+Letter from LEXIPHANES<a href=
+"#note-1179">[1179]</a>; containing
+Proposals for a Glossary or Vocabulary of the Vulgar Tongue:
+intended as a Supplement to a larger DICTIONARY<i>. It is
+evidently meant as a sportive sally of ridicule on Johnson, whose
+style is thus imitated, without being grossly
+overcharged:&mdash;</i></p>
+<p>'It is easy to foresee, that the idle and illiterate will
+complain that I have increased their labours by endeavouring to
+diminish them; and that I have explained what is more easy by
+what is more difficult&mdash; ignotum per ignotius<i>. I expect,
+on the other hand, the liberal acknowledgements of the learned.
+He who is buried in scholastick retirement, secluded from the
+assemblies of the gay, and remote from the circles of the polite,
+will at once comprehend the definitions, and be grateful for such
+a seasonable and necessary elucidation of his
+mother-tongue.'</i></p>
+
+<p>Annexed to this letter is a short specimen of the work,
+thrown together</p>
+<p>in a vague and desultory manner, not even adhering to
+alphabetical concatenation<a href=
+"#note-1180">[1180]</a>.</p>
+<p>The serious imitators of Johnson's style, whether
+intentionally or by the imperceptible effect of its strength and
+animation, are, as I have had already occasion to observe, so
+many, that I might introduce quotations from a numerous body of
+writers in our language, since he appeared in the literary world.
+I shall point out only the following:&mdash;</p>
+<center>WILLIAM ROBERTSON, D.D.<a href=
+"#note-1181">[1181]</a></center>
+<p>'In other parts of the globe, man, in his rudest state,
+appears as lord of the creation, giving law to various tribes of
+animals which he has tamed and reduced to subjection. The Tartar
+follows his prey on the horse which he has reared, or tends his
+numerous herds, which furnish him both with food and clothing;
+the Arab has rendered the camel docile, and avails himself of its
+persevering strength; the Laplander has formed the rein-deer to
+be subservient to his will; and even the people of Kamschatka
+have trained their dogs to labour. This command over the
+inferiour creatures is one of the noblest prerogatives of man,
+and among the greatest efforts of his wisdom and power. Without
+this, his dominion is incomplete. He is a monarch who has no
+subjects; a master without servants; and must perform every
+operation by the strength of his own arm<a href=
+"#note-1182">[1182]</a>.'</p>
+<p>EDWARD GIBBON, Esq.<a href=
+"#note-1183">[1183]</a></p>
+<p>'Of all our passions and appetites, the love of power is of
+the most imperious and unsociable nature, since the pride of one
+man requires the submission of the multitude. In the tumult of
+civil discord the laws of society lose their force, and their
+place is seldom supplied by those of humanity. The ardour of
+contention, the pride of victory, the despair of success, the
+memory of past injuries, and the fear of future dangers, all
+contribute to inflame the mind, and to silence the voice of
+pity<a href="#note-1184">[1184]</a>.'</p>
+<center>MISS BURNEY<a href=
+"#note-1185">[1185]</a>.</center>
+<p>'My family, mistaking ambition for honour, and rank for
+dignity, have long planned a splendid connection for me, to
+which, though my invariable repugnance has stopped any advances,
+their wishes and their views immovably adhere. I am but too
+certain they will now listen to no other. I dread, therefore, to
+make a trial where I despair of success; I know not how to risk a
+prayer with those who may silence me by a command<a href=
+"#note-1186">[1186]</a>.'</p>
+<center>REVEREND MR. NARES<a href=
+"#note-1187">[1187]</a>.</center>
+<p>'In an enlightened and improving age, much perhaps is not to
+be apprehended from the inroads of mere caprice; at such a period
+it will generally be perceived, that needless irregularity is the
+worst of all deformities, and that nothing is so truly elegant in
+language as the simplicity of unviolated analogy. Rules will,
+therefore, be observed, so far as they are known and
+acknowledged: but, at the same time, the desire of improvement
+having been once excited will not remain inactive; and its
+efforts, unless assisted by knowledge, as much as they are
+prompted by zeal, will not unfrequently be found pernicious; so
+that the very persons whose intention it is to perfect the
+instrument of reason, will deprave and disorder it unknowingly.
+At such a time, then, it becomes peculiarly necessary that the
+analogy of language should be fully examined and understood; that
+its rules should be carefully laid down; and that it should be
+clearly known how much it contains, which being already right
+should be defended from change and violation: how much it has
+that demands amendment; and how much that, for fear of greater
+inconveniencies, must, perhaps, be left unaltered, though
+irregular.'</p>
+<p>A distinguished authour in The Mirror<i><a href=
+"#note-1188">[1188]</a>, a periodical
+paper, published at Edinburgh, has imitated Johnson very closely.
+Thus, in No. 16,&mdash;</i></p>
+<p>'The effects of the return of spring have been frequently
+remarked as well in relation to the human mind as to the animal
+and vegetable world. The reviving power of this season has been
+traced from the fields to the herds that inhabit them, and from
+the lower classes of beings up to man. Gladness and joy are
+described as prevailing through universal Nature, animating the
+low of the cattle, the carol of the birds, and the pipe of the
+shepherd.'</p>
+<p>The Reverend Dr. KNOX<a href=
+"#note-1189">[1189]</a>, master of
+Tunbridge school, appears to have the imitari avco<i><a href=
+"#note-1190">[1190]</a> of Johnson's
+style perpetually in his mind; and to his assiduous, though not
+servile, study of it, we may partly ascribe the extensive
+popularity of his writings<a href=
+"#note-1191">[1191]</a>.</i></p>
+<p>In his Essays, Moral and Literary<i>, No. 3, we find the
+following passage:&mdash;</i></p>
+<p>'The polish of external grace may indeed be deferred till the
+approach of manhood. When solidity is obtained by pursuing the
+modes prescribed by our fore-fathers, then may the file be used.
+The firm substance will bear attrition, and the lustre then
+acquired will be durable.'</p>
+<p>There is, however, one in No. 11, which is blown up into such
+tumidity, as to be truly ludicrous. The writer means to tell us,
+that Members of Parliament, who have run in debt by extravagance,
+will sell their votes to avoid an arrest<a href=
+"#note-1192">[1192]</a>, which he thus
+expresses:&mdash;</p>
+<p>'They who build houses and collect costly pictures and
+furniture with the money of an honest artisan or mechanick, will
+be very glad of emancipation from the hands of a bailiff, by a
+sale of their senatorial suffrage.'</p>
+<p>But I think the most perfect imitation of Johnson is a
+professed one, entitled A Criticism on Gray's Elegy in a Country
+Church-Yard<i>, said to be written by Mr. Young, Professor of
+Greek, at Glasgow, and of which let him have the credit, unless a
+better title can be shewn. It has not only the peculiarities of
+Johnson's style, but that very species of literary discussion and
+illustration for which he was eminent. Having already quoted so
+much from others, I shall refer the curious to this performance,
+with an assurance of much entertainment<a href=
+"#note-1193">[1193]</a>.</i></p>
+<p>Yet whatever merit there may be in any imitations of Johnson's
+style, every good judge must see that they are obviously
+different from the original; for all of them are either deficient
+in its force, or overloaded with its peculiarities; and the
+powerful sentiment to which it is suited is not to be found<a
+href="#note-1194">[1194]</a>.</p>
+<p>Johnson's affection for his departed relations seemed to grow
+warmer as he approached nearer to the time when he might hope to
+see them again. It probably appeared to him that he should
+upbraid himself with unkind inattention, were he to leave the
+world without having paid a tribute of respect to their
+memory.</p>
+<p>'To MR. GREEN<a href=
+"#note-1195">[1195]</a>, APOTHECARY, AT
+LICHFIELD.</p>
+<center>'DEAR SIR,</center>
+<p>'I have enclosed the Epitaph<a href=
+"#note-1196">[1196]</a> for my Father,
+Mother, and Brother, to be all engraved on the large size, and
+laid in the middle aisle in St. Michael's church, which I request
+the clergyman and churchwardens to permit.</p>
+<p>'The first care must be to find the exact place of interment,
+that the stone may protect the bodies<a href=
+"#note-1197">[1197]</a>. Then let the
+stone be deep, massy, and hard; and do not let the difference of
+ten pounds, or more, defeat our purpose.</p>
+<p>'I have enclosed ten pounds, and Mrs. Porter will pay you ten
+more, which I gave her for the same purpose. What more is wanted
+shall be sent; and I beg that all possible haste may be made, for
+I wish to have it done while I am yet alive. Let me know, dear
+Sir, that you receive this.</p>
+<p>'I am, Sir,</p>
+<p>'Your most humble servant,</p>
+<center>'SAM. JOHNSON.'</center>
+<p>'Dec. 2, 1784.'</p>
+<p>'To MRS. LUCY PORTER, IN LICHFIELD.</p>
+<center>'DEAR MADAM,</center>
+<p>'I am very ill, and desire your prayers. I have sent Mr. Green
+the Epitaph, and a power to call on you for ten pounds.</p>
+<p>'I laid this summer a stone over Tetty, in the chapel of
+Bromley, in Kent<a href=
+"#note-1198">[1198]</a>. The inscription
+is in Latin, of which this is the English. [Here a
+translation.]</p>
+<p>'That this is done, I thought it fit that you should know.
+What care will be taken of us, who can tell? May GOD pardon and
+bless us, for JESUS CHRIST'S sake.</p>
+<p>'I am, &amp;c.</p>
+<center>'SAM. JOHNSON<a href=
+"#note-1199">[1199]</a>,'</center>
+<p>'Dec. 2, 1784.'</p>
+<p>My readers are now, at last, to behold SAMUEL JOHNSON
+preparing himself for that doom, from which the most exalted
+powers afford no exemption to man<a href=
+"#note-1200">[1200]</a>. Death had always
+been to him an object of terrour; so that, though by no means
+happy, he still clung to life with an eagerness at which many
+have wondered. At any time when he was ill, he was very much
+pleased to be told that he looked better. An ingenious member of
+the Eumelian Club<i><a href=
+"#note-1201">[1201]</a>, informs me, that
+upon one occasion when he said to him that he saw health
+returning to his cheek, Johnson seized him by the hand and
+exclaimed, 'Sir, you are one of the kindest friends I ever
+had.'</i></p>
+<p>His own state of his views of futurity will appear truly
+rational; and may, perhaps, impress the unthinking with
+seriousness.</p>
+<p>'You know, (says he,)<a href=
+"#note-1202">[1202]</a> I never thought
+confidence with respect to futurity, any part of the character of
+a brave, a wise, or a good man. Bravery has no place where it can
+avail nothing; wisdom impresses strongly the consciousness of
+those faults, of which it is, perhaps, itself an aggravation; and
+goodness, always wishing to be better, and imputing every
+deficience to criminal negligence, and every fault to voluntary
+corruption, never dares to suppose the condition of forgiveness
+fulfilled, nor what is wanting in the crime supplied by
+penitence.</p>
+<p>'This is the state of the best; but what must be the condition
+of him whose heart will not suffer him to rank himself among the
+best, or among the good? Such must be his dread of the
+approaching trial, as will leave him little attention to the
+opinion of those whom he is leaving for ever; and the serenity
+that is not felt, it can be no virtue to feign.'</p>
+<p>His great fear of death, and the strange dark manner in which
+Sir John Hawkins<a href=
+"#note-1203">[1203]</a> imparts the
+uneasiness which he expressed on account of offences with which
+he charged himself, may give occasion to injurious suspicions, as
+if there had been something of more than ordinary criminality
+weighing upon his conscience. On that account, therefore, as well
+as from the regard to truth which he inculcated<a href=
+"#note-1204">[1204]</a>, I am to mention,
+(with all possible respect and delicacy, however,) that his
+conduct, after he came to London, and had associated with Savage
+and others, was not so strictly virtuous, in one respect, as when
+he was a younger man. It was well known, that his amorous
+inclinations were uncommonly strong and impetuous. He owned to
+many of his friends, that he used to take women of the town to
+taverns, and hear them relate their history<a href=
+"#note-1205">[1205]</a>. In short, it
+must not be concealed, that, like many other good and pious men,
+among whom we may place the Apostle Paul upon his own authority,
+Johnson was not free from propensities which were ever 'warring
+against the law of his mind<a href=
+"#note-1206">[1206]</a>,'&mdash;and that
+in his combats with them, he was sometimes overcome<a href=
+"#note-1207">[1207]</a>.</p>
+<p>Here let the profane and licentious pause; let them not
+thoughtlessly say that Johnson was an hypocrite<i>, or that
+his</i> principles <i>were not firm, because his</i> practice
+<i>was not uniformly conformable to what he professed.</i></p>
+<p>Let the question be considered independent of moral and
+religious association; and no man will deny that thousands, in
+many instances, act against conviction. Is a prodigal, for
+example, an hypocrite<i>, when he owns he is satisfied that his
+extravagance will bring him to ruin and misery? We are</i> sure
+<i>he</i> believes <i>it; but immediate inclination, strengthened
+by indulgence, prevails over that belief in influencing his
+conduct. Why then shall credit be refused to the</i> sincerity
+<i>of those who acknowledge their persuasion of moral and
+religious duty, yet sometimes fail of living as it requires? I
+heard Dr. Johnson once observe, 'There is something noble in
+publishing truth, though it condemns one's self<a href=
+"#note-1208">[1208]</a>.' And one who
+said in his presence, 'he had no notion of people being in
+earnest in their good professions, whose practice was not
+suitable to them,' was thus reprimanded by him:&mdash;'Sir, are
+you so grossly ignorant of human nature as not to know that a man
+may be very sincere in good principles, without having good
+practice<a href=
+"#note-1209">[1209]</a>?'</i></p>
+<p>But let no man encourage or soothe himself in 'presumptuous
+sin<a href="#note-1210">[1210]</a>,' from
+knowing that Johnson was sometimes hurried into indulgences which
+he thought criminal. I have exhibited this circumstance as a
+shade in so great a character, both from my sacred love of truth,
+and to shew that he was not so weakly scrupulous as he has been
+represented by those who imagine that the sins, of which a deep
+sense was upon his mind, were merely such little venial trifles
+as pouring milk into his tea on Good-Friday. His understanding
+will be defended by my statement, if his consistency of conduct
+be in some degree impaired. But what wise man would, for
+momentary gratifications, deliberately subject himself to suffer
+such uneasiness as we find was experienced by Johnson in
+reviewing his conduct as compared with his notion of the ethicks
+of the gospel? Let the following passages be kept in
+remembrance:&mdash;</p>
+<p>'O, GOD, giver and preserver of all life, by whose power I was
+created, and by whose providence I am sustained, look down upon
+me with tenderness and mercy; grant that I may not have been
+created to be finally destroyed; that I may not be preserved to
+add wickedness to wickedness<a href=
+"#note-1211">[1211]</a>.' 'O, LORD, let
+me not sink into total depravity; look down upon me, and rescue
+me at last from the captivity of sin<a href=
+"#note-1212">[1212]</a>.' 'Almighty and
+most merciful Father, who hast continued my life from year to
+year, grant that by longer life I may become less desirous of
+sinful pleasures, and more careful of eternal happiness<a href=
+"#note-1213">[1213]</a>.' 'Let not my
+years be multiplied to increase my guilt; but as my age advances,
+let me become more pure in my thoughts, more regular in my
+desires, and more obedient to thy laws<a href=
+"#note-1214">[1214]</a>.' 'Forgive, O
+merciful LORD, whatever I have done contrary to thy laws. Give me
+such a sense of my wickedness as may produce true contrition and
+effectual repentance; so that when I shall be called into another
+state, I may be received among the sinners to whom whom sorrow
+and reformation have obtained pardon, for JESUS CHRIST'S sake.
+Amen<a href="#note-1215">[1215]</a>.'</p>
+<p>Such was the distress of mind, such the penitence of Johnson,
+in his hours of privacy, and in his devout approaches to his
+Maker. His sincerity<i>, therefore, must appear to every candid
+mind unquestionable.</i></p>
+<p>It is of essential consequence to keep in view, that there was
+in this excellent man's conduct no false principle of
+commutation<i>, no</i> deliberate <i>indulgence in sin, in
+consideration of a counter-balance of duty. His offending, and
+his repenting, were distinct and separate<a href=
+"#note-1216">[1216]</a>: and when we
+consider his almost unexampled attention to truth, his inflexible
+integrity, his constant piety, who will dare to 'cast a stone at
+him<a href="#note-1217">[1217]</a>?'
+Besides, let it never be forgotten, that he cannot be charged
+with any offence indicating badness of</i> heart<i>, any thing
+dishonest, base, or malignant; but that, on the contrary, he was
+charitable in an extraordinary degree: so that even in one of his
+own rigid judgements of himself, (Easter-eve, 1781,) while he
+says, 'I have corrected no external habits;' he is obliged to
+own, 'I hope that since my last communion I have advanced, by
+pious reflections, in my submission to GOD, and my benevolence to
+man<a href=
+"#note-1218">[1218]</a>.'</i></p>
+<p>I am conscious that this is the most difficult and dangerous
+part of my biographical work, and I cannot but be very anxious
+concerning it. I trust that I have got through it, preserving at
+once my regard to truth,&mdash;to my friend,&mdash;and to the
+interests of virtue and religion. Nor can I apprehend that more
+harm can ensue from the knowledge of the irregularity of Johnson,
+guarded as I have stated it, than from knowing that Addison and
+Parnell were intemperate in the use of wine; which he himself, in
+his Lives <i>of those celebrated writers and pious men, has not
+forborne to record<a href=
+"#note-1219">[1219]</a>.</i></p>
+<p>It is not my intention to give a very minute detail of the
+particulars of Johnson's remaining days<a href=
+"#note-1220">[1220]</a>, of whom it was
+now evident, that the crisis was fast approaching, when he must
+'die like men, and fall like one of the Princes<i><a href=
+"#note-1221">[1221]</a>.' Yet it will be
+instructive, as well as gratifying to the curiosity of my
+readers, to record a few circumstances, on the authenticity of
+which they may perfectly rely, as I have been at the utmost pains
+to obtain an accurate account of his last illness, from the best
+authority<a href=
+"#note-1222">[1222]</a>.</i></p>
+<p>Dr. Heberden<a href=
+"#note-1223">[1223]</a>, Dr. Brocklesby,
+Dr. Warren[1224], and Dr. Butter, physicians, generously attended
+him, without accepting any fees, as did Mr. Cruikshank, surgeon;
+and all that could be done from professional skill and ability,
+was tried, to prolong a life so truly valuable. He himself,
+indeed, having, on account of his very bad constitution, been
+perpetually applying himself to medical inquiries, united his own
+efforts with those of the gentlemen who attended him; and
+imagining that the dropsical collection of water which oppressed
+him might be drawn off by making incisions in his body, he, with
+his usual resolute defiance of pain, cut deep, when he thought
+that his surgeon had done it too tenderly<a href=
+"#note-1225">[1225]</a>.</p>
+<p>About eight or ten days before his death, when Dr. Brocklesby
+paid him his morning visit, he seemed very low and desponding,
+and said, 'I have been as a dying man all night.' He then
+emphatically broke out in the words of Shakspeare,&mdash;</p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'Can'st thou not minister to a mind diseas'd;
+ Pluck from the memory a rooted sorrow;
+ Raze out the written troubles of the brain;
+ And, with some sweet oblivious antidote,
+ Cleanse the stuff'd bosom of that perilous stuff,
+ Which weighs upon the heart?'
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>To which Dr. Brocklesby readily answered, from the same great
+poet:&mdash;</p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ '&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;therein the patient
+ Must minister to himself<a href=
+"#note-1226">1226</a>.'
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>Johnson expressed himself much satisfied with the
+application.</p>
+<p>On another day after this, when talking on the subject of
+prayer, Dr. Brocklesby repeated from Juvenal,&mdash;</p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'Orandum est, ut sit mens sana in corpore Sano<i><a href=
+"#note-1227">1227</a>,'
+</i>
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>and so on to the end of the tenth satire; but in running it
+quickly over, he happened, in the line,</p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'Qui spatium vitae; extremum inter munera ponat<i>,'
+</i>
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>to pronounce supremum <i>for</i> extremum<i>; at which
+Johnson's critical ear instantly took offence, and discoursing
+vehemently on the unmetrical effect of such a lapse, he shewed
+himself as full as ever of the spirit of the grammarian<a href=
+"#note-1228">[1228]</a>.</i></p>
+<p>Having no near relations<a href=
+"#note-1229">[1229]</a>, it had been for
+some time Johnson's intention to make a liberal provision for his
+faithful servant, Mr. Francis Barber, whom he looked upon as
+particularly under his protection, and whom he had all along
+treated truly as an humble friend. Having asked Dr. Brocklesby
+what would be a proper annuity to a favourite servant, and being
+answered that it must depend on the circumstances of the master;
+and, that in the case of a nobleman, fifty pounds a year was
+considered as an adequate reward for many years' faithful
+service; 'Then, (said Johnson,) shall I be nobilissimus<i>, for I
+mean to leave Frank seventy pounds a year, and I desire you to
+tell him so<a href=
+"#note-1230">[1230]</a>.' It is strange,
+however, to think, that Johnson was not free from that general
+weakness of being averse to execute a will, so that he delayed it
+from time to time<a href=
+"#note-1231">[1231]</a>; and had it not
+been for Sir John Hawkins's repeatedly urging it, I think it is
+probable that his kind resolution would not have been fulfilled.
+After making one, which, as Sir John Hawkins informs us, extended
+no further than the promised annuity, Johnson's final disposition
+of his property was established by a Will and Codicil, of which
+copies are subjoined<a href=
+"#note-1232">[1232]</a>.</i></p>
+<p>The consideration of numerous papers of which he was
+possessed, seems to have struck Johnson's mind, with a sudden
+anxiety, and as they were in great confusion, it is much to be
+lamented that he had not entrusted some faithful and discreet
+person with the care and selection of them; instead of which, he
+in a precipitate manner, burnt large masses of them, with little
+regard, as I apprehend, to discrimination. Not that I suppose we
+have thus been deprived of any compositions which he had ever
+intended for the publick eye; but, from what escaped the flames,
+I judge that many curious circumstances relating both to himself
+and other literary characters have perished<a href=
+"#note-1233">[1233]</a>.</p>
+<p>Two very valuable articles, I am sure, we have lost, which
+were two quarto volumes, containing a full, fair, and most
+particular account of his own life, from his earliest
+recollection. I owned to him, that having accidentally seen them,
+I had read a great deal in them; and apologizing for the liberty
+I had taken, asked him if I could help it<a href=
+"#note-1234">[1234]</a>. He placidly
+answered, 'Why, Sir, I do not think you could have helped it.' I
+said that I had, for once in my life, felt half an inclination to
+commit theft. It had come into my mind to carry off those two
+volumes, and never see him more. Upon my inquiring how this would
+have affected him, 'Sir, (said he,) I believe I should have gone
+mad<a href="#note-1235">[1235]</a>.'</p>
+<p>During his last illness, Johnson experienced the steady and
+kind attachment of his numerous friends. Mr. Hoole has drawn up a
+narrative of what passed in the visits which he paid him during
+that time, from the both of November to the 13th of December, the
+day of his death, inclusive, and has favoured me with a perusal
+of it, with permission to make extracts, which I have done.
+Nobody was more attentive to him than Mr. Langton, to whom he
+tenderly said, Te teneam moriens deficiente manu<i><a href=
+"#note-1237">[1237]</a>. And I think it
+highly to the honour of Mr. Windham, that his important
+occupations as an active statesman<a href=
+"#note-1238">[1238]</a> did not prevent
+him from paying assiduous respect to the dying Sage whom he
+revered. Mr. Langton informs me, that, 'one day he found Mr.
+Burke and four or five more friends sitting with Johnson. Mr.
+Burke said to him, "I am afraid, Sir, such a number of us may be
+oppressive to you." "No, Sir, (said Johnson,) it is not so; and I
+must be in a wretched state, indeed, when your company would not
+be a delight to me." Mr. Burke, in a tremulous voice, expressive
+of being very tenderly affected, replied, "My dear Sir, you have
+always been too good to me." Immediately afterwards he went away.
+This was the last circumstance in the acquaintance of these two
+eminent men<a href=
+"#note-1239">[1239]</a>.'</i></p>
+<p>The following particulars of his conversation within a few
+days of his death, I give on the authority of Mr. John Nichols<a
+href="#note-1240">[1240]</a>:&mdash;</p>
+<p>'He said, that the Parliamentary Debates were the only part of
+his writings which then gave him any compunction<a href=
+"#note-1241">[1241]</a>: but that at the
+time he wrote them, he had no conception he was imposing upon the
+world, though they were frequently written from very slender
+materials, and often from none at all,&mdash;the mere coinage of
+his own imagination. He never wrote any part of his works with
+equal velocity. Three columns of the Magazine<i>, in an hour, was
+no uncommon effort, which was faster than most persons could have
+transcribed that quantity.</i></p>
+<p>'Of his friend Cave, he always spoke with great affection.
+"Yet (said he,) Cave, (who never looked out of his window, but
+with a view to the Gentleman's Magazine<i>,) was a penurious
+pay-master; he would contract for lines by the hundred, and
+expect the long hundred; but he was a good man, and always
+delighted to have his friends at his table."</i></p>
+<p>'When talking of a regular edition of his own works, he said,
+"that he had power, [from the booksellers,] to print such an
+edition, if his health admitted it; but had no power to assign
+over any edition, unless he could add notes, and so alter them as
+to make them new works; which his state of health forbade him to
+think of. I may possibly live, (said he,) or rather breath, three
+days, or perhaps three weeks; but find myself daily and gradually
+weaker."</p>
+<p>'He said at another time, three or four days only before his
+death, speaking of the little fear he had of undergoing a
+chirurgical operation, "I would give one of these legs for a year
+more of life, I mean of comfortable life, not such as that which
+I now suffer;"&mdash;and lamented much his inability to read
+during his hours of restlessness; "I used formerly, (he added,)
+when sleepless in bed, to read like a Turk<i><a href=
+"#note-1242">[1242]</a>."</i></p>
+<p>'Whilst confined by his last illness, it was his regular
+practice to have the church-service read to him, by some
+attentive and friendly Divine. The Rev. Mr. Hoole performed this
+kind office in my presence for the last time, when, by his own
+desire, no more than the Litany was read; in which his responses
+were in the deep and sonorous voice which Mr. Boswell has
+occasionally noticed, and with the most profound devotion that
+can be imagined. His hearing not being quite perfect, he more
+than once interrupted Mr. Hoole, with "Louder, my dear Sir,
+louder, I entreat you, or you pray in vain<a href=
+"#note-1243">[1243]</a>!"&mdash;and, when
+the service was ended, he, with great earnestness, turned round
+to an excellent lady who was present, saying, "I thank you,
+Madam, very heartily, for your kindness in joining me in this
+solemn exercise. Live well, I conjure you; and you will not feel
+the compunction at the last, which I now feel<a href=
+"#note-1244">[1244]</a>." So truly humble
+were the thoughts which this great and good man entertained of
+his own approaches to religious perfection<a href=
+"#note-1245">[1245]</a>.</p>
+<p>'He was earnestly invited to publish a volume of Devotional
+Exercises<i><a href=
+"#note-1246">[1246]</a>; but this,
+(though he listened to the proposal with much complacency, and a
+large sum of money was offered for it,) he declined, from motives
+of the sincerest modesty.</i></p>
+<p>'He seriously entertained the thought of translating
+Thuanus<i><a href=
+"#note-1247">[1247]</a>. He often talked
+to me on the subject; and once, in particular, when I was rather
+wishing that he would favour the world, and gratify his
+sovereign, by a Life of Spenser<a href=
+"#note-1248">[1248]</a>, (which he said
+that he would readily have done, had he been able to obtain any
+new materials for the purpose,) he added, "I have been thinking
+again, Sir, of</i> Thuanus<i>: it would not be the laborious task
+which you have supposed it. I should have no trouble but that of
+dictation, which would be performed as speedily as an amanuensis
+could write."</i></p>
+<p>It is to the mutual credit of Johnson and Divines of different
+communions, that although he was a steady Church-of-England man,
+there was, nevertheless, much agreeable intercourse between him
+and them. Let me particularly name the late Mr. La Trobe, and Mr.
+Hutton<a href="#note-1249">[1249]</a>, of
+the Moravian profession. His intimacy with the English
+Benedictines, at Paris, has been mentioned<a href=
+"#note-1250">[1250]</a>; and as an
+additional proof of the charity in which he lived with good men
+of the Romish Church, I am happy in this opportunity of recording
+his friendship with the Reverend Thomas Hussey<a href=
+"#note-1251">[1251]</a>, D.D. His
+Catholick Majesty's Chaplain of Embassy at the Court of London,
+that very respectable man, eminent not only for his powerful
+eloquence as a preacher, but for his various abilities and
+acquisitions. Nay, though Johnson loved a Presbyterian the least
+of all, this did not prevent his having a long and uninterrupted
+social connection with the Reverend Dr. James Fordyce, who, since
+his death, hath gratefully celebrated him in a warm strain of
+devotional composition<a href=
+"#note-1252">[1252]</a>.</p>
+<p>Amidst the melancholy clouds which hung over the dying
+Johnson, his characteristical manner shewed itself on different
+occasions.</p>
+<p>When Dr. Warren, in the usual style, hoped that he was better;
+his answer was, 'No, Sir; you cannot conceive with what
+acceleration I advance towards death.'</p>
+<p>A man whom he had never seen before was employed one night to
+sit up with him<a href=
+"#note-1253">[1253]</a>. Being asked next
+morning how he liked his attendant, his answer was, 'Not at all,
+Sir: the fellow's an ideot; he is as aukward as a turn-spit when
+first put into the wheel, and as sleepy as a dormouse.'</p>
+<p>Mr. Windham having placed a pillow conveniently to support
+him, he thanked him for his kindness, and said, 'That will
+do,&mdash;all that a pillow can do.'</p>
+<p>He repeated<a href=
+"#note-1254">[1254]</a> with great spirit
+a poem, consisting of several stanzas, in four lines, in
+alternate rhyme, which he said he had composed some years before,
+on occasion of a rich, extravagant young gentleman's coming of
+age; saying he had never repeated it but once since he composed
+it, and had given but one copy of it. That copy was given to Mrs.
+Thrale, now Piozzi, who has published it in a Book which she
+entitles British Synonymy<i><a href=
+"#note-1255">[1255]</a>, but which is
+truly a collection of entertaining remarks and stories, no matter
+whether accurate or not. Being a piece of exquisite satire,
+conveyed in a strain of pointed vivacity and humour, and in a
+manner of which no other instance is to be found in Johnson's
+writings, I shall here insert it<a href=
+"#note-1256">[1256]</a>:&mdash;</i></p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ Long-expected one-and-twenty,
+ Ling'ring year, at length is flown;
+ Pride and pleasure, pomp and plenty,
+ Great &mdash;- &mdash;&mdash;<a href=
+"#note-1257">1257</a>, are now your own.
+ Loosen'd from the Minor's tether,
+ Free to mortgage or to sell,
+ Wild as wind, and light as feather,
+ Bid the sons of thrift farewell.
+ Call the Betseys, Kates, and Jennies,
+ All the names that banish care;
+ Lavish of your grandsire's guineas,
+ Shew the spirit of an heir.
+ All that prey on vice or folly
+ Joy to see their quarry fly;
+ There the gamester, light and jolly,
+ There the lender, grave and sly.
+ Wealth, my lad, was made to wander,
+ Let it wander as it will;
+ Call the jockey, call the pander,
+ Bid them come and take their fill.
+ When the bonny blade carouses,
+ Pockets full, and spirits high&mdash;
+ What are acres? what are houses?
+ Only dirt, or wet or dry.
+ Should the guardian friend or mother
+ Tell the woes of wilful waste;
+ Scorn their counsel, scorn their pother,&mdash;
+ You can hang or drown at last.
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>As he opened a note which his servant brought to him, he said,
+'An odd thought strikes me: we shall receive no letters in the
+grave<a href=
+"#note-1258">[1258]</a>.'</p>
+<p>He requested three things of Sir Joshua Reynolds:&mdash;To
+forgive him thirty pounds which he had borrowed of him; to read
+the Bible; and never to use his pencil on a Sunday<a href=
+"#note-1259">[1259]</a>. Sir Joshua
+readily acquiesced[1260].</p>
+<p>Indeed he shewed the greatest anxiety for the religious
+improvement of his friends, to whom he discoursed of its infinite
+consequence. He begged of Mr. Hoole to think of what he had said,
+and to commit it to writing: and, upon being afterwards assured
+that this was done, pressed his hands, and in an earnest tone
+thanked him. Dr. Brocklesby having attended him with the utmost
+assiduity and kindness as his physician and friend, he was
+peculiarly desirous that this gentleman should not entertain any
+loose speculative notions, but be confirmed in the truths of
+Christianity, and insisted on his writing down in his presence,
+as nearly as he could collect it, the import of what passed on
+the subject: and Dr. Brocklesby having complied with the request,
+he made him sign the paper, and urged him to keep it in his own
+custody as long as he lived<a href=
+"#note-1261">[1261]</a>.</p>
+<p>Johnson, with that native fortitude, which, amidst all his
+bodily distress and mental sufferings, never forsook him, asked
+Dr. Brocklesby, as a man in whom he had confidence, to tell him
+plainly whether he could recover. 'Give me (said he) a direct
+answer.' The Doctor having first asked him if he could bear the
+whole truth, which way soever it might lead, and being answered
+that he could, declared that, in his opinion, he could not
+recover without a miracle. 'Then, (said Johnson,) I will take no
+more physick, not even my opiates; for I have prayed that I may
+render up my soul to GOD unclouded.' In this resolution he
+persevered, and, at the same time, used only the weakest kinds of
+sustenance. Being pressed by Mr. Windham to take somewhat more
+generous nourishment, lest too low a diet should have the very
+effect which he dreaded, by debilitating his mind, he said, 'I
+will take any thing but inebriating sustenance<a href=
+"#note-1262">[1262]</a>.'</p>
+<p>The Reverend Mr. Strahan, who was the son of his friend, and
+had been always one of his great favourites, had, during his last
+illness, the satisfaction of contributing to soothe and comfort
+him. That gentleman's house, at Islington, of which he is Vicar,
+afforded Johnson, occasionally and easily, an agreeable change of
+place and fresh air; and he attended also upon him in town in the
+discharge of the sacred offices of his profession.</p>
+<p>Mr. Strahan has given me the agreeable assurance, that, after
+being in much agitation, Johnson became quite composed, and
+continued so till his death<a href=
+"#note-1263">[1263]</a>.</p>
+<p>Dr. Brocklesby, who will not be suspected of fanaticism,
+obliged me with the following accounts:&mdash;</p>
+<p>'For some time before his death, all his fears were calmed and
+absorbed by the prevalence of his faith, and his trust in the
+merits and propitiation <i>of JESUS CHRIST.</i></p>
+<p>'He talked often to me about the necessity of faith in the
+sacrifice <i>of Jesus, as necessary beyond all good works
+whatever, for the salvation of mankind.</i></p>
+<p>'He pressed me to study Dr. Clarke and to read his Sermons. I
+asked him why he pressed Dr. Clarke, an Arian<a href=
+"#note-1264">[1264]</a>. "Because, (said
+he,) he is fullest on the propitiatory sacrifice<i>."'</i></p>
+<p>Johnson having thus in his mind the true Christian scheme, at
+once rational and consolatory, uniting justice and mercy in the
+DIVINITY, with the improvement of human nature, previous to his
+receiving the Holy Sacrament in his apartment, composed and
+fervently uttered this prayer<a href=
+"#note-1265">[1265]</a>:&mdash;</p>
+<p>'Almighty and most merciful Father, I am now as to human eyes,
+it seems, about to commemorate, for the last time, the death of
+thy Son JESUS CHRIST, our Saviour and Redeemer. Grant, O LORD,
+that my whole hope and confidence may be in his merits, and thy
+mercy; enforce and accept my imperfect repentance; make this
+commemoration available to the confirmation of my faith, the
+establishment of my hope, and the enlargement of my charity; and
+make the death of thy Son JESUS CHRIST effectual to my
+redemption. Have mercy upon me, and pardon the multitude of my
+offences. Bless my friends; have mercy upon all men. Support me,
+by thy Holy Spirit, in the days of weakness, and at the hour of
+death; and receive me, at my death, to everlasting happiness, for
+the sake of JESUS CHRIST. Amen.'</p>
+<p>Having, as has been already mentioned, made his will on the
+8th and 9th of December, and settled all his worldly affairs, he
+languished till Monday, the 13th of that month, when he expired,
+about seven o'clock in the evening, with so little apparent pain
+that his attendants hardly perceived when his dissolution took
+place.</p>
+<p>Of his last moments, my brother, Thomas David<a href=
+"#note-1266">[1266]</a>, has furnished me
+with the following particulars:&mdash;</p>
+<p>'The Doctor, from the time that he was certain his death was
+near, appeared to be perfectly resigned<a href=
+"#note-1267">[1267]</a>, was seldom or
+never fretful or out of temper, and often said to his faithful
+servant, who gave me this account, "Attend, Francis, to the
+salvation of your soul, which is the object of greatest
+importance:" he also explained to him passages in the scripture,
+and seemed to have pleasure in talking upon religious
+subjects.</p>
+<p>'On Monday, the 13th of December, the day on which he died, a
+Miss Morris<a href=
+"#note-1268">[1268]</a>, daughter to a
+particular friend of his, called, and said to Francis, that she
+begged to be permitted to see the Doctor, that she might
+earnestly request him to give her his blessing. Francis went into
+his room, followed by the young lady, and delivered the message.
+The Doctor turned himself in the bed, and said, "GOD bless you,
+my dear!" These were the last words he spoke. His difficulty of
+breathing increased till about seven o'clock in the evening, when
+Mr. Barber and Mrs. Desmoulins, who were sitting in the room,
+observing that the noise he made in breathing had ceased, went to
+the bed, and found he was dead<a href=
+"#note-1269">[1269]</a>.'</p>
+<p>About two days after his death, the following very agreeable
+account was communicated to Mr. Malone, in a letter by the
+Honourable John Byng, to whom I am much obliged for granting me
+permission to introduce it in my work.</p>
+<center>'DEAR SIR,</center>
+<p>'Since I saw you, I have had a long conversation with
+Cawston<a href="#note-1270">[1270]</a>,
+who sat up with Dr. Johnson, from nine o'clock, on Sunday
+evening, till ten o'clock, on Monday morning. And, from what I
+can gather from him, it should seem, that Dr. Johnson was
+perfectly composed, steady in hope, and resigned to death. At the
+interval of each hour, they assisted him to sit up in his bed,
+and move his legs, which were in much pain; when he regularly
+addressed himself to fervent prayer; and though, sometimes, his
+voice failed him, his senses never did, during that time. The
+only sustenance he received, was cyder and water. He said his
+mind was prepared, and the time to his dissolution seemed long.
+At six in the morning, he enquired the hour, and, on being
+informed, said that all went on regularly, and he felt he had but
+a few hours to live.</p>
+<p>'At ten o'clock in the morning, he parted from Cawston,
+saying, "You should not detain Mr. Windham's servant:&mdash;I
+thank you; bear my remembrance to your master." Cawston says,
+that no man could appear more collected, more devout, or less
+terrified at the thoughts of the approaching minute.</p>
+<p>'This account, which is so much more agreeable than, and
+somewhat different from, yours, has given us the satisfaction of
+thinking that that great man died as he lived, full of
+resignation, strengthened in faith, and joyful in hope.'</p>
+<p>A few days before his death, he had asked Sir John Hawkins, as
+one of his executors, where he should be buried; and on being
+answered, 'Doubtless, in Westminster-Abbey,' seemed to feel a
+satisfaction, very natural to a Poet; and indeed in my opinion
+very natural to every man of any imagination, who has no family
+sepulchre in which he can be laid with his fathers. Accordingly,
+upon Monday, December 20, his remains were deposited in that
+noble and renowned edifice; and over his grave was placed a large
+blue flag-stone, with this inscription:&mdash;</p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'SAMUEL JOHNSON, LL.D.
+ Obiit <i>XIII</i> die Decembris<i>,
+ </i> Anno Domini <i> M. DCC. LXXXIV.
+ Aetatis suoe</i> LXXV.'
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>His funeral was attended by a respectable number of his
+friends, particularly such of the members of the LITERARY CLUB as
+were then in town; and was also honoured with the presence of
+several of the Reverend Chapter of Westminster. Mr. Burke, Sir
+Joseph Banks, Mr. Windham, Mr. Langton, Sir Charles Bunbury, and
+Mr. Colman, bore his pall<a href=
+"#note-1271">[1271]</a>. His
+schoolfellow, Dr. Taylor, performed the mournful office of
+reading the burial service<a href=
+"#note-1272">[1272]</a>.</p>
+<p>I trust, I shall not be accused of affectation, when I
+declare, that I find myself unable to express all that I felt
+upon the loss of such a 'Guide<a href=
+"#note-1273">[1273]</a>, Philosopher, and
+Friend[1274].' I shall, therefore, not say one word of my own,
+but adopt those of an eminent friend<a href=
+"#note-1275">[1275]</a>, which he uttered
+with an abrupt felicity, superior to all studied
+compositions:&mdash;'He has made a chasm, which not only nothing
+can fill up, but which nothing has a tendency to fill up. Johnson
+is dead. Let us go to the next best:&mdash;there is nobody; no
+man can be said to put you in mind of Johnson<a href=
+"#note-1276">[1276]</a>.'</p>
+<p>As Johnson had abundant homage paid to him during his life<a
+href="#note-1277">[1277]</a>, so no
+writer in this nation ever had such an accumulation of literary
+honours after his death. A sermon upon that event was preached in
+St. Mary's Church, Oxford, before the University, by the Reverend
+Mr. Agutter, of Magdalen College<a href=
+"#note-1278">[1278]</a>. The
+<i>Lives</i>, the <i>Memoirs</i>, the <i>Essays</i>, both in
+prose and verse, which have been published concerning him, would
+make many volumes. The numerous attacks too upon him, I consider
+as part of his consequence, upon the principle which he himself
+so well knew and asserted<a href=
+"#note-1279">[1279]</a>. Many who
+trembled at his presence, were forward in assault, when they no
+longer apprehended danger. When one of his little pragmatical
+foes was invidiously snarling at his fame, at Sir Joshua
+Reynolds's table, the Reverend Dr. Parr exclaimed, with his usual
+bold animation, 'Ay, now that the old lion is dead, every ass
+thinks he may kick at him.'</p>
+<p>A monument for him, in Westminster Abbey, was resolved upon
+soon after his death, and was supported by a most respectable
+contribution<a href=
+"#note-1280">[1280]</a>; but the Dean and
+Chapter of St. Paul's having come to a resolution of admitting
+monuments there, upon a liberal and magnificent plan, that
+Cathedral was afterwards fixed on, as the place in which a
+cenotaph should be erected to his memory<a href=
+"#note-1281">[1281]</a>: and in the
+cathedral of his native city of Lichfield, a smaller one is to be
+erected. To compose his epitaph, could not but excite the warmest
+competition of genius<a href=
+"#note-1282">[1282]</a>. If <i>laudari
+&agrave; laudato viro</i> be praise which is highly estimable<a
+href="#note-1283">[1283]</a>, I should
+not forgive myself were I to omit the following sepulchral verses
+on the authour of THE ENGLISH DICTIONARY, written by the Right
+Honourable Henry Flood<a href=
+"#note-1284">[1284]</a>:&mdash;</p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'No need of Latin or of Greek to grace
+ Our JOHNSON'S memory, or inscribe his grave;
+ His native language claims this mournful space,
+ To pay the Immortality he gave.'
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>The character of SAMUEL JOHNSON has, I trust, been so
+developed in the course of this work, that they who have honoured
+it with a perusal, may be considered as well acquainted with him.
+As, however, it may be expected that I should collect into one
+view the capital and distinguishing features of this
+extraordinary man, I shall endeavour to acquit myself of that
+part of my biographical undertaking<a href=
+"#note-1285">[1285]</a>, however
+difficult it may be to do that which many of my readers will do
+better for themselves.</p>
+<p>His figure was large and well formed, and his countenance of
+the cast of an ancient statue; yet his appearance was rendered
+strange and somewhat uncouth, by convulsive cramps, by the scars
+of that distemper which it was once imagined the royal touch
+could cure, and by a slovenly mode of dress. He had the use only
+of one eye; yet so much does mind govern and even supply the
+deficiency of organs, that his visual perceptions, as far as they
+extended, were uncommonly quick and accurate<a href=
+"#note-1286">[1286]</a>. So morbid was
+his temperament, that he never knew the natural joy of a free and
+vigorous use of his limbs: when he walked, it was like the
+struggling gait of one in fetters; when he rode, he had no
+command or direction of his horse, but was carried as if in a
+balloon<a href="#note-1287">[1287]</a>.
+That with his constitution and habits of life he should have
+lived seventy-five years, is a proof that an inherent <i>vivida
+vis</i><a href="#note-1288">[1288]</a> is
+a powerful preservative of the human frame.</p>
+<p>Man is, in general, made up of contradictory qualities; and
+these will ever shew themselves in strange succession, where a
+consistency in appearance at least, if not in reality, has not
+been attained by long habits of philosophical discipline. In
+proportion to the native vigour of the mind, the contradictory
+qualities will be the more prominent, and more difficult to be
+adjusted; and, therefore, we are not to wonder, that Johnson
+exhibited an eminent example of this remark which I have made
+upon human nature. At different times, he seemed a different man,
+in some respects; not, however, in any great or essential
+article, upon which he had fully employed his mind, and settled
+certain principles of duty, but only in his manners, and in the
+display of argument and fancy in his talk. He was prone to
+superstition, but not to credulity. Though his imagination might
+incline him to a belief of the marvellous and the mysterious, his
+vigorous reason examined the evidence with jealousy<a href=
+"#note-1289">[1289]</a>. He was a sincere
+and zealous Christian, of high Church-of-England and monarchical
+principles, which he would not tamely suffer to be questioned;
+and had, perhaps, at an early period, narrowed his mind somewhat
+too much, both as to religion and politicks. His being impressed
+with the danger of extreme latitude in either, though he was of a
+very independent spirit, occasioned his appearing somewhat
+unfavourable to the prevalence of that noble freedom of sentiment
+which is the best possession of man. Nor can it be denied, that
+he had many prejudices; which, however, frequently suggested many
+of his pointed sayings, that rather shew a playfulness of fancy
+than any settled malignity. He was steady and inflexible in
+maintaining the obligations of religion and morality; both from a
+regard for the order of society, and from a veneration for the
+GREAT SOURCE of all order; correct, nay stern in his taste; hard
+to please, and easily offended<a href=
+"#note-1290">[1290]</a>; impetuous and
+irritable in his temper, but of a most humane and benevolent
+heart<a href="#note-1291">[1291]</a>,
+which shewed itself not only in a most liberal charity, as far as
+his circumstances would allow, but in a thousand instances of
+active benevolence. He was afflicted with a bodily disease, which
+made him often restless and fretful; and with a constitutional
+melancholy, the clouds of which darkened the brightness of his
+fancy, and gave a gloomy cast to his whole course of thinking:
+we, therefore, ought not to wonder at his sallies of impatience
+and passion at any time; especially when provoked by obtrusive
+ignorance, or presuming petulance; and allowance must be made for
+his uttering hasty and satirical sallies even against his best
+friends. And, surely, when it is considered, that, 'amidst
+sickness and sorrow<a href=
+"#note-1292">[1292]</a>,'he exerted his
+faculties in so many works for the benefit of mankind, and
+particularly that he atchieved the great and admirable DICTIONARY
+of our language, we must be astonished at his resolution. The
+solemn text, 'of him to whom much is given, much will be
+required<a href="#note-1293">[1293]</a>,'
+seems to have been ever present to his mind, in a rigorous sense,
+and to have made him dissatisfied with his labours and acts of
+goodness, however comparatively great; so that the unavoidable
+consciousness of his superiority was, in that respect, a cause of
+disquiet. He suffered so much from this, and from the gloom which
+perpetually haunted him, and made solitude frightful, that it may
+be said of him, 'If in this life only he had hope, he was of all
+men most miserable<a href=
+"#note-1294">[1294]</a>.' He loved
+praise, when it was brought to him; but was too proud to seek for
+it. He was somewhat susceptible of flattery. As he was general
+and unconfined in his studies, he cannot be considered as master
+of any one particular science; but he had accumulated a vast and
+various collection of learning and knowledge, which was so
+arranged in his mind, as to be ever in readiness to be brought
+forth. But his superiority over other learned men consisted
+chiefly in what may be called the art of thinking, the art of
+using his mind; a certain continual power of seizing the useful
+substance of all that he knew, and exhibiting it in a clear and
+forcible manner; so that knowledge, which we often see to be no
+better than lumber in men of dull understanding, was, in him,
+true, evident, and actual wisdom. His moral precepts are
+practical; for they are drawn from an intimate acquaintance with
+human nature. His maxims carry conviction; for they are founded
+on the basis of common sense, and a very attentive and minute
+survey of real life. His mind was so full of imagery, that he
+might have been perpetually a poet; yet it is remarkable, that,
+however rich his prose is in this respect, his poetical pieces,
+in general, have not much of that splendour, but are rather
+distinguished by strong sentiment and acute observation, conveyed
+in harmonious and energetick verse, particularly in heroick
+couplets. Though usually grave, and even aweful, in his
+deportment, he possessed uncommon and peculiar powers of wit and
+humour; he frequently indulged himself in colloquial pleasantry;
+and the heartiest merriment<a href=
+"#note-1295">[1295]</a> was often enjoyed
+in his company; with this great advantage, that as it was
+entirely free from any poisonous tincture of vice or impiety, it
+was salutary to those who shared in it. He had accustomed himself
+to such accuracy in his common conversation<a href=
+"#note-1296">[1296]</a>, that he at all
+times expressed his thoughts with great force, and an elegant
+choice of language, the effect of which was aided by his having a
+loud voice, and a slow deliberate utterance<a href=
+"#note-1297">[1297]</a>. In him were
+united a most logical head with a most fertile imagination, which
+gave him an extraordinary advantage in arguing: for he could
+reason close or wide, as he saw best for the moment. Exulting in
+his intellectual strength and dexterity, he could, when he
+pleased, be the greatest sophist that ever contended in the lists
+of declamation; and, from a spirit of contradiction and a delight
+in shewing his powers, he would often maintain the wrong side
+with equal warmth and ingenuity; so that, when there was an
+audience, his real opinions could seldom be gathered from his
+talk<a href="#note-1298">[1298]</a>;
+though when he was in company with a single friend, he would
+discuss a subject with genuine fairness: but he was too
+conscientious to make errour permanent and pernicious, by
+deliberately writing it; and, in all his numerous works, he
+earnestly inculcated what appeared to him to be the truth; his
+piety being constant, and the ruling principle of all his
+conduct<a href=
+"#note-1299">[1299]</a>.</p>
+<p>Such was SAMUEL JOHNSON, a man whose talents, acquirements,
+and virtues, were so extraordinary, that the more his character
+is considered, the more he will be regarded by the present age,
+and by posterity, with admiration and reverence<a href=
+"#note-1300">[1300]</a>.</p>
+<a name="2HAPP3"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+<p> </p>
+<p> </p>
+<p> </p>
+<p> </p>
+<h2>APPENDIX A.</h2>
+<p>(<i>Page</i> 115, <i>note</i> 4.)</p>
+<p>There are at least three accounts of this altercation and
+three versions of the lines. Two of these versions nearly agree.
+The earliest is found in a letter by Richard Burke, senior, dated
+Jan. 6, 1773 (<i>Burke Corres</i>. i. 403); the second in <i>The
+Annual Register</i> for 1776, p. 223; and the third in Miss
+Reynolds's <i>Recollections</i> (Croker's <i>Boswell</i>, 8vo. p.
+833). R. Burke places the scene in Reynolds's house. Whether he
+himself was present is not clear. 'The dean,' he says, 'asserted
+that after forty-five a man did not improve. "I differ with you,
+Sir," answered Johnson; "a man may improve, and you yourself have
+great room for improvement." The dean was confounded, and for the
+instant silent. Recovering, he said, "On recollection I see no
+cause to alter my opinion, except I was to call it improvement
+for a man to grow (which I allow he may) positive, rude, and
+insolent, and save arguments by brutality."' Neither the
+<i>Annual Register</i> nor Miss Reynolds reports the Dean's
+speech. But she says that 'soon after the ladies withdrew, Dr.
+Johnson followed them, and sitting down by the lady of the house
+[that is by herself, if they were at Sir Joshua's] he said, "I am
+very sorry for having spoken so rudely to the Dean." "You very
+well may, Sir." "Yes," he said, "it was highly improper to speak
+in that style to a minister of the gospel, and I am the more hurt
+on reflecting with what mild dignity he received it."' If Johnson
+really spoke of the Dean's <i>mild dignity</i>, it is clear that
+Richard Burke's account is wrong. But it was written just after
+the scene, and Boswell says there was 'a pretty smart
+altercation.' Miss Reynolds continues:&mdash;'When the Dean came
+up into the drawing-room, Dr. Johnson immediately rose from his
+seat, and made him sit on the sofa by him, and with such a
+beseeching look for pardon and with such fond
+gestures&mdash;literally smoothing down his arms and his knees,'
+&amp;c. The <i>Annual Register</i> says that Barnard the next day
+sent the verses addressed to 'Sir Joshua Reynolds &amp; Co.' On
+the next page I give Richard Burke's version of the lines, and
+show the various readings.</p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+MISS REYNOLD'S RICHARD BURKE'S VERSION. <i>Annual Register</i>
+ VERSION
+ I lately thought no man alive
+ Could e'er improve past forty-five,
+ And ventured to assert it;
+ The observation was not new,
+ But seem'd to me so just and true,
+ That none could controvert it.
+ 'No, Sir,' says Johnson, ''tis not so;
+'Tis <i>That's</i> your mistake, and I can show
+ An instance, if you doubt it;
+You who perhaps are <i>You, Sir, who are near</i> forty-eight,
+still May <i>much</i> improve, 'tis not too late;
+ I wish you'd set about it.'
+ Encouraged thus to mend my faults,
+ I turn'd his counsel in my thoughts,
+could Which way I <i>should</i> apply it:
+Genius I knew was <i>Learning and wit seem'd</i> past my reach,
+what none can For who can learn <i>where none will</i> teach? when
+ And wit&mdash;I could not buy it.
+ Then come, my friends, and try your skill,
+may You <i>can improve me, if you will; inform
+ (My books are at a distance).
+ With you I'll live and learn; and then
+ Instead of books I shall read men,
+ </i> So <i>lend me your assistance. To
+ Dear Knight of Plympton<a href=
+"#note-1301">1301</a>, teach me how
+unclouded To suffer with</i> unruffled <i>brow,
+as And smile serene</i> like <i>thine,
+and The jest uncouth</i> or <i>truth severe,
+Like thee to turn </i> To such apply <i>my deafest ear, To such
+ And calmly drink my wine. I'll turn
+ Thou say'st, not only skill is gain'd,
+attained But genius too may be</i> obtain'd<i>, attained
+invitation By studious</i> imitation<i>;
+ Thy temper mild, thy genius fine,
+study I'll</i> copy <i>till I make</i> them <i>mine, thee
+meditation By constant</i> application<i>.
+ Thy art of pleasing teach me, Garrick,
+reverest (</i>sic<i>) Thou who</i> reversest <i>odes Pindarick<a
+ href="#note-1302">1302</a>,
+ A second time read o'er;
+ Oh! could we read thee backwards too,
+Past </i> Last <i>thirty years thou shouldst review,
+ And charm us thirty more.
+ If I have thoughts and can't express 'em,
+ Gibbon shall teach me how to dress 'em
+ In terms select and terse;
+ Jones teach me modesty&mdash;and Greek;
+ Smith how to think;</i> Burke <i>how to speak, Burk
+ And Beauclerk to converse.
+ Let Johnson teach me how to place
+ In fairest light each borrowed grace,
+ From him I'll learn to write;
+free and easy Copy his</i> clear and easy <i>style, clear
+ And from the roughness of his file, familiar
+like Grow</i> as<i> himself&mdash;polite.' like
+</i>
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>Horace Walpole, on Dec. 27, 1775, speaks of these verses as if
+they were fresh. 'They are an answer,' he writes, 'to a gross
+brutality of Dr. Johnson, to which a properer answer would have
+been to fling a glass of wine in his face. I have no patience
+with an unfortunate monster trusting to his helpless deformity
+for indemnity for any impertinence that his arrogance suggests,
+and who thinks that what he has read is an excuse for everything
+he says.' Horace Walpole's Letters, <i>vi. 302. It is strange
+that Walpole should be so utterly ignorant of Johnson's courage
+and bodily strength. The date of Walpole's letter makes me
+suspect that Richard Burke dated his Jan. 6, 1775 (he should have
+written 1776), and that the blunder of a copyist has changed 1775
+into 1773.</i></p>
+<a name="2HAPP4"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+<p> </p>
+<p> </p>
+<p> </p>
+<p> </p>
+<h2>APPENDIX B.</h2>
+<p>(Page <i>238.)</i></p>
+<p>Had Boswell continued the quotation from Priestley's
+Illustrations of Philosophical Necessity <i>he would have shown
+that though Priestley could not</i> hate <i>the rioters, he could
+very easily</i> prosecute <i>them. He says:&mdash;</i></p>
+<p>'If as a Necessarian I cease to blame <i>men for their vices
+in the ultimate sense of the word, though, in the common and
+proper sense of it, I continue to do as much as other persons
+(for how necessarily soever they act, they are influenced by a
+base and mischievous disposition of mind, against which I must
+guard myself and others in proportion as I love myself and
+others),' &amp;c. Priestley's</i> Works<i>, iii. 508.</i></p>
+<p>Of his interview with Johnson, Priestley, in his Appeal to the
+Public<i>, part ii, published in 1792 (</i>Works<i>, xix. 502),
+thus writes, answering 'the impudent falsehood that when I was at
+Oxford Dr. Johnson left a company on my being introduced to
+it':&mdash;</i></p>
+<p>'In fact we never were at Oxford at the same time, and the
+only interview I ever had with him was at Mr. Paradise's, where
+we dined together at his own request. He was particularly civil
+to me, and promised to call upon me the next time he should go
+through Birmingham. He behaved with the same civility to Dr.
+Price, when they supped together at Dr. Adams's at Oxford.
+Several circumstances show that Dr. Johnson had not so much of
+bigotry at the decline of life as had distinguished him before,
+on which account it is well known to all our common acquaintance,
+that I declined all their pressing solicitations to be introduced
+to him.'</p>
+<p>Priestley expresses himself ill, but his meaning can be made
+out. Parr answered Boswell in the March number of the Gent. Mag.
+<i>for 1795, p. 179. But the evidence that he brings is rendered
+needless by Priestley's positive statement. May peace henceforth
+fall on 'Priestley's injured name.' (Mrs. Barbauld's</i>
+Poems<i>, ii. 243.)</i></p>
+<p>When Boswell asserts that Johnson 'was particularly resolute
+in not giving countenance to men whose writings he considered as
+pernicious to society,' he forgets that that very summer of 1783
+he had been willing to dine at Wilkes's house (ante<i>, p. 224,
+note 2).</i></p>
+<p>Dr. Franklin (Memoirs<i>, ed. 1833, iii. 157) wrote to Dr.
+Price in 1784:&mdash;'It is said that scarce anybody but yourself
+and Dr. Priestley possesses the art of knowing how to differ
+decently.' Gibbon (</i>Misc. Works<i>, i. 304), describing in
+1789 the honestest members of the French Assembly, calls them 'a
+set of wild visionaries, like our Dr. Price, who gravely debate,
+and dream about the establishment of a pure and perfect democracy
+of five and twenty millions, the virtues of the golden age, and
+the primitive rights and equality of mankind.' Admiration of
+Price made Samuel Rogers, when a boy, wish to be a preacher. 'I
+thought there was nothing on earth so</i> grand <i>as to figure
+in a pulpit. Dr. Price lived much in the society of Lord
+Lansdowne [Earl of Shelburne] and other people of rank; and his
+manners were extremely polished. In the pulpit he was great
+indeed.' Rogers's</i> Table Talk<i>, p. 3.</i></p>
+<p>The full title of the tract mentioned by Boswell is, A small
+Whole-Length of Dr. Priestley from his Printed Works<i>. It was
+published in 1792, and is a very poor piece of writing.</i></p>
+<p>Johnson had refused to meet the Abb&eacute; Raynal, the author
+of the Histoire Philosophique et Politique du Commerce des Deux
+Indes<i>, when he was over in England in 1777. Mrs. Chapone,
+writing to Mrs. Carter on June 15 of that year,
+says:&mdash;</i></p>
+<p>'I suppose you have heard a great deal of the Abb&eacute;
+Raynal, who is in London. I fancy you would have served him as
+Dr. Johnson did, to whom when Mrs. Vesey introduced him, he
+turned from him, and said he had read his book, and would have
+nothing to say to him.' Mrs. Chapone's Posthumous Works<i>, i.
+172.</i></p>
+<p>See Walpole's Letters<i>, v. 421, and vi. 444. His book was
+burnt by the common hangman in Paris. Carlyle's</i> French
+Revolution<i>, ed. 1857, i. 45.</i></p>
+<a name="2HAPP5"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+<p> </p>
+<p> </p>
+<p> </p>
+<p> </p>
+<h2>APPENDIX C.</h2>
+<p>(Page 253<i>.)</i></p>
+<p>Hawkins gives the two following notes:&mdash;</p>
+<center>'DEAR SIR,</center>
+<p>'As Mr. Ryland was talking with me of old friends and past
+times, we warmed ourselves into a wish, that all who remained of
+the club should meet and dine at the house which once was
+Horseman's, in Ivy-lane. I have undertaken to solicit you, and
+therefore desire you to tell on what day next week you can
+conveniently meet your old friends.</p>
+<p>'I am, Sir,</p>
+<p>'Your most humble servant,</p>
+<center>'SAM. JOHNSON.'</center>
+<p>'Bolt-court, Nov. 22, 1783.'</p>
+<center>'DEAR SIR,</center>
+<p>'In perambulating Ivy-lane, Mr. Ryland found neither our
+landlord Horseman, nor his successor. The old house is shut up,
+and he liked not the appearance of any near it; he therefore
+bespoke our dinner at the Queen's Arms, in St. Paul's
+Church-yard, where, at half an hour after three, your company
+will be desired to-day by those who remain of our former
+society.</p>
+<p>'Your humble servant,</p>
+<center>'SAM. JOHNSON.'</center>
+<p>'Dec. 3.'</p>
+<p>Four met&mdash;Johnson, Hawkins, Ryland, and Payne (ante<i>,
+i. 243).</i></p>
+<p>'We dined,' Hawkins continues, 'and in the evening regaled
+with coffee. At ten we broke up, much to the regret of Johnson,
+who proposed staying; but finding us inclined to separate, he
+left us with a sigh that seemed to come from his heart, lamenting
+that he was retiring to solitude and cheerless meditation.'
+Hawkins's Johnson<i>, p. 562.</i></p>
+<p>Hawkins is mistaken in saying that they had a second meeting
+at a tavern at the end of a month; for Johnson, on March 10,
+1784, wrote:&mdash;</p>
+<p>'I have been confined from the fourteenth of December, and
+know not when I shall get out.' Piozzi Letters<i>, ii.
+351.</i></p>
+<p>He thus describes these meetings:&mdash;</p>
+<p>'Dec. 13. I dined about a fortnight ago with three old
+friends; we had not met together for thirty years, and one of us
+thought the other grown very old. In the thirty years two of our
+set have died; our meeting may be supposed to be somewhat
+tender.' Piozzi Letters<i>, ii. 339.</i></p>
+<p>'Jan. 12, 1784. I had the same old friends to dine with me on
+Wednesday, and may say that since I lost sight of you I have had
+one pleasant day.' Ib. p. 346.</p>
+<p>'April 15, 1784. Yesterday I had the pleasure of giving
+another dinner to the remainder of the old club. We used to meet
+weekly, about the year fifty, and we were as cheerful as in
+former times; only I could not make quite so much noise, for
+since the paralytick affliction my voice is sometimes weak.' Ib.
+p. 361.</p>
+<p>'April 19, 1784. The people whom I mentioned in my letter are
+the remnant of a little club that used to meet in Ivy-lane about
+three and thirty years ago, out of which we have lost Hawkesworth
+and Dyer; the rest are yet on this side the grave. Our meetings
+now are serious, and I think on all parts tender.' Ib. 363.</p>
+<p>See ante<i>, i. 191, note 5.</i></p>
+<a name="2HAPP6"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+<p> </p>
+<p> </p>
+<p> </p>
+<p> </p>
+<h2>APPENDIX D.</h2>
+<p>(Page 254<i>.)</i></p>
+<p>It is likely that Sir Joshua Reynolds refused to join the
+Essex Head Club because he did not wish to meet Barry. Not long
+before this time he had censured Barry's delay in entering upon
+his duties as Professor of painting.</p>
+<p>'Barry answered:&mdash;"If I had no more to do in the
+composition of my lectures than to produce such poor flimsy stuff
+as your discourses, I should soon have done my work, and be
+prepared to read." It is said this speech was delivered with his
+fist clenched, in a menacing posture.' (Northcote's Life of
+Reynolds<i>, ii. 146.)</i></p>
+<p>The Hon. Daines Barrington was the author of an Essay on the
+Migration of Birds <i>(</i>ante<i>, ii. 248) and of</i>
+Observations on the Statutes <i>(</i>ante<i>, iii. 314). Horace
+Walpole wrote on Nov. 24, 1780 (</i>Letters<i>, vii.
+464):&mdash;</i></p>
+<p>'I am sorry for the Dean of Exeter; if he dies I conclude the
+leaden mace of the Antiquarian Society will be given to Judge
+Barrington.' (He was 'second Justice of Chester.')</p>
+<p>For Dr. Brocklesby see ante<i>, pp. 176, 230, 338,
+400.</i></p>
+<p>Of Mr. John Nichols, Murphy says that 'his attachment to Dr.
+Johnson was unwearied.' Life of Johnson<i>, p. 66. He was the
+printer of</i> The Lives of the Poets <i>(</i>ante<i>, p. 36),
+and the author of</i> Biographical and Literary Anecdotes of
+William Bowyer, Printer<i>, 'the last of the learned printers,'
+whose apprentice he had been (</i>ante<i>, p. 369). Horace
+Walpole (</i>Letters<i>, viii. 259) says:&mdash;</i></p>
+<p>'I scarce ever saw a book so correct as Mr. Nichols's Life of
+Mr. Bowyer<i>. I wish it deserved the pains he has bestowed on it
+every way, and that he would not dub so many men</i> great<i>. I
+have known several of his</i> heroes<i>, who were very</i> little
+<i>men.'</i></p>
+<p>The Life of Bowyer <i>being recast and enlarged was
+republished under the title of</i> Literary Anecdotes of the
+Eighteenth Century<i>. From 1778 till his death in 1826 the</i>
+Gentleman's Magazine <i>was in great measure in his hands.
+Southey, writing in 1804, says:&mdash;</i></p>
+<p>'I have begun to take in here at Keswick the Gentleman's
+Magazine<i>,</i> alias <i>the</i> Oldwomania<i>, to enlighten a
+Portuguese student among the mountains; it does amuse me by its
+exquisite inanity, and the glorious and intense stupidity of its
+correspondents; it is, in truth, a disgrace to the age and the
+country.' Southey's</i> Life and Correspondence<i>, ii.
+281.</i></p>
+<p>Mr. William Cooke, 'commonly called Conversation Cooke,' wrote
+Lives of Macklin and Foote<i>. Forster's</i> Essays<i>, ii. 312,
+and</i> Gent. Mag. <i>1824, p. 374. Mr. Richard Paul Joddrel, or
+Jodrell, was the author of</i> The Persian Heroine, a Tragedy<i>,
+which, in Baker's</i> Biog. Dram. <i>i. 400, is wrongly assigned
+to Sir R.P. Jodrell, M.D. Nichols's</i> Lit. Anec. <i>ix.
+2.</i></p>
+<p>For Mr. Paradise see ante<i>, p. 364, note 2.</i></p>
+<p>Dr. Horsley was the controversialist, later on Bishop of St.
+David's and next of Rochester. Gibbon makes splendid mention of
+him (Misc. Works<i>, i. 232) when he tells how 'Dr. Priestley's
+Socinian shield has repeatedly been pierced by the mighty spear
+of Horsley.' Windham, however, in his</i> Diary <i>in one place
+(p. 125) speaks of him as having his thoughts 'intent wholly on
+prospects of Church preferment;' and in another place (p. 275)
+says that 'he often lays down with great confidence what turns
+out afterwards to be wrong.' In the House of Lords he once said
+that 'he did not know what the mass of the people in any country
+had to do with the laws but to obey them.'</i> Parl. Hist<i>.
+xxxii. 258. Thurlow rewarded him for his</i> Letters to Priestley
+<i>by a stall at Gloucester, 'saying that "those who supported
+the Church should be supported by it."' Campbell's</i>
+Chancellors<i>, ed. 1846, v. 635.</i></p>
+<p>For Mr. Windham, see ante<i>, p. 200.</i></p>
+<p>Hawkins (Life of Johnson<i>, p. 567) thus writes of the
+formation of the Club:&mdash;</i></p>
+<p>'I was not made privy to this his intention, but all
+circumstances considered, it was no matter of surprise to me when
+I heard that the great Dr. Johnson had, in the month of December
+1783, formed a sixpenny club at an ale-house in Essex-street, and
+that though some of the persons thereof were persons of note,
+strangers, under restrictions, for three pence each night might
+three nights in a week hear him talk and partake of his
+conversation.'</p>
+<p>Miss Hawkins (Memoirs<i>, i. 103) says:&mdash;</i></p>
+<p>'Boswell was well justified in his resentment of my father's
+designation of this club as a sixpenny club, meeting at an
+ale-house. ... Honestly speaking, I dare say my father did not
+like being passed over.'</p>
+<p>Sir Joshua Reynolds, writing of the club, says:&mdash;</p>
+<p>'Any company was better than none; by which Johnson connected
+himself with many mean persons whose presence he could command.
+For this purpose he established a club at a little ale-house in
+Essex-street, composed of a strange mixture of very learned and
+very ingenious odd people. Of the former were Dr. Heberden, Mr.
+Windham, Mr. Boswell, Mr. Steevens, Mr. Paradise. Those of the
+latter I do not think proper to enumerate.' Taylor's Life of
+Reynolds<i>, ii. 455.</i></p>
+<p>It is possible that Reynolds had never seen the Essex Head,
+and that the term 'little ale-house' he had borrowed from
+Hawkins's account. Possibly too his disgust at Barry here found
+vent. Murphy (Life of Johnson<i>, p. 124) says:&mdash;</i></p>
+<p>'The members of the club were respectable for their rank,
+their talents, and their literature.'</p>
+<p>The 'little ale-house' club saw one of its members, Alderman
+Clarke (ante<i>, p. 258), Lord Mayor within a year; another,
+Horsley, a Bishop within five years; and a third, Windham,
+Secretary at War within ten years. Nichols (</i>Literary
+Anecdotes<i>, ii. 553) gives a list of the 'constant members' at
+the time of Johnson's death.</i></p>
+<a name="2HAPP7"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+<p> </p>
+<p> </p>
+<p> </p>
+<p> </p>
+<h2>APPENDIX E.</h2>
+<p>(Page 399.)</p>
+<p>Miss Burney's account of Johnson's last days is interesting,
+but her dates are confused more even than is common with her. I
+have corrected them as well as I can.</p>
+<p>'Dec. 9. He will not, it seems, be talked to&mdash;at least
+very rarely. At times indeed he re-animates; but it is soon over
+and he says of himself:&mdash;"I am now like
+Macbeth&mdash;question enrages me."'</p>
+<p>'Dec. 10. At night my father brought us the most dismal
+tidings of dear Dr. Johnson. He had thanked and taken leave of
+all his physicians. Alas! I shall lose him, and he will take no
+leave of me. My father was deeply depressed. I hear from everyone
+he is now perfectly resigned to his approaching fate, and no
+longer in terror of death.'</p>
+<p>'Dec. 11. My father in the morning saw this first of men. He
+was up and very composed. He took his hand very kindly, asked
+after all his family, and then in particular how Fanny did. "I
+hope," he said, "Fanny did not take it amiss that I did not see
+her. I was very bad. Tell Fanny to pray for me." After which,
+still grasping his hand, he made a prayer for himself, the most
+fervent, pious, humble, eloquent, and touching, my father says,
+that ever was composed. Oh! would I had heard it! He ended it
+with Amen! in which my father joined, and was echoed by all
+present; and again, when my father was leaving him, he brightened
+up, something of his arch look returned, and he said: "I think I
+shall throw the ball at Fanny yet."'</p>
+<p>'Dec. 12. [Miss Burney called at Bolt-court.] All the rest
+went away but a Mrs. Davis, a good sort of woman, whom this truly
+charitable soul had sent for to take a dinner at his house. [See
+ante<i>, p. 239, note 2.] Mr. Langton then came. He could not
+look at me, and I turned away from him. Mrs. Davis asked how the
+Doctor was. "Going on to death very fast," was his mournful
+answer. "Has he taken," said she, "anything?" "Nothing at all. We
+carried him some bread and milk&mdash;he refused it, and
+said:&mdash;'The less the better.'"'</i></p>
+<p>'Dec. 20. This day was the ever-honoured, ever-lamented Dr.
+Johnson committed to the earth. Oh, how sad a day to me! My
+father attended. I could not keep my eyes dry all day; nor can I
+now in the recollecting it; but let me pass over what to mourn is
+now so vain.' Mme. D'Arblay's Diary<i>, ii. 333-339.</i></p>
+<a name="2HAPP8"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+<p> </p>
+<p> </p>
+<p> </p>
+<p> </p>
+<h2>APPENDIX F.</h2>
+<p>(Notes on Boswell's note on pages 403-405<i>.)</i></p>
+<p>[F-1] In a letter quoted in Mr. Croker's Boswell, p. 427, Dr.
+Johnson calls Thomas Johnson 'cousin,' and says that in the last
+sixteen months he had given him &pound;40. He mentions his death
+in 1779. Piozzi Letters<i>, ii. 45.</i></p>
+<p>[F-2] Hawkins (Life<i>, p. 603) says that Elizabeth Herne was
+Johnson's first-cousin, and that he had constantly&mdash;how long
+he does not say&mdash;contributed &pound;15 towards her
+maintenance.</i></p>
+<p>[F-3] For Mauritius Lowe, see ante<i>, iii. 324, and iv.
+201.</i></p>
+<p>[F-4] To Mr. Windham, two days earlier, he had given a copy of
+the New Testament<i>, saying:&mdash;'Extremum hoc munus morientis
+habeto.' Windham's</i> Diary<i>, p. 28.</i></p>
+<p>[F-5] For Mrs. Gardiner see ante<i>, i. 242.</i></p>
+<p>[F-6] Mr. John Desmoulins was the son of Mrs. Desmoulins
+(ante<i>, iii. 222, 368), and the grandson of Johnson's
+god-father, Dr. Swinfen (</i>ante<i>, i. 34). Johnson mentions
+him in a letter to Mrs. Thrale in 1778. 'Young Desmoulins is
+taken in an</i> under-something <i>of Drury Lane; he knows not, I
+believe, his own denomination.'</i> Piozzi Letters<i>, ii.
+25.</i></p>
+<p>[F-7] The reference is to The Rambler<i>, No. 41 (not 42 as
+Boswell says), where Johnson mentions 'those vexations and
+anxieties with which all human enjoyments are polluted.'</i></p>
+<p>[F-8] Bishop Sanderson described his soul as 'infinitely
+polluted with sin.' Walton's Lives<i>, ed. 1838, p. 396.</i></p>
+<p>[F-9] Hume, writing in 1742 about his Essays Moral and
+Political<i>, says:&mdash;</i></p>
+<p>'Innys, the great bookseller in Paul's Church-yard, wonders
+there is not a new edition, for that he cannot find copies for
+his customers.' J.H. Burton's Hume<i>, i. 143.</i></p>
+<p>[F-10] Nichols (Lit. Anec. <i>ii. 554) says that, on Dec.
+7,</i></p>
+<p>'Johnson asked him whether any of the family of Faden the
+printer were living. Being told that the geographer near Charing
+Cross was Faden's son, he said, after a short pause:&mdash;"I
+borrowed a guinea of his father near thirty years ago; be so good
+as to take this, and pay it for me."'</p>
+<p>[F-11] Nowhere does Hawkins more shew the malignancy of his
+character than in his attacks on Johnson's black servant, and
+through him on Johnson. With the passage in which this offensive
+caveat <i>is found he brings his work to a close. At the first
+mention of Frank (</i>Life<i>, p. 328) he says:&mdash;</i></p>
+<p>'His first master had in great humanity <i>made him a
+Christian, and his last for no assignable reason, nay rather in
+despite of nature, and to unfit him for being useful according to
+his capacity, determined to make him a scholar.'</i></p>
+<p>But Hawkins was a brutal fellow. See ante<i>, i. 27, note 2,
+and 28, note</i></p>
+<center>1.</center>
+<p>[F-12] Johnson had written to Taylor on Oct. 23 of this
+year:&mdash;</p>
+<p>'"Coming down from a very restless night I found your letter,
+which made me a little angry. You tell me that recovery is in my
+power. This indeed I should be glad to hear if I could once
+believe it. But you mean to charge me with neglecting or opposing
+my own health. Tell me, therefore, what I do that hurts me, and
+what I neglect that would help me." This letter is endorsed by
+Taylor: "This is the last letter. My answer, which were (sic<i>)
+the words of advice he gave to Mr. Thrale the day he dyed, he
+resented extremely from me."' Mr. Alfred Morrison's</i>
+Collection of Autographs<i>, &amp;c., ii. 343.</i></p>
+<p>'The words of advice' which were given to Mr. Thrale the day
+before <i>the fatal fit seized him, were that he should abstain
+from full meals.</i> Ante<i>, iv. 84, note 4. Johnson's
+resentment of Taylor's advice may account for the absence of his
+name in his will.</i></p>
+<p>[F-13] They were sold in 650 Lots, in a four days' sale.
+Besides the books there were 146 portraits, of which 61 were
+framed and glazed. These prints in their frames were sold in lots
+of 4, 8, and even 10 together, though certainly some of
+them&mdash;and perhaps many&mdash;were engravings from Reynolds.
+The Catalogue of the sale is in the Bodleian Library.</p>
+<a name="2HAPP9"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+<p> </p>
+<p> </p>
+<p> </p>
+<p> </p>
+<h2>APPENDIX G.</h2>
+<p>(Notes on Boswell's note on page 408<i>.)</i></p>
+<p>[G-1] Mrs. Piozzi records (Anecdotes<i>, p. 120) that Johnson
+told her,&mdash;</i></p>
+<p>'When Boyse was almost perishing with hunger, and some money
+was produced to purchase him a dinner, he got a bit of roast
+beef, but could not eat it without ketch-up; and laid out the
+last half-guinea he possessed in truffles and mushrooms, eating
+them in bed too, for want of clothes, or even a shirt to sit up
+in.'</p>
+<p>Hawkins (Life<i>, p. 159) gives 1740 as the year of Boyse's
+destitution.</i></p>
+<p>'He was,' he says, 'confined to a bed which had no sheets;
+here, to procure food, he wrote; his posture sitting up in bed,
+his only covering a blanket, in which a hole was made to admit of
+the employment of his arm.'</p>
+<p>Two years later Boyse wrote the following verses to Cave from
+a spunging-house:&mdash;</p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'Hodie, teste coelo summo,
+ Sine pane, sine nummo,
+ Sorte positus infeste,
+ Scribo tibi dolens moeste.
+ Fame, bile tumet jecur:
+ Urbane, mitte opem, precor.
+ Tibi enim cor humanum
+ Non a malis alienum:
+ Mihi mens nee male grato,
+ Pro a te favore dato.
+ Ex gehenna debitoria,
+ Vulgo, domo spongiatoria.'
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>He adds that he hopes to have his Ode on the British Nation
+<i>done that day. This</i> Ode<i>, which is given in the</i>
+Gent. Mag. <i>1742, p. 383, contains the following verse, which
+contrasts sadly with the poor poet's case:&mdash;</i></p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'Thou, sacred isle, amidst thy ambient main,
+ Enjoyst the sweets of freedom<i> all thy own.'
+</i>
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>[G-2] It is not likely that Johnson called a sixpence 'a
+serious consideration.' He who in his youth would not let his
+comrades say prodigious <i>(</i>ante/<i>, in. 303) was not likely
+in his old age so to misuse a word.</i></p>
+<p>[G-3] Hugh Kelly is mentioned ante<i>, ii. 48, note 2, and
+iii. 113.</i></p>
+<p>[G-4] It was not on the return from Sky, but on the voyage
+from Sky to Rasay, that the spurs were lost. Post<i>, v.
+163.</i></p>
+<p>[G-5] Dr. White's Bampton Lectures <i>of 1784 'became part of
+the triumphant literature of the University of Oxford,' and got
+the preacher a Christ Church Canonry. Of these</i> Lectures
+<i>Dr. Parr had written about one-fifth part. White, writing to
+Parr about a passage in the manuscript of the last Lecture,
+said:&mdash;'I fear I did not clearly explain myself; I humbly
+beg the favour of you to make my meaning more intelligible.' On
+the death of Mr. Badcock in 1788, a note for &pound;500 from
+White was found in his pocket-book. White pretended that this was
+remuneration for some other work; but it was believed on good
+grounds that Badcock had begun what Parr had completed, and that
+these famous</i> Lectures <i>were mainly their work. Badcock was
+one of the writers in the</i> Monthly Review<i>. Johnstone's</i>
+Life of Dr. Parr<i>, i. 218-278. For Badcock's correspondence
+with the editor of the</i> Monthly Review<i>, see</i> Bodleian
+<i>MS.</i> Add.</p>
+<center>C. 90.</center>
+<p>[G-6] 'Virgilium vidi tantum.' Ovid, Tristia<i>, iv. 10.
+51.</i></p>
+<p>[G-7] Mackintosh says of Priestley:&mdash;'Frankness and
+disinterestedness in the avowal of his opinion were his point of
+honour.' He goes on to point out that there was 'great mental
+power in him wasted and scattered.' Life of Mackintosh<i>, i.
+349. See</i> ante<i>, ii. 124, and iv. 238 for Johnson's opinion
+of Priestley.</i></p>
+<p>[G-8] Badcock, in using the term 'index-scholar,' was
+referring no doubt to Pope's lines:&mdash;</p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+'How Index-learning turns no student pale,
+ Yet holds the eel of science by the tail.'
