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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Autobiography, Letters and Literary Remains
+of Mrs. Piozzi (Thrale) (2nd ed.) (2 vols.), by Mrs. Hester Lynch Piozzi
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Autobiography, Letters and Literary Remains of Mrs. Piozzi (Thrale) (2nd ed.) (2 vols.)
+ Edited with notes and Introductory Account of her life and writings
+
+Author: Mrs. Hester Lynch Piozzi
+
+Release Date: February 14, 2005 [EBook #15045]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LITERARY REMAINS OF MRS. PIOZZI ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Jonathan Ingram, Leonard Johnson and the PG Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net.
+
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+AUTOBIOGRAPHY
+
+LETTERS AND LITERARY REMAINS
+
+OF
+
+MRS. PIOZZI (THRALE)
+
+
+EDITED WITH NOTES
+
+AND
+
+AN INTRODUCTORY ACCOUNT OF HER LIFE AND WRITINGS
+
+BY
+A. HAYWARD, ESQ. Q.C.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Welcome, Associate Forms, where'er we turn
+Fill, Streatham's Hebe, the Johnsonian urn--St. Stephen's
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In Two Volumes
+VOL. I.
+
+SECOND EDITION
+
+LONDON
+LONGMAN, GREEN, LONGMAN, AND ROBERTS
+1861
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE
+
+TO
+
+THE SECOND EDITION.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE first edition of a work of this kind is almost necessarily
+imperfect; since the editor is commonly dependent for a great deal of
+the required information upon sources the very existence of which is
+unknown to him till reminiscences are revived, and communications
+invited, by the announcement or publication of the book. Some
+valuable contributions reached me too late to be properly placed or
+effectively worked up; some, too late to be included at all. The
+arrangement in this edition will therefore, I trust, be found less
+faulty than in the first, whilst the additions are large and
+valuable. They principally consist of fresh extracts from Mrs.
+Piozzi's private diary ("Thraliana"), amounting to more than fifty
+pages; of additional marginal notes on books, and of copious extracts
+from letters hitherto unpublished.
+
+Amongst the effects of her friend Conway, the actor, after his
+untimely death by drowning in North America, were a copy of Mrs.
+Piozzi's "Travel Book" and a copy of Johnson's "Lives of the Poets,"
+each enriched by marginal notes in her handwriting. Such of those in
+the "Travel Book" as were thought worth printing appeared in "The
+Atlantic Monthly" for June last, from which I have taken the liberty
+of copying the best. The "Lives of the Poets" is now the property of
+Mr. William Alexander Smith, of New York, who was so kind as to open
+a communication with me on the subject, and to have the whole of the
+marginal notes transcribed for my use at his expense.
+
+Animated by the same liberal wish to promote a literary undertaking,
+Mr. J.E. Gray, son of the Rev. Dr. Robert Gray, late Bishop of
+Bristol, has placed at my disposal a series of letters from Mrs.
+Piozzi to his father, extending over nearly twenty-five years (from
+1797 to the year of her death) and exceeding a hundred in number.
+These have been of the greatest service in enabling me to complete
+and verify the summary of that period of her life.
+
+So much light is thrown by the new matter, especially by the extracts
+from "Thraliana," on the alleged rupture between Johnson and Mrs.
+Piozzi, that I have re-cast or re-written the part of the
+Introduction relating to it, thinking that no pains should be spared
+to get at the merits of a controversy which now involves, not only
+the moral and social qualities of the great lexicographer, but the
+degree of confidence to be placed in the most brilliant and popular
+of modern critics, biographers and historians. It is no impeachment
+of his integrity, no detraction from the durable elements of his
+fame, to offer proof that his splendid imagination ran away with him,
+or that reliance on his wonderful memory made him careless of
+verifying his original impressions before recording them in the most
+gorgeous and memorable language.
+
+No one likes to have foolish or erroneous notions imputed to him, and
+I have pointed out some of the misapprehensions into which an able
+writer in the "Edinburgh Review" (No. 231) has been hurried by his
+eagerness to vindicate Lord Macaulay. Moreover, this struck me to be
+as good a form as any for re-examining the subject in all its
+bearings; and now that it has become common to reprint articles in a
+collected shape, the comments of a first-rate review can no longer be
+regarded as transitory.
+
+I gladly seize the present opportunity to offer my best
+acknowledgments for kind and valuable aid in various shapes, to the
+Marquis of Lansdowne, His Excellency M. Sylvain Van de Weyer (the
+Belgian Minister), the Viscountess Combermere, Mr. and the Hon. Mrs.
+Monckton Milnes, the Hon. Mrs. Rowley, Miss Angharad Lloyd, and the
+Rev. W.H. Owen, Vicar of St. Asaph and Dymerchion.
+
+ 8, St. James's Street:
+ Oct. 18th, 1861.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+OF
+
+THE FIRST VOLUME
+
+
+Origin and Materials of the Work
+Object of the Introduction
+Origin, Education, and Character of Thrale
+Introduction of Johnson to the Thrales
+Johnson's Habits at the Period
+His Household
+His Social Position
+Society at Streatham
+Blue Stocking Parties
+Johnson's Fondness for Female Society
+Nature of his Intimacy with Mrs. Thrale
+His Verses to her
+Her Age
+Her Personal Appearance and Handwriting
+Portraits of her
+Boswell at Streatham
+Her Behaviour to Johnson
+Her Acquirements
+Johnson's Estimate of her
+Popular Estimate of her
+Manners of her Time
+Madame D'Arblay at Streatham
+Her Account of Conversations there
+Johnson's Politeness
+Mrs. Thrale's Domestic Trials
+Electioneering with Johnson
+Thrale's Embarrassments, and Johnson's Advice
+Johnson on Housekeeping and Dress
+His Opinions on Marriage
+Johnson in the Country
+Johnson fond of riding in a Carriage, but a bad Traveller
+His Want of Taste for Music or Painting
+Tour in Wales
+Tour in France
+Baretti
+Campbell's Diary
+Mrs. Thrale's Account of her Quarrel with Baretti
+His Account
+Alleged Slight to Johnson
+Miss Streatfield
+Thrale's Infidelity
+Madame D'Arblay as an Inmate
+Dr. Burney
+Mrs. Thrale canvassing Southwark
+Attack by Rioters on the Brewhouse
+Thrale's Illness and Winter in Grosvenor Square
+Proposed Tour
+Thrale's Death
+His Will
+Johnson as Executor
+Her Management of the Brewery
+Italian Translation
+A strange Incident
+Mrs. Montagu--Mr. Crutchley
+Sale of the Brewery
+Mrs. Thrale's Introduction to Piozzi
+Scene with him at Dr. Burney's
+Her early Impressions of him
+Melancholy Reflections
+Johnson's Regard for Thrale
+Mrs. Thrale's and Johnson's Feelings towards each other
+Johnson at Streatham after Thrale's Death
+Piozzi--Verses to him
+Johnson's Health
+Self-Communings
+Town Gossip
+Verses on Pacchierotti
+Fears for Johnson
+Reports of her marrying again
+Reasons for quitting Streatham
+Resolution to quit approved by Johnson
+Complaints of Johnson's Indifference
+Piozzi--to marry or not to marry
+Was Johnson driven out of Streatham
+His Farewell to Streatham
+His last Year there
+Johnson and Mrs. Thrale at Brighton
+Conflicting Feelings
+Gives up Piozzi
+Meditated Journey to Italy
+Parting with Piozzi
+Unkindness of Daughters
+Position as regards Johnson
+Objections to him as an Inmate
+Parting with Piozzi
+Verses to him on his Departure
+Her undiminished Regard for Johnson proved by
+their Correspondence
+Character of Daughters
+Madame D'Arblay, Scene with Johnson
+Lord Brougham's Commentary
+Correspondence with Johnson
+Recall of Piozzi
+Trip to London
+Verses to Piozzi on his Return
+Journey with Daughters
+Feelings on Piozzi's Return, and Marriage
+Objections to her Second Marriage discussed
+Correspondence with Madame D'Arblay on the Marriage
+Objections of Daughters--Lady Keith
+Correspondence with Johnson as to the Marriage
+Baretti's Story of her alleged Deceit
+Her uniform Kindness to Johnson
+Johnson's Feelings and Conduct
+Miss Wynn's Commonplace Book
+Johnson's unfounded Objections to the Marriage and erroneous
+ Impressions of Piozzi
+Miss Seward's Account of his Loves
+Misrepresentation and erroneous Theory of a Critic
+Last Days and Death of Johnson
+Lord Macaulay's Summary of Mrs. Piozzi's Treatment of Johnson
+Life in Italy
+Projected Work on Johnson
+The Florence Miscellany
+Correspondence with Cadell and Publication of the "Anecdotes"
+Her alleged Inaccuracy, with Instances
+H. Walpole
+Peter Pindar
+H. Walpole again
+Hannah More
+Marginal Notes on the "Anecdotes"
+Extracts from Dr. Lort's Letters
+Her Thoughts on her Return from Italy
+Her Reception
+Miss Seward's Impressions of her and Piozzi
+Publication of the "Letters"
+Opinions on them--Madame D'Arblay, Queen Charlotte, Hannah More, and
+ Miss Seward
+Baretti's libellous Attacks
+Her Character of him on his Death
+"The Sentimental Mother"
+"Johnson's Ghost"
+The Travel Book
+Offer to Cadell
+Publication of the Book and Criticisms--Walpole and Miss Seward
+Mrs. Piozzi's Theory of Style
+Attacked by Walpole and Gifford
+The Preface
+Extracts
+Anecdote of Goldsmith
+Publication of her "Synonyms"--Gifford's Attack
+Extract
+Remarks on the Appearance of Boswell's Life of Johnson
+"Retrospection"
+Moore's Anecdotes of her and Piozzi
+Lord Lansdowne's Visit and Impressions
+Adoption and Education of Piozzi's Nephew, afterwards Sir John Salusbury
+Life in Wales
+Character and Habits of Piozzi
+Brynbella
+Illness and Death of Piozzi
+Miss Thrale's Marriage
+The Conway Episode
+Anecdotes
+Celebration of her Eightieth Birthday
+Her Death and Will
+Madame D'Arblay's Parallel between Mrs. Piozzi and Madame de Staël
+Character of Mrs. Piozzi, Moral and Intellectual
+
+ * * * * *
+
+AUTOBIOGRAPHY &c. OF MRS. PIOZZI
+
+VOL. I
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+INTRODUCTION:
+
+LIFE AND WRITINGS OF MRS. PIOZZI.
+
+
+Dr. Johnson was hailed the colossus of Literature by a generation who
+measured him against men of no common mould--against Hume, Robertson,
+Gibbon, Warburton, the Wartons, Fielding, Richardson, Smollett, Gray,
+Goldsmith, and Burke. Any one of these may have surpassed the great
+lexicographer in some branch of learning or domain of genius; but as
+a man of letters, in the highest sense of the term, he towered
+pre-eminent, and his superiority to each of them (except Burke) in
+general acquirements, intellectual power, and force of expression,
+was hardly contested by his contemporaries. To be associated with his
+name has become a title of distinction in itself; and some members of
+his circle enjoy, and have fairly earned, a peculiar advantage in
+this respect. In their capacity of satellites revolving round the sun
+of their idolatry, they attracted and reflected his light and heat.
+As humble companions of their _Magnolia grandiflora_, they did more
+than live with it[1]; they gathered and preserved the choicest of its
+flowers. Thanks to them, his reputation is kept alive more by what
+has been saved of his conversation than by his books; and his
+colloquial exploits necessarily revive the memory of the friends (or
+victims) who elicited and recorded them.
+
+[Footnote 1: "Je ne suis pas la rose, mais j'ai vécu près
+d'elle."--_Constant_.]
+
+If the two most conspicuous among these have hitherto gained
+notoriety rather than what is commonly understood by fame, a
+discriminating posterity is already beginning to make reparation for
+the wrong. Boswell's "Letters to Temple," edited by Mr. Francis, with
+"Boswelliana," printed for the Philobiblion Society by Mr. Milnes,
+led, in 1857, to a revisal of the harsh sentence passed on one whom
+the most formidable of his censors, Lord Macaulay, has declared to be
+not less decidedly the first of biographers, than Homer is the first
+of heroic poets, Shakspeare the first of dramatists, or Demosthenes
+the first of orators. The result was favourable to Boswell, although
+the vulnerable points of his character were still more glaringly
+displayed. The appeal about to be hazarded on behalf of Mrs. Piozzi,
+will involve little or no risk of this kind. Her ill-wishers made the
+most of the event which so injuriously affected her reputation at the
+time of its occurrence; and the marked tendency of every additional
+disclosure of the circumstances has been to elevate her. No candid
+person will read her Autobiography, or her Letters, without arriving
+at the conclusion that her long life was morally, if not
+conventionally, irreproachable; and that her talents were sufficient
+to confer on her writings a value and attraction of their own, apart
+from what they possess as illustrations of a period or a school. When
+the papers which form the basis of this work were laid before Lord
+Macaulay, he gave it as his opinion that they afforded materials for
+a "most interesting and durably popular volume."[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: His letter, dated August 22, 1859, was addressed to Mr.
+T. Longman. The editorship of the papers was not proposed to me till
+after his death, and I had never any personal communication with him
+on the subject; although in the Edinburgh Review for July 1857, I
+ventured, with the same freedom which I have used in vindicating Mrs.
+Piozzi, to dispute the paradoxical judgment he had passed on Boswell.
+The materials which reached me after I had undertaken the work, and
+of which he was not aware, would nearly fill a volume.]
+
+They comprise:--
+
+1. Autobiographical Memoirs.
+
+2. Letters, mostly addressed to the late Sir James Fellowes.
+
+3. Fugitive pieces of her composition, most of which have never
+appeared in print.
+
+4. Manuscript notes by her on Wraxall's Memoirs, and on her own
+published works, namely: "Anecdotes of the late Samuel Johnson,
+LL.D., during the last twenty years of his life," one volume, 1786:
+"Letters to and from the late Samuel Johnson, LL.D., &c.," in two
+volumes, 1788: "Observations and Reflections made in the course of a
+journey through France, Italy, and Germany," in two volumes, 1789:
+"Retrospection; or, Review of the most striking and important Events,
+Characters, Situations, and their Consequences which the last
+Eighteen Hundred Years have presented to the View of Mankind," in two
+volumes, quarto, 1801.