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>Dunciad<i>, i. 279.</i></p>
+<a name="2HAPP10"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+<p> </p>
+<p> </p>
+<p> </p>
+<p> </p>
+<h2>APPENDIX H.</h2>
+<p>(Notes on Boswell's note on pages 421-422<i>.)</i></p>
+<p>[H-1] The last lines of the inscription on this urn are
+borrowed, with a slight change, from the last paragraph of the
+last Rambler/<i>. (Johnson's</i> Works<i>, iii. 465, and</i>
+ante<i>, i. 226.) Johnson visited Colonel Myddelton on August 29,
+1774, in his Tour to Wales. See</i> post<i>, v. 453.</i></p>
+<p>[H-2] Johnson, writing to Dr. Taylor on Sept. 3, 1783,
+said:&mdash;'I sat to Opey (sic) as long as he desired, and I
+think the head is finished, but it is not much admired.' Notes
+and Queries<i>, 6th S. v. 481. Hawkins (</i>Life of Johnson<i>,
+p. 569) says that in 1784 'Johnson resumed sitting to Opie, but,'
+he adds, 'I believe the picture was never finished.'</i></p>
+<p>[H-3] Of this picture, which was the one painted for Beauclerk
+(ante<i>, p. 180), it is stated in Johnson's</i> Work<i>, ed.
+1787, xi. 204, that 'there is in it that appearance of a
+labouring working mind, of an indolent reposing body, which he
+had to a very great degree.'</i></p>
+<p>[H-4] It seems almost certain that the portrait of Johnson in
+the Common Room of University College, Oxford, is this very
+mezzotinto. It was given to the College by Sir William Scott, and
+it is a mezzotinto from Opie's portrait. It has been reproduced
+for this work, and will be found facing page 244 of volume iii.
+Scott's inscription on the back of the frame is given on page
+245, note 3, of the same volume.</p>
+<a name="2HAPP11"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+<p> </p>
+<p> </p>
+<p> </p>
+<p> </p>
+<h2>APPENDIX I.</h2>
+<p>(Page <i>424.)</i></p>
+<p>Boswell most likely never knew that in the year 1790 Mr.
+Seward, in the name of Cadell the publisher, had asked Parr to
+write a Life of Johnson<i>. (Johnstone's</i> Life of Parr<i>, iv.
+678.) Parr, in his amusing vanity, was as proud of this</i> Life
+<i>as if he had written it. '"It would have been," he said, "the
+third most learned work that has ever yet appeared. The most
+learned work ever published I consider Bentley</i> On the
+Epistles of Phalaris<i>; the next Salmasius</i> On the
+Hellenistic Language<i>." Alluding to Boswell's Life he
+continued, "Mine should have been, not the droppings of his lips,
+but the history of his mind."' Field's</i> Life of Parr<i>, i.
+164.</i></p>
+<p>In the epitaph that he first sent in were found the words
+'Probabili Poetae.'</p>
+<p>'In arms,' wrote Parr, 'were all the Johnsonians: Malone,
+Steevens, Sir W. Scott, Windham, and even Fox, all in arms. The
+epithet was cold. They do not understand it, and I am a Scholar,
+not a Belles-Lettres man.'</p>
+<p>Parr had wished to pass over all notice of Johnson's poetical
+character. To this, Malone said, none of his friends of the
+Literary Club would agree. He pointed out also that Parr had not
+noticed 'that part of Johnson's genius, which placed him on
+higher ground than perhaps any other quality that can be
+named&mdash;the universality of his knowledge, the promptness of
+his mind in producing it on all occasions in conversation, and
+the vivid eloquence with which he clothed his thoughts, however
+suddenly called upon.' Parr, regardless of Johnson's rule that
+'in lapidary inscriptions a man is not upon oath' (ante<i>, ii.
+407), replied, that if he mentioned his conversation he should
+have to mention also his roughness in contradiction, &amp;c. As
+for the epithet</i> probabili<i>, he 'never reflected upon it
+without almost a triumphant feeling in its felicity.'
+Nevertheless he would change it into 'poetae sententiarum et
+verborum ponderibus admirabili.' Yet these words, 'energetic and
+sonorous' though they were, 'fill one with a secret and
+invincible loathing, because they tend to introduce into the
+epitaph a character of magnificence.' With every fresh objection
+he rose in importance. He wrote for the approbation of real
+scholars of generations yet unborn. 'That the epitaph was written
+by such or such a man will, from the publicity of the situation,
+and the popularity of the subject, be long remembered.'
+Johnstone's</i> Life of Parr<i>, iv. 694-712. No objection seems
+to have been raised to the five pompous lines of perplexing dates
+and numerals in which no room is found even for Johnson's birth
+and birth-place.</i></p>
+<p>'After I had written the epitaph,' wrote Parr to a friend,
+'Sir Joshua Reynolds told me there was a scroll. I was in a rage.
+A scroll! Why, Ned, this is vile modern contrivance. I wanted one
+train of ideas. What could I do with the scroll? Johnson held it,
+and Johnson must speak in it. I thought of this, his favourite
+maxim, in the Life of Milton, [Johnson's Works<i>, vii.
+77],</i></p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ "[Greek: Otti toi en megaroisi kakon t agathon te tetuktai.]."
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>In Homer [Odyssey<i>, iv. 392] you know&mdash;and shewing the
+excellence of Moral Philosophy. There Johnson and Socrates agree.
+Mr. Seward, hearing of my difficulty, and no scholar, suggested
+the closing line in the</i> Rambler <i>[</i>ante<i>, i. 226, note
+1]; had I looked there I should have anticipated the suggestion.
+It is the closing line in Dionysius's</i> Periegesis<i>,</i></p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ "[Greek: Anton ek makaron antaxios eiae amoibae.]."
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>I adopted it, and gave Seward the praise. "Oh," quoth Sir
+William Scott, "[Greek: makaron] <i>is Heathenish, and the Dean
+and Chapter will hesitate." "The more fools they," said I. But to
+prevent disputes I have altered it.</i></p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ "[Greek: En makaressi ponon antaxios ein amoibae]."
+ Johnstone's Life of Parr<i>, iv. 713.
+</i>
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>Though the inscription on the scroll is not strictly speaking
+part of the epitaph, yet this mixture of Greek and Latin is open
+to the censure Johnson passed on Pope's Epitaph on Craggs.</p>
+<p>'It may be proper to remark,' he said, 'the absurdity of
+joining in the same inscription Latin and English, or verse and
+prose. If either language be preferable to the other, let that
+only be used; for no reason can be given why part of the
+information should be given in one tongue and part in another on
+a tomb more than in any other place, or on any other occasion.'
+Johnson's Works<i>, viii. 353.</i></p>
+<p>Bacon the sculptor was anxious, wrote Malone, 'that posterity
+should know that he was entitled to annex R.A. to his name.' Parr
+was ready to give his name, lest if it were omitted 'Bacon should
+slily put the figure of a hog on Johnson's monument'; just as
+'Saurus and Batrachus, when Octavia would not give them leave to
+set their names on the Temples they had built in Rome, scattered
+one of them [Greek: saurai] [lizards], and the other [Greek:
+batrachoi] [frogs] on the bases and capitals of the columns.' But
+as for the R.A., the sculptor 'very reluctantly had to agree to
+its omission.' Johnstone's Parr<i>, iv. 705 and 710.</i></p>
+<a name="2HFOO12"><!-- H2 anchor --></a>
+<p> </p>
+<p> </p>
+<p> </p>
+<p> </p>
+<h2>FOOTNOTES:</h2>
+<p><a name="note-1">[1]</a> Nothing can
+compensate for this want this year of all years. Johnson's health
+was better than it had been for long, and his mind happier
+perhaps than it had ever been. The knowledge that in his Lives of
+the Poets<i>, he had done, and was doing good work, no doubt was
+very cheering to him. At no time had he gone more into society,
+and at no time does he seem to have enjoyed it with greater
+relish. 'How do you think I live?' he wrote on April 25. 'On
+Thursday, I dined with Hamilton, and went thence to Mrs. Ord. On
+Friday, with much company at Reynolds's. On Saturday, at Dr.
+Bell's. On Sunday, at Dr. Burney's; at night, came Mrs. Ord, Mr.
+Greville, &amp;c. On Monday with Reynolds, at night with Lady
+Lucan; to-day with Mr. Langton; to-morrow with the Bishop of St.
+Asaph; on Thursday with Mr. Bowles; Friday &mdash;&mdash;;
+Saturday, at the Academy; Sunday with Mr. Ramsay.'</i> Piozzi
+Letters<i>, ii. 107. On May 1, he wrote:&mdash;'At Mrs. Ord's, I
+met one Mrs. B&mdash;&mdash; [Buller], a travelled lady, of great
+spirit, and some consciousness of her own abilities. We had a
+contest of gallantry an hour long, so much to the diversion of
+the company that at Ramsay's last night, in a crowded room, they
+would have pitted us again. There were Smelt, [one of the King's
+favourites] and the Bishop of St. Asaph, who comes to every
+place; and Lord Monboddo, and Sir Joshua, and ladies out of
+tale.'</i> Ib<i>. p. 111. The account that Langton gives of the
+famous evening at Mrs. Vesey's, 'when the company began to
+collect round Johnson till they became not less than four, if not
+five deep (</i>ante<i>, May 2, 1780), is lively enough; but 'the
+particulars of the conversation' which he neglects, Boswell would
+have given us in full.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-2">[2]</a> In 1792,
+Miss Burney, after recording that Boswell told some of his
+Johnsonian stories, continues:&mdash;'Mr. Langton told some
+stories in imitation of Dr. Johnson; but they became him less
+than Mr. Boswell, and only reminded me of what Dr. Johnson
+himself once said to me&mdash;"Every man has some time in his
+life an ambition to be a wag."' Mme. D'Arblay's Diary<i>, v.
+307.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-3">[3]</a> Stephanorum
+Historia, vitas ipsorum ac libros complectens<i>. London,</i></p>
+<center>1709.</center>
+<p><a name="note-4">[4]</a> Senilia
+<i>was published in 1742. The line to which Johnson refers is,
+'Mel, nervos, fulgur, Carteret, unus, habes,' p. 101. In another
+line, the poet celebrates Colley Cibber's Muse&mdash;the</i> Musa
+Cibberi<i>: 'Multa Cibberum levat aura.' p. 50. See Macaulay's
+Essays, ed. 1843, i. 367.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-5">[5]</a> Graecae
+Linguae Dialecti in Scholae Westmonast. usum<i>, 1738.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-6">[6]</a> Giannone, an
+Italian historian, born 1676, died 1748. When he published his
+History of the Kingdom of Naples<i>, a friend congratulating him
+on its success, said:&mdash;'Mon ami, vous vous &ecirc;tes mis
+une couronne sur la t&ecirc;te, mais une couronne
+d'&eacute;pines.' His attacks on the Church led to persecution,
+in the end he made a retractation, but nevertheless he died in
+prison.</i> Nouv. Biog. G&eacute;n. <i>xx. 422.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-7">[7]</a> See ante<i>,
+ii. 119.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-8">[8]</a> 'There is no
+kind of impertinence more justly censurable than his who is
+always labouring to level thoughts to intellects higher than his
+own; who apologises for every word which his own narrowness of
+converse inclines him to think unusual; keeps the exuberance of
+his faculties under visible restraint; is solicitous to
+anticipate inquiries by needless explanations; and endeavours to
+shade his own abilities lest weak eyes should be dazzled with
+their lustre.' The Rambler<i>, No. 173.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-9">[9]</a> Johnson, in
+his Dictionary<i>, defines</i> Anfractuousness <i>as</i> Fulness
+of windings and turnings<i>.</i> Anfractuosity <i>is not given.
+Lord Macaulay, in the last sentence in his</i> Biography of
+Johnson<i>, alludes to this passage.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-10">[10]</a> See
+ante<i>, iii. 149, note 2.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-11">[11]</a> 'My
+purpose was to admit no testimony of living authors, that I might
+not be misled by partiality, and that none of my contemporaries
+might have reason to complain; nor have I departed from this
+resolution, but when some performance of uncommon excellence
+excited my veneration, when my memory supplied me from late books
+with an example that was wanting, or when my heart, in the
+tenderness of friendship, solicited admission for a favourite
+name.' Johnson's Works<i>, v. 39. He cites himself under</i>
+important<i>, Mrs. Lennox under</i> talent<i>, Garrick under</i>
+giggler<i>; from Richardson's</i> Clarissa<i>, he makes frequent
+quotations. In the fourth edition, published in 1773
+(</i>ante<i>, ii. 203), he often quotes Reynolds; for instance,
+under</i> vulgarism<i>, which word is not in the previous
+editions. Beattie he quotes under</i> weak<i>, and Gray under</i>
+bosom<i>. He introduces also many quotations from Law, and Young.
+In the earlier editions, in his quotations from</i> Clarissa<i>,
+he very rarely gives the author's name; in the fourth edition I
+have found it rarely omitted.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-12">[12]</a> In one of
+his Hypochondriacks <i>(</i>London Mag. <i>1782, p. 233) Boswell
+writes:&mdash;'I have heard it remarked by one, of whom more
+remarks deserve to be remembered than of any person I ever knew,
+that a man is often as narrow as he is prodigal for want of
+counting.'</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-13">[13]</a> 'Sept.
+1778. We began talking of Irene<i>, and Mrs. Thrale made Dr.
+Johnson read some passages which I had been remarking as
+uncommonly applicable to the present time. He read several
+speeches, and told us he had not ever read so much of it before
+since it was first printed.' Mme. D'Arblay's</i> Diary<i>, i. 96.
+'I was told,' wrote Sir Walter Scott, 'that a gentleman called
+Pot, or some such name, was introduced to him as a particular
+admirer of his. The Doctor growled and took no further notice.
+"He admires in especial your</i> Irene <i>as the finest tragedy
+modern times;" to which the Doctor replied, "If Pot says so, Pot
+lies!" and relapsed into his reverie.'</i> Croker Corres. <i>ii.
+32.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-14">[14]</a>
+Scrupulosity <i>was a word that Boswell had caught up from
+Johnson. Sir W. Jones (</i>Life<i>, i. 177) wrote in
+1776:&mdash;'You will be able to examine with the minutest</i>
+scrupulosity<i>, as Johnson would call it.' Johnson describes
+Addison's prose as 'pure without scrupulosity.'</i> Works<i>,
+vii. 472. 'Swift,' he says, 'washed himself with oriental
+scrupulosity.'</i> Ib. <i>viii. 222. Boswell (</i>Hebrides<i>,
+Aug. 15) writes of 'scrupulosity of conscience.'</i></p>
+<center><a name=
+"note-15">[15]</a></center>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'When thou didst not, savage,
+ Know thine own meaning, but wouldst gabble like
+ A thing most brutish, I endow'd thy purposes
+ With words that made them known.'
+ The Tempest<i>, act i. sc. 2.
+</i>
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p><a name="note-16">[16]</a> Secretary
+to the British Herring Fishery, remarkable for an extraordinary
+number of occasional verses, not of eminent merit. BOSWELL. See
+ante<i>, i. 115, note i. Lockman was known in France as the
+translator of Voltaire's</i> La Henriade<i>. See Marmontel's
+Preface. Voltaire's</i> Works<i>, ed. 1819, viii. 18.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-17">[17]</a> Luke
+<i>vii. 50. BOSWELL.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-18">[18]</a> Miss
+Burney, describing him in 1783, says:&mdash;'He looks unformed in
+his manners and awkward in his gestures. He joined not one word
+in the general talk.' Mme. D'Arblay's Diary<i>, ii. 237. See</i>
+ante<i>, ii. 41, note 1.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-19">[19]</a> By
+Garrick.</p>
+<p><a name="note-20">[20]</a> See
+ante<i>, i. 201.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-21">[21]</a> See
+post<i>, under Sept. 30, 1783.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-22">[22]</a> The actor.
+Churchill introduces him in The Rosciad <i>(</i>Poems<i>, i.
+16):&mdash;'Next Holland came. With truly tragic stalk, He
+creeps, he flies. A Hero should not walk.'</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-23">[23]</a> In a
+letter written by Johnson to a friend in 1742-43, he says: 'I
+never see Garrick.' MALONE.</p>
+<p><a name="note-24">[24]</a> See
+ante<i>, ii. 227.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-25">[25]</a> The
+Wonder! A Woman keeps a Secret<i>, by Mrs. Centlivre. Acted at
+Drury Lane in 1714. Revived by Garrick in 1757. Reed's</i> Biog.
+Dram<i>. iii. 420.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-26">[26]</a> In
+Macbeth<i>.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-27">[27]</a> Mr.
+Longley was Recorder of Rochester, and father of Archbishop
+Longley. To the kindness of his grand-daughter, Mrs. Newton
+Smart, I owe the following extract from his manuscript
+Autobiography<i>:&mdash;'Dr. Johnson and General Paoli came down
+to visit Mr. Langton, and I was asked to meet them, when the
+conversation took place mentioned by Boswell, in which Johnson
+gave me more credit for knowledge of the Greek metres than I
+deserved. There was some question about anapaestics, concerning
+which I happened to remember what Foster used to tell us at Eton,
+that the whole line to the</i> Basis Anapaestica <i>was
+considered but as one verse, however divided in the printing, and
+consequently the syllables at the end of each line were not
+common, as in other metres. This observation was new to Johnson,
+and struck him. Had he examined me farther, I fear he would have
+found me ignorant. Langton was a very good Greek scholar, much
+superior to Johnson, to whom nevertheless he paid profound
+deference, sometimes indeed I thought more than he deserved. The
+next day I dined at Langton's with Johnson, I remember Lady
+Rothes [Langton's wife] spoke of the advantage children now
+derived from the little books published purposely for their
+instruction. Johnson controverted it, asserting that at an early
+age it was better to gratify curiosity with wonders than to
+attempt planting truth, before the mind was prepared to receive
+it, and that therefore,</i> Jack the Giant-Killer, Parisenus and
+Parismenus<i>, and</i> The Seven Champions of Christendom <i>were
+fitter for them than Mrs. Barbauld and Mrs. Trimmer.' Mrs. Piozzi
+(</i>Anec<i>. p. 16) says:&mdash;'Dr. Johnson used to condemn me
+for putting Newbery's books into children's hands. "Babies do not
+want," said he, "to hear about babies; they like to be told of
+giants and castles, and of somewhat which can stretch and
+stimulate their little minds." When I would urge the numerous
+editions of</i> Tommy Prudent <i>or</i> Goody Two Shoes<i>;
+"Remember always," said he, "that the parents buy the books, and
+that the children never read them.'" For Johnson's visit to
+Rochester, see</i> post<i>, July, 1783.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-28">[28]</a> See
+post<i>, beginning of 1781, after</i> The Life of Swift<i>, and
+Boswell's</i> Hebrides<i>, Oct. 15.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-29">[29]</a> See
+ante<i>, under Sept. 9, 1779.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-30">[30]</a> Johnson
+wrote of this grotto (Works<i>, viii. 270):&mdash;'It may be
+frequently remarked of the studious and speculative that they are
+proud of trifles, and that their amusements seem frivolous and
+childish.'</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-31">[31]</a> See
+ante<i>, i. 332.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-32">[32]</a> Epilogue
+to the Satires<i>, i. 131. Dr. James Foster, the Nonconformist
+preacher. Johnson mentions 'the reputation which he had gained by
+his proper delivery.'</i> Works<i>, viii. 384. In</i> The
+Conversations of Northcote<i>, p. 88, it is stated that 'Foster
+first became popular from the Lord Chancellor Hardwicke stopping
+in the porch of his chapel in the Old Jewry out of a shower of
+rain: and thinking he might as well hear what was going on he
+went in, and was so well pleased that he sent all the great folks
+to hear him, and he was run after as much as Irving has been in
+our time.' Dr. T. Campbell (</i>Diary<i>, p. 34) recorded in
+1775, that 'when Mrs. Thrale quoted something from Foster's</i>
+Sermons<i>, Johnson flew in a passion, and said that Foster was a
+man of mean ability, and of no original thinking.' Gibbon
+(</i>Misc. Works<i>, v. 300) wrote of Foster:&mdash;'Wonderful! a
+divine preferring reason to faith, and more afraid of vice than
+of heresy.'</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-33">[33]</a> It is
+believed to have been her play of The Sister<i>, brought out in
+1769. 'The audience expressed their disapprobation of it with so
+much appearance of prejudice that she would not suffer an attempt
+to exhibit it a second time.'</i> Gent. Mag. <i>xxxix. 199. It is
+strange, however, if Goldsmith was asked to hiss a play for which
+he wrote the epilogue. Goldsmith's</i> Misc. Works<i>, ii. 80.
+Johnson wrote on Oct. 28, 1779 (</i>Piozzi Letters<i>, ii.
+72):&mdash;'C&mdash;&mdash; L&mdash;&mdash; accuses
+&mdash;&mdash; of making a party against her play. I always
+hissed away the charge, supposing him a man of honour; but I
+shall now defend him with less confidence.' Baretti, in a
+marginal note, says that C&mdash;&mdash; L&mdash;&mdash; is
+'Charlotte Lennox.' Perhaps &mdash;&mdash; stands for Cumberland.
+Miss Burney said that 'Mr. Cumberland is notorious for hating and
+envying and spiting all authors in the dramatic line.' Mme.
+D'Arblay's</i> Diary<i>, i. 272.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-34">[34]</a> See
+ante<i>, i. 255.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-35">[35]</a> In The
+Rambler<i>, No. 195, Johnson describes rascals such as this man.
+'They hurried away to the theatre, full of malignity and
+denunciations against a man whose name they had never heard, and
+a performance which they could not understand; for they were
+resolved to judge for themselves, and would not suffer the town
+to be imposed upon by scribblers. In the pit they exerted
+themselves with great spirit and vivacity; called out for the
+tunes of obscene songs, talked loudly at intervals of Shakespeare
+and Jonson,' &amp;c.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-36">[36]</a> See
+ante<i>, ii. 469.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-37">[37]</a> Dr. Percy
+told Malone 'that they all at the Club had such a high opinion of
+Mr. Dyer's knowledge and respect for his judgment as to appeal to
+him constantly, and that his sentence was final.' Malone adds
+that 'he was so modest and reserved, that he frequently sat
+silent in company for an hour, and seldom spoke unless appealed
+to. Goldsmith, who used to rattle away upon all <i>subjects, had
+been talking somewhat loosely relative to music. Some one wished
+for Mr. Dyer's opinion, which he gave with his usual strength and
+accuracy. "Why," said Goldsmith, turning round to Dyer, whom he
+had scarcely noticed before, "you seem to know a good deal of
+this matter." "If I had not," replied Dyer, "I should not, in
+this company, have said a word upon the subject."' Burke
+described him as 'a man of profound and general erudition; his
+sagacity and judgment were fully equal to the extent of his
+learning.' Prior's</i> Malone<i>, pp. 419, 424. Malone in his</i>
+Life of Dryden<i>, p. 181, says that Dyer was</i> Junius<i>.
+Johnson speaks of him as 'the late learned Mr. Dyer.'</i>
+Works<i>, viii. 385. Had he been alive he was to have been the
+professor of mathematics in the imaginary college at St. Andrews.
+Boswell's</i> Hebrides<i>, Aug. 25. Many years after his death,
+Johnson bought his portrait to hang in 'a little room that he was
+fitting up with prints.' Croker's</i> Boswell<i>, p. 639.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-38">[38]</a> Memoirs of
+Agriculture and other Oeconomical Arts<i>, 3 vols., by Robert
+Dossie, London, 1768-82.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-39">[39]</a> See
+ante<i>, ii. 14.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-40">[40]</a> Here Lord
+Macartney remarks, 'A Bramin or any cast of the Hindoos will
+neither admit you to be of their religion, nor be converted to
+yours;&mdash;a thing which struck the Portuguese with the
+greatest astonishment, when they first discovered the East
+Indies.' BOSWELL.</p>
+<p><a name="note-41">[41]</a> See
+ante<i>, ii. 250.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-42">[42]</a> See
+ante<i>, Aug. 30, 1780.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-43">[43]</a> John, Lord
+Carteret, and Earl Granville, who died Jan. 2, 1763. It is
+strange that he wrote so ill; for Lord Chesterfield says (Misc.
+Works<i>, iv.</i> Appendix<i>, p. 42) that 'he had brought away
+with him from Oxford, a great stock of Greek and Latin, and had
+made himself master of all the modern languages. He was one of
+the best speakers in the House of Lords, both in the declamatory
+and argumentative way.'</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-44">[44]</a> Walpole
+describes the partiality of the members of the court-martial that
+sat on Admiral Keppel in Jan. 1779. One of them 'declared frankly
+that he should not attend to forms of law, but to justice.' So
+friendly were the judges to the prisoner that 'it required the
+almost unanimous voice of the witnesses in favour of his conduct,
+and the vile arts practised against him, to convince all mankind
+how falsely and basely he had been accused.' Walpole, referring
+to the members, speaks of 'the feelings of seamen unused to
+reason.' Some of the leading politicians established themselves
+at Portsmouth during the trial. Journal of the Reign of George
+III<i>, ii. 329</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-45">[45]</a> See
+ante<i>, ii. 240.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-46">[46]</a> In all
+Gray's Odes<i>, there is a kind of cumbrous splendour which we
+wish away.... The mind of the writer seems to work with unnatural
+violence. "Double, double, toil and trouble." He has a kind of
+strutting dignity, and is tall by walking on tip-toe. His art and
+his struggle are too visible, and there is too little appearance
+of ease and nature.' Johnson's</i> Works<i>, viii. 484-87.
+See</i> ante<i>, i. 402, and ii. 327, 335.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-47">[47]</a> One
+evening, in the Haymarket Theatre, 'when Foote lighted the King
+to his chair, his majesty asked who [sic] the piece was written
+by? "By one of your Majesty's chaplains," said Foote, unable even
+then to suppress his wit; "and dull enough to have been written
+by a bishop."' Forster's Essays<i>, ii. 435. See</i> ante<i>, i.
+390, note 3.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-48">[48]</a> Bk. v. ch.
+1.</p>
+<p><a name="note-49">[49]</a> See
+ante<i>, ii. 133, note 1; Boswell's</i> Hebrides<i>, Aug. 27, and
+Oct. 28.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-50">[50]</a> The
+correspondent of The Gentleman's Magazine <i>[1792, p. 214] who
+subscribes himself SCIOLUS furnishes the following
+supplement:&mdash;</i></p>
+<p>'A lady of my acquaintance remembers to have heard her uncle
+sing those homely stanzas more than forty-five years ago. He
+repeated the second thus:&mdash;</p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ She shall breed young lords and ladies fair,
+ And ride abroad in a coach and three pair,
+ And the best, &amp;c.
+ And have a house, &amp;c.
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>And remembered a third which seems to have been the
+introductory one, and is believed to have been the only remaining
+one:&mdash;</p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ When the Duke of Leeds shall have made his choice
+ Of a charming young lady that's beautiful and wise,
+ She'll be the happiest young gentlewoman under the skies,
+ As long as the sun and moon shall rise,
+ And how happy shall, &amp;c.
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>It is with pleasure I add that this stanza could never be more
+truly applied than at this present time. BOSWELL. This note was
+added to the second edition.</p>
+<p><a name="note-51">[51]</a> See
+ante<i>, i. 115, note 1.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-52">[52]</a> See
+ante<i>, i. 82.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-53">[53]</a> Baretti,
+in a MS. note on Piozzi Letters<i>, i. 121, says:&mdash;'Johnson
+was a real</i> true-born Englishman<i>. He hated the Scotch, the
+French, the Dutch, the Hanoverians, and had the greatest contempt
+for all other European nations; such were his early prejudices
+which he never attempted to conquer.' Reynolds wrote of
+Johnson:&mdash;'The prejudices he had to countries did not extend
+to individuals. In respect to Frenchmen he rather laughed at
+himself, but it was insurmountable. He considered every foreigner
+as a fool till they had convinced him of the contrary.'
+Taylor's</i> Reynolds<i>, ii. 460. Garrick wrote of the French in
+1769:&mdash;'Their</i> politesse <i>has reduced their character
+to such a sameness, and their humours and passions are so curbed
+by habit, that, when you have seen half-a-dozen French men and
+women, you have seen the whole.'</i> Garrick Corres<i>. i.
+358.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-54">[54]</a> 'There is
+not a man or woman here,' wrote Horace Walpole from Paris
+(Letters <i>iv. 434), 'that is not a perfect old nurse, and who
+does not talk gruel and anatomy with equal fluency and
+ignorance.'</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-55">[55]</a> '"I
+remember that interview well," said Dr. Parr with great vehemence
+when once reminded of it; "I gave him no quarter." The subject of
+our dispute was the liberty of the press. Dr. Johnson was very
+great. Whilst he was arguing, I observed that he stamped. Upon
+this I stamped. Dr. Johnson said, "Why did you stamp, Dr. Parr?"
+I replied, "Because you stamped; and I was resolved not to give
+you the advantage even of a stamp in the argument."' This, Parr
+said, was by no means his first introduction to Johnson. Field's
+Parr<i>, i. 161. Parr wrote to Romilly in 1811:&mdash;'Pray let
+me ask whether you have ever read some admirable remarks of Mr.
+Hutcheson upon the word</i> merit<i>. I remember a controversy I
+had with Dr. Johnson upon this very term: we began with theology
+fiercely, I gently carried the conversation onward to philosophy,
+and after a dispute of more than three hours he lost sight of my
+heresy, and came over to my opinion upon the metaphysical import
+of the term.'</i> Life of Romilly<i>, ii. 365. When Parr was a
+candidate for the mastership of Colchester Grammar School,
+Johnson wrote for him a letter of recommendation. Johnstone's</i>
+Parr<i>, i. 94.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-56">[56]</a> 'Somebody
+was praising Corneille one day in opposition to Shakespeare.
+"Corneille is to Shakespeare," replied Mr. Johnson, "as a clipped
+hedge is to a forest."' Piozzi's Anec<i>. p. 59.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-57">[57]</a> Johnson,
+it is clear, discusses here Mrs. Montagu's Essay on
+Shakespeare<i>. She compared Shakespeare first with Corneille,
+and then with Aeschylus. In contrasting the ghost in</i> Hamlet
+<i>with the shade of Darius in</i> The Persians<i>, she
+says:&mdash;'The phantom, who was to appear ignorant of what was
+past, that the Athenian ear might be soothed and flattered with
+the detail of their victory at Salamis, is allowed, for the same
+reason, such prescience as to foretell their future triumph at
+Plataea.' p. 161.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-58">[58]</a> Caution is
+required in everything which is laid before youth, to secure them
+from unjust prejudices, perverse opinions, and incongruous
+combinations of images. In the romances formerly written, every
+transaction and sentiment was so remote from all that passes
+among men, that the reader was in very little danger of making
+any applications to himself.' The Rambler<i>, No. 4.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-59">[59]</a> Johnson
+says of Pope's Ode for St. Cecilia's Day<i>:&mdash;'The next
+stanzas place and detain us in the dark and dismal regions of
+mythology, where neither hope nor fear, neither joy nor sorrow
+can be found.'</i> Works<i>, viii. 328. Of Gray's</i> Progress of
+Poetry<i>, he says:&mdash;'The second stanza, exhibiting Mars'
+car and Jove's eagle, is unworthy of further notice. Criticism
+disdains to chase a school-boy to his common-places.'</i> Ib<i>.
+p. 484.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-60">[60]</a> See
+ante<i>, ii. 178.</i></p>
+<center><a name=
+"note-61">[61]</a></center>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'A Wizard-Dame, the Lover's ancient friend,
+ With magic charm has deaft thy husband's ear,
+ At her command I saw the stars descend,
+ And winged lightnings stop in mid career, &amp;c.'
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>Hammond. Elegy<i>, v. In Boswell's</i> Hebrides <i>(Sept. 29),
+he said 'Hammond's</i> Love Elegies <i>were poor things.'</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-62">[62]</a> Perhaps
+Lord Corke and Orrery. Ante<i>, iii. 183. CROKER.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-63">[63]</a> Colman
+assumed that Johnson had maintained that Shakespeare was totally
+ignorant of the learned languages. He then quotes a line to prove
+'that the author of The Taming of the Shrew <i>had at least read
+Ovid;' and continues:&mdash;'And what does Dr. Johnson say on
+this occasion? Nothing. And what does Mr. Farmer say on this
+occasion? Nothing.' Colman's</i> Terence<i>, ii. 390. For Farmer,
+see</i> ante<i>, iii. 38.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-64">[64]</a> 'It is
+most likely that Shakespeare had learned Latin sufficiently to
+make him acquainted with construction, but that he never advanced
+to an easy perusal of the Roman authors.' Johnson's Works<i>, V.
+129. 'The style of Shakespeare was in itself ungrammatical,
+perplexed, and obscure.'</i> Ib<i>. p. 135.</i></p>
+<center><a name=
+"note-65">[65]</a></center>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'May I govern my passion with
+ an absolute sway,
+ And grow wiser and better, as
+ my strength wears away,
+ Without gout or stone by a
+ gentle decay.'
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>The Old Man's Wish <i>was sung to Sir Roger de Coverley by
+'the fair one,' after the collation in which she ate a couple of
+chickens, and drank a full bottle of wine.</i> Spectator<i>, No.
+410. 'What signifies our wishing?' wrote Dr. Franklin. 'I have
+sung that</i> wishing song <i>a thousand times when I was young,
+and now find at fourscore that the three contraries have befallen
+me, being subject to the gout and the stone, and not being yet
+master of all my passions.' Franklin's</i> Memoirs<i>, iii.
+185.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-66">[66]</a> He uses
+the same image in The Life of Milton <i>(</i>Works<i>, vii.
+104):&mdash;'He might still be a giant among the pigmies, the
+one-eyed monarch of the blind.' Cumberland (</i>Memoirs<i>, i.
+39) says that Bentley, hearing it maintained that Barnes spoke
+Greek almost like his mother tongue, replied:&mdash;'Yes, I do
+believe that Barnes had as much Greek and understood it about as
+well as an Athenian blacksmith.' See</i> ante<i>, iii 284. A
+passage in Wooll's</i> Life of Dr. Warton <i>(i. 313) shews that
+Barnes attempted to prove that Homer and Solomon were one and the
+same man. But I. D'Israeli says that it was reported that Barnes,
+not having money enough to publish his edition of</i> Homer<i>,
+'wrote a poem, the design of which is to prove that Solomon was
+the author of the</i> Iliad<i>, to interest his wife, who had
+some property, to lend her aid towards the publication of so
+divine a work.'</i> Calamities of Authors<i>, i. 250.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-67">[67]</a> 'The first
+time Suard saw Burke, who was at Reynolds's, Johnson touched him
+on the shoulder and said, "Le grand Burke."' Boswelliana<i>, p.
+299. See ante, ii. 450.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-68">[68]</a> Miss
+Hawkins (Memoirs<i>, i. 279, 288) says that Langton told her
+father that he meant to give his six daughters such a knowledge
+of Greek, 'that while five of them employed themselves in
+feminine works, the sixth should read a Greek author for the
+general amusement.' She describes how 'he would get into the most
+fluent recitation of half a page of Greek, breaking off for fear
+of wearying, by saying, "and so it goes on," accompanying his
+words with a gentle wave of his hand.'</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-69">[69]</a> See post,
+p. 42.</p>
+<p><a name="note-70">[70]</a> See ante,
+i. 326.</p>
+<p><a name="note-71">[71]</a> This
+assertion concerning Johnson's insensibility to the pathetick
+powers of Otway, is too round<i>. I once asked him, whether he
+did not think Otway frequently tender: when he answered, 'Sir, he
+is all tenderness.' BURNEY. He describes Otway as 'one of the
+first names in the English drama.'</i> Works<i>, vii.
+173.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-72">[72]</a> See ante,
+April 16, 1779.</p>
+<p><a name="note-73">[73]</a> Johnson;
+it seems, took up this study. In July, 1773, he recorded that
+between Easter and Whitsuntide, he attempted to learn the Low
+Dutch language. 'My application,' he continues, 'was very slight,
+and my memory very fallacious, though whether more than in my
+earlier years, I am not very certain.' Pr. and Med. <i>p. 129,
+and ante, ii. 263. On his death-bed, he said to Mr.
+Hoole:&mdash;'About two years since I feared that I had neglected
+God, and that then I had not a</i> mind <i>to give him; on which
+I set about to read</i> Thomas &agrave; Kempis <i>in Low Dutch,
+which I accomplished, and thence I judged that my mind was not
+impaired, Low Dutch having no affinity with any of the languages
+which I knew.' Croker's</i> Boswell<i>, p. 844. See ante, iii.
+235.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-74">[74]</a> See post,
+under July 5, 1783.</p>
+<p><a name="note-75">[75]</a> See ante,
+ii. 409, and iii. 197.</p>
+<p><a name="note-76">[76]</a> One of
+Goldsmith's friends 'remembered his relating [about the year
+1756] a strange Quixotic scheme he had in contemplation of going
+to decipher the inscriptions on the written mountains<i>, though
+he was altogether ignorant of Arabic, or the language in which
+they might be supposed to be written.' Goldsmith's</i> Misc.
+Works<i>, ed. 1801, i. 40. Percy says that Goldsmith applied to
+the prime minister, Lord Bute, for a salary to enable him to
+execute 'the visionary project' mentioned in the text. 'To
+prepare the way, he drew up that ingenious essay on this subject
+which was first printed in the</i> Ledger<i>, and afterwards in
+his</i> Citizen of the World <i>[No. 107].'</i> Ib<i>. p. 65.
+Percy adds that the Earl of Northumberland, who was Lord
+Lieutenant of Ireland, regretted 'that he had not been made
+acquainted with his plan; for he would have procured him a
+sufficient salary on the Irish establishment.' Goldsmith, in his
+review of Van Egmont's</i> Travels in Asia<i>, says:&mdash;'Could
+we see a man set out upon this journey [to Asia] not with an
+intent to consider rocks and rivers, but the manners, and the
+mechanic inventions, and the imperfect learning of the
+inhabitants; resolved to penetrate into countries as yet little
+known, and eager to pry into all their secrets, with an heart not
+terrified at trifling dangers; if there could be found a man who
+could unite this true courage with sound learning, from such a
+character we might hope much information.' Goldsmith's</i>
+Works<i>, ed. 1854, iv. 225. Johnson would have gone to
+Constantinople, as he himself said, had he received his pension
+twenty years earlier.</i> Post<i>, p. 27.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-77">[77]</a> It should
+be remembered, that this was said twenty-five or thirty years
+ago, [written in 1799,] when lace was very generally worn.
+MALONE. 'Greek and Latin,' said Porson, 'are only luxuries.'
+Rogers's Table Talk<i>, p. 325.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-78">[78]</a> See
+ante<i>, iii. 8.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-79">[79]</a> Dr.
+Johnson, in his Life of Cowley<i>, says, that these are 'the only
+English verses which Bentley is known to have written.' I shall
+here insert them, and hope my readers will apply them.</i></p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'Who strives to mount Parnassus' hill,
+ And thence poetick laurels bring,
+ Must first acquire due force and skill,
+ Must fly with swan's or eagle's wing.
+ Who Nature's treasures would explore,
+ Her mysteries and arcana know;
+ Must high as lofty Newton soar,
+ Must stoop as delving Woodward low.
+ Who studies ancient laws and rites,
+ Tongues, arts, and arms, and history;
+ Must drudge, like Selden, days and nights,
+ And in the endless labour die.
+ Who travels in religious jars,
+ (Truth mixt with errour, shades with rays;)
+ Like Whiston, wanting pyx or stars,
+ In ocean wide or sinks or strays.
+ But grant our hero's hope, long toil
+ And comprehensive genius crown,
+ All sciences, all arts his spoil,
+ Yet what reward, or what renown?
+ Envy, innate in vulgar souls,
+ Envy steps in and stops his rise,
+ Envy with poison'd tarnish fouls
+ His lustre, and his worth decries.
+ He lives inglorious or in want,
+ To college and old books confin'd;
+ Instead of learn'd he's call'd pedant,
+ Dunces advanc'd, he's left behind:
+ Yet left content a genuine Stoick he,
+ Great without patron, rich without South Sea.' BOSWELL.
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>In Mr. Croker's octavo editions, arts <i>in the fifth stanza
+is changed into</i> hearts<i>. J. Boswell, jun., gives the
+following reading of the first four lines of the last stanza, not
+from</i> Dodsley's Collection<i>, but from an earlier one,
+called</i> The Grove<i>.</i></p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'Inglorious or by wants inthralled,
+ To college and old books confined,
+ A pedant from his learning called,
+ Dunces advanced, he's left behind.'
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p><a name="note-80">[80]</a> Bentley,
+in the preface to his edition of Paradise Lost<i>,
+says:&mdash;</i></p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'Sunt et mihi carmina; me quoque dicunt
+ Vatem pastores: sed non ego credulus illis.'
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p><a name="note-81">[81]</a> The
+difference between Johnson and Smith is apparent even in this
+slight instance. Smith was a man of extraordinary application,
+and had his mind crowded with all manner of subjects; but the
+force, acuteness, and vivacity of Johnson were not to be found
+there. He had book-making so much in his thoughts, and was so
+chary of what might be turned to account in that way, that he
+once said to Sir Joshua Reynolds, that he made it a rule, when in
+company, never to talk of what he understood. Beauclerk had for a
+short time a pretty high opinion of Smith's conversation.
+Garrick, after listening to him for a while, as to one of whom
+his expectations had been raised, turned slyly to a friend, and
+whispered him, 'What say you to this?&mdash;eh? flabby<i>, I
+think.' BOSWELL. Dr. A. Carlyle (</i>Auto<i>. p. 279),
+says:&mdash;'Smith's voice was harsh and enunciation thick,
+approaching to stammering. His conversation was not colloquial,
+but like lecturing. He was the most absent man in company that I
+ever saw, moving his lips, and talking to himself, and smiling in
+the midst of large companies. If you awaked him from his reverie
+and made him attend to the subject of conversation, he
+immediately began a harangue, and never stopped till he told you
+all he knew about it, with the utmost philosophical ingenuity.'
+Dugald Stewart (</i>Life of Adam Smith<i>, p. 117) says that 'his
+consciousness of his tendency to absence rendered his manner
+somewhat embarrassed in the company of strangers.' But 'to his
+intimate friends, his peculiarities added an inexpressible charm
+to his conversation, while they displayed in the most interesting
+light the artless simplicity of his heart.'</i> Ib<i>. p. 113.
+See also Walpole's</i> Letters<i>, vi. 302, and</i> ante<i>, ii.
+430, note 1.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-82">[82]</a> Garrick
+himself was a good deal of an infidel: see ante<i>, ii. 85, note
+7.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-83">[83]</a> Ante<i>,
+i. 181.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-84">[84]</a> The
+Tempest, act iv. sc. i. In The Rambler<i>, No. 127, Johnson
+writes of men who have 'borne opposition down before them, and
+left emulation panting behind.' He quotes (</i>Works<i>, vii.
+261) the following couplet by Dryden:&mdash;</i></p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'Fate after him below with pain did move,
+ And victory could scarce keep pace above.'
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>Young in The Last Day<i>, book I, had written:&mdash;</i></p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'Words all in vain pant after the distress.'
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p><a name="note-85">[85]</a> I am sorry
+to see in the Transactions of the Royal Society of Edinburgh<i>,
+vol. ii,</i> An Essay on the Character of Hamlet<i>, written, I
+should suppose, by a very young man, though called 'Reverend;'
+who speaks with presumptuous petulance of the first literary
+character of his age. Amidst a cloudy confusion of words, (which
+hath of late too often passed in Scotland for</i>
+Metaphysicks<i>,) he thus ventures to criticise one of the
+noblest lines in our language:&mdash;'Dr. Johnson has remarked,
+that "time toil'd after him in vain." But I should apprehend,
+that this is</i> entirely to mistake the character<i>. Time toils
+after</i> every great man<i>, as well after Shakspeare. The</i>
+workings <i>of an ordinary mind</i> keep pace<i>, indeed, with
+time; they move no faster;</i> they have their beginning, their
+middle, and their end<i>; but superiour natures can</i> reduce
+these into a point<i>. They do not, indeed,</i> suppress <i>them;
+but they</i> suspend<i>, or they</i> lock them up in the
+breast<i>.' The learned Society, under whose sanction such gabble
+is ushered into the world, would do well to offer a premium to
+any one who will discover its meaning. BOSWELL.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-86">[86]</a> 'May 29,
+1662. Took boat and to Fox-hall, where I had not been a great
+while. To the old Spring Garden, and there walked long.' Pepys's
+Diary<i>, i. 361. The place was afterwards known as Faux-hall and
+Vauxhall. See</i> ante<i>, iii. 308.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-87">[87]</a> 'One that
+wouldst be a bawd, in way of good service and art nothing but the
+composition of a knave, beggar, coward, pandar.' King Lear<i>,
+act ii. sc. 2.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-88">[88]</a> Yet W.G.
+Hamilton said:&mdash;'Burke understands everything but gaming and
+music. In the House of Commons I sometimes think him only the
+second man in England; out of it he is always the first.' Prior's
+Burke<i>, p. 484. See</i> ante<i>, ii. 450. Bismarck once 'rang
+the bell' to old Prince Metternich. 'I listened quietly,' he
+said, 'to all his stories, merely jogging the bell every now and
+then till it rang again. That pleases these talkative old men.'
+DR. BUSCH, quoted in Lowe's</i> Prince Bismarck<i>, i.
+130.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-89">[89]</a> See
+ante<i>, i. 470, for his disapproval of 'studied
+behaviour.'</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-90">[90]</a> Johnson
+had perhaps Dr. Warton in mind. Ante<i>, ii. 41, note 1.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-91">[91]</a> See
+ante<i>, i. 471, and iii. 165.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-92">[92]</a> 'Oblivion
+is a kind of annihilation.' Sir Thomas Browne's Christian
+Morals<i>, sect. xxi.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-93">[93]</a> 'Nec te
+quaesiveris extra.' Persius, Sat<i>. i. 7. We may compare
+Milton's line,</i></p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'In himself was all his state.'
+ Paradise Lost<i>, v. 353.
+</i>
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p><a name="note-94">[94]</a> See ante,
+<i>iii. 269.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-95">[95]</a> 'A work of
+this kind must, in a minute examination, discover many
+imperfections; but West's version, so far as I have considered
+it, appears to be the product of great labour and great
+abilities.' Johnson's Works, <i>viii. 398.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-96">[96]</a> See
+Boswell's Hebrides, <i>Aug. 25, 1773.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-97">[97]</a> See ante,
+<i>i. 82, and ii. 228.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-98">[98]</a> See ante,
+<i>i. 242.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-99">[99]</a> See
+Boswell's Hebrides<i>, under Nov. 11.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-100">[100]</a> A
+literary lady has favoured me with a characteristick anecdote of
+Richardson. One day at his country-house at Northend, where a
+large company was assembled at dinner, a gentleman who was just
+returned from Paris, willing to please Mr. Richardson, mentioned
+to him a very flattering circumstance,&mdash;that he had seen his
+Clarissa <i>lying on the King's brother's table. Richardson
+observing that part of the company were engaged in talking to
+each other, affected then not to attend to it. But by and by,
+when there was a general silence, and he thought that the
+flattery might be fully heard, he addressed himself to the
+gentleman, 'I think, Sir, you were saying something
+about,&mdash;' pausing in a high flutter of expectation. The
+gentleman provoked at his inordinate vanity, resolved not to
+indulge it, and with an exquisitely sly air of indifference
+answered, 'A mere trifle Sir, not worth repeating.' The
+mortification of Richardson was visible, and he did not speak ten
+words more the whole day. Dr. Johnson was present, and appeared
+to enjoy it much. BOSWELL.</i></p>
+<center><a name=
+"note-101">[101]</a></center>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'E'en in a bishop I can spy desert;
+ Seeker is decent, Rundel has a heart.'
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>Pope, Epil. to Sat<i>. ii. 70. Horace Walpole wrote on Aug.
+4,1768 (Letters, v. 115):&mdash;'We have lost our Pope.
+Canterbury [Archbishop Seeker] died yesterday. He had never been
+a Papist, but almost everything else. Our Churchmen will not be
+Catholics; that stock seems quite fallen.'</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-102">[102]</a> Perhaps
+the Earl of Corke. Ante<i>, iii. 183.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-103">[103]</a> Garrick
+perhaps borrowed this saying when, in his epigram on Goldsmith,
+speaking of the ideas of which his head was full, he
+said:&mdash;</p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'When his mouth opened all were in a pother,
+ Rushed to the door and tumbled o'er each other,
+ But rallying soon with all their force again,
+ In bright array they issued from his pen.'
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>Fitzgerald's Garrick<i>, ii. 363. See</i> ante<i>, ii.
+231.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-104">[104]</a> See
+ante<i>, i. 116, and ii. 52.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-105">[105]</a> Horace
+Walpole (Letters<i>, ix. 318) writes of Boswell's</i> Life of
+Johnson:<i>&mdash;'Dr. Blagden says justly, that it is a new kind
+of libel, by which you may abuse anybody, by saying some dead
+person said so and so of somebody alive.'</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-106">[106]</a> See
+ante<i>, ii. III. In the</i> Gent. Mag. <i>1770, p. 78, is a
+review of</i> A Letter to Samuel Johnson, LL.D.<i>, 'that is
+generally imputed to Mr. Wilkes.'</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-107">[107]</a> 'Do you
+conceive the full force of the word CONSTITUENT? It has the same
+relation to the House of Commons as Creator to creature.' A
+Letter to Samuel Johnson, LL.D.<i>, p. 23.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-108">[108]</a> His
+profound admiration of the GREAT FIRST CAUSE was such as to set
+him above that 'Philosophy and vain deceit' [Colossians<i>, ii.
+8] with which men of narrower conceptions have been infected. I
+have heard him strongly maintain that 'what is right is not so
+from any natural fitness, but because GOD wills it to be right;'
+and it is certainly so, because he has predisposed the relations
+of things so as that which he wills must be right. BOSWELL.
+Johnson was as much opposed as the Rev. Mr. Thwackum to the
+philosopher Square, who 'measured all actions by the unalterable
+rule of right and the eternal fitness of things.'</i> Tom
+Jones<i>, book iii. ch. 3.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-109">[109]</a> In
+Rasselas <i>(ch. ii.) we read that the prince's look 'discovered
+him to receive some solace of the miseries of life, from
+consciousness of the delicacy with which he felt, and the
+eloquence with which he bewailed them.' See</i> ante<i>, April 8,
+1780.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-110">[110]</a> I hope
+the authority of the great Master of our language will stop that
+curtailing innovation, by which we see critic, public<i>,
+&amp;c., frequently written instead of</i> critick, publick<i>,
+&amp;c. BOSWELL. Boswell had always been nice in his spelling. In
+the Preface to his</i> Corsica<i>, published twenty-four years
+before</i> The Life of Johnson<i>, he defends his peculiarities,
+and says:&mdash;'If this work should at any future period be
+reprinted, I hope that care will be taken of my orthography.' Mr.
+Croker says that in a memorandum in Johnson's writing he has
+found '</i>cubic <i>feet.'</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-111">[111]</a>
+'Disorders of intellect,' answered Imlac, 'happen much more often
+than superficial observers will easily believe. Perhaps, if we
+speak with rigorous exactness, no human mind is in its right
+state.' Rasselas<i>, ch. 44.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-112">[112]</a> See
+ante<i>, i. 397, for Kit Smart's madness in praying.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-113">[113]</a> Yet he
+gave lessons in Latin to Miss Burney and Miss Thrale. Mme.
+D'Arblay's Diary<i>, i. 243. In Skye he said, 'Depend upon it, no
+woman is the worse for sense and knowledge.' Boswell's</i>
+Hebrides<i>, Sept. 19.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-114">[114]</a> See
+ante<i>, iii, 240.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-115">[115]</a> Nos.
+588, 601, 626 and 635. The first number of the Spectator <i>was
+written by Addison, the last by Grove. See</i> ante<i>, iii. 33,
+for Johnson's praise of No. 626.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-116">[116]</a> Sterne
+is of a direct contrary opinion. See his Sentimental Journey<i>,
+Article, 'The Mystery.' BOSWELL. Sterne had been of the same
+opinion as Johnson, for he says that the beggar he saw
+'confounded all kind of reasoning upon him.' 'He passed by me,'
+he continues, 'without asking anything&mdash;and yet he did not
+go five steps farther before he asked charity of a little
+woman&mdash;I was much more likely to have given of the two. He
+had scarce done with the woman, when he pulled his hat off to
+another who was coming the same way.&mdash;An ancient gentleman
+came slowly&mdash;and, after him, a young smart one&mdash;He let
+them both pass, and asked nothing; I stood observing him half an
+hour, in which time he had made a dozen turns backwards and
+forwards, and found that he invariably pursued the same
+plan.'</i> Sentimental Journey<i>, ed. 1775, ii. 105.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-117">[117]</a> Very
+likely Dr. Warton. Ante<i>, ii. 41.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-118">[118]</a> I differ
+from Mr. Croker in the explanation of this ill-turned sentence.
+The shield <i>that Homer may hold up is the observation made by
+Mrs. Fitzherbert. It was this observation that Johnson respected
+as a very fine one. For his high opinion of that lady's
+understanding, see</i> ante<i>, i. 83.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-119">[119]</a> In
+Boswelliana <i>(p. 323) are recorded two more of Langton's
+Anecdotes. 'Mr. Beauclerk told Dr. Johnson that Dr. James said to
+him he knew more Greek than Mr. Walmesley. "Sir," said he, "Dr.
+James did not know enough of Greek to be sensible of his
+ignorance of the language. Walmesley did."' See</i> ante<i>, i.
+81. 'A certain young clergyman used to come about Dr. Johnson.
+The Doctor said it vexed him to be in his company, his ignorance
+was so hopeless. "Sir," said Mr. Langton, "his coming about you
+shows he wishes to help his ignorance." "Sir," said the Doctor,
+"his ignorance is so great, I am afraid to show him the bottom of
+it."'</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-120">[120]</a> Dr.
+Francklin. See ante<i>, iii. 83, note 3. Churchill attacked him
+in</i> The Rosciad <i>(Poems, ii. 4). When, he says, it came to
+the choice of a judge,</i></p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'Others for Francklin voted; but 'twas known,
+ He sickened at all triumphs but his own.'
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p><a name="note-121">[121]</a> See
+ante<i>, iii. 241, note 2.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-122">[122]</a> Pr. and
+Med<i>. p.190. BOSWELL.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-123">[123]</a> Ib<i>.
+174. BOSWELL.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-124">[124]</a> 'Mr.
+Fowke once observed to Dr. Johnson that, in his opinion, the
+Doctor's literary strength lay in writing biography, in which he
+infinitely exceeded all his contemporaries. "Sir," said Johnson,
+"I believe that is true. The dogs don't know how to write trifles
+with dignity."'&mdash;R. Warner's Original Letters<i>, p.
+204.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-125">[125]</a> His
+design is thus announced in his Advertisement<i>: 'The
+Booksellers having determined to publish a body of English
+Poetry, I was persuaded to promise them a Preface to the works of
+each authour; an undertaking, as it was then presented to my
+mind, not very tedious or difficult.</i></p>
+<p>'My purpose was only to have allotted to every poet an
+Advertisement, like that [in original those<i>] which we find in
+the French Miscellanies, containing a few dates, and a general
+character; but I have been led beyond my intention, I hope by the
+honest desire of giving useful pleasure.' BOSWELL.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-126">[126]</a>
+Institutiones<i>, liber i, Prooemium 3.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-127">[127]</a> 'He had
+bargained for two hundred guineas, and the booksellers
+spontaneously added a third hundred; on this occasion Dr. Johnson
+observed to me, "Sir, I always said the booksellers were a
+generous set of men. Nor, in the present instance, have I reason
+to complain. The fact is, not that they have paid me too little,
+but that I have written too much." The Lives <i>were soon
+published in a separate edition; when, for a very few
+corrections, he was presented with another hundred guineas.'
+Nichols's</i> Lit. Anec. <i>viii. 416. See</i> ante<i>, iii. 111.
+In Mr. Morrison's</i> Collection of Autographs <i>&amp;c., vol.
+ii, 'is Johnson's receipt for 100</i>l<i>., from the proprietors
+of</i> The Lives of the Poets <i>for revising the last edition of
+that work.' It is dated Feb. 19, 1783. 'Underneath, in Johnson's
+autograph, are these words: "It is great impudence to put</i>
+Johnson's Poets <i>on the back of books which Johnson neither
+recommended nor revised. He recommended only Blackmore on the
+Creation, and Watts. How then are they Johnson's? This is
+indecent."' The poets whom Johnson recommended were Blackmore,
+Watts, Pomfret, and Yalden.</i> Ante<i>, under Dec. 29,
+1778.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-128">[128]</a> Gibbon
+says of the last five quartos of the six that formed his
+History<i>:&mdash;'My first rough manuscript, without any
+intermediate copy, has been sent to the press.'</i> Misc.
+Works<i>, i. 255. In the</i> Memoir of Goldsmith<i>, prefixed to
+his</i> Misc. Works<i>, i. 113, it is said:&mdash;'In whole
+quires of his</i> Histories<i>,</i> Animated Nature<i>, &amp;c.,
+he had seldom occasion to correct or alter a single word.'
+See</i> ante<i>, i. 203.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-129">[129]</a> From
+Waller's Of Loving at First Sight<i>. Waller's</i> Poems,
+Miscellanies<i>, xxxiv.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-130">[130]</a> He
+trusted greatly to his memory. If it did not retain anything
+exactly, he did not think himself bound to look it up. Thus in
+his criticism on Congreve (Works<i>, viii. 31) he says:&mdash;'Of
+his plays I cannot speak distinctly; for since I inspected them
+many years have passed.' In a note on his</i> Life of Rowe<i>,
+Nichols says:&mdash;'This</i> Life <i>is a very remarkable
+instance of the uncommon strength of Dr. Johnson's memory. When I
+received from him the MS. he complacently observed that the
+criticism was tolerably well done, considering that he had not
+read one of Rowe's plays for thirty years.'</i> Ib<i>. vii.
+417.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-131">[131]</a>
+Thus:&mdash;'In the Life of Waller<i>, Mr. Nichols will find a
+reference to the</i> Parliamentary History <i>from which a long
+quotation is to be inserted. If Mr. Nichols cannot easily find
+the book, Mr. Johnson will send it from Streatham.'</i></p>
+<p>'Clarendon is here returned.'</p>
+<p>'By some accident, I laid your <i>note upon Duke up so safely,
+that I cannot find it. Your informations have been of great use
+to me. I must beg it again; with another list of our authors, for
+I have laid that with the other. I have sent Stepney's Epitaph.
+Let me have the revises as soon as can be. Dec. 1778.'</i></p>
+<p>'I have sent Philips, with his Epitaphs, to be inserted. The
+fragment of a preface is hardly worth the impression, but that we
+may seem to do something. It may be added to the Life of
+Philips<i>. The Latin page is to be added to the</i> Life of
+Smith<i>. I shall be at home to revise the two sheets of Milton.
+March 1, 1779.'</i></p>
+<p>'Please to get me the last edition of Hughes's Letters<i>; and
+try to get</i> Dennis upon Blackmore<i>, and upon Calo, and any
+thing of the same writer against Pope. Our materials are
+defective.'</i></p>
+<p>'As Waller professed to have imitated Fairfax, do you think a
+few pages of Fairfax would enrich our edition? Few readers have
+seen it, and it may please them. But it is not necessary.'</p>
+<p>'An account of the Lives and works of some of the most eminent
+English Poets. By, &amp;c.&mdash;"The English Poets,
+biographically and critically considered, by SAM.
+JOHNSON."&mdash;Let Mr. Nichols take his choice, or make another
+to his mind. May, 1781.'</p>
+<p>'You somehow forgot the advertisement for the new edition. It
+was not inclosed. Of Gay's Letters <i>I see not that any use can
+be made, for they give no information of any thing. That he was a
+member of the Philosophical Society is something; but surely he
+could be but a corresponding member. However, not having his life
+here, I know not how to put it in, and it is of little
+importance.'</i></p>
+<p>See several more in The Gent. Mag.<i>, 1785. The Editor of
+that Miscellany, in which Johnson wrote for several years, seems
+justly to think that every fragment of so great a man is worthy
+of being preserved. BOSWELL. In the original MS. in the British
+Museum,</i> Your <i>in the third paragraph of this note is not in
+italics. Johnson writes his correspondent's name</i>
+Nichols<i>,</i> Nichol<i>, and</i> Nicol<i>. In the fourth
+paragraph he writes, first</i> Philips<i>, and next</i>
+Phillips<i>. His spelling was sometimes careless,</i> ante<i>, i.
+260, note 2. In the</i> Gent. Mag. <i>for 1785, p. 10, another of
+these notes is published:&mdash;'In reading Rowe in your edition,
+which is very impudently called mine, I observed a little piece
+unnaturally and odiously obscene. I was offended, but was still
+more offended when I could not find it in Rowe's genuine volumes.
+To admit it had been wrong; to interpolate it is surely worse. If
+I had known of such a piece in the whole collection, I should
+have been angry. What can be done?' In a note, Mr. Nichols says
+that this piece 'has not only appeared in the</i> Works <i>of
+Rowe, but has been transplanted by Pope into the</i> Miscellanies
+<i>he published in his own name and that of Dean Swift.'</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-132">[132]</a> He
+published, in 1782, a revised edition of Baker's Biographia
+Dramatica<i>. Baker was a grandson of De Foe.</i> Gent. Mag.
+<i>1782, p. 77.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-133">[133]</a> Dryden
+writing of satiric poetry, says:&mdash;'Had I time I could
+enlarge on the beautiful turns of words and thoughts, which are
+as requisite in this as in heroic poetry itself; of which the
+satire is undoubtedly a species. With these beautiful turns I
+confess myself to have been unacquainted, till about twenty years
+ago, in a conversation which I had with that noble wit of
+Scotland, Sir George Mackenzie, he asked me why I did not imitate
+in my verses the turns of Mr. Waller, and Sir John Denham. ...
+This hint, thus seasonably given me, first made me sensible of my
+own wants, and brought me afterwards to seek for the supply of
+them in other English authors. I looked over the darling of my
+youth, the famous Cowley.' Dryden's Works<i>, ed. 1821, xiii.
+III.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-134">[134]</a> In one
+of his letters to Nichols, Johnson says:&mdash;'You have now all
+Cowley. I have been drawn to a great length, but Cowley or Waller
+never had any critical examination before.' Gent. Mag. <i>1785,
+p.9.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-135">[135]</a> Life of
+Sheffield<i>. BOSWELL. Johnson's</i> Works<i>, vii. 485.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-136">[136]</a> See,
+however, p.11 of this volume, where the same remark is made and
+Johnson is there speaking of prose<i>. MALONE.</i></p>
+<center><a name=
+"note-137">[137]</a></center>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'Purpureus, late qui splendeat unus et alter
+ Assuitur pannus.'
+ '... Shreds of purple with broad lustre shine
+ Sewed on your poem.'
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>FRANCIS. Horace, Ars Poet<i>. 15.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-138">[138]</a> The
+original reading is enclosed in crochets, and the present one is
+printed in Italicks. BOSWELL.</p>
+<p><a name="note-139">[139]</a> I have
+noticed a few words which, to our ears, are more uncommon than at
+least two of the three that Boswell mentions; as, 'Languages
+divaricate,' Works<i>, vii. 309; 'The mellifluence of Pope's
+numbers,'</i> ib. <i>337; 'A subject flux and transitory,'</i>
+ib. <i>389; 'His prose is pure without scrupulosity,'</i> ib.
+<i>472; 'He received and accommodated the ladies' (said of one
+serving behind the counter),</i> ib. <i>viii. 62; 'The prevalence
+of this poem was gradual,'</i> ib. <i>p. 276; 'His style is
+sometimes concatenated,'</i> ib. <i>p. 458. Boswell, on the next
+page, supplies one more instance&mdash;'Images such as the
+superficies of nature readily supplies.'</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-140">[140]</a> See
+ante<i>, iii. 249.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-141">[141]</a>
+Veracious is perhaps one of the 'four or five words' which
+Johnson added, or thought that he added, to the English language.
+Ante<i>, i. 221. He gives it in his</i> Dictionary<i>, but
+without any authority for it. It is however older than his
+time.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-142">[142]</a> See
+Johnson's Works<i>, vii. 134, 212, and viii. 386.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-143">[143]</a> Horace
+Walpole (Letters<i>, vii. 452) writes of Johnson's
+'</i>Billingsgate on Milton<i>.' A later letter shows that, like
+so many of Johnson's critics, he had not read the</i>
+Life<i>.</i> Ib<i>. p. 508.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-144">[144]</a>
+Works<i>, vii. 108.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-145">[145]</a> Thirty
+years earlier he had written of Milton as 'that poet whose works
+may possibly be read when every other monument of British
+greatness shall be obliterated.' Ante<i>, i. 230. See</i>
+ante<i>, ii. 239.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-146">[146]</a> Earl
+Stanhope (Life of Pitt<i>, ii. 65) describes this Society in
+1790, 'as a Club, till then of little note, which had a yearly
+festival in commemoration of the events of 1688. It had been
+new-modelled, and enlarged with a view to the transactions at
+Paris, but still retained its former name to imply a close
+connection between the principles of 1688 in England, and the
+principles of 1789 in France.' The Earl Stanhope of that day
+presided at the anniversary meeting on Nov. 4, 1789. Nov. 4 was
+the day on which William III. landed.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-147">[147]</a> See An
+Essay on the Life, Character, and writings of Dr. Samuel
+Johnson<i>, London, 1787; which is very well written, making a
+proper allowance for the democratical bigotry of its authour;
+whom I cannot however but admire for his liberality in speaking
+thus of my illustrious friend:&mdash;</i></p>
+<p>'He possessed extraordinary powers of understanding, which
+were much cultivated by study, and still more by meditation and
+reflection. His memory was remarkably retentive, his imagination
+uncommonly vigorous, and his judgement keen and penetrating. He
+had a strong sense of the importance of religion; his piety was
+sincere, and sometimes ardent; and his zeal for the interests of
+virtue was often manifested in his conversation and in his
+writings. The same energy which was displayed in his literary
+productions was exhibited also in his conversation, which was
+various, striking, and instructive; and perhaps no man ever
+equalled him for nervous and pointed repartees.'</p>
+<p>'His Dictionary<i>, his moral Essays, and his productions in
+polite literature, will convey useful instruction, and elegant
+entertainment, as long as the language in which they are written
+shall be understood.' BOSWELL.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-148">[148]</a> Boswell
+paraphrases the following passage:&mdash;'The King, with lenity
+of which the world has had perhaps no other example, declined to
+be the judge or avenger of his own or his father's wrongs; and
+promised to admit into the Act of Oblivion all, except those whom
+the Parliament should except; and the Parliament doomed none to
+capital punishment but the wretches who had immediately
+co-operated in the murder of the King. Milton was certainly not
+one of them; he had only justified what they had done.' Johnson's
+Works<i>, vii. 95.</i></p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+<a name="note-149">149</a>
+ 'Though fall'n on evil days,
+ On evil days though fall'n and evil tongues,
+ In darkness, and with dangers compast round.'
+ Paradise Lost<i>, vii. 26.
+</i>
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p><a name="note-150">[150]</a>
+Johnson's Works<i>, vii. 105.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-151">[151]</a> 'His
+political notions were those of an acrimonious and surly
+republican.' Ib<i>. p. 116.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-152">[152]</a> 'What we
+know of Milton's character in domestick relations is, that he was
+severe and arbitrary.' Ib. <i>p. 116.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-153">[153]</a> 'His
+theological opinions are said to have been first, Calvinistical;
+and afterwards, perhaps when he began to hate the Presbyterians,
+to have tended towards Arminianism.... He appears to have been
+untainted by any heretical peculiarity of opinion.' Ib. <i>p.
+115.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-154">[154]</a> Mr.
+Malone things it is rather a proof that he felt nothing of those
+cheerful sensations which he has described: that on these topicks
+it is the poet<i>, and not the</i> man<i>, that writes.
+BOSWELL.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-155">[155]</a> See
+ante<i>, i. 427, ii. 124, and iv. 20, for Johnson's condemnation
+of blank verse. This condemnations was not universal. Of Dryden,
+he wrote (</i>Works<i>, vii. 249):&mdash;'He made rhyming
+tragedies, till, by the prevalence of manifest propriety, he
+seems to have grown ashamed of making them any longer.' His
+own</i> Irene <i>is in blank verse; though Macaulay justly
+remarks of it:&mdash;'He had not the slightest notion of what
+blank verse should be.' (Macaulay's</i> Writings and Speeches<i>,
+ed. 1871, p. 380.) Of Thomson's</i> Seasons<i>, he says
+(</i>Works<i>, vii. 377):&mdash;'His is one of the works in which
+blank verse seems properly used.' Of Young's</i> Night
+Thoughts<i>:&mdash;'This is one of the few poems in which blank
+verse could not be changed for rhyme but with disadvantage.'</i>
+Ib<i>. p. 460. Of Milton himself, he writes:&mdash;'Whatever be
+the advantages of rhyme, I cannot prevail on myself to wish that
+Milton had been a rhymer; for I cannot wish his work to be other
+than it is; yet, like other heroes, he is to be admired rather
+than imitated.'</i> Ib<i>. vii. 142. How much he felt the power
+of Milton's blank verse is shewn by his</i> Rambler<i>, No. 90,
+where, after stating that 'the noblest and most majestick pauses
+which our versification admits are upon the fourth and sixth
+syllables,' he adds:&mdash;' Some passages [in Milton] which
+conclude at this stop [the sixth syllable] I could never read
+without some strong emotions of delight or admiration.' 'If,' he
+continues, 'the poetry of Milton be examined with regard to the
+pauses and flow of his verses into each other, it will appear
+that he has performed all that our language would admit.' Cowper
+was so indignant at Johnson's criticism of Milton's blank verse
+that he wrote:&mdash;'Oh! I could thresh his old jacket till I
+made his pension jingle in his pocket.' Southey's</i> Cowper<i>,
+iii. 315.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-156">[156]</a> One of
+the most natural instances of the effect of blank verse occurred
+to the late Earl of Hopeton. His Lordship observed one of his
+shepherds poring in the fields upon Milton's Paradise Lost<i>;
+and having asked him what book it was, the man answered, 'An't
+please your Lordship, this is a very odd sort of an authour: he
+would fain rhyme, but cannot get at it.' BOSWELL. 'The variety of
+pauses, so much boasted by the lovers of blank verse, changes the
+measures of an English poet to the periods of a declaimer; and
+there are only a few skilful and happy readers of Milton, who
+enable their audience to perceive where the lines end or begin.
+"Blank verse," said an ingenious critick, "seems to be verse only
+to the eye."' Johnson's</i> Works<i>, vii. 141. In the</i> Life
+of Roscommon <i>(</i>ib<i>. p. 171), he says:&mdash;'A poem
+frigidly didactick, without rhyme, is so near to prose, that the
+reader only scorns it for pretending to be verse.'</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-157">[157]</a> Mr.
+Locke. Often mentioned in Mme. D'Arblay's Diary<i>.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-158">[158]</a> See vol.
+in. page 71. BOSWELL.</p>
+<p><a name="note-159">[159]</a> It is
+scarcely a defence. Whatever it was, he thus ends it:-'It is
+natural to hope, that a comprehensive is likewise an elevated
+soul, and that whoever is wise is also honest. I am willing to
+believe that Dryden, having employed his mind, active as it was,
+upon different studies, and filled it, capacious as it was, with
+other materials, came unprovided to the controversy, and wanted
+rather skill to discover the right than virtue to maintain it.
+But inquiries into the heart are not for man; we must now leave
+him to his judge.' Works, vii. 279.</p>
+<p><a name="note-160">[160]</a> In the
+original fright<i>.</i> The Hind and the Panther<i>, i.
+79.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-161">[161]</a> In this
+quotation two passages are joined. Works<i>, vii. 339,
+340.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-162">[162]</a> 'The
+deep and pathetic morality of the Vanity of Human Wishes<i>' says
+Sir Walter Scott, 'has often extracted tears from those whose
+eyes wander dry over the pages of professed sentimentality.'
+CROKER. It. drew tears from Johnson himself. 'When,' says Mrs.
+Piozzi (</i>Anec<i>. p. 50), 'he read his own satire, in which
+the life of a scholar is painted, he burst into a passion of
+tears. The family and Mr. Scott only were present, who, in a
+jocose way, clapped him on the back, and said:&mdash;"What's all
+this, my dear Sir? Why you, and I, and Hercules, you know, were
+all troubled with melancholy." He was a very large man, and made
+out the triumvirate with Johnson and Hercules comically enough.
+The Doctor was so delighted at his odd sally, that he suddenly
+embraced him, and the subject was immediately changed.'</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-163">[163]</a> In
+Disraeli's Curiosities of Literature<i>, ed. 1834, iv. 180, is
+given 'a memorandum of Dr. Johnson's of hints for the</i> Life of
+Pope<i>.'</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-164">[164]</a>
+Works<i>, viii. 345.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-165">[165]</a> 'Of the
+last editor [Warburton] it is more difficult to speak. Respect is
+due to high place, tenderness to living reputation, and
+veneration to genius and learning; but he cannot be justly
+offended at that liberty of which he has himself so frequently
+given an example, nor very solicitous what is thought of notes
+which he ought never to have considered as part of his serious
+employments.' Works<i>, v. 140. See</i> post<i>, June
+10,1784.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-166">[166]</a> The
+liberality is certainly measured. With much praise there is much
+censure. Works<i>, viii. 288. See</i> ante<i>, ii. 36, and
+Boswell's</i> Hebrides<i>, Aug. 23.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-167">[167]</a> Of
+Johnson's conduct towards Warburton, a very honourable notice is
+taken by the editor of Tracts by Warburton and a Warburtonian,
+not admitted into the Collection of their respective Works<i>.
+After an able and 'fond, though not undistinguishing,'
+consideration of Warburton's character, he says, 'In two immortal
+works, Johnson has stood forth in the foremost rank of his
+admirers. By the testimony of such a man, impertinence must be
+abashed, and malignity itself must be softened. Of literary
+merit, Johnson, as we all know, was a sagacious but a most severe
+judge. Such was his discernment, that he pierced into the most
+secret springs of human actions; and such was his integrity, that
+he always weighed the moral characters of his fellow-creatures in
+the "balance of the sanctuary." He was too courageous to
+propitiate a rival, and too proud to truckle to a superiour.
+Warburton he knew, as I know him, and as every man of sense and
+virtue would wish to be known,&mdash;I mean, both from his own
+writings, and from the writings of those who dissented from his
+principles, or who envied his reputation. But, as to favours, he
+had never received or asked any from the Bishop of Gloucester;
+and, if my memory fails me not, he had seen him only once, when
+they met almost without design, conversed without much effort,
+and parted without any lasting impressions of hatred or
+affection. Yet, with all the ardour of sympathetic genius,
+Johnson has done that spontaneously and ably, which, by some
+writers, had been before attempted injudiciously, and which, by
+others, from whom more successful attempts might have been
+expected, has not</i> hitherto <i>been done at all. He spoke well
+of Warburton, without insulting those whom Warburton despised. He
+suppressed not the imperfections of this extraordinary man, while
+he endeavoured to do justice to his numerous and transcendental
+excellencies. He defended him when living, amidst the clamours of
+his enemies; and praised him when dead, amidst the</i> silence of
+his friends<i>.'</i></p>
+<p>Having availed myself of this editor's eulogy on my departed
+friend, for which I warmly thank him, let me not suffer the
+lustre of his reputation, honestly acquired by profound learning
+and vigorous eloquence, to be tarnished by a charge of
+illiberality. He has been accused of invidiously dragging again
+into light certain writings of a person respectable by his
+talents, his learning, his station and his age, which were
+published a great many years ago, and have since, it is said,
+been silently given up by their authour. But when it is
+considered that these writings were not sins of youth<i>, but
+deliberate works of one well-advanced in life, overflowing at
+once with flattery to a great man of great interest in the
+Church, and with unjust and acrimonious abuse of two men of
+eminent merit; and that, though it would have been unreasonable
+to expect an humiliating recantation, no apology whatever has
+been made in the cool of the evening, for the oppressive fervour
+of the heat of the day; no slight relenting indication has
+appeared in any note, or any corner of later publications; is it
+not fair to understand him as superciliously persevering? When he
+allows the shafts to remain in the wounds, and will not stretch
+forth a lenient hand, is it wrong, is it not generous to become
+an indignant avenger? BOSWELL. Boswell wrote on Feb. 16,
+1789:&mdash;'There is just come out a publication which makes a
+considerable noise. The celebrated Dr. Parr, of Norwich,
+has&mdash;wickedly, shall we say?&mdash;but surely
+wantonly&mdash;published Warburton's</i> Juvenile Translations
+and Discourse on Prodigies<i>, and Bishop Kurd's attacks on
+Jortin and Dr. Thomas Leland, with his</i> Essay on the Delicacy
+of Friendship<i>.'</i> Letters of Boswell<i>, p. 275. The
+'editor,' therefore, is Parr, and the 'Warburtonian' is Hurd.
+Boswell had written to Parr on Jan. 10, 1791:&mdash;'I request to
+hear by return of post if I may say or guess that Dr. Parr is the
+editor of these tracts.' Parr's</i> Works<i>, viii. 12. See
+also</i> ib<i>. iii. 405.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-168">[168]</a> In
+Johnson's Works <i>(1787), xi. 213, it is said, that this meeting
+was 'at the Bishop of St. &mdash;&mdash;'s [Asaph's]. Boswell, by
+his 'careful enquiry,' no doubt meant to show that this statement
+was wrong. Johnson is reported to have said:&mdash;' Dr.
+Warburton at first looked surlily at me; but after we had been
+jostled into conversation he took me to a window, asked me some
+questions, and before we parted was so well pleased with me that
+he patted me.'</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-169">[169]</a>
+'Warburton's style is copious without selection, and forcible
+without neatness; he took the words that presented themselves;
+his diction is coarse and impure; and his sentences are
+unmeasured.' Johnson's Works<i>, viii. 288.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-170">[170]</a>
+Churchill, in The Duellist (Poems <i>ed. 1766, ii. 85), describes
+Warburton as having</i></p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'A heart, which virtue ne'er disgraced;
+ A head where learning runs to waste.'
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p><a name="note-171">[171]</a>
+Works<i>, viii. 230.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-172">[172]</a> 'I
+never,' writes Mrs. Piozzi, 'heard Johnson pronounce the words,
+"I beg your pardon, Sir," to any human creature but the
+apparently soft and gentle Dr. Burney.' Burney had asked her
+whether she had subscribed &pound;100 to building a bridge. '"It
+is very comical, is it not, Sir?" said I, turning to Dr. Johnson,
+"that people should tell such unfounded stories." "It is,"
+answered he, "neither comical nor serious, my dear; it is only a
+wandering lie." This was spoken in his natural voice, without a
+thought of offence, I am confident; but up bounced Burney in a
+towering passion, and to my much amaze put on the hero,
+surprising Dr. Johnson into a sudden request for pardon, and
+protestation of not having ever intended to accuse his friend of
+a falsehood.' Hayward's Piozzi<i>, i. 312.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-173">[173]</a> In the
+original, 'nor<i>.'</i> Works<i>, viii. 311.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-174">[174]</a> In the
+original, 'either <i>wise or merry.'</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-175">[175]</a> In the
+original, 'stands upon record<i>'.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-176">[176]</a>
+Works<i>, viii. 316. Surely the words 'had not much to say' imply
+that Johnson had heard the answer, but thought little of its wit.
+According to Mr. Croker, the repartee is given in Ruffhead's</i>
+Life of Pope<i>, and this book Johnson had seen.</i> Ante<i>, ii.
+166.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-177">[177]</a> Let me
+here express my grateful remembrance of Lord Somerville's
+kindness to me, at a very early period. He was the first person
+of high rank that took particular notice of me in the way most
+flattering to a young man, fondly ambitious of being
+distinguished for his literary talents; and by the honour of his
+encouragement made me think well of myself, and aspire to deserve
+it better. He had a happy art of communicating his varied
+knowledge of the world, in short remarks and anecdotes, with a
+quiet pleasant gravity, that was exceedingly engaging. Never
+shall I forget the hours which I enjoyed with him at his
+apartments in the Royal Palace of Holy-Rood House, and at his
+seat near Edinburgh, which he himself had formed with an elegant
+taste. BOSWELL.</p>
+<p><a name="note-178">[178]</a> Ante<i>,
+iii. 392.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-179">[179]</a> Boswell,
+I think, misunderstands Johnson. Johnson said (Works<i>, viii.
+313) that 'Pope's admiration of the Great seems to have increased
+in the advance of life.' His</i> Iliad <i>he had dedicated to
+Congreve, but 'to his latter works he took care to annex names
+dignified with titles, but was not very happy in his choice; for,
+except Lord Bathurst, none of his noble friends were such as that
+a good man would wish to have his intimacy with them known to
+posterity; he can derive little honour from the notice of Cobham,
+Burlington, or Bolingbroke.' Johnson, it seems clear, is
+speaking, not of the noblemen whom Pope knew in general, but of
+those to whom he dedicated any of his works. Among them Lord
+Marchmont is not found, so that on him no slight is cast.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-180">[180]</a> Neither
+does Johnson actually say that Lord Marchmont had 'any concern,'
+though perhaps he implies it. He writes:&mdash;'Pope left the
+care of his papers to his executors; first to Lord Bolingbroke;
+and, if he should not be living, to the Earl of Marchmont:
+undoubtedly expecting them to be proud of the trust, and eager to
+extend his fame. But let no man dream of influence beyond his
+life. After a decent time, Dodsley the bookseller went to solicit
+preference as the publisher, and was told that the parcel had not
+been yet inspected; and, whatever was the reason, the world has
+been disappointed of what was "reserved for the next age."'
+Ib<i>. p. 306. As Bolingbroke outlived Pope by more than seven
+years, it is clear, from what Johnson states, that he alone had
+the care of the papers, and that he gave the answer to Dodsley.
+Marchmont, however, knew the contents of the papers.</i> Ib<i>.
+p. 319.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-181">[181]</a> This
+neglect did not arise from any ill-will towards Lord Marchmont,
+but from inattention; just as he neglected to correct his
+statement concerning the family of Thomson the poet, after it had
+been shewn to be erroneous (ante<i>, in. 359). MALONE.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-182">[182]</a> Works,
+vii. 420.</p>
+<p><a name="note-183">[183]</a> Benjamin
+Victor published in 1722, a Letter to Steele<i>, and in 1776,</i>
+Letters, Dramatic Pieces, and Poems <i>Brit. Mus.
+Catalogue.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-184">[184]</a> Mr.
+Wilks<i>. See</i> ante<i>, i. 167, note 1.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-185">[185]</a> See
+post<i>, p. 91 and Macaulay's</i> Essay on Addison <i>(ed. 1974,
+iv.</i></p>
+<center>207).</center>
+<p><a name="note-186">[186]</a> 'A
+better and more Christian man scarcely ever breathed than Joseph
+Addison. If he had not that little weakness for wine&mdash;why we
+could scarcely have found a fault with him, and could not have
+liked him as we do.' Thackery's English Humourists<i>, ed. 1858,
+p. 94.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-187">[187]</a> See
+ante<i>, i. 30, and iii. 155.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-188">[188]</a> See
+post<i>, under Dec. 2, 1784.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-189">[189]</a> Parnell
+'drank to excess.' Ante<i>, iii. 155.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-190">[190]</a> I should
+have thought that Johnson, who had felt the severe affliction
+from which Parnell never recovered, would have preserved this
+passage. BOSWELL.</p>
+<p><a name="note-191">[191]</a> Mrs.
+Thrale wrote to Johnson in May, 1780:-'Blackmore will be rescued
+from the old wits who worried him much to your disliking; so, a
+little for love of his Christianity, a little for love of his
+physic, a little for love of his courage&mdash;and a little for
+love of contradiction, you will save him from his malevolent
+critics, and perhaps do him the honour to devour him yourself.'
+Piozzi Letters<i>, ii. 122. See</i> ante<i>, ii. 107.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-192">[192]</a> 'This is
+a tribute which a painter owes to an architect who composed like
+a painter; and was defrauded of the due reward of his merit by
+the wits of his time, who did not understand the principles of
+composition in poetry better than he did; and who knew little, or
+nothing, of what he understood perfectly, the general ruling
+principles of architecture and painting.' Reynolds's Thirteenth
+Discourse<i>.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-193">[193]</a> Johnson
+had not wished to write Lyttelton's Life<i>. He wrote to Lord
+Westcote, Lyttelton's brother, 'My desire is to avoid offence,
+and be totally out of danger. I take the liberty of proposing to
+your lordship, that the historical account should be written
+under your direction by any friend you may be willing to employ,
+and I will only take upon myself to examine the
+poetry.'&mdash;Croker's</i> Boswell<i>, p.650.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-194">[194]</a> It was
+not Molly Aston <i>(</i>ante <i>i. 83) but Miss Hill Boothby
+(</i>ib<i>.) of whom Mrs. Thrale wrote. She says (</i>Anec<i>.
+p.160):&mdash;'Such was the purity of her mind, Johnson said, and
+such the graces of her manner, that Lord Lyttelton and he used to
+strive for her preference with an emulation that occasioned
+hourly disgust, and ended in lasting animosity.' There is surely
+much exaggeration in this account.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-195">[195]</a> Let not
+my readers smile to think of Johnson's being a candidate for
+female favour; Mr. Peter Garrick assured me, that he was told by
+a lady, that in her opinion Johnson was 'a very seducing man<i>.'
+Disadvantages of person and manner may be forgotten, where
+intellectual pleasure is communicated to a susceptible mind; and
+that Johnson was capable of feeling the most delicate and
+disinterested attachment, appears from the following letter,
+which is published by Mrs. Thrale [</i>Piozzi Letters<i>, ii.
+391], with some others to the same person, of which the
+excellence is not so apparent:&mdash;</i></p>
+<p>'TO MISS BOOTHBY. January, 1755.</p>
+<center>DEAREST MADAM,</center>
+<p>Though I am afraid your illness leaves you little leisure for
+the reception of airy civilities, yet I cannot forbear to pay you
+my congratulations on the new year; and to declare my wishes that
+your years to come may be many and happy. In this wish, indeed, I
+include myself, who have none but you on whom my heart reposes;
+yet surely I wish your good, even though your situation were such
+as should permit you to communicate no gratifications to,
+dearest, dearest Madam, Your, &amp;c. SAM JOHNSON.'
+(BOSWELL.)</p>
+<p><a name="note-196">[196]</a> Horace,
+Odes<i>, iv. 3.2, quoted also</i> ante<i>, i.352, note.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-197">[197]</a> The
+passage which Boswell quotes in part is as follows:&mdash;'When
+they were first published they were kindly commended by the
+Critical Reviewers<i>; [i.e. the writers in the</i> Critical
+Review<i>. In some of the later editions of Boswell these words
+have been printed,</i> critical reviewers<i>; so as to include
+all the reviewers who criticised the work]; and poor Lyttelton,
+with humble gratitude, returned, in a note which I have read,
+acknowledgements which can never be proper, since they must be
+paid either for flattery or for justice.'</i> Works<i>, viii.491.
+Boswell forgets that what may be proper in one is improper in
+another. Lyttelton, when he wrote this note, had long been a man
+of high position. He had 'stood in the first rank of opposition,'
+he had been Chancellor of the Exchequer, and when he lost his
+post, he had been 'recompensed with a peerage.' See</i> ante<i>,
+ii. 126.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-198">[198]</a> See
+post<i>, June 12 and 15, 1784.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-199">[199]</a> He
+adopted it from indolence. Writing on Aug. 1, 1780, after
+mentioning the failure of his application to Lord Westcote, he
+continues:&mdash;'There is an ingenious scheme to save a day's
+work, or part of a day, utterly defeated. Then what avails it to
+be wise? The plain and the artful man must both do their own
+work.&mdash;But I think I have got a life of Dr. Young.' Piozzi
+Letters<i>, ii. 173.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-200">[200]</a> Gent.
+Mag. <i>vol. lv. p. 10. BOSWELL.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-201">[201]</a> By a
+letter to Johnson from Croft, published in the later editions of
+the Lives<i>, it seems that Johnson only expunged one passage.
+Croft says:&mdash;'Though I could not prevail on you to make any
+alteration, you insisted on striking out one passage, because it
+said, that, if I did not wish you to live long for your sake, I
+did for the sake of myself and the world.'</i> Works
+<i>viii.458.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-202">[202]</a> The Late
+Mr. Burke. MALONE.</p>
+<p><a name="note-203">[203]</a>
+Seepost<i>, June 2, 1781.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-204">[204]</a>
+Johnson's Works<i>, viii 440.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-205">[205]</a> Ib.
+<i>p.436</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-206">[206]</a> 'Eheu!
+fugaces, Postume, Postume, Labuntur anni.' 'How swiftly glide our
+flying years!' FRANCIS. Horace, Odes<i>, ii.14. i.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-207">[207]</a> The late
+Mr. James Ralph told Lord Macartney, that he passed an evening
+with Dr. Young at Lord Melcombe's (then Mr. Dodington) at
+Hammersmith. The Doctor happening to go out into the garden, Mr.
+Dodington observed to him, on his return, that it was a dreadful
+night, as in truth it was, there being a violent storm of rain
+and wind. 'No, Sir, (replied the Doctor) it is a very fine night.
+The LORD is abroad.' BOSWELL.</p>
+<p><a name="note-208">[208]</a> See
+ante<i>, ii.96, and iii.251; and Boswell's</i> Hebrides<i>,
+Sept.</i></p>
+<center>30.</center>
+<p><a name="note-209">[209]</a> 'An
+ardent judge, who zealous in his trust, With warmth gives
+sentence, yet is always just.' Pope's Essay on Criticism<i>,
+l.677.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-210">[210]</a>
+Works<i>, viii.459. Though the</i> Life of Young <i>is by Croft,
+yet the critical remarks are by Johnson.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-211">[211]</a> Ib.
+<i>p.460.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-212">[212]</a> Johnson
+refers to Chambers's Dissertation on Oriental Gardening<i>, which
+was ridiculed in the</i> Heroic Epistle<i>. See</i> post<i>,
+under May 8, 1781, and Boswell's</i> Hebrides<i>, Sept.
+13.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-213">[213]</a> Boswell
+refers to the death of Narcissa in the third of the Night
+Thoughts<i>. While he was writing the</i> Life of Johnson <i>Mrs.
+Boswell was dying of consumption in (to quote Young's
+words)</i></p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ The rigid north,
+ Her native bed, on which bleak
+ Boreas blew.'
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>She died nearly two years before The Life <i>was
+published.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-214">[214]</a>
+Proverbs<i>, xviii.14.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-215">[215]</a> See
+Boswell's Hebrides<i>, Aug. 16.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-216">[216]</a> See vol.
+i. page 133. BOSWELL.</p>
+<p><a name="note-217">[217]</a> 'In his
+economy Swift practised a peculiar and offensive parsimony,
+without disguise or apology. The practice of saving being once
+necessary, became habitual, and grew first ridiculous, and at
+last detestable. But his avarice, though it might exclude
+pleasure, was never suffered to encroach upon his virtue. He was
+frugal by inclination, but liberal by principle; and if the
+purpose to which he destined his little accumulations be
+remembered, with his distribution of occasional charity, it will
+perhaps appear, that he only liked one mode of expense better
+than another, and saved merely that he might have something to
+give.' Works<i>, viii.222.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-218">[218]</a> Ib<i>.
+p.225.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-219">[219]</a> Mr.
+Chalmers here records a curious literary anecdote&mdash;that when
+a new and enlarged edition of the Lives of the Poets <i>was
+published in 1783, Mr. Nichols, in justice to the purchasers of
+the preceding editions, printed the additions in a separate
+pamphlet, and advertised that it might be had</i> gratis<i>. Not
+ten copies were called for. CROKER.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-220">[220]</a> See
+ante<i>, p.9, and Boswell's</i> Hebrides<i>, Oct. 15.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-221">[221]</a>
+Works<i>, vii. Preface.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-222">[222]</a> From
+this disreputable class, I except an ingenious though not
+satisfactory defence of HAMMOND, which I did not see till lately,
+by the favour of its authour, my amiable friend, the Reverend Mr.
+Bevill, who published it without his name. It is a juvenile
+performance, but elegantly written, with classical enthusiasm of
+sentiment, and yet with a becoming modesty, and great respect for
+Dr. Johnson. BOSWELL.</p>
+<p><a name="note-223">[223]</a> Before
+the Life of Lyttelton <i>was published there was, it seems, some
+coolness between Mrs. Montagu and Johnson. Miss Burney records
+the following conversation in September 1778. 'Mark now,' said
+Dr. Johnson, 'if I contradict Mrs. Montagu to-morrow. I am
+determined, let her say what she will, that I will not contradict
+her.' MRS. THRALE. 'Why to be sure, Sir, you did put her a little
+out of countenance last time she came.'...DR. JOHNSON. 'Why,
+Madam, I won't answer that I shan't contradict her again, if she
+provokes me as she did then; but a less provocation I will
+withstand. I believe I am not high in her good graces already;
+and I begin (added he, laughing heartily) to tremble for my
+admission into her new house. I doubt I shall never see the
+inside of it.' Yet when they met a few days later all seemed
+friendly. 'When Mrs. Montagu's new house was talked of, Dr.
+Johnson in a jocose manner, desired to know if he should be
+invited to see it. "Ay, sure," cried Mrs. Montagu, looking well
+pleased, "or else I shan't like it."' Mme. D'Arblay's</i>
+Diary<i>, i.118, 126. 'Mrs. Montagu's dinners and assemblies,'
+writes Wraxall, 'were principally supported by, and they fell
+with, the giant talents of Johnson, who formed the nucleus round
+which all the subordinate members revolved.' Wraxall's</i>
+Memoirs<i>, ed. 1815, i.160.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-224">[224]</a>
+Described by the author as 'a body of original essays.' 'I
+consider The Observer,' <i>he arrogantly continues, 'as fairly
+enrolled amongst the standard classics of our native language.'
+Cumberland's</i> Memoirs<i>, ii.199. In his account of this</i>
+Feast of Reason <i>he quite as much satirises Mrs. Montagu as
+praises her. He introduces Johnson in it, annoyed by an
+impertinent fellow, and saying to him:&mdash;'Have I said
+anything, good Sir, that you do not comprehend?' 'No, no,'
+replied he, 'I perfectly well comprehend every word you have been
+saying.' 'Do you so, Sir?' said the philosopher, 'then I heartily
+ask pardon of the company for misemploying their time so
+egregiously.'</i> The Observer<i>, No. 25.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-225">[225]</a> Miss
+Burney gives an account of an attack made by Johnson, at a dinner
+at Streatham, in June 1781, on Mr. Pepys (post<i>, p. 82), 'one
+of Mrs. Montagu's steadiest abettors.' 'Never before,' she
+writes, 'have I seen Dr. Johnson speak with so much passion. "Mr.
+Pepys," he cried, in a voice the most enraged, "I understand you
+are offended by my</i> Life of Lord Lyttelton<i>. What is it you
+have to say against it? Come forth, man! Here am I, ready to
+answer any charge you can bring."' After the quarrel had been
+carried even into the drawing-room, Mrs. Thrale, 'with great
+spirit and dignity, said that she should be very glad to hear no
+more of it. Everybody was silenced, and Dr. Johnson, after a
+pause, said:&mdash;"Well, Madam, you</i> shall <i>hear no more of
+it; yet I will defend myself in every part and in every atom."...
+Thursday morning, Dr. Johnson went to town for some days, but not
+before Mrs. Thrale read him a very serious lecture upon giving
+way to such violence; which he bore with a patience and quietness
+that even more than made his peace with me.' Mme. D'Arblay's</i>
+Diary<i>, ii. 45. Two months later the quarrel was made up. 'Mr.
+Pepys had desired this meeting by way of a reconciliation; and
+Dr. Johnson now made amends for his former violence, as he
+advanced to him, as soon as he came in, and holding out his hand
+to him received him with a cordiality he had never shewn him
+before. Indeed he told me himself that he thought the better of
+Mr. Pepys for all that had passed.'</i> Ib. <i>p. 82. Miss
+Burney, in Dec. 1783, described the quarrel to Mr.
+Cambridge:&mdash;'"I never saw Dr. Johnson really in a passion
+but then; and dreadful indeed it was to see. I wished myself away
+a thousand times. It was a frightful scene. He so red, poor Mr.
+Pepys so pale." "It was behaving ill to Mrs. Thrale certainly to
+quarrel in her house." "Yes, but he never repeated it; though he
+wished of all things to have gone through just such another scene
+with Mrs. Montagu; and to refrain was an act of heroic
+forbearance. She came to Streatham one morning, and I saw he was
+dying to attack her." "And how did Mrs. Montagu herself behave?"
+Very stately, indeed, at first. She turned from him very stiffly,
+and with a most distant air, and without even courtesying to him,
+and with a firm intention to keep to what she had publicly
+declared&mdash;that she would never speak to him more. However,
+he went up to her himself, longing to begin, and very roughly
+said:&mdash;"Well, Madam, what's become of your fine new house? I
+hear no more of it." "But how did she bear this?" "Why, she was
+obliged to answer him; and she soon grew so frightened&mdash;as
+everybody does&mdash;that she was as civil as ever." He laughed
+heartily at this account. But I told him Dr. Johnson was now much
+softened. He had acquainted me, when I saw him last, that he had
+written to her upon the death of Mrs. Williams [see</i> post<i>,
+Sept. 18, 1783, note], because she had allowed her something
+yearly, which now ceased. "And I had a very kind answer from
+her," said he. "Well then, Sir," cried I, "I hope peace now will
+be again proclaimed." "Why, I am now," said he, "come to that
+time when I wish all bitterness and animosity to be at an end."'
+Mme. D'Arblay's</i> Diary<i>, ii. 290.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-226">[226]</a> January,
+1791. BOSWELL. Hastings's trial had been dragging on for more
+than three years when The Life of Johnson <i>was published. It
+began in 1788, and ended in 1795.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-227">[227]</a> Gent.
+Mag<i>. for 1785, p. 412.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-228">[228]</a>
+Afterwards Sir Robert Chambers, one of his Majesty's Judges in
+India. BOSWELL. See ante<i>, i.274.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-229">[229]</a> 'He
+conceived that the cultivation of Persian literature might with
+advantage be made a part of the liberal education of an English
+gentleman; and he drew up a plan with that view. It is said that
+the University of Oxford, in which Oriental learning had never,
+since the revival of letters, been wholly neglected, was to be
+the seat of the institution which he contemplated.' Macaulay's
+Essays<i>, ed. 1843, iii. 338.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-230">[230]</a> Lord
+North's. Feeble though it was, it lasted eight years longer.</p>
+<p><a name="note-231">[231]</a> Jones's
+Persian Grammar<i>. Boswell. It was published in 1771.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-232">[232]</a> Journey
+to the Western Islands of Scotland<i>. BOSWELL.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-233">[233]</a> See
+ante<i>, ii. 296.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-234">[234]</a> Macaulay
+wrote of Hastings's answer to this letter:&mdash;'It is a
+remarkable circumstance that one of the letters of Hastings to
+Dr. Johnson bears date a very few hours after the death of
+Nuncomar. While the whole settlement was in commotion, while a
+mighty and ancient priesthood were weeping over the remains of
+their chief, the conqueror in that deadly grapple sat down, with
+characteristic self-possession, to write about the Tour to the
+Hebrides<i>, Jones's</i> Persian Grammar<i>, and the history,
+traditions, arts, and natural productions of India.'
+Macaulay's</i> Essays<i>, ed. 1843, iii.376.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-235">[235]</a> Johnson
+wrote the Dedication, Ante<i>, i.383.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-236">[236]</a> See
+ante<i>, ii.82, note 2.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-237">[237]</a> Copy
+<i>is</i> manuscript for printing<i>.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-238">[238]</a>
+Published by Kearsley, with this well-chosen motto:&mdash;'From
+his cradle He was a SCHOLAR, and a ripe and good one: And to add
+greater honours to his age Than man could give him, he died
+fearing Heaven.' SHAKSPEARE. BOSWELL. This quotation is a patched
+up one from Henry VIII<i>, act iv. sc.2. The quotation in the
+text is found on p. 89 of this</i> Life of Johnson<i>.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-239">[239]</a> Mr.
+Thrale had removed, that is to say, from his winter residence in
+the Borough. Mrs. Piozzi has written opposite this passage in her
+copy of Boswell:&mdash;'Spiteful again! He went by direction of
+his physicians where they could easiest attend to him.' Hayward's
+Piozzi<i>, i. 91. There was, perhaps, a good deal of truth in
+Boswell's supposition, for in 1779 Johnson had told her that he
+saw 'with indignation her despicable dread of living in the
+Borough.'</i> Piozzi Letters<i>, ii.92. Johnson had a room in the
+new house. 'Think,' wrote Hannah More, 'of Johnson's having
+apartments in Grosvenor-square! but he says it is not half so
+convenient as Bolt-court.' H. More's</i> Memoirs<i>,
+i.2O7.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-240">[240]</a> See
+ante<i>, iii. 250.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-241">[241]</a>
+Shakspeare makes Hamlet thus describe his father:&mdash;</p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'See what a grace was seated on this brow:
+ Hyperion's curls, the front of Jove himself,
+ An eye like Mars, to threaten and command;
+ A station like the herald, Mercury,
+ New-lighted on a heaven-kissing hill;
+ A combination, and a form, indeed,
+ Where every god did seem to set his seal,
+ To give the world assurance of a man.!
+ [Act iii. sc. 4.]
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>Milton thus pourtrays our first parent, Adam:&mdash;</p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'His fair large front and eye sublime declar'd
+ Absolute rule; and hyacinthin locks
+ Round from his parted forelock manly hung
+ Clus'tring, but not beneath his shoulders broad.'
+ [P.L.<i> iv. 300.] BOSWELL.
+</i>
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p><a name="note-242">[242]</a>
+'Grattan's Uncle, Dean Marlay [afterwards Bishop of Waterford],
+had a good deal of the humour of Swift. Once, when the footman
+was out of the way, he ordered the coachman to fetch some water
+from the well. To this the man objected, that his <i>business was
+to drive, not to run on errands. "Well, then," said Marlay,
+"bring out the coach and four, set the pitcher inside, and drive
+to the well;"&mdash;a service which was several times repeated,
+to the great amusement of the village.' Rogers's</i>
+Table-Talk<i>, p.176.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-243">[243]</a> See
+ante<i>, ii. 241, for Johnson's contempt of puns.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-244">[244]</a> 'He left
+not faction, but of that was left.' Absalom and Achitophel<i>, l.
+568.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-245">[245]</a> Boswell
+wrote of Gibbon in 1779:&mdash;'He is an ugly, affected,
+disgusting fellow, and poisons our Literary Club to me.' Letters
+of Boswell<i>, p.242. See</i> ante<i>, ii.443, note 1.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-246">[246]</a> The
+schools <i>in this sense means a University.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-247">[247]</a> See
+ante<i>, ii.224.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-248">[248]</a> Up to
+the year 1770, controverted elections had been tried before a
+Committee of the whole House. By the Grenville Act <i>which was
+passed in that year they were tried by a select committee.</i>
+Parl. Hist. <i>xvi. 902. Johnson, in</i> The False Alarm
+<i>(1770), describing the old method of trial, says;&mdash;'These
+decisions have often been apparently partial, and sometimes
+tyrannically oppressive.'</i> Works, vi. 169. In The Patriot
+<i>(1774), he says:&mdash;'A disputed election is now tried with
+the same scrupulousness and solemnity as any other title.'</i>
+Ib. <i>p.223. See Boswell's</i> Hebrides<i>, Nov.10.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-249">[249]</a> Miss
+Burney describes a dinner at Mr. Thrale's, about this time, at
+which she met Johnson, Boswell, and Dudley Long. Mme. D'Arblay's
+Diary<i>, ii. 14.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-250">[250]</a> See
+ante<i>, ii.171,</i> post<i>, two paragraphs before April 10,
+1783, and May 15, 1784.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-251">[251]</a> Johnson
+wrote on May i, 1780:&mdash;'There was the Bishop of St. Asaph
+who comes to every place.' Piozzi Letters<i>, ii. 111. Hannah
+More, in 1782, describes an assembly at this Bishop's. 'Conceive
+to yourself 150 or 200 people met together dressed in the
+extremity of the fashion, painted as red as Bacchanals...ten or a
+dozen card-tables crammed with dowagers of quality, grave
+ecclesiastics and yellow admirals.'</i> Memoirs<i>, i.242. He was
+elected a member of the Literary Club, 'with the sincere
+approbation and eagerness of all present,' wrote Mr. (afterwards
+Sir William) Jones; elected, too, on the same day on which Lord
+Chancellor Camden was rejected (</i>ante<i>, iii. 311, note 2).
+Two or three years later Sir William married the Bishop's
+daughter.</i> Life of Sir W Jones<i>, pp.240, 279.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-252">[252]</a> 'Trust
+not to looks, nor credit outward show; The villain lurks beneath
+the cassocked beau.' Churchill's Poems <i>(ed. 1766),
+ii.41.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-253">[253]</a> No.
+2.</p>
+<p><a name="note-254">[254]</a> See vol.
+i p. 378. BOSWELL.</p>
+<p><a name="note-255">[255]</a>
+Northcote, according to Hazlitt, said of this character with some
+truth, that 'it was like one of Kneller's portraits&mdash;it
+would do for anybody.' Northcote's Conversations<i>,
+p.86.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-256">[256]</a> See
+post<i>, p.98.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-257">[257]</a> London
+Chronicle<i>, May 2, 1769. This respectable man is there
+mentioned to have died on the 3rd of April, that year, at
+Cofflect, the seat of Thomas Veale, Esq., in his way to London.
+BOSWELL.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-258">[258]</a> Dr.
+Harte was the tutor of Mr. Eliot and of young Stanhope, Lord
+Chesterfield's illegitimate son. 'My morning hopes,' wrote
+Chesterfield to his son at Rome, 'are justly placed in Mr. Harte,
+and the masters he will give you; my evening ones in the Roman
+ladies: pray be attentive to both.' Chesterfield's Letters<i>,
+ii.263. See</i> ante<i>, i.163, note 1, ii.120, and</i> post<i>,
+June 27, 1784.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-259">[259]</a>
+Robertson's Scotland <i>is in the February list of books in
+the</i> Gent. Mag<i>. for 1759; Harte's</i> Gustavus Adolphus
+<i>and Hume's</i> England under the House of Tudor <i>in the
+March list. Perhaps it was from Hume's competition that Harte
+suffered.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-260">[260]</a> Essays
+on Husbandry<i>, 1764.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-261">[261]</a> See
+ante<i>, iii. 381.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-262">[262]</a>
+'Christmas Day, 1780. I shall not attempt to see Vestris till the
+weather is milder, though it is the universal voice that he is
+the only perfect being that has dropped from the clouds, within
+the memory of man or woman...When the Parliament meets he is to
+be thanked by the Speaker.' Walpole's Letters<i>, vii.
+480.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-263">[263]</a> Here
+Johnson uses his title of Doctor (ante<i>, ii.332, note 1), but
+perhaps he does so as quoting the paragraph in the
+newspaper.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-264">[264]</a> William,
+the first Viscount Grimston. BOSWELL. Swift thus introduces him
+in his lines On Poetry, A Rhapsody<i>:&mdash;</i></p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'When death had finished Blackmore's reign,
+ The leaden crown devolved to thee,
+ Great poet of the hollow tree.'
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>Mr. Nichols, in a note on this, says that Grimston 'wrote the
+play when a boy, to be acted by his schoolfellows.' Swift's Works
+<i>(1803), xi. 297. Two editions were published apparently by
+Grimston himself, one bearing his name but no date, and the other
+the date of 1705 but no name. By 1705 Grimston was 22 years
+old&mdash;no longer a boy. The former edition was published by
+Bernard Lintott at the Cross Keys, Fleet-street, and the latter
+by the same bookseller at the Middle Temple Gate. The grossness
+of a young man of birth at this period is shewn by the Preface.
+The third edition with the elephant on the tight-rope was
+published in 1736. There is another illustration in which an ass
+is represented bearing a coronet. Grimston's name is not given
+here, but there is a dedication 'To the Right Sensible the Lord
+Flame.' Three or four notes are added, one of which is very
+gross. The election was for St. Alban's, for which borough he was
+thrice returned.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-265">[265]</a> Dr. T.
+Campbell records (Diary<i>, p. 69) that 'Boswell asked Johnson if
+he had never been under the hands of a dancing master. "Aye, and
+a dancing mistress too," says the Doctor; "but I own to you I
+never took a lesson but one or two; my blind eyes showed me I
+could never make a proficiency."'</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-266">[266]</a> See vol.
+ii. p.286. BOSWELL.</p>
+<p><a name="note-267">[267]</a> Miss
+Burney writes of him in Feb. 1779:&mdash;'He is a professed
+minority man, and very active and zealous in the opposition. Men
+of such different principles as Dr. Johnson and Sir Philip cannot
+have much cordiality in their political debates; however, the
+very superior abilities of the former, and the remarkable good
+breeding of the latter have kept both upon good terms.' She
+describes a hot argument between them, and continues:&mdash;'Dr.
+Johnson pursued him with unabating vigour and dexterity, and at
+length, though he could not convince, he so entirely baffled him,
+that Sir Philip was self-compelled to be quiet&mdash;which, with
+a very good grace, he confessed. Dr. Johnson then recollecting
+himself, and thinking, as he owned afterwards, that the dispute
+grew too serious, with a skill all his own, suddenly and
+unexpectedly turned it to burlesque.' D'Arblay's Diary<i>, i.
+192.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-268">[268]</a> See
+post<i>, Jan. 20, 1782.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-269">[269]</a> See
+ante<i>, ii.355.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-270">[270]</a> Here
+Johnson condescended to play upon the words Long <i>and</i>
+short<i>. But little did he know that, owing to Mr. Long's
+reserve in his presence, he was talking thus of a gentleman
+distinguised amongst his acquaintance for acuteness of wit; one
+to whom I think the French expression, '</i>Il p&eacute;tille
+d'esprit<i>,' is particularly He has gratified me by mentioning
+that he heard Dr. Johnson say, 'Sir, if I were to lose Boswell,
+it would be a limb amputated.' BOSWELL.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-271">[271]</a> William
+Weller Pepys, Esq., one of the Masters in the High Court of
+Chancery, and well known in polite circles. My acquaintance with
+him is not sufficient to enable me to speak of him from my own
+judgement. But I know that both at Eton and Oxford he was the
+intimate friend of the late Sir James Macdonald, the Marcellus
+<i>of Scotland [</i>ante<i>, i.449], whose extraordinary talents,
+learning, and virtues, will ever be remembered with admiration
+and regret. BOSWELL.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-272">[272]</a> See
+note, ante<i>, p. 65, which describes an attack made by Johnson
+on Pepys more than two months after this conversation.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-273">[273]</a> Johnson
+once said to Mrs. Thrale:&mdash;'Why, Madam, you often provoke me
+to say severe things by unreasonable commendation. If you would
+not call for my praise, I would not give you my censure; but it
+constantly moves my indignation to be applied to, to speak well
+of a thing which I think contemptible.' Mme. D'Arblay's Diary<i>,
+i.132. See</i> ante<i>, iii.225.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-274">[274]</a> 'Mrs.
+Thrale,' wrote Miss Burney in 1780, 'is a most dear creature, but
+never restrains her tongue in anything, nor, indeed, any of her
+feelings. She laughs, cries, scolds, sports, reasons, makes
+fun&mdash;does everything she has an inclination to do, without
+any study of prudence, or thought of blame; and, pure and artless
+as is this character, it often draws both herself and others into
+scrapes, which a little discretion would avoid.' Ib<i>. i.386.
+Later on she writes:&mdash;'Mrs. Thrale, with all her excellence,
+can give up no occasion of making sport, however unseasonable or
+even painful... I knew she was not to be safely trusted with
+anything she could turn into ridicule.'</i> Ib<i>. ii.24 and
+29.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-275">[275]</a> Perhaps
+Mr. Seward, who was constantly at the Thrales' (ante<i>, iii.
+123).</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-276">[276]</a> See
+ante<i>, iii.228, 404.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-277">[277]</a> It was
+the seventh anniversary of Goldsmith's death.</p>
+<p><a name="note-278">[278]</a> 'Mrs.
+Garrick and I,' wrote Hannah More (Memoirs<i>, i. 208), 'were
+invited to an assembly at Mrs. Thrale's. There was to be a fine
+concert, and all the fine people were to be there. Just as my
+hair was dressed, came a servant to forbid our coming, for that
+Mr. Thrale was dead.'</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-279">[279]</a> Pr. and
+Med. <i>p 191. BOSWELL. The rest of the entry should be
+given:&mdash;'On Wednesday, 11, was buried my dear friend Thrale,
+who died on Wednesday 4; and with him were buried many of my
+hopes and pleasures. [On Sunday, 1st, the physician warned him
+against full meals, on Monday I pressed him to observance of his
+rules, but without effect, and Tuesday I was absent, but his wife
+pressed forbearance upon him again unsuccessfully. At night I was
+called to him, and found him senseless in strong convulsions. I
+staid in the room, except that I visited Mrs. Thrale twice.]
+About five, I think, on Wednesday morning he expired; I felt,
+&amp;c. Farewell. May God that delighteth in mercy have had mercy
+on thee. I had constantly prayed for him some time before his
+death. The decease of him from whose friendship I had obtained
+many opportunities of amusement, and to whom I turned my thoughts
+as to a refuge from misfortunes, has left me heavy. But my
+business is with myself.' The passage enclosed in brackets I have
+copied from the original MS. Mr. Strahan, the editor, omitted it,
+no doubt from feelings of delicacy. What a contrast in this to
+the widow who published a letter in which she had
+written:&mdash;'I wish that you would put in a word of your own
+to Mr. Thrale about eating less!'</i> Piozzi Letters<i>, ii.130.
+Baretti, in a note on</i> Piozzi Letters<i>, ii.142, says that
+'nobody ever had spirit enough to tell Mr. Thrale that his fits
+were apoplectic; such is the blessing of being rich that nobody
+dares to speak out.' In Johnson's</i> Works <i>(1787), xi.203, it
+is recorded that 'Johnson, who attended Thrale in his last
+moments, said, "His servants would have waited upon him in this
+awful period, and why not his friend?"'</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-280">[280]</a>
+Johnson's letters to the widow show how much he felt Thrale's
+death. 'April 5, 1781. I am not without my part of the calamity.
+No death since that of my wife has ever oppressed me like this.
+April 7. My part of the loss hangs upon me. I have lost a friend
+of boundless kindness, at an age when it is very unlikely that I
+should find another. April 9. Our sorrow has different effects;
+you are withdrawn into solitude, and I am driven into company. I
+am afraid of thinking what I have lost. I never had such a friend
+before. April 11. I feel myself like a man beginning a new course
+of life. I had interwoven myself with my dear friend.' Piozzi
+Letters<i>, ii. 191-97. 'I have very often,' wrote Miss Burney,
+in the following June, 'though I mention them not, long and
+melancholy discourses with Dr. Johnson about our dear deceased
+master, whom, indeed, he regrets incessantly.' Mme.
+D'Arblay's</i> Diary<i>, ii. 63. On his next birthday, he
+wrote:&mdash;'My first knowledge of Thrale was in 1765. I enjoyed
+his favour for almost a fourth part of my life.'</i> Pr. and Med.
+<i>p.191. One or two passages in Mrs. Thrale's Letters shew her
+husband's affection for Johnson. On May 3, 1776, she
+writes:&mdash;'Mr. Thrale says he shall not die in peace without
+seeing Rome, and I am sure he will go nowhere that he can help
+without you.'</i> Piozzi Letters<i>, i.317. A few days later, she
+speaks of 'our dear master, who cannot be quiet without you for a
+week.'</i> Ib. <i>p.329. Johnson, in his fine epitaph on Thrale
+(</i>Works<i>, i.153) broke through a rule which he himself had
+laid down. In his</i> Essay on Epitaphs <i>(</i>Ib. <i>v 263), he
+said:&mdash;'It is improper to address the epitaph to the
+passenger [traveller], a custom which an injudicious veneration
+for antiquity introduced again at the revival of letters.' Yet in
+the monument in Streatham Church, we find the same</i> Abi viator
+<i>which he had censured in an epitaph on Henry IV of
+France.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-281">[281]</a>
+Johnson's letters to Mrs. Thrale shew that he had long been well
+acquainted with the state of her husband's business. In the year
+1772, Mr. Thrale was in money difficulties. Johnson writes to her
+almost as if he were a partner in the business. 'The first
+consequence of our late trouble ought to be an endeavour to brew
+at a cheaper rate...Unless this can be done, nothing can help us;
+and if this be done, we shall not want help.' Piozzi Letters<i>,
+i.57. He urges economy in the household, and
+continues:&mdash;'But the fury of housewifery will soon subside;
+and little effect will be produced, but by methodical attention
+and even frugality.'</i> Ib. <i>p.64. In another letter he
+writes:&mdash;'This year will undoubtedly be an year of struggle
+and difficulty; but I doubt not of getting through it; and the
+difficulty will grow yearly less and less. Supposing that our
+former mode of life kept us on the level, we shall, by the
+present contraction of expense, gain upon fortune a thousand a
+year, even though no improvements can be made in the conduct of
+the trade.'</i> Piozzi Letters<i>, i. 66. Four years later, he
+writes:&mdash;'To-day I went to look into my places at the
+Borough. I called on Mr. Perkins in the counting-house. He crows
+and triumphs, as we go on we shall double our business.'</i> Ib.
+<i>p. 333. When the executors first met, he wrote:&mdash;'We met
+to-day, and were told of mountainous difficulties, till I was
+provoked to tell them, that if there were really so much to do
+and suffer, there would be no executors in the world. Do not
+suffer yourself to be terrified.'</i> Ib. <i>ii. 197. Boswell
+says (</i>ante<i>, ii. 44l):&mdash;'I often had occasion to
+remark, Johnson loved business, loved to have his wisdom actually
+operate on real life.' When Boswell had purchased a farm,
+'Johnson,' he writes (</i>ante<i>, iii. 207), 'made several
+calculations of the expense and profit; for he delighted in
+exercising his mind on the science of numbers.' The letter
+(</i>ante<i>, ii. 424) about the book-trade 'exhibits,' to use
+Boswell's words, 'his extraordinary precision and acuteness.'
+Boswell wrote to Temple:&mdash;'Dr. Taylor has begged of Dr.
+Johnson to come to London, to assist him in some interesting
+business; and Johnson loves much to be so consulted, and so comes
+up.'</i> Ante<i>, iii. 51, note 3.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-282">[282]</a> Johnson,
+as soon as the will was read, wrote to Mrs. Thrale:&mdash;'You
+have, &pound;500 for your immediate expenses, and, &pound;2000 a
+year, with both the houses and all the goods.' Piozzi Letters<i>,
+ii. 192. Beattie wrote on June 1:&mdash;'Everybody says Mr.
+Thrale should have left Johnson &pound;200 a year; which, from a
+fortune like his, would have been a very inconsiderable
+deduction.' Beattie's</i> Life<i>, ed. 1824, p. 290.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-283">[283]</a> Miss
+Burney thus writes of the day of the sale:&mdash;'Mrs. Thrale
+went early to town, to meet all the executors, and Mr. Barclay,
+the Quaker, who was the bidder. She was in great agitation of
+mind, and told me if all went well she would wave a white
+handkerchief out of the coach-window. Four o'clock came and
+dinner was ready, and no Mrs. Thrale. Queeny and I went out upon
+the lawn, where we sauntered in eager expectation, till near six,
+and then the coach appeared in sight, and a white handkerchief
+was waved from it.' Mme. D'Arblay's Diary<i>, ii. 34. The brewery
+was sold for &pound;135,000. See</i> post<i>, June 16,
+1781.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-284">[284]</a> See
+post<i>, paragraph before June 22, 1784.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-285">[285]</a> Baretti,
+in a MS. note on Piozzi Letters<i>, i. 369, says that 'the two
+last years of Thrale's life his brewery brought him &pound;30,000
+a year neat profit.'</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-286">[286]</a> In the
+fourth edition of his Dictionary<i>, published in 1773, Johnson
+introduced a second definition of</i> patriot<i>:&mdash;'It is
+sometimes used for a factious disturber of the government.'
+Gibbon (</i>Misc. Works<i>, ii. 77) wrote on Feb. 21,
+1772:&mdash;'Charles Fox is commenced patriot, and is already
+attempting to pronounce the words,</i> country<i>,</i>
+liberty<i>,</i> corruption<i>, &amp;c.; with what success time
+will discover.' Forty years before Johnson begged not to meet
+patriots, Sir Robert Walpole said:&mdash;'A patriot, Sir! why
+patriots spring up like mushrooms. I could raise fifty of them
+within the four-and-twenty hours. I have raised many of them in
+one night. It is but refusing to gratify an unreasonable or an
+insolent demand, and up starts a patriot. I have never been
+afraid of making patriots; but I disdain and despise all their
+efforts.' Coxe's</i> Walpole<i>, i. 659. See</i> ante<i>, ii.
+348, and iii. 66.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-287">[287]</a> He was
+tried on Feb. 5 and 6, 1781. Ann. Reg. <i>xxiv. 217.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-288">[288]</a> Hannah
+More (Memoirs<i>, i. 210) records a dinner on a Tuesday in this
+year. (Like Mrs. Thrale and Miss Burney, she cared nothing for
+dates.) It was in the week after Thrale's death. It must have
+been the dinner here mentioned by Boswell; for it was at a
+Bishop's (Shipley of St. Asaph), and Sir Joshua and Boswell were
+among the guests. Why Boswell recorded none of Johnson's
+conversation may be guessed from what she tells. 'I was heartily
+disgusted,' she says, 'with Mr. Boswell, who came up stairs after
+dinner much disordered with wine.' (See</i> post<i>, p. 109). The
+following morning Johnson called on her. 'He reproved me,' she
+writes, 'with pretended sharpness for reading</i> Les
+Pens&eacute;es de Pascal<i>, alleging that as a good Protestant I
+ought to abstain from books written by Catholics. I was beginning
+to stand upon my defence, when he took me with both hands, and
+with a tear running down his cheeks, "Child," said he, with the
+most affecting earnestness, "I am heartily glad that you read
+pious books, by whomsoever they may be written.'"</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-289">[289]</a> On
+Good-Friday, in 1778, Johnson recorded:&mdash;'It has happened
+this week, as it never happened in Passion-week before, that I
+have never dined at home, and I have therefore neither practised
+abstinence nor peculiar devotion' Pr. and Med. <i>p. 163.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-290">[290]</a> No.
+7.</p>
+<p><a name="note-291">[291]</a> See
+ante<i>, iii. 302.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-292">[292]</a> Richard
+Berenger, Esq., many years Gentleman of the Horse, and first
+Equerry to his present Majesty. MALONE. According to Mrs. Piozzi
+(Anec. <i>p. 156), he was Johnson's 'standard of true
+elegance.'</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-293">[293]</a> See
+ante<i>, iii. 186.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-294">[294]</a> Johnson
+(Works<i>, vii. 449) thus describes Addison's 'familiar day,' on
+the authority of Pope:&mdash;'He studied all morning; then dined
+at a tavern; and went afterwards to Button's [coffee-house]. From
+the coffee-house he went again to a tavern, where he often sat
+late, and drank too much wine.' Spence (</i>Anec. <i>p. 286)
+adds, on the authority of Pope, that 'Addison passed each day
+alike, and much in the manner that Dryden did. Dryden employed
+his mornings in writing; dined</i> en famille<i>; and then went
+to Wills's; only he came home earlier a'nights'</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-295">[295]</a> Mr. Foss
+says of Blackstone:&mdash;'Ere he had been long on the bench he
+experienced the bad effects of the studious habits in which he
+had injudiciously indulged in his early life, and of his neglect
+to take the necessary amount of exercise, to which he was
+specially averse.' He died at the age of 56. Foss's Judges<i>,
+viii. 250. He suffered greatly from his corpulence. His portrait
+in the Bodleian shews that he was a very fat man. Malone says
+that Scott (afterwards Lord Stowell) wrote to Blackstone's family
+to apologise for Boswell's anecdote. Prior's</i> Malone<i>, p.
+415. Scott would not have thought any the worse of Blackstone for
+his bottle of port; both he and his brother, the Chancellor, took
+a great deal of it. 'Lord Eldon liked plain port; the stronger
+the better.' Twiss's</i> Eldon<i>, iii. 486. Some one asked him
+whether Lord Stowell took much exercise. 'None,' he said, 'but
+the exercise of eating and drinking.'</i> Ib. <i>p. 302. Yet both
+men got through a vast deal of hard work, and died, Eldon at the
+age of 86, and Stowell of 90.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-296">[296]</a> See this
+explained, pp. 52, 53 of this volume. BOSWELL.</p>
+<p><a name="note-297">[297]</a> See
+ante<i>, ii. 7.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-298">[298]</a> William
+Scott was a tutor of University College at the age of nineteen.
+He held the office for ten years&mdash;to 1775. He wrote to his
+father in 1772 about his younger brother John (afterwards Lord
+Eldon), who had just made a run-away match:&mdash;'The business
+in which I am engaged is so extremely disagreeable in itself, and
+so destructive to health (if carried on with such success as can
+render it at all considerable in point of profit) that I do not
+wonder at his unwillingness to succeed me in it.' Twiss's
+Eldon<i>, i. 47, 74.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-299">[299]</a> The
+account of her marriage given By John Wesley in a letter to his
+brother-in-law, Mr. Hall, is curious. He wrote on Dec. 22,
+1747:&mdash;'More than twelve years ago you told me God had
+revealed it to you that you should marry my youngest sister ...
+You asked and gained her consent... In a few days you had a
+counter-revelation, that you was not to marry her, but her
+sister. This last error was far worse than the first. But you was
+not quite above conviction. So, in spite of her poor astonished
+parents, of her brothers, of all your vows and promises, you
+shortly after jilted the younger and married the elder sister.'
+Wesley's Journal<i>, ii. 39. Mrs. Hall suffered greatly for
+marrying a wretch who had so cruelly treated her own sister,
+Southey's</i> Wesley<i>, i. 369.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-300">[300]</a> See
+ante<i>, iii. 269.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-301">[301]</a> The
+original 'Robinhood' was a debating society which met near
+Temple-Bar. Some twenty years before this time Goldsmith belonged
+to it, and, it was said, Burke. Forster's Goldsmith<i>, i. 287,
+and Prior's</i> Burke<i>, p. 79. The president was a baker by
+trade. 'Goldsmith, after hearing him give utterance to a train of
+strong and ingenious reasoning, exclaimed to Derrick, "That man
+was meant by nature for a Lord Chancellor." Derrick replied, "No,
+no, not so high; he is only intended for Master of the</i>
+Rolls<i>."' Prior's</i> Goldsmith<i>, i. 420. Fielding, in 1752,
+in</i> The Covent-Garden Journal<i>, Nos. 8 and 9, takes off this
+Society and the baker. A fragment of a report of their
+discussions which he pretends to have discovered, begins
+thus:&mdash;'This evenin the questin at the Robinhood was,
+whether relidgin was of any youse to a sosyaty; baken bifor mee
+To'mmas Whytebred, baker.' Horace Walpole (</i>Letters<i>, iv.
+288), in 1764, wrote of the visit of a French gentleman to
+England, 'He has</i> seen <i>... Jews, Quakers, Mr. Pitt, the
+Royal Society, the Robinhood, Lord Chief-Justice Pratt, the
+Arts-and-Sciences, &amp;c.' Romilly (</i>Life<i>, i. 168), in a
+letter dated May 22, 1781, says that during the past winter
+several of these Sunday religious debating societies had been
+established. 'The auditors,' he was assured, 'were mostly weak,
+well-meaning people, who were inclined to Methodism;' but among
+the speakers were 'some designing villains, and a few coxcombs,
+with more wit than understanding.' 'Nothing,' he continues,
+'could raise up panegyrists of these societies but what has
+lately happened, an attempt to suppress them. The
+Solicitor-General has brought a bill into Parliament for this
+purpose. The bill is drawn artfully enough; for, as these
+societies are held on Sundays, and people pay for admittance, he
+has joined them with a famous tea-drinking house [Carlisle
+House], involving them both in the same fate, and entitling his
+bill,</i> A Bill to regulate certain Abuses and Profanations of
+the Lord's Day<i>.' The Bill was carried; on a division none
+being found among the Noes but the two tellers. The penalties for
+holding a meeting were &pound;200 for the master of the house,
+&pound;100 for the moderator of the meeting, and &pound;50 for
+each of the servants at the door.</i> Parl. Hist. <i>xxii. 262,
+279.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-302">[302]</a> St.
+Matthew<i>, xxvii. 52.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-303">[303]</a> I
+Corinthians<i>, xv. 37.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-304">[304]</a> As this
+subject frequently recurs in these volumes, the reader may be led
+erroneously to suppose that Dr. Johnson was so fond of such
+discussions, as frequently to introduce them. But the truth is,
+that the authour himself delighted in talking concerning ghosts,
+and what he has frequently denominated the mysterious<i>; and
+therefore took every opportunity of</i> leading <i>Johnson to
+converse on such subjects. MALONE. See</i> ante<i>, i.
+406.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-305">[305]</a> Macbean
+(Johnson's old amanuensis, ante<i>, i. 187) is not in Boswell's
+list of guests; but in the Pemb. Coll. MSS., there is the
+following entry on Monday, April 16:&mdash;'Yesterday at dinner
+were Mrs. Hall, Mr. Levet, Macbean, Boswel (sic), Allen. Time
+passed in talk after dinner. At seven, I went with Mrs. Hall to
+Church, and came back to tea.'</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-306">[306]</a> Mrs.
+Piozzi records (Anec<i>. p. 192) that he said 'a long time after
+my poor mother's death, I heard her voice call</i> Sam<i>.' She
+is so inaccurate that most likely this is merely her version of
+the story that Boswell has recorded above. See also</i> ante<i>,
+i. 405. Lord Macaulay made more of this story of the voice than
+it could well bear&mdash;'Under the influence of his disease, his
+senses became morbidly torpid, and his imagination morbidly
+active. At one time he would stand poring on the town clock
+without being able to tell the hour. At another, he would
+distinctly hear his mother, who was many miles off, calling him
+by his name. But this was not the worst.' Macaulay's</i> Writings
+and Speeches<i>, ed. 1871, p. 374.</i></p>
+<center><a name=
+"note-307">[307]</a></center>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'One wife is too much for most
+ husbands to bear,
+ But two at a time there's no
+ mortal can bear.'
+ Act iii. sc. 4.
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p><a name="note-308">[308]</a> 'I think
+a person who is terrified with the imagination of ghosts and
+spectres much more reasonable than one who, contrary to the
+reports of all historians, sacred and profane, ancient and
+modern, and to the traditions of all nations, thinks the
+appearance of spirits fabulous and groundless.' The Spectator<i>,
+No. 110.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-309">[309]</a> St.
+Matthew<i>, chap. xxvii. vv. 52, 53. BOSWELL.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-310">[310]</a> Garrick
+died on Jan. 20, 1779.</p>
+<p><a name="note-311">[311]</a> Garrick
+called her Nine<i>, (the Nine Muses). 'Nine,' he said, 'you are
+a</i> Sunday Woman<i>.' H. More's</i> Memoirs<i>, i. 113.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-312">[312]</a> See vol.
+iii. p. 331. BOSWELL.</p>
+<p><a name="note-313">[313]</a> See
+ante<i>, ii. 325, note 3.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-314">[314]</a> Boswell
+is quoting from Johnson's eulogium on Garrick in his Life of
+Edmund Smith. Works<i>, vii. 380. See</i> ante<i>, i. 81.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-315">[315]</a> How fond
+she and her husband had been is shewn in a letter, in which, in
+answer to an invitation, he says:&mdash;'As I have not left Mrs.
+Garrick one day since we were married, near twenty-eight years, I
+cannot now leave her.' Garrick Corres. <i>ii. 150. 'Garrick's
+widow is buried with him. She survived him forty-three
+years&mdash;"a little bowed-down old woman, who went about
+leaning on a gold-headed cane, dressed in deep widow's mourning,
+and always talking of her dear Davy." (</i>Pen and Ink
+Sketches<i>, 1864).' Stanley's</i> Westminster Abbey<i>, ed.
+1868, p. 305.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-316">[316]</a> Love's
+Labour's Lost<i>, act ii. sc. i.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-317">[317]</a> See
+ante<i>, ii. 461.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-318">[318]</a> Horace
+Walpole (Letters<i>, vii. 346) describes Hollis as 'a most
+excellent man, a most immaculate Whig, but as simple a poor soul
+as ever existed, except his editor, who has given extracts from
+the good creature's diary that are very near as anile as
+Ashmole's. There are thanks to God for reaching every birthday,
+... and thanks to Heaven for her Majesty's being delivered of a
+third or fourth prince, and</i> God send he may prove a good
+man<i>.' See also Walpole's</i> Journal of the Reign of George
+III<i>, i. 287. Dr. Franklin wrote much more highly of him.
+Speaking of what he had done, he said:&mdash;'It is prodigious
+the quantity of good that may be done by one man,</i> if he will
+make a business of it<i>.' Franklin's Memoirs, ed. 1818, iii.
+135.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-319">[319]</a> See p.
+77 of this volume. BOSWELL.</p>
+<p><a name="note-320">[320]</a> See
+ante<i>, iii. 97.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-321">[321]</a> On April
+6 of the next year this gentleman, when Secretary of the
+Treasury, destroyed himself, overwhelmed, just as Cowper had
+been, by the sense of the responsibility of an office which had
+been thrust upon him. See Hannah More's Memoirs<i>, i. 245, and
+Walpole's</i> Letters<i>, viii. 206.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-322">[322]</a> 'It is
+commonly supposed that the uniformity of a studious life affords
+no matter for a narration; but the truth is, that of the most
+studious life a great part passes without study. An author
+partakes of the common condition of humanity; he is born and
+married like another man; he has hopes and fears, expectations
+and disappointments, griefs and joys, and friends and enemies,
+like a courtier, or a statesman; nor can I conceive why his
+affairs should not excite curiosity as much as the whisper of a
+drawing-room or the factions of a camp.' The Idler<i>, No.
+102.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-323">[323]</a> Hannah
+More wrote of this day (Memoirs<i>, i. 212):&mdash;'I accused Dr.
+Johnson of not having done justice to the</i> Allegro <i>and</i>
+Penseroso<i>. He spoke disparagingly of both. I praised</i>
+Lycidas<i>, which he absolutely abused, adding, "if Milton had
+not written the</i> Paradise Lost<i>, he would have only ranked
+among the minor Poets. He was a Phidias that could cut a Colossus
+out of a rock, but could not cut heads out of cherry-stones."'
+See</i> post<i>, June 13, 1784. The</i> Allegro <i>and</i>
+Penseroso <i>Johnson described as 'two noble efforts of
+imagination.' Of</i> Lycidas <i>he wrote:&mdash;'Surely no man
+could have fancied that he read it with pleasure, had he not
+known the author.'</i> Works<i>, vii. 121, 2.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-324">[324]</a> Murphy
+(Life of Garrick<i>, p. 374) says 'Shortly after Garrick's death
+Johnson was told in a large company, "You are recent from the</i>
+Lives of the Poets<i>; why not add your friend Garrick to the
+number?" Johnson's answer was, "I do not like to be officious;
+but if Mrs. Garrick will desire me to do it, I shall be very
+willing to pay that last tribute to the memory of a man I loved."
+'Murphy adds that he himself took care that Mrs. Garrick was
+informed of what Johnson had said, but that no answer was ever
+received.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-325">[325]</a> Miss
+Burney wrote in May:&mdash;'Dr. Johnson was charming, both in
+spirits and humour. I really think he grows gayer and gayer
+daily, and more ductile <i>and pleasant.' In June she
+wrote:&mdash;'I found him in admirable good-humour, and our
+journey [to Streatham] was extremely pleasant. I thanked him for
+the last batch of his poets, and we talked them over almost all
+the way.' Mme. D'Arblay's</i> Diary<i>, ii. 23, 44. Beattie, a
+week or two later, wrote:&mdash;'Johnson grows in grace as he
+grows in years. He not only has better health and a fresher
+complexion than ever he had before (at least since I knew him),
+but he has contracted a gentleness of manner which pleases
+everybody.' Beattie's</i> Life<i>, ed. 1824, p. 289.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-326">[326]</a> See
+ante<i>, iii. 65. Wilkes was by this time City Chamberlain. 'I
+think I see him at this moment,' said Rogers (</i>Table-Talk<i>,
+p. 43), 'walking through the crowded streets of the city, as
+Chamberlain, on his way to Guildhall, in a scarlet coat, military
+boots, and a bag-wig&mdash;the hackney-coachmen in vain calling
+out to him, "A coach, your honour."'</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-327">[327]</a> See
+ante<i>, ii. 201, for Beattie's</i> Essay on Truth<i>.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-328">[328]</a> Thurot,
+in the winter of 1759-60, with a small squadron made descents on
+some of the Hebrides and on the north-eastern coast of Ireland.
+In a sea fight off Ireland he was killed and his ships were
+taken. Gent. Mag<i>. xxx. 107. Horace Walpole says that in the
+alarm raised by him in Ireland, 'the bankers there stopped
+payment.'</i> Memoirs of the Reign of George II<i>, iii.
+224.</i></p>
+<center><a name=
+"note-329">[329]</a></center>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'Some for renown on scraps of learning doat,
+ And think they grow immortal as they quote.'
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>Young's Love of Fame<i>, sat. i. Cumberland (</i>Memoirs<i>,
+ii. 226) says that Mr. Dilly, speaking of 'the profusion of
+quotations which some writers affectedly make use of, observed
+that he knew a Presbyterian parson who, for eighteenpence, would
+furnish any pamphleteer with as many scraps of Greek and Latin as
+would pass him off for an accomplished classic.'</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-330">[330]</a> Cowley
+was quite out of fashion. Richardson (Corres. <i>ii. 229) wrote
+more than thirty years earlier:&mdash;'I wonder Cowley is so
+absolutely neglected.' Pope, a dozen years or so before
+Richardson, asked,</i></p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'Who now reads Cowley? if he pleases yet,
+ His moral pleases, not his pointed wit.'
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>Imitations of Horace<i>, Epis. ii. i. 75.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-331">[331]</a> See
+ante<i>, ii. 58, and iii. 276.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-332">[332]</a> 'There
+was a club held at the King's Head in Pall Mall that arrogantly
+called itself The World. Lord Stanhope (now Lord Chesterfield)
+was a member. Epigrams were proposed to be written on the glasses
+by each member after dinner. Once when Dr. Young was invited
+thither, the doctor would have declined writing because he had no
+diamond, Lord Stanhope lent him his, and he wrote
+immediately&mdash;</p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ "Accept<i> a miracle," &amp;c.'
+</i>
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>Spence's Anecdotes<i>, p. 377. Dr. Maty (</i>Memoirs of
+Chesterfield<i>, i. 227) assigns the lines to Pope, and lays the
+scene at Lord Cobham's. Spence, however, gives Young himself as
+his authority.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-333">[333]</a> 'Aug.
+1778. "I wonder," said Mrs. Thrale, "you bear with my nonsense."
+"No, madam, you never talk nonsense; you have as much sense and
+more wit than any woman I know." "Oh," cried Mrs. Thrale,
+blushing, "it is my turn to go under the table this morning, Miss
+Burney." "And yet," continued the doctor, with the most comical
+look, "I have known all the wits from Mrs. Montagu down to Bet
+Flint." "Bet Flint!" cried Mrs. Thrale. "Pray, who is she?" "Oh,
+a fine character, madam. She was habitually a slut and a
+drunkard, and occasionally a thief and a harlot.... Mrs.
+Williams," he added, "did not love Bet Flint, but Bet Flint made
+herself very easy about that."' Mme. D'Arblay's Diary<i>, i. 87,
+90.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-334">[334]</a> Johnson,
+whose memory was wonderfully retentive [see ante<i>, i. 39],
+remembered the first four lines of this curious production, which
+have been communicated to me by a young lady of his
+acquaintance:&mdash;</i></p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'When first I drew my vital breath,
+ A little minikin I came upon
+ earth;
+ And then I came from a dark
+ abode,
+ Into this gay and gaudy world.'
+ BOSWELL.
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p><a name="note-335">[335]</a> The
+Sessional Reports of the Old Bailey Trials <i>for 1758, p. 278,
+contain a report of the trial. The Chief Justice Willes was in
+the Commission, but, according to the</i> Report<i>, it was
+before the Recorder that Bet Flint was tried. It may easily be,
+however, that either the reporter or the printer has blundered.
+It is only by the characters * and &Dagger; that the trials
+before the Chief Justice and the Recorder are distinguished. Bet
+had stolen not only the counterpane, but five other articles. The
+prosecutrix could not prove that the articles were hers, and not
+a captain's, whose servant she said she had been, and who was now
+abroad. On this ground the prisoner was acquitted. Of Chief
+Justice Willes, Horace Walpole writes:&mdash;'He was not wont to
+disguise any of his passions. That for gaming was notorious; for
+women unbounded.' He relates an anecdote of his wit and
+licentiousness. Walpole's</i> Reign of George II<i>, i. 89. He
+had been Johnson's schoolfellow (</i>ante<i>, i. 45).</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-336">[336]</a> Burke is
+meant. See ante<i>, ii. 131, where Johnson said that Burke spoke
+too familiarly; and</i> post<i>, May 15, 1784, where he said that
+'when Burke lets himself down to jocularity he is in the
+kennel.'</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-337">[337]</a> Wilkes
+imperfectly recalled to mind the following passage in
+Plutarch:&mdash;'[Greek: Euphranor ton Thaesea ton heatou to
+Parrhasiou parebale, legon tor men ekeinou hroda bebrokenai, tor
+de eautou krea boeia.]' 'Euphranor, comparing his own Theseus
+with Parrhasius's, said that Parrhasius's had fed on roses, but
+his on beef.' Plutarch<i>, ed. 1839, iii. 423.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-338">[338]</a>
+Portugal, receiving from Brazil more gold than it needed for home
+uses, shipped a large quantity to England. It was said, though
+probably with exaggeration, that the weekly packet-boat from
+Lisbon, brought one week with another, more than &pound;50,000 in
+gold to England. Smith's Wealth of Nations<i>, book iv. ch. 6.
+Portugal pieces were current in our colonies, and no doubt were
+commonly sent to them from London. It was natural therefore that
+they should be selected for this legal fiction.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-339">[339]</a> See
+ante<i>, ii. III.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-340">[340]</a>
+'Whenever the whole of our foreign trade and consumption exceeds
+our exportation of commodities, our money must go to pay our
+debts so contracted, whether melted or not melted down. If the
+law makes the exportation of our coin penal, it will be melted
+down; if it leaves the exportation of our coin free, as in
+Holland, it will be carried out in specie. One way or other, go
+it must, as we see in Spain.... Laws made against exportation of
+money or bullion will be all in vain. Restraint or liberty in
+that matter makes no country rich or poor.' Locke's Works<i>, ed.
+1824, iv. 160.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-341">[341]</a> 'Nov.
+14, 1779. Mr. Beauclerk has built a library in Great
+Russellstreet, that reaches half way to Highgate. Everybody goes
+to see it; it has put the Museum's nose quite out of joint.'
+Walpole's Letters<i>, vii. 273. It contained upwards of 30,000
+volumes, and the sale extended over fifty days. Two days' sale
+were given to the works on divinity, including, in the words of
+the catalogue, 'Heterodox! et Increduli. Angl. Freethinkers and
+their opponents.'</i> Dr. Johnson: His Friends and His
+Critics<i>, p. 315. It sold for &pound;5,011 (ante, in. 420, note
+4). Wilkes's own library&mdash;a large one&mdash;had been sold in
+1764, in a five days' sale, as is shewn by the</i> Auctioneer's
+Catalogue<i>, which is in the Bodleian.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-342">[342]</a> 'Our own
+language has from the Reformation to the present time been
+chiefly dignified and adorned by the works of our divines, who,
+considered as commentators, controvertists, or preachers, have
+undoubtedly left all other nations far behind them.' The
+Idler<i>, No. 91.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-343">[343]</a> Mr.
+Wilkes probably did not know that there is in an English sermon
+the most comprehensive and lively account of that entertaining
+faculty, for which he himself is so much admired. It is in Dr.
+Barrow's first volume, and fourteenth sermon, 'Against foolish
+Talking and Jesting.' <i>My old acquaintance, the late Corbyn
+Morris, in his ingenious</i> Essay on Wit, Humour, and
+Ridicule<i>, calls it 'a profuse description of Wit;' but I do
+not see how it could be curtailed, without leaving out some good
+circumstance of discrimination. As it is not generally known, and
+may perhaps dispose some to read sermons, from which they may
+receive real advantage, while looking only for entertainment, I
+shall here subjoin it:&mdash;'But first (says the learned
+preacher) it may be demanded, what the thing we speak of is? Or
+what this facetiousness (or</i> wit <i>as he calls it before)
+doth import? To which questions I might reply, as Democritus did
+to him that asked the definition of a man, "'Tis that which we
+all see and know." Any one better apprehends what it is by
+acquaintance, than I can inform him by description. It is,
+indeed, a thing so versatile and multiform, appearing in so many
+shapes, so many postures, so many garbs, so variously apprehended
+by several eyes and judgements, that it seemeth no less hard to
+settle a clear and certain notion thereof, than to make a
+portrait of Proteus, or to define the figure of the fleeting air.
+Sometimes it lieth in pat allusion to a known story, or in
+seasonable application of a trivial saying, or in forging an
+apposite tale; sometimes it playeth in words and phrases, taking
+advantage from the ambiguity of their sense, or the affinity of
+their sound: sometimes it is wrapped in a dress of humorous
+expression: sometimes it lurketh under an odd similitude:
+sometimes it is lodged in a sly question, in a smart answer, in a
+quirkish reason, in a shrewd intimation, in cunningly diverting
+or cleverly retorting an objection: sometimes it is couched in a
+bold scheme of speech, in a tart irony, in a lusty hyperbole, in
+a startling metaphor, in a plausible reconciling of
+contradictions, or in acute nonsense: sometimes a scenical
+representation of persons or things, a counterfeit speech, a
+mimical look or gesture, passeth for it: sometimes an affected
+simplicity, sometimes a presumptuous bluntness giveth it being:
+sometimes it riseth only from a lucky hitting upon what is
+strange: sometimes from a crafty wresting obvious matter to the
+purpose. Often it consisteth in one knows not what, and springeth
+up one can hardly tell how. Its ways are unaccountable, and
+inexplicable; being answerable to the numberless rovings of
+fancy, and windings of language. It is, in short, a manner of
+speaking out of the simple and plain way, (such as reason
+teacheth and proveth things by,) which by a pretty surprising
+uncouthness in conceit or expression, doth affect and amuse the
+fancy, stirring in it some wonder, and breeding some delight
+thereto. It raiseth admiration, as signifying a nimble sagacity
+of apprehension, a special felicity of invention, a vivacity of
+spirit, and reach of wit more than vulgar; it seeming to argue a
+rare quickness of parts, that one can fetch in remote conceits
+applicable; a notable skill, that he can dextrously accommodate
+them to the purpose before him; together with a lively briskness
+of humour, not apt to damp those sportful flashes of imagination.
+(Whence in Aristotle such persons are termed [Greek:</i>
+hepidexioi<i>], dextrous men, and [Greek:</i> eustrophoi<i>], men
+of facile or versatile manners, who can easily turn themselves to
+all things, or turn all things to themselves.) It also procureth
+delight, by gratifying curiosity with its rareness, as semblance
+of difficulty: (as monsters, not for their beauty, but their
+rarity; as juggling tricks, not for their use, but their
+abstruseness, are beheld with pleasure:) by diverting the mind
+from its road of serious thoughts; by instilling gaiety and
+airiness of spirit; by provoking to such dispositions of spirit
+in way of emulation or complaisance; and by seasoning matters,
+otherwise distasteful or insipid, with an unusual and thence
+grateful tang.' BOSWELL. Morris's</i> Essay <i>was published in
+1744. Hume wrote:&mdash;'Pray do you not think that a proper
+dedication may atone for what is objectionable in my Dialogues'!
+I am become much of my friend Corbyn Morrice's mind, who says
+that he writes all his books for the sake of the dedications.' J.
+H. Burton's</i> Hume<i>, ii. 147.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-344">[344]</a> The
+quarrel arose from the destruction by George II. of George I.'s
+will (ante<i>, ii. 342). The King of Prussia, Frederick the
+Great, was George I.'s grandson. 'Vague rumours spoke of a large
+legacy to the Queen of Prussia [Frederick's mother]. Of that
+bequest demands were afterwards said to have been frequently and
+roughly made by her son, the great King of Prussia, between whom
+and his uncle subsisted much inveteracy.' Walpole's</i>
+Letters<i>, i. cxx.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-345">[345]</a> When I
+mentioned this to the Bishop of Killaloe, 'With the goat,' said
+his Lordship. Such, however, is the engaging politeness and
+pleasantry of Mr. Wilkes, and such the social good humour of the
+Bishop, that when they dined together at Mr. Dilly's, where I
+also was, they were mutually agreeable. BOSWELL. It was not the
+lion, but the leopard, that shall lie down with the kid.
+Isaiah<i>, xi. 6.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-346">[346]</a> Mr.
+Benjamin Stillingfleet, authour of tracts relating to natural
+history, &amp;c. BOSWELL.</p>
+<p><a name="note-347">[347]</a> Mrs.
+Montagu, so early as 1757, wrote of Mr. Stillingfleet:&mdash;'I
+assure you our philosopher is so much a man of pleasure, he has
+left off his old friends and his blue stockings, and is at operas
+and other gay assemblies every night.' Montagu's Letters<i>, iv.
+117.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-348">[348]</a> See
+ante<i>, in. 293, note 5.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-349">[349]</a> Miss
+Burney thus describes her:&mdash;'She is between thirty and
+forty, very short, very fat, but handsome; splendidly and
+fantastically dressed, rouged not unbecomingly yet evidently, and
+palpably desirous of gaining notice and admiration. She has an
+easy levity in her air, manner, voice, and discourse, that speak
+(sic) all within to be comfortable.... She is one of those who
+stand foremost in collecting all extraordinary or curious people
+to her London conversaziones, which, like those of Mrs. Vesey,
+mix the rank and the literature, and exclude all beside.... Her
+parties are the most brilliant in town.' Miss Burney then
+describes one of these parties, at which were present Johnson,
+Burke, and Reynolds. 'The company in general were dressed with
+more brilliancy than at any rout I ever was at, as most of them
+were going to the Duchess of Cumberland's.' Miss Burney herself
+was 'surrounded by strangers, all dressed superbly, and all
+looking saucily.... Dr. Johnson was standing near the fire, and
+environed with listeners.' Mme. D'Arblay's Diary<i>, ii. 179,
+186, 190. Leslie wrote of Lady Corke in 1834
+(</i>Autobiographical Recollections<i>, i. 137,
+243):&mdash;'Notwithstanding her great age, she is very animated.
+The old lady, who was a lion-hunter in her youth, is as much one
+now as ever.' She ran after a Boston negro named Prince Saunders,
+who 'as he put his Christian name "Prince" on his cards without
+the addition of Mr., was believed to be a native African prince,
+and soon became a lion of the first magnitude in fashionable
+circles.' She died in 1840.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-350">[350]</a> 'A lady
+once ventured to ask Dr. Johnson how he liked Yorick's [Sterne's]
+Sermons<i>. "I know nothing about them, madam," was his reply.
+But some time afterwards, forgetting himself, he severely
+censured them. The lady retorted:&mdash;"I understood you to say,
+Sir, that you had never read them." "No, Madam, I did read them,
+but it was in a stage-coach; I should not have even deigned to
+look at them had I been at large." Cradock's</i> Memoirs<i>, p.
+208.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-351">[351]</a> See
+ante<i>, iii. 382, note 1.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-352">[352]</a> Next day
+I endeavoured to give what had happened the most ingenious turn I
+could, by the following verses:&mdash;</p>
+<p>To THE HONOURABLE Miss MONCKTON.</p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'Not that with th' excellent Montrose
+ I had the happiness to dine;
+ Not that I late from table rose,
+ From Graham's wit, from generous wine.
+ It was not these alone which led
+ On sacred manners to encroach;
+ And made me feel what most I dread,
+ JOHNSON'S just frown, and self-reproach.
+ But when I enter'd, not abash'd,
+ From your bright eyes were shot such rays,
+ At once intoxication flash'd,
+ And all my frame was in a blaze.
+ But not a brilliant blaze I own,
+ Of the dull smoke I'm yet asham'd;
+ I was a dreary ruin grown,
+ And not enlighten'd though inflam'd.
+ Victim at once to wine and love,
+ I hope, MARIA, you'll forgive;
+ While I invoke the powers above,
+ That henceforth I may wiser live.'
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>The lady was generously forgiving, returned me an obliging
+answer, and I thus obtained an Act of Oblivion<i>, and took care
+never to offend again. BOSWELL.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-353">[353]</a> See
+ante<i>, ii. 436, and iv. 88, note I.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-354">[354]</a> On May
+22 Horace Walpole wrote (Letters<i>, viii. 44):&mdash;'Boswell,
+that quintessence of busybodies, called on me last week, and was
+let in, which he should not have been, could I have foreseen it.
+After tapping many topics, to which I made as dry answers as an
+unbribed oracle, he vented his errand. "Had I seen Dr.
+Johnson's</i> Lives of the Poets<i>?" I said slightly, "No, not
+yet;" and so overlaid his whole impertinence.'</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-355">[355]</a> See
+ante<i>, iii. 1.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-356">[356]</a> See
+ante<i>, ii. 47, note 2; 352, note I; and iii. 376, for
+explanations of like instances of Boswell's neglect.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-357">[357]</a> See
+ante<i>, i. 298, note 4.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-358">[358]</a> 'He
+owned he sometimes talked for victory.' Boswell's Hebrides<i>,
+opening pages.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-359">[359]</a> The late
+Right Hon. William Gerard Hamilton. MALONE.</p>
+<p><a name="note-360">[360]</a> Dr.
+Johnson, being told of a man who was thankful for being
+introduced to him, 'as he had been convinced in a long dispute
+that an opinion which he had embraced as a settled truth was no
+better than a vulgar error, "Nay," said he, "do not let him be
+thankful, for he was right, and I was wrong." Like his Uncle
+Andrew in the ring at Smithfield, Johnson, in a circle of
+disputants, was determined neither to be thrown nor conquered.'
+Murphy's Johnson<i>, p. 139. Johnson, in</i> The Adventurer<i>,
+No. 85, seems to describe his own talk. He writes:&mdash;' While
+the various opportunities of conversation invite us to try every
+mode of argument, and every art of recommending our sentiments,
+we are frequently betrayed to the use of such as are not in
+themselves strictly defensible; a man heated in talk, and eager
+of victory, takes advantage of the mistakes or ignorance of his
+adversary, lays hold of concessions to which he knows he has no
+right, and urges proofs likely to prevail on his opponent, though
+he knows himself that they have no force.' J. S. Mill gives
+somewhat the same account of his own father. 'I am inclined to
+think,' he writes, 'that he did injustice to his own opinions by
+the unconscious exaggerations of an intellect emphatically
+polemical; and that when thinking without an adversary in view,
+he was willing to make room for a great portion of the truths he
+seemed to deny.' Mill's</i> Autobiography<i>, p. 201. See
+also</i> ante<i>, ii. 100, 450, in. 23, 277, 331; and</i>
+post<i>, May 18, 1784, and Steevens's account of Johnson just
+before June 22, 1784.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-361">[361]</a> Thomas
+Shaw, D.D., author of Travels to Barbary and the
+Levant<i>.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-362">[362]</a> See
+ante, iii. 314.</p>
+<p><a name="note-363">[363]</a> The
+friend very likely was Boswell himself. He was one of 'these
+tanti <i>men.' 'I told Paoli that in the very heat of youth I
+felt the</i> nom est tanti<i>, the</i> omnia vanitas <i>of one
+who has exhausted all the sweets of his being, and is weary with
+dull repetition. I told him that I had almost become for ever
+incapable of taking a part in active life.' Boswell's</i>
+Corsica<i>, ed. 1879, p. 193.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-364">[364]</a> Letters
+on the English Nation: By Batista Angeloni, a Jesuit, who resided
+many years in London. Translated from the original Italian by the
+Author of the Marriage Act. A Novel<i>. 2 vols. London [no
+printer's name given], 1755. Shebbeare published besides six</i>
+Letters to the People of England <i>in the years 1755-7, for the
+last of which he was sentenced to the pillory.</i> Ante<i>, iii.
+315, note I. Horace Walpole (</i>Letters<i>, iii. 74) described
+him in 1757 as 'a broken Jacobite physician, who has threatened
+to write himself into a place or the pillory.'</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-365">[365]</a> I
+recollect a ludicrous paragraph in the newspapers, that the King
+had pensioned both a He<i>-bear and a</i> She<i>-bear. BOSWELL.
+See</i> ante<i>, ii. 66, and</i> post<i>, April 28, 1783.</i></p>
+<center><a name=
+"note-366">[366]</a></center>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ Witness, ye chosen train
+ Who breathe the sweets of his Saturnian reign;
+ Witness ye Hills, ye Johnsons, Scots, Shebbeares,
+ Hark to my call, for some of you have ears.'
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>Heroic Epistle<i>. See</i> post<i>, under June 16,
+1784.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-367">[367]</a> In this
+he was unlike the King, who, writes Horace Walpole,' expecting
+only an attack on Chambers, bought it to tease, and began reading
+it to, him; but, finding it more bitter on himself, flung it down
+on the floor in a passion, and would read no more.' Journal of
+the Reign of George III<i>, i. 187.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-368">[368]</a> They
+were published in 1773 in a pamphlet of 16 pages, and, with the
+good fortune that attends a muse in the peerage, reached a third
+edition in the year. To this same earl the second edition of
+Byron's Hours of Idleness <i>was 'dedicated by his obliged ward
+and affectionate kinsman, the author.' In</i> English Bards and
+Scotch Reviewers<i>, he is abused in the passage which
+begins:&mdash;</i></p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'No muse will cheer with renovating smile,
+ The paralytic puling of Carlisle.'
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>In a note Byron adds:&mdash;'The Earl of Carlisle has lately
+published an eighteen-penny pamphlet on the state of the stage,
+and offers his plan for building a new theatre. It is to be hoped
+his lordship will be permitted to bring forward anything for the
+stage&mdash;except his own tragedies.' In the third canto of
+Childe Harold <i>Byron makes amends. In writing of the death of
+Lord Carlisle's youngest son at Waterloo, he says:&mdash;</i></p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'Their praise is hymn'd by loftier harps than mine;
+ Yet one I would select from that proud throng,
+ Partly because they blend me with his line,
+ And partly that I did his Sire some wrong.'
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>For his lordship's tragedy see post<i>, under Nov. 19,
+1783.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-369">[369]</a> Men of
+rank and fortune, however, should be pretty well assured of
+having a real claim to the approbation of the publick, as
+writers, before they venture to stand forth. Dryden, in his
+preface to All for Love<i>, thus expresses
+himself:&mdash;</i></p>
+<p>'Men of pleasant conversation (at least esteemed so) and
+endued with a trifling kind of fancy, perhaps helped out by
+[with] a smattering of Latin, are ambitious to distinguish
+themselves from the herd of gentlemen, by their poetry:</p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ "Rarus enim ferm&egrave; sensus communis in ilia
+ Fortuna,"&mdash;&mdash;[Juvenal<i>, viii. 73.]
+</i>
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>And is not this a wretched affectation, not to be contented
+with what fortune has done for them, and sit down quietly with
+their estates, but they must call their wits in question, and
+needlessly expose their nakedness to publick view? Not
+considering that they are not to expect the same approbation from
+sober men, which they have found from their flatterers after the
+third bottle: If a little glittering in discourse has passed them
+on us for witty men, where was the necessity of undeceiving the
+world? Would a man who has an ill title to an estate, but yet is
+in possession of it, would he bring it of his own accord to be
+tried at Westminster? We who write, if we want the talents
+[talent], yet have the excuse that we do it for a poor
+subsistence; but what can be urged in their defence, who, not
+having the vocation of poverty to scribble, out of mere
+wantonness take pains to make themselves ridiculous? Horace was
+certainly in the right where he said, "That no man is satisfied
+with his own condition." A poet is not pleased, because he is not
+rich; and the rich are discontented because the poets will not
+admit them of their number.' BOSWELL. Boswell, it should seem,
+had followed Swift's advice:&mdash;</p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'Read all the prefaces of Dryden,
+ For these our critics much confide in;
+ Though merely writ at first for filling,
+ To raise the volume's price a shilling.'
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>Swift's Works<i>, ed. 1803, xi. 293.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-370">[370]</a> See
+ante<i>, i. 402.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-371">[371]</a>
+Wordsworth, it should seem, held with Johnson in this. When he
+read the article in the Edinburgh Review <i>on Lord Byron's early
+poems, he remarked that 'though Byron's verses were probably poor
+enough, yet such an attack was abominable,&mdash;that a young
+nobleman, who took to poetry, deserved to be encouraged, not
+ridiculed.' Rogers's</i> Table-Talk<i>, p. 234, note.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-372">[372]</a> Dr.
+Barnard, formerly Dean of Derry. See ante<i>, iii. 84.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-373">[373]</a> This
+gave me very great pleasure, for there had been once a pretty
+smart altercation between Dr. Barnard and him, upon a question,
+whether a man could improve himself after the age of forty-five;
+when Johnson in a hasty humour, expressed himself in a manner not
+quite civil. Dr. Barnard made it the subject of a copy of
+pleasant verses, in which he supposed himself to learn different
+perfections from different men. They concluded with delicate
+irony:&mdash;</p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'Johnson shall teach me how to place
+ In fairest light each borrow'd grace;
+ From him I'll learn to write;
+ Copy his clear familiar style,
+ And by the roughness of his file
+ Grow, like himself, polite<i>.'
+</i>
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>I know not whether Johnson ever saw the poem, but I had
+occasion to find that as Dr. Barnard and he knew each other
+better, their mutual regard increased. BOSWELL. See Appendix
+A.</p>
+<p><a name="note-374">[374]</a> See
+ante<i>, ii. 357, iii. 309, and</i> post<i>, March 23,
+1783.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-375">[375]</a> 'Sir
+Joshua once asked Lord B&mdash;&mdash; to dine with Dr. Johnson
+and the rest, but though a man of rank and also of good
+information, he seemed as much alarmed at the idea as if you had
+tried to force him into one of the cages at Exeter-Change.'
+Hazlitt's Conversations of Northcote<i>, p. 41.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-376">[376]</a> Yet when
+he came across them he met with much respect. At Alnwick he was,
+he writes, 'treated with great civility by the Duke of
+Northumberland.' Piozzi Letters<i>, i. 108. At Inverary, the Duke
+and Duchess of Argyle shewed him great attention. Boswell's</i>
+Hebrides<i>, Oct. 25. In fact, all through his Scotch tour he was
+most politely welcomed by 'the great.' At Chatsworth, he was
+'honestly pressed to stay' by the Duke and Duchess of Devonshire
+(</i>post<i>, Sept. 9, 1784). See</i> ante<i>, iii. 21. On the
+other hand, Mrs. Barbauld says:&mdash;'I believe it is true that
+in England genius and learning obtain less personal notice than
+in most other parts of Europe.' She censures 'the contemptuous
+manner in which Lady Wortley Montagu mentioned
+Richardson:&mdash;"The doors of the Great," she says, "were never
+opened to him."'</i> Richardson Corres. <i>i. clxxiv.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-377">[377]</a> When
+Lord Elibank was seventy years old, he wrote:&mdash;'I shall be
+glad to go five hundred miles to enjoy a day of his company.'
+Boswell's Hebrides<i>, Sept. 12.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-378">[378]</a>
+Romans<i>, x. 2.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-379">[379]</a> I
+Peter<i>, iii. 15.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-380">[380]</a> Horace
+Walpole wrote three years earlier:&mdash;' Whig principles are
+founded on sense; a Whig may be a fool, a Tory must be so.'
+Letters<i>, vii. 88.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-381">[381]</a> Mr.
+Barclay, a descendant of Robert Barclay, of Ury, the celebrated
+apologist of the people called Quakers, and remarkable for
+maintaining the principles of his venerable progenitor, with as
+much of the elegance of modern manners, as is consistent with
+primitive simplicity, BOSWELL.</p>
+<p><a name="note-382">[382]</a> Now
+Bishop of Llandaff, one of the poorest <i>Bishopricks in this
+kingdom. His Lordship has written with much zeal to show the
+propriety of</i> equalizing <i>the revenues of Bishops. He has
+informed us that he has burnt all his chemical papers. The
+friends of our excellent constitution, now assailed on every side
+by innovators and levellers, would have less regretted the
+suppression of some of this Lordship's other writings. BOSWELL.
+Boswell refers to</i> A Letter to the Archbishop of Canterbury by
+Richard, Lord Bishop of Landaff<i>, 1782. If the revenues were
+made more equal, 'the poorer Bishops,' the Bishop writes, 'would
+be freed from the necessity of holding ecclesiastical
+preferments</i> in commendam <i>with their Bishopricks,' p.
+8.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-383">[383]</a> De
+Quincey says that Sir Humphry Davy told him, 'that he could
+scarcely imagine a time, or a condition of the science, in which
+the Bishop's Essays <i>would be superannuated.' De Quincey's</i>
+Works<i>, ii. 106. De Quincey describes the Bishop as being
+'always a discontented man, a railer at the government and the
+age, which could permit such as his to pine away ingloriously in
+one of the humblest among the Bishopricks.'</i> Ib<i>. p. 107. He
+was, he adds, 'a true Whig,' and would have been made Archbishop
+of York had his party staid in power a little longer in
+1807.'</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-384">[384]</a>
+Rasselas<i>, chap. xi.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-385">[385]</a> See
+Boswell's Hebrides<i>, Sept. 30.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-386">[386]</a> 'They
+heard the voice of the Lord God walking in the garden.'