+
+The "Autobiographical Memoirs," and the annotated books, were given
+by her to the late Sir James Fellowes, of Adbury House, Hants, M.D.,
+F.R.S., to whom the letters were addressed. He and the late Sir John
+Piozzi Salusbury were her executors, and the present publication
+takes place in pursuance of an agreement with their personal
+representatives, the Rev. G.A. Salusbury, Rector of Westbury, Salop,
+and Captain J. Butler Fellowes.
+
+Large and valuable additions to the original stock of materials have
+reached me since the announcement of the work.
+
+The Rev. Dr. Wellesley, Principal of New Inn Hall, has kindly placed
+at my disposal his copy of Boswell's "Life of Johnson" (edition of
+1816), plentifully sprinkled with marginal notes by Mrs. Piozzi.
+
+The Rev. Samuel Lysons, of Hempsted Court, Gloucester, has liberally
+allowed me the free use of his valuable collection of books and
+manuscripts, including numerous letters from Mrs. Piozzi to his
+father and uncle, the Rev. Daniel Lysons and Mr. Samuel Lysons.
+
+From 1776 to 1809 Mrs. Piozzi kept a copious diary and note-book,
+called "Thraliana." Johnson thus alludes to it in a letter of
+September 6th, 1777: "As you have little to do, I suppose you are
+pretty diligent at the 'Thraliana;' and a very curious collection
+posterity will find it. Do not remit the practice of writing down
+occurrences as they arise, of whatever kind, and be very punctual in
+annexing the dates. Chronology, you know, is the eye of history. Do
+not omit painful casualties or unpleasing passages; they make the
+variegation of existence; and there are many passages of which I will
+not promise, with Æneas, _et hæc olim meminisse juvabit_."
+"Thraliana," which at one time she thought of burning, is now 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 and much valuable information extracted
+from it.
+
+I shall have many minor obligations to acknowledge as I proceed.
+
+Unless Mrs. Piozzi's character and social position are freshly
+remembered, her reminiscences and literary remains will lose much of
+their interest and utility. It has therefore been thought advisable
+to recapitulate, by way of introduction, what has been ascertained
+from other sources concerning her; especially during her intimacy
+with Johnson, which lasted nearly twenty years, and exercised a
+marked influence on his tone of mind.
+
+"This year (1765)," says Boswell, "was distinguished by his (Johnson)
+being introduced into the family of Mr. Thrale, one of the most
+eminent brewers in England, and member of Parliament for the borough
+of Southwark.... Johnson used to give this account of the rise of Mr.
+Thrale's father: 'He worked at six shillings a week for twenty years
+in the great brewery, which afterwards was his own. The proprietor of
+it had an only daughter, who was married to a nobleman. It was not
+fit that a peer should continue the business. On the old man's death,
+therefore, the brewery was to be sold. To find a purchaser for so
+large a property was a difficult matter; and after some time, it was
+suggested that it would be advisable to treat with Thrale, a
+sensible, active, honest man, who had been employed in the house, and
+to transfer the whole to him for thirty thousand pounds, security
+being taken upon the property. This was accordingly settled. In
+eleven years Thrale paid the purchase money. He acquired a large
+fortune, and lived to be a member of Parliament for Southwark. But
+what was most remarkable was the liberality with which he used his
+riches. He gave his son and daughters the best education. The esteem
+which his good conduct procured him from the nobleman who had married
+his master's daughter made him be treated with much attention; and
+his son, both at school and at the University of Oxford, associated
+with young men of the first rank. His allowance from his father,
+after he left college, was splendid; not less than a thousand a year.
+This, in a man who had risen as old Thrale did, was a very
+extraordinary instance of generosity. He used to say, 'If this young
+dog does not find so much after I am gone as he expects, let him
+remember that he has had a great deal in my own time.'"
+
+What is here stated regarding Thrale's origin, on the alleged
+authority of Johnson, is incorrect. The elder Thrale was the nephew
+of Halsey, the proprietor of the brewery whose daughter was married
+to a nobleman (Lord Cobham), and he naturally nourished hopes of
+being his uncle's successor. In the Abbey Church of St. Albans, there
+is a monument to some members of the Thrale family who died between
+1676 and 1704, adorned with a shield of arms and a crest on a ducal
+coronet. Mrs. Thrale's marginal note on Boswell's account of her
+husband's family is curious and characteristic:
+
+"Edmund Halsey was son to a miller at St. Albans, with whom he
+quarrelled, like Ralph in the 'Maid of the Mill,' and ran away to
+London with a very few shillings in his pocket.[1] He was eminently
+handsome, and old Child of the Anchor Brewhouse, Southwark, took him
+in as what we call a broomstick clerk, to sweep the yard, &c. Edmund
+Halsey behaved so well he was soon preferred to be a house-clerk, and
+then, having free access to his master's table, married his only
+daughter, and succeeded to the business upon Child's demise. Being
+now rich and prosperous, he turned his eyes homewards, where he
+learned that sister Sukey had married a hardworking man at Offley in
+Hertfordshire, and had many children. He sent for one of them to
+London (my Mr. Thrale's father); said he would make a man of him, and
+did so: but made him work very hard, and treated him very roughly,
+Halsey being more proud than tender, and his only child, a daughter,
+married to Lord Cobham.
+
+"Old Thrale, however, as these fine writers call him,--then a young
+fellow, and, like his uncle, eminent for personal beauty,--made
+himself so useful to Mr. Halsey that the weight of the business fell
+entirely on him; and while Edmund was canvassing the borough and
+visiting the viscountess, Ralph Thrale was getting money both for
+himself and his principal: who, envious of his success with a wench
+they both liked but who preferred the young man to the old one, died,
+leaving him never a guinea, and he bought the brewhouse of Lord and
+Lady Cobham, making an excellent bargain, with the money he had
+saved."
+
+[Footnote 1: In "Thraliana" she says: "strolled to London with only
+4_s._ 6_d._ in his pocket."]
+
+When, in the next page but one, Boswell describes Thrale as
+presenting the character of a plain independent English squire, she
+writes: "No, no! Mr. Thrale's manners presented the character of a
+gay man of the town: like Millamant, in Congreve's comedy, he
+abhorred the country and everything in it."
+
+In "Thraliana" after a corresponding statement, she adds: "He (the
+elder Thrale) educated his son and three daughters quite in a high
+style. His son he wisely connected with the Cobhams and their
+relations, Grenvilles, Lyttletons, and Pitts, to whom he lent money,
+and they lent assistance of every other kind, so that my Mr. Thrale
+was bred up at Stowe, and Stoke and Oxford, and every genteel place;
+had been abroad with Lord Westcote, whose expenses old Thrale
+cheerfully paid, I suppose, who was thus a kind of tutor to the young
+man, who had not failed to profit by these advantages, and who was,
+when he came down to Offley to see his father's birthplace, a very
+handsome and well accomplished gentleman."
+
+After expatiating on the advantages of birth, and the presumption of
+new men in attempting to found a new system of gentility, Boswell
+proceeds: "Mr. Thrale had married Miss Hester Lynch Salusbury, of
+good Welsh extraction, a lady of lively talents, improved by
+education. That Johnson's introduction into Mr. Thrale's family,
+which contributed so much to the happiness of his life, was owing to
+her desire for his conversation, is a very probable and the general
+supposition; but it is not the truth. Mr. Murphy, who was intimate
+with Mr. Thrale, having spoken very highly of Dr. Johnson, he was
+requested to make them acquainted. This being mentioned to Johnson,
+he accepted of an invitation to dinner at Thrale's, and was so much
+pleased with his reception both by Mr. and Mrs. Thrale, and they so
+much pleased with him, that his invitations to their house were more
+and more frequent, till at last he became one of the family, and an
+apartment was appropriated to him, both in their house at Southwark
+and in their villa at Streatham."
+
+Long before this was written, Boswell had quarrelled with Mrs. Thrale
+(as it is most convenient to call her till her second marriage), and
+he takes every opportunity of depreciating her. He might at least,
+however, have stated that, instead of sanctioning the "general
+supposition" as to the introduction, she herself supplied the account
+of it which he adopts. In her "Anecdotes" she says:
+
+"The first time I ever saw this extraordinary man was in the year
+1764, when Mr. Murphy, who had long been the friend and confidential
+intimate of Mr. Thrale, persuaded him to wish for Johnson's
+conversation, extolling it in terms which that of no other person
+could have deserved, till we were only in doubt how to obtain his
+company, and find an excuse for the invitation. The celebrity of Mr.
+Woodhouse, a shoemaker, whose verses were at that time the subject of
+common discourse, soon afforded a pretence[1], and Mr. Murphy brought
+Johnson to meet him, giving me general caution not to be surprised at
+his figure, dress, or behaviour[1].... Mr. Johnson liked his new
+acquaintance so much, however, that from that time he dined with us
+every Thursday through the winter, and in the autumn of the next year
+he followed us to Brighthelmstone, whence we were gone before his
+arrival; so he was disappointed and enraged, and wrote us a letter
+expressive of anger, which we were very desirous to pacify, and to
+obtain his company again if possible. Mr. Murphy brought him back to
+us again very kindly, and from that time his visits grew more
+frequent, till in the year 1766 his health, which he had always
+complained of, grew so exceedingly bad, that he could not stir out of
+his room in the court he inhabited for many weeks together, I think
+months."
+
+[Footnote 1: "He (Johnson) spoke with much contempt of the notice
+taken of Woodhouse, the poetical shoemaker. He said that it was all
+vanity and childishness, and that such objects were to those who
+patronised them, mere mirrors of their own superiority. They had
+better, said he, furnish the man with good implements for his trade,
+than raise subscriptions for his poems. He may make an excellent
+shoemaker, but can never make a good poet. A schoolboy's exercise may
+be a pretty thing for a schoolboy, but it is no treat to a
+man."--_Maxwell's Collectanea_.]
+
+The "Anecdotes" were written in Italy, where she had no means of
+reference. The account given in "Thraliana" has a greater air of
+freshness, and proves Boswell right as to the year.
+
+"It was on the second Thursday of the month of January, 1765, that I
+first saw Mr. Johnson in a room. Murphy, whose intimacy with Mr.
+Thrale had been of many years' standing, was one day dining with us
+at our house in Southwark, and was zealous that we should be
+acquainted with Johnson, of whose moral and literary character he
+spoke in the most exalted terms; and so whetted our desire of seeing
+him soon that we were only disputing _how_ he should be invited,
+_when_ he should be invited, and what should be the pretence. At last
+it was resolved that one Woodhouse, a shoemaker, who had written some
+verses, and been asked to some tables, should likewise be asked to
+ours, and made a temptation to Mr. Johnson to meet him: accordingly
+he came, and Mr. Murphy at four o'clock brought Mr. Johnson to
+dinner. We liked each other so well that the next Thursday was
+appointed for the same company to meet, exclusive of the shoemaker,
+and since then Johnson has remained till this day our constant
+acquaintance, visitor, companion, and friend."
+
+In the "Anecdotes" she goes on to say that when she and her husband
+called on Johnson one morning in Johnson's Court, Fleet Street, he
+gave way to such an uncontrolled burst of despair regarding the world
+to come, that Mr. Thrale tried to stop his mouth by placing one hand
+before it, and desired her to prevail on him to quit his close
+habitation for a period and come with them to Streatham. He complied,
+and took up his abode with them from before Midsummer till after
+Michaelmas in that year. During the next sixteen years a room in each
+of their houses was set apart for him.
+
+The principal difficulty at first was to induce him to live peaceably
+with her mother, who took a strong dislike to him, and constantly led
+the conversation to topics which he detested, such as foreign news
+and politics. He revenged himself by writing to the newspapers
+accounts of events which never happened, for the sole purpose of
+mystifying her; and probably not a few of his mischievous fictions
+have passed current for history. They made up their differences
+before her death, and a Latin epitaph of the most eulogistic order
+from his pen is inscribed upon her tomb.
+
+It had been well for Mrs. Thrale and her guests if there had existed
+no more serious objection to Johnson as an inmate. At the
+commencement of the acquaintance, he was fifty-six; an age when
+habits are ordinarily fixed: and many of his were of a kind which it
+required no common temper and tact to tolerate or control. They had
+been formed at a period when he was frequently subjected to the worst
+extremities of humiliating poverty and want. He describes Savage,
+without money to pay for a night's lodging in a cellar, walking about
+the streets till he was weary, and sleeping in summer upon a bulk or
+in winter amongst the ashes of a glass-house. He was Savage's
+associate on several occasions of the sort. He told Sir Joshua
+Reynolds that, one night in particular, when Savage and he walked
+round St. James's Square for want of a lodging, they were not at all
+depressed; but in high spirits, and brimful of patriotism, traversed
+the square for several hours, inveighed against the minister, and
+"resolved they would stand by their country." Whilst at college he
+threw away the shoes left at his door to replace the worn-out pair in
+which he appeared daily. His clothes were in so tattered a state
+whilst he was writing for the "Gentleman's Magazine" that, instead of
+taking his seat at Cave's table, he sate behind a screen and had his
+victuals sent to him.
+
+Talking of the symptoms of Christopher Smart's madness, he said,
+"Another charge was that he did not love clean linen; and I have no
+passion for it."
+
+His deficiency in this respect seems to have made a lasting
+impression on his hostess. Referring to a couplet in "The Vanity of
+Human Wishes":--
+
+ "Through all his veins the fever of renown
+ _Spreads_ from the strong contagion of the gown,"
+
+"he had desired me (says Boswell) to change _spreads_ into _burns._ I
+thought this alteration not only cured the fault, but was more
+poetical, as it might carry an allusion to the shirt by which
+Hercules was inflamed." She has written in the margin: "Every fever
+burns I believe; but Bozzy could think only on Nessus' dirty shirt,
+or Dr. Johnson's." In another marginal note she disclaims that
+attention to the Doctor's costume for which Boswell gives her credit,
+when, after relating how he had been called into a shop by Johnson to
+assist in the choice of a pair of silver buckles, he adds: "Probably
+this alteration in dress had been suggested by Mrs. Thrale, by
+associating with whom his external appearance was much improved." She
+writes: "it was suggested by Mr. Thrale, not by his wife."
+
+In general his wigs were very shabby, and their foreparts were burned
+away by the near approach of the candle, which his short-sightedness
+rendered necessary in reading. At Streatham, Mr. Thrale's valet had
+always a better wig ready, with which he met Johnson at the parlour
+door when dinner was announced, and as he went up stairs to bed, the
+same man followed him with another.