+Genesis<i>, iii. 8.</i></p>
+<center><a name=
+"note-387">[387]</a></center>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ ... 'Vivendi recte qui prorogat horam,
+ Rusticus expectat dum defluat amnis; at ille
+ Labitur et labetur in omne volubilis aevum.'
+ 'And sure the man who has it in his power
+ To practise virtue, and protracts the hour,
+ Waits like the rustic till the river dried;
+ Still glides the river, and will ever glide.'
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>FRANCIS. Horace, Epist<i>. i. 2. 41.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-388">[388]</a> See
+ante<i>, p. 59.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-389">[389]</a> See
+ante<i>, iii. 251.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-390">[390]</a> See
+ante<i>, iii. 136.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-391">[391]</a> This
+assertion is disproved by a comparison of dates. The first four
+satires of Young were published in 1725; The South Sea scheme
+(which appears to be meant,) was in 1720. MALONE. In Croft's Life
+of Young<i>, which Johnson adopted, it is stated:&mdash;'By
+the</i> Universal Passion <i>he acquired no vulgar fortune, more
+than &pound;3000. A considerable sum had already been swallowed
+up in the South Sea.' Johnson's</i> Works<i>, viii. 430. Some of
+Young's poems were published before 1720.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-392">[392]</a> Crabbe
+got Johnson to revise his poem, The Village <i>(</i>post<i>,
+under March 23, 1783). He states, that 'the Doctor did not
+readily comply with requests for his opinion; not from any
+unwillingness to oblige, but from a painful contention in his
+mind between a desire of giving pleasure and a determination to
+speak truth.' Crabbe's</i> Works<i>, ii. 12. See</i> ante<i>, ii.
+51, 195, and iii. 373.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-393">[393]</a> Pope's
+Essay on Man<i>, iv. 390. See</i> ante<i>, iii. 6, note
+2.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-394">[394]</a> He had
+within the last seven weeks gone up drunk, at least twice, to a
+lady's drawing-room. Ante<i>, pp. 88, note 1, and 109.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-395">[395]</a> Mr.
+Croker, though without any authority, prints
+unconscious<i>.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-396">[396]</a> I
+Corinthians, ix. 27. See ante<i>, 295.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-397">[397]</a> 'We walk
+by faith, not by sight.' 2 Corinthians, v. 7</p>
+<p><a name="note-398">[398]</a> Dr.
+Ogden, in his second sermon On the Articles of the Christian
+Faith<i>, with admirable acuteness thus addresses the opposers of
+that Doctrine, which accounts for the confusion, sin and misery,
+which we find in this life: 'It would be severe in GOD, you
+think, to</i> degrade <i>us to such a sad state as this, for the
+offence of our first parents: but you can allow him to</i> place
+<i>us in it without any inducement. Are our calamities lessened
+for not being ascribed to Adam? If your condition be unhappy, is
+it not still unhappy, whatever was the occasion? with the
+aggravation of this reflection, that if it was as good as it was
+at first designed, there seems to be somewhat the less reason to
+look for its amendment.' BOSWELL.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-399">[399]</a> 'Which
+taketh away the sin' &amp;c. St. John, i. 29.</p>
+<p><a name="note-400">[400]</a> See
+Boswell's Hebrides, August 22.</p>
+<p><a name="note-401">[401]</a> This
+unfortunate person, whose full name was Thomas Fysche Palmer,
+afterwards went to Dundee, in Scotland, where he officiated as
+minister to a congregation of the sect who called themselves
+Unitarians<i>, from a notion that they distinctively worship ONE
+GOD, because they</i> deny <i>the mysterious doctrine of the
+TRINITY. They do not advert that the great body of the Christian
+Church, in maintaining that mystery, maintain also the</i> Unity
+<i>of the GODHEAD; the 'TRINITY in UNITY!&mdash;three persons and
+ONE GOD.' The Church humbly adores the DIVINITY as exhibited in
+the holy Scriptures. The Unitarian sect vainly presumes to
+comprehend and define the ALMIGHTY. Mr. Palmer having heated his
+mind with political speculations, became so much dissatisfied
+with our excellent Constitution, as to compose, publish, and
+circulate writings, which were found to be so seditious and
+dangerous, that upon being found guilty by a Jury, the Court of
+Justiciary in Scotland sentenced him to transportation for
+fourteen years. A loud clamour against this sentence was made by
+some Members of both Houses of Parliament; but both Houses
+approved of it by a great majority; and he was conveyed to the
+settlement for convicts in New South Wales. BOSWELL. This note
+first appears in the third edition. Mr. Palmer was sentenced to
+seven (not fourteen) years transportation in Aug. 1793. It was
+his fellow prisoner, Mr. Muir, an advocate, who was sentenced to
+fourteen years.</i> Ann. Reg. <i>1793, p. 40. When these
+sentences were brought before the House of Commons, Mr. Fox said
+that it was 'the Lord-Advocate's fervent wish that his native
+principles of justice should be introduced into this country; and
+that on the ruins of the common law of England should be erected
+the infamous fabric of Scottish persecution. ... If that day
+should ever arrive, if the tyrannical laws of Scotland should
+ever be introduced in opposition to the humane laws of England,
+it would then be high time for my hon. friends and myself to
+settle our affairs, and retire to some happier clime, where we
+might at least enjoy those rights which God has given to man, and
+which his nature tells him he has a right to demand.'</i> Parl.
+Hist. <i>xxx. 1563. For</i> Unitarians<i>, see</i> ante<i>, ii.
+408, note I.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-402">[402]</a> Taken
+from Herodotus. [Bk. ii. ch. 104.] BOSWELL.</p>
+<p><a name="note-403">[403]</a> 'The
+mummies,' says Blakesley, 'have straight hair, and in the
+paintings the Egyptians are represented as red, not black.'
+Ib<i>. note.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-404">[404]</a> See
+ante<i>, i. 441, and</i> post<i>, March 28, and June 3,
+1782.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-405">[405]</a> Mr.
+Dawkins visited Palmyra in 1751. He had 'an escort of the Aga of
+Hassia's best Arab horsemen.' Johnson was perhaps astonished at
+the size of their caravan, 'which was increased to about 200
+persons.' The writer treats the whole matter with great brevity.
+Wood's Ruins of Palmyra<i>, p. 33. On their return the travellers
+discovered a party of Arab horsemen, who gave them an alarm.
+Happily these Arabs were still more afraid of them, and were at
+once plundered by the escort, 'who laughed at our remonstrances
+against their injustice.' Wood's</i> Ruins of Balbec<i>, p.
+2.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-406">[406]</a> He wrote
+a Life of Watts<i>, which Johnson quoted.</i> Works<i>,
+viii.</i></p>
+<center>382.</center>
+<p><a name="note-407">[407]</a> See
+ante<i>, iii. 422, note 6.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-408">[408]</a> In the
+first two editions formal<i>.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-409">[409]</a> Johnson
+maintains this in The Idler<i>, No. 74. 'Few,' he says, 'have
+reason to complain of nature as unkindly sparing of the gifts of
+memory ... The true art of memory is the art of attention.'
+See</i> ante<i>, iii. 191.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-410">[410]</a>The first
+of the definitions given by Johnson of to remember <i>is</i> to
+bear in mind anything; not to forget. To recollect <i>he
+defines</i> to recover to memory<i>. We may, perhaps, assume that
+Boswell said, 'I did not recollect that the chair was broken;'
+and that Johnson replied, 'you mean, you did not remember. That
+you did not remember is your own fault. It was in your mind that
+it was broken, and therefore you ought to have remembered it. It
+was not a case of recollecting; for we recollect, that is,
+recover to memory, what is not in our mind.' In the passage</i>
+ante<i>, i. 112, which begins, 'I indeed doubt if he could have
+remembered,' we find in the first two editions not</i>
+remembered<i>, but</i> recollected<i>. Perhaps this change is due
+to euphony, as</i> collected <i>comes a few lines before. Horace
+Walpole, in one of his</i> Letters <i>(i. 15), distinguishes the
+two words, on his revisiting his old school, Eton:&mdash;'By the
+way, the clock strikes the old cracked sound&mdash;I recollect so
+much, and remember so little.'</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-411">[411]</a> He made
+the same boast at St. Andrews. See Boswell's Hebrides<i>, Aug.
+19. He was, I believe, speaking of his translation of
+Courayer's</i> Life of Paul Sarpi and Notes<i>, of which some
+sheets were printed off.</i> Ante<i>, i. 135.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-412">[412]</a> Horace
+Walpole, after mentioning that George III's mother, who died in
+1772, left but &pound;27,000 when she was reckoned worth at least
+&pound;300,000, adds:&mdash;'It is no wonder that it became the
+universal belief that she had wasted all on Lord Bute. This
+became still more probable as he had made the purchase of the
+estate at Luton, at the price of &pound;114,000, before he was
+visibly worth &pound;20,000; had built a palace there, another in
+town, and had furnished the former in the most expensive manner,
+bought pictures and books, and made a vast park and lake.'
+Journal of the Reign of George III<i>, i. 19.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-413">[413]</a> To him
+Boswell dedicated his Thesis <i>as</i> excelsae familiae de Bute
+spei alterae <i>(</i>ante<i>, ii. 20). In 1775, he wrote of
+him:&mdash;'He is warmly my friend and has engaged to do for
+me.'</i> Letters of Boswell<i>, p. 186</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-414">[414]</a> He was
+mistaken in this. See ante<i>, i. 260; also iii. 420.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-415">[415]</a> In
+England in like manner, and perhaps for the same reason, all
+Attorneys have been converted into Solicitors.</p>
+<p><a name="note-416">[416]</a> 'There
+is at Edinburgh a society or corporation of errand boys, called
+Cawdies, who ply in the streets at night with paper lanthorns,
+and are very serviceable in carrying messages.' Humphrey
+Clinker<i>. Letter of Aug. 8.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-417">[417]</a> Their
+services in this sense are noticed in the same letter.</p>
+<center><a name=
+"note-418">[418]</a></center>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'The formal process shall be turned to sport,
+ And you dismissed with honour by the Court.'
+ FRANCIS. Horace, Satires<i>, ii.i.86.
+</i>
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p><a name="note-419">[419]</a> Mr.
+Robertson altered this word to jocandi<i>, he having found in
+Blackstone that to irritate is actionable. BOSWELL.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-420">[420]</a> Quoted
+by Johnson, ante<i>, ii. l97.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-421">[421]</a> His
+god-daughter. See post <i>May 10, 1784.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-422">[422]</a> See
+post<i>, under Dec. 20, 1782</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-423">[423]</a> See
+ante<i>, i. 155</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-424">[424]</a> The will
+of King Alfred, alluded to in this letter, from the original
+Saxon, in the library of Mr. Astle, has been printed at the
+expense of the University of Oxford. BOSWELL.</p>
+<p><a name="note-425">[425]</a> He was a
+surgeon in this small Norfolk town. Dr. Burney's Memoirs<i>, i.
+106.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-426">[426]</a> Burney
+visited Johnson first in 1758, when he was living in Gough
+Square. Ante<i>, i. 328.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-427">[427]</a> Mme.
+D'Arblay says that Dr. Johnson sent them to Dr. Burney's house,
+directed 'For the Broom Gentleman.' Dr. Burney's Memoirs<i>, ii.
+180.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-428">[428]</a> 'Sept.
+14, 1781. Dr. Johnson has been very unwell indeed. Once I was
+quite frightened about him; but he continues his strange
+discipline&mdash;starving, mercury, opium; and though for a time
+half demolished by its severity, he always in the end rises
+superior both to the disease and the remedy, which commonly is
+the most alarming of the two.' Mme. D'Arblay's Diary<i>, ii. 107.
+On Sept. 18, his birthday, he wrote:&mdash;'As I came home [from
+church], I thought I had never begun any period of life so
+placidly. I have always been accustomed to let this day pass
+unnoticed, but it came this time into my mind that some little
+festivity was not improper. I had a dinner, and invited Allen and
+Levett.'</i> Pr. and Med. <i>p. 199.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-429">[429]</a> This
+remark, I have no doubt, is aimed at Hawkins, who (Life<i>, p.
+553) pretends to account for this trip.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-430">[430]</a> Pr. and
+Med. <i>p. 201. BOSWELL.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-431">[431]</a> He wrote
+from Lichfield on the previous Oct. 27:&mdash;'All here is
+gloomy; a faint struggle with the tediousness of time; a doleful
+confession of present misery, and the approach seen and felt of
+what is most dreaded and most shunned. But such is the lot of
+man.' Piozzi Letters<i>, ii. 209.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-432">[432]</a> The
+truth of this has been proved by sad experience. BOSWELL. Mrs.
+Boswell died June 4, 1789. MALONE.</p>
+<p><a name="note-433">[433]</a> See
+account of him in the Gent. Mag<i>. Feb. 1785. BOSWELL, see ante,
+i. 243, note 3.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-434">[434]</a> Mrs.
+Piozzi (Synonymy<i>, ii. 79), quoting this verse, under</i>
+Officious<i>, says;&mdash;'Johnson, always thinking neglect the
+worst misfortune that could befall a man, looked on a character
+of this description with less aversion than I do.'</i></p>
+<center><a name=
+"note-435">[435]</a></center>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'Content thyself to be obscurely good<i>.'
+</i>
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>Addisons Cato<i>, act. iv. sc. 4.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-436">[436]</a> In both
+editions of Sir John Hawkins's Life of Dr. Johnson<i>,
+'letter'd</i> ignorance<i>' is printed. BOSWELL. Mr. Croker
+(</i>Boswell<i>, p. I) says that 'Mr. Boswell is habitually
+unjust to Sir J. Hawkins.' As some kind of balance, I suppose, to
+this injustice, he suppresses this note.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-437">[437]</a> Johnson
+repeated this line to me thus:&mdash;</p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'And Labour steals an hour to die.'
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>But he afterwards altered it to the present reading. BOSWELL.
+This poem is printed in the Ann. Reg<i>. for 1783, p. 189, with
+the following variations:&mdash;l. 18, for 'ready help' 'useful
+care': l. 28, 'His single talent,' 'The single talent'; l. 33,
+'no throbs of fiery pain,' 'no throbbing fiery pain'; l. 36, 'and
+freed,' 'and forced.' On the next page it is printed</i> John
+Gilpin<i>.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-438">[438]</a> Mr.
+Croker says that this line shows that 'some of Gray's happy
+expressions lingered in Johnson's memory' He quotes a line that
+comes at the end of the Ode on Vicissitude<i>&mdash;'From busy
+day, the peaceful night.' This line is not Gray's, but
+Mason's.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-439">[439]</a> Johnson
+wrote to Mrs. Thrale on Aug. 14, 1780:&mdash;'If you want events,
+Here is Mr. Levett just come in at fourscore from a walk to
+Hampstead, eight miles, in August.' Piozzi Letters<i>, ii.
+177.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-440">[440]</a> In the
+original, March <i>20. On the afternoon of March 20 Lord North
+announced in the House of Commons 'that his Majesty's Ministers
+were no more.'</i> Parl. Hist<i>. xxii. 1215.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-441">[441]</a> Pr. and
+Med<i>. p. 209 [207]. BOSWELL.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-442">[442]</a> See
+ante<i>, ii. 355, iii. 46, iv. 81, 100. Mr. Seward records in
+his</i> Biographiana<i>, p. 600&mdash;without however giving the
+year&mdash;that 'Johnson being asked what the Opposition meant by
+their flaming speeches and violent pamphlets against Lord North's
+administration, answered: "They mean, Sir, rebellion; they mean
+in spite to destroy that country which they are not permitted to
+govern."'</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-443">[443]</a> In the
+previous December the City of London in an address, writes Horace
+Walpole, 'besought the King to remove both his public and private
+<i>counsellors, and used these stunning and memorable
+words:&mdash;</i>"Your armies are captured; the wonted
+superiority of your navies is annihilated, your dominions are
+lost." <i>Words that could be used to no other King; no King had
+ever lost so much without losing all. If James II. lost his
+crown, yet the crown lost no dominions.'</i> Journal of the Reign
+of George III<i>, ii. 483. The address is given in the</i> Ann.
+Reg. <i>xxiv. 320. On Aug. 4 of this year Johnson wrote to Dr.
+Taylor:&mdash;'Perhaps no nation not absolutely conquered has
+declined so much in so short a time. We seem to be sinking.
+Suppose the Irish, having already gotten a free trade and an
+independent Parliament, should say we will have a King and ally
+ourselves with the House of Bourbon, what could be done to hinder
+or overthrow them?' Mr. Morrison's</i> Autographs<i>, vol.
+ii.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-444">[444]</a> In
+February and March, 1771, the House of Commons ordered eight
+printers to attend at the bar on a charge of breach of privilege,
+in publishing reports of debates. One of the eight, Miller of the
+Evening Post<i>, when the messenger of the House tried to arrest
+him, gave the man himself into custody on a charge of assault.
+The messenger was brought before Lord Mayor Crosby and Aldermen
+Wilkes and Oliver, and a warrant was made out for his commitment.
+Bail was thereupon offered and accepted for his appearance at the
+next sessions. The Lord Mayor and Oliver were sent to the Tower
+by the House. Wilkes was ordered to appear on April 8; but the
+Ministry, not daring to face his appearance, adjourned the House
+till the 9th. A committee was appointed by ballot to inquire into
+the late obstructions to the execution of the orders of the
+House. It recommended the consideration of the expediency of the
+House ordering that Miller should be taken into custody. The
+report, when read, was received with a roar of laughter. Nothing
+was done. Such was, to quote the words of Burke in the</i> Annual
+Register <i>(xiv. 70), 'the miserable result of all the pretended
+vigour of the Ministry.' See</i> Parl. Hist. <i>xvii. 58,
+186.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-445">[445]</a> Lord
+Cornwallis's army surrendered at York Town, five days before Sir
+Henry Clinton's fleet and army arrived off the Chesapeak. Ann.
+Reg. <i>xxiv. 136.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-446">[446]</a> Johnson
+wrote on March 30:&mdash;'The men have got in whom I have
+endeavoured to keep out; but I hope they will do better than
+their predecessors; it will not be easy to do worse.' Croker's
+Boswell<i>, p. 706.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-447">[447]</a> This
+note was in answer to one which accompanied one of the earliest
+pamphlets on the subject of Chatterton's forgery, entitled
+Cursory Observations on the Poems attributed to Thomas Rowley<i>,
+&amp;c. Mr. Thomas Warton's very able</i> Inquiry <i>appeared
+about three months afterwards; and Mr. Tyrwhitt's admirable</i>
+Vindication of his Appendix <i>in the summer of the same hear,
+left the believers in this daring imposture nothing but 'the
+resolution to say again what had been said before.'
+MALONE.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-448">[448]</a> Pr. and
+Med. <i>p. 207. BOSWELL.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-449">[449]</a> He
+addressed to him an Ode in Latin, entitled Ad Thomam Laurence,
+medicum doctissimum, quum filium peregre agentem desiderio nimis
+tristi prosequeretur. Works<i>, i. 165.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-450">[450]</a> Mr.
+Holder, in the Strand, Dr. Johnson's apothecary. BOSWELL.</p>
+<p><a name="note-451">[451]</a> 'Johnson
+should rather have written "imperatum est." But the meaning of
+the words is perfectly clear. "If you say yes, the messenger has
+orders to bring Holder to me." Mr. Croker translates the words as
+follows:-"If you consent, pray tell the messenger to bring Holder
+to me." If Mr. Croker is resolved to write on points of classical
+learning, we would advise him to begin by giving an hour every
+morning to our old friend Corderius.' Macaulay's Essays<i>, ed.
+1843, i 366. In</i> The Answers to Mr. Macaulay's Criticism<i>,
+prefixed to Croker's</i> Boswell<i>, p. 13, it is suggested that
+Johnson wrote either</i> imperetur <i>or</i> imperator<i>. The
+letter may be translated: 'A fresh chill, a fresh cough, and a
+fresh difficulty in breathing call for a fresh letting of blood.
+Without your advice, however, I would not submit to the
+operation. I cannot well come to you, nor need you come to me.
+Say yes or no in one word, and leave the rest to Holder and to
+me. If you say yes, let the messenger be bidden (imperetur) to
+bring Holder to me. May 1, 1782. When</i> you <i>have left,
+whither shall I turn?'</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-452">[452]</a> Soon
+after the above letter, Dr. Lawrence left London, but not before
+the palsy had made so great a progress as to render him unable to
+write for himself. The folio wing are extracts from letters
+addressed by Dr. Johnson to one of his daughters:&mdash;</p>
+<p>'You will easily believe with what gladness I read that you
+had heard once again that voice to which we have all so often
+delighted to attend. May you often hear it. If we had his mind,
+and his tongue, we could spare the rest.</p>
+<p>'I am not vigorous, but much better than when dear Dr.
+Lawrence held my pulse the last time. Be so kind as to let me
+know, from one little interval to another, the state of his body.
+I am pleased that he remembers me, and hope that it never can be
+possible for me to forget him. July 22, 1782.'</p>
+<p>'I am much delighted even with the small advances which dear
+Dr. Lawrence makes towards recovery. If we could have again but
+his mind, and his tongue in his mind, and his right hand, we
+should not much lament the rest. I should not despair of helping
+the swelled hand by electricity, if it were frequently and
+diligently supplied.</p>
+<p>'Let me know from time to time whatever happens; and I hope I
+need not tell you, how much I am interested in every change. Aug.
+26, 1782.'</p>
+<p>'Though the account with which you favoured me in your last
+letter could not give me the pleasure that I wished, yet I was
+glad to receive it; for my affection to my dear friend makes me
+desirous of knowing his state, whatever it be. I beg, therefore,
+that you continue to let me know, from time to time, all that you
+observe.</p>
+<p>'Many fits of severe illness have, for about three months
+past, forced my kind physician often upon my mind. I am now
+better; and hope gratitude, as well as distress, can be a motive
+to remembrance. Bolt-court, Fleet-street, Feb. 4, 1783.'
+BOSWELL.</p>
+<p><a name="note-453">[453]</a> Mr.
+Langton being at this time on duty at Rochester, he is addressed
+by his military title. BOSWELL.</p>
+<p><a name="note-454">[454]</a> Eight
+days later he recorded:&mdash;'I have in ten days written to
+Aston, Lucy, Hector, Langton, Boswell; perhaps to all by whom my
+letters are desired.' Pr. and Med. <i>209. He had written also to
+Mrs. Thrale, but her affection, it should seem from this, he was
+beginning to doubt.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-455">[455]</a> See
+ante<i>, p. 84.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-456">[456]</a> See
+ante<i>, i. 247.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-457">[457]</a> See
+post<i>, p. 158, note 4.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-458">[458]</a> Johnson
+has here expressed a sentiment similar to that contained in one
+of Shenstone's stanzas, to which, in his life of that poet, he
+has given high praise:&mdash;</p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'I prized every hour that went by,
+ Beyond all that had pleased me before;
+ But now they are gone [past] and I sigh,
+ I grieve that I prized them no more.'
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<center>J. BOSWELL, JUN.</center>
+<p><a name="note-459">[459]</a> She was
+his god-daughter. See post<i>, May 10, 1784.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-460">[460]</a> 'Dr.
+Johnson gave a very droll account of the children of Mr. Langton,
+"who," he said, "might be very good children, if they were let
+alone; but the father is never easy when he is not making them do
+something which they cannot do; they must repeat a fable, or a
+speech, or the Hebrew alphabet, and they might as well count
+twenty for what they know of the matter; however, the father says
+half, for he prompts every other word."' Mme. D'Arblay's
+Diary<i>, i. 73. See</i> ante<i>, p. 20, note 2.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-461">[461]</a> A part
+of this letter having been torn off, I have, from the evident
+meaning, supplied a few words and half-words at the ends and
+beginnings of lines. BOSWELL.</p>
+<p><a name="note-462">[462]</a> See vol.
+ii. p. 459. BOSWELL. She was Hector's widowed sister, and
+Johnson's first love. In the previous October, writing of a visit
+to Birmingham, he said:&mdash;'Mrs. Careless took me under her
+care, and told me when I had tea enough.' Piozzi Letters<i>, ii.
+205.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-463">[463]</a> This
+letter cannot belong to this year. In it Johnson says of his
+health, 'at least it is not worse.' But 1782 found him in very
+bad health; he passed almost the whole of the year 'in a
+succession of disorders' (post<i>, p. 156). What he says of
+friendship renders it almost certain that the letter was written
+while he had still Thrale; and him he lost in April, 1781. Had it
+been written after June, 1779, but before Thrale's death, the
+account given of health would have been even better than it is
+(</i>ante<i>, iii. 397). It belongs perhaps to the year 1777 or
+1778.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-464">[464]</a> 'To a
+man who has survived all the companions of his youth ... this
+full-peopled world is a dismal solitude.' Rambler<i>, No.
+69.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-465">[465]</a> See
+ante<i>, i. 63.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-466">[466]</a> They met
+on these days in the years 1772, 3, 5, 6, 8, 9, 81, and</p>
+<center>3.</center>
+<p><a name="note-467">[467]</a> The
+ministry had resigned on the 20th. Ante<i>, p. 139, note
+1.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-468">[468]</a>
+Thirty-two years earlier he wrote in The Rambler<i>, No. 53:-'In
+the prospect of poverty there is nothing but gloom and
+melancholy; the mind and body suffer together; its miseries bring
+no alleviation; it is a state in which every virtue is obscured,
+and in which no conduct can avoid reproach.' And again in No.
+57:&mdash;'The prospect of penury in age is so gloomy and
+terrifying, that every man who looks before him must resolve to
+avoid it; and it must be avoided generally by the science of
+sparing.' See</i> ante<i>. 441.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-469">[469]</a> See
+ante<i>, p. 128.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-470">[470]</a> Hannah
+More wrote in April of this year (Memoirs<i>, i.
+249):&mdash;'Poor Johnson is in a bad state of health. I fear his
+constitution is broken up.' (Yet in one week he dined out four
+times.</i> Piozzi Letters<i>, ii. 237.) At one of these dinners,
+'I urged him,' she continues (</i>ib<i>. p. 251) 'to take a</i>
+little <i>wine. He replied, "I can't drink a</i> little<i>,
+child; therefore, I never touch it. Abstinence is as easy to me
+as temperance would be difficult." He was very good-humoured and
+gay. One of the company happened to say a word about poetry,
+"Hush, hush," said he, "it is dangerous to say a word of poetry
+before her; it is talking of the art of war before
+Hannibal."'</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-471">[471]</a> This
+book was published in 1781, and, according to Lowndes, reached
+its seventh edition by 1787. See ante<i>, i. 214.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-472">[472]</a> The
+clergyman's letter was dated May 4. Gent. Mag. <i>1786, p. 93.
+Johnson is explaining the reason of his delay in acknowledging
+it.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-473">[473]</a> What
+follows appeared in the Morning Chronicle <i>of May 29,
+1782:&mdash;'A correspondent having mentioned, in the</i> Morning
+Chronicle <i>of December 12, the last clause of the following
+paragraph, as seeming to favour suicide; we are requested to
+print the whole passage, that its true meaning may appear, which
+is not to recommend suicide but exercise.</i></p>
+<p>'Exercise cannot secure us from that dissolution to which we
+are decreed: but while the soul and body continue united, it can
+make the association pleasing, and give probable hopes that they
+shall be disjoined by an easy separation. It was a principle
+among the ancients, that acute diseases are from Heaven, and
+chronical from ourselves; the dart of death, indeed, falls from
+Heaven, but we poison it by our own misconduct: to die is the
+fate of man; but to die with lingering anguish is generally his
+folly.' [The Rambler<i>, No. 85.] BOSWELL.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-474">[474]</a> The
+Correspondence may be seen at length in the Gent. Mag. <i>Feb.
+1786. BOSWELL. Johnson, advising Dr. Taylor 'to take as much
+exercise as he can bear,' says:-'I take the true definition of
+exercise to be labour without weariness.'</i> Notes and
+Queries<i>, 6th S. v. 461.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-475">[475]</a> Here he
+met Hannah More. 'You cannot imagine,' she writes (Memoirs<i>, i.
+261), 'with what delight he showed me every part of his own
+college. Dr. Adams had contrived a very pretty piece of
+gallantry. We spent the day and evening at his house. After
+dinner, Johnson begged to conduct me to see the College; he would
+let no one show it me but himself. "This was my room; this
+Shenstone's." Then, after pointing out all the rooms of the poets
+who had been of his college, "In short," said he, "we were a nest
+of singing-birds." When we came into the common-room, we spied a
+fine large print of Johnson, hung up that very morning, with this
+motto:&mdash;</i>And is not Johnson ours, himself a host?
+<i>Under which stared you in the face&mdash;</i>From Miss More's
+"Sensibility<i>." This little incident amused us; but, alas!
+Johnson looks very ill indeed&mdash;spiritless and wan. However,
+he made an effort to be cheerful.' Miss Adams wrote on June 14,
+1782:&mdash;'On Wednesday we had here a delightful blue-stocking
+party. Dr. and Mrs. Kennicott and Miss More, Dr. Johnson, Mr.
+Henderson, &amp;c., dined here. Poor Dr. Johnson is in very bad
+health, but he exerted himself as much as he could, and being
+very fond of Miss More, he talked a good deal, and every word he
+says is worth recording. He took great delight in showing Miss
+More every part of Pembroke College, and his own rooms, &amp;c.,
+and told us many things about himself when here. .. June 19,
+1782. We dined yesterday for the last time in the company with
+Dr. Johnson; he went away to-day. A warm dispute arose; it was
+about cider or wine freezing, and all the spirit retreating to
+the center.'</i> Pemb. Coll. MSS.</p>
+<p><a name="note-476">[476]</a> 'I never
+retired to rest without feeling the justness of the Spanish
+proverb, "Let him who sleeps too much borrow the pillow of a
+debtor."' Johnson's Works<i>, iv. 14.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-477">[477]</a> See
+ante<i>, i. 441.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-478">[478]</a> Which I
+celebrated in the Church of England chapel at Edinburgh, founded
+by Lord Chief Baron Smith, of respectable and pious memory.
+BOSWELL.</p>
+<p><a name="note-479">[479]</a> See
+ante<i>, p. 80.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-480">[480]</a> The
+Reverend Mr. Temple, Vicar of St. Gluvias, Cornwall. BOSWELL. See
+ante<i>, i. 436, and ii. 316.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-481">[481]</a> 'He had
+settled on his eldest son,' says Dr. Rogers (Boswelliana<i>, p.
+129), 'the ancestral estate, with an unencumbered rental of
+&pound;l,600 a year.' That the rental, whatever it was, was not
+unencumbered is shewn by the passage from Johnson's letter,</i>
+post<i>, p. 155, note 4. Boswell wrote to Malone in 1791
+(Croker's</i> Boswell<i>, p. 828):&mdash;'The clear money on
+which I can reckon out of my estate is scarcely &pound;900 a
+year.'</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-482">[482]</a> Cowley's
+Ode to Liberty<i>, Stanza vi.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-483">[483]</a> 'I do
+beseech all the succeeding heirs of entail,' wrote Boswell in his
+will, 'to be kind to the tenants, and not to turn out old
+possessors to get a little more rent.' Rogers's Boswelliana, p.
+186.</p>
+<p><a name="note-484">[484]</a> Macleod,
+the Laird of Rasay. See Boswell's <i>Hebrides</i>, Sept. 8.</p>
+<p><a name="note-485">[485]</a> A farm
+in the Isle of Skye, where Johnson wrote his Latin Ode to Mrs.
+Thrale. <i>Ib.</i> Sept. 6.</p>
+<p><a name="note-486">[486]</a> Johnson
+wrote to Dr. Taylor on Oct. 4:&mdash;'Boswel's (sic) father is
+dead, and Boswel wrote me word that he would come to London for
+my advice. [The] advice which I sent him is to stay at home, and
+[busy] himself with his own affairs. He has a good es[tate],
+considerably burthened by settlements, and he is himself in debt.
+But if his wife lives, I think he will be prudent.' <i>Notes and
+Queries</i>, 6th S. v. 462.</p>
+<p><a name="note-487">[487]</a> Miss
+Burney wrote in the first week in December:&mdash;'Dr. Johnson
+was in most excellent good humour and spirits.' She describes
+later on a brilliant party which he attended at Miss Monckton's
+on the 8th, where the people were 'superbly dressed,' and where
+he was 'environed with listeners.' Mme. D'Arblay's <i>Diary</i>,
+ii. 186, and 190. See <i>ante</i>, p. 108, note 4.</p>
+<p><a name="note-488">[488]</a> See
+<i>ante,</i>, iii. 337, where Johnson got 'heated' when Boswell
+maintained this.</p>
+<p><a name="note-489">[489]</a> See
+<i>ante</i>, in. 395.</p>
+<p><a name="note-490">[490]</a> The
+greatest part of the copy, or manuscript of <i>The Lives of the
+Poets</i> had been given by Johnson to Boswell (<i>ante</i>, iv.
+36).</p>
+<p><a name="note-491">[491]</a> Of her
+twelve children but these three were living. She was forty-one
+years old.</p>
+<p><a name="note-492">[492]</a> 'The
+family,' writes Dr. Burney, 'lived in the library, which used to
+be the parlour. There they breakfasted. Over the bookcases were
+hung Sir Joshua's portraits of Mr. Thrale's
+friends&mdash;Baretti, Burke, Burney, Chambers, Garrick,
+Goldsmith, Johnson, Murphy, Reynolds, Lord Sandys, Lord Westcote,
+and in the same picture Mrs. Thrale and her eldest daughter.' Mr.
+Thrale's portrait was also there. Dr. Burney's <i>Memoirs</i>,
+ii. 80, and Prior's <i>Malone</i>, p. 259.</p>
+<p><a name="note-493">[493]</a> <i>Pr.
+and Med.</i> p. 214. BOSWELL.</p>
+<p><a name="note-494">[494]</a> Boswell
+omits a line that follows this prayer:&mdash;'O Lord, so far as,
+&amp;c.,&mdash;Thrale.' This means, I think, 'so far as it might
+be lawful, I prayed for Thrale.' The following day Johnson
+entered:&mdash;'I was called early. I packed up my bundles, and
+used the foregoing prayer with my morning devotions, somewhat, I
+think, enlarged. Being earlier than the family, I read St. Paul's
+farewell in the <i>Acts</i> [xx. 17-end], and then read
+fortuitously in the gospels, which was my parting use of the
+library.'</p>
+<p><a name="note-495">[495]</a> Johnson,
+no doubt, was leaving Streatham because Mrs. Thrale was leaving
+it. 'Streatham,' wrote Miss Burney, on Aug. 12 of this year, 'my
+other home, and the place where I have long thought my residence
+dependent only on my own pleasure, is already let for three years
+to Lord Shelburne.' Mme. D'Arblay's <i>Diary</i>, ii.151. Johnson
+was not yet leaving the Thrale family, for he joined them at
+Brighton, and he was living with them the following spring in
+Argyll-street. Nevertheless, if, as all Mrs. Thrale's friends
+strongly held, her second marriage was blameworthy, Boswell's
+remark admits of defence. Miss Burney in her diary and letters
+keeps the secret which Mrs. Thrale had confided to her of her
+attachment to Mr. Piozzi; but in the <i>Memoirs of Dr.
+Burney</i>, which, as Mme. D'Arblay, she wrote long afterwards,
+she leaves little doubt that Streatham was given up as a step
+towards the second marriage. In 1782, on a visit there, she found
+that her father 'and all others&mdash;Dr. Johnson not
+excepted&mdash;were cast into the same gulf of general neglect.
+As Mrs. Thrale became more and more dissatisfied with her own
+situation, and impatient for its relief, she slighted Johnson's
+counsel, and avoided his society.' Mme. D'Arblay describes a
+striking scene in which her father, utterly puzzled by 'sad and
+altered Streatham,' left it one day with tears in his eyes.
+Another day, Johnson accompanied her to London. 'His look was
+stern, though dejected, but when his eye, which, however
+shortsighted, was quick to mental perception, saw how ill at ease
+she appeared, all sternness subsided into an undisguised
+expression of the strongest emotion, while, with a shaking hand
+and pointing finger, he directed her looks to the mansion from
+which they were driving; and when they faced it from the
+coach-window, as they turned into Streatham Common, tremulously
+exclaimed, "That house ...is lost to <i>me</i>... for ever."'
+Johnson's letter to Langton of March 20, 1782 (<i>ante</i>, p.
+145), in which he says that he was 'musing in his chamber at Mrs.
+Thrale's,' shews that so early as that date he foresaw that a
+change was coming. Boswell's statement that 'Mrs. Thrale became
+less assiduous to please Johnson,' might have been far more
+strongly worded. See Dr. Burney's <i>Memoirs</i>, ii. 243-253.
+Lord Shelburne, who as Prime Minister was negotiating peace with
+the United States, France, and Spain, hired Mrs. Thrale's house
+'in order to be constantly near London.' Fitzmaurice's
+<i>Shelburne</i>, iii. 242.</p>
+<p><a name="note-496">[496]</a> Mr.
+Croker quotes the following from the <i>Rose
+MSS</i>.:&mdash;'Oct. 6, Die Dominica, 1782. Pransus sum
+Streathamiae agninum crus coctum cum herbis (spinach) comminutis,
+farcimen farinaceum cum uvis passis, lumbos bovillos, et pullum
+gallinae: Turcicae; et post carnes missas, ficus, uvas, non
+admodum maturas, ita voluit anni intemperies, cum malis Persicis,
+iis tamen duris. Non laetus accubui, cibum modic&egrave; sumpsi,
+ne intemperanti&acirc; ad extremum peccaretur. Si recte memini,
+in mentem venerunt epulae in exequiis Hadoni celebratae.
+Streathamiam quando revisam?'</p>
+<p><a name="note-497">[497]</a> 'Mr.
+Metcalfe is much with Dr. Johnson, but seems to have taken an
+unaccountable dislike to Mrs. Thrale, to whom he never speaks....
+He is a shrewd, sensible, keen, and very clever man.' Mme.
+D'Arblay's <i>Diary</i>, ii. 172, 174. He, Burke, and Malone were
+Sir Joshua's executors. Northcote's <i>Reynolds</i>, ii. 293.</p>
+<p><a name="note-498">[498]</a> Boswell
+should have shown, for he must have known it, that Johnson was
+Mrs. Thrale's guest at Brighton. Miss Burney was also of the
+party. Her account of him is a melancholy one:&mdash;'Oct. 28.
+Dr. Johnson accompanied us to a ball, to the universal amazement
+of all who saw him there; but he said he had found it so dull
+being quite alone the preceding evening, that he determined upon
+going with us; "for," said he, "it cannot be worse than being
+alone."' Mme. D'Arblay's <i>Diary</i>, ii. 161. 'Oct. 29. Mr.
+Pepys joined Dr. Johnson, with whom he entered into an argument,
+in which he was so roughly confuted, and so severely ridiculed,
+that he was hurt and piqued beyond all power of disguise, and, in
+the midst of the discourse, suddenly turned from him, and,
+wishing Mrs. Thrale goodnight, very abruptly withdrew. Dr.
+Johnson was certainly right with respect to the argument and to
+reason; but his opposition was so warm, and his wit so satirical
+and exulting, that I was really quite grieved to see how
+unamiable he appeared, and how greatly he made himself dreaded by
+all, and by many abhorred.' <i>Ib</i>. p. 163. 'Oct. 30. In the
+evening we all went to Mrs. Hatsel's. Dr. Johnson was not
+invited.' <i>Ib</i>. p. 165. 'Oct. 31. A note came to invite us
+all, except Dr. Johnson, to Lady Rothes's.' <i>Ib</i>. p. 168.
+'Nov. 2. We went to Lady Shelley's. Dr. Johnson again excepted in
+the invitation. He is almost constantly omitted, either from too
+much respect or too much fear. I am sorry for it, as he hates
+being alone.' <i>Ib</i>. p. 160. 'Nov. 7. Mr. Metcalfe called
+upon Dr. Johnson, and took him out an airing. Mr. Hamilton is
+gone, and Mr. Metcalfe is now the only person out of this house
+that voluntarily communicates with the Doctor. He has been in a
+terrible severe humour of late, and has really frightened all the
+people, till they almost ran from him. To me only I think he is
+now kind, for Mrs. Thrale fares worse than anybody.' <i>Ib</i>.
+p. 177.</p>
+<p><a name="note-499">[499]</a> '"Dr.
+Johnson has asked me," said Mr. Metcalfe, "to go with him to
+Chichester, to see the cathedral, and I told him I would
+certainly go if he pleased; but why I cannot imagine, for how
+shall a blind man see a cathedral?" "I believe," quoth I [i.e.
+Miss Burney] "his blindness is as much the effect of absence as
+of infirmity, for he sees wonderfully at times."' <i>Ib</i>. p.
+174. For Johnson's eyesight, see <i>ante</i>, i. 41.</p>
+<p><a name="note-500">[500]</a> The
+second letter is dated the 28th. Johnson says:&mdash;'I have
+looked <i>often</i>,' &amp;c.; but he does not say 'he has been
+<i>much</i> informed,' but only 'informed.' Both letters are in
+the <i>Gent. Mag.</i> 1784, p. 893.</p>
+<p><a name="note-501">[501]</a> The
+reference is to Rawlinson's MS. collections for a continuation of
+Wood's <i>Athenae</i> (Macray's <i>Annals of the Bodleian</i>, p.
+181).</p>
+<p><a name="note-502">[502]</a> Jortin's
+sermons are described by Johnson as 'very elegant.' <i>Ante</i>,
+in. 248. He and Thirlby are mentioned by him in the <i>Life of
+Pope. Works</i>, viii. 254.</p>
+<p><a name="note-503">[503]</a> Markland
+was born 1693, died 1776. His notes on some of Euripides'
+<i>Plays</i> were published at the expense of Dr. Heberden.
+Markland had previously destroyed a great many other notes;
+writing in 1764 he said:&mdash;'Probably it will be a long time
+(if ever) before this sort of learning will revive in England; in
+which it is easy to foresee that there must be a disturbance in a
+few years, and all public disorders are enemies to this sort of
+literature.' <i>Gent. Mag.</i> 1778, P. 3l0. 'I remember,' writes
+Mrs. Piozzi (<i>Anec</i>. p. 252), 'when lamentation was made of
+the neglect shown to Jeremiah Markland, a great philologist, as
+some one ventured to call him: "He is a scholar undoubtedly,
+Sir," replied Dr. Johnson, "but remember that he would run from
+the world, and that it is not the world's business to run after
+him. I hate a fellow whom pride, or cowardice, or laziness drives
+into a corner, and [who] does nothing when he is there but sit
+and <i>growl</i>; let him come out as I do, and <i>bark</i>"' A
+brief account of him is given in the <i>Ann. Reg.</i> xix.
+45.</p>
+<p><a name="note-504">[504]</a> Nichols
+published in 1784 a brief account of Thirlby, nearly half of it
+being written by Johnson. Thirlby was born in 1692 and died in
+1753. 'His versatility led him to try the round of what are
+called the learned professions.' His life was marred by drink and
+insolence.' His mind seems to have been tumultuous and desultory,
+and he was glad to catch any employment that might produce
+attention without anxiety; such employment, as Dr. Battie has
+observed, is necessary for madmen.' <i>Gent. Mag.</i> 1784, pp.
+260, 893.</p>
+<p><a name="note-505">[505]</a> He was
+attacked, says Northcote (<i>Life of Reynolds</i>, ii. 131), 'by
+a slight paralytic affection, after an almost uninterrupted
+course of good health for many years.' Miss Burney wrote on Dec.
+28 to one of her sisters:&mdash;'How can you wish any wishes
+[matrimonial wishes] about Sir Joshua and me? A man who has had
+two shakes of the palsy!' Mme. D'Arblay's <i>Diary</i>, ii.
+218.</p>
+<p><a name="note-506">[506]</a> Dr.
+Patten in Sept. 1781 (Croker's <i>Boswell</i>, p. 699) informed
+Johnson of Wilson's intended dedication. Johnson, in his reply,
+said:&mdash;'What will the world do but look on and laugh when
+one scholar dedicates to another?'</p>
+<p><a name="note-507">[507]</a> On the
+same day he wrote to Dr. Taylor:-'This, my dear Sir, is the last
+day of a very sickly and melancholy year. Join your prayers with
+mine, that the next may be more happy to us both. I hope the
+happiness which I have not found in this world will by infinite
+mercy be granted in another.' <i>Notes and Queries</i>, 6th S. v.
+462.</p>
+<p><a name="note-508">[508]</a> 'Jan. 4,
+1783. Dr. Johnson came so very late that we had all given him up;
+he was very ill, and only from an extreme of kindness did he come
+at all. When I went up to him to tell how sorry I was to find him
+so unwell, "Ah," he cried, taking my hand and kissing it, "who
+shall ail anything when Cecilia is so near? Yet you do not think
+how poorly I am."</p>
+<p>All dinner time he hardly opened his mouth but to repeat to
+me:&mdash;"Ah! you little know how ill I am." He was excessively
+kind to me in spite of all his pain.' Mme. D'Arblay's
+<i>Diary</i>, ii. 228. <i>Cecilia</i> was the name of her second
+novel (<i>post</i>, May 26, 1783). On Jan. 10 he thus ended a
+letter to Mr. Nichols:&mdash;'Now I will put you in a way of
+shewing me more kindness. I have been confined by ilness (sic) a
+long time, and sickness and solitude make tedious evenings. Come
+sometimes and see, Sir,</p>
+<p>'Your humble servant,</p>
+<center>'SAM. JOHNSON.'</center>
+<p><i>MS</i>. in the British Museum.</p>
+<p><a name="note-509">[509]</a> 'Dr.
+Johnson found here [at Auchinleck] Baxter's Anacreon, which he
+told me he had long inquired for in vain, and began to suspect
+there was no such book.' Boswell's <i>Hebrides</i>, Nov.2. See
+<i>post</i>, under Sept. 29, 1783.</p>
+<p><a name="note-510">[510]</a> 'The
+delight which men have in popularity, fame, honour, submission,
+and subjection of other men's minds, wills, or affections,
+although these things may be desired for other ends, seemeth to
+be a thing in itself, without contemplation of consequence,
+grateful and agreeable to the nature of man.' Bacon's <i>Nat.
+Hist.</i> Exper. No. 1000. See <i>ante</i>, ii. 178.</p>
+<p><a name="note-511">[511]</a> In a
+letter to Dr. Taylor on Jan. 21 of this year, he attacked the
+scheme of equal representation.' Pitt, on May 7, 1782, made his
+first reform motion. Johnson thus ended his letter:&mdash;'If the
+scheme were more reasonable, this is not a time for innovation. I
+am afraid of a civil war. The business of every wise man seems to
+be now to keep his ground.' <i>Notes and Queries</i>, 6th S. v.
+481.</p>
+<p><a name="note-512">[512]</a> See
+<i>ante</i>, i. 429, <i>post</i>, 170, and Boswell's
+<i>Hebrides</i>, Sept.</p>
+<center>30.</center>
+<p><a name="note-513">[513]</a> The year
+after this conversation the General Election of 1784 was held,
+which followed on the overthrow of the Coalition Ministry and the
+formation of the Pitt Ministry in December, 1783. The 'King's
+friends' were in a minority of one in the last great division in
+the old Parliament; in the motion on the Address in the new
+Parliament they had a majority of 168. <i>Parl. Hist.</i> xxiv.
+744, 843. Miss Burney, writing in Nov. 1788, when the King was
+mad, says that one of his physicians 'moved me even to tears by
+telling me that none of their own lives would be safe if the King
+did not recover, so prodigiously high ran the tide of affection
+and loyalty. All the physicians received threatening letters
+daily, to answer for the safety of their monarch with their
+lives! Sir G. Baker had already been stopped in his carriage by
+the mob, to give an account of the King; and when he said it was
+a bad one, they had furiously exclaimed, "The more shame for
+you."' Mme. D'Arblay's <i>Diary</i>, iv. 336. Describing in 1789
+a Royal tour in the West of England, she writes of 'the crowds,
+the rejoicings, the hallooing and singing, and garlanding and
+decorating of all the inhabitants of this old city [Exeter], and
+of all the country through which we passed.' <i>Ib.</i> v.
+48.</p>
+<p><a name="note-514">[514]</a> Miss
+Palmer, Sir Joshua's niece, 'heard Dr. Johnson repeat these
+verses with the tears falling over his cheek.' Taylor's
+<i>Reynolds</i>, ii. 417.</p>
+<p><a name="note-515">[515]</a> Gibbon
+remarked that 'Mr. Fox was certainly very shy of saying anything
+in Johnson's presence.' <i>Ante</i>, iii. 267. See <i>post</i>,
+under June 9, 1784, where Johnson said 'Fox is my friend.'</p>
+<p><a name="note-516">[516]</a> Mr.
+Greville (<i>Journal</i>, ed. 1874, ii. 316) records the
+following on the authority of Lord Holland:&mdash;'Johnson liked
+Fox because he defended his pension, and said it was only to
+blame in not being large enough. "Fox," he said, is a liberal
+man; he would always be <i>aut Caesar aut nullus</i>; whenever I
+have seen him he has been <i>nullus</i>. Lord Holland said Fox
+made it a rule never to talk in Johnson's presence, because he
+knew all his conversations were recorded for publication, and he
+did not choose to figure in them.' Fox could not have known what
+was not the fact. When Boswell was by, he had reason for his
+silence; but otherwise he might have spoken out. 'Mr. Fox,'
+writes Mackintosh (<i>Life</i>, i. 322) 'united, in a most
+remarkable degree, the seemingly repugnant characters of the
+mildest of men and the most vehement of orators. In private life
+he was so averse from parade and dogmatism as to be somewhat
+inactive in conversation.' Gibbon (<i>Misc. Works</i>, i. 283)
+tells how Fox spent a day with him at Lausanne:&mdash;'Perhaps it
+never can happen again, that I should enjoy him as I did that
+day, alone from ten in the morning till ten at night. Our
+conversation never flagged a moment.' 'In London mixed society,'
+said Rogers (<i>Table-Talk</i>, p. 74), 'Fox conversed little;
+but at his own house in the country, with his intimate friends,
+he would talk on for ever, with all the openness and simplicity
+of a child.'</p>
+<p><a name="note-517">[517]</a> Sec
+<i>ante</i>, ii. 450.</p>
+<p><a name="note-518">[518]</a> Most
+likely 'Old Mr. Sheridan.'</p>
+<p><a name="note-519">[519]</a> See
+<i>ante</i>, ii. 166.</p>
+<p><a name="note-520">[520]</a> Were I
+to insert all the stories which have been told of contests boldly
+maintained with him, imaginary victories obtained over him, of
+reducing him to silence, and of making him own that his
+antagonist had the better of him in argument, my volumes would
+swell to an immoderate size. One instance, I find, has circulated
+both in conversation and in print; that when he would not allow
+the Scotch writers to have merit, the late Dr. Rose, of Chiswick,
+asserted, that he could name one Scotch writer, whom Dr. Johnson
+himself would allow to have written better than any man of the
+age; and upon Johnson's asking who it was, answered, 'Lord Bute,
+when he signed the warrant for your pension.' Upon which Johnson,
+struck with the repartee, acknowledged that this <i>was</i> true.
+When I mentioned it to Johnson, 'Sir, (said he,) if Rose said
+this, I never heard it.' BOSWELL.</p>
+<p><a name="note-521">[521]</a> This
+reflection was very natural in a man of a good heart, who was not
+conscious of any ill-will to mankind, though the sharp sayings
+which were sometimes produced by his discrimination and vivacity,
+which he perhaps did not recollect, were, I am afraid, too often
+remembered with resentment. BOSWELL. When, three months later on,
+he was struck with palsy, he wrote to Mrs. Thrale:&mdash;'I have
+in this still scene of life great comfort in reflecting that I
+have given very few reason to hate me. I hope scarcely any man
+has known me closely but for his benefit, or cursorily but to his
+innocent entertainment. Tell me, you that know me best, whether
+this be true, that according to your answer I may continue my
+practice, or try to mend it.' <i>Piozzi Letters</i>, ii. 287. See
+<i>post</i>, May 19, 1784. Passages such as the two following
+might have shewn him why he had enemies. 'For roughness, it is a
+needless cause of discontent; severity breedeth fear, but
+roughness breedeth hate.' Bacon's <i>Essays</i>, No. xi. ''Tis
+possible that men may be as oppressive by their parts as their
+power.' <i>The Government of the Tongue</i>, sect. vii. See
+<i>ante</i>, i. 388, note 2.</p>
+<p><a name="note-522">[522]</a> 'A grain
+which in England is generally given to horses, but in Scotland
+supports the people.' <i>Ante</i>, i. 294. Stockdale records
+(<i>Memoirs</i>, ii. 191) that he heard a Scotch lady, after
+quoting this definition, say to Johnson, 'I can assure you that
+in Scotland we give oats to our horses as well as you do to yours
+in England.' He replied:&mdash;'I am very glad, Madam, to find
+that you treat your horses as well as you treat yourselves.'</p>
+<p><a name="note-523">[523]</a> Sir
+Joshua Reynolds wrote:&mdash;'The prejudices he had to countries
+did not extend to individuals. The chief prejudice in which he
+indulged himself was against Scotland, though he had the most
+cordial friendship with individuals. This he used to vindicate as
+a duty. ... Against the Irish he entertained no prejudice; he
+thought they united themselves very well with us; but the Scotch,
+when in England, united and made a party by employing only Scotch
+servants and Scotch tradesmen. He held it right for Englishmen to
+oppose a party against them.' Taylor's <i>Reynolds</i>, ii. 460.
+See <i>ante</i>, ii. 242, 306, and Boswell's <i>Hebrides,
+post</i>, v. 20.</p>
+<p><a name="note-524">[524]</a>
+<i>Ante</i>, ii. 300.</p>
+<p><a name="note-525">[525]</a> Mrs.
+Piozzi (<i>Anec</i>. p. 85) says that 'Dr. Johnson, commonly
+spending the middle of the week at our house, kept his numerous
+family in Fleet-street upon a settled allowance; but returned to
+them every Saturday to give them three good dinners and his
+company, before he came back to us on the Monday night.'</p>
+<p><a name="note-526">[526]</a> Lord
+North's Ministry lasted from 1770, to March, 1782. It was
+followed by the Rockingham Ministry, and the Shelburne Ministry,
+which in its turn was at this very time giving way to the
+Coalition Ministry, to be followed very soon by the Pitt
+Ministry.</p>
+<p><a name="note-527">[527]</a> I have,
+in my <i>Journal of a Tour to the Hebrides</i> [p. 200, Sept.
+13], fully expressed my sentiments upon this subject. The
+Revolution was <i>necessary</i>, but not a subject for
+<i>glory</i>; because it for a long time blasted the generous
+feelings of <i>Loyalty</i>. And now, when by the benignant effect
+of time the present Royal Family are established in our
+<i>affections</i>, how unwise it is to revive by celebrations the
+memory of a shock, which it would surely have been better that
+our constitution had not required. BOSWELL. See <i>ante</i>, iii.
+3, and iv. 40, note 4.</p>
+<p><a name="note-528">[528]</a> Johnson
+reviewed this book in 1756. <i>Ante</i>, i. 309.</p>
+<p><a name="note-529">[529]</a> Johnson,
+four months later, wrote to one of Mrs. Thrale's
+daughters:&mdash;'Never think, my sweet, that you have
+arithmetick enough; when you have exhausted your master, buy
+books. ... A thousand stories which the ignorant tell and believe
+die away at once when the computist takes them in his gripe.'
+<i>Piozzi Letters</i>, ii. 296. See <i>post</i>, April 18,
+1783.</p>
+<p><a name="note-530">[530]</a> See
+<i>ante</i>, p. 116; also iii. 310, where he bore the same topic
+impatiently when with Dr. Scott.</p>
+<p><a name="note-531">[531]</a> See
+<i>ante</i>, ii. 357.</p>
+<center><a name=
+"note-532">[532]</a></center>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'See nations, slowly wise and meanly just,
+ To buried merit raise the tardy bust.'
+ Johnson's <i>Vanity of Human Wishes</i>.
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p><a name="note-533">[533]</a> He was
+perhaps, thinking of Markland. <i>Ante</i>, p. 161, note 3.</p>
+<p><a name="note-534">[534]</a> 'Dr.
+Johnson,' writes Mrs. Piozzi, 'was no complainer of ill-usage. I
+never heard him even lament the disregard shown to <i>Irene</i>.'
+<i>Piozzi Letters</i>, ii. 386. See <i>ante</i>, i. 200.</p>
+<p><a name="note-535">[535]</a> Letter
+to the People of Scotland against the attempt to diminish the
+number of the Lords of Session, 1785. BOSWELL. 'By Mr. Burke's
+removal from office the King's administration was deprived of the
+assistance of that affluent mind, which is so universally rich
+that, as long as British literature and British politicks shall
+endure, it will be said of Edmund Burke, <i>Regum equabat [sic]
+opes animis.'</i> p.71.</p>
+<p><a name="note-536">[536]</a>
+<i>Georgics</i>, iv. 132.</p>
+<p><a name="note-537">[537]</a> See
+<i>ante</i>, iii. 56, note 2.</p>
+<p><a name="note-538">[538]</a> Very
+likely Boswell.</p>
+<p><a name="note-539">[539]</a> See
+Boswell's <i>Hebrides</i>, Sept. 22.</p>
+<p><a name="note-540">[540]</a> Johnson
+had said:&mdash;'Lord Chesterfield is the proudest man this day
+existing.' <i>Ante</i>, i. 265.</p>
+<p><a name="note-541">[541]</a> Lord
+Shelburne. At this time he was merely holding office till a new
+Ministry was formed. On April 5 he was succeeded by the Duke of
+Portland. His 'coarse manners' were due to a neglected childhood.
+In the fragment of his <i>Autobiography</i> he describes 'the
+domestic brutality and ill-usage he experienced at home,' in the
+South of Ireland. 'It cost me,' he continues, 'more to unlearn
+the habits, manners, and principles which I then imbibed, than
+would have served to qualify me for any <i>r&ocirc;le</i>
+whatever through life.' Fitzmaurice's <i>Shelburne</i>, i. 12,
+16.</p>
+<p><a name="note-542">[542]</a> Bentham,
+it is reported, said of of him that 'alone of his own time, he
+was a "Minister who did not fear the people."' <i>Ib.</i> iii.
+572.</p>
+<p><a name="note-543">[543]</a>
+Malagrida, a Jesuit, was put to death at Lisbon in 1761,
+nominally on a charge of heresy, but in reality on a suspicion of
+his having sanctioned, as confessor to one of the conspirators,
+an attempt to assassinate King Joseph of Portugal. Voltaire,
+<i>Si&egrave;cle de Louis XV</i>, ch. xxxviii. 'His name,' writes
+Wraxall (<i>Memoirs</i>, ed. 1815, i. 67), 'is become proverbial
+among us to express duplicity.' It was first applied to Lord
+Shelburne in a squib attributed to Wilkes, which contained a
+vision of a masquerade. The writer, after describing him as
+masquerading as 'the heir apparent of Loyola and all the
+College,' continues:&mdash;'A little more of the devil, my Lord,
+if you please, about the eyebrows; that's enough, a perfect
+Malagrida, I protest.' Fitzmaurice's <i>Shelburne</i>, ii. 164.
+'George III. habitually spoke of Shelburne as "Malagrida," and
+the "Jesuit of Berkeley Square."' <i>Ib.</i> iii. 8. The charge
+of duplicity was first made against Shelburne on the retirement
+of Fox (the first Lord Holland) in 1763. 'It was the tradition of
+Holland House that Bute justified the conduct of Shelburne, by
+telling Fox that it was "a pious fraud." "I can see the fraud
+plainly enough," is said to have been Fox's retort, "but where is
+the piety?"' <i>Ib</i>. i. 226. Any one who has examined
+Reynolds's picture of Shelburne, especially 'about the eyebrows,'
+at once sees how the name of Jesuit was given.</p>
+<p><a name="note-544">[544]</a>
+Beauclerk wrote to Lord Charlemont on Nov. 20, 1773:-'Goldsmith
+the other day put a paragraph into the newspapers in praise of
+Lord Mayor Townshend. [Shelburne supported Townshend in
+opposition to Wilkes in the election of the Lord Mayor.
+Fitzmaurice's <i>Shelburne</i>, ii. 287.] The same night we
+happened to sit next to Lord Shelburne at Drury Lane. I mentioned
+the circumstance of the paragraph to him; he said to Goldsmith
+that he hoped that he had mentioned nothing about Malagrida in
+it. "Do you know," answered Goldsmith, "that I never could
+conceive the reason why they call you Malagrida, <i>for</i>
+Malagrida was a very good sort of man." You see plainly what he
+meant to say, but that happy turn of expression is peculiar to
+himself. Mr. Walpole says that this story is a picture of
+Goldsmith's whole life.' <i>Life of Charlemont</i>, i. 344.</p>
+<p><a name="note-545">[545]</a> Most
+likely Reynolds, who introduced Crabbe to Johnson. Crabbe's
+<i>Works</i>, ed. 1834, ii. 11.</p>
+<center><a name=
+"note-546">[546]</a></center>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'I paint the cot,
+ As truth will paint it, and as Bards will not.
+ Nor you, ye Poor, of lettered scorn complain,
+ To you the smoothest song is smooth in vain;
+ O'ercome by labour, and bowed down by time,
+ Feel you the barren flattery of a rhyme?
+ Can poets soothe you, when you pine for bread,
+ By winding myrtles round your ruined shed?
+ Can their light tales your weighty griefs o'erpower,
+ Or glad with airy mirth the toilsome hour?'
+ <i>The Village</i>, book i.
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>See Boswell's <i>Hebrides</i>, Oct. 6.</p>
+<p><a name="note-547">[547]</a> I shall
+give an instance, marking the original by Roman, and Johnson's
+substitution in Italick characters:&mdash;</p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'In fairer scenes, where peaceful pleasures spring,
+ Tityrus, the pride of Mantuan swains, might sing:
+ But charmed by him, or smitten with his views,
+ Shall modern poets court the Mantuan muse?
+ From Truth and Nature shall we widely stray,
+ Where Fancy leads, or Virgil led the way?'
+ '<i>On Mincio's banks, in Caesar's bounteous reign,
+ If Tityrus found the golden age again,
+ Must sleepy bards the flattering dream prolong,
+ Mechanick echoes of the Mantuan song?</i>
+ From Truth and Nature shall we widely stray,
+ <i>Where Virgil, not where Fancy, leads the way?.</i>
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>Here we find Johnson's poetical and critical powers
+undiminished. I must, however, observe, that the aids he gave to
+this poem, as to <i>The Traveller</i> and <i>Deserted Village</i>
+of Goldsmith, were so small as by no means to impair the
+distinguished merit of the authour. BOSWELL.</p>
+<p><a name="note-548">[548]</a> In the
+<i>Gent. Mag.</i> 1763, pp. 602, 633, is a review of his
+<i>Observations on Diseases of the Army</i>. He says that the
+register of deaths of military men proves that more than eight
+times as many men fall by what was called the gaol fever as by
+battle. His suggestions are eminently wise. Lord Seaford, in
+1835, told Leslie 'that he remembered dining in company with Dr.
+Johnson at Dr. Brocklesby's, when he was a boy of twelve or
+thirteen. He was impressed with the superiority of Johnson, and
+his knocking everybody down in argument.' C.R. Leslie's
+<i>Recollections</i>, i. 146.</p>
+<p><a name="note-549">[549]</a> See
+Boswell's <i>Hebrides</i>, Sept. 28.</p>
+<p><a name="note-550">[550]</a> See
+<i>ante</i>, i. 433, and ii. 217, 358.</p>
+<p><a name="note-551">[551]</a> "In his
+<i>Life of Swift</i> (<i>Works</i>, viii. 205) he thus speaks of
+this <i>Journal</i>:-'In the midst of his power and his
+politicks, he kept a journal of his visits, his walks, his
+interviews with ministers, and quarrels with his servant, and
+transmitted it to Mrs. Johnson and Mrs. Dingley, to whom he knew
+that whatever befell him was interesting, and no accounts could
+be too minute. Whether these diurnal trifles were properly
+exposed to eyes which had never received any pleasure from the
+presence of the dean, may be reasonably doubted: they have,
+however, some odd attraction: the reader, finding frequent
+mention of names which he has been used to consider as important,
+goes on in hope of information; and, as there is nothing to
+fatigue attention, if he is disappointed, he can hardly
+complain.'"</p>
+<p><a name="note-552">[552]</a> On his
+fifty-fifth birthday he recorded:&mdash;'I resolve to keep a
+journal both of employment and of expenses. To keep accounts.'
+<i>Pr. and Med</i>. 59. See <i>post</i>, Aug. 25, 1784, where he
+writes to Langton:&mdash;'I am a little angry at you for not
+keeping minutes of your own <i>acceptum et expensum</i>, and
+think a little time might be spared from Aristophanes for the
+<i>res familiares</i>.'</p>
+<p><a name="note-553">[553]</a> This Mr.
+Chalmers thought was George Steevens. CROKER. D'Israeli
+(<i>Curiosities of Literature</i>, ed. 1834, vi. 76) describes
+Steevens as guilty of 'an unparalleled series of arch deception
+and malicious ingenuity.' He gives curious instances of his
+literary impostures. See <i>ante</i>, iii. 281, and <i>post</i>,
+May 15, 1784.</p>
+<p><a name="note-554">[554]</a> If this
+be Lord Mansfield, Boswell must use <i>late</i> in the sense of
+<i>in retirement</i>; for Mansfield was living when the <i>Life
+of Johnson</i> was published. He retired in 1788. Johnson in
+1772, said that he had never been in his company (<i>ante</i>,
+ii. 158). The fact that Mansfield is mentioned in the previous
+paragraph adds to the probability that he is meant.</p>
+<p><a name="note-555">[555]</a> See
+<i>ante</i>, ii. 318.</p>
+<p><a name="note-556">[556]</a> In
+Scotland, Johnson spoke of Mansfield's 'splendid talents.'
+Boswell's <i>Hebrides</i>, under Nov. 11.</p>
+<p><a name="note-557">[557]</a> 'I am
+not only witty in myself, but the cause that wit is in other
+men.' 2 <i>Henry IV</i>, act i. sc. 2.</p>
+<p><a name="note-558">[558]</a> Knowing
+as well as I do what precision and elegance of oratory his
+Lordship can display, I cannot but suspect that his unfavourable
+appearance in a social circle, which drew such animadversions
+upon him, must be owing to a cold affectation of consequence,
+from being reserved and stiff. If it be so, and he might be an
+agreeable man if he would, we cannot be sorry that he misses his
+aim. BOSWELL. Wedderburne, afterwards Lord Loughborough, is
+mentioned (<i>ante</i>, ii. 374), and again in Murphy's <i>Life
+of Johnson</i>, p. 43, as being in company with Johnson and
+Foote. Boswell also has before (<i>ante</i>, i. 387) praised the
+elegance of his oratory. Henry Mackenzie (<i>Life of John
+Home</i>, i. 56) says that Wedderburne belonged to a club at the
+British Coffee-house, of which Garrick, Smollett, and Dr. Douglas
+were members.</p>
+<p><a name="note-559">[559]</a> Boswell
+informed the people of Scotland in the Letter that he addressed
+to them in 1785 (p. 29), that 'now that Dr. Johnson is gone to a
+better world, he (Boswell) bowed the intellectual knee to <i>Lord
+Thurlow</i>.' See <i>post</i>, June 22, 1784.</p>
+<p><a name="note-560">[560]</a>
+Boswell's <i>Hebrides</i>, Oct. 27.</p>
+<center><a name=
+"note-561">[561]</a></center>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'Charged with light summer-rings his fingers sweat,
+ Unable to support a gem of weight.'
+ DRYDEN. Juvenal, <i>Satires</i>, i. 29.
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p><a name="note-562">[562]</a> He had
+published a series of seventy <i>Essays</i> under the title of
+<i>The Hypochondriack</i> in the <i>London Magazine</i> from 1777
+to 1783.</p>
+<p><a name="note-563">[563]</a> Juvenal,
+<i>Satires</i>, x. 365. The common reading, however, is 'Nullum
+numen <i>habes</i>,' &amp;c. Mrs. Piozzi (<i>Anec.</i> p. 218)
+records this saying, but with a variation. '"For," says Mr.
+Johnson, "though I do not quite agree with the proverb, that
+<i>Nullum numen adest si sit prudentia</i>, yet we may very well
+say, that <i>Nullum numen adest, ni sit prudentia."'</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-564">[564]</a> It has
+since appeared. BOSWELL.</p>
+<p><a name="note-565">[565]</a> Miss
+Burney mentions meeting Dr. Harington at Bath in 1780. 'It is his
+son,' she writes, 'who published those very curious remains of
+his ancestor [Sir John Harington] under the title Nugae Antiquae
+<i>which my father and all of us were formerly so fond of.' Mme.
+D'Arblay's</i> Diary<i>, i. 341.</i></p>
+<center><a name=
+"note-566">[566]</a></center>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'For though they are but trifles, thou
+ Some value didst to them allow.'
+ Martin's Catullus<i>, p. 1.
+</i>
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<center><a name=
+"note-567">[567]</a></center>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ &mdash;Underneath this rude, uncouth disguise,
+ A genius of extensive knowledge lies.'
+ FRANCIS. Horace, Satires<i>, i. 3. 33.
+</i>
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p><a name="note-568">[568]</a> He would
+not have been a troublesome patient anywhere, for, according to
+Mrs. Piozzi (Anec<i>. p. 275),'he required less attendance, sick
+or well, than ever I saw any human creature.'</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-569">[569]</a> 'That
+natural jealousy which makes every man unwilling to allow much
+excellence in another, always produces a disposition to believe
+that the mind grows old with the body; and that he whom we are
+now forced to confess superiour is hastening daily to a level
+with ourselves.' Johnson's Works<i>, vii. 212.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-570">[570]</a> With the
+following elucidation of the saying-Quos Deus <i>(it should
+rather be-</i>Quem Jupiter) vult perdere, prius dementat<i>-Mr.
+Boswell was furnished by Mr. Pitts:&mdash;'Perhaps no scrap of
+Latin whatever has been more quoted than this. It occasionally
+falls even from those who are scrupulous even to pedantry in
+their Latinity, and will not admit a word into their
+compositions, which has not the sanction of the first age. The
+word</i> demento <i>is of no authority, either as a verb active
+or neuter.&mdash;After a long search for the purpose of deciding
+a bet, some gentlemen of Cambridge found it among the fragments
+of Euripides, in what edition I do not recollect, where it is
+given as a translation of a Greek Iambick: [Greek: Ou Theos
+thelei apolesoi' apophreuai.]</i></p>
+<p>'The above scrap was found in the hand-writing of a suicide of
+fashion, Sir D. O., some years ago, lying on the table of the
+room where he had destroyed himself. The suicide was a man of
+classical acquirements: he left no other paper behind him.'</p>
+<p>Another of these proverbial sayings,</p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ Incidit in Scyllam, cupiens vitare Charybdim,
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>I, in a note on a passage in The Merchant of Venice <i>[act
+iii. sc. 5], traced to its source. It occurs (with a slight
+variation) in the</i> Alexandreis <i>of Philip Gualtier (a poet
+of the thirteenth century), which was printed at Lyons in 1558.
+Darius is the person addressed:&mdash;</i></p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ &mdash;Qu&ograve; tendis inertem,
+ Rex periture, fugam? nescis, heu! perdite, nescis
+ Quern fugias: hostes incurris dum fugis hostem;
+ Incidis in Scyllam, cupiens vitare Charybdim.
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>A line not less frequently quoted was suggested for enquiry in
+a note on The Rape of Lucrece:&mdash;</p>
+<p>Solamen miseris socios habuisse doloris&mdash;<i>:</i></p>
+<p>But the author of this verse has not, I believe, been
+discovered. MALONE. The 'Greek lambick' in the above note is not
+Greek. To a learned friend I owe the following note. 'The Quem
+Jupiter vult perdere<i>, &amp;c., is said to be a translation of
+a fragment of</i> Euripides <i>by Joshua Barnes. There is, I
+believe, no such fragment at all. In Barnes's</i> Euripides<i>,
+Cantab. 1694, fol. p. 515, is a fragment of Euripides with a note
+which may explain the muddle of Boswell's
+correspondent:&mdash;</i></p>
+<p>"[Greek: otau de daimonn handri porsunae kaka ton noun
+heblapse proton,]"</p>
+<p>on which Barnes writes:&mdash;"Tale quid in Franciados nostrae
+[probably his uncompleted poem on Edward III.] l. 3. Certe ille
+deorum Arbiter ultricem cum vult extendere dextram Dementat
+prius.<i>"' See</i> ante<i>, ii. 445, note 1. Sir D. O. is,
+perhaps, Sir D'Anvers Osborne, whose death is recorded in the</i>
+Gent. Mag. <i>1753, p. 591. 'Sir D'Anvers Osborne, Bart.,
+Governor of New York, soon after his arrival there;</i> in his
+garden.' Solamen miseris, &amp;c.<i>, is imitated by Swift in
+his</i> Verses on Stella's Birthday<i>, 1726-7:&mdash;</i></p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'The only comfort they propose,
+ To have companions in their woes.'
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>Swift's Works<i>, ed. 1803, xi. 22. The note on</i> Lucrece
+<i>was, I conjecture, on line 1111:&mdash;</i></p>
+<p>'Grief best is pleased with grief's society.'</p>
+<center><a name=
+"note-571">[571]</a></center>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'FAUSTUS&mdash;
+ "Tu quoque, ut h&icirc;c video, non es ignarus amorum."
+ 'FORTUNATUS&mdash;
+ "Id commune malum; semel insanivimus omnes."'
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>Baptistae Mantuani Carmelitae Adolescentia, seu Bucolica<i>.
+Ecloga I, published in 1498. 'Scaliger,' says Johnson
+(</i>Works<i>, viii. 391), 'complained that Mantuan's Bucolicks
+were received into schools, and taught as classical. ... He was
+read, at least in some of the inferiour schools of this kingdom,
+to the beginning of the present [eighteenth] century.'</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-572">[572]</a> See
+ante<i>, i. 368.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-573">[573]</a> See
+ante<i>, i. 396.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-574">[574]</a> I am
+happy, however, to mention a pleasing instance of his enduring
+with great gentleness to hear one of his most striking
+particularities pointed out:&mdash;Miss Hunter, a niece of his
+friend Christopher Smart, when a very young girl, struck by his
+extraordinary motions, said to him, 'Pray, Dr. Johnson, why do
+you make such strange gestures?' 'From bad habit,' he replied.
+'Do you, my dear, take care to guard against bad habits.' This I
+was told by the young lady's brother at Margate. BOSWELL. Boswell
+had himself told Johnson of some of them, at least in writing.
+Johnson read in manuscript his Journal of a Tour to the
+Hebrides<i>. Boswell says in a note on Oct. 12:&mdash;'It is
+remarkable that Dr. Johnson should have read this account of some
+of his own peculiar habits, without saying anything on the
+subject, which I hoped he would have done.'</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-575">[575]</a> See
+ante<i>, ii. 42, note 2, and iii. 324.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-576">[576]</a> Johnson,
+after stating that some of Milton's manuscripts prove that 'in
+the early part of his life he wrote with much care,'
+continues:&mdash;'Such reliques show how excellence is acquired;
+what we hope ever to do with ease, we must learn first to do with
+diligence.' Works<i>, vii. 119. Lord Chesterfield
+(</i>Letters<i>, iii. 146) had made the same rule as
+Johnson:&mdash;'I was,' he writes, 'early convinced of the
+importance and powers of eloquence; and from that moment I
+applied myself to it. I resolved not to utter one word even in
+common conversation that should not be the most expressive and
+the most elegant that the language could supply me with for that
+purpose; by which means I have acquired such a certain degree of
+habitual eloquence, that I must now really take some pains if I
+would express myself very inelegantly.'</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-577">[577]</a> 'Dr.
+Johnson,' wrote Malone in 1783, 'is as correct and elegant in his
+common conversation as in his writings. He never seems to study
+either for thoughts or words. When first introduced I was very
+young; yet he was as accurate in his conversation as if he had
+been talking to the first scholar in England.' Prior's Malone<i>,
+p. 92. See</i> post<i>, under Aug. 29, 1783.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-578">[578]</a> See
+ante<i>, iii. 216.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-579">[579]</a> See
+ante<i>, ii. 323.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-580">[580]</a> The
+justness of this remark is confirmed by the following story, for
+which I am indebted to Lord Eliot:&mdash;A country parson, who
+was remarkable for quoting scraps of Latin in his sermons, having
+died, one of his parishioners was asked how he liked his
+successor. 'He is a very good preacher,' was his answer, 'but no
+latiner<i>.' BOSWELL. For the original of Lord Eliot's story see
+Twells's</i> Life of Dr. E. Pocock<i>, ed. 1816, p. 94. Reynolds
+said that 'Johnson always practised on every occasion the rule of
+speaking his best, whether the person to whom he addressed
+himself was or was not capable of comprehending him. "If," says
+he, "I am understood, my labour is not lost. If it is above their
+comprehension, there is some gratification, though it is the
+admiration of ignorance;" and he said those were the most sincere
+admirers; and quoted Baxter, who made a rule never to preach a
+sermon without saying something which he knew was beyond the
+comprehension of his audience, in order to inspire their
+admiration.' Taylor's</i> Reynolds<i>, ii. 456. Addison, in</i>
+The Spectator<i>, No. 221, tells of a preacher in a country town
+who outshone a more ignorant rival, by quoting every now and then
+a Latin sentence from one of the Fathers. 'The other finding his
+congregation mouldering every Sunday, and hearing at length what
+was the occasion of it, resolved to give his parish a little
+Latin in his turn; but being unacquainted with any of the
+Fathers, he digested into his sermons the whole book of</i> Quae
+Genus<i>, adding, however, such explications to it as he thought
+might be for the benefit of his people. He afterwards entered
+upon</i> As in praesenti<i>, which he converted in the same
+manner to the use of his parishioners. This in a very little time
+thickened his audience, filled his church, and routed his
+antagonist.'</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-581">[581]</a> See
+ante<i>, ii. 96</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-582">[582]</a> '"Well,"
+said he, "we had good talk." BOSWELL. "Yes, Sir; you tossed and
+gored several persons."' Ante, <i>ii. 66.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-583">[583]</a> Dr. J.
+H. Burton says of Hume (Life, ii. 31<i>):&mdash;'No Scotsman
+could write a book of respectable talent without calling forth
+his loud and warm eulogiums. Wilkie was to be the Homer,
+Blacklock the Pindar, and Home the Shakespeare or something still
+greater of his country.' See</i> ante<i>, ii. 121, 296,
+306.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-584">[584]</a> The
+Present State of Music in France and Italy, <i>I vol. 1771,
+and</i> The Present State of Music in Germany, &amp;c., <i>2
+vols. 1773. Johnson must have skipped widely in reading these
+volumes, for though Dr. Burney describes his travels, yet he
+writes chiefly of music.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-585">[585]</a>
+Boswell's son James says that he heard from his father, that the
+passage which excited this strong emotion was the
+following:&mdash;</p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'Tis night, and the landscape is lovely no more:
+ I mourn, but, ye woodlands, I mourn not for you;
+ For morn is approaching, your charms to restore,
+ Perfumed with fresh fragrance, and glittering with dew;
+ Nor yet for the ravage of winter I mourn;
+ Kind Nature the embryo blossom will save:
+ But when shall spring visit the mouldering urn?
+ O when shall it dawn on the night of the grave?'
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p><a name="note-586">[586]</a> Horace
+Walpole (Letters<i>, vii. 338) mentions this book at some length.
+On March 13, 1780, he wrote:&mdash;'Yesterday was published an
+octavo, pretending to contain the correspondence of Hackman and
+Miss Ray that he murdered.' See</i> ante<i>, iii. 383.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-587">[587]</a> Hawkins
+(Life<i>, p. 547), recording how Johnson used to meet Psalmanazar
+at an ale-house, says that Johnson one day 'remarked on the human
+mind, that it had a necessary tendency to improvement, and that
+it would frequently anticipate instruction. "Sir," said a
+stranger that overheard him, "that I deny; I am a tailor, and
+have had many apprentices, but never one that could make a coat
+till I had taken great pains in teaching him."' See</i> ante<i>,
+iii. 443. Robert Hall was influenced in his studies by 'his
+intimate association in mere childhood with a tailor, one of his
+father's congregation, who was an acute metaphysician.'
+Hall's</i> Works<i>, vi. 5.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-588">[588]</a> Johnson
+had never been in Grub-street. Ante<i>, i. 296, note 2.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-589">[589]</a> The
+Honourable Horace Walpole, late Earl of Orford, thus bears
+testimony to this gentleman's merit as a writer:&mdash;'Mr.
+Chambers's Treatise on Civil Architecture <i>is the most sensible
+book, and the most exempt from prejudices, that ever was written
+on that science.'&mdash;Preface to</i> Anecdotes of Painting in
+England<i>. BOSWELL. Chambers was the architect of Somerset
+House. See</i> ante<i>, p. 60, note 7.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-590">[590]</a> The
+introductory lines are these:&mdash;'It is difficult to avoid
+praising too little or too much. The boundless panegyricks which
+have been lavished upon the Chinese learning, policy, and arts,
+shew with what power novelty attracts regard, and how naturally
+esteem swells into admiration. I am far from desiring to be
+numbered among the exaggerators of Chinese excellence. I consider
+them as great, or wise, only in comparison with the nations that
+surround them; and have no intention to place them in competition
+either with the antients or with the moderns of this part of the
+world; yet they must be allowed to claim our notice as a distinct
+and very singular race of men: as the inhabitants of a region
+divided by its situation from all civilized countries, who have
+formed their own manners, and invented their own arts, without
+the assistance of example.' BOSWELL.</p>
+<p><a name="note-591">[591]</a> The last
+execution at Tyburn was on Nov. 7, 1783, when one man was hanged.
+The first at Newgate was on the following Dec. 9, when ten were
+hanged. Gent. Mag. <i>1783, pp. 974, 1060.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-592">[592]</a> We may
+compare with this 'loose talk' Johnson's real opinion, as set
+forth in The Rambler<i>, No. 114, entitled:&mdash;</i>The
+necessity of proportioning punishments to crimes<i>. He
+writes:&mdash;'The learned, the judicious, the pious Boerhaave
+relates that he never saw a criminal dragged to execution without
+asking himself, "Who knows whether this man is not less culpable
+than me?" On the days when the prisons of this city are emptied
+into the grave, let every spectator of this dreadful procession
+put the same question to his own heart. Few among those that
+crowd in thousands to the legal massacre, and look with
+carelessness, perhaps with triumph, on the utmost exacerbations
+of human misery, would then be able to return without horror and
+dejection.' He continues:&mdash;'It may be observed that all but
+murderers have, at their last hour, the common sensations of
+mankind pleading in their favour.... They who would rejoice at
+the correction of a thief, are yet shocked at the thought of
+destroying him. His crime shrinks to nothing compared with his
+misery, and severity defeats itself by exciting pity.'</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-593">[593]</a>
+Richardson, in his Familiar Letters<i>, No. 160, makes a country
+gentleman in town describe the procession of five criminals to
+Tyburn, and their execution. He should have heard, he said, 'the
+exhortation spoken by the bell-man from the wall of St.