+
+One of his applications to Cave for a trifling advance of money is
+signed _Impransus_ (Dinnerless); and he told Boswell that he could
+fast two days without inconvenience, and had never been hungry but
+once. What he meant by hungry is not easy to explain, for his every
+day manner of eating was that of a half-famished man. When at table,
+he was totally absorbed in the business of the moment; his looks were
+riveted to his plate, till he had satisfied his appetite; which was
+indulged with such in-* tenseness, that the veins of his forehead
+swelled, and generally a strong perspiration was visible. Until he
+left off drinking fermented liquors altogether, he acted on the maxim
+"claret for boys, port for men, brandy for heroes." He preferred the
+strongest because he said it did its work (_i.e._ intoxicate) the
+soonest. He used to pour capillaire into his port wine, and melted
+butter into his chocolate. His favourite dishes are accurately
+enumerated by Peter Pindar:
+
+MADAME PIOZZI _(loquitur)._
+
+ "Dear Doctor Johnson loved a leg of pork,
+ And hearty on it would his grinders work:
+ He lik'd to eat it so much over done,
+ That _one_ might shake the flesh from off the bone.
+ A veal pye too, with sugar crammed and plums,
+ Was wondrous grateful to the Doctor's gums.
+ Though us'd from morn to night on fruit to stuff,
+ He vow'd his belly never had enough."
+
+Mr. Thackeray relates in his "Irish Sketches" that on his asking for
+currant jelly for his venison at a public dinner, the waiter replied,
+"It's all gone, your honour, but there's some capital lobster sauce
+left." This would have suited Johnson equally well, or better: he was
+so fond of lobster sauce that he would call for the sauce-boat and
+pour the whole of its remaining contents over his plum pudding. A
+clergyman who once travelled with him relates, "The coach halted as
+usual for dinner, which seemed to be a deeply interesting business to
+Johnson, who vehemently attacked a dish of stewed carp, using his
+fingers only in feeding himself." At the dinner when he passed his
+celebrated sentence on the leg of mutton--"That it was as bad as bad
+could be: ill-fed, ill-killed, ill-kept, and ill-dressed"--the
+ladies, his fellow-passengers, observed his loss or equanimity with
+wonder.
+
+Two of Mrs. Thrale's marginal notes on Boswell refer to her
+illustrious friend's mode of eating. On his reported remark, that "a
+dog will take a small bit of meat as readily as a large, when both
+are before him," she adds, "which Johnson would never have done."
+When Boswell, describing the dinner with Wilkes at Davies', says, "No
+man eat more heartily than Johnson, or loved better what was nice and
+delicate," she strikes in with--"What was gustful rather: what was
+strong that he could taste it, what was tender that he could chew
+it."
+
+When Boswell describes him as occupied for a considerable time in
+reading the "Memoirs of Fontenelle," leaning and swinging upon the
+low gate into the court (at Streatham) without his hat, her note is:
+"I wonder how he liked the story of the asparagus,"--an obvious hint
+at his selfish habits of indulgence at table.
+
+With all this he affected great nicety of palate, and did not like
+being asked to a plain dinner. "It was a good dinner enough," he
+would remark, "but it was not a dinner to ask a man to." He was so
+displeased with the performances of a nobleman's French cook, that he
+exclaimed with vehemence, "I'd throw such a rascal into the river;"
+and in reference to one of his Edinburgh hosts he said, "As for
+Maclaurin's imitation of a made dish, it was a wretched attempt."
+
+His voice was loud, and his gesticulations, voluntary or involuntary,
+singularly uncouth. He had superstitious fancies about crossing
+thresholds or squares in the carpet with the right or left leg
+foremost, and when he did not appear at dinner might be found vainly
+endeavouring to pass a particular spot in the anteroom. He loved late
+hours, or more properly (say Mrs. Thrale) hated early ones. Nothing
+was more terrifying to him than the idea of going to bed, which he
+never would call going to rest, or suffer another to call it so. "I
+lie down that my acquaintance may sleep; but I lie down to endure
+oppressive misery, and soon rise again to pass the night in anxiety
+and pain." When people could be induced to sit up with him, they were
+often amply compensated by his rich flow of mind; but the resulting
+sacrifice of health and comfort in an establishment where this
+sitting up became habitual, was inevitably great.[1] Instead of being
+grateful, he always maintained that no one forbore his own
+gratification for the purpose of pleasing another, and "if one did
+sit up, it was probably to amuse oneself." Boswell excuses his wife
+for not coinciding in his enthusiasm, by admitting that his
+illustrious friend's irregular hours and uncouth habits, such as
+turning the candles with their ends downwards when they did not burn
+bright enough, and letting the wax drop upon the carpet, could not
+but be displeasing to a lady. He was generally last at breakfast, but
+one morning happened to be first and waited some time alone; when
+afterwards twitted by Mrs. Thrale with irregularity, he replied,
+"Madam, I do not like to come down to vacuity."
+
+[Footnote 1: Dr. Burney states that in 1765 "he very frequently met
+Johnson at Streatham, where they had many long conversations, after
+sitting up as long as the fire and candles lasted, and much longer
+than the patience of the servants subsisted."]
+
+He was subject to dreadful fits of depression, caused or accompanied
+by compunction for venial or fancied sins, by the fear of death or
+madness--(the only things he did fear), and by ingrained ineradicable
+disease. When Boswell speaks of his "striving against evil," "Ay,"
+she writes in the margin, "and against the King's evil."
+
+If his early familiarity with all the miseries of destitution,
+aggravated by disease, had increased his natural roughness and
+irritability, on the other hand it had helped largely to bring out
+his sterling virtues,--his discriminating charity, his genuine
+benevolence, his well-timed generosity, his large-hearted sympathy
+with real suffering. But he required it to be material and positive,
+and scoffed at mere mental or sentimental woes. "The sight of people
+who want food and raiment is so common in great cities, that a surly
+fellow like me has no compassion to spare for wounds given only to
+vanity or softness." He said it was enough to make a plain man sick
+to hear pity lavished on a family reduced by losses to exchange a
+fine house for a snug cottage; and when condolence was demanded for a
+lady of rank in mourning for a baby, he contrasted her with a
+washerwoman with half-a-dozen children dependent on her daily labour
+for their daily bread.[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: "It's weel wi' you gentles that can sit in the house wi'
+handkerchers at your een when ye lose a friend; but the like o' us
+maun to our wark again, if our hearts were beating as hard as any
+hammer."--_The Antiquary_. For this very reason the "gentles"
+commonly suffer most.]
+
+Lord Macaulay thus portrays the objects of Johnson's hospitality as
+soon as he had got a house to cover them. "It was the home of the
+most extraordinary assemblage of inmates that ever was brought
+together. At the head of the establishment he had placed an old lady
+named Williams, whose chief recommendations were her blindness and
+her poverty. But in spite of her murmurs and reproaches, he gave an
+asylum to another lady who was as poor as herself, Mrs. Desmoulins,
+whose family he had known many years before in Staffordshire. Room
+was found for the daughter of Mrs. Desmoulins, and for another
+destitute damsel, who was generally addressed as Mrs. Carmichael, but
+whom her generous host called Polly. An old quack doctor called
+Levet, who bled and dosed coalheavers and hackney coachmen, and
+received for fees crusts of bread, bits of bacon, glasses of gin, and
+sometimes a little copper, completed this menagerie."[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: Miscellaneous Writings, vol. i. p. 293.]
+
+Mrs. Williams was the daughter of a physician, and of a good Welsh
+family, who did not leave her dependent on Johnson. She is termed by
+Madame D'Arblay a very pretty poet, and was treated with uniform
+respect by him.[1] All the authorities for the account of Levet were
+collected by Hawkins[2]: from these it appears that his patients were
+"chiefly of the lowest class of tradesmen," and that, although he
+took all that was offered him by way of fee, including meat and
+drink, he demanded nothing from the poor, nor was known in any
+instance to have enforced the payment of even what was justly his
+due. Hawkins adds that he (Levet) had acted for many years in the
+capacity of surgeon and apothecary to Johnson under the direction of
+Dr. Lawrence.
+
+[Footnote 1: Miss Cornelia Knight, in her "Autobiography," warmly
+vindicates her respectability, and refers to a memoir, by Lady
+Knight, in the "European Magazine" for Oct. 1799.]
+
+[Footnote 2: Life of Johnson, p. 396-400.]
+
+ "When fainting Nature called for aid,
+ And hovering death prepared the blow,
+ His vigorous remedy display'd
+ The power of Art without the show;
+
+ No summons mocked by chill delay,
+ _No petty gains disdained by pride,_
+ The modest wants of every day
+ The toil of every day supplied."
+
+Johnson's verses, compared with Lord Macaulay's prose, strikingly
+shew how the same subject can be degraded or elevated by the mode of
+treatment; and how easily the historian or biographer, who expands
+his authorities by picturesque details, may brighten or darken
+characters at will.
+
+To complete the picture of Johnson's interior, it should be added
+that the inmates of his house were quarrelling from, morning to night
+with one another, with his negro servant, or with himself. In one of
+his letters to Mrs. Thrale, he says, "Williams hates everybody: Levet
+hates Desmoulins, and does not love Williams: Desmoulins hates them
+both: Poll (Miss Carmichael) loves none of them." In a conversation
+at Streatham, reported by Madame D'Arblay, the _menagerie_ was thus
+humorously described:--
+
+"_Mrs. Thrale_.--Mr. Levet, I suppose, Sir, has the office of keeping
+the hospital in health? for he is an apothecary.
+
+"_Dr. J_.--Levet, Madam, is a brutal fellow, but I have a good regard
+for him; for his brutality is in his manners, not his mind.
+
+"_Mr. Thrale_.--But how do you get your dinners drest?
+
+"_Dr. J_.--Why De Mullin has the chief management of the kitchen; but
+our roasting is not magnificent, for we have no jack.
+
+"_Mr. T_.--No jack? Why how do they manage without?
+
+"_Dr. J_.--Small joints, I believe, they manage with a string, and
+larger are done at the tavern. I have some thoughts (with a profound
+gravity) of buying a jack, because I think a jack is some credit to a
+house.
+
+"_Mr. T_.--Well, but you will have a spit, too?
+
+"_Dr. J_.--No, Sir, no; that would be superfluous; for we shall never
+use it; and if a jack is seen, a spit will be presumed!
+
+"_Mrs. T_.--But pray, Sir, who is the Poll you talk of? She that you
+used to abet in her quarrels with Mrs. Williams, and call out,' At
+her again, Poll! Never flinch, Poll!'
+
+"_Dr. J_.--Why I took to Poll very well at first, but she won't do
+upon a nearer examination.
+
+"_Mrs. T_.--How came she among you, Sir?
+
+"_Dr. J_.--Why I don't rightly remember, but we could spare her very
+well from us. Poll is a stupid slut; I had some hopes of her at
+first; but when I talked to her tightly and closely, I could make
+nothing of her; she was wiggle waggle, and I could never persuade her
+to be categorical."
+
+The effect of an unbroken residence with such inmates, on a man of
+irritable temper subject to morbid melancholy, may be guessed; and
+the merit of the Thrales in rescuing him from it, and in soothing
+down his asperities, can hardly be over-estimated. Lord Macaulay
+says, they were flattered by finding that a man so widely celebrated
+preferred their house to every other in London; and suggests that
+even the peculiarities which seem to unfit him for civilised society,
+including his gesticulations, his rollings, his puffings, his
+mutterings, and the ravenous eagerness with which he devoured his
+food, increased the interest which his new associates took in him.
+His hostess does not appear to have viewed them in that light, and
+she was able to command the best company of the intellectual order
+without the aid of a "lion," or a bear. If his conversation attracted
+many, it drove away many, and silenced more. He accounted for the
+little attention paid him by the great, by saying that "great lords
+and great ladies do not like to have their mouths stopped," as if
+this was peculiar to them as a class. "My leddie," remarks Cuddie in
+"Old Mortality," "canna weel bide to be contradicted, as I ken
+neabody likes, if they could help themselves."
+
+Johnson was in the zenith of his fame when literature, politics, and
+fashion began to blend together again by hardly perceptible shades,
+like the colours in shot-silk, as they had partially done in the
+Augustan age of Queen Anne. One marked sign was the formation of the
+Literary Club (The Club, as it still claims to be called), which
+brought together Fox, Burke, Gibbon, Johnson, Goldsmith, Garrick,
+Reynolds, and Beauclerc, besides blackballing a bishop (the Bishop of
+Chester), and a lord-chancellor (Camden).[1] Yet it is curious to
+observe within how narrow a circle of good houses the Doctor's
+engagements were restricted. Reynolds, Paoli, Beauclerc, Allan
+Ramsay, Hoole, Dilly, Strahan, Lord Lucan, Langton, Garrick, and the
+Club formed his main reliance as regards dinners; and we find Boswell
+recording with manifest symptoms of exultation in 1781: "I dined with
+him at a bishop's where were Sir Joshua Reynolds, Mr. Berenger, and
+some more company. He had dined the day before at another bishop's."
+His reverence for the episcopal bench well merited some return on
+their part. Mr. Seward saw him presented to the Archbishop of York,
+and described his bow to an Archbishop as such a studied elaboration
+of homage, such an extension of limb, such a flexion of body, as have
+seldom or ever been equalled. The lay nobility were not equally
+grateful, although his deference for the peerage was extreme. Except
+in Scotland or on his travels, he is seldom found dining with a
+nobleman.
+
+[Footnote 1: Canning was blackballed the first time he was proposed.
+He was elected in 1798, Mr. Windham being his proposer, and Dr.
+Burney his seconder.]
+
+It is therefore hardly an exaggeration to say that he owed more
+social enjoyment to the Thrales than to all the rest of his
+acquaintance put together. Holland House alone, and in its best days,
+would convey to persons living in our time an adequate conception of
+the Streatham circle, when it comprised Burke, Reynolds, Garrick,
+Goldsmith, Boswell, Murphy, Dr. Burney and his daughter, Mrs.
+Montagu, Mrs. Boscawen, Mrs. Crewe, Lord Loughborough, Dunning
+(afterwards Lord Ashburton), Lord Mulgrave, Lord Westcote, Sir Lucas
+and Mr. (afterwards Sir William) Pepys, Major Holroyd afterwards Lord
+Sheffield, the Bishop of London and Mrs. Porteous, the Bishop of
+Peterborough and Mrs. Hinchcliffe, Miss Gregory, Miss Streatfield,
+&c. As at Holland House, the chief scene of warm colloquial contest
+or quiet interchange of mind was the library, a large and handsome
+room, which the pencil of Reynolds gradually enriched with portraits
+of all the principal persons who had conversed or studied in it. To
+supply any deficiencies on the shelves, a hundred pounds, Madame
+D'Arblay states, was placed at Johnson's disposal to expend in books;
+and we may take it for granted that any new publication suggested by
+him was ordered at once. But a bookish couple, surrounded by a
+literary set, were surely not exclusively dependent on him for this
+description of help, nor laid under any extraordinary obligation by
+reason of it. Whilst the "Lives of the Poets" was in progress, Dr.
+Johnson "would frequently produce one of the proof sheets to
+embellish the breakfast table, which was always in the library, and
+was certainly the most sprightly and agreeable meeting of the day."
+... "These proof sheets Mrs. Thrale was permitted to read aloud, and
+the discussions to which they led were in the highest degree
+entertaining."[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: "Memoirs of Dr. Burney," &c., by his daughter, Madame
+D'Arblay. In three volumes, 1832. Vol. ii. p. 173-178.]
+
+It was mainly owing to his domestication with the Thrales that he
+began to frequent drawing-rooms at an age when the arm-chair at home
+or at the club has an irresistible charm for most men of sedentary
+pursuits. It must be admitted that the evening parties in which he
+was seen, afforded a chance of something better than the "unidead
+chatter of girls," with an undue fondness for which he reproached
+Langton; for the _Blue Stocking_ clubs had just come into
+fashion,--so called from a casual allusion to the blue stockings of
+an _habitué_, Mr. Stillingfleet.[1] Their founders were Mrs. Vesey
+and Mrs. Montagu; but according to Madame D'Arblay, "more bland and
+more gleeful than that of either of them, was the personal celebrity
+of Mrs. Thrale. Mrs. Vesey, indeed, gentle and diffident, dreamed not
+of any competition, but Mrs. Montagu and Mrs. Thrale had long been
+set up as rival candidates for colloquial eminence, and each of them
+thought the other alone worthy to be her peer. Openly therefore when
+they met, they combated for precedence of admiration, with placid
+though high-strained intellectual exertion on the one side, and an
+exuberant pleasantry or classical allusion or quotation on the other;
+without the smallest malice in either."
+
+[Footnote 1: The first of these was then (about 1768) in the meridian
+of its lustre, but had been instituted many years previously at Bath,
+It owed its name to an apology made by Mr. Stillingfleet in declining
+to accept an invitation to a literary meeting at Mrs. Vesey's, from
+not being, he said, in the habit of displaying a proper equipment for
+an evening assembly. "Pho, pho," said she, "don't mind dress. Come in
+your blue stockings." With which words, humorously repeating them as
+he entered the apartment of the chosen coterie, Mr. Stillingfleet
+claimed permission for entering according to order. And these words,
+ever after, were fixed, in playful stigma, upon Mrs. Vesey's
+associations. _(Madame D'Arblay.)_ Boswell also traces the term to
+Stillingfleet's blue stockings; and Hannah More's "Bas-Bleu" gave it
+a permanent place in literature.]
+
+A different account of the origin of Bluestocking parties was given
+by Lady Crewe to a lady who has allowed me to copy her note of the
+conversation, made at the time (1816):
+
+"Lady Crewe told me that her mother (Mrs. Greville), the Duchess of
+Portland, and Mrs. Montagu were the first who began the conversation
+parties in imitation of the noted ones, _temp._ Madame de Sevigne',
+at Rue St. Honore. Madame de Polignac, one of the first guests, came
+in blue silk stockings, then the newest fashion in Paris. Mrs.
+Greville and all the lady members of Mrs. Montagu's _club_, adopted
+the _mode_. A foreign gentleman, after spending an evening at Mrs.
+Montagu's _soirée_, wrote to tell a friend of the charming
+intellectual party, who had one rule; 'they wear blue stockings as a
+distinction.'"
+
+Wraxall, who makes the same comparison, remarks: "Mrs. Thrale always
+appeared to me to possess at least as much information, a mind as
+cultivated, and more brilliancy of intellect than Mrs. Montagu, but
+she did not descend among men from such an eminence, and she talked
+much more, as well as more unguardedly, on every subject. She was the
+provider and conductress of Johnson, who lived almost constantly
+under her roof, or more properly under that of Mr. Thrale, both in
+Town and at Streatham. He did not, however, spare her more than other
+women in his attacks if she courted and provoked his animadversions."
+
+Although he seldom appeared to greater advantage than when under the
+combined spell of feminine influence and rank, his demeanour varied
+with his mood. On Miss Monkton's (afterwards Countess of Cork)
+insisting, one evening, that Sterne's writings were very pathetic,
+Johnson bluntly denied it. "I am sure," she rejoined, "they have
+affected me." "Why," said Johnson, smiling and rolling himself about,
+"that is because, dearest, you're a dunce." 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."
+
+He did not come off so well on another occasion, when the presence of
+women he respected might be expected to operate as a cheek. Talking,
+at Mrs. Garrick's, of a very respectable author, he told us, says
+Boswell, "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 _bottom_ 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 slily 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 despotic power, glanced sternly
+around, and called out in a strong tone, 'Where's the merriment?'
+Then collecting himself, and looking awful, 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 _woman_ was
+_fundamentally_ sensible;' as if he had said, Hear this now, and
+laugh if you dare. We all sat composed as at a funeral."
+
+This resembles the influence exercised by the "great commoner" over
+the House of Commons. An instance being mentioned of his throwing an
+adversary into irretrievable confusion by an arrogant expression of
+contempt, the late Mr. Charles Butler asked the relator, an
+eye-witness, whether the House did not laugh at the ridiculous figure
+of the poor member. "No, Sir," was the reply, "we were too much awed
+to laugh."
+
+It was a marked feature in Johnson's character that he was fond of
+female society; so fond, indeed, that on coming to London he was
+obliged to be on his guard against the temptations to which it
+exposed him. He left off attending the Green Room, telling Grarrick,
+"I'll come no more behind your scenes, Davy; for the silk stockings
+and white bosoms of your actresses excite my amorous propensities."
+
+The proneness of his imagination to wander in this forbidden field is
+unwittingly betrayed by his remarking at Sky, in support of the
+doctrine that animal substances are less cleanly than vegetable: "I
+have _often_ thought that, if I kept a seraglio, the ladies should
+all wear linen gowns, or cotton, I mean stuffs made of vegetable
+substances. I would have no silks: you cannot tell when it is clean:
+it will be very nasty before it is perceived to be so; linen detects
+its own dirtiness." His virtue thawed instead of becoming more rigid
+in the North. "This evening," records Boswell of their visit to an
+Hebridean chief, "one of our married ladies, a lively pretty little
+woman, good-humouredly sat down upon Dr. Johnson's knee, and being
+encouraged by some of the company, put her hands round his neck and
+kissed him. 'Do it again,' said he, 'and let us see who will tire
+first.' He kept her on his knee some time whilst he and she drank
+tea."
+
+The Rev. Dr. Maxwell relates in his "Collectanea," that "Two young
+women from Staffordshire visited him when I was present, to consult
+him on the subject of Methodism, to which they were inclined. 'Come,'
+said he, 'you pretty fools, dine with Maxwell and me at the Mitre,
+and we will talk over that subject:' which they did, and after dinner
+he took one of them upon his knee, and fondled her for half an hour
+together." [1]
+
+[Footnote 1: "Amongst his singularities, his love of conversing with
+the prostitutes he met in the streets, was not the least. He has been
+known to carry some of these unfortunate creatures into a tavern, for
+the sake of striving to awaken in them a proper sense of their
+condition. I remember, he said, once asking one of them for what
+purpose she supposed her Maker had bestowed on her so much beauty.
+Her answer was, 'To please the gentlemen, to be sure; for what other
+purpose could it be given me?" _(Johnsoniana.)_ He once carried one,
+fainting from exhaustion, home on his back.]
+
+Women almost always like men who like women; or as the phenomenon is
+explained by Pope--
+
+ "Lust, through some certain strainers well refined, Is gentle love,
+ and charms all womankind."
+
+Johnson, despite of his unwieldy figure, scarred features and uncouth
+gestures, was a favourite with the fair, and talked of affairs of the
+heart as things of which he was entitled to speak from personal
+experience as confidently as of any other moral or social topics. He
+told Mrs. Thrale, without the smallest consciousness of presumption
+or what Mr. Square would term the unfitness of things, of his and
+Lord Lyttleton's having contended for Miss Boothby's preference with
+an emulation that occasioned hearty disgust and ended in lasting
+animosity. "You may see," he added, when the Lives of the Poets were
+printed, "that dear Boothby is at my heart still. She would delight
+in that fellow Lyttleton's company though, all that I could do, and I
+cannot forgive even his memory the preference given by a mind like
+hers." [1]
+
+[Footnote 1: In point of personal advantages the man of rank and
+fashion and the scholar were nearly on a par.
+
+ "But who is this astride the pony,
+ So long, so lean, so lank, so bony?
+ Dat be de great orator, Littletony."]
+
+Mr. Croker surmises that "Molly Aston," not "dear Boothby," must have
+been the object of this rivalry[1]; and the surmise is strengthened
+by Johnson's calling Molly the loveliest creature he ever saw; adding
+(to Mrs. Thrale), "My wife was a little jealous, and happening one
+day when walking in the country to meet a fortune-hunting gipsy, Mrs.
+Johnson made the wench look at my hand, but soon repented of her
+curiosity,'for,' says the gipsy, 'your heart is divided between a
+Betty and a Molly: Betty loves you best, but you take most delight in
+Molly's company.' When I turned about to laugh, I saw my wife was
+crying. Pretty charmer, she had no reason." This pretty charmer was
+in her forty-eighth year when he married her, he being then
+twenty-seven. He told Beauclerc that it was a love match on both
+sides; and Garrick used to draw ludicrous pictures of their mutual
+fondness, which he heightened by representing her as short, fat,
+tawdrily dressed, and highly rouged.
+
+[Footnote 1: See "Croker's Boswell," p. 672, and Malone's note in the
+prior edition.]
+
+On the question whether "Molly Aston" or "dear Boothby" was the cause
+of his dislike of Lyttleton, one of Mrs. Piozzi's marginal notes is
+decisive. "Mrs. Thrale (says Boswell) suggests that he was offended
+by Molly Aston's preference of his lordship to him." She retorts: "I
+never said so. I believe Lord Lyttleton and Molly Aston were not
+acquainted. No, no: it was Miss Boothby whose preference he professed
+to have been jealous of, and so I said in the 'Anecdotes.'"
+
+One of Rochefoucauld's maxims is: "Young women who do not wish to
+appear _coquette_, and men of advanced years who do not wish to
+appear ridiculous, should never speak of love as of a thing in which
+they might take part." Mrs. Thrale relates an amusing instance of
+Johnson's adroitness in escaping from the dilemma: "As we had been
+saying one day that no subject failed of receiving dignity from the
+manner in which Mr. Johnson treated it, a lady at my house said, she
+would make him talk about love; and took her measures accordingly,
+deriding the novels of the day because they treated about love. 'It
+is not,' replied our philosopher, 'because they treat, as you call
+it, about love, but because they treat of nothing, that they are
+despicable: we must not ridicule a passion which he who never felt,
+never was happy, and he who laughs at, never deserves to feel--a
+passion which has caused the change of empires, and the loss of
+worlds--a passion which has inspired heroism and subdued avarice.' He
+thought he had already said too much. 'A passion, in short,' added
+he, with an altered tone, 'that consumes me away for my pretty Fanny
+here, and she 'is very cruel,' speaking of another lady (Miss Burney)
+in the room."
+
+As the high-flown language which he occasionally employed in
+addressing or discussing women, has originated a theory that the
+basis or essence of his character was romance, it may be as well to
+contrast what he said in soberer moods on love. He remarked to Dr.
+Maxwell, that "its violence and ill-effects were much exaggerated;
+for who knows any real sufferings on that head, more than from the
+exorbitancy of any other passion?" On Boswell asking him whether he
+did not suppose that there are fifty women in the world with any of
+whom a man may be as happy as with any one woman in particular, he
+replied, "Ay, Sir, fifty thousand. I believe marriages would in
+general be as happy, and often more so, if they were all made by the
+lord-chancellor upon a due consideration of the characters and
+circumstances without the parties having any choice in the matter."
+On another occasion he observed that sensible men rarely married for
+love.
+
+These peculiarities throw light on more questions than one relating
+to Johnson's prolonged intimacy and alleged quarrel with Mrs. Thrale.
+His gallantry, and the flattering air of deferential tenderness which
+he threw into his commerce with his female favourites, may have had
+little less to do with his domestication at Streatham than his
+celebrity, his learning, or his wit. The most submissive wife will
+manage to dislodge an inmate who is displeasing to her, "Aye, a
+marriage, man," said Bucklaw to his led captain, "but wherefore
+droops thy mighty spirit? The board will have a corner, and the
+corner will have a trencher, and the trencher will have a glass
+beside it; and the board end shall be filled, and the trencher and
+the glass shall be replenished for thee, if all the petticoats in
+Lothian had sworn the contrary." "So says many an honest fellow,"
+said Craigenfelt, "and some of my special friends; but curse me if I
+know the reason, the women could never bear me, and always contrived
+to trundle me out before the honey-moon was over."[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: Bride of Lammermoor.]
+
+It was all very well for Johnson to tell Boswell, "I know no man who
+is more master of his wife and family than Thrale. If he holds up a
+finger, he is obeyed." The sage never acted on the theory, and
+instead of treating the wife as a cipher, lost no opportunity of
+paying court to her, though in a manner quite compatible with his own
+lofty spirit of independence and self-respect. Thus, attention having
+been called to some Italian verses by Baretti, he converted them into
+an elegant compliment to her by an improvised paraphrase:
+
+ "Viva! viva la padrona!
+ Tutta bella, e tutta buona,
+ La padrona e un angiolella
+ Tutta buona e tutta bella;
+ Tutta bella e tutta buona;
+ Viva! viva la padrona!"
+
+ "Long may live my lovely Hetty!
+ Always young and always pretty;
+ Always pretty, always young,
+ Live my lovely Hetty long!
+ Always young and always pretty;
+ Long may live my lovely Hetty!"