+Sepulchre's church-yard; but the noise of the officers and the
+mob was so great, and the silly curiosity of people climbing into
+the cart to take leave of the criminals made such a confused
+noise that I could not hear them. They are as follow: "All good
+people pray heartily to God for these poor sinners, who now are
+going to their deaths; for whom this great bell doth toll. You
+that are condemned to die, repent with lamentable tears.... Lord
+have mercy upon you! Christ have mercy upon you!" which last
+words the bell-man repeats three times. All the way up Holborn
+the crowd was so great, as at every twenty or thirty yards to
+obstruct the passage; and wine, notwithstanding a late good order
+against that practice, was brought the malefactors, who drank
+greedily of it. After this the three thoughtless young men, who
+at first seemed not enough concerned, grew most shamefully daring
+and wanton. They swore, laughed, and talked obscenely. At the
+place of execution the scene grew still more shocking; and the
+clergyman who attended was more the subject of ridicule than of
+their serious attention. The psalm was sung amidst the curses and
+quarrelling of hundreds of the most abandoned and profligate of
+mankind. As soon as the poor creatures were half-dead, I was much
+surprised to see the populace fall to haling and pulling the
+carcases with so much earnestness as to occasion several warm
+rencounters and broken heads. These, I was told, were the friends
+of the persons executed, or such as for the sake of tumult chose
+to appear so; and some persons sent by private surgeons to obtain
+bodies for dissection.' The psalm is mentioned in a note on the
+line in</i> The Dunciad<i>, i. 4l, 'Hence hymning Tyburn's
+elegiac lines:'&mdash;'It is an ancient English custom,' says
+Pope, 'for the malefactors to sing a psalm at their execution at
+Tyburn.'</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-594">[594]</a> The rest
+of these miscellaneous sayings were first given in the Additions
+to Dr. Johnson's Life <i>at the beginning of vol. I of the second
+edition.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-595">[595]</a> Hume
+(Auto<i>. p. 6) speaks of Hurd as attacking him 'with all the
+illiberal petulance, arrogance, and scurrility which distinguish
+the Warburtonian school.' 'Hurd,' writes Walpole, 'had acquired a
+great name by several works of slender merit, was a gentle,
+plausible man, affecting a singular decorum that endeared him
+highly to devout old ladies.'</i> Journal of the Reign of George
+III<i>, ii. 50. He is best known to the present generation by his
+impertinent notes on Addison's</i> Works<i>. By reprinting them,
+Mr. Bohn did much to spoil what was otherwise an excellent
+edition of that author. See</i> ante<i>, p. 47, note 2.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-596">[596]</a> The Rev.
+T. Twining, one of Dr. Burney's friends, wrote in
+1779:&mdash;'You use a form of reference that I abominate, i.e.
+the latter, the former. "As long as you have the use of your
+tongue and your pen," said Dr. Johnson to Dr. Burney, "never,
+Sir, be reduced to that shift."' Recreations and Studies of a
+Country Clergyman of the XVIIIth Century<i>, p. 72.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-597">[597]</a> 'A
+shilling was now wanted for some purpose or other, and none of
+them happened to have one; I begged that I might lend one. "Ay,
+do," said the Doctor, "I will borrow of you; authors are like
+privateers, always fair game for one another."' Mme. D'Arblay's
+Diary<i>, ii. 212.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-598">[598]</a> See
+ante<i>, i. 129, note 3.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-599">[599]</a> See
+post<i>, June 3, 1784, where he uses almost the same
+words.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-600">[600]</a> What
+this period was Boswell seems to leave intentionally vague.
+Johnson knew Lord Shelburne at least as early as 1778 (ante<i>,
+iii. 265). He wrote to Dr. Taylor on July 22,
+1782:&mdash;'Shelburne speaks of Burke in private with great
+malignity.'</i> Notes and Queries<i>, 6th S. v. 462. The company
+commonly gathered at his house would have been displeasing to
+Johnson. Priestley, who lived with Shelburne seven years, says
+(</i>Auto<i>. p. 55) that a great part of the company he saw
+there was like the French philosophers, unbelievers in
+Christianity, and even professed atheists: men 'who had given no
+proper attention to Christianity, and did not really know what it
+was.' Johnson was intimate with Lord Shelburne's brother.</i>
+Ante<i>, ii. 282, note 3.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-601">[601]</a> Johnson
+being asked his opinion of this Essay, answered, 'Why, Sir, we
+shall have the man come forth again; and as he has proved
+Falstaff to be no coward, he may prove Iago to be a very good
+character.' BOSWELL.</p>
+<p><a name="note-602">[602]</a> A writer
+in the European Magazine<i>, xxx. 160, says that Johnson visited
+Lord Shelburne at Bowood. At dinner he repeated part of his
+letter to Lord Chesterfield (</i>ante<i>, i. 261). A gentleman
+arrived late. Shelburne, telling him what he had missed, went
+on:-'I dare say the Doctor will be kind enough to give it to us
+again.' 'Indeed, my Lord, I will not. I told the circumstance
+first for my own amusement, but I will not be dragged in as
+story-teller to a company.' In an argument he used some strong
+expressions, of which his opponent took no notice, Next morning
+'he went up to the gentleman with great good-nature, and said,
+"Sir, I have found out upon reflection that I was both warm and
+wrong in my argument with you last night; for the first of which
+I beg your pardon, and for the second, I thank you for setting me
+right."' It is clear that the second of these anecdotes is the
+same as that told by Mr. Morgann of Johnson and himself, and that
+the scene has been wrongly transferred from Wickham to Bowood.
+The same writer says that it was between Derrick and
+Boyce&mdash;not Derrick and Smart&mdash;that Johnson, in the
+story that follows, could not settle the precedency.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-603">[603]</a> See
+ante, i. 124, 394.</p>
+<p><a name="note-604">[604]</a> See
+ante, i. 397.</p>
+<p><a name="note-605">[605]</a> What the
+great TWALMLEY was so proud of having invented, was neither more
+nor less than a kind of box-iron for smoothing linen.
+BOSWELL.</p>
+<center><a name=
+"note-606">[606]</a></center>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'Hic manus ob patriam pugnando vulnera passi,
+ Quique sacerdotes casti, dum vita manebat,
+ Quique pii vates et Phoebo digna locuti,
+ Inventas aut qui vitam excoluere per artes.'
+ Aeneid<i>, vi. 660.
+ 'Lo, they who in their country's fight
+ sword-wounded bodies bore;
+ Lo, priests of holy life and chaste,
+ while they in life had part;
+ Lo, God-loved poets, men who spake
+ things worthy Phoebus' heart,
+ And they who bettered life on earth
+ by new-found mastery.'
+</i>
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>MORRIS. Virgil, Aeneids<i>, vi. 660. The great Twalmley might
+have justified himself by</i> The Rambler<i>, No. 9:&mdash;'Every
+man, from the highest to the lowest station, ought to warm his
+heart and animate his endeavours with the hopes of being useful
+to the world, by advancing the art which it is his lot to
+exercise; and for that end he must necessarily consider the whole
+extent of its application, and the whole weight of its
+importance.... Every man ought to endeavour at eminence, not by
+pulling others down, but by raising himself, and enjoy the
+pleasure of his own superiority, whether imaginary or real,
+without interrupting others in the same felicity.' All this is
+what Twalmley did. He adorned an art, he endeavoured at eminence,
+and he inoffensively enjoyed the pleasure of his own superiority.
+He could also have defended himself by the example of Aeneas,
+who, introducing himself, said:&mdash;</i></p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'Sum pius Aeneas .....
+ ... fama super aethera notus.'
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>Aeneid<i>, i. 378. I fear that Twalmley met with the neglect
+that so commonly befalls inventors. In the</i> Gent. Mag<i>.
+1783, p. 719, I find in the list of 'B-nk-ts,' Josiah Twamley,
+the elder, of Warwick, ironmonger.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-607">[607]</a> 'Sir,
+Hume is a Tory by chance, as being a Scotchman; but not upon a
+principle of duty, for he has no principle. If he is anything, he
+is a Hobbist.' Boswell's Hebrides<i>, Sept. 30. Horace Walpole's
+opinion was very different. 'Are not atheism and bigotry first
+cousins? Was not Charles II. an atheist and a bigot? and does Mr.
+Hume pluck a stone from a church but to raise an altar to
+tyranny?'</i> Letters<i>, v. 444. Hume wrote in 1756:&mdash;'My
+views of</i> things <i>are more conformable to Whig principles;
+my representations of</i> persons <i>to Tory prejudices.' J.H.
+Burton's</i> Hume<i>, ii. 11. Hume's Toryism increased with
+years. He says in his</i> Autobiography/ <i>(p. xi.) that all the
+alterations which he made in the later editions of his</i>
+History of the Stuarts<i>, 'he made invariably to the Tory side.'
+Dr. Burton gives instances of these;</i> Life of Hume<i>, ii. 74.
+Hume wrote in 1763 that he was 'too much infected with the plaguy
+prejudices of Whiggism when he began the work.'</i> Ib<i>. p.
+144. In 1770 he wrote:&mdash;'I either soften or expunge many
+villainous, seditious Whig strokes which had crept into it.'</i>
+Ib<i>. p. 434. This growing hatred of Whiggism was, perhaps, due
+to pique. John Home, in his notes of Hume's talk in the last
+weeks of his life, says: 'He recurred to a subject not unfrequent
+with him&mdash;that is, the design to ruin him as an author, by
+the people that were ministers at the first publication of
+his</i> History<i>, and called themselves Whigs.'</i> Ib<i>. p.
+500. As regards America, Hume was with the Whigs, as Johnson had
+perhaps learnt from their common friend, Mr. Strahan. 'He was,'
+says Dr. Burton, 'far more tolerant of the sway of individuals
+over numbers, which he looked upon as the means of preserving
+order and civilization, than of the predominance of one territory
+over another, which he looked upon as subjugation.'</i> Ib<i>. p.
+477. Quite at the beginning of the struggle he foretold that the
+Americans would not be subdued, unless they broke in pieces among
+themselves.</i> Ib<i>. p. 482. He was not frightened by the
+prospect of the loss of our supremacy. He wrote to Adam
+Smith:&mdash;'My notion is that the matter is not so important as
+is commonly imagined. Our navigation and general commerce may
+suffer more than our manufactures.'</i> Ib<i>. p. 484. Johnson's
+charge against Hume that he had no principle, is, no doubt, a
+gross one; yet Hume's advice to a sceptical young clergyman, who
+had good hope of preferment, that he should therefore continue in
+orders, was unprincipled enough. 'It is,' he wrote, 'putting too
+great a respect on the vulgar and on their superstitions to pique
+one's self on sincerity with regard to them. Did ever one make it
+a point of honour to speak truth to children or madmen? If the
+thing were worthy being treated gravely, I should tell him that
+the Pythian oracle, with the approbation of Xenophon, advised
+every one to worship the gods&mdash;[Greek: nomo poleos]. I wish
+it were still in my power to be a hypocrite in this particular.
+The common duties of society usually require it; and the
+ecclesiastical profession only adds a little more to an innocent
+dissimulation, or rather simulation, without which it is
+impossible to pass through the world.'</i> Ib/<i>. p.
+187.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-608">[608]</a> Mrs.
+Piozzi (Anec<i>. p. 48) says that Johnson told her that in
+writing the story of Gelaleddin, the poor scholar (</i>Idler<i>,
+No. 75), who thought to fight his way to fame by his learning and
+wit, 'he had his own outset into life in his eye.' Gelaleddin
+describes how 'he was sometimes admitted to the tables of the
+viziers, where he exerted his wit and diffused his knowledge; but
+he observed that where, by endeavour or accident he had
+remarkably excelled, he was seldom invited a second time.'
+See</i> ante<i>, p. 116.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-609">[609]</a> See
+ante, p. 115.</p>
+<p><a name="note-610">[610]</a> Bar.
+BOSWELL.</p>
+<p><a name="note-611">[611]</a> Nard.
+BOSWELL.</p>
+<p><a name="note-612">[612]</a> Barnard.
+BOSWELL.</p>
+<p><a name="note-613">[613]</a> It was
+reviewed in the Gent. Mag<i>. 1781, p. 282, where it is said to
+have been written by Don Gabriel, third son of the King of
+Spain.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-614">[614]</a> Though
+'you was' is very common in the authors of the last century when
+one person was addressed, I doubt greatly whether Johnson ever so
+expressed himself.</p>
+<p><a name="note-615">[615]</a> See
+ante<i>, i. 311.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-616">[616]</a> Horace
+Walpole (Letters <i>v. 85) says, 'Boswell, like Cambridge, has a
+rage of knowing anybody that ever was talked of.' Miss Burney
+records 'an old trick of Mr. Cambridge to his son George, when
+listening to a dull story, in saying to the relator "Tell the
+rest of that to George."' Mme. D'Arblay's</i> Diary<i>, ii. 274.
+See</i> ante<i>, ii. 361.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-617">[617]</a> Virgil,
+Eclogues<i>, i. 47.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-618">[618]</a> 'Mr.
+Johnson,' writes Mrs. Piozzi (Anec<i>. p. 21), 'was exceedingly
+disposed to the general indulgence of children, and was even
+scrupulously and ceremoniously attentive not to offend them. He
+had strongly persuaded himself of the difficulty people always
+find to erase early impressions either of kindness or
+resentment.'</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-619">[619]</a> Ante<i>,
+ii.171, iv.75; also</i> post<i>, May 15, 1784.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-620">[620]</a> Johnson,
+on May 1, 1780, wrote of the exhibition dinner:&mdash;'The
+apartments were truly very noble. The pictures, for the sake of a
+sky-light, are at the top of the house; there we dined, and I sat
+over against the Archbishop of York. See how I live when I am not
+under petticoat government.' Piozzi Letters<i>, ii. 111. It was
+Archbishop Markham whom he met; he is mentioned by Boswell in
+his</i> Hebrides, post<i>, v. 37. In spite of the 'elaboration of
+homage' Johnson could judge freely of an archbishop. He described
+the Archbishop of Tuam as 'a man coarse of voice and inelegant of
+language.'</i> Piozzi Letters<i>, ii. 300.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-621">[621]</a> By Lord
+Perceval, afterwards Earl of Egmont. He carried, writes Horace
+Walpole (Letters<i>, ii. 144), 'the Westminster election at the
+end of my father's ministry, which he amply described in the
+history of his own family, a genealogical work called the</i>
+History of the House of Yvery<i>, a work which cost him three
+thousand pounds; and which was so ridiculous, that he has since
+tried to suppress all the copies. It concluded with the
+description of the Westminster election, in these or some such
+words:&mdash;"And here let us leave this young nobleman
+struggling for the dying liberties of his country."'</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-622">[622]</a> Five
+days earlier Johnson made the following entry in his
+Diary:&mdash;'1783, April 5. I took leave of Mrs. Thrale. I was
+much moved. I had some expostulations with her. She said that she
+was likewise affected. I commended the Thrales with great
+good-will to God; may my petitions have been heard.' Hawkins's
+Life<i>, p. 553. This was not 'a formal taking of leave,' as
+Hawkins says. She was going to Bath (Mme. D'Arblay's</i>
+Diary<i>, ii. 264). On May-day he wrote to her on the death of
+one of her little girls:&mdash;'I loved her, for she was Thrale's
+and yours, and, by her dear father's appointment, in some sort
+mine: I love you all, and therefore cannot without regret see the
+phalanx broken, and reflect that you and my other dear girls are
+deprived of one that was born your friend. To such friends every
+one that has them has recourse at last, when it is discovered and
+discovered it seldom fails to be, that the fortuitous friendships
+of inclination or vanity are at the mercy of a thousand
+accidents.'</i> Piozzi Letters<i>, ii. 255. He was sadly thinking
+how her friendship for him was rapidly passing away.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-623">[623]</a> Johnson
+modestly ended his account of the tour by saying:&mdash;'I cannot
+but be conscious that my thoughts on national manners are the
+thoughts of one who has seen but little.' Works<i>, ix. 161. See
+Boswell's</i> Hebrides<i>, Nov. 22.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-624">[624]</a> See
+ib<i>. Oct. 21.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-625">[625]</a> She says
+that he was 'the genuine author of the first volume. An ingenious
+physician,' she continues, 'with the assistance of several
+others, continued the work until the eighth volume.' Mrs.
+Manley's History of her own Life and Times<i>, p. 15&mdash;a
+gross, worthless book. Swift satirised her in</i> Corinna, a
+Ballad<i>. Swift's</i> Works <i>(1803), x. 94.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-626">[626]</a> The real
+authour was I. P. Marana, a Genoese, who died at Paris in 1693.
+John Dunton in his Life <i>says, that Mr.</i> William Bradshaw
+<i>received from Dr. Midgeley forty shillings a sheet for writing
+part of the</i> Turkish Spy<i>; but I do not find that he any
+where mentions</i> Sault <i>as engaged in that work.
+MALONE.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-627">[627]</a> See
+ante<i>, ii. 355, iii. 46, and iv. 139.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-628">[628]</a> This was
+in June, 1783, and I find in Mr. Windham's private diary (which
+it seems this conversation induced him to keep) the following
+memoranda of Dr. Johnson's advice: 'I have no great timidity in
+my own disposition, and am no encourager of it in others. Never
+be afraid to think yourself fit for any thing for which your
+friends think you fit. You will become an able negotiator&mdash;a
+very pretty rascal<i>. No one in Ireland wears even the mask of
+incorruption; no one professes to do for sixpence what he can get
+a shilling for doing. Set sail, and see where the winds and the
+waves will carry you. Every day will improve another.</i> Dies
+diem docet<i>, by observing at night where you failed in the day,
+and by resolving to fail so no more.' CROKER. The Whigs thought
+he made 'a very pretty rascal' in a very different way. On his
+opposition to Whitbread's bill for establishing parochial
+schools, Romilly wrote (</i>Life<i>, ii. 2l6), 'that a man so
+enlightened as Windham should take the same side (which he has
+done most earnestly) would excite great astonishment, if one did
+not recollect his eager opposition a few months ago to the
+abolition of the slave trade.' He was also 'most strenuous in
+opposition' to Romilly's bill for repealing the act which made it
+a capital offence to steal to the amount of forty shillings in a
+dwelling-house,</i> Ib<i>. p. 316.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-629">[629]</a> We
+accordingly carried our scheme into execution, in October, 1792;
+but whether from that uniformity which has in modern times, in a
+great degree, spread through every part of the Metropolis, or
+from our want of sufficient exertion, we were disappointed.
+BOSWELL.</p>
+<p><a name="note-630">[630]</a> Piozzi's
+Anecdotes<i>, p. 193. See</i> post<i>, under June 30,
+1784.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-631">[631]</a>
+Northcote (Life of Reynolds<i>, ii. 139-143) says that the
+picture, which was execrable beyond belief, was exhibited in an
+empty room. Lowe, in 1769 (not in 1771 as Northcote says), gained
+the gold medal of the Academy for the best historical picture.
+(</i>Gent. Mag<i>. 1770, p. 587.) Northcote says that the award
+was not a fair one. He adds that Lowe, being sent to Rome by the
+patronage of the Academy, was dissatisfied with the sum allowed
+him. 'When Sir Joshua said that he knew from experience that it
+was sufficient, Lowe pertly answered "that it was possible for a
+man to live on guts and garbage."' He died at an obscure lodging
+in Westminster, in 1793. There is, wrote Miss Burney, 'a certain
+poor wretch of a villainous painter, one Mr. Lowe, whom Dr.
+Johnson recommends to all the people he thinks can afford to sit
+for their picture. Among these he applied to Mr. Crutchley [one
+of Mr. Thrale's executors]. "But now," said Mr. Crutchley to me,
+"I have not a notion of sitting for my picture&mdash;for who
+wants it? I may as well give the man the money without; but no,
+they all said that would not do so well, and Dr. Johnson asked me
+to give</i> him <i>my picture." "And I assure you, Sir," says he,
+"I shall put it in very good company, for I have portraits of
+some very respectable people in my dining-room." After all I
+could say I was obliged to go to the painter's. And I found him
+in such a condition! a room all dirt and filth, brats squalling
+and wrangling... "Oh!" says I, "Mr. Lowe, I beg your pardon for
+running away, but I have just recollected another engagement; so
+I poked three guineas in his hand, and told him I would come
+again another time, and then ran out of the house with all my
+might."' Mme. D'Arblay's</i> Diary<i>, ii.41. A correspondent of
+the</i> Examiner <i>writing on May 28, 1873, said that he had met
+one of Lowe's daughters, 'who recollected,' she told him, 'when a
+child, sitting on Dr. Johnson's knee and his making her repeat
+the Lord's Prayer.' She was Johnson's god-daughter. By a
+committee consisting of Milman, Thackeray, Dickens, Carlyle and
+others, an annuity fund for her and her sister was raised. Lord
+Palmerston gave a large subscription.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-632">[632]</a> See
+post<i>, May 15, 1783.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-633">[633]</a> See
+Boswell's Hebrides<i>,</i> post<i>, v. 48.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-634">[634]</a> See
+ante<i>, p. 171.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-635">[635]</a> Quoted
+by Boswell, ante<i>, iii. 324.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-636">[636]</a> It is
+suggested to me by an anonymous Annotator on my Work, that the
+reason why Dr. Johnson collected the peels of squeezed oranges
+may be found in the 58th [358th] Letter in Mrs. Piozzi's
+Collection<i>, where it appears that he recommended 'dried
+orange-peel, finely powdered,' as a medicine. BOSWELL. See</i>
+ante<i>, ii. 330.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-637">[637]</a> There
+are two mistakes in this calculation, both perhaps due to
+Boswell. Eighty-four <i>should be</i> eighty-eight<i>, and
+square-yards should be</i> yards square<i>. 'If a wall cost
+&pound;1000 a mile, &pound;100 would build 176 yards of wall,
+which would form a square of 44 yards, and enclose an area of
+1936 square yards; and &pound;200 would build 352 yards of wall,
+which would form a square of 88 yards, and inclose an area of
+7744 square yards. The cost of the wall in the latter case, as
+compared with the space inclosed, would therefore be reduced to
+one half.'</i> Notes and Queries<i>, 1st S. x. 471.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-638">[638]</a> See
+ante<i>, i. 318.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-639">[639]</a> 'Davies
+observes, in his account of Ireland, that no Irishman had ever
+planted an orchard.' Johnson's Works<i>, ix.7. 'At Fochabars [in
+the Highlands] there is an orchard, which in Scotland I had never
+seen before.'</i> Ib. <i>p. 21.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-640">[640]</a> Miss
+Burney this year mentions meeting 'Mr. Walker, the lecturer.
+Though modest in science, he is vulgar in conversation.' Mme.
+D'Arblay's Diary<i>, ii. 237. Johnson quotes him,</i> Works<i>,
+viii. 474.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-641">[641]</a> 'Old Mr.
+Sheridan' was twelve years younger than Johnson. For his oratory,
+see ante<i>, i. 453, and</i> post<i>, April 28 and May 17,
+1783.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-642">[642]</a> See
+ante<i>, i. 358, when Johnson said of Sheridan:&mdash;'His voice
+when strained is unpleasing, and when low is not always
+heard.'</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-643">[643]</a> See
+ante<i>, iii. 139.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-644">[644]</a> 'A more
+magnificent funeral was never seen in London,' wrote Murphy (Life
+of Garrick<i>, p. 349). Horace Walpole (</i>Letters<i>, vii.
+169), wrote on the day of the funeral:&mdash;'I do think the pomp
+of Garrick's funeral perfectly ridiculous. It is confounding the
+immense space between pleasing talents and national services.' He
+added, 'at Lord Chatham's interment there were not half the noble
+coaches that attended Garrick's.'</i> Ib<i>. p. 171. In his</i>
+Journal of the Reign of George III <i>(ii. 333), he
+says:&mdash;'The Court was delighted to see a more noble and
+splendid appearance at the interment of a comedian than had
+waited on the remains of the great Earl of Chatham.' Bishop Horne
+(</i>Essays and Thoughts<i>, p. 283) has some lines on 'this
+grand parade of woe,' which begin:&mdash;</i></p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'Through weeping London's crowded streets,
+ As Garrick's funeral passed,
+ Contending wits and nobles strove,
+ Who should forsake him last.
+ Not so the world behaved to him<i> Who came that world to save,
+ By solitary Joseph borne
+ Unheeded to his grave.'
+</i>
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>Johnson wrote on April 30, 1782: 'Poor Garrick's funeral
+expenses are yet unpaid, though the undertaker is broken.' Piozzi
+Letters<i>, ii. 239. Garrick was buried on Feb. 1, 1779, and had
+left his widow a large fortune. Chatham died in May,
+1778.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-645">[645]</a> Boswell
+had heard Johnson maintain this; ante<i>, ii. 101.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-646">[646]</a> See
+post<i>, p. 238, note 2.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-647">[647]</a> This
+duel was fought on April 21, between Mr. Riddell of the
+Horse-Grenadiers, and Mr. Cunningham of the Scots Greys. Riddell
+had the first fire, and shot Cunningham through the breast. After
+a pause of two minutes Cunningham returned the fire, and gave
+Riddell a wound of which he died next day. Gent. Mag. <i>1783, p.
+362. Boswell's grandfather's grandmother was a Miss Cunningham.
+Rogers's</i> Boswelliana<i>, p. 4. I do not know that there was
+any nearer connection. In Scotland, I suppose, so much kindred as
+this makes two men 'near relations.'</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-648">[648]</a> 'Unto
+him that smiteth thee on the one cheek offer also the other.' St.
+Luke<i>, vi. 29. Had Miss Burney thought of this text, she might
+have quoted it with effect against Johnson, who, criticising
+her</i> Evelina<i>, said:&mdash;'You write Scotch, you say "the
+one,"&mdash;my dear, that's not English. Never use that phrase
+again.' Mme. D'Arblay's</i> Diary<i>, i. 84.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-649">[649]</a> 'Turn
+not thou away.' St. Matthew<i>, v. 42.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-650">[650]</a> I think
+it necessary to caution my readers against concluding that in
+this or any other conversation of Dr. Johnson, they have his
+serious and deliberate opinion on the subject of duelling. In my
+Journal of a Tour to the Hebrides<i>, 3 ed. p. 386 [p. 366, Oct.
+24], it appears that he made this frank confession:&mdash;'Nobody
+at times, talks more laxly than I do;' and,</i> ib<i>. p. 231
+[Sept. 19, 1773], 'He fairly owned he could not explain the
+rationality of duelling.' We may, therefore, infer, that he could
+not think that justifiable, which seems so inconsistent with the
+spirit of the Gospel. At the same time it must be confessed, that
+from the prevalent notions of honour, a gentleman who receives a
+challenge is reduced to a dreadful alternative. A remarkable
+instance of this is furnished by a clause in the will of the late
+Colonel Thomas, of the Guards, written the night before he fell
+in a duel, Sept. 3, 1783:&mdash;'In the first place, I commit my
+soul to Almighty GOD, in hopes of his mercy and pardon for the
+irreligious step I now (in compliance with the unwarrantable
+customs of this wicked world) put myself under the necessity of
+taking.' BOSWELL. See</i> ante<i>, ii. 179.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-651">[651]</a> See
+Boswell's Hebrides<i>, Aug. 24 and Sept. 20. Dr. Franklin
+(</i>Memoirs<i>, i. 177) says that when the assembly at
+Philadelphia, the majority of which were Quakers, was asked by
+New England to supply powder for some garrison, 'they would not
+grant money to buy powder, because that was an ingredient of war;
+but they voted an aid of &pound;3000 to be appropriated for the
+purchase of bread, flour, wheat, or</i> other grain<i>.' The
+Governor interpreted</i> other grain <i>as gunpowder, without any
+objection ever being raised.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-652">[652]</a> 'A
+gentleman falling off his horse brake his neck, which sudden hap
+gave occasion of much speech of his former life, and some in this
+judging world judged the worst. In which respect a good friend
+made this good epitaph, remembering that of Saint Augustine,
+Misericordia Domini inter pontem et fontem<i>.</i></p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ "My friend judge not me,
+ Thou seest I judge not thee;
+ Betwixt the stirrop and the ground,
+ Mercy I askt, mercy I found."'
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>Camden's Remains<i>, ed. 1870, p. 420.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-653">[653]</a> 'In sure
+and certain hope of the Resurrection to eternal life.'
+Prayer-book.</p>
+<p><a name="note-654">[654]</a> Upon
+this objection the Reverend Mr. Ralph Churton, Fellow of
+Brazennose College, Oxford, has favoured me with the following
+satisfactory observation:&mdash;'The passage in the
+Burial-service does not mean the resurrection of the person
+interred, but the general resurrection; it is in sure and certain
+hope of the <i>resurrection; not</i> his <i>resurrection. Where
+the deceased is really spoken of, the expression is very
+different, "as our hope is this our brother doth" [rest in
+Christ]; a mode of speech consistent with every thing but
+absolute certainty that the person departed doth</i> not <i>rest
+in Christ, which no one can be assured of, without immediate
+revelation from Heaven. In the first of these places also,
+"eternal life" does not necessarily mean eternity of bliss, but
+merely the eternity of the state, whether in happiness or in
+misery, to ensue upon the resurrection; which is probably the
+sense of "the life everlasting," in the Apostles' Creed. See</i>
+Wheatly and Bennet on the Common Prayer<i>.' BOSWELL.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-655">[655]</a> Six days
+earlier the Lord-Advocate Dundas had brought in a bill for the
+Regulation of the Government of India. Hastings, he said, should
+be recalled. His place should be filled by 'a person of
+independent fortune, who had not for object the repairing of his
+estate in India, that had long been the nursery of ruined and
+decayed fortunes.' Parl. Hist<i>. xxiii. 757. Johnson wrote to
+Dr. Taylor on Nov. 22 of this year:&mdash;'I believe corruption
+and oppression are in India at an enormous height, but it has
+never appeared that they were promoted by the Directors, who, I
+believe, see themselves defrauded, while the country is
+plundered; but the distance puts their officers out of
+reach.'</i> Notes and Queries<i>, 6th S. v. 482. See</i> ante<i>,
+p. 66.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-656">[656]</a> See
+ante<i>, p. 113.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-657">[657]</a>
+Stockdale (Memoirs<i>, ii. 57) says that, in 1770, the payment to
+writers in the</i> Critical Review <i>was two guineas a sheet,
+but that some of the writers in</i> The Monthly Review
+<i>received four guineas a sheet. As these Reviews were octavos,
+each sheet contained sixteen pages. Lord Jeffrey says that the
+writers in the</i> Edinburgh Review <i>were at first paid ten
+guineas a sheet. 'Not long after the</i> minimum <i>was raised to
+sixteen guineas, at which it remained during my reign, though
+two-thirds of the articles were paid much higher&mdash;averaging,
+I should think, from twenty to twenty-five guineas a sheet on the
+whole number.' Cockburn's</i> Jeffrey<i>, i. 136.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-658">[658]</a> See
+ante, ii. 344.</p>
+<p><a name="note-659">[659]</a> See
+ante<i>, iii.32.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-660">[660]</a> See
+ante<i>, p. 206.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-661">[661]</a> Monday
+<i>is no doubt put by mistake for</i> Tuesday<i>, which was the
+29th. Boswell had spent a considerable part of Monday the 28th
+with Johnson (</i>ante<i>, p. 211).</i></p>
+<center><a name=
+"note-662">[662]</a></center>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'A fugitive from Heaven and prayer,
+ I mocked at all religious fear.'
+FRANCIS. Horace, Odes<i>, i.34. 1.
+</i>
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p><a name="note-663">[663]</a> He told
+Boswell (ante<i>, i. 68) that he had been a sort of lax talker
+against religion for some years before he went to Oxford, but
+that there he took up Law's</i> Serious Call <i>and found it
+quite an overmatch for him. 'This,' he said, 'was the first
+occasion of my thinking in earnest of religion after I became
+capable of rational enquiry.' During the vacation of 1729 he had
+a serious illness (</i>ante<i>, i. 63), which most likely was
+'the sickness that brought religion back.'</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-664">[664]</a> See
+ante<i>, i. 93, 164, and</i> post<i>, under Dec. 2, 1784.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-665">[665]</a> Mr.
+Langton. See ante<i>, ii. 254.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-666">[666]</a> See
+ante<i>, ii. 249.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-667">[667]</a> Malloch
+continued to write his name thus, after he came to London<i>. His
+verses prefixed to the second edition of Thomson's</i> Winter
+<i>are so subscribed. MALONE. 'Alias. A Latin word signifying
+otherwise; as, Mallet,</i> alias <i>Malloch; that is</i>
+otherwise <i>Malloch.' The mention of Mallet first comes in
+Johnson's own abridgment of his</i> Dictionary<i>. In the earlier
+unabridged editions the definition concludes, 'often used in the
+trials of criminals, whose danger has obliged them to change
+their names; as Simpson</i> alias <i>Smith,</i> alias <i>Baker,
+&amp;c.' For Mallet, see</i> ante<i>, i. 268, and ii.
+159.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-668">[668]</a> Perhaps
+Scott had this saying of Johnson's in mind when he made Earl
+Douglas exclaim:&mdash;</p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'At first in heart it liked me ill,
+ When the King praised his clerkly skill.
+ Thanks to St. Bothan, son of mine,
+ Save Gawain, ne'er could pen a line.'
+Marmion<i>, canto vi. 15.
+</i>
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p><a name="note-669">[669]</a> See
+Boswell's Hebrides<i>, Sept. 10.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-670">[670]</a> Johnson
+often maintained this diffusion of learning. Thus he
+wrote:&mdash;'The call for books was not in Milton's age what it
+is in the present. To read was not then a general amusement;
+neither traders, nor often gentlemen, thought themselves
+disgraced by ignorance. The women had not then aspired to
+literature nor was every house supplied with a closet of
+knowledge.' Works<i>, vii. 107. He goes on to mention 'that
+general literature which now pervades the nation through all its
+ranks.'</i> Works<i>, p. 108. 'That general knowledge which now
+circulates in common talk was in Addison's time rarely to be
+found. Men not professing learning were not ashamed of ignorance;
+and, in the female world, any acquaintance with books was
+distinguished only to be censured.'</i> Ib<i>. p.470. 'Of the</i>
+Essay on Criticism<i>, Pope declared that he did not expect the
+sale to be quick, because "not one gentleman in sixty, even of
+liberal education, could understand it." The gentlemen, and the
+education of that time, seem to have been of a lower character
+than they are of this.'</i> Ib<i>. viii. 243. See</i> ante<i>,
+iii. 3, 254. Yet he maintained that 'learning has decreased in
+England, because learning will not do so much for a man as
+formerly.' Boswell's</i> Hebrides, post<i>, v. 80.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-671">[671]</a> Malone
+describes a call on Johnson in the winter of this year:&mdash;'I
+found him in his arm-chair by the fire-side, before which a few
+apples were laid. He was reading. I asked him what book he had
+got. He said the History of Birmingham<i>. Local histories, I
+observed, were generally dull. "It is true, Sir; but this has a
+peculiar merit with me; for I passed some of my early years, and
+married my wife there." [See</i> ante<i>, i. 96.] I supposed the
+apples were preparing as medicine. "Why, no, Sir; I believe they
+are only there because I want something to do. These are some of
+the solitary expedients to which we are driven by sickness. I
+have been confined this week past; and here you find me roasting
+apples, and reading the</i> History of Birmingham<i>."'
+Prior's</i> Malone<i>, p. 92.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-672">[672]</a> On April
+19, he wrote:&mdash;'I can apply better to books than I could in
+some more vigorous parts of my life&mdash;at least than I did<i>;
+and I have one more reason for reading&mdash;that time has, by
+taking away my companions, left me less opportunity of
+conversation.' Croker's</i> Boswell<i>, p. 727.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-673">[673]</a> He told
+Mr. Windham that he had never read the Odyssey <i>through in the
+original. Windham's</i> Diary<i>, p. 17. 'Fox,' said Rogers
+(</i>Table Talk<i>, p. 92), 'used to read Homer through once
+every year. On my asking him, "Which poem had you rather have
+written, the</i> Iliad <i>or the</i> Odyssey<i>?" he answered, "I
+know which I had rather read" (meaning the</i>
+Odyssey<i>).'</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-674">[674]</a>
+'Composition is, for the most part, an effort of slow diligence
+and steady perseverance, to which the mind is dragged by
+necessity or resolution, and from which the attention is every
+moment starting to more delightful amusements.' Johnson's
+Works<i>, iv. 145. Of Pope Johnson wrote (</i>ib<i>. viii.
+321):&mdash;'To make verses was his first labour, and to mend
+them was his last. ... He was one of those few whose labour is
+their pleasure.' Thomas Carlyle, in 1824, speaking of writing,
+says:&mdash;'I always recoil from again engaging with it.'
+Froude's</i> Carlyle<i>, i. 213. Five years later he
+wrote:&mdash;'Writing is a dreadful labour, yet not so dreadful
+as</i> idleness<i>.'</i> Ib<i>. ii. 75. See</i> ante<i>, iii.
+19.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-675">[675]</a> See
+ante<i>, ii. 15.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-676">[676]</a> Miss
+Burney wrote to Mrs. Thrale in 1780:&mdash;'I met at Sir Joshua's
+young Burke, who is made much ado about, but I saw not enough of
+him to know why.' Mme. D'Arblay's Diary<i>, i. 416. Mrs. Thrale
+replied:&mdash;'I congratulate myself on being quite of your
+opinion concerning Burke the minor, whom I once met and could
+make nothing of.'</i> Ib<i>. p. 418. Miss Hawkins
+(</i>Memoirs<i>, i. 304) reports, on Langton's authority, that
+Burke said:&mdash;'How extraordinary it is that I, and Lord
+Chatham, and Lord Holland, should each have a son so superior to
+ourselves.'</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-677">[677]</a>
+Cruikshank, not Cruikshanks (see post<i>, under Sept. 18, 1783,
+and Sept. 4 1784). He had been Dr. Hunter's partner; he was not
+elected (</i>Gent. Mag. <i>1783, p. 626). Northcote, in quoting
+this letter, says that 'Sir Joshua's influence in the Academy was
+not always answerable to his desire. "Those who are of some
+importance everywhere else," he said, "find themselves nobody
+when they come to the Academy."' Northcote's</i> Reynolds<i>, ii.
+145.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-678">[678]</a> William
+Hunter, scarcely less famous as a physician than his youngest
+brother, John Hunter, as a surgeon.</p>
+<p><a name="note-679">[679]</a> Let it
+be remembered by those who accuse Dr. Johnson of illiberality
+that both were Scotchmen<i>. BOSWELL.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-680">[680]</a> The
+following day he dined at Mrs. Garrick's. 'Poor Johnson,' wrote
+Hannah More (Memoirs<i>, i. 280), 'exerted himself exceedingly,
+but he was very ill and looked so dreadfully, that it quite
+grieved me. He is more mild and complacent than he used to be.
+His sickness seems to have softened his mind, without having at
+all weakened it. I was struck with the mild radiance of this
+setting sun.'</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-681">[681]</a> In the
+winter of 1788-9 Boswell began a canvass of his own county, He
+also courted Lord Lonsdale, in the hope of getting one of the
+seats in his gift, who first fooled him and then treated him with
+great brutality, Letters of Boswell<i>, pp. 270, 294,
+324.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-682">[682]</a> On April
+6, 1780&mdash;'a day,' wrote Horace Walpole (Letters<i>, vii.
+345), 'that ought for ever to be a red-lettered day'&mdash;Mr.
+Dunning made this motion. It was carried by 233 to 215.</i> Parl.
+Hist. <i>xxi. 340-367.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-683">[683]</a> See
+ante<i>, i. 355, and ii. 94 for Johnson's appeal to meals as a
+measure of vexation.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-684">[684]</a> Johnson
+defines cant <i>as '1. A corrupt dialect used by beggars and
+vagabonds. 2. A particular form of speaking peculiar to some
+certain class or body of men. 3. A whining pretension to goodness
+in formal and affected terms. 4. Barbarous jargon. 5. Auction.' I
+have noted the following instances of his use of the
+word:&mdash;'I betook myself to a coffee-house frequented by
+wits, among whom I learned in a short time the</i> cant <i>of
+criticism.'</i> The Rambler<i>, No.123. 'Every class of society
+has its</i> cant <i>of lamentation.'</i> Ib<i>. No.128. 'Milton's
+invention required no assistance from the common</i> cant <i>of
+poetry.'</i> Ib<i>. No.140. 'We shall secure our language from
+being overrun with</i> cant<i>, from being crowded with low
+terms, the spawn of folly or affectation.'</i> Works<i>, v. II.
+'This fugitive</i> cant<i>, which is always in a state of
+increase or decay, cannot be regarded as any part of the durable
+materials of a language.'</i> Ib<i>. p.45. In a note on I</i>
+Henry VI<i>, act iii. sc.1, he says: 'To</i> roam <i>is supposed
+to be derived from the</i> cant <i>of vagabonds, who often
+pretended a pilgrimage to Rome.' See</i> ante<i>, iii. 197, for
+'modern</i> cant<i>.'</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-685">[685]</a>
+'Custom,' wrote Sir Joshua, 'or politeness, or courtly manners
+has authorised such an eastern hyperbolical style of compliment,
+that part of Dr. Johnson's character for rudeness of manners must
+be put to the account of scrupulous adherence to truth. His
+obstinate silence, whilst all the company were in raptures, vying
+with each other who should pepper highest, was considered as
+rudeness or ill-nature.' Taylor's Reynolds<i>, ii. 458.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-686">[686]</a> 'The
+shame is to impose words for ideas upon ourselves or others.'
+Johnson's Works<i>, vi. 64. See</i> ante<i>, p.122, where he
+says: 'There is a middle state of mind between conviction and
+hypocrisy.' Bacon, in his</i> Essay of Truth<i>, says: 'It is not
+the lie that passeth through the mind, but the lie that sinketh
+in and settleth in it, that doth the hurt.'</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-687">[687]</a> See
+ante<i>, p. 204.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-688">[688]</a> 'I dined
+and lay at Harrison's, where I was received with that
+old-fashioned breeding which is at once so honourable and so
+troublesome.' Gibbon's Misc. Works<i>, i. 144. Mr. Pleydell,
+in</i> Guy Mannering<i>, ed. 1860, iv. 96, says: 'You'll excuse
+my old-fashioned importunity. I was born in a time when a
+Scotchman was thought inhospitable if he left a guest alone a
+moment, except when he slept.'</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-689">[689]</a> See
+ante<i>, ii. 167.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-690">[690]</a> See
+ante<i>, i. 387.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-691">[691]</a> In
+Johnson's Works<i>, ed. 1787, xi. 197, it is recorded that
+Johnson said, 'Sheridan's writings on elocution were a continual
+renovation of hope, and an unvaried succession of
+disappointments.' According to the</i> Gent. Mag. <i>1785, p.
+288, he continued:&mdash;'If we should have a bad harvest this
+year, Mr. Sheridan would say:&mdash;"It was owing to the neglect
+of oratory."' See</i> ante<i>, p. 206.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-692">[692]</a> Burke,
+no doubt, was this 'bottomless Whig.' When Johnson said 'so they
+all <i>are now,' he was perhaps thinking of the Coalition
+Ministry in which Lord North and his friends had places.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-693">[693]</a> No doubt
+Burke, who was Paymaster of the Forces. He is Boswell's 'eminent
+friend.' See ante <i>ii.222, and</i> post<i>, Dec. 24, 1783, and
+Jan.8, 1784. In these two consecutive paragraphs, though two
+people seem to be spoken of, yet only one is in reality.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-694">[694]</a> I
+believe that Burke himself was present part of the time, and that
+he was the gentleman who 'talked of retiring<i>. On May 19 and 21
+he had in Parliament defended his action in restoring to office
+two clerks, Powell and Bembridge, who had been dismissed by his
+predecessor, and he had justified his reforms in the Paymaster's
+office. 'He awaited,' he said, the 'judgement of the House. ...If
+they so far differed in sentiment, he had only to say,</i> Nunc
+dimittis servum tuum.' Parl. Hist. <i>xxiii.919.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-695">[695]</a> A copy
+of Evelina <i>had been placed in the Bodleian. 'Johnson says,'
+wrote Miss Burney, 'that when he goes to Oxford he will write my
+name in the books, and my age when I writ them, and then,' he
+says, 'the world may know that we</i> So mix our studies, and so
+joined our fame. <i>For we shall go down hand in hand to
+posterity.' Mme. D'Arblay's</i> Diary<i>, i.429. The oldest copy
+of</i> Evelina <i>now in the Bodleian is of an edition published
+after Johnson's death. Miss Burney, in 1793, married General
+D'Arblay, a French refugee.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-696">[696]</a> Macaulay
+maintained that Johnson had a hand in the composition of
+Cecilia<i>. He quotes a passage from it, and says:&mdash;'We say
+with confidence, either Sam. Johnson or the Devil.'
+(</i>Essays<i>, ed. 1874, iv. 157.) That he is mistaken is shown
+by Mme. D'Arblay's</i> Diary <i>(ii. 172). 'Ay,' cried Dr.
+Johnson, 'some people want to make out some credit to me from the
+little rogue's book. I was told by a gentleman this morning that
+it was a very fine book, if it was all her own.' "It is all her
+own," said I, "for me, I am sure, for I never saw one word of it
+before it was printed."' On p. 196 she records the
+following:&mdash;'SIR JOSHUA. "Gibbon says he read the whole five
+volumes in a day." "'Tis impossible," cried Mr. Burke, "it cost
+me three days; and you know I never parted with it from the day I
+first opened it."' See</i> post<i>, among the imitators of
+Johnson's style, under Dec. 6, 1784.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-697">[697]</a> In Mr.
+Barry's printed analysis, or description of these pictures, he
+speaks of Johnson's character in the highest terms. BOSWELL.
+Barry, in one of his pictures, placed Johnson between the two
+beautiful duchesses of Rutland and Devonshire, pointing to their
+Graces Mrs. Montagu as an example. He expresses his 'reverence
+for his consistent, manly, and well-spent life.' Barry's
+Works<i>, ii. 339. Johnson, in his turn, praises 'the
+comprehension of Barry's design.'</i> Piozzi Letters<i>, ii. 256.
+He was more likely to understand it, as the pictures formed a
+series, meant 'to illustrate one great maxim of moral truth, viz.
+that the obtaining of happiness depends upon cultivating the
+human faculties. We begin with man in a savage state full of
+inconvenience, imperfection, and misery, and we follow him
+through several gradations of culture and happiness, which, after
+our probationary state here, are finally attended with beatitude
+or misery.' Barry's</i> Works<i>, ii. 323. Horace Walpole
+(</i>Letters<i>, viii. 366) describes Barry's book as one 'which
+does not want sense, though full of passion and self, and
+vulgarisms and vanity.'</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-698">[698]</a> Boswell
+had tried to bring about a third meeting between Johnson and
+Wilkes. On May 21 he wrote:&mdash;'Mr. Boswell's compliments to
+Mr. Wilkes. He finds that it would not be unpleasant to Dr.
+Johnson to dine at Mr. Wilkes's. The thing would be so curiously
+benignant, it were a pity it should not take place. Nobody but
+Mr. Boswell should be asked to meet the doctor.' An invitation
+was sent, but the following answer was returned:&mdash;'May 24,
+1783. Mr. Johnson returns thanks to Mr. and Miss Wilkes for their
+kind invitation; but he is engaged for Tuesday to Sir Joshua
+Reynolds, and for Wednesday to Mr. Paradise.' Owing to Boswell's
+return to Scotland, another day could not be fixed. Almon's
+Wilkes<i>, iv. 314, 321.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-699">[699]</a> 'If the
+tree fall toward the south, or toward the north, in the place
+where the tree falleth, there it shall be.' Ecclesiastes<i>, xi.
+3.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-700">[700]</a> 'When a
+tree is falling, I have seen the labourers, by a trivial jerk
+with a rope, throw it upon the spot where they would wish it
+should lie. Divines, understanding this text too literally,
+pretend, by a little interposition in the article of death, to
+regulate a person's everlasting happiness. I fancy the allusion
+will hardly countenance their presumption.' Shenstone's Works<i>,
+ed. 1773, ii. 255.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-701">[701]</a> Hazlitt
+says that 'when old Baxter first went to Kidderminster to preach,
+he was almost pelted by the women for maintaining from the pulpit
+the then fashionable and orthodox doctrine, that "Hell was paved
+with infants' skulls.'" Conversations of Northcote<i>, p.
+80.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-702">[702]</a> Acts<i>,
+xvii. 24.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-703">[703]</a> Now the
+celebrated Mrs. Crouch. BOSWELL.</p>
+<p><a name="note-704">[704]</a> Mr.
+Windham was at this time in Dublin, Secretary to the Earl of
+Northington, then Lord Lieutenant of Ireland. BOSWELL. See
+ante<i>, p.200.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-705">[705]</a> Son of
+Mr. Samuel Paterson. BOSWELL. See ante<i>, iii.90, and</i>
+post<i>, April 5, 1784.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-706">[706]</a> The late
+Keeper of the Royal Academy. He died on Jan. 23 of this year.
+Reynolds wrote of him:&mdash;'He may truly be said in every
+sense, to have been the father of the present race of artists.'
+Northcote's Reynolds <i>ii.137.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-707">[707]</a> Mr.
+Allen was his landlord and next neighbour in Bolt-court. Ante<i>,
+iii. 141.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-708">[708]</a> Cowper
+mentions him in Retirement<i>:&mdash;</i></p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'Virtuous and faithful Heberden! whose skill
+ Attempts no task it cannot well fulfill,
+ Gives melancholy up to nature's care,
+ And sends the patient into purer air.'
+ Cowper's Poems<i>, ed. 1786, i. 272.
+</i>
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>He is mentioned also by Priestley (Auto. <i>ed. 1810, p.66) as
+one of his chief benefactors. Lord Eldon, when almost a briefless
+barrister, consulted him. 'I put my hand into my pocket, meaning
+to give him his fee; but he stopped me, saying, "Are you the
+young gentleman who gained the prize for the essay at Oxford?" I
+said I was. "I will take no fee from you." I often consulted him;
+but he would never take a fee.' Twiss's</i> Eldon<i>, i.
+104.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-709">[709]</a> How much
+he had physicked himself is shewn by a letter of May 8. 'I took
+on Thursday,' he writes, 'two brisk catharticks and a dose of
+calomel. Little things do me no good. At night I was much better.
+Next day cathartick again, and the third day opium for my cough.
+I lived without flesh all the three days.' Piozzi Letters<i>,
+ii.257. He had been bled at least four times that year and had
+lost about fifty ounces of blood.</i> Ante<i>, pp.142, 146. On
+Aug. 3, 1779, he wrote:&mdash;'Of the last fifty days I have
+taken mercurial physick, I believe, forty.'</i> Notes and
+Queries<i>, 6th S. v.461.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-710">[710]</a> An exact
+reprint of this letter is given by Professor Mayor in Notes and
+Queries<i>, 6th S. v.481. The omissions and the repetitions
+'betray,' he says, 'the writer's agitation.' The postscript
+Boswell had omitted. It is as follows:&mdash;'Dr. Brocklesby will
+be with me to meet Dr. Heberden, and I shall have previously make
+(sic) master of the case as well as I can.'</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-711">[711]</a> Vol. ii.
+p.268, of Mrs. Thrale's Collection<i>. BOSWELL. The beginning of
+the letter is very touching:&mdash;'I am sitting down in no
+cheerful solitude to write a narrative which would once have
+affected you with tenderness and sorrow, but which you will
+perhaps pass over now with the careless glance of frigid
+indifference. For this diminution of regard, however, I know not
+whether I ought to blame you, who may have reasons which I cannot
+know, and I do not blame myself, who have for a great part of
+human life done you what good I could, and have never done you
+evil.'</i> Piozzi Letters<i>, ii. 268. 'I have loved you,' he
+continued, 'with virtuous affection; I have honoured you with
+sincere esteem. Let not all our endearments be forgotten, but let
+me have in this great distress your pity and your prayers. You
+see I yet turn to you with my complaints as a settled and
+unalienable friend; do not, do not drive me from you, for I have
+not deserved either neglect or hatred.'</i> Ib. <i>p.271.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-712">[712]</a> On Aug.
+20 he wrote:&mdash;'I sat to Mrs. Reynolds yesterday for my
+picture, perhaps the tenth time, and I sat near three hours with
+the patience of mortal born to bear<i>; at last she declared it
+quite finished, and seems to think it fine. I told her it was</i>
+Johnson's grimly ghost<i>. It is to be engraved, and I think</i>
+in glided<i>, &amp;c., will be a good inscription.'</i> Piozzi
+Letters<i>, ii. 302. Johnson is quoting from Mallet's ballad
+of</i> Margaret's Ghost<i>:&mdash;</i></p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'Twas at the silent solemn hour,
+ When night and morning meet;
+ In glided Margaret's grimly ghost,
+ And stood at William's feet.'
+ Percy Ballads<i>, in. 3, 16.
+</i>
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>According to Northcote, Reynolds said of his sister's
+oil-paintings, 'they made other people laugh and him cry.' 'She
+generally,' Northcote adds, 'did them by stealth.' Life of
+Reynolds<i>, ii. 160.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-713">[713]</a> 'Nocte,
+inter 16 et 17 Junii, 1783.</p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ Summe pater, quodcunque tuum de corpore Numen
+ Hoc statuat, precibus Christus adesse velit:
+ Ingenio parcas, nee sit mihi culpa rogasse,
+ Qua solum potero parte placere tibi.'
+ Works<i>, i.159.
+</i>
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p><a name="note-714">[714]</a>
+According to the Gent. Mag<i>. 1783, p.542, Dr. Lawrence died at
+Canterbury on June 13 of this year, his second son died on the
+15th. But, if we may trust Munk's</i> Roll of the College of
+Physicians<i>, ii.153, on the father's tomb-stone, June 6 is
+given as the day of his death. Mr. Croker gives June 17 as the
+date, and June 19 as the day of the son's death, and is puzzled
+accordingly.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-715">[715]</a> Poor
+Derrick, however, though he did not himself introduce me to Dr.
+Johnson as he promised, had the merit of introducing me to
+Davies, the immediate introductor. BOSWELL. See ante<i>, i.385,
+391.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-716">[716]</a> Miss
+Burney, calling on him the next morning, offered to make his tea.
+He had given her his own large arm-chair which was too heavy for
+her to move to the table. '"Sir," quoth she, "I am in the wrong
+chair." "It is so difficult," cried he with quickness, "for
+anything to be wrong that belongs to you, that it can only be I
+that am in the wrong chair to keep you from the right one."' Dr.
+Burney's Memoirs<i>, ii. 345.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-717">[717]</a> His
+Lordship was soon after chosen, and is now a member of THE CLUB.
+BOSWELL. He was father of the future prime-minister, who was born
+in the following year.</p>
+<p><a name="note-718">[718]</a> He wrote
+on June 23:&mdash;'What man can do for man has been done for me.'
+Piozzi Letters<i>, ii.278. Murphy (</i>Life<i>, p. 121) says
+that, visiting him during illness, he found him reading Dr.
+Watson's</i> Chymistry <i>(</i>ante<i>, p. 118). 'Articulating
+with difficulty he said:&mdash;"From this book he who knows
+nothing may learn a great deal, and he who knows will be pleased
+to find his knowledge recalled to his mind in a manner highly
+pleasing."'</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-719">[719]</a> 'I have,
+by the migration of one of my ladies, more peace at home; but I
+remember an old savage chief that says of the Romans with great
+indignation-ubi solitudinem faciunt pacem appellant
+<i>[</i>Tacitus, Agricola<i>, c. xxx].</i> Piozzi Letters<i>, ii.
+259.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-720">[720]</a> 'July
+23. I have been thirteen days at Rochester, and am just now
+returned. I came back by water in a common boat twenty miles for
+a shilling, and when I landed at Billingsgate, I carried my
+budget myself to Cornhill before I could get a coach, and was not
+much incommoded' Ib<i>. ii.294. See</i> ante<i>, iv.8, 22, for
+mention of Rochester.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-721">[721]</a> Murphy
+(Life<i>, p. 121) says that Johnson visited Oxford this summer.
+Perhaps he was misled by a passage in the</i> Piozzi Letters
+<i>(ii. 302) where Johnson is made to write:&mdash;'At Oxford I
+have just left Wheeler.' For</i> left <i>no doubt should be
+read</i> lost<i>. Wheeler died on July 22 of this year.</i> Gent.
+Mag<i>. 1783, p. 629.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-722">[722]</a> This
+house would be interesting to Johnson, as in it Charles II, 'for
+whom he had an extraordinary partiality' (ante<i>, ii. 341), lay
+hid for some days after the battle of Worcester. Clarendon (vi.
+540) describes it 'as a house that stood alone from neighbours
+and from any highway.' Charles was lodged 'in a little room,
+which had been made since the beginning of the troubles for the
+concealment of delinquents.'</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-723">[723]</a> 'I told
+Dr. Johnson I had heard that Mr. Bowles was very much delighted
+with the expectation of seeing him, and he answered me:&mdash;"He
+is so delighted that it is shocking. It is really shocking to see
+how high are his expectations." I asked him why, and he
+said:&mdash;"Why, if any man is expected to take a leap of twenty
+yards, and does actually take one of ten, everybody will be
+disappointed, though ten yards may be more than any other man
+ever leaped."' Mme. D'Arblay's Diary<i>, ii.260. On Oct. 9, he
+wrote:&mdash;'Two nights ago Mr. Burke sat with me a long time.
+We had both seen Stonehenge this summer for the first time.'</i>
+Piozzi Letters<i>, ii.315.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-724">[724]</a>
+Salisbury is eighty-two miles from Cornhill by the old
+coach-road. Johnson seems to have been nearly fifteen hours on
+the journey.</p>
+<p><a name="note-725">[725]</a> 'Aug.
+13, 1783. I am now broken with disease, without the alleviation
+of familiar friendship or domestic society. I have no middle
+state between clamour and silence, between general conversation
+and self-tormenting solitude. Levett is dead, and poor Williams
+is making haste to die.' Piozzi Letters<i>, ii.301. 'Aug. 20.
+This has been a day of great emotion; the office of the Communion
+of the Sick has been performed in poor Mrs. Williams's
+chamber.'</i> Ib<i>. 'Sept. 22. Poor Williams has, I hope, seen
+the end of her afflictions. She acted with prudence and she bore
+with fortitude. She has left me.</i></p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ "Thou thy weary [worldly] task hast done,
+ Home art gone and ta'en thy wages."
+ [Cymbeline<i>, act iv. sc. 2.]
+</i>
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>Had she had good humour and prompt elocution, her universal
+curiosity and comprehensive knowledge would have made her the
+delight of all that knew her.' Ib<i>. p. 311.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-726">[726]</a> Johnson
+(Works<i>, viii. 354) described in 1756 such a companion as he
+found in Mrs. Williams. He quotes Pope's</i> Epitaph on Mrs.
+Corbet<i>, and continues:&mdash;'I have always considered this as
+the most valuable of all Pope's epitaphs; the subject of it is a
+character not discriminated by any shining or eminent
+peculiarities; yet that which really makes, though not the
+splendour, the felicity of life, and that which every wise man
+will choose for his final and lasting companion in the languor of
+age, in the quiet of privacy, when he departs, weary and
+disgusted, from the ostentatious, the volatile and the vain. Of
+such a character which the dull overlook, and the gay despise, it
+was fit that the value should be made known, and the dignity
+established.' See</i> ante<i>, i.232.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-727">[727]</a> Pr. and
+Med<i>. p. 226. BOSWELL.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-728">[728]</a> I
+conjecture that Mr. Bowles is the friend. The account follows
+close on the visit to his house, and contains a mention of
+Johnson's attendance at a lecture at Salisbury.</p>
+<p><a name="note-729">[729]</a> A writer
+in Notes and Queries<i>, 1st S. xii. 149, says:&mdash;'Mr. Bowles
+had married a descendant of Oliver Cromwell, viz. Dinah, the
+fourth daughter of Sir Thomas Frankland, and highly valued
+himself upon this connection with the Protector.' He adds that
+Mr. Bowles was an active Whig.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-730">[730]</a> Mr.
+Malone observes, 'This, however, was certainly a mistake, as
+appears from the Memoirs <i>published by Mr. Noble. Had Johnson
+been furnished with the materials which the industry of that
+gentleman has procured, and with others which, it it is believed,
+are yet preserved in manuscript, he would, without doubt, have
+produced a most valuable and curious history of Cromwell's life.'
+BOSWELL.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-731">[731]</a> See
+ante<i>, ii.358, note 3.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-732">[732]</a> Short
+Notes for Civil Conversation<i>. Spedding's</i> Bacon<i>,
+vii.109.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-733">[733]</a> 'When I
+took up his Life of Cowley<i>, he made me put it away to talk. I
+could not help remarking how very like he is to his writing, and
+how much the same thing it was to hear or to read him; but that
+nobody could tell that without coming to Streatham, for his
+language was generally imagined to be laboured and studied,
+instead of the mere common flow of his thoughts. "Very true,"
+said Mrs. Thrale, "he writes and talks with the same ease, and in
+the same manner."' Mme. D'Arblay's</i> Diary<i>, i. 120. What a
+different account is this from that given by
+Macaulay:&mdash;'When he talked he clothed his wit and his sense
+in forcible and natural expressions. As soon as he took his pen
+in his hand to write for the public, his style became
+systematically vicious.' Macaulay's</i> Essays<i>, edit. 1843,
+i.404. See</i> ante<i>, ii.96, note; iv.183; and</i> post<i>, the
+end of the vol.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-734">[734]</a> See
+ante<i>, ii.125, iii.254, and Boswell's</i> Hebrides<i>, Oct.
+14.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-735">[735]</a> Hume
+said:&mdash;'The French have more real politeness, and the
+English the better method of expressing it. By real politeness I
+mean softness of temper, and a sincere inclination to oblige and
+be serviceable, which is very conspicuous in this nation, not
+only among the high, but low; in so much that the porters and
+coachmen here are civil, and that, not only to gentlemen, but
+likewise among themselves.' J.H. Burton's Hume<i>, i. 53.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-736">[736]</a> This is
+the third time that Johnson's disgust at this practice is
+recorded. See ante<i>, ii.403, and iii.352.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-737">[737]</a> See
+ante<i>, iii.398, note 3.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-738">[738]</a> 'Sept.
+22, 1783. The chymical philosophers have discovered a body (which
+I have forgotten, but will enquire) which, dissolved by an acid,
+emits a vapour lighter than the atmospherical air. This vapour is
+caught, among other means, by tying a bladder compressed upon the
+body in which the dissolution is performed; the vapour rising
+swells the bladder and fills it. Piozzi Letters<i>, ii.310. The
+'body' was iron-filings, the acid sulphuric acid, and the vapour
+nitrogen. The other 'new kinds of air' were the gases discovered
+by Priestley.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-739">[739]</a> I do not
+wonder at Johnson's displeasure when the name of Dr. Priestley
+was mentioned; for I know no writer who has been suffered to
+publish more pernicious doctrines. I shall instance only three.
+First, Materialism<i>; by which</i> mind <i>is denied to human
+nature; which, if believed, must deprive us of every elevated
+principle. Secondly,</i> Necessity<i>; or the doctrine that every
+action, whether good or bad, is included in an unchangeable and
+unavoidable system; a notion utterly subversive of moral
+government. Thirdly, that we have no reason to think that the</i>
+future <i>world, (which, as he is pleased to</i> inform <i>us,
+will be adapted to our</i> merely improved <i>nature,) will be
+materially different from</i> this<i>; which, if believed, would
+sink wretched mortals into despair, as they could no longer hope
+for the 'rest that remaineth for the people of GOD'
+[</i>Hebrews<i>, iv.9], or for that happiness which is revealed
+to us as something beyond our present conceptions; but would feel
+themselves doomed to a continuation of the uneasy state under
+which they now groan. I say nothing of the petulant intemperance
+with which he dares to insult the venerable establishments of his
+country.</i></p>
+<p>As a specimen of his writings, I shall quote the following
+passage, which appears to me equally absurd and impious, and
+which might have been retorted upon him by the men who were
+prosecuted for burning his house. 'I cannot, (says he,) as a
+necessarian<i>, [meaning</i> necessitarian<i>] hate</i> any
+man<i>; because I consider him as</i> being<i>, in all respects,
+just what GOD has</i> made him to be<i>; and also as</i> doing
+with respect to me<i>, nothing but what he was</i> expressly
+designed <i>and</i> appointed <i>to do; GOD being the</i> only
+cause<i>, and men nothing more than the</i> instruments <i>in his
+hands to</i> execute all his pleasure<i>.'&mdash;</i>
+Illustrations of Philosophical Necessity<i>, p. 111.</i></p>
+<p>The Reverend Dr. Parr, in a late tract, appears to suppose
+that 'Dr. Johnson not only endured, but almost solicited, an
+interview with Dr. Priestley<i>. In justice to Dr. Johnson, I
+declare my firm belief that he never did. My illustrious friend
+was particularly resolute in not giving countenance to men whose
+writings he considered as pernicious to society. I was present at
+Oxford when Dr. Price, even before he had rendered himself so
+generally obnoxious by his zeal for the French Revolution, came
+into a company where Johnson was, who instantly left the room.
+Much more would he have reprobated Dr. Priestley. Whoever wishes
+to see a perfect delineation of this</i> Literary Jack of all
+Trades<i>, may find it in an ingenious tract, entitled, 'A SMALL
+WHOLE-LENGTH OF DR. PRIESTLEY,' printed for Rivingtons, in St.
+Paul's Church-Yard. BOSWELL. See Appendix B.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-740">[740]</a> Burke
+said, 'I have learnt to think better <i>of mankind.'</i> Ante<i>,
+iii.236.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-741">[741]</a> He wrote
+to his servant Frank from Heale on Sept. l6:&mdash;'As Thursday
+[the 18th] is my birthday I would have a little dinner got, and
+would have you invite Mrs. Desmoulins, Mrs. Davis that was about
+Mrs. Williams, and Mr. Allen, and Mrs. Gardiner.' Croker's
+Boswell<i>, p.739. See</i> ante<i>, iii.157, note 3.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-742">[742]</a> Dr.
+Burney had just lost Mr. Bewley, 'the Broom Gentleman' (ante<i>,
+p. 134), and Mr. Crisp. Dr. Burney's</i> Memoirs<i>, ii.323, 352.
+For Mr. Crisp, see Macaulay's</i> Review <i>of Mme.
+D'Arblay's</i> Diary. Essays<i>, ed. 1874, iv.104.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-743">[743]</a> He wrote
+of her to Mrs. Montagu:&mdash;'Her curiosity was universal, her
+knowledge was very extensive, and she sustained forty years of
+misery with steady fortitude. Thirty years and more she had been
+my companion, and her death has left me very desolate.' Croker's
+Boswell<i>, p. 739. This letter brought to a close his quarrel
+with Mrs. Montagu (</i>ante<i>, p. 64).</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-744">[744]</a> On Sept.
+22 he wrote to Mrs. Thrale:&mdash;'If excision should be delayed,
+there is danger of a gangrene. You would not have me for fear of
+pain perish in putrescence. I shall, I hope, with trust in
+eternal mercy, lay hold of the possibility of life which yet
+remains.' Piozzi Letters<i>, ii.312.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-745">[745]</a> Rather
+more than seven years ago. Ante<i>, ii.82, note 2.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-746">[746]</a> Mrs.
+Anna Williams. BOSWELL.</p>
+<p><a name="note-747">[747]</a> See
+ante<i>, p. 163, and Boswell's</i> Hebrides<i>, Nov 2.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-748">[748]</a> Dated
+Oct. 27. Piozzi Letters<i>, ii.321.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-749">[749]</a>
+According to Mrs. Piozzi (Letters<i>, ii.387), he said to Mrs.
+Siddons:&mdash;'You see, Madam, wherever you go there are no
+seats to be got.' Sir Joshua also paid her a fine compliment. 'He
+never marked his own name [on a picture],' says Northcote,
+'except in the instance of Mrs. Siddons's portrait as the Tragic
+Muse, when he wrote his name upon the hem of her garment. "I
+could not lose," he said, "the honour this opportunity offered to
+me for my name going down to posterity on the hem of your
+garment."' Northcote's</i> Reynolds<i>, i. 246. In Johnson's</i>
+Works<i>, ed. 1787, xi. 207, we read that 'he said of Mrs.
+Siddons that she appeared to him to be one of the few persons
+that the two great corrupters of mankind, money and reputation,
+had not spoiled.'</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-750">[750]</a> 'Indeed,
+Dr. Johnson,' said Miss Monckton, 'you must <i>see Mrs. Siddons.'
+'Well, Madam, if you desire it, I will go. See her I shall not,
+nor hear her; but I'll go, and that will do.' Mme. D'Arblay's</i>
+Diary<i>, ii. 198.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-751">[751]</a> 'Mrs.
+Porter, the tragedian, was so much the favourite of her time,
+that she was welcomed on the stage when she trod it by the help
+of a stick.' Piozzi Letters<i>, ii. 319.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-752">[752]</a> He
+said:&mdash;'Mrs. Clive was the best player I ever saw.'
+Boswell's Hebrides, post<i>, v. 126. See</i> ante<i>, p. 7. She
+was for many years the neighbour and friend of Horace
+Walpole.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-753">[753]</a> She
+acted the heroine in Irene. Ante<i>, i. 197. 'It is wonderful how
+little mind she had,' he once said.</i> Ante<i>, ii. 348. See
+Boswell's</i> Hebrides, post<i>, v. 126.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-754">[754]</a> See
+ante<i>, iii. 183.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-755">[755]</a> See
+ante, iii. 184.</p>
+<p><a name="note-756">[756]</a>
+'Garrick's great distinction is his universality,' Johnson said.
+'He can represent all modes of life, but that of an easy,
+fine-bred gentleman.' Boswell's Hebrides, post<i>, v. 126.
+See</i> ante<i>, iii. 35. Horace Walpole wrote of Garrick in 1765
+(</i>Letters<i>, iv. 335):&mdash;'Several actors have pleased me
+more, though I allow not in so many parts. Quin in Falstaff was
+as excellent as Garrick in</i> Lear<i>. Old Johnson far more
+natural in everything he attempted; Mrs. Porter surpassed him in
+passionate tragedy. Cibber and O'Brien were what Garrick could
+never reach, coxcombs and men of fashion. Mrs. Clive is at least
+as perfect in low comedy.'</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-757">[757]</a> See
+ante<i>, ii. 465.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-758">[758]</a> Mr.
+Kemble told Mr. Croker that 'Mrs. Siddons's pathos in the last
+scene of The Stranger <i>quite overcame him, but he always
+endeavoured to restrain any impulses which might interfere with
+his previous study of his part.' Croker's</i> Boswell<i>, p. 742.
+Diderot, writing of the qualifications of a great actor,
+says:&mdash;'Je lui veux beaucoup de jugement; je le veux
+spectateur froid et tranquille de la nature humaine; qu'il ait
+par cons&eacute;quent beaucoup de finesse, mais nulle
+sensibilit&eacute;, ou, ce qui est la m&ecirc;me chose, l'art de
+tout imiter, et une &eacute;gale aptitude &agrave; toutes sortes
+de caract&egrave;res et de r&ocirc;les; s'il &eacute;tait
+sensible, il lui serait impossible de jouer dix fois de suite le
+m&ecirc;me r&ocirc;le avec la m&ecirc;me chaleur et le m&ecirc;me
+succ&egrave;s; tr&egrave;s chaud &agrave; la premi&egrave;re
+repr&eacute;sentation, il serait &eacute;puis&eacute; et froid
+comme le marble &agrave; la troisi&egrave;me,' &amp;c.
+Diderot's</i> Works <i>(ed. 1821), iii. 274. See Boswell's</i>
+Hebrides, post<i>, v. 46.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-759">[759]</a> My
+worthy friend, Mr. John Nichols, was present when Mr. Henderson,
+the actor, paid a visit to Dr. Johnson; and was received in a
+very courteous manner. See Gent. Mag<i>. June, 1791.</i></p>
+<p>I found among Dr. Johnson's papers, the following letter to
+him, from the celebrated Mrs. Bellamy [ante<i>, i.
+326]:&mdash;</i></p>
+<p>'To DR. JOHNSON.</p>
+<center>'SIR,</center>
+<p>'The flattering remembrance of the partiality you honoured me
+with, some years ago, as well as the humanity you are known to
+possess, has encouraged me to solicit your patronage at my
+Benefit.</p>
+<p>'By a long Chancery suit, and a complicated train of
+unfortunate events, I am reduced to the greatest distress; which
+obliges me, once more, to request the indulgence of the
+publick.</p>
+<p>'Give me leave to solicit the honour of your company, and to
+assure you, if you grant my request, the gratification I shall
+feel, from being patronized by Dr. Johnson, will be infinitely
+superiour to any advantage that may arise from the Benefit; as I
+am, with the profoundest respect, Sir,</p>
+<p>'Your most obedient, humble servant, G. A. BELLAMY. No. 10
+Duke-street, St. James's, May 11, 1783.'</p>
+<p>I am happy in recording these particulars, which prove that my
+illustrious friend lived to think much more favourably of Players
+than he appears to have done in the early part of his life.
+BOSWELL. Mr. Nichols, describing Henderson's visit to Johnson,
+says:&mdash;'The conversation turning on the merits of a certain
+dramatic writer, Johnson said: "I never did the man an injury;
+but he would persist in reading his tragedy to me."' Gent.
+Mag<i>: 1791, p. 500.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-760">[760]</a> Piozzi
+Letters<i>, vol. ii. p. 328. BOSWELL.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-761">[761]</a> Piozzi
+Letters<i>, vol. ii. p. 342. BOSWELL. The letter to Miss Thrale
+was dated Nov. 18. Johnson wrote on Dec. l3:&mdash;'You must all
+guess again at my friend. It was not till Dec. 31 that he told
+the name.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-762">[762]</a> Miss
+Burney, who visited him on this day, records:&mdash;'He was, if
+possible, more instructive, entertaining, good-humoured, and
+exquisitely fertile than ever.' Mme. D'Arblay's Diary<i>, ii.
+284. The day before he wrote to one of Mrs. Thrale's little
+daughters:&mdash;'I live here by my own self, and have had of
+late very bad nights; but then I have had a pig to dinner which
+Mr. Perkins gave me. Thus life is chequered.'</i> Piozzi
+Letters<i>, ii. 327.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-763">[763]</a> See
+ante<i>, i. 242.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-764">[764]</a> See
+ante<i>, i. 242.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-765">[765]</a> Nos. 26
+and 29.</p>
+<p><a name="note-766">[766]</a> Piozzi
+Letters<i>, i. 334. See</i> ante<i>, p. 75.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-767">[767]</a> He
+strongly opposed the war with America, and was one of Dr.
+Franklin's friends. Franklin's Memoirs<i>, ed. 1818, iii.
+108.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-768">[768]</a> It was
+of this tragedy that the following story is told in Rogers's
+Table-Talk<i>, p. 177:&mdash;'Lord Shelburne could say the most
+provoking things, and yet appear quite unconscious of their being
+so. In one of his speeches, alluding to Lord Carlisle, he
+said:&mdash;"The noble Lord has written a comedy." "No, a
+tragedy." "Oh, I beg pardon; I thought it was a comedy."' See</i>
+ante<i>, p. 113. Pope, writing to Mr. Cromwell on Aug. 19, 1709,
+says:&mdash;'One might ask the same question of a modern life,
+that Rich did of a modern play: "Pray do me the favour, Sir, to
+inform me is this your tragedy or your comedy?"' Pope's</i>
+Works<i>, ed. 1812, vi. 81.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-769">[769]</a> Mrs.
+Chapone, when she was Miss Mulso, had written 'four billets in
+The Rambler<i>, No. 10.'</i> Ante<i>, i. 203. She was one of the
+literary ladies who sat at Richardson's feet. Wraxall
+(</i>Memoirs<i>, ed. 1815, i. 155) says that 'under one of the
+most repulsive exteriors that any woman ever possessed she
+concealed very superior attainments and extensive knowledge.'
+Just as Mrs. Carter was often called 'the learned Mrs. Carter,'
+so Mrs. Chapone was known as 'the admirable Mrs.
+Chapone.'</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-770">[770]</a> See
+ante<i>, iii. 373.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-771">[771]</a> A few
+copies only of this tragedy have been printed, and given to the
+authour's friends. BOSWELL.</p>
+<p><a name="note-772">[772]</a> Dr.
+Johnson having been very ill when the tragedy was first sent to
+him, had declined the consideration of it. BOSWELL.</p>
+<p><a name="note-773">[773]</a> Johnson
+refers, I suppose, to a passage in Dryden which he quotes in his
+Dictionary <i>under</i> mechanick<i>:&mdash;'Many a fair precept
+in poetry is like a seeming demonstration in mathematicks, very
+specious in the diagram, but failing in the mechanick
+operation.'</i></p>
+<center><a name=
+"note-774">[774]</a></center>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'I could have borne my woes; that stranger Joy
+ Wounds while it smiles:&mdash;The long imprison'd wretch,
+ Emerging from the night of his damp cell,
+ Shrinks from the sun's bright beams; and that which flings
+ Gladness o'er all, to him is agony.' BOSWELL.
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p><a name="note-775">[775]</a> Lord
+Cockburn (Life of Lord Jeffrey<i>, i. 74) describing the
+representation of Scotland towards the close of last century, and
+in fact till the Reform Bill of 1832, says:&mdash;'There were
+probably not above 1500 or 2000 county electors in all Scotland;
+a body not too large to be held, hope included, in Government's
+hand. The election of either the town or the county member was a
+matter of such utter indifference to the people, that they often
+only knew of it by the ringing of a bell, or by seeing it
+mentioned next day in a newspaper.'</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-776">[776]</a> Six
+years later, when he was Praeses <i>of the Quarter-Sessions, he
+carried up to London an address to be presented to the Prince of
+Wales. 'This,' he wrote, 'will add something to my</i>
+conspicuousness<i>. Will that word do?'</i> Letters of
+Boswell<i>, p. 295.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-777">[777]</a> This
+part of this letter was written, as Johnson goes on to say, a
+considerable time before the conclusion. The Coalition Ministry,
+which was suddenly dismissed by the King on Dec. 19, was
+therefore still in power. Among Boswell's 'friends' was Burke.
+See ante<i>, p. 223.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-778">[778]</a> On Nov.
+22 he wrote to Dr. Taylor:-'I feel the weight of solitude very
+pressing; after a night of broken and uncomfortable slumber I
+rise to a solitary breakfast, and sit down in the evening with no
+companion. Sometimes, however, I try to read more and more.'
+Notes and Queries<i>, 6th S. v. 482. On Dec. 27 he wrote to Mrs.
+Thrale:&mdash;'You have more than once wondered at my complaint
+of solitude, when you hear that I am crowded with visits.</i>
+Inopem me copia fecit<i>. Visitors are no proper companions in
+the chamber of sickness. They come when I could sleep or read,
+they stay till I am weary.... The amusements and consolations of
+langour and depression are conferred by familiar and domestick
+companions, which can be visited or called at will.... Such
+society I had with Levett and Williams; such I had where I am
+never likely to have it more.'</i> Piozzi Letters<i>, ii.
+341.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-779">[779]</a> The
+confusion arising from the sudden dismissal of a Ministry which
+commanded a large majority in the House of Commons had been
+increased by the resignation, on Dec. 22, of Earl Temple, three
+days after his appointment as Secretary of State. Parl. Hist<i>.
+xxiv. 238.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-780">[780]</a> 'News I
+know none,' wrote Horace Walpole on Dec. 30, 1783 (Letters<i>,
+viii. 447), 'but that they are crying Peerages about the streets
+in barrows, and can get none off.' Thirty-three peerages were
+made in the next three years. (</i>Whitaker's Almanac<i>, 1886,
+p. 463.) Macaulay tells how this December 'a troop of Lords of
+the Bedchamber, of Bishops who wished to be translated, and of
+Scotch peers who wished to be reelected made haste to change
+sides.' Macaulay's</i> Writings and Speeches<i>, ed. 1871, p.
+407.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-781">[781]</a> See
+ante<i>, ii. 182. He died Oct. 28, 1788.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-782">[782]</a>'Prince
+Henry was the first encourager of remote navigation. What mankind
+has lost and gained by the genius and designs of this prince it
+would be long to compare, and very difficult to estimate. Much
+knowledge has been acquired, and much cruelty been committed; the
+belief of religion has been very little propagated, and its laws
+have been outrageously and enormously violated. The Europeans
+have scarcely visited any coast but to gratify avarice, and
+extend corruption; to arrogate dominion without right, and
+practise cruelty without incentive. Happy had it then been for
+the oppressed, if the designs of Henry had slept in his bosom,
+and surely more happy for the oppressors.' Johnson's Works<i>, v.
+219. See</i> ante<i>, ii. 478.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-783">[783]</a> 'The
+author himself,' wrote Gibbon (Misc. Works<i>, i. 220), 'is the
+best judge of his own performance; no one has so deeply meditated
+on the subject; no one is so sincerely interested in the
+event.'</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-784">[784]</a> Mickle,
+speaking in the third person as the Translator, says:&mdash; 'He
+is happy to be enabled to add Dr. Johnson to the number of those
+whose kindness for the man, and good wishes for the Translation,
+call for his sincerest gratitude.' Mickle's Lusiad<i>, p.
+ccxxv.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-785">[785]</a> A brief
+record, it should seem, is given, ante<i>, iii. 37.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-786">[786]</a> See
+ante<i>, iii. 106, 214.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-787">[787]</a> The
+author of Memoirs of the Life and Writings of Dr, Johnson <i>says
+(p. 153) that it was Johnson who determined Shaw to undertake
+this work. 'Sir,' he said, 'if you give the world a vocabulary of
+that language, while the island of Great Britain stands in the
+Atlantic Ocean your name will be mentioned.' On p. 156 is a
+letter by Johnson introducing Shaw to a friend.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-788">[788]</a> 'Why is
+not the original deposited in some publick library?' he asked.
+Boswell's Hebrides<i>, Nov. 10.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-789">[789]</a> See
+ante, i. 190.</p>
+<p><a name="note-790">[790]</a> See
+Appendix C.</p>
+<p><a name="note-791">[791]</a> 'Dec.
+27, 1873. The wearisome solitude of the long evenings did indeed
+suggest to me the convenience of a club in my neighbourhood, but
+I have been hindered from attending it by want of breath.' Piozzi
+Letters<i>, ii. 340. 'Dec. 31. I have much need of entertainment;
+spiritless, infirm, sleepless, and solitary, looking back with
+sorrow and forward with terrour.'</i> Ib<i>, p. 343.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-792">[792]</a> '"I
+think," said Mr. Cambridge, "it sounds more like some club that
+one reads of in The Spectator <i>than like a real club in these
+times; for the forfeits of a whole year will not amount to those
+of a single night in other clubs."' Mme. D'Arblay's</i> Diary<i>,
+ii. 290. Mr. Cambridge was thinking of the Two-penny Club.</i>
+Spectator<i>, No. ix.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-793">[793]</a> I was in
+Scotland when this Club was founded, and during all the winter.