+
+Her marginal note in the copy of the "Anecdotes" presented by her to
+Sir James Fellowes in 1816 is:--"I heard these verses sung at Mr.
+Thomas's by three voices not three weeks ago."
+
+It was in the eighth year of their acquaintance that Johnson solaced
+his fatigue in the Hebrides by writing a Latin ode to her. "About
+fourteen years since," wrote Sir Walter Scott, in 1829, "I landed in
+Sky with a party of friends, and had the curiosity to ask what was
+the first idea on every one's mind at landing. All answered
+separately that it was this ode." Thinking Miss Cornelia Knight's
+version too diffuse, I asked Mr. Milnes for a translation or
+paraphrase, and he kindly complied by producing these spirited
+stanzas:
+
+ "Where constant mist enshrouds the rocks,
+ Shattered in earth's primeval shocks,
+ And niggard Nature ever mocks
+ The labourer's toil,
+
+ I roam through clans of savage men,
+ Untamed by arts, untaught by pen;
+ Or cower within some squalid den
+ O'er reeking soil.
+
+ Through paths that halt from stone to stone,
+ Amid the din of tongues unknown,
+ One image haunts my soul alone,
+ Thine, gentle Thrale!
+
+ Soothes she, I ask, her spouse's care?
+ Does mother-love its charge prepare?
+ Stores she her mind with knowledge rare,
+ Or lively tale?
+
+ Forget me not! thy faith I claim,
+ Holding a faith that cannot die,
+ That fills with thy benignant name
+ These shores of Sky."
+
+"On another occasion," says Mrs. Thrale, in the "Anecdotes," "I can
+boast verses from Dr. Johnson. As I went into his room the morning of
+my birthday once and said to him, 'Nobody sends me any verses now,
+because I am five-and-thirty years old; and Stella was fed with them
+till forty-six, I remember.' My being just recovered from illness and
+confinement will account for the manner in which he burst out
+suddenly, for so he did without the least previous hesitation
+whatsoever, and without having entertained the smallest intention
+towards it half a minute before:
+
+ "Oft in danger, yet alive,
+ We are come to thirty-five;
+ Long may better years arrive,
+ Better years than thirty-five.
+ Could philosophers contrive
+ Life to stop at thirty-five,
+ Time his hours should never drive
+ O'er the bounds of thirty-five.
+ High to soar, and deep to dive,
+ Nature gives at thirty-five.
+ Ladies, stock and tend your hive,
+ Trifle not at thirty-five;
+ For howe'er we boast and strive,
+ Life declines from thirty-five;
+ He that ever hopes to thrive
+ Must begin by thirty-five;
+ And all who wisely wish to wive
+ Must look on Thrale at thirty-five."
+
+"'And now,' said he, as I was writing them down, 'you may see what it
+is to come for poetry to a dictionary-maker; you may observe that the
+rhymes run in alphabetical order exactly.' And so they do."
+
+Byron's estimate of life at the same age, is somewhat different:
+
+ "Too old for youth--too young, at thirty-five
+ To herd with boys, or hoard with good threescore,
+ I wonder people should he left alive.
+ But since they are, that epoch is a bore."
+
+Lady Aldborough, whose best witticisms unluckily lie under the same
+merited ban as Rochester's best verses, resolved not to pass
+twenty-five, and had her passport made out accordingly till her death
+at eighty-five. She used to boast that, whenever a foreign official
+objected, she never failed to silence him by the remark, that he was
+the first gentleman of his country who ever told a lady she was older
+than she said she was. Actuated probably by a similar feeling, and in
+the hope of securing to herself the benefit of the doubt, Mrs. Thrale
+omitted in the "Anecdotes" the year when these verses were addressed
+to her, and a sharp controversy has been raised as to the respective
+ages of herself and Dr. Johnson at the time. It is thus summed up by
+one of the combatants:
+
+"In one place Mr. Croker says that at the commencement of the
+intimacy between Dr. Johnson and Mrs. Thrale, in 1765, the lady was
+twenty-five years old. In other places he says that Mrs. Thrale's
+thirty-fifth year coincided with Johnson's seventieth. Johnson was
+born in 1709. If, therefore, Mrs. Thrale's thirty-fifth year
+coincided with Johnson's seventieth, she could have been only
+twenty-one years old in 1765. This is not all. Mr. Croker, in another
+place, assigns the year 1777 as the date of the complimentary lines
+which Johnson made on Mrs. Thrale's thirty-fifth birthday. If this
+date be correct Mrs. Thrale must have been born in 1742, and could
+have been only twenty-three when her acquaintance commenced. Mr.
+Croker, therefore, gives us three different statements as to her age.
+Two of the three must be incorrect. We will not decide between
+them."[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: Macaulay's Essays.]
+
+Mr. Salusbury, referring to a china bowl in his possession, says:
+"The slip of paper now in it is in my father's handwriting, and
+copied, I have heard him say, from the original slip, which was worn
+out by age and fingering. The exact words are, 'In this bason was
+baptised Hester Lynch Salusbury, 16th Jan. 1740-41 old style, at
+Bodville in Carnarvonshire.'"
+
+The incident of the verses is thus narrated in "Thraliana": "And this
+year, 1777[1], when I told him that it was my birthday, and that I
+was then thirty-five years old, he repeated me these verses, which I
+wrote down from his mouth as he made them." If she was born in
+1740-41, she must have been thirty-six in 1777; and there is no
+perfectly satisfactory settlement of the controversy, which many will
+think derives its sole importance from the two chief
+controversialists.
+
+[Footnote 1: In one of her Memorandum books, 1776.]
+
+The highest authorities differ equally about her looks. "My readers,"
+says Boswell, "will naturally wish for some representation of the
+figures of this couple. Mr. Thrale was tall, well-proportioned, and
+stately. As for _Madam_, or _My Mistress_, by which epithets Johnson
+used to mention Mrs. Thrale, she was short, plump, and brisk." "He
+should have added," observes Mr. Croker, "that she was very pretty."
+This was not her own opinion, nor that of her cotemporaries, although
+her face was attractive from animation and expression, and her
+personal appearance pleasing on the whole. Sometimes, when visiting
+the author of "Piozziana,"[1] she used to look at her little self, as
+she called it, and spoke drolly of what she once was, as if speaking
+of some one else; and one day, turning to him, she exclaimed: "No, I
+never was handsome: I had always too many strong points in my face
+for beauty." On his expressing a doubt of this, and hinting that Dr.
+Johnson was certainly an admirer of her personal charms, she replied
+that his devotion was at least as warm towards the table and the
+table-cloth at Streatham.
+
+[Footnote 1: "Piozziana; or Recollections of the late Mrs. Piozzi,
+with Remarks. By a Friend." (The Rev. E. Mangin.) Moxon, 1833. These
+reminiscences, unluckily limited to the last eight or ten years of
+her life at Bath, contain much curious information, and leave a
+highly favourable impression of Mrs. Piozzi.]
+
+One day when he was ill, exceedingly low-spirited, and persuaded that
+death was not far distant, she appeared before him in a dark-coloured
+gown, which his bad sight, and worse apprehensions, made him mistake
+for an iron-grey. "'Why do you delight,' said he, 'thus to thicken
+the gloom of misery that surrounds me? is not here sufficient
+accumulation of horror without anticipated mourning?'--'This is not
+mourning, Sir!' said I, drawing the curtain, that the light might
+fall upon the silk, and show it was a purple mixed with
+green.--'Well, well!' replied he, changing his voice; 'you little
+creatures should never wear those sort of clothes, however; they are
+unsuitable in every way. What! have not all insects gay colours?'"
+
+According to the author of "Piozziana," who became acquainted with
+her late in life, "She was short, and though well-proportioned,
+broad, and deep-chested. Her hands were muscular and almost coarse,
+but her writing was, even in her eightieth year, exquisitely
+beautiful; and one day, while conversing with her on the subject of
+education, she observed that 'all Misses now-a-days, wrote so like
+each other, that it was provoking;' adding, 'I love to see
+individuality of character, and abhor sameness, especially in what is
+feeble and flimsy.' Then, spreading her hand, she said, 'I believe I
+owe what you are pleased to call my good writing, to the shape of
+this hand, for my uncle, Sir Robert Cotton, thought it was too manly
+to be employed in writing like a boarding-school girl; and so I came
+by my vigorous, black manuscript.'"
+
+It was fortunate that the hand-writing compensated for the hands; and
+as she attached great importance to blood and race, that she did not
+live to read Byron's "thoroughbred and tapering fingers," or to be
+shocked by his theory that "the hand is almost the only sign of blood
+which aristocracy can generate." Her Bath friend appeals to a
+miniature (engraved for this work) by Roche, of Bath, taken when she
+was in her seventy-seventh year. Like Cromwell, who told the painter
+that if he softened a harsh line or so much as omitted a wart, he
+should never be paid a sixpence,--she desired the artist to paint her
+face deeply rouged, which it always was[1], and to introduce a
+trivial deformity of the jaw, produced by a horse treading on her as
+she lay on the ground after a fall. In this respect she proved
+superior to Johnson; who, with all his love of truth, could not bear
+to be painted with his defects. He was displeased at being drawn
+holding a pen close to his eye; and on its being suggested that
+Reynolds had painted himself holding his ear in his hand to catch the
+sound, he replied: "He may paint himself as deaf as he pleases, but I
+will not be Blinking Sam."
+
+[Footnote 1: "One day I called early at her house, and as I entered
+her drawing-room, she passed me, saying, 'Dear Sir, I will be with
+you in a few minutes; but, while I think of it, I must go to my
+dressing-closet and paint my face, which I forgot to do this
+morning.' Accordingly she soon returned, wearing the requisite
+quantity of bloom; which, it must be noticed, was not in the least
+like that of youth and beauty. I then said that I was surprised she
+should so far sacrifice to fashion, as to take that trouble. Her
+answer was that, as I might conclude, her practice of painting did
+not proceed from any silly compliance with Bath fashion, or any
+fashion; still less, if possible, from the desire of appearing
+younger than she was, but from this circumstance, that in early life
+she had worn rouge, as other young persons did in her day, as a part
+of dress; and after continuing the habit for some years, discovered
+that it had introduced a dull yellow colour into her complexion,
+quite unlike that of her natural skin, and that she wished to conceal
+the deformity."--_Piozziana_.]
+
+Reynolds' portrait of Mrs. Thrale conveys a highly agreeable
+impression of her; and so does Hogarth's, when she sat to him for the
+principal figure in "The Lady's Last Stake." She was then only
+fourteen; and he probably idealised his model; but that he also
+produced a striking likeness, is obvious on comparing his picture
+with the professed portraits. The history of this picture (which has
+been engraved, at Lord Macaulay's suggestion, for this work) will be
+found in the Autobiography and the Letters.
+
+Boswell's account of his first visit to Streatham gives a tolerably
+fair notion of the footing on which Johnson stood there, and the
+manner in which the interchange of mind was carried on between him
+and the hostess. This visit took place in October, 1769, four years
+after Johnson's introduction to her; and Boswell's absence from
+London, in which he had no fixed residence during Johnson's life,
+will hardly account for the neglect of his illustrious friend in not
+procuring him a privilege which he must have highly coveted and would
+doubtless have turned to good account.
+
+"On the 6th of October I complied with this obliging invitation; and
+found, at an elegant villa, six miles from town, every circumstance
+that can make society pleasing. Johnson, though quite at home, was
+yet looked up to with an awe, tempered by affection, and seemed to be
+equally the care of his host and hostess. I rejoiced at seeing him so
+happy."
+
+"Mrs. Thrale disputed with him on the merit of Prior. He attacked him
+powerfully; said he wrote of love like a man who had never felt it;
+his love verses were college verses: and he repeated the song,
+'Alexis shunn'd his fellow swains,' &c. in so ludicrous a manner, as
+to make us all wonder how any one could have been pleased with such
+fantastical stuff. Mrs. Thrale stood to her guns with great courage,
+in defence of amorous ditties, which Johnson despised, till he at
+last silenced her by saving, 'My dear lady, talk no more of this.
+Nonsense can be defended but by nonsense.'
+
+"Mrs. Thrale then praised Garrick's talents for light gay poetry;
+and, as a specimen, repeated his song in 'Florizel and Perdita,' and
+dwelt with peculiar pleasure on this line:--
+
+ "'I'd smile with the simple, and feed with the poor.'
+
+"_Johnson._--'Nay, my dear lady, this will never do. Poor David!
+Smile with the simple!--what folly is that? And who would feed with
+the poor that can help it? No, no; let me smile with the wise, and
+feed with the rich.'" Boswell adds, that he repeated this sally to
+Glarrick, and wondered to find his sensibility as a writer not a
+little irritated by it; on which Mrs. Thrale remarks, "How odd to go
+and tell the man!"
+
+The independent tone she took when she deemed the Doctor
+unreasonable, is also proved by Boswell in his report of what took
+place at Streatham in reference to Lord Marchmont's offer to supply
+information for the Life of Pope:
+
+"Elated with the success of my spontaneous exertion to procure
+material and respectable aid to Johnson for his very favourite work,
+'the Lives of the Poets,' I hastened down to Mr. Thrale's, at
+Streatham, where he now was, that I might insure his being at home
+next day; and after dinner, when I thought he would receive the good
+news in the best humour, I announced it eagerly: 'I have been at work
+for you to-day, Sir. I have been with Lord Marchmont. He bade me tell
+you he has a great respect for you, and will call on you to-morrow at
+one o'clock, and communicate all he knows about Pope.' _Johnson._ 'I
+shall not be in town to-morrow. I don't care to know about Pope.'
+_Mrs. Thrale_ (surprised, as I was, and a little angry). 'I suppose,
+Sir, Mr. Boswell thought that as you are to write Pope's Life, you
+would wish to know about him.' _Johnson._ 'Wish! why yes. If it
+rained knowledge, I'd hold out my hand; but I would not give myself
+the trouble to go in quest of it.' There was no arguing with him at
+the moment. Sometime afterwards he said, 'Lord Marchmont will call
+upon me, and then I shall call on Lord Marchmont.' Mrs. Thrale was
+uneasy at this unaccountable caprice: and told me, that if I did not
+take care to bring about a meeting between Lord Marchmont and him, it
+would never take place, which would be a great pity."
+
+The ensuing conversation is a good sample of the freedom and variety
+of "talk" in which Johnson luxuriated, and shows how important a part
+Mrs. Thrale played in it:
+
+"Mrs. Thrale told us, that a curious clergyman of our acquaintance
+(Dr. Lort is named in the margin) had discovered a licentious stanza,
+which Pope had originally in his 'Universal Prayer,' before the
+stanza,--
+
+ "'What conscience dictates to be done,
+ Or warns us not to do,' &c.
+
+It was this:--
+
+ "'Can sins of moment claim the rod
+ Of everlasting fires?
+ And that offend great Nature's God
+ Which Nature's self inspires."
+
+and that Dr. Johnson observed, it had been borrowed from _Guarini_.
+There are, indeed, in _Pastor Fido_, many such flimsy superficial
+reasonings as that in the last two lines of this stanza.
+
+"_Boswell_. 'In that stanza of Pope's, "_rod of fires_" is certainly
+a bad metaphor.' _Mrs. Thrale_. 'And "sins of _moment_" is a faulty
+expression; for its true import is _momentous_, which cannot be
+intended.' _Johnson_. 'It must have been written "of _moments_." Of
+_moment_, is _momentous_; of _moments, momentary_. I warrant you,
+however, Pope wrote this stanza, and some friend struck it out.'
+
+"Talking of divorces, I asked if Othello's doctrine was not
+plausible:--
+
+ "'He that is robb'd, not wanting what is stolen,
+ Let him not know't, and he's not robb'd at all.'
+
+Dr. Johnson and Mrs. Thrale joined against this. _Johnson_. 'Ask any
+man if he'd wish not to know of such an injury.' _Boswell_. 'Would
+you tell your friend to make him unhappy?' _Johnson_. 'Perhaps, Sir,
+I should not: but that would be from prudence on my own account. A
+man would tell his father.' _Boswell_. 'Yes; because he would not
+have spurious children to get any share of the family inheritance.'
+_Mrs. Thrale_. 'Or he would tell his brother.' _Boswell_. 'Certainly
+his _elder_ brother.... Would you tell Mr. ----?' (naming a gentleman
+who assuredly was not in the least danger of so miserable a disgrace,
+though married to a fine woman). _Johnson_. 'No, Sir: because it
+would do no good; he is so sluggish, he'd never go to Parliament and
+get through a divorce.'" _Marginal Note_: "Langton."
+
+There is every reason to believe that her behaviour to Johnson was
+uniformly marked by good-breeding and delicacy. She treated him with
+a degree of consideration and respect which he did not always receive
+from other friends and admirers. A foolish rumour having got into the
+newspapers that he had been learning to dance of Vestris, it was
+agreed that Lord Charlemont should ask him if it was true, and his
+lordship with (it is shrewdly observed) the characteristic spirit of
+a general of Irish volunteers, actually put the question, which
+provoked a passing feeling of irritation. Opposite Boswell's account
+of this incident she has written, "Was he not right in hating to be
+so treated? and would he not have been right to have loved me better
+than any of them, because I never did make a Lyon of him?"
+
+One great charm of her companionship to cultivated men was her
+familiarity with the learned languages, as well as with French,
+Italian, and Spanish. The author of "Piozziana" says: "She not only
+read and wrote Hebrew, Greek, and Latin, but had for sixty years
+constantly and ardently studied the Scriptures and the works of
+commentators in the original languages." She did not know Greek, and
+he probably over-estimated her other acquirements, which Boswell
+certainly underestimates when he speaks slightingly of them on the
+strength of Johnson's having said: "It is a great mistake to suppose
+that she is above him (Thrale) in literary attainments. She is more
+flippant, but he has ten times her learning: he is a regular scholar;
+but her learning is that of a school-boy in one of the lower forms."
+If this were so, it is strange that Thrale should cut so poor a
+figure, should seem little better than a nonentity, whilst every
+imaginable topic was under animated discussion at his table; for
+Boswell was more ready to report the husband's sayings than the
+wife's. In a marginal note on one of the printed letters she says:
+"Mr. Thrale was a very merry talking man in 1760; but the distress of
+1772, which affected his health, his hopes, and his whole soul,
+affected his temper too. Perkins called it being planet struck, and I
+am not sure he was ever completely the same man again." The notes of
+his conversation during the antecedent period are equally meagre.[1]
+He is described by Madame D'Arblay as taking a singular amusement in
+hearing, instigating, and provoking a war of words, alternating
+triumph and overthrow, between clever and ambitious colloquial
+combatants.
+
+[Footnote 1: "Pray, Doctor, said a gentleman to Johnson, is Mr.
+Thrale a man of conversation, or is he only wise and silent?' 'Why,
+Sir, his conversation does not show the _minute_ hand; but he
+generally strikes the hour very correctly.'"--_Johnsoniana_.]
+
+No one would have expected to find her as much at home in Greek and
+Latin authors as a man of fair ability who had received and profited
+by an University education, but she could appreciate a classical
+allusion or quotation, and translate off-hand a Latin epigram.
+
+"Mary Aston," said Johnson, "was a beauty and a scholar, and a wit
+and a whig; and she talked all in praise of liberty; and so I made
+this epigram upon her. She was the loveliest creature I ever saw!
+
+ "'Liber ut esse velim, suasisti, pulchra Maria,
+ Ut maneam liber, pulchra Maria, vale!'
+
+"Will it do this way in English, Sir? (said Mrs. Thrale)--
+
+ "'Persuasions to freedom fall oddly from you,
+ If freedom we seek, fair Maria, adieu."
+
+Mr. Croker's version is:--
+
+ "'You wish me, fair Maria, to be free,
+ Then, fair Maria, I must fly from thee.'
+
+Boswell also has tried his hand at it; and a correspondent of the
+"Gentleman's Magazine" suggests that Johnson had in his mind an
+epigram on a young lady who appeared at a masquerade in Paris,
+habited as a Jesuit, during the height of the contention between the
+Jansenists and Molinists concerning free will:--
+
+ "On s'étonne ici que Calviniste
+ Eût pris l'habit de Moliniste,
+ Puisque que cette jeune beauté
+ Ôte à chacun sa liberté,
+ N'est ce pas une Janséniste."[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: "Menagiana," vol. iii. p. 376. Edition of 1716. Equally
+happy were Lord Chesterfield's lines to a young lady who appeared at
+a Dublin ball, with an orange breastknot:--
+
+Mrs. Thrale took the lead even when her husband might be expected to
+strike in, as when Johnson was declaiming paradoxically against
+action in oratory: "Action can have no effect on reasonable minds. It
+may augment noise, but it never can enforce argument." _Mrs. Thrale_.
+"What then, Sir, becomes of Demosthenes' saying, Action, action,
+action?" _Johnson_. "Demosthenes, Madam, spoke to an assembly of
+brutes, to a barbarous people." "The polished Athenians!" is her
+marginal protest, and a conclusive one.
+
+In English literature she was rarely at fault. In
+
+ "Pretty Tory, where's the jest
+ To wear that riband on thy breast,
+ When that same breast betraying shows
+ The whiteness of the rebel rose?"
+
+White was adopted by the malcontent Irish as the French emblem.
+Johnson's epigram may have been suggested by Propertius:
+
+ "Nullus liber erit si quis amare volet."]
+
+reference to the flattery lavished on Garrick by Lord Mansfield and
+Lord Chatham, Johnson had said, "When he whom everybody else
+flatters, flatters me, then I am truly happy." _Mrs. Thrale_. "The
+sentiment is in Congreve, I think." _Johnson_. "Yes, Madam, in 'The
+Way of the World.'
+
+ "'If there's delight in love, 'tis when I see
+ The heart that others bleed for, bleed for me.'"
+
+When Johnson is reported saying, "Those who have a style of
+distinguished excellence can always be distinguished," she objects:
+"It seems not. The lines always quoted as Dryden's, beginning,
+
+ 'To die is landing on some silent shore,'
+
+are Garth's after all." Johnson would have been still less pleased at
+her discovery that a line in his epitaph on Phillips,
+
+ "Till angels wake thee with a note like thine,"
+
+was imitated from Pope's
+
+ "And saints embrace thee with a love like mine."
+
+In one of her letters to him (June, 1782) she writes: "Meantime let
+us be as _merry_ as reading Burton upon _Melancholy_ will make us.
+You bid me study that book in your absence, and now, what have I
+found? Why, I have found, or fancied, that he has been cruelly
+plundered: that Milton's first idea of 'L'Allegro' and 'Il Penseroso'
+were suggested by the verses at the beginning; that Savage's speech
+of Suicide in the 'Wanderer' grew up out of a passage you probably
+remember towards the 216th page; that Swift's tale of the woman that
+holds water in her mouth, to regain her husband's love by silence,
+had its source in the same farrago; and that there is an odd
+similitude between my Lord's trick upon Sly the Tinker, in
+Shakspeare's 'Taming of the Shrew,' and some stuff I have been
+reading in Burton."
+
+It would be easy to heap proof upon proof of the value and variety of
+Mrs. Thrale's contributions to the colloquial treasures accumulated
+by Boswell and other members of the set; and Johnson's deliberate
+testimony to her good qualities of head and heart will far more than
+counterbalance any passing expressions of disapproval or reproof with
+her mistimed vivacity, or alleged disregard of scrupulous accuracy in
+narrative, may have called forth. No two people ever lived much
+together for a series of years without many fretful, complaining,
+dissatisfied, uncongenial moments,--without letting drop captious or
+unkind expressions, utterly at variance with their habitual feelings
+and their matured judgments of each other. The hasty word, the
+passing sarcasm, the sly hit at an acknowledged foible, should count
+for nothing in the estimate, when contrasted with earnest and
+deliberate assurances, proceeding from one who was commonly too proud
+to flatter, and in no mood for idle compliment when he wrote.
+
+"Never (he writes in 1773) imagine that your letters are long; they
+are always too short for my curiosity. I do not know that I was ever
+content with a single perusal.... My nights are grown again very
+uneasy and troublesome. I know not that the country will mend them;
+but I hope your company will mend my days. Though I cannot now expect
+much attention, and would not wish for more than can be spared from
+the poor dear lady (her mother), yet I shall see you and hear you
+every now and then; and to see and hear you, is always to hear wit,
+and to see virtue."
+
+He would not suffer her to be lightly spoken of in his presence, nor
+permit his name to be coupled jocularly with hers. "I yesterday told
+him," says Boswell, when they were traversing the Highlands, "I was
+thinking of writing a poetical letter to him, on his return from
+Scotland, in the style of Swift's humorous epistle in the character
+of Mary Gulliver to her husband, Captain Lemuel Gulliver, on his
+return to England from the country of the Houyhnhnms:--
+
+ "'At early morn I to the market haste,
+ Studious in ev'ry thing to please thy taste.
+ A curious _fowl_ and _sparagrass_ I chose;
+ (For I remember you were fond of those:)
+ Three shillings cost the first, the last seven groats;
+ Sullen you turn from both, and call for OATS.'
+
+He laughed, and asked in whose name I would write it. I said in Mrs.
+Thrale's. He was angry. 'Sir, if you have any sense of decency or
+delicacy, you won't do that.' _Boswell_. 'Then let it be in Cole's,
+the landlord of the Mitre tavern, where we have so often sat
+together.' _Johnson_. 'Ay, that may do.'"
+
+Again, at Inverary, when Johnson called for a gill of whiskey that he
+might know what makes a Scotchman happy, and Boswell proposed Mrs.
+Thrale as their toast, he would not have _her_ drunk in whiskey.
+Peter Pindar has maliciously added to this reproof:--
+
+ "We supped most royally, were vastly frisky,
+ When Johnson ordered up a gill of whiskey.
+ Taking the glass, says I, 'Here's Mistress Thrale,'
+ 'Drink her in _whiskey_ not,' said he, 'but _ale_.'"
+
+So far from making light of her scholarship, he frequently accepted
+her as a partner in translations from the Latin. The translations
+from Boethius, printed in the second volume of the Letters, are their
+joint composition.
+
+After recapitulating Johnson's other contributions to literature in
+1766, Boswell says, "'The Fountains,' a beautiful little fairy tale
+in prose, written with exquisite simplicity, is one of Johnson's
+productions; and I cannot withhold from Mrs. Thrale the praise of
+being the author of that admirable poem 'The Three Warnings.'"
+_Marginal note_: "How sorry he is!" Both the tale and the poem were
+written for a collection of "Miscellanies," published by Mrs.
+Williams in that year. The character of Floretta in "The Fountains"
+was intended for Mrs. Thrale, and she thus gracefully alludes to it
+in a letter to Johnson in Feb. 1782:
+
+"The newspapers would spoil my few comforts that are left if they
+could; but you tell me that's only because I have the reputation,
+whether true or false, of being a _wit_ forsooth; and you remember
+_poor Floretta_, who was teased into wishing away her spirit, her
+beauty, her fortune, and at last even her life, never could bear the
+bitter water which was to have washed away her wit; which she
+resolved to keep with all its consequences."
+
+Her fugitive pieces, mostly in verse, thrown off from time to time at
+all periods of her life, are numerous; and the best of them that have
+been recovered will be included in these volumes. In a letter to the
+author of "Piozziana," she says:--"When Wilkes and Liberty were at
+their highest tide, I was bringing or losing children every year; and
+my studies were confined to my nursery; so, it came into my head one
+day to send an infant alphabet to the 'St. James Chronicle':--
+
+ "'A was an Alderman, factious and proud;
+ B was a Bellas that blustered aloud, &c.'
+
+"In a week's time Dr. Johnson asked me if I knew who wrote it? 'Why,
+who did write it, Sir?' said I. 'Steevens,' was the reply. Some time
+after that, years for aught I know, he mentioned to me Steevens's
+veracity! 'No, no;' answered H.L.P., anything but that;' and told my
+story; showing him by incontestable proofs that it was mine. Johnson
+did not utter a word, and we never talked about it any more. I durst
+not introduce the subject; but it served to hinder S. from visiting
+at the house: I suppose Johnson kept him away."
+
+It does not appear that Steevens claimed the Alphabet; which may have
+suggested the celebrated squib that appeared in the "New Whig Guide,"
+and was popularly attributed to Mr. Croker. It was headed "The
+Political Alphabet; or, the Young Member's A B C," and begins:
+
+ "A was an Althorpe, as dull as a hog:
+ B was black Brougham, a surly cur dog:
+ C was a Cochrane, all stripped of his lace."
+
+What widely different associations are now awakened by these names!
+The sting is in the tail:
+
+ "W was a Warre, 'twixt a wasp and a worm,
+ But X Y and Z are not found in this form,
+ Unless Moore, Martin, and Creevey be said
+ (As the last of mankind) to be X Y and Z."