+Johnson, however, declared I should be a member, and invented a
+word upon the occasion: 'Boswell (said he) is a very clubable
+<i>man.' When I came to town I was proposed by Mr. Barrington,
+and chosen. I believe there are few societies where there is
+better conversation or more decorum. Several of us resolved to
+continue it after our great founder was removed by death. Other
+members were added; and now, above eight years since that loss,
+we go on happily. BOSWELL. Mr. Croker says 'Johnson had already
+invented</i> unclubable <i>for Sir J. Hawkins,' and refers to a
+note by Dr. Burney (</i>ante<i>, i. 480, note I), in which
+Johnson is represented as saying of Hawkins, while he was still a
+member of the Literary Club:&mdash;'Sir John, Sir, is a very
+unclubable man.' But, as Mr. Croker points out (Croker's</i>
+Boswell<i>, p. 164), 'Hawkins was not knighted till long after he
+had left the club.' The anecdote, being proved to be inaccurate
+in one point, may be inaccurate in another, and may therefore
+belong to a much later date.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-794">[794]</a> See
+Appendix D.</p>
+<p><a name="note-795">[795]</a> Ben
+Jonson wrote Leges Convivales <i>that were 'engraven in marble
+over the chimney in the Apollo of the Old Devil Tavern, Temple
+Bar; that being his Club Room.' Jonson's</i> Works<i>, ed. 1756,
+vii. 291.</i></p>
+<center><a name="note-796">[796]</a>
+RULES.</center>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'To-day deep thoughts with me resolve to drench
+ In mirth, which after no repenting draws.'&mdash;MILTON.
+ ['To-day deep thoughts resolve with me <i>to drench
+ In mirth</i> that<i>, &amp;c.'</i> Sonnets<i>, xxi.]
+</i>
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>'The Club shall consist of four-and-twenty.</p>
+<p>'The meetings shall be on the Monday, Thursday, and Saturday
+of every week; but in the week before Easter there shall be no
+meeting.</p>
+<p>'Every member is at liberty to introduce a friend once a week,
+but not oftener.</p>
+<p>'Two members shall oblige themselves to attend in their turn
+every night from eight to ten, or to procure two to attend in
+their room.</p>
+<p>'Every member present at the Club shall spend at least
+sixpence; and every member who stays away shall forfeit
+three-pence.</p>
+<p>'The master of the house shall keep an account of the absent
+members; and deliver to the President of the night a list of the
+forfeits incurred.</p>
+<p>'When any member returns after absence, he shall immediately
+lay down his forfeits; which if he omits to do, the President
+shall require.</p>
+<p>'There shall be no general reckoning, but every man shall
+adjust his own expences.</p>
+<p>'The night of indispensable attendance will come to every
+member once a month. Whoever shall for three months together omit
+to attend himself, or by substitution, nor shall make any apology
+in the fourth month, shall be considered as having abdicated the
+Club.</p>
+<p>'When a vacancy is to be filled, the name of the candidate,
+and of the member recommending him, shall stand in the Club-room
+three nights. On the fourth he may be chosen by ballot; six
+members at least being present, and two-thirds of the ballot
+being in his favour; or the majority, should the numbers not be
+divisible by three.</p>
+<p>'The master of the house shall give notice, six days before,
+to each of those members whose turn of necessary attendance is
+come.</p>
+<p>'The notice may be in these words:&mdash;"Sir, On
+&mdash;&mdash; the &mdash;&mdash; of &mdash;&mdash; &mdash; will
+be your turn of presiding at the Essex-Head. Your company is
+therefore earnestly requested."</p>
+<p>'One penny shall be left by each member for the waiter.'</p>
+<p>Johnson's definition of a Club in this sense, in his
+Dictionary<i>, is, 'An assembly of good fellows, meeting under
+certain conditions.' BOSWELL.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-797">[797]</a> She had
+left him in the summer (ante<i>, p. 233), but perhaps she had
+returned.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-798">[798]</a> He
+received many acts of kindness from outside friends. On Dec. 31
+he wrote:&mdash;'I have now in the house pheasant, venison,
+turkey, and ham, all unbought. Attention and respect give
+pleasure, however late or however useless. But they are not
+useless when they are late; it is reasonable to rejoice, as the
+day declines, to find that it has been spent with the approbation
+of mankind.' Piozzi Letters<i>, ii. 343.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-799">[799]</a> 'Dec.
+16, 1783. I spent the afternoon with Dr. Johnson, who indeed is
+very ill, and whom I could hardly tell how to leave. He was very,
+very kind. Oh! what a cruel, heavy loss will he be! Dec. 30. I
+went to Dr. Johnson, and spent the evening with him. He was very
+indifferent indeed. There were some very disagreeable people with
+him; and he once affected me very much by turning suddenly to me,
+and grasping my hand and saying:&mdash;"The blister I have tried
+for my breath has betrayed some very bad tokens; but I will not
+terrify myself by talking of them. Ah! priez Dieu pour moi<i>."'
+Mme. D'Arblay's</i> Diary<i>, ii. 293, 5. 'I snatch,' he wrote a
+few weeks later, 'every lucid interval, and animate myself with
+such amusements as the time offers.'</i> Piozzi Letters<i>, ii.
+349.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-800">[800]</a> He had
+written to her on Nov. 10. See Croker's Boswell<i>, p.
+742.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-801">[801]</a> Hawkins
+(Life<i>, 562) says that this November Johnson said to
+him:&mdash;'What a man am I, who have got the better of three
+diseases, the palsy, the gout, and the asthma, and can now enjoy
+the conversation of my friends, without the interruptions of
+weakness or pain.'</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-802">[802]</a> 'The
+street [on London Bridge], which, before the houses fell to
+decay, consisted of handsome lofty edifices, pretty regularly
+built, was 20 feet broad, and the houses on each side generally
+26-1/2 feet deep.' After 1746 no more leases were granted, and
+the houses were allowed to run to ruin. In 1756-7 they were all
+taken down. Dodsley's London and its Environs<i>, ed. 1761, iv.
+136-143.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-803">[803]</a> In
+Lowndes's Bibl. Man<i>. i. 328 is given a list of nearly fifty of
+these books. Some of them were reprinted by Stace in 1810-13 in 6
+vols. quarto. Dr. Franklin, writing of the books that he bought
+in his boyhood says:&mdash;'My first acquisition was Bunyan's
+works in separate little volumes. I afterwards sold them to
+enable me to buy R. Burton's</i> Historical Collections<i>; they
+were small chapmen's books, and cheap. Forty volumes in all.'
+Franklin's</i> Memoirs<i>, i. 17.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-804">[804]</a> He wrote
+to Mrs. Thrale this same day:&mdash;'Alas, I had no sleep last
+night, and sit now panting over my paper. Dabit Deus his quoque
+finem.' ['This too the Gods shall end.' MORRIS, Virgil,
+<i>Aeneids</i>, 1.199.] <i>Piozzi Letters</i>, ii. 347.</p>
+<p><a name="note-805">[805]</a>
+Boswell's purpose in this <i>Letter</i> was to recommend the
+Scotch to address the King to express their satisfaction that the
+East India Company Bill had been rejected by the House of Lords.
+<i>Ib</i>. p. 39. 'Let us,' he writes, 'upon this awful occasion
+think only of <i>property</i> and <i>constitution</i>;' p. 42.
+'Let me add,' he says in concluding, 'that a dismission of the
+Portland Administration will probably disappoint an object which
+I have most ardently at heart;' p. 42. He was thinking no doubt
+of his 'expectations from the interest of an eminent person then
+in power' (ante, p. 223.)</p>
+<p><a name="note-806">[806]</a> On p. 4
+Boswell condemns the claim of Parliament to tax the American
+colonies as 'unjust and inexpedient.' 'This claim,' he says, 'was
+almost universally approved of in Scotland, where due
+consideration was had of the advantage of raising regiments.' He
+continues:&mdash;'When pleading at the bar of the House of
+Commons in a question concerning taxation, I avowed that opinion,
+declaring that the man in the world for whom I have the highest
+respect (Dr. Johnson) had not been able to convince me that
+<i>Taxation was no Tyranny</i>.'</p>
+<p><a name="note-807">[807]</a> Boswell
+wrote to Reynolds on Feb. 6:&mdash;'I intend to be in London next
+month, chiefly to attend upon Dr. Johnson with respectful
+affection.' Croker's <i>Boswell</i>, p. 748.</p>
+<p><a name="note-808">[808]</a> 'I have
+really hope from spring,' he wrote on Jan. 21, 'and am ready,
+like Almanzor, to bid the sun <i>fly swiftly</i>, and <i>leave
+weeks and months behind him</i>. The sun has looked for six
+thousand years upon the world to little purpose, if he does not
+know that a sick man is almost as impatient as a lover.'
+<i>Piozzi Letters</i>, ii. 347. Almanzor's speech is at the end
+of Dryden's <i>Conquest of Granada</i>:&mdash;</p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'Move swiftly, Sun, and fly a lover's pace;
+ Leave weeks and months behind thee in thy race.'
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>See <i>ante</i>, i. 332, where Johnson said, 'This distinction
+of seasons is produced only by imagination operating on luxury.
+To temperance every day is bright,' and <i>post</i>, Aug. 2,
+1784.</p>
+<p><a name="note-809">[809]</a> He died
+in the following August at Dover, on his way home. Walpole's
+<i>Letters</i>, viii. 494. See <i>ante</i>, iii. 250, 336, and
+<i>post</i>, Aug. 19, 1784.</p>
+<p><a name="note-810">[810]</a> On the
+last day of the old year he wrote:&mdash;'To any man who extends
+his thoughts to national consideration, the times are dismal and
+gloomy. But to a sick man, what is the publick?' <i>Piozzi
+Letters</i>, ii. 344.</p>
+<p>The original of the following note is in the admirable
+collection of autographs belonging to my friend, Mr. M. M.
+Holloway:&mdash;</p>
+<center>'TO THE REV. DR. TAYLOR,</center>
+<p>'in Ashbourne,</p>
+<p>'Derbyshire.</p>
+<center>'DEAR SIR,</center>
+<p>'I am still confined to the house, and one of my amusements is
+to write letters to my friends, though they, being busy in the
+common scenes of life, are not equally diligent in writing to me.
+Dr. Heberden was with me two or three days ago, and told me that
+nothing ailed me, which I was glad to hear, though I knew it not
+to be true. My nights are restless, my breath is difficult, and
+my lower parts continue tumid.</p>
+<p>'The struggle, you see, still continues between the two sets
+of ministers: those that are <i>out</i> and <i>in</i> one can
+scarce call them, for who is <i>out</i> or <i>in</i> is perhaps
+four times a day a new question. The tumult in government is, I
+believe, excessive, and the efforts of each party outrageously
+violent, with very little thought on any national interest, at a
+time when we have all the world for our enemies, when the King
+and parliament have lost even the titular dominion of America,
+and the real power of Government every where else. Thus Empires
+are broken down when the profits of administration are so great,
+that ambition is satisfied with obtaining them, and he that
+aspires to greatness needs do nothing more than talk himself into
+importance. He has then all the power which danger and conquest
+used formerly to give; he can raise a family and reward his
+followers.</p>
+<p>'Mr. Burke has just sent me his Speech upon the affairs of
+India, a volume of above a hundred pages closely printed. I will
+look into it; but my thoughts seldom now travel to great
+distances.</p>
+<p>'I would gladly know when you think to come hither, and
+whether this year you will come or no. If my life be continued, I
+know not well how I shall bestow myself.</p>
+<p>'I am, Sir,</p>
+<p>'Your affectionate &amp;c.,</p>
+<center>'SAM. JOHNSON.'</center>
+<p>'London, Jan. 24, 1784.'</p>
+<p><a name="note-811">[811]</a> See
+<i>post</i>, v. 48.</p>
+<p><a name="note-812">[812]</a> See
+<i>post</i>, p. 271.</p>
+<p><a name="note-813">[813]</a> I sent
+it to Mr. Pitt, with a letter, in which I thus expressed
+myself:&mdash;'My principles may appear to you too monarchical:
+but I know and am persuaded, they are not inconsistent with the
+true principles of liberty. Be this as it may, you, Sir, are now
+the Prime Minister, called by the Sovereign to maintain the
+rights of the Crown, as well as those of the people, against a
+violent faction. As such, you are entitled to the warmest support
+of every good subject in every department.' He answered:&mdash;'I
+am extremely obliged to you for the sentiments you do me the
+honour to express, and have observed with great pleasure the
+<i>zealous and able support</i> given to the CAUSE OF THE PUBLICK
+in the work you were so good to transmit to me.' BOSWELL. Five
+years later, and two years before <i>The Life of Johnson</i> was
+published, Boswell wrote to Temple:&mdash;'As to Pitt, he is an
+insolent fellow, but so able, that upon the whole I must support
+him against the <i>Coalition</i>; but I will <i>work</i> him, for
+he has behaved very ill to me. Can he wonder at my wishing for
+preferment, when men of the first family and fortune in England
+struggle for it?' <i>Letters of Boswell</i>, p. 295. Warburton
+said of Helvetius, whom he disliked, that, if he had met him, 'he
+would have <i>worked</i> him.' Walpole's <i>Letters</i>, iv.
+217.</p>
+<p><a name="note-814">[814]</a> Out of
+this offer, and one of a like nature made in 1779 (<i>ante</i>,
+iii. 418), Mr. Croker weaves a vast web of ridiculous
+suspicions.</p>
+<p><a name="note-815">[815]</a> From his
+garden at Prestonfield, where he cultivated that plant with such
+success, that he was presented with a gold medal by the Society
+of London for the Encouragement of Arts, Manufactures, and
+Commerce. BOSWELL.</p>
+<p><a name="note-816">[816]</a> In the
+original <i>effusion</i>. Johnson's <i>Works</i>, vii. 402.</p>
+<p><a name="note-817">[817]</a> Who had
+written him a very kind letter. BOSWELL.</p>
+<p><a name="note-818">[818]</a> On Jan.
+12 the Ministry had been in a minority of 39 in a House of 425;
+on March 8 the minority was reduced to one in a House of 381.
+Parliament was dissolved on the 25th. In the first division in
+the new Parliament the Ministry were in a majority of 97 in a
+House of 369. <i>Parl. Hist.</i> xxiv. 299, 744, 829.</p>
+<p><a name="note-819">[819]</a> See
+<i>ante</i>, p. 241.</p>
+<p><a name="note-820">[820]</a> 'In old
+Aberdeen stands the King's College, of which the first president
+was Hector Boece, or Boethius, who may be justly reverenced as
+one of the revivers of elegant learning.' Johnson's <i>Works</i>,
+ix. 11.</p>
+<p><a name="note-821">[821]</a> See
+<i>ante</i>, iii. 104.</p>
+<p><a name="note-822">[822]</a> In his
+dining-room, no doubt, among 'the very respectable people' whose
+portraits hung there. <i>Ante</i>, p. 203, note.</p>
+<p><a name="note-823">[823]</a> Horace
+Walpole (<i>Letters</i>, viii. 466) wrote on March 30:&mdash;'The
+nation is intoxicated, and has poured in Addresses of Thanks to
+the Crown for exerting the prerogative <i>against</i> the
+palladium of the people.'</p>
+<p><a name="note-824">[824]</a> The
+election lasted from April 1 to May 16. Fox was returned second
+on the poll. <i>Ann. Reg.</i> xxvii. 190.</p>
+<p><a name="note-825">[825]</a> He was
+returned also for Kirkwall, for which place he sat for nearly a
+year, while the scrutiny of the Westminster election was dragging
+on. <i>Parl. Hist</i>. xxiv. 799.</p>
+<p><a name="note-826">[826]</a> Hannah
+More wrote on March 8 (<i>Memoirs</i>, i. 310):&mdash;'I am sure
+you will honour Mr. Langton, when I tell you he is come on
+purpose to stay with Dr. Johnson, and that during his illness. He
+has taken a little lodging in Fleet-street in order to be near,
+to devote himself to him. He has as much goodness as learning,
+and that is saying a bold thing of one of the first Greek
+scholars we have.'</p>
+<p><a name="note-827">[827]</a> Floyer
+was the Lichfield physician on whose advice Johnson was
+'<i>touched</i>' by Queen Anne. <i>Ante</i>, i. 42, 91, and
+<i>post</i>, July 20, 1784.</p>
+<p><a name="note-828">[828]</a> To which
+Johnson returned this answer:&mdash;</p>
+<center>'TO THE RIGHT HONOURABLE EARL OF PORTMORE.</center>
+<p>'Dr. Johnson acknowledges with great respect the honour of
+Lord Portmore's notice. He is better than he was; and will, as
+his Lordship directs, write to Mr. Langton.</p>
+<p>'Bolt-court, Fleet-street,</p>
+<p>April 13, 1784.'</p>
+<p>BOSWELL. Johnson here assumes his title of Doctor, which
+Boswell says (<i>ante</i>, ii. 332, note 1), so far as he knew,
+he never did. Perhaps the letter has been wrongly copied, or
+perhaps Johnson thought that, in writing to a man of title, he
+ought to assume such title as he himself had.</p>
+<p><a name="note-829">[829]</a> The
+eminent painter, representative of the ancient family of Homfrey
+(now Humphry) in the west of England; who, as appears from their
+arms which they have invariably used, have been, (as I have seen
+authenticated by the best authority,) one of those among the
+Knights and Esquires of honour who are represented by Holinshed
+as having issued from the Tower of London on coursers apparelled
+for the justes, accompanied by ladies of honour, leading every
+one a Knight, with a chain of gold, passing through the streets
+of London into Smithfield, on Sunday, at three o'clock in the
+afternoon, being the first Sunday after Michaelmas, in the
+fourteenth year of King Richard the Second. This family once
+enjoyed large possessions, but, like others, have lost them in
+the progress of ages. Their blood, however, remains to them well
+ascertained; and they may hope in the revolution of events, to
+recover that rank in society for which, in modern times, fortune
+seems to be an indispensable requisite. BOSWELL.</p>
+<p><a name="note-830">[830]</a> Son of
+Mr. Samuel Paterson. BOSWELL. In the first two editions after
+'Paterson' is added 'eminent for his knowledge of books.' See
+<i>ante</i>, iii. 90.</p>
+<p><a name="note-831">[831]</a> Humphry,
+on his first coming to London, poor and unfriended, was helped by
+Reynolds. Northcote's <i>Reynolds</i>, ii. 174.</p>
+<p><a name="note-832">[832]</a> On April
+21 he wrote:&mdash;'After a confinement of 129 days, more than
+the third part of a year, and no inconsiderable part of human
+life, I this day returned thanks to God in St. Clement's Church
+for my recovery.' <i>Piozzi Letters</i>, ii. 365.</p>
+<p><a name="note-833">[833]</a> On April
+26 he wrote:&mdash;'On Saturday I showed myself again to the
+living world at the Exhibition; much and splendid was the
+company, but like the Doge of Genoa at Paris [Versailles,
+Voltaire, <i>Si&egrave;cle de Louis XIV</i>, chap, xiv.], I
+admired nothing but myself. I went up the stairs to the pictures
+without stopping to rest or to breathe,</p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ "In all the madness of superfluous health."
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>[Pope's <i>Essay on Man</i>, iii. 3.] The Prince of Wales had
+promised to be there; but when we had waited an hour and a half,
+sent us word that he could not come.' <i>Piozzi Letters</i>, ii.
+367. 'The first Gentleman in Europe' was twenty-one years old
+when he treated men like Johnson and Reynolds with this
+insolence. Mr. Forster (<i>Life of Goldsmith</i>, ii. 244) says
+that it was at this very dinner that 'Johnson left his seat by
+desire of the Prince of Wales, and went to the head of the table
+to be introduced.' He does not give his authority for the
+statement.</p>
+<p><a name="note-834">[834]</a> Mr.
+Croker wrote in 1847 that he had 'seen it very lately framed and
+glazed, in possession of the lady to whom it was addressed.'
+Croker's <i>Boswell</i>, p. 753.</p>
+<p><a name="note-835">[835]</a> Shortly
+before he begged one of Mrs. Thrale's daughters 'never to think
+that she had arithmetic enough.' <i>Ante</i>, p. 171, note 3. See
+<i>ante</i>, iii. 207, note 3.</p>
+<p><a name="note-836">[836]</a> Cowper
+wrote on May 10 to the Rev. John Newton:&mdash;'We rejoice in the
+account you give us of Dr. Johnson. His conversion will indeed be
+a singular proof of the omnipotence of Grace; and the more
+singular, the more decided.' Southey's <i>Cowper</i>, xv. 150.
+Johnson, in a prayer that he wrote on April 11,
+said:&mdash;'Enable me, O Lord, to glorify Thee for that
+knowledge of my corruption, and that sense of Thy wrath, which my
+disease and weakness and danger awakened in my mind.' <i>Pr. and
+Med.</i> p. 217.</p>
+<p><a name="note-837">[837]</a> Mr.
+Croker suggests <i>immediate</i>.</p>
+<p><a name="note-838">[838]</a> 'The
+effectual fervent prayer of a righteous man availeth much.'
+<i>St. James</i>, v. 16.</p>
+<p><a name="note-839">[839]</a> Upon
+this subject there is a very fair and judicious remark in the
+life of Dr. Abernethy, in the first edition of the <i>Biographia
+Britannica</i>, which I should have been glad to see in his life
+which has been written for the second edition of that valuable
+work. 'To deny the exercise of a particular providence in the
+Deity's government of the world is certainly impious: yet nothing
+serves the cause of the scorner more than an incautious forward
+zeal in determining the particular instances of it.'</p>
+<p>In confirmation of my sentiments, I am also happy to quote
+that sensible and elegant writer Mr. <i>Melmoth</i> [see
+<i>ante</i>, iii. 422], in Letter VIII. of his collection,
+published under the name of <i>Fitzosborne</i>. 'We may safely
+assert, that the belief of a particular Providence is founded
+upon such probable reasons as may well justify our assent. It
+would scarce, therefore, be wise to renounce an opinion which
+affords so firm a support to the soul, in those seasons wherein
+she stands in most need of assistance, merely because it is not
+possible, in questions of this kind, to solve every difficulty
+which attends them.' BOSWELL.</p>
+<p><a name="note-840">[840]</a> I was
+sorry to observe Lord Monboddo avoid any communication with Dr.
+Johnson. I flattered myself that I had made them very good
+friends (see <i>Journal of a Tour to the Hebrides</i>, third
+edit. p. 67, <i>post</i>, v. 80), but unhappily his Lordship had
+resumed and cherished a violent prejudice against my illustrious
+friend, to whom I must do the justice to say, there was on his
+part not the least anger, but a good-humoured sportiveness. Nay,
+though he knew of his Lordship's indisposition towards him, he
+was even kindly; as appeared from his inquiring of me after him,
+by an abbreviation of his name, 'Well, how does <i>Monny</i>?'
+BOSWELL. Boswell (<i>Hebrides, post</i>, v. 74) says:&mdash;'I
+knew Lord Monboddo and Dr. Johnson did not love each other; yet I
+was unwilling not to visit his lordship, and was also curious to
+see them together.' Accordingly, he brought about a meeting. Four
+years later, in 1777 (<i>ante</i>, iii. 102), Monboddo received
+from Johnson a copy of his Journey to the Hebrides. They met
+again in London in 1780 (Piozzi Letters, ii. III), and perhaps
+then quarrelled afresh. Dr. Seattle wrote on Feb. 28, 1785:-'Lord
+Monboddo's hatred of Johnson was singular; he would not allow him
+to know anything but Latin grammar, "and that," says he, "I know
+as well as he does." I never heard Johnson say anything severe of
+him, though when he mentioned his name, he generally "grinned
+horribly a ghastly smile,"' ['Grinned horrible,' &amp;c.
+<i>Paradise Lost</i>, ii. 846.] Forbes's <i>Beattie</i>, p. 333.
+The use of the abbreviation <i>Monny</i> on Johnson's part
+scarcely seems a proof of kindliness. See <i>ante</i>, i. 453,
+where he said:--'Why, Sir, _Sherry_ is dull, naturally dull,'
+&amp;c.; and iii. 84, note 2, where he said:&mdash;'I should have
+thought <i>Mund</i> Burke would have had more sense;' see also
+Rogers's <i>Boswelliana</i>, p. 216, where he
+said:&mdash;'<i>Derry</i> [Derrick] may do very well while he can
+outrun his character; but the moment that his character gets up
+with him he is gone.'</p>
+<p><a name="note-841">[841]</a> On May
+13 he wrote:&mdash;' Now I am broken loose, my friends seem
+willing enough to see me. ... But I do not now drive the world
+about; the world drives or draws me. I am very weak.' <i>Piozzi
+Letters</i>, ii. 369.</p>
+<p><a name="note-842">[842]</a> See
+<i>ante,</i> iii, 443.</p>
+<p><a name="note-843">[843]</a> See
+<i>ante,</i> p. 197.</p>
+<p><a name="note-844">[844]</a> Boswell
+himself, likely enough.</p>
+<p><a name="note-845">[845]</a> Verses
+on the death of Mr. Levett. BOSWELL. <i>Ante,</i> p. 138</p>
+<p><a name="note-846">[846]</a> If it
+was Boswell to whom this advice was given, it is not unlikely
+that he needed it. The meagreness of his record of Johnson's talk
+at this season may have been due, as seems to have happened
+before, to too much drinking. <i>Ante,</i> p.88, note 1.</p>
+<p><a name="note-847">[847]</a>
+<i>Ante,</i> ii. 100.</p>
+<p><a name="note-848">[848]</a> George
+Steevens. See <i>ante,</i> iii. 281.</p>
+<p><a name="note-849">[849]</a>
+Forty-six years earlier Johnson wrote of this lady:-'I have
+composed a Greek epigram to Eliza, and think she ought to be
+celebrated in as many different languages as Lewis le Grand.'
+<i>Ante</i>, i. 122. Miss Burney described her in 1780 as 'really
+a noble-looking woman; I never saw age so graceful in the female
+sex yet; her whole face seems to beam with goodness, piety, and
+philanthropy.' Mme. D'Arblay's <i>Diary</i>, i. 373.</p>
+<p><a name="note-850">[850]</a> 'Mrs.
+Thrale says that though Mrs. Lennox's books are generally
+approved, nobody likes her.' <i>Ib.</i> p. 91. See <i>ante</i>,
+i. 255, and iv. 10.</p>
+<p><a name="note-851">[851]</a> 'Sept.
+1778. MRS. THRALE. "Mrs. Montagu is the first woman for literary
+knowledge in England, and if in England, I hope I may say in the
+world." DR. JOHNSON. "I believe you may, Madam. She diffuses more
+knowledge in her conversation than any woman I know, or, indeed,
+almost any man." MRS. THRALE. "I declare I know no man equal to
+her, take away yourself and Burke, for that art."' Mme.
+D'Arblay's <i>Diary</i>, i. 118. It is curious that Mrs. Thrale
+and Boswell should both thus instance Burke. Miss Burney writes
+of her in much more moderate terms:&mdash;'Allowing a little for
+parade and ostentation, which her power in wealth and rank in
+literature offer some excuse for, her conversation is very
+agreeable; she is always reasonable and sensible, and sometimes
+instructive and entertaining.' <i>Ib.</i> p. 325. See
+<i>ante</i>, ii. 88, note 3. These five ladies all lived to a
+great age. Mrs. Montagu was 80 when she died; Mrs. Lennox, 83;
+Miss Burney (Mme. D'Arblay), 87; Miss More and Mrs. (Miss)
+Carter, 88. Their hostess, Mrs. Garrick, was 97 or 98.</p>
+<p><a name="note-852">[852]</a> Miss
+Burney, describing how she first saw Burke, says:&mdash;'I had
+been told that Burke was not expected; yet I could conclude this
+gentleman to be no other. There was an evident, a striking
+superiority in his demeanour, his eye, his motions, that
+announced him no common man.' Mme. D'Arblay's <i>Diary</i>, ii.
+145. See <i>ante</i>, ii. 450, where Johnson said of
+Burke:&mdash;'His stream of mind is perpetual;' and Boswell's
+<i>Hebrides post,</i>, v. 32, and Prior's <i>Life of Burke</i>,
+fifth edition, p. 58.</p>
+<p><a name="note-853">[853]</a>
+<i>Kennel</i> is a strong word to apply to Burke; but, in his
+jocularity, he sometimes 'let himself down' to indelicate
+stories. In the House of Commons he had told one&mdash;and a very
+stupid one too&mdash;not a year before. <i>Parl. Hist</i>, xxiii.
+918. Horace Walpole speaks of Burke's 'pursuit of wit even to
+puerility.' <i>Journal of the Reign of George III</i>, i. 443. He
+adds (<i>ib</i>. ii. 26):&mdash;'Burke himself always aimed at
+wit, but was not equally happy in public and private. In the
+former, nothing was so luminous, so striking, so abundant; in
+private, it was forced, unnatural, and bombast.' See <i>ante</i>,
+p. 104, where Wilkes said that in his oratory 'there was a
+strange want of taste.'</p>
+<p><a name="note-854">[854]</a>
+<i>Journal of a Tour to the Hebrides</i>, third edition, p. 20
+[<i>post</i>, v. 32.] BOSWELL. See also <i>ante</i>, i. 453, and
+iii. 323.</p>
+<p><a name="note-855">[855]</a> I have
+since heard that the report was not well founded; but the elation
+discovered by Johnson in the belief that it was true, shewed a
+noble ardour for literary fame. BOSWELL. Johnson wrote on Feb.
+9:&mdash;'One thing which I have just heard you will think to
+surpass expectation. The chaplain of the factory at Petersburgh
+relates that the <i>Rambler</i> is now, by the command of the
+Empress, translating into Russian, and has promised, when it is
+printed, to send me a copy.' <i>Piozzi Letters,</i> ii. 349.
+Stockdale records (<i>Memoirs,</i> ii. 98) that in 1773 the
+Empress of Russia engaged 'six English literary gentlemen for
+instructors of her young nobility in her Academy at St.
+Petersburgh.' He was offered one of the posts. Her zeal may have
+gone yet further, and she may have wished to open up English
+literature to those who could not read English. Beauclerk's
+library was offered for sale to the Russian Ambassador.
+<i>Ante,</i> iii. 420. Miss Burney, in 1789, said that a
+newspaper reported that 'Angelica Kauffmann is making drawings
+from <i>Evelina</i> for the Empress of Russia.' Mme. D'Arblay's
+<i>Diary,</i> v. 35.</p>
+<center><a name=
+"note-856">[856]</a></center>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ '&mdash;me peritus
+ Disect Iber, Rhodanique potor.'
+ 'To him who drinks the rapid Rhone
+ Shall Horace, deathless bard, be known.'
+ FRANCIS. Horace, <i>Odes</i>, ii. 20. 19.
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p><a name="note-857">[857]</a> See
+<i>ante</i>, iii. 49.</p>
+<p><a name="note-858">[858]</a> See
+<i>post</i>, June 12, 1784.</p>
+<p><a name="note-859">[859]</a> See
+<i>ante</i>, p. 126.</p>
+<p><a name="note-860">[860]</a> H. C.
+Robinson (<i>Diary</i>, i. 29) describes him as 'an author on an
+infinity of subjects; his books were on Law, History, Poetry,
+Antiquities, Divinity, Politics.' He adds (<i>ib</i>. p.
+49l):&mdash;'Godwin, Lofft, and Thelwall are the only three
+persons I know (except Hazlitt) who grieve at the late
+events'&mdash;the defeat of Napoleon at Waterloo. He found long
+after his death 'a MS. by him in these words:&mdash;"Rousseau,
+Euripides, Tasso, Racine, Cicero, Virgil, Petrarch, Richardson.
+If I had five millions of years to live upon this earth, these I
+would read daily with increasing delight."' <i>Ib</i>. iii.
+283.</p>
+<p><a name="note-861">[861]</a> Dunciad,
+iv. 394, note.</p>
+<p><a name="note-862">[862]</a> The King
+opened Parliament this day. Hannah More during the election found
+the mob favourable to Fox. One night, in a Sedan chair, she was
+stopped with the news that it was not safe to go through Covent
+Garden. 'There were a hundred armed men,' she was told, 'who,
+suspecting every chairman belonged to Brookes's, would fall upon
+us. A vast number of people followed me, crying out "It is Mrs.
+Fox; none but Mr. Fox's wife would dare to come into Covent
+Garden in a chair; she is going to canvas in the dark."' H.
+More's <i>Memoirs</i>, i. 316. Horace Walpole wrote on April
+11:&mdash;'In truth Mr. Fox has all the popularity in
+Westminster.' <i>Letters</i>, viii. 469.</p>
+<p><a name="note-863">[863]</a> See
+<i>post</i>, under June 9, 1784, where Johnson describes Fox as
+'a man who has divided the kingdom with Caesar.'</p>
+<p><a name="note-864">[864]</a> See
+<i>ante</i>, p. 111.</p>
+<p><a name="note-865">[865]</a> See
+<i>ante</i>, ii. 162.</p>
+<p><a name="note-866">[866]</a> Boswell
+twice speaks of W. G. Hamilton as 'an eminent friend' of Johnson.
+He was not Boswell's friend. (Ante, p. 111, and <i>post</i>,
+under Dec. 20, 1784.) But Boswell does not here say 'a friend
+<i>of ours</i>.' By 'eminent friend' Burke is generally meant,
+and he, possibly, is meant here. Boswell, it is true, speaks of
+his 'orderly and amiable domestic habits' (<i>ante</i>, iii.
+378); but then Boswell mentions the person here 'as a virtuous
+man.' If Burke is meant, Johnson's suspicions would seem to be
+groundless.</p>
+<p><a name="note-867">[867]</a> See
+<i>ante</i>, p. 168, where Johnson 'wonders why he should have
+any enemies.'</p>
+<p><a name="note-868">[868]</a> After
+all, I cannot but be of opinion, that as Mr. Langton was
+seriously requested by Dr. Johnson to mention what appeared to
+him erroneous in the character of his friend, he was bound, as an
+honest man, to intimate what he really thought, which he
+certainly did in the most delicate manner; so that Johnson
+himself, when in a quiet frame of mind, was pleased with it. The
+texts suggested are now before me, and I shall quote a few of
+them. 'Blessed are the meek, for they shall inherit the earth.'
+<i>Mat.</i> v. 5.&mdash;'I therefore, the prisoner of the LORD,
+beseech you, that ye walk worthy of the vocation wherewith ye are
+called; with all lowliness and meekness, with long-suffering,
+forbearing one another in love.' <i>Ephes.</i> v. [iv.] 1,
+2.&mdash;'And above all these things put on charity, which is the
+bond of perfectness.' <i>Col.</i> iii. 14.&mdash;'Charity
+suffereth long and is kind; charity envieth not, charity vaunteth
+not itself, is not puffed up: doth not behave itself unseemly, is
+not easily provoked.' 1 <i>Cor.</i> xiii. 4, 5. BOSWELL. Johnson,
+in <i>The Rambler,</i> No. 28, had almost foretold what would
+happen. 'For escaping these and a thousand other deceits many
+expedients have been proposed. Some have recommended the frequent
+consultation of a wise friend, admitted to intimacy and
+encouraged by sincerity. But this appears a remedy by no means
+adapted to general use; for, in order to secure the virtue of
+one, it pre-supposes more virtue in two than will generally be
+found. In the first, such a desire of rectitude and amendment as
+may incline him to hear his own accusation from the mouth of him
+whom he esteems, and by whom therefore he will always hope that
+his faults are not discovered; and in the second, such zeal and
+honesty as will make him content for his friend's advantage to
+lose his kindness.'</p>
+<p><a name="note-869">[869]</a> Member
+for Dumfries.</p>
+<p><a name="note-870">[870]</a> Malone
+points out that the passage is not in Bacon, but in Boyle, and
+that it is quoted in Johnson's <i>Dictionary</i> (in the later
+editions only), under <i>cross-bow.</i> It is as
+follows:&mdash;'Testimony is like the shot of a long-bow, which
+owes its efficacy to the force of the shooter; argument is like
+the shot of the cross-bow, equally forcible whether discharged by
+a giant or a dwarf.' See Smollett's <i>Works</i>, ed. 1797, i.
+cliv, for a somewhat fuller account by Dr. Moore of what was said
+by Johnson this evening.</p>
+<p><a name="note-871">[871]</a> The
+Peace made by that very able statesman, the Earl of Shelburne,
+now Marquis of Lansdown, which may fairly be considered as the
+foundation of all the prosperity of Great Britain since that
+time. BOSWELL. In the winter of 1782-83, preliminary treaties of
+peace were made with the United States, France, and Spain; and a
+suspension of arms with Holland. The Ode is made up of such lines
+as the following:&mdash;</p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'While meek philosophy explores
+ Creation's vast stupendous round,
+ With piercing gaze sublime she soars,
+ And bursts the system's distant bound.'
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p><i>Gent. Mag.</i>; 1783. p. 245.</p>
+<p><a name="note-872">[872]</a> In the
+first edition of my Work, the epithet <i>amiable</i> was given. I
+was sorry to be obliged to strike it out; but I could not in
+justice suffer it to remain, after this young lady had not only
+written in favour of the savage Anarchy with which France has
+been visited, but had (as I have been informed by good
+authority), walked, without horrour, over the ground at the
+Thuillieries, when it was strewed with the naked bodies of the
+faithful Swiss Guards, who were barbarously massacred for having
+bravely defended, against a crew of ruffians, the Monarch whom
+they had taken an oath to defend. From Dr. Johnson she could now
+expect not endearment but repulsion. BOSWELL.</p>
+<p><a name="note-873">[873]</a> Rogers
+(<i>Table-Talk</i>, p. 50) described her as 'a very fascinating
+person,' and narrated a curious anecdote which he heard from her
+about the Reign of Terror.</p>
+<p><a name="note-874">[874]</a> This
+year, forming as it did exactly a quarter of a century since
+Handel's death, and a complete century since his birth, was
+sought, says the <i>Gent. Mag.</i> (1784, p. 457) as the first
+public periodical occasion for bringing together musical
+performers in England. Dr. Burney writes (<i>Ann. Reg.</i> 1784,
+p. 331):&mdash;'Foreigners must have been astonished at so
+numerous a band, moving in such exact measure, without the
+assistance of a Coryphaeus to beat time. Rousseau says that "the
+more time is beaten, the less it is kept."' There were upwards of
+500 performers.</p>
+<p><a name="note-875">[875]</a> See
+<i>ante</i>, iii. 242.</p>
+<p><a name="note-876">[876]</a> Lady
+Wronghead, whispers Mrs. Motherly, pointing to Myrtilla.</p>
+<p>'<i>Mrs. Motherly</i>. Only a niece of mine, Madam, that lives
+with me; she will be proud to give your Ladyship any assistance
+in her power.</p>
+<p>'<i>Lady Wronghead</i>. A pretty sort of a young
+woman&mdash;Jenny, you two must be acquainted.</p>
+<p>'<i>Jenny</i>. O Mamma! I am never strange in a strange place.
+<i>Salutes Myrtilla</i>.' <i>The Provoked Husband; or, A Journey
+to London</i>, act ii. sc. 1, by Vanbrugh and Colley Gibber. It
+was not therefore Squire Richard whom Johnson quoted, but his
+sister.</p>
+<p><a name="note-877">[877]</a> See
+<i>ante</i>, p. 191.</p>
+<p><a name="note-878">[878]</a> See
+Macaulay's <i>Essays</i>, ed. 1843, i. 353, for his application
+of this story.</p>
+<p><a name="note-879">[879]</a> She too
+was learned; for according to Hannah More (<i>Memoirs</i>, i.
+292) she had learnt Hebrew, merely to be useful to her
+husband.</p>
+<center><a name=
+"note-880">[880]</a></center>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'This day then let us not be told,
+ That you are sick, and I grown old;
+ Nor think on our approaching ills,
+ And talk of spectacles and pills.'
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>Swift's <i>Lines on Stella's Birthday</i>, 1726-27. Works, ed.
+1803, xi. 21.</p>
+<p><a name="note-881">[881]</a> Dr.
+Newton, in his <i>Account of his own Life</i>, after
+animadverting upon Mr. Gibbon's <i>History</i>, says, 'Dr.
+Johnson's <i>Lives of the Poets</i> afforded more amusement; but
+candour was much hurt and offended at the malevolence that
+predominates in every part. Some passages, it must be allowed,
+are judicious and well written, but make not sufficient
+compensation for so much spleen and ill humour. Never was any
+biographer more sparing of his praise, or more abundant in his
+censures. He seemingly delights more in exposing blemishes, than
+in recommending beauties; slightly passes over excellencies,
+enlarges upon imperfections, and not content with his own severe
+reflections, revives old scandal, and produces large quotations
+from the forgotten works of former criticks. His reputation was
+so high in the republick of letters, that it wanted not to be
+raised upon the ruins of others. But these <i>Essays</i>, instead
+of raising a higher idea than was before entertained of his
+understanding, have certainly given the world a worse opinion of
+his temper.&mdash;The Bishop was therefore the more surprized and
+concerned for his townsman, for <i>he respected him not only for
+his genius and learning, but valued him much more for the more
+amiable part of his character, his humanity and charity, his
+morality and religion.'</i> The last sentence we may consider as
+the general and permanent opinion of Bishop Newton; the remarks
+which precede it must, by all who have read Johnson's admirable
+work, be imputed to the disgust and peevishness of old age. I
+wish they had not appeared, and that Dr. Johnson had not been
+provoked by them to express himself, not in respectful terms, of
+a Prelate, whose labours were certainly of considerable advantage
+both to literature and religion. BOSWELL.</p>
+<p><a name="note-882">[882]</a> Newton
+was born Jan. 1, 1704, and was made Bishop in 1761. In his
+<i>Account of his own Life</i> (p. 65) he says:&mdash;'He was no
+great gainer by his preferment; for he was obliged to give up the
+prebend of Westminster, the precentorship of York, the
+lecturership of St. George's, Hanover Square, and the <i>genteel
+office of sub-almoner</i>.' He died in 1781. His <i>Works</i>
+were published in 1782. Gibbon, defending himself against an
+attack by Newton, says (<i>Misc. Works</i>, l. 24l):&mdash;'The
+old man should not have indulged his zeal in a false and feeble
+charge against the historian, who,' &amp;c.</p>
+<p><a name="note-883">[883]</a>
+<i>Journal of a Tour to the Hebrides,</i> 3rd ed. p. 371 [Oct.
+25]. BOSWELL. See <i>ante</i>, ii. 216.</p>
+<p><a name="note-884">[884]</a> The Rev.
+Mr. Agutter [<i>post,</i> under Dec. 20] has favoured me with a
+note of a dialogue between Mr. John Henderson [<i>post,</i> June
+12] and Dr. Johnson on this topick, as related by Mr. Henderson,
+and it is evidently so authentick that I shall here insert
+it:&mdash;HENDERSON. 'What do you think, Sir, of William Law?'
+JOHNSON. 'William Law, Sir, wrote the best piece of Parenetick
+Divinity; but William Law was no reasoner.' HENDERSON. 'Jeremy
+Collier, Sir?' JOHNSON. 'Jeremy Collier fought without a rival,
+and therefore could not claim the victory.' Mr. Henderson
+mentioned Kenn and Kettlewell; but some objections were made: at
+last he said, 'But, Sir, what do you think of Leslie?' JOHNSON.
+'Charles Leslie I had forgotten. Leslie <i>was</i> a reasoner,
+and <i>a reasoner who was not to be reasoned against.'</i>
+BOSWELL.</p>
+<p>For the effect of Law's 'Parenetick Divinity' on Johnson, see
+<i>ante</i>, i. 68. 'I am surprised,' writes Macaulay, 'that
+Johnson should have pronounced Law no reasoner. Law did indeed
+fall into great errors; but they were errors against which logic
+affords no security. In mere dialectical skill he had very few
+superiors.' Macaulay's <i>England</i>, ed. 1874, v. 81, note.
+Jeremy Collier's attack on the play-writers Johnson describes in
+his <i>Life of Congreve</i> (<i>Works</i>, viii. 28), and
+continues:&mdash;'Nothing now remained for the poets but to
+resist or fly. Dryden's conscience, or his prudence, angry as he
+was, withheld him from the conflict: Congreve and Vanbrugh
+attempted answers.' Of Leslie, Lord Bolingbroke thus writes
+(<i>Works</i>, in. 45):&mdash;'Let neither the polemical skill of
+Leslie, nor the antique erudition of Bedford, persuade us to put
+on again those old shackles of false law, false reason, and false
+gospel, which were forged before the Revolution, and broken to
+pieces by it.' Leslie is described by Macaulay, <i>History of
+England</i>, v. 81.</p>
+<p><a name="note-885">[885]</a> Burnet
+(<i>History of his own Time</i>, ed. 1818, iv. 303) in 1712
+speaks of Hickes and Brett as being both in the Church, but as
+shewing 'an inclination towards Popery.' Hickes, he says, was at
+the head of the Jacobite party. See Boswell's <i>Hebrides</i>,
+Oct. 25.</p>
+<p><a name="note-886">[886]</a> 'Only
+five of the seven were non-jurors; and anybody but Boswell would
+have known that a man may resist arbitrary power, and yet not be
+a good reasoner. Nay, the resistance which Sancroft and the other
+nonjuring Bishops offered to arbitrary power, while they
+continued to hold the doctrine of non-resistance, is the most
+decisive proof that they were incapable of reasoning.' Macaulay's
+<i>England</i>, ed. 1874, v. 81.</p>
+<p><a name="note-887">[887]</a> See
+<i>ante</i>, ii. 321, for Johnson's estimate of the Nonjurors,
+and i. 429 for his Jacobitism.</p>
+<p><a name="note-888">[888]</a> Savage's
+<i>Works</i>, ed. 1777, ii. 28.</p>
+<p><a name="note-889">[889]</a> See
+<i>ante</i>, p. 46.</p>
+<p><a name="note-890">[890]</a> See
+Boswell's <i>Hebrides, post</i>, v. 77.</p>
+<p><a name="note-891">[891]</a> I have
+inserted the stanza as Johnson repeated it from memory; but I
+have since found the poem itself, in <i>The Foundling Hospital
+for Wit</i>, printed at London, 1749. It is as
+follows:&mdash;</p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'EPIGRAM, <i>occasioned by a religious dispute at Bath</i>.
+ 'On Reason, Faith, and Mystery high,
+ Two wits harangue the table;
+ B&mdash;&mdash;y believes he knows not why.
+ N&mdash;&mdash; swears 'tis all a fable.
+ Peace, coxcombs, peach, and both agree,
+ N&mdash;&mdash;, kiss they empty brother:
+ Religion laughs at foes like thee,
+ And dreads a friend like t'other.'
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>BOSWELL. The disputants are supposed to have been Beau Nash
+and Bentley, the son of the doctor, and the friend of Walpole.
+Croker. John Wesley in his <i>Journal</i>, i. 186, tells how he
+once silences Nash.</p>
+<p><a name="note-892">[892]</a> See
+ante, ii. 105.</p>
+<p><a name="note-893">[893]</a> Waller,
+in his <i>Divine Poesie</i>, canto first, has the same thought
+finely expressed:&mdash;</p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'The Church triumphant, and the Church below,
+ In songs of praise their present union show;
+ Their joys are full; our expectation long,
+ In life we differ, but we join in song;
+ Angels and we assisted by this art,
+ May sing together, though we dwell apart.'
+ BOSWELL.
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p><a name="note-894">[894]</a> See
+Boswell's <i>Hebrides</i>, post, v. 45.</p>
+<p><a name="note-895">[895]</a> In the
+original, <i>flee</i>.</p>
+<p><a name="note-896">[896]</a> The
+sermon thus opens:&mdash;'That there are angels and spirits good
+and bad; that at the head of these last there is ONE more
+considerable and malignant than the rest, who, in the form, or
+under the name of a <i>serpent</i>, was deeply concerned in the
+fall of man, and whose <i>head</i>, as the prophetick language
+is, the son of man was one day to <i>bruise</i>; that this evil
+spirit, though that prophecy be in part completed, has not yet
+received his death's wound, but is still permitted, for ends
+unsearchable to us, and in ways which we cannot particularly
+explain, to have a certain degree of power in this world hostile
+to its virtue and happiness, and sometimes exerted with too much
+success; all this is so clear from Scripture, that no believer,
+unless he be first of all <i>spoiled by philosophy and vain
+deceit [Colossians</i>, ii. 8], can possibly entertain a doubt of
+it.'</p>
+<p>Having treated of <i>possessions</i>, his Lordship says, 'As I
+have no authority to affirm that there <i>are</i> now any such,
+so neither may I presume to say with confidence, that there are
+<i>not</i> any.'</p>
+<p>'But then with regard to the influence of evil spirits at this
+day upon the SOULS of men, I shall take leave to be a great deal
+more peremptory.&mdash;(Then, having stated the various proofs,
+he adds,) All this, I say, is so manifest to every one who reads
+the Scriptures, that, if we respect their authority, the question
+concerning the reality of the demoniack influence upon the minds
+of men is clearly determined.'</p>
+<p>Let it be remembered, that these are not the words of an
+antiquated or obscure enthusiast, but of a learned and polite
+Prelate now alive; and were spoken, not to a vulgar congregation,
+but to the Honourable Society of Lincoln's-Inn. His Lordship in
+this sermon explains the words, 'deliver us from evil,' in the
+Lord's Prayer, as signifying a request to be protected from 'the
+evil one,' that is the Devil. This is well illustrated in a short
+but excellent Commentary by my late worthy friend, the Reverend
+Dr. Lort, of whom it may truly be said, <i>Multis ille bonis
+flebilis occidit</i>. It is remarkable that Waller, in his
+<i>Reflections on the several Petitions, in that sacred form of
+devotion</i>, has understood this in the same sense;&mdash;</p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'Guard us from all temptations of the FOE.'
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>BOSWELL. Dr. Lort is often mentioned in Horace Walpole's
+<i>Letters</i>. Multis ille <i>quidem</i> flebilis occidit,'
+comes from Horace, <i>Odes</i>, i. xxiv. 9, translated by
+Francis,&mdash;</p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ How did the good, the virtuous mourn.'
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>For Dr. Hurd see <i>ante</i>, p. 189.</p>
+<p><a name="note-897">[897]</a> There is
+a curious anecdote of this physician in <i>Gent. Mag.</i> 1772,
+p. 467.</p>
+<p><a name="note-898">[898]</a> See
+<i>ante</i>, p. 166. He may have taken the more to Fox, as he had
+taken to Beauclerk (<i>ante</i>, i. 248), on account of his
+descent from Charles II. Fox was the great-great-grandson of that
+king. His Christian names recall his Stuart ancestry.</p>
+<p><a name="note-899">[899]</a> Horace
+Walpole wrote on April 11 (<i>Letters</i>, viii. 469):&mdash;'In
+truth Mr. Fox has all the popularity in Westminster; and, indeed,
+is so amiable and winning that, could he have stood in person all
+over England, I question whether he would not have carried the
+Parliament.' Hannah More (<i>Memoirs</i>, i. 316) in the same
+month wrote:&mdash;'Unluckily for my principles I met Fox
+canvassing the other day, and he looked so sensible and
+agreeable, that if I had not turned my eyes another way, I
+believe it would have been all over with me.' See <i>ante</i>, p.
+279.</p>
+<p><a name="note-900">[900]</a> Dr. John
+Radcliffe, who died in 1714, left by his will, among other great
+benefactions to the University of Oxford, '&pound;600 yearly to
+two persons, when they are Masters of Arts and entered on the
+physic-line, for their maintenance for the space of ten years;
+the half of which time at least they are to travel in parts
+beyond sea for their better improvement.' <i>Radcliffe's Life and
+Will</i>, p. 123. Pope mentions them in his <i>Imitations of
+Horace, Epistles</i>, ii. i. 183:&mdash;</p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'E'en Radcliffe's doctors travel first to France,
+ Nor dare to practise till they've learned to dance.'
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p><a name="note-901">[901]</a> What
+risks were run even by inoculation is shewn in two of Dr.
+Warton's letters. He wrote to his brother:&mdash;'This moment the
+dear children have all been inoculated, never persons behaved
+better, no whimpering at all, I hope in God for success, but
+cannot avoid being in much anxiety.' A few days later he
+wrote:&mdash;'You may imagine I never passed such a day as this
+in my life! grieved to death myself for the loss of so sweet a
+child, but forced to stifle my feelings as much as possible for
+the sake of my poor wife. She does not, however, hit on, or dwell
+on, that most cutting circumstance of all, poor Nanny's dying, as
+it were by our own means, tho' well intended indeed.' Wooll's
+<i>Warton</i>, i. 289. Dr. Franklin (<i>Memoirs</i>, i. 155), on
+the other hand, bitterly regretted that he had not had a child
+inoculated, whom he lost by small-pox.</p>
+<p><a name="note-902">[902]</a> See
+<i>post</i>, before Nov. 17, and under Dec. 9, 1784.</p>
+<p><a name="note-903">[903]</a> 'I am
+the vilest of sinners and the worst of men.' Taylor's
+<i>Works</i> (ed. 1864), iii. 31. 'The best men deserve not
+eternal life, and I who am the worst may have it given me.'
+<i>Ib</i>. p. 431&mdash;'He that hath lived worst, even I.'
+<i>Ib</i>. vii. 241. 'Behold me the meanest of thy creatures.'
+<i>Ib</i>. p. 296.</p>
+<p><a name="note-904">[904]</a> 'You may
+fairly look upon yourself to be the greatest sinner that you know
+in the world. First, because you know more of the folly of your
+own heart than you do of other people's; and can charge yourself
+with various sins that you only know of yourself, and cannot be
+sure that other people are guilty of them.' Law's <i>Serious
+Call</i>, chap. 23.</p>
+<p><a name="note-905">[905]</a> 1
+<i>Timothy</i>, i. 15.</p>
+<p><a name="note-906">[906]</a> See
+<i>post</i>, v. 68, note 4.</p>
+<p><a name="note-907">[907]</a> 'Be
+careful thou dost not speak a lie in thy prayers, which though
+not observed is frequently practised by careless persons,
+especially in the forms of confession, affirming things which
+they have not thought, professing sorrow which is not, making a
+vow they mean not.' Taylor's <i>Works</i>, ed. 1865, vii.
+622.</p>
+<p><a name="note-908">[908]</a> Reynolds
+wrote:&mdash;'As in Johnson's writings not a line can be found
+which a saint would wish to blot, so in his life he would never
+suffer the least immorality or indecency of conversation, [or
+anything] contrary to virtue or piety to proceed without a severe
+check, which no elevation of rank exempted them from.' Taylor's
+<i>Reynolds</i>, ii. 458. See <i>ante</i>, iii. 41.</p>
+<p><a name="note-909">[909]</a> No doubt
+Mr. Langton.</p>
+<p><a name="note-910">[910]</a> Dr.
+Sheridan tells how Swift overheard a Captain Hamilton say to a
+gentleman at whose house he had arrived 'that he was very sorry
+he had chosen that time for his visit. "Why so?" "Because I hear
+Dean Swift is with you. He is a great scholar, a wit; a plain
+country squire will have but a bad time of it in his company, and
+I don't like to be laughed at." Swift then stepped up and said,
+"Pray, Captain Hamilton, do you know how to say <i>yes</i> or
+<i>no</i> properly?" "Yes, I think I have understanding enough
+for that." "Then give me your hand&mdash;depend upon it, you and
+I will agree very well."' 'The Captain told me,' continues
+Sheridan, 'that he never passed two months so pleasantly in his
+life.' Swift's <i>Works</i>, ed. 1803, ii. 104.</p>
+<p><a name="note-911">[911]</a> Gibbon
+wrote on Feb. 21, 1772 (<i>Misc. Works</i>, ii. 78):&mdash;'To
+day the House of Commons was employed in a very odd way. Tommy
+Townshend moved that the sermon of Dr. Nowell, who preached
+before the House on the 30th of January (<i>id est</i>, before
+the Speaker and four members), should be burnt by the common
+hangman, as containing arbitrary, Tory, high-flown doctrines. The
+House was nearly agreeing to the motion, till they recollected
+that they had already thanked the preacher for his excellent
+discourse, and ordered it to be printed.'</p>
+<center><a name=
+"note-912">[912]</a></center>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'Although it be not <i>shined</i> upon.'
+ <i>Hudibras</i>, iii. 2, 175.
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p><a name="note-913">[913]</a>
+According to Mr. Croker, this was the Rev. Henry Bate, of the
+<i>Morning Post</i>, who in 1784 took the name of Dudley, was
+created a baronet in 1815, and died in 1824. Horace Walpole wrote
+on Nov. 13, 1776 (<i>Letters</i>, vi. 39l):&mdash;'Yesterday I
+heard drums and trumpets in Piccadilly: I looked out of the
+window and saw a procession with streamers flying. At first I
+thought it a press-gang, but seeing the corps so well-drest, like
+Hussars, in yellow with blue waistcoats and breeches, and high
+caps, I concluded it was some new body of our allies, or a
+regiment newly raised, and with new regimentals for distinction.
+I was not totally mistaken, for the Colonel is <i>a new ally</i>.
+In short, this was a procession set forth by Mr. Bate, Lord
+Lyttelton's chaplain, and author of the old <i>Morning Post</i>,
+and meant as an appeal to the town against his antagonist, the
+new one.' In June, 1781, Bate was sentenced to a year's
+imprisonment 'for an atrocious libel on the Duke of Richmond. He
+was the worst of all the scandalous libellers that had appeared
+both on private persons as well as public. His life was
+dissolute, and he had fought more than one duel. Yet Lord
+Sandwich had procured for him a good Crown living, and he was
+believed to be pensioned by the Court.' Walpole's <i>Journal of
+the Reign of George III</i>, ii. 464.</p>
+<p><a name="note-914">[914]</a> See
+<i>ante</i>, ii. 339, and iii. 265.</p>
+<p><a name="note-915">[915]</a> Three
+days earlier, in the debate on the Westminster Scrutiny, Fox
+accused 'a person of great rank in this House'&mdash;Pitt I
+believe&mdash;'of adding pertness and personal contumely to every
+species of rash and inconsiderate violence.' <i>Parl. Hist</i>.
+xxiv. 924. Pitt, in reply, classed Fox among 'political
+apostates,' <i>ib</i>. p. 929. Burke, the same evening, 'sat down
+saying, "he little minded the ill-treatment of a parcel of
+boys."' When he was called to order, he said:&mdash;'When he used
+the term "a parcel of boys," he meant to apply it to the
+ministry, who, he conceived, were insulting him with their
+triumph; a triumph which grey hairs ought to be allowed the
+privilege of expressing displeasure at, when it was founded on
+the rash exultation of mere boys.' <i>Ib</i>. p. 939. Pitt,
+Prime-Minister though he was, in the spring of the same year, was
+called to order by the Speaker, for charging a member with using
+'language the most false, the most malicious, and the most
+slanderous.' <i>Ib</i>. p. 763.</p>
+<p><a name="note-916">[916]</a>
+<i>Epistles to Mr. Pope</i>, ii. 165.</p>
+<p><a name="note-917">[917]</a> See an
+account of him, in a sermon by the Reverend Mr. Agutter. BOSWELL.
+This sermon was published in 1788. In Hannah More's
+<i>Memoirs</i> (i. 217), Henderson is described as 'a mixture of
+great sense, which discovered uncommon parts and learning, with a
+tincture of nonsense of the most extravagant kind. He believes in
+witches and apparitions, as well as in judicial astronomy.' Mrs.
+Kennicott writes (<i>ib</i>. p. 220):&mdash;'I think if Dr.
+Johnson had the shaking him about, he would shake out his
+nonsense, and set his sense a-working. 'He never got out into the
+world, says Dr. Hall, the Master of Pembroke College, having died
+in College in 1788.</p>
+<p><a name="note-918">[918]</a> This was
+the second Lord Lyttelton, commonly known as 'the wicked Lord
+Lyttelton.' Fox described him to Rogers as 'a very bad
+man&mdash;downright wicked.' Rogers's <i>Table Talk</i>, p. 95.
+He died Nov. 27, 1779. Horace Walpole (<i>Letters</i>, vii. 292)
+wrote to Mason on Dec. 11 of that year:&mdash;'If you can send us
+any stories of ghosts out of the North, they will be very
+welcome. Lord Lyttelton's vision has revived the taste; though it
+seems a little odd that an apparition should despair of being
+able to get access to his Lordship's bed in the shape of a young
+woman, without being forced to use the disguise of a
+robin-red-breast.' In the <i>Gent. Mag.</i> 1815, i. 597, and
+1816, ii. 421, accounts are given of this vision. In the latter
+account it is said that 'he saw a bird fluttering, and afterwards
+a woman appeared in white apparel, and said, "Prepare to die; you
+will not exist three days."' Mrs. Piozzi also wrote a full
+account of it. Hayward's <i>Piozzi</i>, i. 332.</p>
+<p><a name="note-919">[919]</a> See
+<i>ante</i>, ii. 150, and iii. 298, note 1.</p>
+<p><a name="note-920">[920]</a> See
+<i>ante</i>, p. 278.</p>
+<p><a name="note-921">[921]</a> 'If he
+who considers himself as suspended over the abyss of eternal
+perdition only by the thread of life, which must soon part by its
+own weakness, and which the wing of every minute may divide, can
+cast his eyes round him without shuddering with horror, or
+panting for security; what can he judge of himself, but that he
+is not yet awakened to sufficient conviction? &amp;c.' <i>The
+Rambler</i>, No. 110. In a blank leaf in the book in which
+Johnson kept his diary of his journey in Wales is written in his
+own hand, 'Faith in some proportion to Fear.' Duppa's Johnson's
+<i>Diary of a Journey &amp;c</i>., p. 157. See <i>ante</i>, iii.
+199.</p>
+<p><a name="note-922">[922]</a> He wrote
+to Mrs. Thrale on March 20:&mdash;'Write to me no more about
+<i>dying with a grace</i>; when you feel what I have felt in
+approaching eternity&mdash;in fear of soon hearing the sentence
+of which there is no revocation, you will know the folly.'
+<i>Piozzi Letters</i>, ii. 354. Of him it might have been said in
+Cowper's words:&mdash;</p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'Scripture is still a trumpet to his fears.'
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p><i>The Task: The Winter Morning Walk</i>, 1. 611. See
+<i>ante</i>, iii. 294.</p>
+<p><a name="note-923">[923]</a> The
+Reverend Mr. Ralph Churton, Fellow of Brazen-Nose College,
+Oxford, has favoured me with the following remarks on my Work,
+which he is pleased to say, 'I have hitherto extolled, and
+cordially approve.'</p>
+<p>'The chief part of what I have to observe is contained in the
+following transcript from a letter to a friend, which, with his
+concurrence, I copied for this purpose; and, whatever may be the
+merit or justness of the remarks, you may be sure that being
+written to a most intimate friend, without any intention that
+they ever should go further, they are the genuine and undisguised
+sentiments of the writer:&mdash;</p>
+<p>'Jan. 6, 1792.</p>
+<p>'Last week, I was reading the second volume of Boswell's
+<i>Johnson</i>, with increasing esteem for the worthy authour,
+and increasing veneration of the wonderful and excellent man who
+is the subject of it. The writer throws in, now and then, very
+properly some serious religious reflections; but there is one
+remark, in my mind an obvious and just one, which I think he has
+not made, that Johnson's "morbid melancholy," and constitutional
+infirmities, were intended by Providence, like St. Paul's thorn
+in the flesh, to check intellectual conceit and arrogance; which
+the consciousness of his extraordinary talents, awake as he was
+to the voice of praise, might otherwise have generated in a very
+culpable degree. Another observation strikes me, that in
+consequence of the same natural indisposition, and habitual
+sickliness, (for he says he scarcely passed one day without pain
+after his twentieth year,) he considered and represented human
+life, as a scene of much greater misery than is generally
+experienced. There may be persons bowed down with affliction all
+their days; and there are those, no doubt, whose iniquities rob
+them of rest; but neither calamities nor crimes, I hope and
+believe, do so much and so generally abound, as to justify the
+dark picture of life which Johnson's imagination designed, and
+his strong pencil delineated. This I am sure, the colouring is
+far too gloomy for what I have experienced, though as far as I
+can remember, I have had more sickness (I do not say more severe,
+but only more in quantity,) than falls to the lot of most people.
+But then daily debility and occasional sickness were far
+overbalanced by intervenient days, and, perhaps, weeks void of
+pain, and overflowing with comfort. So that in short, to return
+to the subject, human life, as far as I can perceive from
+experience or observation, is not that state of constant
+wretchedness which Johnson always insisted it was; which
+misrepresentation, (for such it surely is,) his Biographer has
+not corrected, I suppose, because, unhappily, he has himself a
+large portion of melancholy in his constitution, and fancied the
+portrait a faithful copy of life.'</p>
+<p>The learned writer then proceeds thus in his letter to
+me:&mdash;</p>
+<p>'I have conversed with some sensible men on this subject, who
+all seem to entertain the same sentiments respecting life with
+those which are expressed or implied in the foregoing paragraph.
+It might be added that as the representation here spoken of,
+appears not consistent with fact and experience, so neither does
+it seem to be countenanced by Scripture. There is, perhaps, no
+part of the sacred volume which at first sight promises so much
+to lend its sanction to these dark and desponding notions as the
+book of <i>Ecclesiastes</i>, which so often, and so emphatically,
+proclaims the vanity of things sublunary. But the design of this
+whole book, (as it has been justly observed,) is not to put us
+out of conceit with life, but to cure our vain expectations of a
+compleat and perfect happiness in this world; to convince us,
+that there is no such thing to be found in mere external
+enjoyments;&mdash;and to teach us to seek for happiness in the
+practice of virtue, in the knowledge and love of God, and in the
+hopes of a better life. For this is the application of all;
+<i>Let us hear</i>, &amp;c. xii. 13. Not only his duty, but his
+happiness too; _For_ GOD, &amp;c. ver. 14.--See _Sherlock on
+Providence<i>, p. 299.</i></p>
+<p>'The New Testament tells us, indeed, and most truly, that
+"sufficient unto the day is the evil thereof;" and, therefore,
+wisely forbids us to increase our burden by forebodings of
+sorrows; but I think it no where says that even our ordinary
+afflictions are not consistent with a very considerable degree of
+positive comfort and satisfaction. And, accordingly, one whose
+sufferings as well as merits were conspicuous, assures us, that
+in proportion "as the sufferings of Christ abounded in them, so
+their consolation also abounded by Christ." 2 Cor<i>. i. 5. It is
+needless to cite, as indeed it would be endless even to refer to,
+the multitude of passages in both Testaments holding out, in the
+strongest language, promises of blessings, even in this world, to
+the faithful servants of GOD. I will only refer to</i> St.
+Luke<i>, xviii. 29, 30, and 1</i> Tim<i>. iv. 8.</i></p>
+<p>'Upon the whole, setting aside instances of great and lasting
+bodily pain, of minds peculiarly oppressed by melancholy, and of
+severe temporal calamities, from which extraordinary cases we
+surely should not form our estimate of the general tenour and
+complexion of life; excluding these from the account, I am
+convinced that as well the gracious constitution of things which
+Providence has ordained, as the declarations of Scripture and the
+actual experience of individuals, authorize the sincere Christian
+to hope that his humble and constant endeavours to perform his
+duty, checquered as the best life is with many failings, will be
+crowned with a greater degree of present peace, serenity, and
+comfort, than he could reasonably permit himself to expect, if he
+measured his views and judged of life from the opinion of Dr.
+Johnson, often and energetically expressed in the Memoirs of him,
+without any animadversion or censure by his ingenious Biographer.
+If he himself, upon reviewing the subject, shall see the matter
+in this light, he will, in an octavo edition, which is eagerly
+expected, make such additional remarks or correction as he shall
+judge fit; lest the impressions which these discouraging passages
+may leave on the reader's mind, should in any degree hinder what
+otherwise the whole spirit and energy of the work tends, and, I
+hope, successfully, to promote,&mdash;pure morality and true
+religion.'</p>
+<p>Though I have, in some degree, obviated any reflections
+against my illustrious friend's dark views of life, when
+considering, in the course of this Work, his Rambler
+<i>[</i>ante<i>, i. 213] and his</i> Rasselas <i>[</i>ante<i>, i.
+343], I am obliged to Mr. Churton for complying with my request
+of his permission to insert his Remarks, being conscious of the
+weight of what he judiciously suggests as to the melancholy in my
+own constitution. His more pleasing views of life, I hope, are
+just.</i> Valeant quantum valere possunt<i>.</i></p>
+<p>Mr. Churton concludes his letter to me in these
+words:&mdash;'Once, and only once, I had the satisfaction of
+seeing your illustrious friend; and as I feel a particular regard
+for all whom he distinguished with his esteem and friendship, so
+I derive much pleasure from reflecting that I once beheld, though
+but transiently near our College gate, one whose works will for
+ever delight and improve the world, who was a sincere and zealous
+son of the Church of England, an honour to his country, and an
+ornament to human nature.'</p>
+<p>His letter was accompanied with a present from himself of his
+Sermons at the Bampton Lecture<i>, and from his friend, Dr.
+Townson, the venerable Rector of Malpas, in Cheshire, of his</i>
+Discourses on the Gospels<i>, together with the following extract
+of a letter from that excellent person, who is now gone to
+receive the reward of his labours:&mdash;'Mr. Boswell is not only
+very entertaining in his works, but they are so replete with
+moral and religious sentiments, without an instance, as far as I
+know, of a contrary tendency, that I cannot help having a great
+esteem for him; and if you think such a trifle as a copy of
+the</i> Discourses, ex dono authoris<i>, would be acceptable to
+him, I should be happy to give him this small testimony of my
+regard.'</i></p>
+<p>Such spontaneous testimonies of approbation from such men,
+without any personal acquaintance with me, are truly valuable and
+encouraging.</p>
+<center>BOSWELL.</center>
+<center><a name=
+"note-924">[924]</a></center>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'Tout se plaint, tout g&eacute;mit en cherchant le bien-etre;
+ Nul ne voudrait mourir, nul ne voudrait renaitre.'
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>Voltaire, Le d&eacute;sastre de Lisbonne. Works<i>, ed. 1819,
+x. 124. 'Johnson said that, for his part, he never passed that
+week in his life which he would wish to repeat, were an angel to
+make the proposal to him.'</i> Ante<i>, ii. 125. Yet Dr.
+Franklin, whose life overlapped Johnson's at both ends, said:-'I
+should have no objection to go over the same life from its
+beginning to the end, requesting only the advantage authors have
+of correcting in a second edition the faults of its first. So
+would I also wish to change some incidents of it for others more
+favourable Notwithstanding, if this condition was denied, I
+should still accept the offer of re-commencing the same life.'
+Franklin's</i> Memoirs<i>, i. 2.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-925">[925]</a>
+Mackintosh thus sums up this question:&mdash;'The truth is, that
+endless fallacies must arise from the attempt to appreciate by
+retrospect human life, of which the enjoyments depend on hope.'
+Life of Mackintosh<i>, ii. 160. See</i> ante<i>, ii. 350.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-926">[926]</a> In the
+lines on Levett. Ante<i>, p. 137.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-927">[927]</a>
+AURENGZEBE, act iv. sc. 1. BOSWELL. According to Dr. Maxwell
+(ante<i>, ii. 124), Johnson frequently quoted the fourth couplet
+of these lines. Boswell does not give the last&mdash;</i></p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'I'm tired with waiting for this chemic gold
+ Which fools us young, and beggars us when old.'
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p><a name="note-928">[928]</a> Johnson,
+speaking of the companions of his college days, said:&mdash; 'It
+was bitterness which they mistook for frolick.' Ante<i>, i.
+73.</i></p>
+<center><a name=
+"note-929">[929]</a></center>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ '&mdash;to thee I call
+ But with no friendly voice, and add thy name
+ O Sun, to tell thee how I hate thy beams.'
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>Milton's Paradise Lost<i>, iv. 35.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-930">[930]</a> Yet
+there is no doubt that a man may appear very gay in company who
+is sad at heart. His merriment is like the sound of drums and
+trumpets in a battle, to drown the groans of the wounded and
+dying. BOSWELL.</p>
+<p><a name="note-931">[931]</a> Mme.
+D'Arblay (Memoirs of Dr. Burney<i>, ii. 103) tells how Johnson
+was one day invited to her father's house at the request of Mr.
+Greville, 'the finest gentleman about town,' as she earlier
+described him (</i>ib<i>. i. 25), who desired to make his
+acquaintance. This 'superb' gentleman was afraid to begin to
+speak. 'Assuming his most supercilious air of distant superiority
+he planted himself, immovable as a noble statue, upon the hearth,
+as if a stranger to the whole set.' Johnson, who 'never spoke
+till he was spoken to' (</i>ante<i>, in. 307)&mdash;this habit
+the Burneys did not as yet know&mdash;'became completely absorbed
+in silent rumination; very unexpectedly, however, he shewed
+himself alive to what surrounded him, by one of those singular
+starts of vision, that made him seem at times, though purblind to
+things in common, gifted with an eye of instinct for espying any
+action that he thought merited reprehension; for all at once,
+looking fixedly on Mr. Greville, who without much self-denial,
+the night being very cold, kept his station before the
+chimney-piece, he exclaimed:&mdash;"If it were not for depriving
+the ladies of the fire, I should like to stand upon the hearth
+myself." A smile gleamed upon every face at this pointed speech.
+Mr. Greville tried to smile himself, though faintly and
+scoffingly. He tried also to hold his post; and though for two or
+three minutes he disdained to move, the awkwardness of a general
+pause impelled him ere long to glide back to his chair; but he
+rang the bell with force as he passed it to order his
+carriage.'</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-932">[932]</a> Page
+139. BOSWELL.</p>
+<p><a name="note-933">[933]</a> On this
+same day Miss Adams wrote to a friend:&mdash;'Dr. Johnson, tho'
+not in good health, is in general very talkative and infinitely
+agreeable and entertaining.' Pemb. Coll. MSS<i>.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-934">[934]</a> Johnson
+said 'Milton was a Phidias<i>, &amp;c.'</i> Ante<i>, p. 99, note
+1. In his</i> Life of Milton <i>(</i>Works, vii. 119) he
+writes:&mdash;'Milton never learnt the art of doing little things
+with grace; he overlooked the milder excellence of suavity and
+softness; he was a <i>Lion</i> that had no skill <i>in dandling
+the kid</i>.'</p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ ['Sporting the lion ramped, and in his paw
+ Dandled the kid.'
+ <i>Paradise Lost</i>, iv. 343.]
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p><a name="note-935">[935]</a> Cardinal
+Newman (<i>History of my Religious Opinions</i>, ed. 1865, p.
+361) remarks on this:&mdash;'As to Johnson's case of a murderer
+asking you which way a man had gone, I should have anticipated
+that, had such a difficulty happened to him, his first act would
+have been to knock the man down, and to call out for the police;
+and next, if he was worsted in the conflict, he would not have
+given the ruffian the information he asked, at whatever risk to
+himself. I think he would have let himself be killed first. I do
+not think that he would have told a lie.'</p>
+<p><a name="note-936">[936]</a> See
+<i>ante</i>, iii. 376.</p>
+<p><a name="note-937">[937]</a> Book ii.
+1. 142.</p>
+<p><a name="note-938">[938]</a> The
+annotator calls them 'amiable verses.' BOSWELL. The annotators of
+the <i>Dunciad</i> were Pope himself and Dr. Arbuthnot. Johnson's
+<i>Works</i>, viii. 280.</p>
+<p><a name="note-939">[939]</a> Boswell
+was at this time corresponding with Miss Seward. See <i>post</i>,
+June 25.</p>
+<p><a name="note-940">[940]</a> By John
+Dyer. <i>Ante</i>, ii. 453.</p>
+<p><a name="note-941">[941]</a> Lewis's
+Verses addressed to Pope were first published in a Collection of
+Pieces on occasion of <i>The Dunciad</i>, 8vo., 1732. They do not
+appear in Lewis's own <i>Miscellany</i>, printed in
+1726.&mdash;<i>Grongar Hill</i> was first printed in Savage's
+<i>Miscellanies</i> as an Ode, and was <i>reprinted</i> in the
+same year in Lewis's <i>Miscellany</i>, in the form it now
+bears.</p>
+<p>In his <i>Miscellanies</i>, 1726, the beautiful
+poem,&mdash;'Away, let nought to love
+displeasing,'&mdash;reprinted in Percy's <i>Reliques</i>, vol. i.
+book iii. No. 13, first appeared. MALONE.</p>
+<p><a name="note-942">[942]</a> See
+<i>ante</i>, p. 58.</p>
+<p><a name="note-943">[943]</a> See
+<i>ante</i>, i. 71, and ii. 226.</p>
+<p><a name="note-944">[944]</a> Captain
+Cook's third voyage. The first two volumes by Captain Cook; the
+last by Captain King.</p>
+<p><a name="note-945">[945]</a> See
+<i>ante</i>, ii. 73, 228, 248; iii. 49.</p>
+<center><a name=
+"note-946">[946]</a></center>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ '&mdash;quae mollissima fandi Tempora.'
+ '&mdash;time wherein the word May softliest be said.'
+ MORRIS. Virgil, <i>Aeneids</i>, iv. 293.
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p><a name="note-947">[947]</a> See
+<i>ante</i>, i. 71.</p>
+<p><a name="note-948">[948]</a> See
+<i>ante</i>, i. 203, note 6.</p>
+<p><a name="note-949">[949]</a> Boswell
+began to eat dinners in the Inner Temple so early as 1775.
+<i>Ante</i>, ii. 377, note 1. He was not called till Hilary Term,
+1786. Rogers's <i>Boswelliana</i>, p. 143.</p>
+<p><a name="note-950">[950]</a> Mr.
+(afterwards Sir) William Jones wrote two years earlier
+(<i>Life</i>, p. 268):&mdash;'Whether it be a wise part to live
+uncomfortably in order to die wealthy, is another question; but
+this I know by experience, and have heard old practitioners make
+the same observation, that a lawyer who is in earnest must be
+chained to his chambers and the bar for ten or twelve years
+together.'</p>
+<p><a name="note-951">[951]</a>
+Johnson's <i>Prologue at the opening of Drury Lane Theatre.
+Works,</i> i. 23.</p>
+<p><a name="note-952">[952]</a>
+According to Mr. Seward, who published this account in his
+<i>Anecdotes,</i> ii. 83, it was Mr. Langton's great-grandfather
+who drew it up.</p>
+<p><a name="note-953">[953]</a> 'My Lord
+said that his rule for his, health was to be temperate and keep
+himself warm. He never made breakfasts, but used in the morning
+to drink a glass of some sort of ale. That he went to bed at
+nine, and rose between six and seven, allowing himself a good
+refreshment for his sleep. That the law will admit of no rival,
+nothing to go even with it; but that sometimes one may for
+diversion read in the Latin historians of England, Hoveden and
+Matthew Paris, &amp;c. But after it is conquered, it will admit
+of other studies. He said, a little law, a good tongue, and a
+good memory, would fit a man for the Chancery.' Seward's
+<i>Anecdotes</i>, ii. 92.</p>
+<p><a name="note-954">[954]</a>
+Wednesday was the 16th</p>
+<p><a name="note-955">[955]</a> See
+<i>ante</i>, i. 41.</p>
+<p><a name="note-956">[956]</a>
+<i>Letters to Mrs. Thrale</i>, vol. ii. p. 372. BOSWELL.</p>
+<p><a name="note-957">[957]</a> See
+<i>ante/</i>, i. 155.</p>
+<p><a name="note-958">[958]</a> The
+recommendation in this list of so many histories little agrees
+'with the fierce and boisterous contempt of ignorance' with
+which, according to Lord Macaulay, Johnson spoke of history.
+Macaulay's <i>Essays</i>, ed. 1843, i. 403.</p>
+<p><a name="note-959">[959]</a> See
+<i>ante</i>, iii. 12.</p>
+<p><a name="note-960">[960]</a>
+Northcote's account of Reynolds's table suits the description of
+this 'gentleman's mode of living.' 'A table prepared for seven or
+eight was often compelled to contain fifteen or sixteen.' There
+was a 'deficiency of knives and forks, plates and glasses. The
+attendance was in the same style.' There were 'two or three
+undisciplined domestics. The host left every one at perfect
+liberty to scramble for himself.' 'Rags' is certainly a strong
+word to apply to any of the company; but then strong words were
+what Johnson used. Northcote mentions 'the mixture of company.'
+Northcote's <i>Reynolds</i>, ii. 94-6. See <i>ante</i>, iii. 375,
+note 2.</p>
+<p><a name="note-961">[961]</a> The
+Mayor of Windsor. Rogers's <i>Boswelliana</i>, p. 211.</p>
+<p><a name="note-962">[962]</a> The
+passage occurs in Brooke's <i>Earl of Essex</i>(1761) at the
+close of the first act, where Queen Elizabeth says:</p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'I shall henceforth seek
+ For other lights to truth; for righteous monarchs,
+ Justly to judge, with their own eyes should see;
+ <i>To rule o'er freemen should themselves be free</i>.'
+ <i>Notes and Queries</i>, 5th S. viii. 456.
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>The play was acted at Drury Lane Theatre, old Mr. Sheridan
+taking the chief part. He it was who, in admiration, repeated the
+passage to Johnson which provoked the parody. Murphy's
+<i>Garrick</i>, p. 234.</p>
+<p><a name="note-963">[963]</a> 'Letters
+to Mrs. Thrale, vol. ii. p. 284. BOSWELL. In a second letter
+(<i>ib</i>. p. 347) he says:&mdash;'Cator has a rough, manly
+independent understanding, and does not spoil it by
+complaisance.' Miss Burney accuses him of emptiness, verbosity
+and pomposity, all of which she describes in an amusing manner.
+Mme. D'Arblay's <i>Diary</i>, ii. 47.</p>
+<p><a name="note-964">[964]</a> 'All
+general reflections upon nations and societies are the trite,
+thread-bare jokes of those who set up for wit without having any,
+and so have recourse to common-place.' Chesterfield's
+<i>Letters</i>, i. 231.</p>
+<p><a name="note-965">[965]</a> See vol.
+ii. p. 126. BOSWELL</p>
+<p><a name="note-966">[966]</a> '"That
+may be so," replied the lady, "for ought I know, but they are
+above my comprehension." "I an't obliged to find you
+comprehension, Madam, curse me," cried he,' <i>Roderick
+Random</i>, ch. 53. '"I protest," cried Moses, "I don't rightly
+comprehend the force of your reasoning." "O, Sir," cried the
+Squire, "I am your most humble servant, I find you want me to
+furnish you with argument and intellects too."' <i>Vicar of
+Wakefield</i>, ch. 7.</p>
+<p><a name="note-967">[967]</a> In the
+first edition, 'as the Honourable Horace Walpole is often
+called;' in the second edition, 'as Horace, now Earl of Orford,
+&amp;c.' Walpole succeeded to the title in Dec. 1791. In answer
+to congratulations he wrote (<i>Letters</i>, ix.
+364):&mdash;'What has happened destroys my tranquillity....
+Surely no man of seventy-four, unless superannuated, can have the
+smallest pleasure in sitting at home in his own room, as I almost
+always do, and being called by a new name.' He died March 2,
+1797.</p>
+<p><a name="note-968">[968]</a> In
+<i>The Rambler</i>, No. 83, a character of a virtuoso is given
+which in many ways suits Walpole:&mdash;'It is never without
+grief that I find a man capable of ratiocination or invention
+enlisting himself in this secondary class of learning; for when
+he has once discovered a method of gratifying his desire of
+eminence by expense rather than by labour, and known the sweets
+of a life blest at once with the ease of idleness and the
+reputation of knowledge, he will not easily be brought to undergo
+again the toil of thinking, or leave his toys and trinkets for
+arguments and principles.'</p>
+<p><a name="note-969">[969]</a> Walpole
+says:&mdash;'I do not think I ever was in a room with Johnson six
+times in my days.' <i>Letters</i>, ix. 319. 'The first time, I
+think, was at the Royal Academy. Sir Joshua said, "Let me present
+Dr. Goldsmith to you;" he did. "Now I will present Dr. Johnson to
+you." "No," said I, "Sir Joshua; for Dr. Goldsmith,
+pass&mdash;but you shall not present Dr. Johnson to me."'
+<i>Journal &amp;c. of Miss Berry</i>, i. 305. In his <i>Journal
+of the Reign of George III</i>, he speaks of Johnson as 'one of
+the venal champions of the Court,' 'a renegade' (i. 430); 'a
+brute,' 'an old decrepit hireling' (<i>ib.</i> p. 472); and as
+'one of the subordinate crew whom to name is to stigmatize'
+(<i>ib.</i> ii. 5). In his <i>Memoirs of the Reign of George
+III</i>, iv. 297, he says:&mdash;'With a lumber of learning and
+some strong parts Johnson was an odious and mean character. His
+manners were sordid, supercilious, and brutal; his style
+ridiculously bombastic and vicious, and, in one word, with all
+the pedantry he had all the gigantic littleness of a country
+schoolmaster.'</p>
+<p><a name="note-970">[970]</a> See
+<i>ante</i>, i. 367.</p>
+<p><a name="note-971">[971]</a> On May
+26, 1791, Walpole wrote of Boswell's <i>Life of Johnson
+(Letters</i> ix. 3l9):&mdash;'I expected amongst the
+excommunicated to find myself, but am very gently treated. I
+never would be in the least acquainted with Johnson; or, as
+Boswell calls it, I had not a just value for him; which the
+biographer imputes to my resentment for the Doctor's putting bad
+arguments (purposely out of Jacobitism) into the speeches which
+he wrote fifty years ago for my father in the <i>Gentleman's
+Magazine</i>; which I did not read then, or ever knew Johnson
+wrote till Johnson died.' Johnson said of these Debates:&mdash;'I
+saved appearances tolerably well; but I took care that the Whig
+dogs should not have the best of it.' <i>Ante</i>, i. 504. 'Lord
+Holland said that whenever Boswell came into a company where
+Horace Walpole was, Walpole would throw back his head, purse up
+his mouth very significantly, and not speak a word while Boswell
+remained.' <i>Autobiographical Recollections of C. R. Leslie</i>,
+i. 155. Walpole (<i>Letters</i>, viii. 44) says:&mdash;'Boswell,
+that quintessence of busybodies, called on me last week, and was
+let in, which he should not have been, could I have foreseen it.
+After tapping many topics, to which I made as dry answers as an
+unbribed oracle, he vented his errand.'</p>
+<p><a name="note-972">[972]</a> Walpole
+wrote (<i>Letters</i>, vi. 44):&mdash;'If <i>The School for
+Wives</i> and <i>The Christmas Tale</i> were laid to me, so was
+<i>The Heroic Espistle</i>. I could certainly have written the
+two former, but not the latter.' See <i>ante</i>, iv. 113.</p>
+<p><a name="note-973">[973]</a> The
+title given by Bishop Pearson to his collection of Hales's
+Writings is the <i>Golden Remains of the Ever Memorable John
+Hales of Eaton College, &amp;c</i>. It was published in 1659.</p>
+<p><a name="note-974">[974]</a> I
+<i>Henry IV</i>, act ii. sc. 4. 'Sir James Mackintosh remembers
+that, while spending the Christmas of 1793 at Beaconsfield, Mr.
+Burke said to him, 'Johnson showed more powers of mind in company
+than in his writings; but he argued only for victory; and when he
+had neither a paradox to defend, nor an antagonist to crush, he
+would preface his assent with "Why, no, Sir."' CROKER. Croker's
+<i>Boswell</i>, p. 768.</p>
+<center><a name=
+"note-975">[975]</a></center>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ Search then the ruling passion: There alone
+ The wild are constant, and the cunning known;
+ The fool consistent, and the false sincere;
+ Priests, princes, women, no dissemblers here.'
+ Pope, <i>Moral Essays</i>, i. 174.
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>'The publick pleasures of far the greater part of mankind are
+counterfeit.' <i>The Idler</i>, No. 18.</p>
+<p><a name="note-976">[976]</a>
+<i>Ante</i>, ii. 241, and iii. 325.</p>
+<p><a name="note-977">[977]</a> Boswell
+refers to Cicero's <i>Treatise on Famous Orators</i>.</p>
+<p><a name="note-978">[978]</a> Boswell
+here falls into a mistake. About harvest-time in 1766, there were
+corn-riots owing to the dearness of bread. By the Act of the 15th
+of Charles II, corn, when under a certain price, might be legally
+exported. On Sept. 26, 1766, before this price had been reached,
+the Crown issued a proclamation to prohibit the exportation of
+grain. When parliament met in November, a bill of indemnity was
+brought in for those concerned in the late embargo. 'The
+necessity of the embargo was universally allowed;' it was the
+exercise by the Crown of a power of dispensing with the laws that
+was attacked. Some of the ministers who, out of office, 'had set
+up as the patrons of liberty,' were made the object 'of many
+sarcasms on the beaten subject of occasional patriotism.' <i>Ann.
+Reg.</i> x. 39-48, and Dicey's <i>Law of the Constitution</i>, p.
+50.</p>
+<p><a name="note-979">[979]</a> <i>St.
+Mark</i>, ii. 9.</p>
+<p><a name="note-980">[980]</a>
+<i>Anecdotes</i>, p. 43. BOSWELL. The passage is from the
+<i>Speech on Conciliation with the Colonies</i>, March 22, 1775.
+Payne's <i>Burke</i>, i. 173. The image of the angel and Lord
+Bathurst was thus, according to Mrs. Piozzi, parodied by
+Johnson:&mdash;'Suppose, Mr. Speaker, that to Wharton, or to
+Marlborough, or to any of the eminent Whigs of the last age, the
+devil had, not with great impropriety, consented to appear.' See
+<i>ante</i>, iii. 326, where Johnson said 'the first Whig was the
+Devil.'</p>
+<p><a name="note-981">[981]</a> Boswell
+was stung by what Mrs. Piozzi wrote when recording this parody.
+She said that she had begged Johnson's leave to write it down
+directly. 'A trick,' she continues, 'which I have seen played on
+common occasions of sitting steadily [? stealthily] down at the
+other end of the room to write at the moment what should be said
+in company, either by Dr. Johnson or to him, I never practised
+myself, nor approved of in another. There is something so
+ill-bred, and so inclining to treachery in this conduct, that,
+were it commonly adopted, all confidence would soon be exiled
+from society.' See <i>post</i>, under June 30, 1784, where
+Boswell refers to this passage.</p>
+<center><a name=
+"note-982">[982]</a></center>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'Who'er offends, at some unlucky time
+ Slides into verse, and hitches in a rhyme.'
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>Pope, <i>Imitations of Horace</i>, 2 Satires, i. 78.</p>
+<p><a name="note-983">[983]</a> On March
+14, 1770, in a debate on the licentiousness of the press,
+Townshend joined together Johnson and Shebbeare. Burke, who
+followed him, said nothing about Johnson. Fitzherbert, speaking
+of Johnson as 'my friend,' defended him as 'a pattern of
+morality.' <i>Cavendish Debates</i>, i.514. On Feb. 16, 1774,
+when Fox drew attention to a 'vile libel' signed <i>A South
+Briton</i>, Townshend said 'Dr. Shebbeare and Dr. Johnson have
+been pensioned, but this wretched South Briton is to be
+prosecuted.' It was Fox, and not Burke, who on this occasion
+defended Johnson. <i>Parl. Hist.</i> xvii.1054. As Goldsmith was
+writing <i>Retaliation</i> at the very time that this second
+attack was made, it is very likely that it was the occasion, of
+the change in the line.</p>
+<p><a name="note-984">[984]</a> In the
+original <i>yet</i>.</p>
+<center><a name=
+"note-985">[985]</a></center>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'Sis pecore et multa dives tellure licebit,
+ Tibique Pactolus fluat.'
+ 'Though wide thy land extends, and large thy fold,
+ Though rivers roll for thee their purest gold.'
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>FRANCIS. Horace, <i>Epodes</i>, xv. 19.</p>
+<p><a name="note-986">[986]</a> See
+Macaulay's <i>Essays</i>, ed. 1843, i. 404, for Macaulay's
+appropriation and amplification of this passage.</p>
+<p><a name="note-987">[987]</a> See
+<i>ante</i>, ii. 168.</p>
+<p><a name="note-988">[988]</a> Mr.
+Croker suggests the Rev. Martin Sherlock, an Irish Clergyman,
+'who published in 1781 his own travels under the title of
+<i>Letters of an English Traveller translated from the
+French.</i>' Croker's <i>Boswell, p. 770. Mason writes of him as
+'Mister, or Monsieur, or Signor Sherlock, for I am told he is
+both [sic] French, English, and Italian in print.' Walpole's</i>
+Letters<i>, viii. 202. I think, however, that Dr. Thomas Campbell
+is meant. His</i> Philosophical Survey of the South of Ireland
+<i>Boswell calls 'a very entertaining book, which has, however,
+one fault;&mdash;that it assumes the fictitious character of an
+Englishman.'</i> Ante<i>, ii. 339.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-989">[989]</a> See
+ante<i>, iv. 49.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-990">[990]</a> This
+anecdote is not in the first two editions.</p>
+<p><a name="note-991">[991]</a> See
+ante<i>, in. 369.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-992">[992]</a> 'I have
+heard,' says Hawkins (Life<i>, p. 409), 'that in many instances,
+and in some with tears in his eyes, he has apologised to those
+whom he had offended by contradiction or roughness of behaviour.'
+See</i> ante<i>, ii. 109, and 256, note 1.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-993">[993]</a> Johnson
+(Works<i>, viii. 131) describes Savage's 'superstitious regard to
+the correction of his sheets ... The intrusion or omission of a
+comma was sufficient to discompose him, and he would lament an
+errour of a single letter as a heavy calamity.'</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-994">[994]</a>
+Compositor in the Printing-house means, the person who adjusts
+the types in the order in which they are to stand for printing;
+and arranges what is called the form<i>, from which an impression
+is taken. BOSWELL.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-995">[995]</a> This
+circumstance therefore alluded to in Mr. Courtenay's Poetical
+Character <i>of him is strictly true. My informer was Mrs.
+Desmoulins, who lived many years in Dr. Johnson's house. BOSWELL.
+The following are Mr. Courtenay's lines:&mdash;</i></p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'Soft-eyed compassion with a look benign,
+ His fervent vows he offered at thy shrine;
+ To guilt, to woe, the sacred debt was paid,
+ And helpless females blessed his pious aid;
+ Snatched from disease, and want's abandoned crew,
+ Despair and anguish from their victims flew;
+ Hope's soothing balm into their bosoms stole,
+ And tears of penitence restored the soul.'
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p><a name="note-996">[996]</a> The
+Cross Readings <i>were said to be formed 'by reading two columns
+of a newspaper together onwards,' whereby 'the strangest
+connections were brought about,' such as:&mdash;</i></p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'This morning the Right Hon. the Speaker
+ was convicted of keeping a disorderly house.
+ Whereas the said barn was set on fire by
+ an incendiary letter dropped early in the morning.
+ By order of the Commissioners for Paving
+ An infallible remedy for the stone and gravel.
+ The sword of state was carried
+ before Sir John Fielding and committed to Newgate.'
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>The New Foundling Hospital for Wit<i>, i. 129. According to
+Northcote (</i>Life of Reynolds<i>, i. 217), 'Dr. Goldsmith
+declared, in the heat of his admiration of these</i> Cross
+Readings<i>, it would have given him more pleasure to have been
+the author of them than of all the works he had ever published of
+his own.' Horace Walpole (Letters, v. 30) writes:&mdash; 'Have
+you seen that delightful paper composed out of scraps in the
+newspapers? I laughed till I cried. I mean the paper that
+says:&mdash;</i></p>
+<p>"This day his Majesty will go in great state to fifteen
+notorious common prostitutes."'</p>
+<p><a name="note-997">[997]</a> One of
+these gentlemen was probably Mr. Musgrave (ante<i>, ii. 343, note
+2), who, says Mrs. Piozzi (</i>Anec<i>. p. 295), when 'once he
+was singularly warm about Johnson's writing the lives of our
+famous prose authors, getting up and entreating him to set about
+the work immediately, he coldly replied, "Sit down, Sir."' Miss
+Burney says that 'the incense he paid Dr. Johnson by his solemn
+manner of listening, by the earnest reverence with which he eyed
+him, and by a theatric start of admiration every time he spoke,
+joined to the Doctor's utter insensibility to all these tokens,
+made me find infinite difficulty in keeping my countenance.' Mme.
+D'Arblay's</i> Diary<i>, ii. 85. The other gentleman was perhaps
+Dr. Wharton.</i> Ante<i>, ii. 41, note 1.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-998">[998]</a> Probably
+Dr. Beattie. The number of letters in his name agrees with the
+asterisks given a few lines below. Ante<i>, iii. 339, note 1,
+and</i> post<i>, p. 330.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-999">[999]</a> Johnson,
+in his Dictionary<i>, defines</i> cong&eacute; d'&eacute;lire
+<i>as</i> the king's permission royal to a dean and chapter in
+time of vacation, to choose a bishop. <i>When Dr. Hampden was
+made Bishop of Hereford in 1848, the Dean resisted the
+appointment. H. C. Robinson records, on the authority of the
+Bishop's Secretary (</i>Diary<i>, iii. 311), that 'at the actual
+confirmation in Bow Church the scene was quite ludicrous. After
+the judge had told the opposers that he could not hear them, the
+citation for opposers to come forward was repeated, at which the
+people present laughed out, as at a play.'</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1000">[1000]</a> This
+has been printed in other publications, 'fall to the ground<i>.'
+But Johnson himself gave me the true expression which he had used
+as above; meaning that the recommendation left as little choice
+in the one case as the other. BOSWELL. One of the 'other
+publications is Hawkins's edition of Johnson's</i> Works<i>. See
+in it vol. xi. p. 216.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1001">[1001]</a> They
+are published in vol. xi. of Hawkins's edition of Johnson's
+Works<i>. 1787, and are often quoted in my notes. It should be
+remembered that Steevens is not trustworthy. See</i> ante<i>,
+iii. 281, and iv. 178.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1002">[1002]</a> See
+ante<i>, ii. 96.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1003">[1003]</a> See
+ante<i>, p. iii.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1004">[1004]</a> She
+Stoops to Conquer <i>was first acted on March 15, 1773. The King
+of Sardinia had died on Feb. 20.</i> Gent. Mag<i>. 1773, pp. 149,
+151.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1005">[1005]</a> Hannah
+More (Memoirs<i>, i. 170) describes how, in 1780, she went to one
+of Mrs. Ord's assemblies at a time when 'the mourning for some
+foreign Wilhelmina Jaquelina was not over. Every human creature
+was in deep mourning, and I, poor I, all gorgeous in scarlet.
+Even Jacobite Johnson was in deep mourning.'</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1006">[1006]</a> In the
+tenth edition of the Rambler<i>, published in 1784, the entry is
+still found:&mdash;'Milton, Mr. John, remarks on his
+versification.' In like manner we find:&mdash;'Shakspeare, Mr.
+William, his eminent success in tragi-comedy;' 'Spenser, Mr.
+Edmund, some imitations of his diction censured;' 'Cowley, Mr.
+Abraham, a passage in his writing illustrated.'</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1007">[1007]</a> See
+ante<i>, p. 116.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1008">[1008]</a> See
+ante<i>, iii. 425, note 3.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1009">[1009]</a>
+Hawkins (Life<i>, p. 571) writes:&mdash;'The plan for Johnson's
+visiting the Continent became so well known, that, as a lady then
+resident at Rome afterwards informed me, his arrival was
+anxiously expected throughout Italy.'</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1010">[1010]</a> Edward
+Lord Thurlow. BOSWELL.</p>
+<p><a name="note-1011">[1011]</a> See
+ante<i>, p. 179.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1012">[1012]</a> In
+1778.</p>
+<p><a name="note-1013">[1013]</a> 'With
+Lord Thurlow, while he was at the bar, Johnson was well
+acquainted. He said to Mr. Murphy twenty years ago, "Thurlow is a
+man of such vigour of mind that I never knew I was to meet him,
+but&mdash;I was going to tell a falsehood; I was going to say I
+was afraid of him, and that would not be true, for I was never
+afraid of any man&mdash;but I never knew that I was to meet
+Thurlow, but I knew I had something to encounter."' Monthly
+Review <i>for 1787, lxxvi. 382. Murphy, no doubt, was the writer.
+Lord Campbell (</i>Lives of the Chancellors<i>, ed. 1846, v.621)
+quotes from 'the Diary of a distinguished political character' an
+account of a meeting between Thurlow and Horne Tooke, in 1801.
+'Tooke evidently came forward for a display, and as I considered
+his powers of conversation as surpassing those of any person I
+had ever seen (in point of skill and dexterity, and if necessary
+in</i> lying<i>), so I took for granted old grumbling Thurlow
+would be obliged to lower his top-sail to him&mdash;but it seemed
+as if the very</i> look <i>and</i> voice <i>of Thurlow scared him
+out of his senses from the first moment. So Tooke tried to
+recruit himself by wine, and, though not generally a drinker, was
+very drunk, but all would not do.'</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1014">[1014]</a> It is
+strange that Sir John Hawkins should have related that the
+application was made by Sir Joshua Reynolds, when he could so
+easily have been informed of the truth by inquiring of Sir
+Joshua. Sir John's carelessness to ascertain facts is very
+remarkable. BOSWELL.</p>
+<p><a name="note-1015">[1015]</a> There
+is something dreadful in the thought of the old man quietly going
+on with his daily life within a few hundred yards of this
+shocking scene of slaughter, this 'legal massacre,' to use his
+own words (ante<i>, p. 188, note 3). England had a kind of Reign
+of Terror of its own; little thought of at the time or remembered
+since. Twenty-four men were sentenced to death at the Old Bailey
+Sessions that ended on April 28. On June 16 nine of these had the
+sentence commuted; the rest were hanged this day. Among these men
+was not a single murderer. Twelve of them had committed burglary,
+two a street robbery, and one had personated another man's name,
+with intent to receive his wages.</i> Ann. Reg<i>. xxvii, 193,
+and</i> Gent. Mag<i>. liv. 379, 474. The</i> Gent. Mag<i>.
+recording the sentences, remarks:&mdash;'Convicts under sentence
+of death in Newgate and the gaols throughout the kingdom increase
+so fast, that, were they all to be executed, England would soon
+be marked among the nations as the</i> Bloody Country<i>.' In the
+spring assizes the returns are given for ten towns. There were 88
+capital convictions, of which 21 were at Winchester.</i> Ib<i>.
+224. In the summer assizes and at the Old Bailey Sessions for
+July there were 149 capital convictions. At Maidstone a man on
+being sentenced 'gave three loud cheers, upon which the judge
+gave strict orders for his being chained to the floor of the
+dungeon.'</i> Ib<i>. pp. 311, 633. The hangman was to grow busier
+yet. This increase in the number of capital punishments was
+attributed by Romilly in great part to Madan's</i> Thoughts on
+Executive Justice<i>; 'a small tract, in which, by a mistaken
+application of the maxim "that the certainty of punishment is
+more efficacious than its severity for the prevention of crimes,"
+he absurdly insisted on the expediency of rigidly enforcing, in
+every instance, our penal code, sanguinary and barbarous as it
+was. In 1783, the year before the book was published, there were
+executed in London only 51 malefactors; in 1785, the year after
+the book was published, there were executed 97; and it was
+recently after the publication of the book that was exhibited a
+spectacle unseen in London for a long course of years before, the
+execution of nearly 20 criminals at a time.'</i> Life of
+Romilly<i>, i. 89. Madan's Tract was published in the winter of
+1784-5. Boswell's fondness for seeing executions is shewn,</i>
+ante<i>, ii. 93.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1016">[1016]</a> See
+ante<i>, ii. 82, 104; iii. 290; and v. 7l.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1017">[1017]</a> A
+friend of mine happened to be passing by a field congregation
+<i>in the environs of London, when a Methodist preacher quoted
+this passage with triumph. BOSWELL. On Dec. 26, 1784, John Wesley
+preached the condemned criminals' sermon to forty-seven who were
+under sentence of death. He records:&mdash;'The power of the Lord
+was eminently present, and most of the prisoners were in tears. A
+few days after, twenty of them died at once, five of whom died in
+peace. I could not but greatly approve of the spirit and
+behaviour of Mr. Villette, the Ordinary; and I rejoiced to hear
+that it was the same on all similar occasions.' Wesley's</i>
+Journal<i>, ed. 1827, iv. 287.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1018">[1018]</a> I
+trust that THE CITY OF LONDON, now happily in unison with THE
+COURT, will have the justice and generosity to obtain preferment
+for this Reverend Gentleman, now a worthy old servant of that
+magnificent Corporation. BOSWELL. In like manner, Boswell in 1768
+praised the Rev. Mr. Moore, Mr. Villette's predecessor. 'Mr.
+Moore, the Ordinary of Newgate, discharged his duty with much
+earnestness and a fervour for which I and all around me esteemed
+and loved him. Mr. Moore seems worthy of his office, which, when
+justly considered, is a very important one.' London Mag. <i>1783,
+p. 204. For the quarrel between the City and the Court, see</i>
+ante<i>, iii. 201.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1019">[1019]</a> See
+ante<i>, i. 387.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1020">[1020]</a> Knox
+in Winter Evenings<i>, No. xi. (</i>Works<i>, ii. 348), attacks
+Johnson's biographers for lowering his character by publishing
+his private conversation. 'Biography,' he complains, 'is every
+day descending from its dignity.' See</i> ante<i>, i. 222, note
+1.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1021">[1021]</a> Piozzi
+Letters<i>, ii. 256.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1022">[1022]</a>
+Johnson wrote on April 15:&mdash;'I am still very weak, though my
+appetite is keen and my digestion potent. ... I now think and
+consult to-day what I shall eat to-morrow. This disease likewise
+will, I hope, be cured.' Piozzi Letters<i>, ii. 362. Beattie, who
+dined with Johnson on June 27, wrote:&mdash;'Wine, I think, would
+do him good, but he cannot be prevailed on to drink it. He has,
+however, a voracious appetite for food. I verily believe that on
+Sunday last he ate as much to dinner as I have done in all for
+these ten days past.' Forbes's</i> Beattie<i>, ed. 1824, p. 315.
+It was said that Beattie latterly indulged somewhat too much in
+wine.</i> Ib<i>. p. 432.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1023">[1023]</a> Horace
+Walpole wrote in April 1750 (Letters<i>, ii. 206):&mdash;'There
+is come from France a Madame Bocage who has translated Milton: my
+Lord Chesterfield prefers the copy to the original; but that is
+not uncommon for him to do, who is the patron of bad authors and
+bad actors. She has written a play too, which was damned, and
+worthy my lord's approbation.' It was this lady who bade her
+footman blow into the spout of the tea-pot.</i> Ante<i>, ii. 403.
+Dr. J. H. Burton writes of her in his</i> Life of Hume<i>, ii.
+213:&mdash;'The wits must praise her bad poetry if they
+frequented her house. "Elle &eacute;tait d'une figure aimable,"
+says Grimm, "elle est bonne femme; elle est riche; elle pouvait
+fixer chez elle les gens d'esprit et de bonne compagnie, sans les
+mettre dans l'embarras de lui parler avec peu de
+sinc&eacute;rit&eacute; de sa Colombiade ou de ses
+Amazones."'</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1024">[1024]</a> It is
+the sea round the South Pole that she describes in her Elegy
+<i>(not</i> Ode<i>). The description begins:&mdash;</i></p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'While o'er the deep in many a dreadful form,
+ The giant Danger howls along the storm,
+ Furling the iron sails with numbed hands,
+ Firm on the deck the great Adventurer stands;<i> Round glitt'ring mountains hear the billows rave,
+ And the vast ruin thunder on the wave.'
+</i>
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>In the Gent. Mag. <i>1793, p. 197, were given extracts abusive
+of Johnson from some foolish letters that passed between Miss
+Seward and Hayley, a poet her equal in feebleness. Boswell, in
+his</i> Corrections and Additions to the First Edition
+<i>(</i>ante<i>, i.10), corrected an error into which he had been
+led by Miss Seward (</i>ante<i>, i.92, note 2). She, in the</i>
+Gent. Mag. <i>for 1793, p.875, defended herself and attacked him.
+His reply is found on p.1009. He says:&mdash;'As my book was to
+be a</i> real history<i>, and not a</i> novel<i>, it was
+necessary to suppress all erroneous particulars, however
+entertaining.' (</i>Ante<i>, ii 467, note 4.) He
+continues:&mdash;'So far from having any hostile disposition
+towards this Lady, I have, in my</i> Life of Dr.
+Johnson<i>...quoted a compliment paid by him to one of her
+poetical pieces; and I have withheld his opinion of herself,
+thinking that she might not like it. I am afraid it has reached
+her by some other means; and thus we may account for various
+attacks by her on her venerable townsman since his decease...What
+are we to think of the scraps of letters between her and Mr.
+Hayley, impotently attempting to undermine the noble pedestal on
+which the publick opinion has placed Dr. Johnson?'</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1025">[1025]</a> See
+ante<i>, i.265, and iv. 174.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1026">[1026]</a>
+'Johnson said he had once seen Mr. Stanhope at Dodsley's shop,
+and was so much struck with his awkward manners and appearance
+that he could not help asking Mr. Dodsley who he was.' Johnson's
+Works<i>, (1787) xi.209.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1027">[1027]</a>
+Chesterfield was Secretary of State from Nov. 1746 to Feb. 1748.
+His letters to his son extend from 1739 to 1768.</p>
+<p><a name="note-1028">[1028]</a> Foote
+had taken off Lord Chesterfield in The Cozeners<i>. Mrs.
+Aircastle trains her son Toby in the graces. She says to her
+husband:&mdash;'Nothing but grace! I wish you would read some
+late</i> Posthumous Letters<i>; you would then know the true
+value of grace.' Act ii. sc. 2.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1029">[1029]</a> See
+ante<i>, p.78, note 1.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1030">[1030]</a> See a
+pamphlet entitled Remarks on the Characters of the Court of Queen
+Anne<i>, included in Swift's</i> Works<i>, ed. 1803, vi.
+163.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1031">[1031]</a>
+Carleton, according to the Memoirs<i>, made his first service in
+the navy in 1672&mdash;seventeen years before the siege of Derry.
+There is no mention of this siege in the book.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1032">[1032]</a> 'He
+had obtained, by his long service, some knowledge of the practic
+part of an engineer.' Preface to the Memoirs<i>.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1033">[1033]</a> Nearly
+200 pages in Bohn's edition. See ante<i>, i. 71, for Johnson's
+rapid reading.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1034">[1034]</a> Lord
+Mahon (War of the Succession in Spain<i>, Appendix, p. 131)
+proves that a Captain Carleton really served. 'It is not
+impossible,' he says, 'that the MS. may have been intrusted to De
+Foe for the purpose of correction or revision...The</i> Memoirs
+<i>are most strongly marked with internal proofs of
+authenticity.' Lockhart (</i>Life of Scott<i>, iii. 84)
+says:&mdash;'It seems to be now pretty generally believed that
+Carleton's</i> Memoirs <i>were among the numberless fabrications
+of De Foe; but in this case (if the fact indeed be so), as in
+that of his</i> Cavalier<i>, he no doubt had before him the rude
+journal of some officer.' Dr. Burton (</i>Reign of Queen Anne
+<i>ii. 173) says that MSS. in the British Museum disprove 'the
+possibility of De Foe's authorship.'</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1035">[1035]</a> Lord
+Chesterfield (Letters<i>, ii. 109) writing to his son on Nov. 29,
+1748, says of Mr. Eliot:&mdash;'Imitate that application of his,
+which has made him know all thoroughly, and to the bottom. He
+does not content himself with the surface of knowledge; but works
+in the mine for it, knowing that it lies deep.'</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1036">[1036]</a> The
+Houghton Collection was sold in 1779 by the third Earl of Orford,
+to the Empress of Russia for &pound;40,555. (Walpole's
+Letters<i>, vii. 227, note 1.)</i></p>
+<p>Horace Walpole wrote on Aug. 4 of that year (ib<i>. p.
+235):&mdash;'Well! adieu to Houghton! about its mad master I
+shall never trouble myself more. From the moment he came into
+possession, he has undermined every act of my father that was
+within his reach, but, having none of that great man's sense or
+virtues, he could only lay wild hands on lands and houses; and
+since he has stript Houghton of its glory, I do not care a straw
+what he does with the stone or the acres.'</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1037">[1037]</a> This
+museum at Alkerington near Manchester is described in the Gent.
+Mag<i>. 1773, p.219. A proposal was made in Parliament to buy it
+for the British Museum.</i> Ib<i>. 1783, p. 919. On July 8, 1784,
+a bill enabling Lever to dispose of it by lottery passed the
+House of Commons.</i> Ib<i>. 1784, p.705.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1038">[1038]</a>
+Johnson defines intuition <i>as</i> sight of anything; immediate
+knowledge<i>; and</i> sagacity <i>as</i> quickness of scent;
+acuteness of discovery<i>.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1039">[1039]</a> In the
+first edition it stands 'A gentleman<i>' and below instead of Mr.
+&mdash;&mdash;, Mr. &mdash;&mdash;. In the second edition Mr.
+&mdash;&mdash; becomes Mr. &mdash;&mdash;. In the third
+edition</i> young <i>is added. Young Mr. Burke is probably meant.
+As it stood in the second edition it might have been thought that
+Edmund Burke was the gentleman; the more so as Johnson often
+denied his want of wit.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1040">[1040]</a>
+Hamlet<i>, act i. sc. 2.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1041">[1041]</a> See
+ante<i>, i. 372, note 1.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1042">[1042]</a>
+Windham says (Diary<i>, p. 34) that when Dr. Brocklesby made this
+offer 'Johnson pressed his hands and said, "God bless you through
+Jesus Christ, but I will take no money but from my sovereign."
+This, if I mistake not, was told the King through West.' Dr.
+Brocklesby wrote to Burke, on July 2, 1788, to make him 'an
+instant present of &pound;1000, which,' he continues, 'for years
+past, by will, I had destined as a testimony of my regard on my
+decease.' Burke, accepting the present, said:&mdash;'I shall
+never be ashamed to have it known, that I am obliged to one who
+never can be capable of converting his kindness into a burthen.'
+Burke's</i> Corres. <i>iii.78. See</i> ante<i>, p. 263, for the
+just praise bestowed by Johnson on physicians in his</i> Life of
+Garth<i>.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1043">[1043]</a> See
+ante<i>, ii. 194.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1044">[1044]</a>
+Letters to Mrs. Thrale<i>, vol. ii. p 375. BOSWELL.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1045">[1045]</a> Rogers
+(Table-Talk<i>, p. 45) describes him as 'a very handsome,
+gentlemanly, and amiable person. Mme. D'Arblay tells how one
+evening at Dr. Burney's home, when Signor Piozzi was playing on
+the piano, 'Mrs. Thrale stealing on tip-toe behind him,
+ludicrously began imitating him. Dr. Burney whispered to her,
+"Because, Madam, you have no ear yourself for music, will you
+destroy the attention of all who in that one point are otherwise
+gifted?"' Mrs. Thrale took this rebuke very well. This was her
+first meeting with Piozzi. It was in Mr. Thrale's life-time.</i>
+Memoirs of Dr. Burney<i>, ii. 110.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1046">[1046]</a> Dr.
+Johnson's letter to Sir John Hawkins, Life<i>, p. 570. BOSWELL.
+The last time Miss Burney saw Johnson, not three weeks before his
+death, he told her that the day before he had seen Miss Thrale.
+'I then said:&mdash;"Do you ever, Sir, hear from mother?" "No,"
+cried he, "nor write to her. I drive her quite from my mind. If I
+meet with one of her letters, I burn it instantly. I have burnt
+all I can find. I never speak of her, and I desire never to hear
+of her more. I drive her, as I said, wholly from my mind."' Mme.
+D'Arblay's</i> Diary<i>, ii. 328.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1047">[1047]</a> See
+ante<i>, i. 493.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1048">[1048]</a>
+Anec<i>. p. 293. BOSWELL.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1049">[1049]</a> 'The
+saying of the old philosopher who observes, "that he who wants
+least is most like the gods who want nothing," was a favourite
+sentence with Dr. Johnson, who on his own part required less
+attendance, sick or well, than ever I saw any human creature.
+Conversation was all he required to make him happy.' Piozzi's
+Anec<i>. p.275. Miss Burney's account of the life at Streatham is
+generally very cheerful. I suspect that the irksome confinement
+described by Mrs. Piozzi was not felt by her till she became
+attached to Mr. Piozzi. This caused a great change in her
+behaviour and much unhappiness. (</i>Ante<i>, p. 138, note 4.) He
+at times treated her harshly. (</i>Ante<i>, p. 160, note.) Two
+passages in her letters to Miss Burney shew a want of feeling in
+her for a man who for nearly twenty years had been to her almost
+as a father. On Feb. 18, 1784, she writes:&mdash;'Johnson is in a
+sad way doubtless; yet he may still with care last another
+twelve-month, and every week's existence is gain to him, who,
+like good Hezekiah, wearies Heaven with entreaties for life. I
+wrote him a very serious letter the other day.' On March 23 she
+writes:&mdash;' My going to London would be a dreadful expense,
+and bring on a thousand inquiries and inconveniences&mdash;visits
+to Johnson and from Cator.' It is likely that in other letters
+there were like passages, but these letters Miss Burney 'for
+cogent reasons destroyed.' Mme. D'Arblay's</i> Diary<i>, ii. 305,
+7, 8.</i></p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+<a name="note-1050">1050</a>
+ 'Bless'd paper credit! last and best supply!
+ That lends corruption lighter wings to fly!'
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>Pope, Moral Essays<i>, iii. 39.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1051">[1051]</a> Who
+has been pleased to furnish me with his remarks. BOSWELL. No
+doubt Malone, who says, however: 'On the whole the publick is
+indebted to her for her lively, though very inaccurate and
+artful, account of Dr. Johnson.' Prior's Malone<i>, p.
+364.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1052">[1052]</a> See
+ante<i>, iii. 81.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1053">[1053]</a> Anec.
+<i>p. 183. BOSWELL.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1054">[1054]</a> Hannah
+More. She, with her sisters, had kept a boarding-school at
+Bristol.</p>
+<p><a name="note-1055">[1055]</a> She
+first saw Johnson in June, 1774. According to her Memoirs <i>(i.
+48) he met her 'with good humour in his countenance, and
+continued in the same pleasant humour the whole of the evening.'
+She called on him in Bolt Court. One of her sisters
+writes:&mdash;'Miss Reynolds told the doctor of all our rapturous
+exclamations [about him] on the road. He shook his scientific
+head at Hannah, and said, "She was a silly thing."'</i> Ib<i>. p.
+49. 'He afterwards mentioned to Miss Reynolds how much he had
+been touched with the enthusiasm of the young authoress, which
+was evidently genuine and unaffected.'</i> Ib<i>. p. 50. She met
+him again in the spring of 1775. Her sister writes:&mdash;'The
+old genius was extremely jocular, and the young one very
+pleasant. They indeed tried which could "pepper the highest"
+[Goldsmith's</i> Retaliation<i>], and it is not clear to me that
+he was really the highest seasoner.'</i> Ib<i>. p. 54. From the
+Mores we know nothing of his reproof. He had himself said of 'a
+literary lady'&mdash;no doubt Hannah More&mdash;'I was obliged to
+speak to Miss Reynolds to let her know that I desired she would
+not flatter me so much.'</i> Ante<i>, iii.293. Miss Burney
+records a story she had from Mrs. Thrale, 'which,' she continues,
+'exceeds, I think, in its severity all the severe things I have
+yet heard of Dr. Johnson's saying. When Miss More was introduced
+to him, she began singing his praise in the warmest manner. For
+some time he heard her with that quietness which a long use of
+praise has given him: she then redoubled her strokes, till at
+length he turned suddenly to her, with a stern and angry
+countenance, and said, "Madam, before you flatter a man so
+grossly to his face, you should consider whether or not your
+flattery is worth his having."' Mme. D'Arblay's</i> Diary<i>,
+i.103. Shortly afterwards Miss Burney records (</i>ib<i>. p. 121)
+that Mrs. Thrale said to him:&mdash;'We have told her what you
+said to Miss More, and I believe that makes her afraid.' He
+replied:&mdash;'Well, and if she was to serve me as Miss More
+did, I should say the same thing to her.' We have therefore three
+reports of what he said&mdash;one from Mrs. Thrale indirectly,
+one from her directly, and the third from Malone. However severe
+the reproof was, the Mores do not seem to have been much touched
+by it. At all events they enjoyed the meeting with Johnson, and
+Hannah More needed a second reproof that was conveyed to her
+through Miss Reynolds.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1056">[1056]</a> Anec.
+<i>p. 202. BOSWELL.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1057">[1057]</a> See
+ante<i>, i. 40, 68, 92, 415, 481; ii. 188, 194; iii. 229; and</i>
+post<i>, v. 245, note 2.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1058">[1058]</a> Anec.
+<i>p. 44. BOSWELL. See</i> ante<i>, p. 318,</i> note <i>1, where
+I quote the passage.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1059">[1059]</a> Ib<i>.
+p. 23. BOSWELL.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1060">[1060]</a> Ib<i>.
+p. 45. Mr. Hayward says:&mdash;'She kept a copious diary and
+notebook called</i> Thraliana <i>from 1776 to 1809. It is now,'
+<a name="note-1861">[1861]</a> he
+continues, 'in the possession of Mr. Salusbury, who deems it of
+too private and delicate a character to be submitted to
+strangers, but has kindly supplied me with some curious passages
+from it.' Hayward's</i> Piozzi<i>, i. 6.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1061">[1061]</a> Ib<i>.
+p. 51 [192]. BOSWELL.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1062">[1062]</a> Anec.
+<i>p. 193 [51]. BOSWELL.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1063">[1063]</a>
+Johnson, says Murphy, (Life<i>, p. 96) 'felt not only kindness,
+but zeal and ardour for his friends.' 'Who,' he asks (</i>ib<i>.
+p. 144), 'was more sincere and steady in his friendships?'
+'Numbers,' he says (</i>ib<i>. p. 146), 'still remember with
+gratitude the friendship which he shewed to them with unaltered
+affection for a number of years.'</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1064">[1064]</a> See
+ante<i>, ii. 285, and iii. 440.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1065">[1065]</a>
+Johnson's Works<i>, i. 152, 3.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1066">[1066]</a> In
+vol. ii. of the Piozzi Letters <i>some of these letters are
+given.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1067">[1067]</a> He
+gave Miss Thrale lessons in Latin. Mme. D'Arblay's Diary, <i>i.
+243 and 427.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1068">[1068]</a> Anec.
+<i>p. 258. BOSWELL.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1069">[1069]</a> George
+James Cholmondeley, Esq., grandson of George, third Earl of
+Cholmondeley, and one of the Commissioners of Excise; a gentleman
+respected for his abilities, and elegance of manners. BOSWELL.
+When I spoke to him a few years before his death upon this point,
+I found him very sore at being made the topic of such a debate,
+and very unwilling to remember any thing about either the offence
+or the apology. CROKER.</p>
+<p><a name="note-1070">[1070]</a>
+Letters to Mrs. Thrale, <i>vol. ii. p. 12. BOSWELL.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1071">[1071]</a> Mrs.
+Piozzi (Anec.<i>p. 258) lays the scene of this anecdote 'in some
+distant province, either Shropshire or Derbyshire, I believe.'
+Johnson drove through these counties with the Thrales in 1774
+(</i>ante<i>, ii. 285). If the passage in the letter refers to
+the same anecdote&mdash;and Mrs. Piozzi does not, so far as I
+know, deny it&mdash;more than three years passed before Johnson
+was told of his rudeness. Baretti, in a MS. note on</i> Piozzi
+Letters<i>, ii. 12, says that the story was 'Mr. Cholmondeley's
+running away from his creditors.' In this he is certainly wrong;
+yet if Mr. Cholmondeley had run away, and others gave the same
+explanation of the passage, his soreness is easily accounted
+for.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1072">[1072]</a>
+Anec<i>. p. 23. BOSWELL.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1073">[1073]</a> Ib<i>.
+p. 302. BOSWELL.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1074">[1074]</a>
+Rasselas<i>, chap, xvii</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1075">[1075]</a>
+Paradise Lost<i>, iv. 639.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1076">[1076]</a>
+Anec<i>. p. 63. BOSWELL.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1077">[1077]</a>
+'Johnson one day, on seeing an old terrier lie asleep by the
+fire-side at Streatham, said, "Presto, you are, if possible, a
+more lazy dog that I am."' Johnson's Works<i>, ed. 1787, xi.
+203.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1078">[1078]</a> Upon
+mentioning this to my friend Mr. Wilkes, he, with his usual
+readiness, pleasantly matched it with the following sentimental
+anecdote<i>. He was invited by a young man of fashion at Paris,
+to sup with him and a lady, who had been for some time his
+mistress, but with whom he was going to part. He said to Mr.
+Wilkes that he really felt very much for her, she was in such
+distress; and that he meant to make her a present of two hundred
+louis-d'ors. Mr. Wilkes observed the behaviour of Mademoiselle,
+who sighed indeed very piteously, and assumed every pathetick air
+of grief; but eat no less than three French pigeons, which are as
+large as English partridges, besides other things. Mr. Wilkes
+whispered the gentleman, 'We often say in England,</i> Excessive
+sorrow is exceeding dry<i>, but I never heard</i> Excessive
+sorrow is exceeding hungry<i>. Perhaps</i> one <i>hundred will
+do.' The gentleman took the hint. BOSWELL.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1079">[1079]</a> See
+post<i>, p. 367, for the passage omitted.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1080">[1080]</a> Sir
+Joshua Reynolds, on account of the excellence both of the
+sentiment and expression of this letter, took a copy of it which
+he shewed to some of his friends; one of whom, who admired it,
+being allowed to peruse it leisurely at home, a copy was made,
+and found its way into the newspapers and magazines. It was
+transcribed with some inaccuracies. I print it from the original
+draft in Johnson's own hand-writing. BOSWELL. Hawkins writes
+(Life<i>, p. 574):&mdash;'Johnson, upon being told that it was in
+print, exclaimed in my hearing, "I am betrayed," but soon after
+forgot, as he was ever ready to do all real or supposed injuries,
+the error that made the publication possible.'</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1081">[1081]</a> Cowper
+wrote of Thurlow:&mdash;'I know well the Chancellor's benevolence
+of heart, and how much he is misunderstood by the world. When he
+was young he would do the kindest things, and at an expense to
+himself which at that time he could ill afford, and he would do
+them too in the most secret manner.' Southey's Cowper<i>, vii.
+128. Yet Thurlow did not keep his promise made to Cowper when
+they were fellow-clerks in an attorney's office. 'Thurlow, I am
+nobody, and shall be always nobody, and you will be chancellor.
+You shall provide for me when you are.' He smiled, and replied,
+'I surely will.'</i> Ib. <i>i. 41. When Cowper sent him the first
+volume of his poems, 'he thought it not worth his while,' the
+poet writes, 'to return me any answer, or to take the least
+notice of my present.'</i> Ib. <i>xv. 176. Mr. (afterwards Sir)
+W. Jones, in two letters to Burke, speaks of Thurlow as the
+[Greek: thaerion] (beast). 'I heard last night, with surprise and
+affliction,' he wrote on Feb. 15, 1783,'that the [Greek:
+thaerion] was to continue in office. Now I can assure you from my
+own positive knowledge (and I know him well), that although he
+hates</i> our <i>species in general, yet his particular hatred is
+directed against none more virulently than against Lord North,
+and the friends of the late excellent Marquis.' Burke's</i>
+Corres. <i>ii. 488, and iii. 10.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1082">[1082]</a>
+'Scarcely had Pitt obtained possession of unbounded power when an
+aged writer of the highest eminence, who had made very little by
+his writings, and who was sinking into the grave under a load of
+infirmities and sorrows, wanted five or six hundred pounds to
+enable him, during the winter or two which might still remain to
+him, to draw his breath more easily in the soft climate of Italy.
+Not a farthing was to be obtained; and before Christmas the
+author of the English Dictionary <i>and of the</i> Lives of the
+Poets <i>had gasped his last in the river fog and coal smoke of
+Fleet-street.'</i> Macaulay's Writings and Speeches, <i>ed. 1871,
+p. 413. Just before Macaulay, with monstrous exaggeration, says
+that Gibbon, 'forced by poverty to leave his country, completed
+his immortal work on the shores of Lake Leman.' This poverty of
+Gibbon would have been 'splendour' to Johnson. Debrett's Royal
+Kalendar, for 1795 (p. 88), shews that there were twelve Lords of
+the King's Bedchamber receiving each &pound;1000 a year, and
+fourteen Grooms of the Bedchamber receiving each, &pound;500 a
+year. As Burns was made a gauger, so Johnson might have been made
+a Lord, or at least a Groom of the Bedchamber. It is not certain
+that Pitt heard of the application for an increased pension. Mr.
+Croker quotes from Thurlow's letter to Reynolds of Nov. 18,
+1784:&mdash;'It was impossible for me to take the King's pleasure
+on the suggestion I presumed to move. I am an untoward
+solicitor.' Whether he consulted Pitt cannot be known. Mr. Croker
+notices a curious obliteration in this letter. The Chancellor had
+written:&mdash;'It would have suited the purpose better, if
+nobody had heard of it, except Dr. Johnson, you and J.
+Boswell.'</i> Boswell <i>has been erased&mdash;'artfully' too,
+says&mdash;Mr. Croker-so that 'the sentence appears to run,
+"except Dr. Johnson, you, and I."' Mr. Croker, with his usual
+suspiciousness, suspects 'an uncandid trick.' But it is very
+likely that Thurlow himself made the obliteration, regardless of
+grammar. He might easily have thought that it would have been
+better still had Boswell not been in the secret.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1083">[1083]</a> See
+ante<i>, iii. 176.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1084">[1084]</a> On
+June 11 Boswell and Johnson were together (ante<i>, p. 293). The
+date perhaps should be July 11. The letter that follows next is
+dated July 12.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1085">[1085]</a> 'Even
+in our flight from vice some virtue lies.' FRANCIS. Horace, i.
+Epistles<i>, I. 41.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1086">[1086]</a> See
+vol. ii. p. 258. BOSWELL.</p>
+<p><a name="note-1087">[1087]</a> Mrs.
+Johnson died in 1752. See ante<i>, i. 241, note 2.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1088">[1088]</a> See
+Appendix.</p>
+<p><a name="note-1089">[1089]</a>
+Printed in his Works <i>[i. 150]. BOSWELL. See</i> ante<i>, i.
+241, note 2.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1090">[1090]</a> He
+wrote to Mr. Ryland on the same day:&mdash;'Be pleased to let the
+whole be done with privacy that I may elude the vigilance of the
+papers.' Notes and Queries<i>, 5th S. vii. 381.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1091">[1091]</a>
+Boileau, Art Po&eacute;tique<i>, chant iv.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1092">[1092]</a> This
+is probably an errour either of the transcript or the press.
+Removes <i>seems to be the word intended. MALONE.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1093">[1093]</a> See
+ante<i>, i. 332, and</i> post <i>p. 360.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1094">[1094]</a> See
+ante<i>, p. 267.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1095">[1095]</a> I have
+heard Dr. Johnson protest that he never had quite as much as he
+wished of wall-fruit, except once in his life.' Piozzi's Anec<i>.
+p. 103.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1096">[1096]</a> At the
+Essex Head, Essex-street. BOSWELL.</p>
+<p><a name="note-1097">[1097]</a>
+Juvenal, Satires<i>, x. 8:&mdash;</i></p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'Fate wings with every wish the afflictive dart.'
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>Vanity of Human Wishes<i>, l. 15.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1098">[1098]</a> Mr.
+Allen, the printer. BOSWELL. See ante<i>, iii. 141, 269.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1099">[1099]</a> It was
+on this day that he wrote the prayer given below (p. 370) in
+which is found that striking line&mdash;'this world where much is
+to be done and little to be known.'</p>
+<p><a name="note-1100">[1100]</a> His
+letter to Dr. Heberden (Croker's Boswell<i>, p. 789) shews that
+he had gone with Dr. Brocklesby to the last Academy dinner, when,
+as he boasted, 'he went up all the stairs to the pictures without
+stopping to rest or to breathe.'</i> Ante<i>, p. 270, note
+2.</i></p>
+<center><a name=
+"note-1101">[1101]</a></center>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ Quid te exempta levat<i> spinis de pluribus una?
+ 'Pluck out one thorn to mitigate thy pain,
+ What boots it while so many more remain?'
+</i>
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>FRANCIS. Horace, 2 Epistles<i>, ii. 212.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1102">[1102]</a> See
+ante<i>, iii. 4, note 2.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1103">[1103]</a> Sir
+Joshua's physician. He is mentioned by Goldsmith in his verses to
+the Miss Hornecks. Forster's Goldsmith<i>, ii. 149.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1104">[1104]</a> How
+much balloons filled people's minds at this time is shewn by such
+entries as the following in Windham's Diary<i>:-'Feb 7, 1784. Did
+not rise till past nine; from that time till eleven, did little
+more than indulge in idle reveries about balloons.' p. 3. 'July
+20. The greater part of the time, till now, one o'clock, spent in
+foolish reveries about balloons.' p. 12. Horace Walpole wrote on
+Sept. 30 (</i>Letters<i>, viii. 505):&mdash;'I cannot fill my
+paper, as the newspapers do, with air-balloons; which though
+ranked with the invention of navigation, appear to me as childish
+as the flying kites of school-boys.' 'Do not write about the
+balloon,' wrote Johnson to Reynolds (</i>post<i>, p. 368),
+'whatever else you may think proper to say.' In the beginning of
+the year he had written:&mdash;'It is very seriously true that a
+subscription of &pound;800 has been raised for the wire and
+workmanship of iron wings.'</i> Piozzi Letters<i>, ii.
+345.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1105">[1105]</a> It is
+remarkable that so good a Latin scholar as Johnson, should have
+been so inattentive to the metre, as by mistake to have written
+stellas <i>instead of</i> ignes<i>. BOSWELL.</i></p>
+<center><a name=
+"note-1106">[1106]</a></center>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'Micat inter omnes
+ Julium sidus, velut inter ignes Luna minores.'
+ 'And like the Moon, the feebler fires among,
+ Conspicuous shines the Julian star.'
+ FRANCIS. Horace, Odes<i>, i. 12. 46.
+</i>
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p><a name="note-1107">[1107]</a> See
+ante<i>, iii. 209.</i></p>
+<center><a name=
+"note-1108">[1108]</a></center>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'The little blood that creeps within his veins
+ Is but just warmed in a hot fever's pains.'
+ DRYDEN. Juvenal, Satires<i>, x. 217.
+</i>
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p><a name="note-1109">[1109]</a>
+Lunardi had made, on Sept. 15, the first balloon ascent in
+England. Gent. Mag<i>. 1784, p. 711. Johnson wrote to Mr. Ryland
+on Sept. 18:&mdash;'I had this day in three letters three
+histories of the Flying Man in the great Balloon.' He
+adds:&mdash;'I live in dismal solitude.'</i> Notes and
+Queries<i>, 5th S. vii. 381.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1110">[1110]</a> 'Sept.
+27, 1784. Went to see Blanchard's balloon. Met Burke and D.
+Burke; walked with them to Pantheon to see Lunardi's. Sept. 29.
+About nine came to Brookes's, where I heard that the balloon had
+been burnt about four o'clock.' Windham's Diary<i>, p.
+24.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1111">[1111]</a> His
+love of London continually appears. In a letter from him to Mrs.
+Smart, wife of his friend the Poet, which is published in a
+well-written life of him, prefixed to an edition of his Poems, in
+1791, there is the following sentence:-'To one that has passed so
+many years in the pleasures and opulence of London, there are few
+places that can give much delight.'</p>
+<p>Once, upon reading that line in the curious epitaph quoted in
+The Spectator;</p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'Born in New-England, did in London die;'
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>he laughed and said, 'I do not wonder at this. It would have
+been strange, if born in London, he had died in New-England.'
+BOSWELL. Mrs. Smart was in Dublin when Johnson wrote to her.
+After the passage quoted by Boswell he continued:&mdash;'I think,
+Madam, you may look upon your expedition as a proper preparative
+to the voyage which we have often talked of. Dublin, though a
+place much worse than London, is not so bad as Iceland.' Smart's
+Poems<i>, i. xxi. For Iceland see</i> ante<i>, i. 242. The
+epitaph, quoted in</i> The Spectator<i>, No. 518,
+begins&mdash;</i></p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ Here Thomas Sapper lies interred. Ah why!
+ Born in New-England, did in London die.'
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p><a name="note-1112">[1112]</a> St.
+Mark<i>, v. 34.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1113">[1113]</a> There
+is no record of this in the Gent. Mag<i>. Among the 149 persons
+who that summer had been sentenced to death (</i>ante<i>, p. 328)
+who would notice these two?</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1114">[1114]</a> See
+ante<i>, p. 356, note 1</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1115">[1115]</a>
+Johnson wrote for him a Dedication of his Tasso <i>in 1763.</i>
+Ante<i>, i. 383.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1116">[1116]</a> There
+was no information for which Dr. Johnson was less grateful that
+than for that which concerned the weather. It was in allusion to
+his impatience with those who were reduced to keep conversation
+alive by observations on the weather, that he applied the old
+proverb to himself. If any one of his intimate acquaintance told
+him it was hot or cold, wet or dry, windy or calm, he would stop
+them, by saying, 'Poh! poh! you are telling us that of which none
+but men in a mine or a dungeon can be ignorant. Let us bear with
+patience, or enjoy in quiet, elementary changes, whether for the
+better or the worse, as they are never secrets.' BURNEY. In The
+Idler<i>, No. II, Johnson shews that 'an Englishman's notice of
+the weather is the natural consequence of changeable skies and
+uncertain seasons... In our island every man goes to sleep unable
+to guess whether he shall behold in the morning a bright or
+cloudy atmosphere, whether his rest shall be lulled by a shower,
+or broken by a tempest. We therefore rejoice mutually at good
+weather, as at an escape from something that we feared; and
+mutually complain of bad, as of the loss of something that we
+hoped.' See</i> ante<i>, i. 332, and iv. 353.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1117">[1117]</a> His
+Account of the Musical Performances in Commemoration of
+Handel<i>. See</i> ante<i>, p. 283.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1118">[1118]</a> The
+celebrated Miss Fanny Burney. BOSWELL.</p>
+<p><a name="note-1119">[1119]</a> Dr.
+Burney's letter must have been franked; otherwise there would
+have been no frugality, for each enclosure was charged as a
+separate letter.</p>
+<p><a name="note-1120">[1120]</a> He
+does not know, that is to say, what people of his acquaintance
+were in town, privileged to receive letters post free; such as
+members of either House of Parliament.</p>
+<p><a name="note-1121">[1121]</a>
+Consolation <i>is clearly a blunder, Malone's conjecture</i>
+mortification <i>seems absurd.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1122">[1122]</a> See
+ante<i>, iii. 48, and iv. 177.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1123">[1123]</a>
+Windham visited him at Ashbourne in the end of August, after the
+former of these letters was written. See ante<i>, p. 356.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1124">[1124]</a> This
+may refer, as Mr. Croker says, to Hamilton's generous offer,
+mentioned ante<i>, p. 244. Yet Johnson, with his accurate mind,
+was not likely to assign to the spring an event of the previous
+November.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1125">[1125]</a>
+Johnson refers to Pope's lines on Walpole:&mdash;</p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'Seen him I have but in his happier hour <i> Of social pleasure, ill-exchanged for power.'
+ </i> Satires. Epilogue<i>, i. 29.
+</i>
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p><a name="note-1126">[1126]</a> Son of
+the late Peter Paradise, Esq. his Britannick Majesty's Consul at
+Salonica, in Macedonia, by his lady, a native of that country. He
+studied at Oxford, and has been honoured by that University with
+the degree of LL.D. He is distinguished not only by his learning
+and talents, but by an amiable disposition, gentleness of
+manners, and a very general acquaintance with well-informed and
+accomplished persons of almost all nations. BOSWELL.</p>
+<p><a name="note-1127">[1127]</a>
+Bookseller to his Majesty. BOSWELL.</p>
+<p><a name="note-1128">[1128]</a> Mr.
+Cruikshank attended him as a surgeon the year before. Ante<i>, p.
+239.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1129">[1129]</a>Allan
+Ramsay, Esq. painter to his Majesty, who died Aug. 10, 1784, in
+the 71st year of his age, much regretted by his friends. BOSWELL.
+See ante<i>, p. 260.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1130">[1130]</a>
+Northcote (Life of Reynolds<i>, ii. 187) says that Johnson 'most
+probably refers to Sir Joshua's becoming painter to the King. 'I
+know,' he continues, 'that Sir Joshua expected the appointment
+would be offered to him on the death of Ramsay, and expressed his
+disapprobation with regard to soliciting for it; but he was
+informed that it was a necessary point of etiquette, with which
+at last he complied.' His 'furious purposes' should seem to have
+been his intention to resign the Presidency of the Academy, on
+finding that the place was not at once given him, and in the
+knowledge that in the Academy there was a party against him.
+Taylor's</i> Reynolds<i>, ii. 448.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1131">[1131]</a> See
+ante<i>, p. 348.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1132">[1132]</a> The
+Chancellor had not, it should seem, asked the King. See ante<i>,
+p. 350, note.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1133">[1133]</a> The
+Duke of Devonshire has kindly given me the following explanation
+of this term:&mdash;'It was formerly the custom at some (I
+believe several) of the large country-houses to have dinners at
+which any of the neighbouring gentry and clergy might present
+themselves as guests without invitation. The custom had been
+discontinued at Chatsworth before my recollection, and so far as
+I am aware is now only kept-up at Wentworth, Lord Fitzwilliam's
+house in Yorkshire, where a few public dinners are still given
+annually. I believe, however, that all persons intending to be
+present on such occasions are now expected to give notice some
+days previously. Public dinners were also given formerly by the
+Archbishop of Canterbury, and if I am not mistaken also by the
+Archbishop of York. I have myself been present at a public dinner
+at Lambeth Palace within the last fifty years or thereabouts, and
+I have been at one or more such dinners at Wentworth.' Since
+receiving this explanation I have read the following in the
+second part of the Greville Memoirs<i>, i. 99:&mdash;'June 1,
+1838. I dined yesterday at Lambeth, at the Archbishop's public
+dinner, the handsomest entertainment I ever saw. There were
+nearly a hundred people present, all full-dressed or in uniform.
+Nothing can be more dignified and splendid than the whole
+arrangement.'</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1134">[1134]</a> Six
+weeks later he was willing to hear even of balloons, so long as
+he got a letter. 'You,' he wrote to Mr. Sastres, 'may always have
+something to tell: you live among the various orders of mankind,
+and may make a letter from the exploits, sometimes of the
+philosopher, and sometimes of the pickpocket. You see some
+balloons succeed and some miscarry, and a thousand strange and a
+thousand foolish things.' Piozzi Letters<i>, ii. 412.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1135">[1135]</a> See
+ante<i>, p. 349, note.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1136">[1136]</a> 'He
+alludes probably to the place of King's Painter; which, since
+Burke's reforming the King's household expenses, had been reduced
+from &pound;200 to &pound;50 per annum.' Northcote's Reynolds<i>,
+ii. 188. The place was more profitable than Johnson thought. 'It
+was worth having from the harvest it brought in by the
+multiplication of the faces of King and Queen as presents for
+ambassadors and potentates.' This is shewn by the following note
+in Sir Joshua's price-book:&mdash;'Nov. 28, 1789, remain in the
+Academy five Kings, four Queens; in the house two Kings and one
+Queen.' Taylor's</i> Reynolds<i>, ii. 449.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1137">[1137]</a> Mr.
+Nichols published in 1782 Anecdotes of William Bowyer,
+Printer<i>. In 1812-15 he brought out this work, recast and
+enlarged, under the title of</i> Literary Anecdotes of the
+Eighteenth Century<i>. See</i> ante<i>, p. 161.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1138">[1138]</a> In the
+original (which is in the British Museum) not hints <i>but</i>
+names<i>.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1139">[1139]</a> On
+Nov. 4, he wrote to Mr. Ryland:&mdash;'I have just received a
+letter in which you tell me that you love to hear from me, and I
+value such a declaration too much to neglect it. To have a
+friend, and a friend like you, may be numbered amongst the first
+felicities of life; at a time when weakness either of body or
+mind loses the pride and the confidence of self-sufficiency, and
+looks round for that help which perhaps human kindness cannot
+give, and which we yet are willing to expect from one another. I
+am at this time very much dejected.... I am now preparing myself
+for my return, and do not despair of some more monthly meetings
+[post<i>, Appendix C]. To hear that dear Payne is better gives me
+great delight. I saw the draught of the stone [over Mrs.
+Johnson's grave,</i> ante<i>, p. 351]. Shall I ever be able to
+bear the sight of this stone? In your company I hope I shall.'
+Mr. Morrison's</i> Autographs<i>, vol. ii.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1140">[1140]</a> To him
+as a writer might be generally applied what he said of
+Rochester:&mdash;'His pieces are commonly short, such as one fit
+of resolution would produce.' Works<i>, vii. 159.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1141">[1141]</a>
+Odes<i>, iv.7.</i> Works<i>, i. 137.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1142">[1142]</a>
+Against inqitisitive and perplexing thoughts<i>. 'O LORD, my
+Maker and Protector, who hast graciously sent me into this world
+to work out my salvation, enable me to drive from me all such
+unquiet and perplexing thoughts as may mislead or hinder me in
+the practice of those duties which Thou hast required. When I
+behold the works of thy hands, and consider the course of thy
+providence, give me grace always to remember that thy thoughts
+are not my thoughts, nor thy ways my ways. And while it shall
+please Thee to continue me in this world, where much is to be
+done, and little to be known, teach me by thy Holy Spirit, to
+withdraw my mind from unprofitable and dangerous enquiries, from
+difficulties vainly curious, and doubts impossible to be solved.
+Let me rejoice in the light which Thou hast imparted, let me
+serve Thee with active zeal and humble confidence, and wait with
+patient expectation for the time in which the soul which Thou
+receivest shall be satisfied with knowledge. Grant this, O LORD,
+for JESUS CHRIST'S sake. Amen.' BOSWELL.</i> Pr. and Med. <i>p.
+219.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1143">[1143]</a> Life
+of Johnson<i>, p. 599.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1144">[1144]</a> Porson
+with admirable humour satirised Hawkins for his attack on Barber.
+Gent. Mag. <i>1787, p. 752, and</i> Porson Tracts<i>, p. 358.
+Baretti in his</i> Tolondron<i>, p. 149, says that 'Barber from
+his earliest youth served Johnson with the greatest affection and
+disinterestedness.'</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1145">[1145]</a> Vol.
+ii. p. 30. BOSWELL.</p>
+<p><a name="note-1146">[1146]</a> I
+shall add one instance only to those which I have thought it
+incumbent on me to point out. Talking of Mr. Garrick's having
+signified his willingness to let Johnson have the loan of any of
+his books to assist him in his edition of Shakspeare [ante<i>,
+ii. 192]; Sir John says, (p. 444,) 'Mr. Garrick knew not what
+risque he ran by this offer. Johnson had so strange a
+forgetfulness of obligations of this sort, that few who lent him
+books ever saw them again.' This surely conveys a most
+unfavourable insinuation, and has been so understood. Sir John
+mentions the single case of a curious edition of Politian
+[</i>ante<i>, i. 90], which he tells us, 'appeared to belong to
+Pembroke College, and which, probably, had been considered by
+Johnson as his own, for upwards of fifty years.' Would it not be
+fairer to consider this as an inadvertence, and draw no general
+inference? The truth is, that Johnson was so attentive, that in
+one of his manuscripts in my possession, he has marked in two
+columns, books borrowed, and books lent.</i></p>
+<p>In Sir John Hawkins's compilation, there are, however, some
+passages concerning Johnson which have unquestionable merit. One
+of them I shall transcribe, in justice to a writer whom I have
+had too much occasion to censure, and to shew my fairness as the
+biographer of my illustrious friend: 'There was wanting in his
+conduct and behaviour, that dignity which results from a regular
+and orderly course of action, and by an irresistible power
+commands esteem. He could not be said to be a stayed man, nor so
+to have adjusted in his mind the balance of reason and passion,
+as to give occasion to say what may be observed of some men, that
+all they do is just, fit, and right.' [Hawkins's Johnson<i>, p.
+409.] Yet a judicious friend well suggests, 'It might, however,
+have been added, that such men are often merely just, and rigidly
+correct, while their hearts are cold and unfeeling; and that
+Johnson's virtues were of a much higher tone than those of
+the</i> stayed, orderly man<i>, here described.' BOSWELL.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1147">[1147]</a> 'Lich,
+a dead carcase; whence Lichfield, the field of the dead, a city
+in Staffordshire, so named from martyred Christians. Salve magna
+parens.' <i>It is curious that in the Abridgment of the</i>
+Dictionary <i>he struck out this salutation, though he left the
+rest of the article.</i> Salve magna parens<i>, (Hail, mighty
+parent) is from Virgil's</i> Georgics<i>, ii. 173. The Rev. T.
+Twining, when at Lichfield in 1797, says:&mdash;'I visited the
+famous large old willow-tree, which Johnson, they say, used to
+kiss when he came to Lichfield.'</i> Recreations and Studies of a
+Country Clergyman of the XVIII Century<i>, p. 227.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1148">[1148]</a> The
+following circumstance, mutually to the honour of Johnson, and
+the corporation of his native city, has been communicated to me
+by the Reverend Dr. Vyse, from the Town-Clerk:&mdash;'Mr. Simpson
+has now before him, a record of the respect and veneration which
+the Corporation of Lichfield, in the year 1767, had for the
+merits and learning of Dr. Johnson. His father built the
+corner-house in the Market-place, the two fronts of which,
+towards Market and Broad-market-street, stood upon waste land of
+the Corporation, under a forty years' lease, which was then
+expired. On the 15th of August, 1767, at a common-hall of the
+bailiffs and citizens, it was ordered (and that without any
+solicitation,) that a lease should be granted to Samuel Johnson,
+Doctor of Laws, of the encroachments at his house, for the term
+of ninety-nine years, at the old rent, which was five shillings.
+Of which, as Town-Clerk, Mr. Simpson had the honour and pleasure
+of informing him, and that he was desired to accept it, without
+paying any fine on the occasion, which lease was afterwards
+granted, and the Doctor died possessed of this property.'
+BOSWELL.</p>
+<p><a name="note-1149">[1149]</a> See
+vol. i. p. 37. BOSWELL.</p>
+<p><a name="note-1150">[1150]</a>
+According to Miss Seward, who was Mr. White's cousin, 'Johnson
+once called him "the rising strength of Lichfield."' Seward's
+Letters<i>, i. 335.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1151">[1151]</a> The
+Rev. R. Warner, who visited Lichfield in 1801, gives in his Tour
+through the Northern Counties<i>, i. 105, a fuller account. He is
+clearly wrong in the date of its occurrence, and in one other
+matter, yet his story may in the main be true. He says that
+Johnson's friends at Lichfield missed him one morning; the
+servants said that he had set off at a very early hour, whither
+they knew not. Just before supper he returned. He informed his
+hostess of his breach of filial duty, which had happened just
+fifty years before on that very day. 'To do away the sin of this
+disobedience, I this day went,' he said, 'in a chaise to&mdash;,
+and going into the market at the time of high business uncovered
+my head, and stood with it bare an hour, before the stall which
+my father had formerly used, exposed to the sneers of the
+standers-by, and the inclemency of the weather.' This penance may
+recall Dante's lines,&mdash;</i></p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'Quando vivea pi&ugrave; glorioso, disse,
+ Liberamente nel campo di Siena,
+ Ogni vergogna deposta, s'affisse.'
+ '"When at his glory's topmost height," said he,
+ "Respect of dignity all cast aside,
+ Freely he fix'd him on Sienna's plain."'
+ CARY. Dante, Purgatory<i>. Cant. xi. l. 133.
+</i>
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<center><a name=
+"note-1152">[1152]</a></center>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'How instinct varies in the grovelling swine,
+ Compared, half-reasoning elephant, with thine.'
+ Pope, Essay on Man<i>, i. 221.
+</i>
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p><a name="note-1153">[1153]</a> See
+ante<i>, iii. 153, 296.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1154">[1154]</a> Mr.
+Burke suggested to me as applicable to Johnson, what Cicero, in
+his CATO MAJOR, says of Appius:&mdash;'Intentum enim animum
+tanquam arcum habebat, nec languescens succumbebat senectuti<i>;'
+repeating, at the same time, the following noble words in the
+same passage:&mdash;</i>'Ita enim senectus honesta est, si se
+ipsa defendit, si jus suum retinet, si nemini emancipata est, si
+usque ad extremum vitae spiritum vindicet jus suum<i>.' BOSWELL.
+The last line runs in the original:-'si usque ad ultimum spiritum
+dominatur in suos.'</i> Cato Major<i>, xi. 38.</i></p>
+<center><a name=
+"note-1155">[1155]</a></center>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'atrocem <i>animum Catonis.'
+ 'Cato&mdash;
+ Of spirit unsubdued.'
+ FRANCIS. Horace, 2</i> Odes<i>, i. 24.
+</i>
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p><a name="note-1156">[1156]</a> Yet
+Baretti, who knew Johnson well, in a MS. note on Piozzi
+Letters<i>, i.315, says:&mdash;'If ever Johnson took any delight
+in anything it was to converse with some old acquaintance. New
+people he never loved to be in company with, except ladies, when
+disposed to caress and flatter him.'</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1157">[1157]</a>
+Johnson, thirty-four years earlier, wrote:&mdash;'I think there
+is some reason for questioning whether the body and mind are not
+so proportioned that the one can bear all that can be inflicted
+on the other; whether virtue cannot stand its ground as long as
+life, and whether a soul well principled will not be separated
+sooner than subdued.' The Rambler<i>, No. 32. He wrote to Mrs.
+Thrale on Aug. 14, 1780:&mdash;'But what if I am seventy-two; I
+remember Sulpitius says of Saint Martin (now that's above your
+reading),</i> Est animus victor annorum, et senectuti cedere
+nescius<i>. Match me that among your young folks.'</i> Piozzi
+Letters<i>, ii. 177. On Sept. 2, 1784, he wrote to Mr. Sastres
+the Italian master:&mdash;'I have hope of standing the English
+winter, and of seeing you, and reading</i> Petrarch <i>at
+Bolt-court.'</i> Ib<i>. p. 407.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1158">[1158]</a> Life
+of Johnson<i>, p. 7.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1159">[1159]</a> It is
+a most agreeable circumstance attending the publication of this
+Work, that Mr. Hector has survived his illustrious schoolfellow
+so many years; that he still retains his health and spirits; and
+has gratified me with the following acknowledgement: 'I thank
+you, most sincerely thank you, for the great and long continued
+entertainment your Life of Dr. Johnson <i>has afforded me, and
+others, of my particular friends.' Mr. Hector, besides setting me
+right as to the verses on a sprig of Myrtle, (see vol. i. p. 92,
+note,) has favoured me with two English odes, written by Dr.
+Johnson, at an early period of his life, which will appear in my
+edition of his poems. BOSWELL. See</i> ante<i>, i. 16, note
+1.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1160">[1160]</a> The
+editor of the Biographia Britannica. Ante<i>, iii. 174.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1161">[1161]</a> On
+Dec. 23, Miss Adams wrote to a friend:&mdash;'We are all under
+the sincerest grief for the loss of poor Dr. Johnson. He spent
+three or four days with my father at Oxford, and promised to come
+again; as he was, he said, nowhere so happy.' Pemb. Coll.
+MSS.</p>
+<p><a name="note-1162">[1162]</a> See
+ante<i>, p. 293.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1163">[1163]</a> Mr.
+Strahan says (Preface, p. iv.) that Johnson, being hindered by
+illness from revising these prayers, 'determined to give the
+MSS., without revision, in charge to me. Accordingly one morning,
+on my visiting him by desire at an early hour, he put these
+papers into my hands, with instructions for committing them to
+the press, and with a promise to prepare a sketch of his own life
+to accompany them.' Whatever Johnson wished about the prayers, it
+passes belief that he ever meant for the eye of the world these
+minute accounts of his health and his feelings. Some parts indeed
+Mr. Strahan himself suppressed, as the Pemb. Coll. MSS. shew
+(ante<i>, p. 84, note 4). It is curious that one portion at least
+fell into other hands (</i>ante<i>, ii. 476). There are other
+apparent gaps in the diary which raise the suspicion that it was
+only fragments that Mr. Strahan obtained. On the other hand Mr.
+Strahan had nothing to gain by the publication beyond notoriety
+(see his Preface, p. vi.). Dr. Adams, whose name is mentioned in
+the preface, expressed in a letter to the</i> Gent. Mag. <i>1785,
+p. 755, his disapproval of the publication. Mr. Courtenay
+(</i>Poetical Review<i>, ed. 1786, p. 7), thus attacked Mr.
+Strahan:&mdash;</i></p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'Let priestly S&mdash;h&mdash;n in a godly fit
+ The tale relate, in aid of Holy Writ;
+ Though candid Adams, by whom David fell [A],
+ Who ancient miracles sustained so well,
+ To recent wonders may deny his aid,
+ Nor own a pious brother of the trade.'
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>[A] The Rev. Dr. Adams of Oxford, distinguished for his answer
+to David Hume's Essay on Miracles<i>.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1164">[1164]</a>
+Johnson once said to Miss Burney of her brother Charles:&mdash;'I
+should be glad to see him if he were not your brother; but were
+he a dog, a cat, a rat, a frog, and belonged to you, I must needs
+be glad to see him.' Mme. D'Arblay's Diary<i>, ii. 233. On Nov.
+25 she called on him. 'He let me in, though very ill. He told me
+he was going to try what sleeping out of town might do for him.
+"I remember," said he, "that my wife, when she was near her end,
+poor woman, was also advised to sleep out of town; and when she
+was carried to the lodgings that had been prepared for her, she
+complained that the staircase was in very bad condition, for the
+plaster was beaten off the walls in many places." "Oh!" said the
+man of the house, "that's nothing but by the knocks against it of
+the coffins of the poor souls that have died in the lodgings." He
+laughed, though not without apparent secret anguish, in telling
+me this.' Miss Burney continues:&mdash;'How delightfully bright
+are his faculties, though the poor and infirm machine that
+contains them seems alarmingly giving way. Yet, all brilliant as
+he was, I saw him growing worse, and offered to go, which, for
+the first time I ever remember, he did not oppose; but most
+kindly pressing both my hands, "Be not," he said, in a voice of
+even tenderness, "be not longer in coming again for my letting
+you go now." I assured him I would be the sooner, and was running
+off, but he called me back in a solemn voice, and in a manner the
+most energetic, said:&mdash;"Remember me in your prayers."' Mme.
+D'Arblay's</i> Diary<i>, ii. 327. See</i> ante<i>, iii. 367, note
+4.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1165">[1165]</a> Mr.
+Hector's sister and Johnson's first love. Ante<i>, ii.
+459.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1166">[1166]</a> The
+Rev. Dr. Taylor. BOSWELL.</p>
+<p><a name="note-1167">[1167]</a> See
+ante<i>, ii. 474, and iii. 180.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1168">[1168]</a>
+'Reliquum est, [Greek: Sphartan elaches, tahutan khusmei].'
+<i>Cicero,</i> Epistolae ad Atticum<i>, iv. 6. 'Spartam nactus
+es, hanc orna.' Erasmus,</i> Adagiorum Chiliades<i>, ed. 1559, p.
+485.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1169">[1169]</a> Temple
+says of the spleen that it is a disease too refined for this
+country and people, who are well when they are not ill, and
+pleased when they are not troubled; are content, because they
+think little of it, and seek their happiness in the common eases
+and commodities of life, or the increase of riches; not amusing
+themselves with the more speculative contrivances of passion, or
+refinements of pleasure.' Temple's Works<i>, ed. 1757, i.
+170.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1170">[1170]</a> It is
+truly wonderful to consider the extent and constancy of Johnson's
+literary ardour, notwithstanding the melancholy which clouded and
+embittered his existence. Besides the numerous and various works
+which he executed, he had, at different times, formed schemes of
+a great many more, of which the following catalogue was given by
+him to Mr. Langton, and by that gentleman presented to his
+Majesty:</p>
+<center>'DIVINITY.</center>
+<p>'A small book of precepts and directions for piety; the hint
+taken from the directions in Morton's exercise.</p>
+<p>'PHILOSOPHY, HISTORY, and LITERATURE in general.</p>
+<p>'History of Criticism<i>, as it relates to judging of
+authours, from Aristotle to the present age. An account of the
+rise and improvements of that art; of the different opinions of
+authours, ancient and modern.</i></p>
+<p>'Translation of the History of Herodian<i>.</i></p>
+<p>'New edition of Fairfax's Translation of Tasso<i>, with notes,
+glossary, &amp;c.</i></p>
+<p>'Chaucer, a new edition of him, from manuscripts and old
+editions, with various readings, conjectures, remarks on his
+language, and the changes it had undergone from the earliest
+times to his age, and from his to the present: with notes
+explanatory of customs, &amp;c., and references to Boccace, and
+other authours from whom he has borrowed, with an account of the
+liberties he has taken in telling the stories; his life, and an
+exact etymological glossary.</p>
+<p>'Aristotle's Rhetorick<i>, a translation of it into
+English.</i></p>
+<p>'A Collection of Letters, translated from the modern writers,
+with some account of the several authours.</p>
+<p>'Oldham's Poems, with notes, historical and critical.</p>
+<p>'Roscommon's Poems, with notes.</p>
+<p>'Lives of the Philosophers, written with a polite air, in such
+a manner as may divert as well as instruct.</p>
+<p>'History of the Heathen Mythology, with an explication of the
+fables, both allegorical and historical; with references to the
+poets.</p>
+<p>'History of the State of Venice, in a compendious manner.</p>
+<p>'Aristotle's Ethicks<i>, an English translation of them, with
+notes.</i></p>
+<p>'Geographical Dictionary, from the French.</p>
+<p>'Hierocles upon Pythagoras, translated into English, perhaps
+with notes. This is done by Norris.</p>
+<p>'A book of Letters, upon all kinds of subjects.</p>
+<p>'Claudian, a new edition of his works, cum notis variorum<i>,
+in the manner of Burman.</i></p>
+<p>'Tully's Tusculan Questions, a translation of them.</p>
+<p>'Tully's De Natur&acirc; Deorum, a translation of those
+books.</p>
+<p>'Benzo's New History of the New World, to be translated.</p>
+<p>'Machiavel's History of Florence, to be translated.</p>
+<p>'History of the Revival of Learning in Europe, containing an
+account of whatever contributed to the restoration of literature;
+such as controversies, printing, the destruction of the Greek
+empire, the encouragement of great men, with the lives of the
+most eminent patrons and most eminent early professors of all
+kinds of learning in different countries.</p>
+<p>'A Body of Chronology, in verse, with historical notes.</p>
+<p>'A Table of the Spectators, Tatlers, and Guardians,
+distinguished by figures into six degrees of value, with notes,
+giving the reasons of preference or degradation.</p>
+<p>'A Collection of Letters from English authours, with a preface
+giving some account of the writers; with reasons for selection,
+and criticism upon styles; remarks on each letter, if
+needful.</p>
+<p>'A Collection of Proverbs from various languages. Jan.
+6,&mdash;53.</p>
+<p>'A Dictionary to the Common Prayer, in imitation of Calmet's
+Dictionary of the Bible<i>. March, 52.</i></p>
+<p>'A Collection of Stories and Examples, like those of Valerius
+Maximus. Jan. 10,&mdash;53.</p>
+<p>'From Aelian, a volume of select Stories, perhaps from others.
+Jan.</p>
+<center>28,-53.</center>
+<p>'Collection of Travels, Voyages, Adventures, and Descriptions
+of Countries.</p>
+<p>'Dictionary of Ancient History and Mythology.</p>
+<p>'Treatise on the Study of Polite Literature, containing the
+history of learning, directions for editions, commentaries,
+&amp;c.</p>
+<p>'Maxims, Characters, and Sentiments, after the manner of
+Bruy&egrave;re, collected out of ancient authours, particularly
+the Greek, with Apophthegms.</p>
+<p>'Classical Miscellanies, Select Translations from ancient
+Greek and Latin authours.</p>
+<p>'Lives of Illustrious Persons, as well of the active as the
+learned, in imitation of Plutarch.</p>
+<p>'Judgement of the learned upon English authours.</p>
+<p>'Poetical Dictionary of the English tongue.</p>
+<p>'Considerations upon the present state of London.</p>
+<p>'Collection of Epigrams, with notes and observations.</p>
+<p>'Observations on the English language, relating to words,
+phrases, and modes of Speech.</p>
+<p>'Minutiae Literariae, Miscellaneous reflections, criticisms,
+emendations, notes.</p>
+<p>'History of the Constitution.</p>
+<p>'Comparison of Philosophical and Christian Morality, by
+sentences collected from the moralists and fathers.</p>
+<p>'Plutarch's Lives, in English, with notes.</p>
+<p>'POETRY and works of IMAGINATION.</p>
+<p>'Hymn to Ignorance.</p>
+<p>'The Palace of Sloth,&mdash;a vision.</p>
+<p>'Coluthus, to be translated.</p>
+<p>'Prejudice,&mdash;a poetical essay.</p>
+<p>'The Palace of Nonsense,&mdash;a vision.'</p>
+<p>Johnson's extraordinary facility of composition, when he shook
+off his constitutional indolence, and resolutely sat down to
+write, is admirably described by Mr. Courtenay, in his Poetical
+Review, which I have several times quoted:</p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'While through life's maze he sent a piercing view,
+ His mind expansive to the object grew.