+
+Amongst Miss Reynolds' "Recollections" will be found:--"On the
+praises of Mrs. Thrale, he (Johnson) used to dwell with a peculiar
+delight, a paternal fondness, expressive of conscious exultation in
+being so intimately acquainted with her. One day, in speaking of her
+to Mr. Harris, author of 'Hermes,' and expatiating on her various
+perfections,--the solidity of her virtues, the brilliancy of her wit,
+and the strength of her understanding, &c.--he quoted some lines (a
+stanza, I believe, but from what author I know not[1]), with which he
+concluded his most eloquent eulogium, and of these I retained but the
+two last lines:--
+
+ 'Virtues--of such a generous kind,
+ Pure in the last recesses of the mind.'"
+
+[Footnote 1: Dryden's Translation of Persius.]
+
+The place assigned to Mrs. Thrale by the popular voice amongst the
+most cultivated and accomplished women of the day, is fixed by some
+verses printed in the "Morning Herald" of March 12th, 1782, which
+attracted much attention. They were commonly attributed to Mr.
+(afterwards Sir W.W.) Pepys, and Madame d'Arblay, who alludes to them
+complacently, thought them his; but he subsequently repudiated the
+authorship, and the editor of her Memoirs believes that they were
+written by Dr. Burney. They were provoked by the proneness of the
+Herald to indulge in complimentary allusions to ladies of the demirep
+genus:
+
+ "Herald, wherefore thus proclaim
+ Nought of women but the _shame_?
+ Quit, oh, quit, at least awhile,
+ Perdita's too luscious smile;
+ Wanton Worsley, stilted Daly,
+ Heroines of each blackguard alley;
+ Better sure record in story
+ Such as shine their sex's glory!
+ Herald! haste, with me proclaim
+ Those of literary fame.
+ Hannah More's pathetic pen,
+ Painting high th' impassion'd scene;
+ Carter's piety and learning,
+ Little Burney's quick discerning;
+ Cowley's neatly pointed wit,
+ Healing those her satires hit;
+ Smiling Streatfield's iv'ry neck,
+ Nose, and notions--_à la Grecque!_
+ Let Chapone retain a place,
+ And the mother of her Grace[1],
+ Each art of conversation knowing,
+ High-bred, elegant Boscawen;
+ Thrale, in whose expressive eyes
+ Sits a soul above disguise,
+ Skill'd with-wit and sense t'impart
+ Feelings of a generous heart.
+ Lucan, Leveson, Greville, Crewe;
+ Fertile-minded Montagu,
+ Who makes each rising art her care,
+ 'And brings her knowledge from afar!'
+ Whilst her tuneful tongue defends
+ Authors dead, and absent friends;
+ Bright in genius, pure in fame:--
+ Herald, haste, and these proclaim!"
+
+[Footnote 1: Mrs. Boscawen was the mother of the Duchess of Beaufort
+and Mrs. Leveson Gower:
+
+ "All Leveson's sweetness, and all Beaufort's grace."]
+
+These lines merit attention for the sake of the comparison they
+invite. An outcry has recently been raised against the laxity of
+modern fashion, in permitting venal beauty to receive open homage in
+our parks and theatres, and to be made the subject of prurient gossip
+by maids and matrons who should ignore its existence. But we need not
+look far beneath the surface of social history to discover that the
+irregularity in question is only a partial revival of the practice of
+our grandfathers and grandmothers, much as a crinoline may be
+regarded as a modified reproduction of the hoop. Junius thus
+denounces the Duke of Grafton's indecorous devotion to Nancy Parsons:
+"It is not the private indulgence, but the public insult, of which I
+complain. The name of Miss Parsons would hardly have been known, if
+the First Lord of the Treasury had not led her in triumph through the
+Opera House, even in the presence of the Queen." Lord March
+(afterwards Duke of Queensberry) was a lord of the bedchamber in the
+decorous court of George the Third, when he wrote thus to Selwyn: "I
+was prevented from writing to you last Friday, by being at Newmarket
+with my little girl (Signora Zamperini, a noted dancer and singer). I
+had the whole family and Cocchi. The beauty went with me in my
+chaise, and the rest in the old landau."
+
+We have had Boswell's impression of his first visit to Streatham; and
+Madame D'Arblay's account of hers confirms the notion that My
+Mistress, not My Master, was the presiding genius of the place.
+
+"_London, August_ (1778).--I have now to write an account of the most
+consequential day I have spent since my birth: namely, my Streatham
+visit.
+
+"Our journey to Streatham was the least pleasant part of the day, for
+the roads were dreadfully dusty, and I was really in the fidgets from
+thinking what my reception might be, and from fearing they would
+expect a less awkward and backward kind of person than I was sure
+they would find.
+
+"Mr. Thrale's house is white, and very pleasantly situated, in a fine
+paddock. Mrs. Thrale was strolling about, and came to us as we got
+out of the chaise.
+
+"She then received me, taking both my hands, and with mixed
+politeness and cordiality welcomed me to Streatham. She led me into
+the house, and addressed herself almost wholly for a few minutes to
+my father, as if to give me an assurance she did not mean to regard
+me as a show, or to distress or frighten me by drawing me out.
+Afterwards she took me up stairs, and showed me the house, and said
+she had very much wished to see me at Streatham, and should always
+think herself much obliged to Dr. Burney for his goodness in bringing
+me, which she looked upon as a very great favour.
+
+"But though we were some time together, and though she was so very
+civil, she did not _hint_ at my book, and I love her much more than
+ever for her delicacy in avoiding a subject which she could not but
+see would have greatly embarrassed me.
+
+"When we returned to the music-room, we found Miss Thrale was with my
+father. Miss Thrale is a very fine girl, about fourteen years of age,
+but cold and reserved, though full of knowledge and intelligence.
+
+"Soon after, Mrs. Thrale took me to the library; she talked a little
+while upon common topics, and then, at last, she mentioned 'Evelina.'
+
+"I now prevailed upon Mrs. Thrale to let me amuse myself, and she
+went to dress. I then prowled about to choose some book, and I saw,
+upon the reading-table, 'Evelina.' I had just fixed upon a new
+translation of Cicero's 'Lælius,' when the library door was opened,
+and Mr. Seward entered. I instantly put away my book, because I
+dreaded being thought studious and affected. He offered his service
+to find anything for me, and then, in the same breath, ran on to
+speak of the book with which I had myself 'favoured the world!'
+
+"The exact words he began with I cannot recollect, for I was actually
+confounded by the attack; and his abrupt manner of letting me know he
+was _au fait_ equally astonished and provoked me. How different from
+the delicacy of Mr. and Mrs. Thrale!"
+
+A high French authority has laid down that good breeding consists in
+rendering to all what is socially their due. This definition is
+imperfect. Good breeding is best displayed by putting people at their
+ease; and Mrs. Thrale's manner of putting the young authoress at her
+ease was the perfection of delicacy and tact.
+
+If Johnson's entrance on the stage had been premeditated, it could
+hardly have been more dramatically ordered.
+
+"When we were summoned to dinner, Mrs. Thrale made my father and me
+sit on each side of her. I said that I hoped I did not take Dr.
+Johnson's place;--for he had not yet appeared.
+
+"'No,' answered Mrs. Thrale, 'he will sit by you, which I am sure
+will give him great pleasure.'
+
+"Soon after we were seated, this great man entered. I have so true a
+veneration for him, that the very sight of him inspires me with
+delight and reverence, notwithstanding the cruel infirmities to which
+he is subject; for he has almost perpetual convulsive movements,
+either of his hands, lips, feet, or knees, and sometimes of all
+together.
+
+"Mrs. Thrale introduced me to him, and he took his place. We had a
+noble dinner, and a most elegant dessert. Dr. Johnson, in the middle
+of dinner, asked Mrs. Thrale what was in some little pies that were
+near him.
+
+"'Mutton,' answered she, 'so I don't ask you to eat any, because I
+know you despise it.'
+
+"'No, Madam, no,' cried he: 'I despise nothing that is good of its
+sort; but I am too proud now to eat of it. Sitting by Miss Burney
+makes me very proud to-day!'
+
+"'Miss Burney,' said Mrs. Thrale, laughing, 'you must take great care
+of your heart if Dr. Johnson attacks it; for I assure you he is not
+often successless.'
+
+"'What's that you say, Madam?' cried he; 'are you making mischief
+between the young lady and me already?'
+
+"A little while after he drank Miss Thrale's health and mine, and
+then added:
+
+"'Tis a terrible thing that we cannot wish young ladies well, without
+wishing them to become old women.'"
+
+Madame D'Arblay's memoirs are sadly defaced by egotism, and gratified
+vanity may have had a good deal to do with her unqualified admiration
+of Mrs. Thrale; for "Evelina" (recently published) was the unceasing
+topic of exaggerated eulogy during the entire visit. Still so acute
+an observer could not be essentially wrong in an account of her
+reception, which is in the highest degree favourable to her newly
+acquired friend. Of her second visit she says:
+
+"Our journey was charming. The kind Mrs. Thrale would give courage to
+the most timid. She did not ask me questions, or catechise me upon
+what I knew, or use any means to draw me out, but made it her
+business to draw herself out--that is, to start subjects, to support
+them herself, and take all the weight of the conversation, as if it
+behoved her to find me entertainment. But I am so much in love with
+her, that I shall be obliged to run away from the subject, or shall
+write of nothing else.
+
+"When we arrived here, Mrs. Thrale showed me my room, which is an
+exceeding pleasant one, and then conducted me to the library, there
+to divert myself while she dressed.
+
+"Miss Thrale soon joined me: and I begin to like her. Mr. Thrale was
+neither well nor in spirits all day. Indeed, he seems not to be a
+happy man, though he has every means of happiness in his power. But I
+think I have rarely seen a very rich man with a light heart and light
+spirits."
+
+The concluding remark, coming from such a source, may supply an
+improving subject of meditation or inquiry; if found true, it may
+help to suppress envy and promote contentment. Thrale's state of
+health, however, accounts for his depression independently of his
+wealth, which rested on too precarious a foundation to allow of
+unbroken confidence and gaiety.
+
+"At tea (continues the diarist) we all met again, and Dr. Johnson was
+gaily sociable. He 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. But he could not have chosen a man who would have
+been less entertained by such means.'
+
+"'I believe not!' cried Mrs. Thrale: 'nothing is more ridiculous than
+parents cramming their children's nonsense down other people's
+throats. I keep mine as much out of the way as I can.'
+
+"'Yours, Madam,' answered he, 'are in nobody's way; no children can
+be better managed or less troublesome; but your fault is, a too great
+perverseness in not allowing anybody to give them anything. Why
+should they not have a cherry, or a gooseberry, as well as bigger
+children?'
+
+"Indeed, the freedom with which Dr. Johnson condemns whatever he
+disapproves, is astonishing; and the strength of words he uses would,
+to most people, be intolerable; but Mrs. Thrale seems to have a
+sweetness of disposition that equals all her other excellences, and
+far from making a point of vindicating herself, she generally
+receives his admonitions with the most respectful silence."
+
+But it must not be supposed that this was done without an effort.
+When Boswell speaks of Johnson's "accelerating her pulsation," she
+adds, "he checked it often enough, to be sure."
+
+Another of the conversations which occurred during this visit is
+characteristic of all parties:
+
+"We had been talking of colours, and of the fantastic names given to
+them, and why the palest lilac should be called a _soupir étouffé_.
+
+"'Why, Madam,' said he, with wonderful readiness, 'it is called a
+stifled sigh because it is checked in its progress, and only half a
+colour.'
+
+"I could not help expressing my amazement at his universal readiness
+upon all subjects, and Mrs. Thrale said to him,
+
+"'Sir, Miss Burney wonders at your patience with such stuff; but I
+tell her you are used to me, for I believe I torment you with more
+foolish questions than anybody else dares do.'
+
+"'No, Madam,' said he, 'you don't torment me;--you teaze me, indeed,
+sometimes.'
+
+"'Ay, so I do, Dr. Johnson, and I wonder 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.'
+
+"'And, for heaven's sake, how came you to know her?'
+
+"'Why, Madam, she figured in the literary world, too! Bet Flint wrote
+her own life, and called herself Cassandra, and it was in verse. So
+Bet brought me her verses to correct; but I gave her a half-a-crown,
+and she liked it as well.'
+
+"'And pray what became of her, Sir?'
+
+"'Why, Madam, she stole a quilt from the man of the house, and he had
+her taken up: but Bet Flint had a spirit not to be subdued; so when
+she found herself obliged to go to jail, she ordered a sedan chair,
+and bid her footboy walk before her. However, the boy proved
+refractory, for he was ashamed, though his mistress was not.'
+
+"'And did she ever get out of jail again, Sir?'
+
+"'Yes, Madam; when she came to her trial, the judge acquitted her.
+"So now," she said to me, "the quilt is my own, and now I'll make a
+petticoat of it."[1] Oh, I loved Bet Flint!'
+
+"Bless me, Sir!' cried Mrs. Thrale, 'how can all these vagabonds
+contrive to get at _you_, of all people?'
+
+"'Oh the dear creatures!' cried he, laughing heartily, 'I can't but
+be glad to see them!'"
+
+[Footnote 1: This story is told by Boswell, roy. 8vo, edit. p. 688.]
+
+Madame D'Arblay's notes (in her Diary) of the conversation and mode
+of life at Streatham are full and spirited, and exhibit Johnson in
+moods and situations in which he was seldom seen by Boswell. The
+adroitness with which he divided his attentions amongst the ladies,
+blending approval with instruction, and softening contradiction or
+reproof by gallantry, gives plausibility to his otherwise paradoxical
+claim to be considered a polite man.[1] He obviously knew how to set
+about it, and (theoretically at least) was no mean proficient in that
+art of pleasing which attracts
+
+ "Rather by deference than compliment,
+ And wins e'en by a delicate dissent."
+
+[Footnote 1: "When the company were retired, we happened to be
+talking of Dr. Barnard, the provost of Eton, who died about that
+time; and after a long and just eulogium on his wit, his learning,
+and goodness of heart--'He was the only man, too,' says Mr. Johnson,
+quite seriously, 'that did justice to my good breeding; and you may
+observe that I am well-bred to a degree of needless scrupulosity. No
+man,' continued he, not observing the amazement of his hearers, 'no
+man is so cautious not to interrupt another; no man thinks it so
+necessary to appear attentive when others are speaking; no man so
+steadily refuses preference to himself, or so willingly bestows it on
+another, as I do; nobody holds so strongly as I do the necessity of
+ceremony, and the ill effects which follow the breach of it: yet
+people think me rude; but Barnard did me justice.'"--_Anecdotes_. "I
+think myself a very polite man,"--_Boswell_. 1778.]