+ With various stores of erudition fraught,
+ The lively image, the deep-searching thought,
+ Slept in repose;&mdash;but when the moment press'd,
+ The bright ideas stood at once confess'd;
+ Instant his genius sped its vigorous rays,
+ And o'er the letter'd world diffus'd a blaze:
+ As womb'd with fire the cloud electrick flies,
+ And calmly o'er th' horizon seems to rise;
+ Touch'd by the pointed steel, the lightning flows,
+ And all th' expanse with rich effulgence glows.'
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>We shall in vain endeavour to know with exact precision every
+production of Johnson's pen. He owned to me, that he had written
+about forty sermons; but as I understood that he had given or
+sold them to different persons, who were to preach them as their
+own, he did not consider himself at liberty to acknowledge them.
+Would those who were thus aided by him, who are still alive, and
+the friends of those who are dead, fairly inform the world, it
+would be obligingly gratifying a reasonable curiosity, to which
+there should, I think, now be no objection. Two volumes of them,
+published since his death, are sufficiently ascertained; see vol.
+iii. p. 181. I have before me, in his hand-writing, a fragment of
+twenty quarto leaves, of a translation into English of Sallust,
+De Bella Catilinario<i>. When it was done I have no notion; but
+it seems to have no very superior merit to mark it as his. Beside
+the publications heretofore mentioned, I am satisfied, from
+internal evidence, to admit also as genuine the following, which,
+notwithstanding all my chronological care, escaped me in the
+course of this work:</i></p>
+<p>'Considerations on the Case of Dr. Trapp's Sermons,' +
+published in 1739, in the Gentleman's Magazine<i>. [These
+Considerations were published, not in 1739, but in 1787.</i>
+Ante<i>, i. 140, note 5.] It is a very ingenious defence of the
+right of</i> abridging <i>an authour's work, without being held
+as infringing his property. This is one of the nicest questions
+in the</i> Law of Literature<i>; and I cannot help thinking, that
+the indulgence of abridging is often exceedingly injurious to
+authours and booksellers, and should in very few cases be
+permitted. At any rate, to prevent difficult and uncertain
+discussion, and give an absolute security to authours in the
+property of their labours, no abridgement whatever should be
+permitted, till after the expiration of such a number of years as
+the Legislature may be pleased to fix.</i></p>
+<p>But, though it has been confidently ascribed to him, I cannot
+allow that he wrote a Dedication to both Houses of Parliament of
+a book entitled The Evangelical History Harmonized<i>. He was
+no</i> croaker<i>; no declaimer against</i> the times<i>.
+[See</i> ante<i>, ii. 357.] He would not have written, 'That we
+are fallen upon an age in which corruption is not barely
+universal, is universally confessed.' Nor 'Rapine preys on the
+publick without opposition, and perjury betrays it without
+inquiry.' Nor would he, to excite a speedy reformation, have
+conjured up such phantoms of terrour as these: 'A few years
+longer, and perhaps all endeavours will be in vain. We may be
+swallowed by an earthquake: we may be delivered to our enemies.'
+This is not Johnsonian.</i></p>
+<p>There are, indeed, in this Dedication, several sentences
+constructed upon the model of those of Johnson. But the imitation
+of the form, without the spirit of his style, has been so
+general, that this of itself is not sufficient evidence. Even our
+newspaper writers aspire to it. In an account of the funeral of
+Edwin, the comedian, in The Diary <i>of Nov. 9, 1790, that son of
+drollery is thus described: 'A man who had so often cheered the
+sullenness of vacancy, and suspended the approaches of sorrow.'
+And in</i> The Dublin Evening Post<i>, August 16, 1791, there is
+the following paragraph: 'It is a singular circumstance, that, in
+a city like this, containing 200,000 people, there are three
+months in the year during which no place of publick amusement is
+open. Long vacation is here a vacation from pleasure, as well as
+business; nor is there any mode of passing the listless evenings
+of declining summer, but in the riots of a tavern, or the
+stupidity of a coffee-house.'</i></p>
+<p>I have not thought it necessary to specify every copy of
+verses written by Johnson, it being my intention to, publish an
+authentick edition of all his Poetry, with notes. BOSWELL. This
+Catalogue<i>, as Mr. Boswell calls it, is by Dr. Johnson
+intitled</i> Designs<i>. It seems from the hand that it was
+written early in life: from the marginal dates it appears that
+some portions were added in 1752 and 1753. CROKER.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1171">[1171]</a> On
+April 19 of this year he wrote: 'When I lay sleepless, I used to
+drive the night along by turning Greek epigrams into Latin. I
+know not if I have not turned a hundred.' Piozzi Letters<i>, ii.
+364. Forty-five years earlier he described how Boerhaave, 'when
+he lay whole days and nights without sleep, found no method of
+diverting his thoughts so effectual as meditation upon his
+studies, and often relieved and mitigated the sense of his
+torments by the recollection of what he had read, and by
+reviewing those stores of knowledge which he had reposited in his
+memory.'</i> Works<i>, vi. 284.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1172">[1172]</a> Mr.
+Cumberland assures me, that he was always treated with great
+courtesy by Dr. Johnson, who, in his Letters to Mrs. Thrale<i>,
+vol. ii. p. 68 thus speaks of that learned, ingenious, and
+accomplished gentleman: 'The want of company is an inconvenience:
+but Mr. Cumberland is a million.' BOSWELL. Northcote, according
+to Hazlitt (</i>Conversations of Northcote<i>, p. 275), said that
+Johnson and his friends 'never admitted
+C&mdash;&mdash;[Cumberland] as one of the set; Sir Joshua did not
+invite him to dinner. If he had been in the room, Goldsmith would
+have flown out of it as if a dragon had been there. I remember
+Garrick once saying, "D&mdash;n his</i> dish-clout <i>face; his
+plays would never do, if it were not for my patching them up and
+acting in them."'</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1173">[1173]</a> See
+ante<i>, p. 64, note 2.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1174">[1174]</a> Dr.
+Parr said, "There are three great Grecians in England: Porson is
+the first; Burney is the third; and who is the second I need not
+tell"' Field's Parr<i>, ii. 215.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1175">[1175]</a> 'Dr.
+Johnson,' said Parr, 'was an admirable scholar.... The classical
+scholar was forgotten in the great original contributor to the
+literature of his country.' Ib. <i>i. 164. 'Upon his correct and
+profound knowledge of the Latin language,' he wrote, 'I have
+always spoken with unusual zeal and unusual confidence.'
+Johnson's</i> Parr<i>, iv. 679. Mrs. Piozzi (</i>Anec. <i>p. 54)
+recounts a 'triumph' gained by Johnson in a talk on Greek
+literature.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1176">[1176]</a>
+Ante<i>, iii. 172.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1177">[1177]</a> We
+must smile at a little inaccuracy of metaphor in the Preface to
+the Transactions<i>, which is written by Mr. Burrowes. The</i>
+critick of the style of <i>JOHNSON having, with a just zeal for
+literature, observed, that the whole nation are called on to
+exert themselves, afterwards says: 'They are</i> called on <i>by
+every</i> tye <i>which can have a laudable influence on the heart
+of man.' BOSWELL.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1178">[1178]</a>
+Johnson's wishing to unite himself with this rich widow, was much
+talked of, but I believe without foundation. The report, however,
+gave occasion to a poem, not without characteristical merit,
+entitled, 'Ode to Mrs. Thrale, by Samuel Johnson, LL.D. on their
+supposed approaching Nuptials; printed for Mr. Faulder in
+Bond-street.' I shall quote as a specimen the first three
+stanzas:&mdash;</p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'If e'er my fingers touch'd the lyre,
+ In satire fierce, in pleasure gay;
+ Shall not my THRALIA'S smiles inspire?
+ Shall Sam refuse the sportive lay?
+ My dearest Lady! view your slave,
+ Behold him as your very Scrub<i>;
+ Eager to write, as authour grave,
+ Or govern well, the brewing-tub.
+ To rich felicity thus raised,
+ My bosom glows with amorous fire;
+ Porter no longer shall be praised,
+ 'Tis I MYSELF am</i> Thrale's Entire<i>'
+</i>
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p><a name="note-1179">[1179]</a> See
+ante<i>, ii. 44.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1180">[1180]</a>
+'Higledy piggledy<i>,&mdash;Conglomeration and confusion.</i></p>
+<p>'Hodge-podge<i>,&mdash;A culinary mixture of heterogeneous
+ingredients: applied metaphorically to all discordant
+combinations.</i></p>
+<p>'Tit for Tat<i>,&mdash;Adequate retaliation.</i></p>
+<p>'Shilly Shally<i>,&mdash;Hesitation and irresolution.</i></p>
+<p>'Fee! fau! fum!&mdash;Gigantic intonations.</p>
+<p><i>Rigmarole</i>,-Discourse, incoherent and rhapsodical.</p>
+<p>'<i>Crincum-crancum</i>,&mdash;Lines of irregularity and
+involution.</p>
+<p>'<i>Dingdong</i>&mdash;Tintinabulary chimes, used
+metaphorically to signify dispatch and vehemence.' BOSWELL. In
+all the editions that I have examined the sentence in the text
+beginning with 'annexed,' and ending with 'concatenation,' is
+printed as if it were Boswell's. It is a quotation from vol. ii.
+p. 93 of Colman's book. For <i>Scrub</i>, see <i>ante</i>, iii.
+70, note 2.</p>
+<p><a name="note-1181">[1181]</a> See
+<i>ante</i>, iii. 173.</p>
+<p><a name="note-1182">[1182]</a>
+<i>History of America</i>, vol. i. quarto, p. 332. BOSWELL.</p>
+<p><a name="note-1183">[1183]</a> Gibbon
+(<i>Misc. Works</i>, i. 219) thus writes of his own
+style:&mdash;'The style of an author should be the image of his
+mind, but the choice and command of language is the fruit of
+exercise. Many experiments were made before I could hit the
+middle tone between a dull chronicle and a rhetorical
+declamation; three times did I compose the first chapter, and
+twice the second and third, before I was tolerably satisfied with
+their effect.' See <i>ante</i>, p. 36, note 1.</p>
+<p><a name="note-1184">[1184]</a>
+<i>Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire</i>, vol. i. chap.
+iv.</p>
+<center>BOSWELL.</center>
+<p><a name="note-1185">[1185]</a>
+Macaulay (<i>Essays</i>, ed. 1874, iv. 157) gives a yet better
+example of her Johnsonian style, though, as I have shewn
+(<i>ante</i>, p. 223, note 5), he is wrong in saying that
+Johnson's hand can be seen.</p>
+<p><a name="note-1186">[1186]</a>
+<i>Cecilia</i>, Book. vii. chap. i. [v.] BOSWELL.</p>
+<p><a name="note-1187">[1187]</a> The
+passage which I quote is taken from that gentleman's <i>Elements
+of Orthoepy</i>; containing a distinct View of the whole Analogy
+of the ENGLISH LANGUAGE, so far as relates to <i>Pronunciation,
+Accent, and Quantity</i>, London, 1784. I beg leave to offer my
+particular acknowledgements to the authour of a work of uncommon
+merit and great utility. I know no book which contains, in the
+same compass, more learning, polite literature, sound sense,
+accuracy of arrangement, and perspicuity of expression.
+BOSWELL.</p>
+<p><a name="note-1188">[1188]</a> That
+collection was presented to Dr. Johnson, I believe by its
+authours; and I heard him speak very well of it. BOSWELL. <i>The
+Mirror</i> was published in 1779-80; by 1793 it reached its ninth
+edition. For an account of it see Appendix DD. to Forbes's
+<i>Beattie</i>. Henry Mackenzie, the author of <i>The Man of
+Feeling</i>, was the chief contributor as well as the conductor
+of the paper. He is given as the author of No. 16 in Lynam's
+edition, p. 1.</p>
+<p><a name="note-1189">[1189]</a> The
+name of Vicesimus Knox is now scarcely known. Yet so late as 1824
+his collected <i>Works</i> were published in seven octavo
+volumes. The editor says of his <i>Essays</i> (i. iii):&mdash;'In
+no department of the <i>Belles Lettres</i> has any publication,
+excepting the <i>Spectator</i>, been so extensively circulated.
+It has been translated into most of the European languages.' See
+<i>ante</i>, i. 222, note 1; iii. 13, note 3; and iv. 330.</p>
+<p><a name="note-1190">[1190]</a>
+<i>Lucretius</i>, iii. 6.</p>
+<p><a name="note-1191">[1191]</a> It
+were to be wished, that he had imitated that great man in every
+respect, and had not followed the example of Dr. Adam Smith
+[<i>ante</i>, iii. 13, note 1] in ungraciously attacking his
+venerable <i>Alma Mater</i> Oxford. It must, however, be
+observed, that he is much less to blame than Smith: he only
+objects to certain particulars; Smith to the whole institution;
+though indebted for much of his learning to an exhibition which
+he enjoyed for many years at Baliol College. Neither of them,
+however, will do any hurt to the noblest university in the world.
+While I animadvert on what appears to me exceptionable in some of
+the works of Dr. Knox, I cannot refuse due praise to others of
+his productions; particularly his sermons, and to the spirit with
+which he maintains, against presumptuous hereticks, the
+consolatory doctrines peculiar to the Christian Revelation. This
+he has done in a manner equally strenuous and conciliating.
+Neither ought I to omit mentioning a remarkable instance of his
+candour: Notwithstanding the wide difference of our opinions,
+upon the important subject of University education, in a letter
+to me concerning this Work, he thus expresses himself: 'I thank
+you for the very great entertainment your <i>Life of Johnson</i>
+gives me. It is a most valuable work. Yours is a new species of
+biography. Happy for Johnson, that he had so able a recorder of
+his wit and wisdom.' BOSWELL.</p>
+<p><a name="note-1192">[1192]</a> Dr.
+Knox, in his <i>Moral and Literary</i> abstraction, may be
+excused for not knowing the political regulations of his country.
+No senator can be in the hands of a bailiff. BOSWELL.</p>
+<p><a name="note-1193">[1193]</a> It is
+entitled <i>A Continuation of Dr. J&mdash;n's Criticism on the
+Poems of Gray</i>. The following is perhaps the best
+passage:&mdash;'On some fine evening Gray had seen the moon
+shining on a tower such as is here described. An owl might be
+peeping out from the ivy with which it was clad. Of the observer
+the station might be such that the owl, now emerged from the
+mantling, presented itself to his eye in profile, skirting with
+the Moon's limb. All this is well. The perspective is striking;
+and the picture well defined. But the poet was not contented. He
+felt a desire to enlarge it; and in executing his purpose gave it
+accumulation without improvement. The idea of the Owl's
+<i>complaining</i> is an artificial one; and the views on which
+it proceeds absurd. Gray should have seen, that it but ill
+befitted the <i>Bird of Wisdom</i> to complain to the Moon of an
+intrusion which the Moon could no more help than herself.' p. 17.
+Johnson wrote of this book:&mdash;'I know little of it, for
+though it was sent me I never cut the leaves open. I had a letter
+with it representing it to me as my own work; in such an account
+to the publick there may be humour, but to myself it was neither
+serious nor comical. I suspect the writer to be wrong-headed.'
+<i>Piozzi Letters</i>, ii. 289. 'I was told,' wrote Walpole
+(<i>Letters</i>, viii. 376), 'it would divert me, that it seems
+to criticise Gray, but really laughs at Johnson. I sent for it
+and skimmed it over, but am not at all clear what it
+means&mdash;no recommendation of anything. I rather think the
+author wishes to be taken by Gray's admirers for a ridiculer of
+Johnson, and by the tatter's for a censurer of Gray.' '"The
+cleverest parody of the Doctor's style of criticism," wrote Sir
+Walter Scott, "is by John Young of Glasgow, and is very
+capital."' <i>Croker Corres</i>, ii. 34.</p>
+<p><a name="note-1194">[1194]</a> See
+<i>ante</i>, iv. 59, for Burke's description of Croft's
+imitation.</p>
+<p><a name="note-1195">[1195]</a> See
+<i>ante</i>, ii. 465.</p>
+<center><a name="note-1196">[1196]</a>
+H.S.E.</center>
+<center>MICHAEL JOHNSON,</center>
+<p>Vir impavidus, constans, animosus, periculorum immemor,
+laborum patientissimus; fiducia christiana fortis, fervidusque;
+paterfamilias apprime strenuus; bibliopola admodum peritus; mente
+et libris et negotiis exculta; animo ita firmo, ut, rebus
+adversis diu conflictatus, nec sibi nec suis defuerit; lingua sic
+temperata, ut ei nihil quod aures vel pias, vel castas laesisset,
+aut dolor, vel voluptas unquam expresserit.</p>
+<p>Natus Cubleiae, in agro Derbiensi,</p>
+<p>Anno MDCLVI.</p>
+<p>Obiit MDCCXXXI.</p>
+<p>Apposita est SARA, conjux,</p>
+<p>Antiqua FORDORUM gente oriunda; quam domi sedulam, foris
+paucis notam; nulli molestam, mentis acumine et judicii
+subtilitate praecellentem; aliis multum, sibi parum indulgentem:
+aeternitati semper attentam, omne fere virtutis nomen
+commendavit.</p>
+<p>Nata Nortoniae Regis, in agro Varvicensi, Anno MDCLXIX;</p>
+<p>Obiit MDCCLIX.</p>
+<p>Cum NATHANAELE, illorum filio, qui natus MDCCXII, cum vires et
+animi et corporis multa pollicerentur, anno MDCCXXXVII, vitam
+brevem pia morte finivit. Johnson's <i>Works</i>, i. 150.</p>
+<p><a name="note-1197">[1197]</a>
+Hawkins (<i>Life</i>, p. 590) says that he asked that the stone
+over his own grave 'might be so placed as to protect his body
+from injury.' Harwood (<i>History of Lichfield</i>, p. 520) says
+that the stone in St. Michael's was removed in 1796, when the
+church was paved. A fresh one with the old inscriptions was
+placed in the church on the hundredth anniversary of Johnson's
+death by Robert Thorp, Esq., of Buxton Road House, Macclesfield.
+The Rev. James Serjeantson, Rector of St. Michael's, suggests to
+me that the first stone was never set up. It is, he says,
+unlikely that such a memorial within a dozen years was treated so
+unworthily. Moreover in 1841 and again in 1883, during
+reparations of the church, a very careful search was made for it,
+but without result. There may have been, he thinks, some
+difficulty in finding the exact place of interment. The matter
+may have stood over till it was forgotten, and the mason, whose
+receipted bill shews that he was paid for the stone, may have
+used it for some other purpose.</p>
+<p><a name="note-1198">[1198]</a> See
+<i>ante</i>, i. 241, and iv. 351.</p>
+<p><a name="note-1199">[1199]</a> 'He
+would also,' says Hawkins (<i>Life</i>, p. 579), 'have written in
+Latin verse an epitaph for Mr. Garrick, but found himself unequal
+to the task of original poetic composition in that language.'</p>
+<p><a name="note-1200">[1200]</a> In his
+<i>Life of Browne</i>, Johnson wrote:&mdash;'The time will come
+to every human being when it must be known how well he can bear
+to die; and it has appeared that our author's fortitude did not
+desert him in the great hour of trial.' <i>Works</i>, vi.
+499.</p>
+<p><a name="note-1201">[1201]</a> A Club
+in London, founded by the learned and ingenious physician, Dr.
+Ash, in honour of whose name it was called Eumelian, from the
+Greek [Greek: Eumelias]; though it was warmly contended, and even
+put to a vote, that it should have the more obvious appellation
+of <i>Fraxinean</i>, from the Latin. BOSWELL. This club, founded
+in 1788, met at the Blenheim Tavern, Bond-street. Reynolds,
+Boswell, Burney, and Windham were members. Rose's <i>Biog.
+Dict.</i> ii. 240. [Greek: Eummeliaes] means <i>armed with good
+ashen spear</i>.</p>
+<p><a name="note-1202">[1202]</a> Mrs.
+Thrale's <i>Collection</i>, March 10,1784. Vol. ii. p. 350.</p>
+<center>BOSWELL.</center>
+<p><a name="note-1203">[1203]</a>
+Hawkins's <i>Life of Johnson</i>, p. 583.</p>
+<p><a name="note-1204">[1204]</a> See
+what he said to Mr. Malone, p. 53 of this volume. BOSWELL.</p>
+<p><a name="note-1205">[1205]</a> See
+<i>ante</i>, i. 223, note 2.</p>
+<p><a name="note-1206">[1206]</a>
+<i>Epistle to the Romans</i>, vii. 23.</p>
+<p><a name="note-1207">[1207]</a>
+'Johnson's passions,' wrote Reynolds, 'were like those of other
+men, the difference only lay in his keeping a stricter watch over
+himself. In petty circumstances this [? his] wayward disposition
+appeared, but in greater things he thought it worth while to
+summon his recollection and be always on his guard.... [To them
+that loved him not] as rough as winter; to those who sought his
+love as mild as summer&mdash;many instances will readily occur to
+those who knew him intimately of the guard which he endeavoured
+always to keep over himself.' Taylor's <i>Reynolds</i>, ii. 460.
+See <i>ante</i>, i. 94, 164, 201, and iv. 215.</p>
+<p><a name="note-1208">[1208]</a>
+<i>Journal of a Tour to the Hebrides</i>, 3d ed. p. 209.
+[<i>Post</i>, v. 211.] On the same subject, in his Letter to Mrs.
+Thrale, dated Nov. 29, 1783, he makes the following just
+observation:&mdash;'Life, to be worthy of a rational being, must
+be always in progression; we must always purpose to do more or
+better than in time past. The mind is enlarged and elevated by
+mere purposes, though they end as they began [in the original,
+<i>begin</i>], by airy contemplation. We compare and judge,
+though we do not practise.' BOSWELL.</p>
+<p><a name="note-1209">[1209]</a>
+<i>Journal of a Tour to the Hebrides</i>, p. 374. [<i>Post</i>,
+v. 359.]</p>
+<center>BOSWELL.</center>
+<p><a name="note-1210">[1210]</a>
+<i>Psalm</i> xix. 13.</p>
+<p><a name="note-1211">[1211]</a> <i>Pr.
+and Med.</i> p.47. BOSWELL.</p>
+<p><a name="note-1212">[1212]</a>
+<i>Ib.</i> p. 68 BOSWELL</p>
+<p><a name="note-1213">[1213]</a>
+<i>Ib.</i> p. 84 BOSWELL</p>
+<p><a name="note-1214">[1214]</a>
+<i>Ib.</i> p. 120. BOSWELL.</p>
+<p><a name="note-1215">[1215]</a> Pr.
+and Med. p. 130. BOSWELL.</p>
+<p><a name="note-1216">[1216]</a> Dr.
+Johnson related, with very earnest approbation, a story of a
+gentleman, who, in an impulse of passion, overcame the virtue of
+a young woman. When she said to him, 'I am afraid we have done
+wrong!' he answered, 'Yes, we have done wrong;&mdash;for I would
+not <i>debauch her mind</i>.' BOSWELL.</p>
+<p><a name="note-1217">[1217]</a> <i>St.
+John</i>, viii. 7.</p>
+<p><a name="note-1218">[1218]</a> <i>Pr.
+and Med.</i> p. 192. BOSWELL.</p>
+<p><a name="note-1219">[1219]</a> See
+<i>ante</i>, iii. 155.</p>
+<p><a name="note-1220">[1220]</a>
+Boswell, on Feb. 10, 1791, describing to Malone the progress of
+his book, says:&mdash;'I have now before me p. 488 [of vol. ii.]
+in print; and 923 pages of the copy [MS.] only is exhausted, and
+there remains 80, besides the <i>death</i>; as to which I shall
+be concise, though solemn. Pray how shall I wind up? Shall I give
+the <i>character</i> from my <i>Tour</i> somewhat enlarged?'
+Croker's <i>Boswell</i>, p. 829. Mr. Croker is clearly in error
+in saying (<i>ib.</i> p. 800) that 'Mr. Boswell's absence and the
+jealousy between him and some of Johnson's other friends
+prevented his being able to give the particulars which he (Mr.
+Croker) has supplied in the Appendix.' In this Appendix is Mr.
+Hoole's narrative which Boswell had seen and used (<i>post</i>,
+p. 406).</p>
+<p><a name="note-1221">[1221]</a>
+<i>Psalm</i> lxxxii. 7.</p>
+<p><a name="note-1222">[1222]</a> See
+Appendix E.</p>
+<p><a name="note-1223">[1223]</a> 'On
+being asked in his last illness what physician he had sent for,
+"Dr. Heberden," replied he, "<i>ultimus Romanorum</i>, the last
+of the learned physicians."' Seward's <i>Biographiana</i>, p.
+601.</p>
+<p><a name="note-1224">[1224]</a> Mr.
+Green related that when some of Johnson's friends desired that
+Dr. Warren should be called in, he said they might call in whom
+they pleased; and when Warren was called, at his going away
+Johnson said, 'You have come in at the eleventh hour, but you
+shall be paid the same with your fellow-labourers. Francis, put
+into Dr. Warren's coach a copy of the <i>English Poets</i>.'
+CROKER. Dr. Warren ten years later attended Boswell in his last
+illness. <i>Letters of Boswell</i>, p. 355. He was the
+great-grandfather of Col. Sir Charles Warren, G.C.M.G., F.R.S.,
+Chief Commissioner of Police.</p>
+<p><a name="note-1225">[1225]</a> This
+bold experiment, Sir John Hawkins has related in such a manner as
+to suggest a charge against Johnson of intentionally hastening
+his end; a charge so very inconsistent with his character in
+every respect, that it is injurious even to refute it, as Sir
+John has thought it necessary to do. It is evident, that what
+Johnson did in hopes of relief, indicated an extraordinary
+eagerness to retard his dissolution. BOSWELL. Murphy
+(<i>Life</i>, p. 122) says that 'for many years, when Johnson was
+not disposed to enter into the conversation going forward,
+whoever sat near his chair might hear him repeating from
+Shakespeare [<i>Measure for Measure</i>, act iii. sc.
+i]:&mdash;</p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ "Ay, but to die and go we know not where;
+ To lie in cold obstruction and to rot;
+ This sensible warm motion to become
+ A kneaded clot; and the delighted spirit
+ To bathe in fiery floods."
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>And from Milton [<i>Paradise Lost</i>, ii. 146]:&mdash;</p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ "Who would lose
+ Though full of pain this intellectual being?"'
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>Johnson, the year before, at a time when he thought that he
+must submit to the surgeon's knife (<i>ante</i>, p. 240), wrote
+to Mrs. Thrale:&mdash;'You would not have me for fear of pain
+perish in putrescence. I shall, I hope, with trust in eternal
+mercy lay hold of the possibility of life which yet remains.'
+<i>Piozzi Letters</i>, ii. 312. Hawkins records (<i>Life</i>, p.
+588) that one day Johnson said to his doctor:&mdash;'How many men
+in a year die through the timidity of those whom they consult for
+health! I want length of life, and you fear giving me pain, which
+I care not for.' Another day, 'when Mr. Cruikshank scarified his
+leg, he cried out, "Deeper, deeper. I will abide the consequence;
+you are afraid of your reputation, but that is nothing to me." To
+those about him, he said, "You all pretend to love me, but you do
+not love me so well as I myself do." '<i>Ib</i>. p. 592. Windham
+(<i>Diary</i>, p. 32) says that he reproached Heberden with being
+<i>timidorum timidissimus</i>. Throughout he acted up to what he
+had said:&mdash;'I will be conquered, I will not capitulate.'
+<i>Ante</i>, P. 374.</p>
+<p><a name="note-1226">[1226]</a>
+Macbeth, act v. sc. 3.</p>
+<p><a name="note-1227">[1227]</a>
+Satires, x. 356. Paraphrased by Johnson in The Vanity of Human
+Wishes, at the lines beginning:&mdash;</p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'Pour forth thy fervours for a healthful mind,
+ Obedient passions and a will resigned.'
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p><a name="note-1228">[1228]</a>
+Johnson, three days after his stroke of palsy (ante, p. 230),
+wrote:&mdash;'When I waked, I found Dr. Brocklesby sitting by me.
+He fell to repeating Juvenal's ninth satire; but I let him see
+that the province was mine.' <i>Piozzi Letters</i>, ii. 274.</p>
+<p><a name="note-1229">[1229]</a>
+Johnson, on his way to Scotland, 'changed horses,' he wrote, 'at
+Darlington, where Mr. Cornelius Harrison, a cousin-german of
+mine, was perpetual curate. He was the only one of my relations
+who ever rose in fortune above penury, or in character above
+neglect.' <i>Piozzi Letters</i>, i. 105. Malone, in a note to
+later editions, shews that Johnson shortly before his death was
+trying to discover some of his poor relations.</p>
+<p><a name="note-1230">[1230]</a> Mr.
+Windham records (<i>Diary</i>, p. 28) that the day before Johnson
+made his will 'he recommended Frank to him as to one who had will
+and power to protect him.' He continues, 'Having obtained my
+assent to this, he proposed that Frank should be called in; and
+desiring me to take him by the hand in token of the promise,
+repeated before him the recommendation he had just made of him,
+and the promise I had given to attend to it.</p>
+<p><a name="note-1231">[1231]</a>
+Johnson wrote five years earlier to Mrs. Thrale about her
+husband's will:&mdash;'Do not let those fears prevail which you
+know to be unreasonable; a will brings the end of life no
+nearer.' <i>Piozzi Letters</i>, ii. 72.</p>
+<p><a name="note-1232">[1232]</a> 'IN
+THE NAME OF GOD. AMEN. I, SAMUEL JOHNSON, being in full
+possession of my faculties, but fearing this night may put an end
+to my life, do ordain this my last Will and Testament. I bequeath
+to GOD, a soul polluted with many sins, but I hope purified by
+JESUS CHRIST. I leave seven hundred and fifty pounds in the hands
+of Bennet Langton, Esq.; three hundred pounds in the hands of Mr.
+Barclay and Mr. Perkins, brewers; one hundred and fifty pounds in
+the hands of Dr. Percy, Bishop of Dromore; one thousand pounds,
+three <i>per cent.</i> annuities, in the publick funds; and one
+hundred pounds now lying by me in ready money: all these
+before-mentioned sums and property I leave, I say, to Sir Joshua
+Reynolds, Sir John Hawkins, and Dr. William Scott, of Doctors
+Commons, in trust for the following uses:&mdash;That is to say,
+to pay to the representatives of the late William Innys,
+bookseller, in St, Paul's Church-yard, the sum of two hundred
+pounds; to Mrs. White, my female servant, one hundred pounds
+stock in the three <i>per cent</i>. annuitites aforesaid. The
+rest of the aforesaid sums of money and property, together with
+my books, plate, and household furniture, I leave to the
+before-mentioned Sir Joshua Reynolds, Sir John Hawkins, and Dr.
+William Scott, also in trust, to the use of Francis Barber, my
+man-servant, a negro, in such a manner as they shall judge most
+fit and available to his benefit. And I appoint the aforesaid Sir
+Joshua Reynolds, Sir John Hawkins, and Dr. William Scott, sole
+executors of this my last will and testament, hereby revoking all
+former wills and testaments whatever. In witness whereof I
+hereunto subscribe my name, and affix my seal, this eighth day of
+December, 1784.</p>
+<p>'Sam Johnson, (L.S.)</p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'Signed, scaled, published, declared,
+ and delivered, by the
+ said testator, as his last will
+ and testament, in the presence
+ of us, the word two being first
+ inserted in the opposite page.
+ 'GEORGE STRAHAN
+ 'JOHN DESMOULINS
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>'By way of Codicil to my last Will and Testament, I, SAMUEL
+JOHNSON, give, devise, and bequeath, my messuage or tenement
+situate at Litchfield, in the county of Stafford, with the
+appertenances, in the tenure or occupation of Mrs. Bond, of
+Lichfield aforesaid, or of Mr. Hinchman, her under-tenant, to my
+executors, in trust, to sell and dispose of the same; and the
+money arising from such sale I give and bequeath as follows, viz.
+to Thomas and Benjamin, the sons of Fisher Johnson, late of
+Leicester, and &mdash;&mdash;- Whiting, daughter of Thomas
+Johnson [F-1], late of Coventry, and the grand-daughter of the
+said Thomas Johnson, one full and equal fourth part each; but in
+case there shall be more grand-daughters than one of the said
+Thomas Johnson, living at the time of my decease, I give and
+bequeath the part or share of that one to and equally between
+such grand-daughters. I give and bequeath to the Rev. Mr. Rogers,
+of Berkley, near Froom, in the county of Somerset, the sum of one
+hundred pounds, requesting him to apply the same towards the
+maintenance of Elizabeth Herne, a lunatick [F-2]. I also give and
+bequeath to my god-children, the son and daughter of Mauritius
+Lowe [F-3], painter, each of them, one hundred pounds of my stock
+in the three <i>per cent</i>, consolidated annuities, to be
+applied and disposed of by and at the discretion of my Executors,
+in the education or settlement in the world of them my said
+legatees. Also I give and bequeath to Sir John Hawkins, one of my
+Executors, the Annales Ecclesiastici of Baronius, and Holinshed's
+and Stowe's Chronicles, and also an octavo Common Prayer-Book. To
+Bennet Langton, Esq. I give and bequeath my Polyglot Bible. To
+Sir Joshua Reynolds, my great French Dictionary, by Martiniere,
+and my own copy of my folio English Dictionary, of the last
+revision. To Dr. William Scott, one of my Executors, the
+Dictionnaire de Commerce, and Lectius's edition of the Greek
+poets. To Mr. Windham [F-4], Poetae Graeci Heroici per Henricum
+Stephanum. To the Rev. Mr. Strahan, vicar of Islington, in
+Middlesex, Mill's Greek Testament, Beza's Greek Testament, by
+Stephens, all my Latin Bibles, and my Greek Bible, by Wechelius.
+To Dr. Heberden, Dr. Brocklesby, Dr. Butter, and Mr. Cruikshank,
+the surgeon who attended me, Mr. Holder, my apothecary, Gerard
+Hamilton, Esq., Mrs. Gardiner [F-5], of Snow-hill, Mrs. Frances
+Reynolds, Mr. Hoole, and the Reverend Mr. Hoole, his son, each a
+book at their election, to keep as a token of remembrance. I also
+give and bequeath to Mr. John Desmoulins [F-6], two hundred
+pounds consolidated three <i>per cent</i>, annuities: and to Mr.
+Sastres, the Italian master [F-7], the sum of five pounds, to be
+laid out in books of piety for his own use. And whereas the said
+Bennet Langton hath agreed, in consideration of the sum of seven
+hundred and fifty pounds, mentioned in my Will to be in his
+hands, to grant and secure an annuity of seventy pounds payable
+during the life of me and my servant, Francis Barber, and the
+life of the survivor of us, to Mr. George Stubbs, in trust for
+us; my mind and will is, that in case of my decease before the
+said agreement shall be perfected, the said sum of seven hundred
+and fifty pounds, and the bond for securing the said sum, shall
+go to the said Francis Barber; and I hereby give and bequeath to
+him the same, in lieu of the bequest in his favour, contained in
+my said Will. And I hereby empower my Executors to deduct and
+retain all expences that shall or may be incurred in the
+execution of my said Will, or of this Codicil thereto, out of
+such estate and effects as I shall die possessed of. All the
+rest, residue, and remainder, of my estate and effects, I give
+and bequeath to my said Executors, in trust for the said Francis
+Barber, his Executors and Administrators. Witness my hand and
+seal, this ninth day of December, 1784.</p>
+<center>'SAM. JOHNSON, (L. S.)</center>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'Signed, sealed, published, declared,
+ and delivered, by the
+ said Samuel Johnson, as, and
+ for a Codicil to his last Will and
+ Testament, in the presence of
+ us, who, in his presence, and at
+ his request, and also in the
+ presence of each other, have
+ hereto subscribed our names as
+ witnesses.
+ 'JOHN COPLEY.
+ 'WILLIAM GIBSON.
+ 'HENRY COLE.'
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>Upon these testamentary deeds it is proper to make a few
+observations.</p>
+<p>His express declaration with his dying breath as a Christian,
+as it had been often practised in such solemn writings, was of
+real consequence from this great man; for the conviction of a
+mind equally acute and strong, might well overbalance the doubts
+of others, who were his contemporaries. The expression
+<i>polluted</i>, may, to some, convey an impression of more than
+ordinary contamination; but that is not warranted by its genuine
+meaning, as appears from <i>The Rambler</i>, No. 42[F-8]. The
+same word is used in the will of Dr. Sanderson, Bishop of Lincoln
+[F-9], who was piety itself.</p>
+<p>His legacy of two hundred pounds to the representatives of Mr.
+Innys, bookseller, in St. Paul's Church-yard [F-10], proceeded
+from a very worthy motive. He told Sir John Hawkins, that his
+father having become a bankrupt, Mr. Innys had assisted him with
+money or credit to continue his business. 'This, (said he,) I
+consider as an obligation on me to be grateful to his descendants
+[F-11].'</p>
+<p>The amount of his property proved to be considerably more than
+he had supposed it to be. Sir John Hawkins estimates the bequest
+to Francis Barber at a sum little short of fifteen hundred
+pounds, including an annuity of seventy pounds to be paid to him
+by Mr. Langton, in consideration of seven hundred and fifty
+pounds, which Johnson had lent to that gentleman. Sir John seems
+not a little angry at this bequest, and mutters 'a caveat against
+ostentatious bounty and favour to negroes [F-12].' But surely
+when a man has money entirely of his own acquisition, especially
+when he has no near relations, he may, without blame, dispose of
+it as he pleases, and with great propriety to a faithful servant.
+Mr. Barber, by the recommendation of his master, retired to
+Lichfield, where he might pass the rest of his days in
+comfort.</p>
+<p>It has been objected that Johnson has omitted many of his best
+friends, when leaving books to several as tokens of his last
+remembrance. The names of Dr. Adams, Dr. Taylor [F-13], Dr.
+Burney, Mr. Hector, Mr. Murphy, the Authour of this Work, and
+others who were intimate with him, are not to be found in his
+Will. This may be accounted for by considering, that as he was
+very near his dissolution at the time, he probably mentioned such
+as happened to occur to him; and that he may have recollected,
+that he had formerly shewn others such proofs of his regard, that
+it was not necessary to crowd his Will with their names. Mrs.
+Lucy Porter was much displeased that nothing was left to her; but
+besides what I have now stated, she should have considered, that
+she had left nothing to Johnson by her Will, which was made
+during his life-time, as appeared at her decease.</p>
+<p>His enumerating several persons in one group, and leaving them
+'each a book at their election,' might possibly have given
+occasion to a curious question as to the order of choice, had
+they not luckily fixed on different books. His library, though by
+no means handsome in its appearance, was sold by Mr. Christie,
+for two hundred and forty-seven pounds, nine shillings [F-14];
+many people being desirous to have a book which had belonged to
+Johnson. In many of them he had written little notes: sometimes
+tender memorials of his departed wife; as, 'This was dear Tetty's
+book:' sometimes occasional remarks of different sorts. Mr.
+Lysons, of Clifford's Inn, has favoured me with the two
+following:</p>
+<p>In <i>Holy Rules and Helps to Devotion</i>, by Bryan Duppa,
+Lord Bishop of Winton, '<i>Preces quidam (? quidem) videtur
+diligenter tractasse; spero non inauditus (? inauditas).'</i></p>
+<p>In <i>The Rosicrucian infallible Axiomata</i>, by John Heydon,
+Gent., prefixed to which are some verses addressed to the
+authour, signed Ambr. Waters, A.M. Coll. Ex. Oxon. '<i>These
+Latin verses were written to Hobbes by Bathurst, upon his
+Treatise on Human Nature, and have no relation to the
+book.&mdash;An odd fraud</i>.'&mdash;BOSWELL. [Note: See Appendix
+F for notes on this footnote.]</p>
+<p><a name="note-1233">[1233]</a> 'He
+burned,' writes Mrs. Piozzi, 'many letters in the last week, I am
+told, and those written by his mother drew from him a flood of
+tears. Mr. Sastres saw him cast a melancholy look upon their
+ashes, which he took up and examined to see if a word was still
+legible.'&mdash;<i>Piozzi Letters</i>, ii. 383.</p>
+<p><a name="note-1234">[1234]</a>
+Boswell in his <i>Hebrides</i> (<i>post</i>, v. 53) says that
+Johnson, starting northwards on his tour, left in a drawer in
+Boswell's house 'one volume of a pretty full and curious <i>Diary
+of his Life</i>, of which I have,' he continues, 'a few
+fragments.' The other volume, we may conjecture, Johnson took
+with him, for Boswell had seen both, and apparently seen them
+only once. He mentions (<i>ante</i>, i. 27) that these 'few
+fragments' had been transferred to him by the residuary legatee
+(Francis Barber). One large fragment, which was published after
+Barber's death, he could never have seen, for he never quotes
+from it (<i>ante</i>, i. 35, note 1).</p>
+<p><a name="note-1235">[1235]</a> One of
+these volumes, Sir John Hawkins informs us, he put into his
+pocket; for which the excuse he states is, that he meant to
+preserve it from falling into the hands of a person whom he
+describes so as to make it sufficiently clear who is meant;
+'having strong reasons (said he,) to suspect that this man might
+find and make an ill use of the book.' Why Sir John should
+suppose that the gentleman alluded to would act in this manner,
+he has not thought fit to explain. But what he did was not
+approved of by Johnson; who, upon being acquainted of it without
+delay by a friend, expressed great indignation, and warmly
+insisted on the book being delivered up; and, afterwards, in the
+supposition of his missing it, without knowing by whom it had
+been taken, he said, 'Sir, I should have gone out of the world
+distrusting half mankind.' Sir John next day wrote a letter to
+Johnson, assigning reasons for his conduct; upon which Johnson
+observed to Mr. Langton, 'Bishop Sanderson could not have
+dictated a better letter. I could almost say, <i>Melius est sic
+penituisse quam non err&acirc;sse</i>.' The agitation into which
+Johnson was thrown by this incident, probably made him hastily
+burn those precious records which must ever be regretted.
+BOSWELL. According to Mr. Croker, Steevens was the man whom
+Hawkins said that he suspected. Porson, in his witty
+<i>Panegyrical Epistle on Hawkins v. Johnson</i> (<i>Gent.
+Mag.</i> 1787, pp. 751-3, and <i>Porson Tracts</i>, p. 341),
+says:&mdash;'I shall attempt a translation [of <i>Melius est</i>,
+&amp;c.] for the benefit of your mere English
+readers:&mdash;<i>There is more joy over a sinner that repenteth
+than over a just person that needeth no repentance</i>. And we
+know from an authority not to be disputed (Hawkins's <i>Life</i>,
+p. 406) that <i>Johnson was a great lover of penitents</i>.</p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ "God put it in the mind to take it hence,
+ That thou might'st win the more thy [Johnson's] love,
+ Pleading so wisely in excuse of it."
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p><a name="note-1236">[1236]</a>
+<i>Henry IV</i>, act iv. sc. 5.</p>
+<p><a name="note-1237">[1237]</a>
+'Tibullus addressed Cynthia in this manner:&mdash;</p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ "<i>Te spectem, suprema, mihi cum venerit hora,
+ Te teneam moriens deficiente mamu.
+ Lib. i. El. I. 73.
+ Before my closing eyes dear Cynthia stand,
+ Held weakly by my fainting, trembling hand."'
+ Johnson's Works, iv. 35.
+</i>
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p><a name="note-1238">[1238]</a>
+Windham was scarcely a statesman as yet, though for a few months
+of the year before he had been Chief Secretary for Ireland
+(ante<i>, p 200). He was in Parliament, but he had never spoken.
+His</i> Diary <i>shews that he had no 'important occupations.' On
+Dec. 12, for instance, he records (p. 30):&mdash;'Came down about
+ten; read reviews, wrote to Mrs. Siddons, and then went to the
+ice; came home only in time to dress and go to my mother's to
+dinner.' See</i> ante<i>, p. 356, for his interest in
+balloons.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1239">[1239]</a> 'My
+father,' writes Miss Burney, 'saw him once while I was away, and
+carried Mr. Burke with him, who was desirous of paying his
+respects to him once more in person. He rallied a little while
+they were there; and Mr. Burke, when they left him, said to my
+father:&mdash;"His work is almost done, and well has he done
+it."' Mme. D'Arblay's Diary<i>, ii. 333. Burke, in 1792, said in
+Parliament that 'Dr. Johnson's virtues were equal to his
+transcendent talents, and his friendship he valued as the
+greatest consolation and happiness of his life.'</i> Parl.
+Debates<i>, xxx. 109.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1240">[1240]</a> On the
+same undoubted authority, I give a few articles, which should
+have been inserted in chronological order; but which, now that
+they are before me, I should be sorry to omit:&mdash;</p>
+<p>'In 1736, Dr. Johnson had a particular inclination to have
+been engaged as an assistant to the Reverend Mr. Budworth, then
+head master of the Grammar-school, at Brewood, in Staffordshire,
+"an excellent person, who possessed every talent of a perfect
+instructor of youth, in a degree which, (to use the words of one
+of the brightest ornaments of literature, the Reverend Dr. Hurd,
+Bishop of Worcester,) has been rarely found in any of that
+profession since the days of Quintilian." Mr. Budworth, "who was
+less known in his life-time, from that obscure situation to which
+the caprice of fortune oft condemns the most accomplished
+characters, than his highest merit deserved," had been bred under
+Mr. Blackwell [Blackwall], at Market Bosworth, where Johnson was
+some time an usher [ante<i>, i. 84]; which might naturally lead
+to the application. Mr. Budworth was certainly no stranger to the
+learning or abilities of Johnson; as he more than once lamented
+his having been under the necessity of declining the engagement,
+from an apprehension that the paralytick affection, under which
+our great Philologist laboured through life, might become the
+object of imitation or of ridicule, among his pupils.' Captain
+Budworth, his grandson, has confirmed to me this
+anecdote.</i></p>
+<p>'Among the early associates of Johnson, at St. John's Gate,
+was Samuel Boyse [G-1], well known by his ingenious productions;
+and not less noted for his imprudence. It was not unusual for
+Boyse to be a customer to the pawnbroker. On one of these
+occasions, Dr. Johnson collected a sum of money to redeem his
+friend's clothes, which in two days after were pawned again. "The
+sum, (said Johnson,) was collected by sixpences, at a time when
+to me sixpence was a serious consideration [G-2]."</p>
+<p>'Speaking one day of a person for whom he had a real
+friendship, but in whom vanity was somewhat too predominant, he
+observed, that "Kelly [G-3] was so fond of displaying on his
+side-board the plate which he possessed, that he added to it his
+spurs. For my part, (said he,) I never was master of a pair of
+spurs, but once; and they are now at the bottom of the ocean. By
+the carelessness of Boswell's servant, they were dropped from the
+end of the boat, on our return from the Isle of Sky [G-4]."'</p>
+<p>The late Reverend Mr. Samuel Badcock [G-5], having been
+introduced to Dr. Johnson, by Mr. Nichols, some years before his
+death, thus expressed himself in a letter to that
+gentleman:&mdash;</p>
+<p>'How much I am obliged to you for the favour you did me in
+introducing me to Dr. Johnson! Tant&ugrave;m v&igrave;di
+Virgilium <i>[G-6]. But to have seen him, and to have received a
+testimony of respect from him, was enough. I recollect all the
+conversation, and shall never forget one of his expressions.
+Speaking of Dr. P&mdash;&mdash; [Priestley], (whose writings, I
+saw, he estimated at a low rate,) he said, "You have proved him
+as deficient in</i> probity <i>as he is in learning [G-7]." I
+called him an "Index-scholar [G-8];" but he was not willing to
+allow him a claim even to that merit. He said, that "he borrowed
+from those who had been borrowers themselves, and did not know
+that the mistakes he adopted had been answered by others." I
+often think of our short, but precious, visit to this great man.
+I shall consider it as a kind of an</i> aera <i>in my life.'
+BOSWELL. [Note: See Appendix G for notes on this
+footnote.]</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1241">[1241]</a> See
+ante<i>, i. 152, 501.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1242">[1242]</a> He
+wrote to Dr. Taylor on Feb. 17, 1776:&mdash;'Keep yourself
+cheerful. Lie in bed with a lamp, and when you cannot sleep and
+are beginning to think, light your candle and read. At least
+light your candle; a man is perhaps never so much harrassed
+(sic<i>) by his own mind in the light as in the dark.'</i> Notes
+and Queries<i>, 6th S. v. 423.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1243">[1243]</a> Mr.
+Croker records 'the following communication from Mr. Hoole
+himself':&mdash;'I must mention an incident which shews how ready
+Johnson was to make amends for any little incivility. When I
+called upon him, the morning after he had pressed me rather
+roughly to read louder<i>, he said, "I was peevish yesterday; you
+must forgive me: when you are as old and as sick as I am, perhaps
+you may be peevish too." I have heard him make many apologies of
+this kind.'</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1244">[1244]</a> 'To
+his friend Dr. Burney he said a few hours before he died, taking
+the Doctor's hands within his, and casting his eyes towards
+Heaven with a look of the most fervent piety, "My dear friend,
+while you live do all the good you can." Seward's Biographiana,
+<i>p. 601</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1245">[1245]</a> Mr.
+Hoole, senior, records of this day:&mdash;'Dr. Johnson exhorted
+me to lead a better life than he had done. "A better life than
+you, my dear Sir:" I repeated. He replied warmly, "Don't
+compliment not." Croker's Boswell<i>, p. 844</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1246">[1246]</a> See
+ante<i>, p. 293</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1247">[1247]</a> The
+French historian, Jacques-Auguste de Thou, 1553-1617, author of
+Historia sui Temporis <i>in 138 books.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1248">[1248]</a> See
+ante, <i>ii. 42, note 2.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1249">[1249]</a> Mr.
+Hutton was occasionally admitted to the royal breakfast-table.
+"Hutton," said the King to him one morning, "is it true that you
+Moravians marry without any previous knowledge of each other?"
+"Yes, may it please your majesty," returned Hutton; "our
+marriages are quite royal" Hannah More's Memoirs<i>, i. 318. One
+of his female-missionaries for North American said to Dr.
+Johnson:&mdash;'Whether my Saviour's service may be best carried
+on here, or on the coast of Labrador, 'tis Mr. Hutton's business
+to settle. I will do my part either in a brick-house or a
+snow-house with equal alacrity.' Piozzi's</i> Synonymy<i>, ii.
+120. He is described also in the</i> Memoirs of Dr. Burney<i>, i.
+251, 291.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1250">[1250]</a>
+Ante<i>, ii. 402.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1251">[1251]</a> Burke
+said of Hussey, who was his friend and correspondent, that in his
+character he had made 'that very rare union of the enlightened
+statesman with the ecclesiastic.' Burke's Corres<i>. iv.
+270.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1252">[1252]</a>
+Boswell refers, I believe, to Fordyce's epitaph on Johnson in the
+Gent. Mag. <i>1785, p. 412, or possibly to an</i> Ode <i>on p. 50
+of his poems.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1253">[1253]</a> 'Being
+become very weak and helpless it was thought necessary that a man
+should watch with him all night; and one was found in the
+neighbourhood for half a crown a night.' Hawkins's Life of
+Johnson<i>, p. 589.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1254">[1254]</a> It was
+on Nov. 30 that he repeated these lines. See Croker's Boswell<i>,
+p. 843.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1255">[1255]</a>
+British Synonymy<i>, i. 359. Mrs. Piozzi, to add to the wonder,
+says that these verses were 'improviso,' forgetting that Johnson
+wrote to her on Aug 8, 1780 (</i>Piozzi Letters<i>, ii.
+175):&mdash;'You have heard in the papers how &mdash;- is come to
+age. I have enclosed a short song of congratulation which you
+must not shew to anybody. It is odd that it should come into
+anybody's head. I hope you will read it with candour; it is, I
+believe, one of the author's first essays in that way of writing,
+and a beginner is always to be treated with tenderness.' That it
+was Sir John Lade who had come of age is shewn by the entry of
+his birth, Aug. 1, 1759, in the</i> Gent. Mag. <i>1759, p. 392.
+He was the nephew and ward of Mr. Thrale, who seemed to think
+that Miss Burney would make him a good wife. (Mme. D'Arblay's</i>
+Diary<i>, i. 79.) According to Mr. Hayward (</i>Life of
+Piozzi<i>, i. 69) it was Lade who having asked Johnson whether he
+advised him to marry, received as answer: 'I would advise no man
+to marry, Sir, who is not likely to propagate understanding.'
+See</i> ante<i>, ii. 109, note 2. Mr. Hayward adds that 'he
+married a woman of the town, became a celebrated member of the
+Four-in-Hand Club, and contrived to waste the whole of a fine
+fortune before he died.' In Campbell's</i> Chancellors <i>(ed.
+1846, v. 628) a story is told of Sir John Ladd, who is, I
+suppose, the same man. The Prince of Wales in 1805 asked Lord
+Thurlow to dinner, and also Ladd. 'When "the old Lion" arrived
+the Prince went into the ante-room to meet him, and apologised
+for the party being larger than he had intended, but added, "that
+Sir John was an old friend of his, and he could not avoid asking
+him to dinner," to which Thurlow, in his growling voice,
+answered, "I have no objection, Sir, to Sir John Ladd in his
+proper place, which I take to be your Royal Highness's coach-box,
+and not your table."'</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1256">[1256]</a>
+British Synonymy <i>was published in 1794, later therefore than
+Boswell's first and second editions. In both these the latter
+half of this paragraph ran as follows:&mdash;"From the specimen
+which Mrs. Piozzi has exhibited of it (</i>Anecdotes<i>, p. 196)
+it is much to be wished that the world could see the whole.
+Indeed I can speak from my own knowledge; for having had the
+pleasure to read it, I found it to be a piece of exquisite satire
+conveyed in a strain of pointed vivacity and humour, and in a
+manner of which no other instance is to be found in Johnson's
+writings. After describing the ridiculous and ruinous career of a
+wild spendthrift he</i> consoles <i>him with this
+reflection:&mdash;</i></p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ "You may hang or drown at last."'
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p><a name="note-1257">[1257]</a> Sir
+John.</p>
+<p><a name="note-1258">[1258]</a>'"Les
+morts n'&eacute;crivent point," says Madame de Maintenon.' Hannah
+More's Memoirs<i>, i. 233. The note that Johnson received 'was,'
+says Mr. Hoole, 'from Mr. Davies, the bookseller, and mentioned a
+present of some pork; upon which the Doctor said, in a manner
+that seemed as if he thought it ill-timed, "too much of this," or
+some such expression.' Croker's</i> Boswell<i>, p. 844.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1259">[1259]</a> Sir
+Walter Scott says that 'Reynolds observed the charge given him by
+Johnson on his death-bed not to use his pencil of a Sunday for a
+considerable time, but afterwards broke it, being persuaded by
+some person who was impatient for a sitting that the Doctor had
+no title to exact such a promise.' Croker's Corres<i>. ii. 34.
+'Reynolds used to say that "the pupil in art who looks for the
+Sunday with pleasure as an idle day will never make a painter."'
+Northcote's</i> Reynolds<i>, i. 119. 'Dr. Johnson,' said Lord
+Eldon, 'sent me a message on his death-bed, to request that I
+would attend public worship every Sunday.' Twiss's</i> Eldon<i>,
+i. 168. The advice was not followed, for 'when a lawyer, a warm
+partisan of the Chancellor, called him one of the pillars of the
+Church; "No," said another lawyer, "he may be one of its
+buttresses; but certainly not one of its pillars, for he is never
+found within it."'</i> Ib<i>. iii. 488. Lord Campbell (</i>Lives
+of the Chancellors<i>, vii. 716) says:&mdash;Lord Eldon was never
+present at public worship in London from one year's end to the
+other. Pleading in mitigation before Lord Ellenborough that he
+attended public worship in the country, he received the rebuke,
+"as if there were no God in town.'"</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1260">[1260]</a>
+Reynolds records:&mdash;'During his last illness, when all hope
+was at an end, he appeared to be quieter and more resigned. His
+approaching dissolution was always present to his mind. A few
+days before he died, Mr. Langton and myself only present, he said
+he had been a great sinner, but he hoped he had given no bad
+example to his friends; that he had some consolation in
+reflecting that he had never denied Christ, and repeated the
+text, "Whoever denies me, &amp;c." [St. Matthew <i>x. 33.] We
+were both very ready to assure him that we were conscious that we
+were better and wiser from his life and conversation; and that so
+far from denying Christ, he had been, in this age, his greatest
+champion.' Taylor's</i> Reynolds<i>, ii. 459.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1261">[1261]</a> Hannah
+More (Memoirs <i>i. 393) says that Johnson, having put up a
+fervent prayer that Brocklesby might become a sincere Christian,
+'caught hold of his hand with great earnestness, and cried,
+"Doctor, you do not say</i> Amen<i>." The Doctor looked
+foolishly, but after a pause cried "</i>Amen<i>"' Her account,
+however, is often not accurate.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1262">[1262]</a>
+Windham records (Diary<i>, p. 30) that on the night of the 12th
+he urged him to take some sustenance, 'and desisted only upon his
+exclaiming, "It is all very childish; let us hear no more of
+it."' On his pressing him a second time, he answered that 'he
+refused no sustenance but inebriating sustenance.' Windham
+thereupon asked him to take some milk, but 'he recurred to his
+general refusal, and begged that there might be an end of it. I
+then said that I hoped he would forgive my earnestness; when he
+replied eagerly, "that from me nothing would be necessary by way
+of apology;" adding with great fervour, in words which I shall (I
+hope) never forget&mdash;"God bless you, my dear Windham, through
+Jesus Christ;" and concluding with a wish that we might meet in
+some humble portion of that happiness which God might finally
+vouchsafe to repentant sinners. These were the last words I ever
+heard him speak. I hurried out of the room with tears in my eyes,
+and more affected than I had been on any former occasion.' It was
+at a later hour in this same night that Johnson 'scarified
+himself in three places. On Mr. Desmoulins making a difficulty of
+giving him the lancet he said, "Don't you, if you have any
+scruples; but I will compel Frank," and on Mr. Desmoulins
+attempting to prevent Frank from giving it to him, and at last to
+restrain his hands, he grew very outrageous, so much so as to
+call Frank "scoundrel" and to threaten Mr. Desmoulins that he
+would stab him.'</i> Ib<i>. p. 32.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1263">[1263]</a> Mr.
+Strahan, mentioning 'the anxious fear', which seized Johnson,
+says, that 'his friends who knew his integrity observed it with
+equal astonishment and concern.' He adds that 'his foreboding
+dread of the Divine justice by degrees subsided into a pious
+trust and humble hope in the Divine mercy.' Pr. and Med.
+<i>preface, p. xv.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1264">[1264]</a> The
+change of his sentiments with regard to Dr. Clarke, is thus
+mentioned to me in a letter from the late Dr. Adams, Master of
+Pembroke College, Oxford:&mdash;'The Doctor's prejudices were the
+strongest, and certainly in another sense the weakest, that ever
+possessed a sensible man. You know his extreme zeal for
+orthodoxy. But did you ever hear what he told me himself? That he
+had made it a rule not to admit Dr. Clarke's name in his
+Dictionary<i>. This, however, wore off. At some distance of time
+he advised with me what books he should read in defence of the
+Christian Religion. I recommended Clarke's</i> Evidences of
+Natural and Revealed Religion<i>, as the best of the kind; and I
+find in what is called his</i> Prayers and Meditations<i>, that
+he was frequently employed in the latter part of his time in
+reading Clarke's</i> Sermons<i>. BOSWELL. See</i> ante<i>, i.
+398.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1265">[1265]</a> The
+Reverend Mr. Strahan took care to have it preserved, and has
+inserted it in Prayers and Meditations<i>, p. 216.
+BOSWELL.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1266">[1266]</a> See
+ante<i>, iii. 433.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1267">[1267]</a> The
+counterpart of Johnson's end and of one striking part of his
+character may be found in Mr. Fearing in The Pilgrim's
+Progress<i>, part ii. '"Mr. Fearing was," said Honesty, "a very
+zealous man. Difficulty, lions, or Vanity Fair he feared not at
+all; it was only sin, death, and hell that were to him a terror,
+because he had some doubts about his interest in that celestial
+country." "I dare believe," Greatheart replied, "that, as the
+proverb is, he could have bit a firebrand, had it stood in his
+way; but the things with which he was oppressed no man ever yet
+could shake off with ease."' See</i> ante<i>, ii. 298, note
+4.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1268">[1268]</a> Her
+sister's likeness as Hope nursing Love was painted by Reynolds.
+Northcote's Reynolds<i>, i. 185.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1269">[1269]</a> The
+following letter, written with an agitated hand, from the very
+chamber of death, by Mr. Langton, and obviously interrupted by
+his feelings, will not unaptly close the story of so long a
+friendship. The letter is not addressed, but Mr. Langton's family
+believe it was intended for Mr. Boswell.</p>
+<p>'MY DEAR SIR,&mdash;After many conflicting hopes and fears
+respecting the event of this heavy return of illness which has
+assailed our honoured friend, Dr. Johnson, since his arrival from
+Lichfield, about four days ago the appearances grew more and more
+awful, and this afternoon at eight o'clock, when I arrived at his
+house to see how he should be going on, I was acquainted at the
+door, that about three quarters of an hour before, he breathed
+his last. I am now writing in the room where his venerable
+remains exhibit a spectacle, the interesting solemnity of which,
+difficult as it would be in any sort to find terms to express, so
+to you, my dear Sir, whose own sensations will paint it so
+strongly, it would be of all men the most superfluous to attempt
+to&mdash;.'&mdash;CROKER. The interruption of the note was
+perhaps due to a discovery made by Langton. Hawkins says, 'at
+eleven, the evening of Johnson's death, Mr. Langton came to me,
+and in an agony of mind gave me to understand that our friend had
+wounded himself in several parts of the body.' Hawkins's Life<i>,
+p. 590. To the dying man, 'on the last day of his existence on
+this side the grave the desire of life,' to use Murphy's words
+(</i>Life<i>, p. 135), 'had returned with all its former
+vehemence.' In the hope of drawing off the dropsical water he
+gave himself these wounds (see</i> ante<i>, p. 399). He lost a
+good deal of blood, and no doubt hastened his end. Langton must
+have suspected that Johnson intentionally shortened his
+life.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1270">[1270]</a>
+Servant to the Right Honourable William Windham. BOSWELL.</p>
+<p><a name="note-1271">[1271]</a> Sir
+Joshua Reynolds and Paoli were among the mourners. Among the
+Nichols papers in the British Museum is preserved an invitation
+card to the funeral.</p>
+<p><a name="note-1272">[1272]</a> Dr.
+Burney wrote to the Rev. T. Twining on Christmas Day,
+1784:&mdash;'The Dean and Chapter of Westminster Abbey lay all
+the blame on Sir John Hawkins for suffering Johnson to be so
+unworthily interred. The Knight's first inquiry at the Abbey in
+giving orders, as the most acting executor, was&mdash;"What would
+be the difference in the expense between a public and private
+funeral?" and was told only a few pounds to the prebendaries, and
+about ninety pairs of gloves to the choir and attendants; and he
+then determined that, "as Dr. Johnson had no music in him, he
+should choose the cheapest manner of interment." And for this
+reason there was no organ heard, or burial service sung; for
+which he suffers the Dean and Chapter to be abused in all the
+newspapers, and joins in their abuse when the subject is
+mentioned in conversation.' Burney mentions a report that Hawkins
+had been slandering Johnson. Recreations and Studies of a Country
+Clergyman of the XVIII Century<i>, p. 129. Dr. Charles Burney,
+jun., had written the day after the funeral:&mdash;'The executor,
+Sir John Hawkins, did not manage things well, for there was no
+anthem or choir service performed&mdash;no lesson&mdash;but
+merely what is read over every old woman that is buried by the
+parish. Dr. Taylor read the service but so-so.' Johnstone's</i>
+Parr<i>, i. 535.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1273">[1273]</a> Pope's
+Essay on Man<i>, iv. 390. See</i> ante<i>, iii. 6, and iv.
+122.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1274">[1274]</a> On the
+subject of Johnson I may adopt the words of Sir John Harrington,
+concerning his venerable Tutor and Diocesan, Dr. John Still,
+Bishop of Bath and Wells; 'who hath given me some helps, more
+hopes, all encouragements in my best studies: to whom I never
+came but I grew more religious; from whom I never went, but I
+parted better instructed. Of him therefore, my acquaintance, my
+friend, my instructor, if I speak much, it were not to be
+marvelled; if I speak frankly, it is not to be blamed; and though
+I speak partially, it were to be pardoned.' Nugoe Antiquoe<i>,
+vol. i. p. 136. There is one circumstance in Sir John's character
+of Bishop Still, which is peculiarly applicable to Johnson: 'He
+became so famous a disputer, that the learnedest were even afraid
+to dispute with him; and he finding his own strength, could not
+stick to warn them in their arguments to take heed to their
+answers, like a perfect fencer that will tell aforehand in which
+button he will give the venew, or like a cunning chess-player
+that will appoint aforehand with which pawn and in what place he
+will give the mate.'</i> Ibid<i>. BOSWELL.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1275">[1275]</a> The
+late Right Hon. William Gerard Hamilton. MALONE.</p>
+<p><a name="note-1276">[1276]</a> 'His
+death,' writes Hannah More (Memoirs<i>, i. 394), 'makes a kind of
+era in literature.' 'One who had long known him said of
+him:&mdash;'In general you may tell what the man to whom you are
+speaking will say next. This you can never do of Johnson.'
+Johnson's</i> Works <i>(1787), xi. 211.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1277">[1277]</a> Beside
+the Dedications to him by Dr. Goldsmith [ante<i>, ii. 216], the
+Reverend Dr. Francklin [</i>ante<i>, iv. 34], and the Reverend
+Mr. Wilson [</i>ante<i>, iv. 162], which I have mentioned
+according to their dates, there was one by a lady, of a
+versification of</i> Aningait and Ajut<i>, and one by the
+ingenious Mr. Walker [</i>ante<i>, iv. 206], of his</i>
+Rhetorical Grammar<i>. I have introduced into this work several
+compliments paid to him in the writings of his contemporaries;
+but the number of them is so great, that we may fairly say that
+there was almost a general tribute.</i></p>
+<p>Let me not be forgetful of the honour done to him by Colonel
+Myddleton, of Gwaynynog, near Denbigh; who, on the banks of a
+rivulet in his park, where Johnson delighted to stand and repeat
+verses, erected an urn with the following inscription:</p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ 'This spot was often dignified by the presence of
+ SAMUEL JOHNSON, LL.D.
+ Whose moral writings, exactly conformable to the
+ precepts of Christianity,
+ Gave ardour to Virtue and confidence to Truth [H-1].'
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>As no inconsiderable circumstance of his fame, we must reckon
+the extraordinary zeal of the artists to extend and perpetuate
+his image. I can enumerate a bust by Mr. Nollekens, and the many
+casts which are made from it; several pictures by Sir Joshua
+Reynolds, from one of which, in the possession of the Duke of
+Dorset, Mr. Humphry executed a beautiful miniature in enamel; one
+by Mrs. Frances Reynolds, Sir Joshua's sister; one by Mr.
+Zoffani; and one by Mr. Opie [H-2]; and the following engravings
+of his portrait: 1. One by Cooke, from Sir Joshua, for the
+Proprietors' edition of his folio Dictionary<i>.&mdash;2. One
+from ditto, by ditto, for their quarto edition.&mdash;3. One from
+Opie, by Heath, for Harrison's edition of his</i>
+Dictionary<i>.&mdash;4. One from Nollekens' bust of him, by
+Bartolozzi, for Fielding's quarto edition of his</i>
+Dictionary<i>.&mdash;5. One small, from Harding, by Trotter, for
+his</i> Beauties<i>.&mdash;6. One small, from Sir Joshua, by
+Trotter, for his</i> Lives of the Poets<i>.&mdash;7. One small,
+from Sir Joshua, by Hall, for</i> The Rambler<i>.&mdash;8. One
+small, from an original drawing, in the possession of Mr. John
+Simco, etched by Trotter, for another edition of his</i> Lives of
+the Poets<i>.&mdash;9. One small, no painter's name, etched by
+Taylor, for his</i> Johnsoniana<i>.&mdash;10. One folio
+whole-length, with his oak-stick, as described in Boswell's</i>
+Tour<i>, drawn and etched by Trotter.&mdash;11. One large
+mezzotinto, from Sir Joshua, by Doughty [H-3].&mdash;l2. One
+large Roman head, from Sir Joshua, by Marchi.&mdash;13. One
+octavo, holding a book to his eye, from Sir Joshua, by Hall, for
+his</i> Works<i>.&mdash;14. One small, from a drawing from the
+life, and engraved by Trotter, for his</i> Life <i>published by
+Kearsley.&mdash;15. One large, from Opie, by Mr. Townley,
+(brother of Mr. Townley, of the Commons,) an ingenious artist,
+who resided some time at Berlin, and has the honour of being
+engraver to his Majesty the King of Prussia. This is one of the
+finest mezzotintos that ever was executed; and what renders it of
+extraordinary value, the plate was destroyed after four or five
+impressions only were taken off. One of them is in the possession
+of Sir William Scott [H-4]. Mr. Townley has lately been prevailed
+with to execute and publish another of the same, that it may be
+more generally circulated among the admirers of Dr.
+Johnson.&mdash;16. One large, from Sir Joshua's first picture of
+him, by Heath, for this work, in quarto.&mdash;17. One octavo, by
+Baker, for the octavo edition.&mdash;18. And one for
+Lavater's</i> Essay on Physiognomy<i>, in which Johnson's
+countenance is analysed upon the principles of that fanciful
+writer.&mdash;There are also several seals with his head cut on
+them, particularly a very fine one by that eminent artist, Edward
+Burch, Esq. R.A. in the possession of the younger Dr. Charles
+Burney.</i></p>
+<p>Let me add, as a proof of the popularity of his character,
+that there are copper pieces struck at Birmingham, with his head
+impressed on them, which pass current as half-pence there, and in
+the neighbouring parts of the country. BOSWELL. [Note: See
+Appendix H for notes on this footnote.]</p>
+<p><a name="note-1278">[1278]</a> It is
+not yet published.&mdash;In a letter to me, Mr. Agutter says, 'My
+sermon before the University was more engaged with Dr. Johnson's
+moral <i>than his</i> intellectual <i>character. It particularly
+examined his fear of death, and suggested several reasons for the
+apprehension of the good, and the indifference of the infidel in
+their last hours; this was illustrated by contrasting the death
+of Dr. Johnson and Mr. Hume: the text was Job xxi. 22-26.'
+BOSWELL. It was preached on July 23, 1786, and not at Johnson's
+death. It is entitled</i> On the Difference between the Deaths of
+the Righteous and the Wicked. Illustrated in the Instance of Dr.
+Samuel Johnson and David Hume, Esq. <i>The text is from Job xxi.
+23 (not 22)-26. It was published in 1800. Neither Johnson nor
+Hume is mentioned in the sermon itself by name. Its chief,
+perhaps its sole, merit is its brevity.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1279">[1279]</a> See
+ante<i>, ii. 335, and iii. 375.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1280">[1280]</a> 'May
+26, 1791. After the Doctor's death, Burke, Sir Joshua Reynolds,
+and Boswell sent an ambling circular-letter to me begging
+subscriptions for a monument for him. I would not deign to write
+an answer; but sent down word by my footman, as I would have done
+to parish officers, with a brief, that I would not subscribe.'
+Horace Walpole's Letters<i>, ix. 319. In Malone's correspondence
+are complaints of the backwardness of the members of the Literary
+Club 'to pay the amounts nominally subscribed by them.'
+Prior's</i> Goldsmith<i>, ii. 226.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1281">[1281]</a> It
+was, says Malone, owing to Reynolds that the monument was erected
+in St. Paul's. In his Journey to Flanders<i>he had lamented that
+sculpture languished in England, and was almost confined to
+monuments to eminent men. But even in these it had not fair play,
+for Westminster Abbey was so full, that the recent monuments
+appeared ridiculous being stuck up in odd holes and corners. On
+the other hand St. Paul's looked forlorn and desolate. Here
+monuments should be erected, under the direction of the Royal
+Academy. He took advantage of Johnson's death to make a beginning
+with the plan which he had here sketched, and induced his friends
+to give up their intention of setting up the monument in the
+Abbey. Reynolds's</i> Works<i>, ed. 1824, ii. 248. 'He asked Dr.
+Parr&mdash;but in vain&mdash;to include in the epitaph Johnson's
+title of Professor of Ancient Literature to the Royal Academy; as
+it was on this pretext that he persuaded the Academicians to
+subscribe a hundred guineas.' Johnstone's</i> Parr<i>, iv. 686.
+See</i> ante<i>, ii. 239, where the question was raised whose
+monument should be first erected in St. Paul's, and Johnson
+proposed Milton's.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1282">[1282]</a> The
+Reverend Dr. Parr, on being requested to undertake it, thus
+expressed himself in a letter to William Seward, Esq.:</p>
+<p>'I leave this mighty task to some hardier and some abler
+writer. The variety and splendour of Johnson's attainments, the
+peculiarities of his character, his private virtues, and his
+literary publications, fill me with confusion and dismay, when I
+reflect upon the confined and difficult species of composition,
+in which alone they can be expressed, with propriety, upon his
+monument.'</p>
+<p>But I understand that this great scholar, and warm admirer of
+Johnson, has yielded to repeated solicitations, and executed the
+very difficult undertaking. BOSWELL. Dr. Johnson's Monument,
+consisting of a colossal figure leaning against a column, has
+since the death of our authour been placed in St. Paul's
+Cathedral. The Epitaph was written by the Rev. Dr. Parr, and is
+as follows:</p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<pre>
+ SAMVELI IOHNSON
+ GRAMMATICO ET CRITICO
+ SCRIPTORVM ANGLICORVM LITTERATE PERITO
+ POETAE LVMINIBVS SENTENTIARVM
+ ET PONDERIBVS VERBORVM ADMIRABILI
+ MAGISTRO VIRTVTIS GRAVISSIMO
+ HOMINI OPTIMO ET SINGVLARIS EXEMPLI
+ QVI VIXIT ANN LXXV MENS IL. DIEB XIII
+ DECESSIT IDIB DECEMBR ANN CHRIST cIo Iocc LXXXIIII
+ SEPVLT IN AED SANCT PETR WESTMONASTERIENS
+ XIII KAL IANVAR ANN CHRIST cIo Iocc LXXXV
+ AMICI ET SODALES LITTERARII
+ PECVNIA CONLATA
+ H M FACIVND CVRAVER.
+</pre>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<p>On a scroll in his hand are the following words: [Greek:
+ENMAKARESSIPONONANTAXIOSEIHAMOIBH].</p>
+<p>On one side of the Monument&mdash;- FACIEBAT JOHANNES BACON
+SCVLPTOR ANN.</p>
+<center>CHRIST. M.DCC.-LXXXXV.</center>
+<p>The Subscription for this monument, which cost eleven hundred
+guineas, was begun by the LITERARY CLUB. MALONE. See Appendix
+I.</p>
+<p><a name="note-1283">[1283]</a>
+'"Laetus sum laudari me," inquit Hector, opinor apud Naevium,
+"abs te, pater, a laudato viro."' Cicero, Ep. ad Fam<i>. xv.
+6.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1284">[1284]</a> To
+prevent any misconception on this subject, Mr. Malone, by whom
+these lines were obligingly communicated, requests me to add the
+following remark:&mdash;</p>
+<p>'In justice to the late Mr. Flood, now himself wanting, and
+highly meriting, an epitaph from his country, to which his
+transcendent talents did the highest honour, as well as the most
+important service; it should be observed that these lines were by
+no means intended as a regular monumental inscription for Dr.
+Johnson. Had he undertaken to write an appropriated and
+discriminative epitaph for that excellent and extraordinary man,
+those who knew Mr. Flood's vigour of mind, will have no doubt
+that he would have produced one worthy of his illustrious
+subject. But the fact was merely this: In Dec. 1789, after a
+large subscription had been made for Dr. Johnson's monument, to
+which Mr. Flood liberally contributed, Mr. Malone happened to
+call on him at his house, in Berners-street, and the conversation
+turning on the proposed monument, Mr. Malone maintained that the
+epitaph, by whomsoever it should be written, ought to be in
+Latin. Mr. Flood thought differently. The next morning, in the
+postscript to a note on another subject, he mentioned that he
+continued of the same opinion as on the preceding day, and
+subjoined the lines above given.' BOSWELL. Cowper also composed
+an epitaph for Johnson&mdash;though not one of much merit. See
+Southey's Cowper<i>, v. 119.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1285">[1285]</a> As I
+do not see any reason to give a different character of my
+illustrious friend now, from what I formerly gave, the greatest
+part of the sketch of him in my Journal of a Tour to the
+Hebrides<i>, is here adopted. BOSWELL.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1286">[1286]</a> See
+ante<i>, i. 41.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1287">[1287]</a> For
+his fox-hunting see ante<i>, i. 446, note I.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1288">[1288]</a>
+Lucretius<i>, i. 72.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1289">[1289]</a> See
+ante, i. 406.</p>
+<p><a name="note-1290">[1290]</a> 'He
+was always indulgent to the young, he never attacked the
+unassuming, nor meant to terrify the diffident.' Mme. D'Arblay's
+Diary <i>ii. 343.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1291">[1291]</a> In the
+Olla Podrida<i>, a collection of Essays published at Oxford,
+there is an admirable paper upon the character of Johnson,
+written by the Reverend Dr. Home, the last excellent Bishop of
+Norwich. The following passage is eminently happy: 'To reject
+wisdom, because the person of him who communicates it is uncouth,
+and his manners are inelegant;&mdash;what is it, but to throw
+away a pine-apple, and assign for a reason the roughness of its
+coat?' BOSWELL. The</i> Olla Podrida <i>was published in weekly
+numbers in 1787 8. Boswell's quotation is from No. 13.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1292">[1292]</a> 'The
+English Dictionary <i>was written ... amidst inconvenience
+distraction, in sickness and in sorrow.' Preface to Johnson's</i>
+Dictionary, Works<i>, v. 51.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1293">[1293]</a> 'For
+unto whomsoever much is given, of him shall be much required.'
+Luke<i>, xii. 48.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1294">[1294]</a> 'If in
+this life only we have hope in Christ, we are of all men most
+miserable.' I Corinthians<i>, xv. 19.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1295">[1295]</a> See
+ante, ii. 262, note 2.</p>
+<p><a name="note-1296">[1296]</a> Though
+a perfect resemblance of Johnson is not to be found in any age,
+parts of his character are admirably expressed by Clarendon in
+drawing that of Lord Falkland, whom the noble and masterly
+historian describes at his seat near Oxford;&mdash;'Such an
+immenseness of wit, such a solidity of judgement, so infinite a
+fancy, bound in by a most logical ratiocination.&mdash;His
+acquaintance was cultivated by the most polite and accurate men,
+so that his house was an University in less volume, whither they
+came, not so much for repose as study, and to examine and refine
+those grosser propositions, which laziness and consent made
+current in conversation.'</p>
+<p>Bayle's account of Menage may also be quoted as exceedingly
+applicable to the great subject of this work:&mdash;'His
+illustrious friends erected a very glorious monument to him in
+the collection entitled Menagiana. Those who judge of things
+aright, will confess that this collection is very proper to shew
+the extent of genius and learning which was the character of
+Menage. And I may be bold to say, that the excellent works he
+published will not distinguish him from other learned men so
+advantageously as this<i>. To publish books of great learning, to
+make Greek and Latin verses exceedingly well turned, is not a
+common talent, I own; neither is it extremely rare, It is
+incomparably more difficult to find men who can furnish discourse
+about an infinite number of things, and who can diversify them an
+hundred ways. How many authours are there, who are admired for
+their works, on account of the vast learning that is displayed in
+them, who are not able to sustain a conversation. Those who know
+Menage only by his books, might think he resembled those learned
+men; but if you shew the MENAGIANA, you distinguish him from
+them, and make him known by a talent which is given to very few
+learned men. There it appears that he was a man who spoke
+off-hand a thousand good things. His memory extended to what was
+ancient and modern; to the court and to the city; to the dead and
+to the living languages; to things serious and things jocose; in
+a word, to a thousand sorts of subjects. That which appeared a
+trifle to some readers of the</i> Menagiana<i>, who did not
+consider circumstances, caused admiration in other readers, who
+minded the difference between what a man speaks without
+preparation, and that which he prepares for the press. And,
+therefore, we cannot sufficiently commend the care which his
+illustrious friends took to erect a monument so capable of giving
+him immortal glory. They were not obliged to rectify what they
+had heard him say; for, in so doing, they had not been faithful
+historians of his conversations.' BOSWELL. Boswell's quotation
+from Clarendon (ed. 1826, iv. 242) differs somewhat from the
+original.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1297">[1297]</a> See
+ante<i>, ii. 326, and iv. 236.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1298">[1298]</a> See
+ante<i>, p. iii.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1299">[1299]</a> To
+this finely-drawn character we may add the noble testimony of Sir
+Joshua Reynolds:&mdash;'His pride had no meanness in it; there
+was nothing little or mean about him.' Taylor's Reynolds<i>, ii.
+457.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1300">[1300]</a> In
+Johnson's character of Boerhaave there is much that applies
+equally well to himself. 'Thus died Boerhaave, a man formed by
+nature for great designs, and guided by religion in the exertion
+of his abilities. He was of a robust and athletick constitution
+of body, so hardened by early severities and wholesome fatigue
+that he was insensible of any sharpness of air, or inclemency of
+weather. He was tall, and remarkable for extraordinary strength.
+There was in his air and motion something rough and artless, but
+so majestick and great at the same time, that no man ever looked
+upon him without veneration, and a kind of tacit submission to
+the superiority of his genius.... He was never soured by calumny
+and detraction, nor ever thought it necessary to confute them;
+"for they are sparks," said he, "which, if you do not blow them,
+will go out of themselves."... He was not to be overawed or
+depressed by the presence, frowns, or insolence of great men; but
+persisted, on all occasions, in the right with a resolution
+always present and always calm.... Nor was he unacquainted with
+the art of recommending truth by elegance, and embellishing the
+philosopher with polite literature.... He knew the importance of
+his own writings to mankind, and lest he might by a roughness and
+barbarity of style, too frequent among men of great learning,
+disappoint his own intentions, and make his labours less useful,
+he did not neglect the politer arts of eloquence and poetry. Thus
+was his learning at once various and exact, profound and
+agreeable.... He asserted on all occasions the divine authority
+and sacred efficacy of the holy Scriptures; and maintained that
+they alone taught the way of salvation, and that they only could
+give peace of mind.' Johnson's Works<i>, vi. 288.</i></p>
+<p><a name="note-1301">[1301]</a> Sir
+Joshua Reynolds, who was born at Plympton.</p>
+<p><a name="note-1302">[1302]</a> See
+ante, <i>iii. 43, note 3.</i></p>
+<center>THE END OF THE FOURTH VOLUME.</center>
+<p> </p>
+<p> </p>
+<p> </p>
+<p> </p>
+<p> </p>
+<p> </p>
+
+<div>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 10357 ***</div>
+</body>
+</html>
+