+
+Sir Henry Bulwer (in his "France") says that Louis the Fourteenth was
+entitled to be called a man of genius, if only from the delicate
+beauty of his compliments. Mrs. Thrale awards the palm of excellence
+in the same path to Johnson. "Your compliments, Sir, are made seldom,
+but when they are made, they have an elegance unequalled; but then,
+when you are angry, who dares make speeches so bitter and so cruel?"
+"I am sure," she adds, after a semblance of defence on his part, "I
+have had my share of scolding from you." _Johnson_. "It is true, you
+have, but you have borne it like an angel, and you have been the
+better for it." As the discussion proceeds, he accuses her of often
+provoking him to say severe things by unreasonable commendation; a
+common mode of acquiring a character for amiability at the expense of
+one's intimates, who are made to appear uncharitable by being thus
+constantly placed on the depreciating side.
+
+Some years prior to this period (1778) Mrs. Thrale's mind and
+character had undergone a succession of the most trying ordeals, and
+was tempered and improved, without being hardened, by them. In
+allusion to what she suffered in child-bearing, she said later in
+life that she had nine times undergone the sentence of a
+convict,--confinement with hard labour. Child after child died at the
+age when the bereavement is most affecting to a mother. Her husband's
+health kept her in a constant state of apprehension for his life, and
+his affairs became embarrassed to the very verge of bankruptcy. So
+long as they remained prosperous, he insisted on her not meddling
+with them in any way, and even required her to keep to her
+drawing-room and leave the conduct of their domestic establishment to
+the butler and housekeeper. But when (from circumstances detailed in
+the "Autobiography") his fortune was seriously endangered, he wisely
+and gladly availed himself of her prudence and energy, and was saved
+by so doing. I have now before me a collection of autograph letters
+from her to Mr. Perkins, then manager and afterwards one of the
+proprietors of the brewery, from which it appears that she paid the
+most minute attention to the business, besides undertaking the
+superintendence of her own hereditary estate in Wales. On September
+28, 1773, she writes to Mr. Perkins, who was on a commercial
+journey:--
+
+"Mr. Thrale is still upon his little tour; I opened a letter from you
+at the counting-house this morning, and am sorry to find you have so
+much trouble with Grant and his affairs. How glad I shall be to hear
+that matter is settled at all to your satisfaction. His letter and
+remittance came while I was there to-day.... Careless, of the 'Blue
+Posts,' has turned refractory, and applied to Hoare's people, who
+have sent him in their beer. I called on him to-day, however, and by
+dint of an unwearied solicitation, (for I kept him at the coach side
+a full half-hour) I got his order for six butts more as the final
+trial."
+
+Examples of fine ladies pressing tradesmen for their votes with
+compromising importunity are far from rare, but it would be difficult
+to find a parallel for Johnson's Hetty doing duty as a commercial
+traveller. She was simultaneously obliged to anticipate the
+electioneering exploits of the Duchess of Devonshire and Mrs. Crewe;
+and in after life, having occasion to pass through Southwark, she
+expresses her astonishment at no longer recognising a place, every
+hole and corner of which she had three times visited as a canvasser.
+
+After the death of Mr. Thrale, a friend of Mr. H. Thornton canvassed
+the borough on behalf of that gentleman. He waited on Mrs. Thrale,
+who promised her support. She concluded her obliging expressions by
+saying:--"I wish your friend success, and I think he will have it: he
+may probably come in for two parliaments, but if he tries for a
+third, were he an angel from heaven, the people of Southwark would
+cry, 'Not _this_ man, but Barabbas.'"[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: Miss Laetitia Matilda Hawkins vouches for this
+story.--"Memoir, &c." vol. i. p.66, note, where she adds:--"I have
+heard it said, that into whatever company she (Mrs. T.) fell, she
+could be the most agreeable person in it."]
+
+On one of her canvassing expeditions, Johnson accompanied her, and a
+rough fellow, a hatter by trade, seeing the moralist's hat in a state
+of decay, seized it suddenly with one hand, and clapping him on the
+back with the other, cried out, "Ah, Master Johnson, this is no time
+to be thinking about hats." "No, no, Sir," replied the Doctor, "hats
+are of no use now, as you say, except to throw up in the air and
+huzzah with;" accompanying his words with the true election halloo.
+
+Thrale had serious thoughts of repaying Johnson's electioneering aid
+in kind, by bringing him into Parliament. Sir John Hawkins says that
+Thrale had two meetings with the minister (Lord North), who at first
+seemed inclined to find Johnson a seat, but eventually
+discountenanced the project. Lord Stowell told Mr. Croker that Lord
+North did not feel quite sure that Johnson's support might not
+sometimes prove rather an incumbrance than a help. "His lordship
+perhaps thought, and not unreasonably, that, like the elephant in the
+battle, he was quite as likely to trample down his friends as his
+foes." Flood doubted whether Johnson, being long used to sententious
+brevity and the short flights of conversation, would have succeeded
+in the expanded kind of argument required in public speaking. Burke's
+opinion was, that if he had come early into Parliament, he would have
+been the greatest speaker ever known in it. Upon being told this by
+Reynolds, he exclaimed, "I should like to try my hand now." On
+Boswell's adding that he wished he _had_, Mrs. Thrale writes:
+"Boswell had leisure for curiosity: Ministers had not. Boswell would
+have been equally amused by his failure as by his success; but to
+Lord North there would have been no joke at all in the experiment
+ending untowardly."
+
+He was equally ready with advice and encouragement during the
+difficulties connected with the brewery. He was not of opinion with
+Aristotle and Parson Adams, that trade is below a philosopher[1]; and
+he eagerly buried himself in computing the cost of the malt and the
+possible profits on the ale. In October 1772, he writes from
+Lichfield:
+
+[Footnote 1: "Trade, answered Adams, is below a philosopher, as
+Aristotle proves in his first chapter of 'Politics,' and unnatural,
+as it is managed now."--_Joseph Andrews_.]
+
+"Do not suffer little things to disturb you. The brew-house must be
+the scene of action, and the subject of speculation. The first
+consequence of our late trouble ought to be, an endeavour to brew at
+a cheaper rate; an endeavour not violent and transient, but steady
+and continual, prosecuted with total contempt of censure or wonder,
+and animated by resolution not to stop while more can be done. Unless
+this can be done, nothing can help us; and if this be done, we shall
+not want help. Surely there is something to be saved; there is to be
+saved whatever is the difference between vigilance and neglect,
+between parsimony and profusion. The price of malt has risen again.
+It is now two pounds eight shillings the quarter. Ale is sold in the
+public-houses at sixpence a quart, a price which I never heard of
+before."
+
+In November of the same year, from Ashbourne:
+
+"DEAR MADAM,--So many days and never a letter!--_Fugere fides,
+pietasque pudorque_. This is Turkish usage. And I have been hoping
+and hoping. But you are so glad to have me out of your mind.[1]
+
+"I think you were quite right in your advice about the thousand
+pounds, for the payment could not have been delayed long; and a short
+delay would have lessened credit, without advancing interest. But in
+great matters you are hardly ever mistaken."
+
+[Footnote 1: This tone of playful reproach, when adopted by Johnson
+at a later period, has been cited as a proof of actual
+ill-treatment.]
+
+In May 17, 1773:
+
+"Why should Mr. T---- suppose, that what I took the liberty of
+suggesting was concerted with you? He does not know how much I
+revolve his affairs, and how honestly I desire his prosperity. I hope
+he has let the hint take some hold of his mind."
+
+In the copy of the printed letters presented by Mrs. Thrale to Sir
+James Fellowes, the blank is filled up with the name of Thrale, and
+the passage is thus annotated in her handwriting:
+
+"Concerning his (Thrale's) connection with quack chemists, quacks of
+all sorts; jumping up in the night to go to Marlbro' Street from
+Southwark, after some advertising mountebank, at hazard of his life,"
+In "Thraliana":
+
+"18_th July_, 1778.--Mr. Thrale overbrewed himself last winter and
+made an artificial scarcity of money in the family which has
+extremely lowered his spirits. Mr. Johnson endeavoured last night,
+and so did I, to make him promise that he would never more brew a
+larger quantity of beer in one winter than 80,000 barrels[1], but my
+Master, mad with the noble ambition of emulating Whitbread and
+Calvert, two fellows that he despises,--could scarcely be prevailed
+on to promise even _this_, that he will not brew more than four score
+thousand barrels a year for five years to come. He did promise that
+much, however; and so Johnson bade me write it down in the
+'Thraliana';--and so the wings of Speculation are clipped a
+little--very fain would I have pinioned her, but I had not strength
+to perform the operation."
+
+[Footnote 1: "If he got but 2_s._ 6_d._ by each barrel, 80,000 half
+crowns are £10,000; and what more would mortal man desire than an
+income of ten thousand a year--five to spend, and five to lay up?"]
+
+That Johnson's advice was neither thrown away nor undervalued, may be
+inferred from an incident related by Boswell. Mr. Perkins had hung up
+in the counting-house a fine proof of the mezzotinto of Dr. Johnson
+by Doughty; and when Mrs. Thrale asked him, somewhat flippantly, "Why
+do you put him up in the counting-house?" Mr. Perkins answered,
+"Because, Madam, I wish to have one wise man there." "Sir," said
+Johnson, "I thank you. It is a very handsome compliment, and I
+believe you speak sincerely."
+
+He was in the habit of paying the most minute attention to every
+branch of domestic economy, and his suggestions are invariably marked
+by shrewdness and good sense. Thus when Mrs. Thrale was giving
+evening parties, he told her that though few people might be hungry
+after a late dinner, she should always have a good supply of cakes
+and sweetmeats on a side table, and that some cold meat and a bottle
+of wine would often be found acceptable. Notwithstanding the
+imperfection of his eyesight, and his own slovenliness, he was a
+critical observer of dress and demeanour, and found fault without
+ceremony or compunction when any of his canons of taste or propriety
+were infringed. Several amusing examples are enumerated by Mrs.
+Thrale:
+
+"I commended a young lady for her beauty and pretty behaviour one
+day, however, to whom I thought no objections could have been made.
+'I saw her,' said Dr. Johnson, 'take a pair of scissors in her left
+hand though; and for all her father is now become a nobleman, and as
+you say excessively rich, I should, were I a youth of quality ten
+years hence, hesitate between a girl so neglected, and a _negro_.'
+
+"It was indeed astonishing how he _could_ remark such minuteness with
+a sight so miserably imperfect; but no accidental position of a
+riband escaped him, so nice was his observation, and so rigorous his
+demands of propriety. When I went with him to Litchfield, and came
+downstairs to breakfast at the inn, my dress did not please him, and
+he made me alter it entirely before he would stir a step with us
+about the town, saying most satirical things concerning the
+appearance I made in a riding-habit; and adding, ''Tis very strange
+that such eyes as yours cannot discern propriety of dress: if I had a
+sight only half as good, I think I should see to the centre.'
+
+"Another lady, whose accomplishments he never denied, came to our
+house one day covered with diamonds, feathers, &c., and he did not
+seem inclined to chat with her as usual. I asked him why? when the
+company was gone. 'Why, her head looked so like that of a woman who
+shows puppets,' said he, 'and her voice so confirmed the fancy, that
+I could not bear her to-day; when she wears a large cap, I can talk
+to her.'
+
+"When the ladies wore lace trimmings to their clothes, he expressed
+his contempt of the reigning fashion in these terms: 'A Brussels
+trimming is like bread-sauce,' said he, 'it takes away the glow of
+colour from the gown, and gives you nothing instead of it; but sauce
+was invented to heighten the flavour of our food, and trimming is an
+ornament to the manteau, or it is nothing. Learn,' said he, 'that
+there is propriety or impropriety in every thing how slight soever,
+and get at the general principles of dress and of behaviour; if you
+then transgress them, you will at least know that they are not
+observed.'"
+
+Madame D'Arblay confirms this account. He had just been finding fault
+with a bandeau worn by Lady Lade, a very large woman, standing six
+feet high without her shoes:
+
+"_Dr. J._--The truth is, women, take them in general, have no idea of
+grace. Fashion is all they think of. I don't mean Mrs. Thrale and
+Miss Burney, when I talk of women!--they are goddesses!--and
+therefore I except them.
+
+"_Mrs. Thrale._--Lady Lade never wore the bandeau, and said she never
+would, because it is unbecoming.
+
+"_Dr. J. (laughing.)_--Did not she? then is Lady Lade a charming
+woman, and I have yet hopes of entering into engagements with her!
+
+"_Mrs. T._--Well, as to that I can't say; but to be sure, the only
+similitude I have yet discovered in you, is in size: there you agree
+mighty well.
+
+"_Dr. J._--Why, if anybody could have worn the bandeau, it must have
+been Lady Lade; for there is enough of her to carry it off; but you
+are too little for anything ridiculous; that which seems nothing upon
+a Patagonian, will become very conspicuous upon a Lilliputian, and of
+you there is so little in all, that one single absurdity would
+swallow up half of you."
+
+Matrimony was one of his favourite subjects, and he was fond of
+laying down and refining on the duties of the married state, with the
+amount of happiness and comfort to be found in it. But once when he
+was musing over the fire in the drawing-room at Streatham, a young
+gentleman called to him suddenly, "Mr. Johnson, would you advise me
+to marry?" "I would advise no man to marry, Sir," replied the Doctor
+in a very angry tone, "who is not likely to propagate understanding;"
+and so left the room. "Our companion," adds Mrs. Thrale, in the
+"Anecdotes," "looked confounded, and I believe had scarce recovered
+the consciousness of his own existence, when Johnson came back, and,
+drawing his chair among us, with altered looks and a softened voice,
+joined in the general chat, insensibly led the conversation to the
+subject of marriage, where he laid himself out in a dissertation so
+useful, so elegant, so founded on the true knowledge of human life,
+and so adorned with beauty of sentiment, that no one ever recollected
+the offence, except to rejoice in its consequences."
+
+The young gentleman was Mr. Thrale's nephew, Sir John Lade; who was
+proposed, half in earnest, whilst still a minor, by the Doctor as a
+fitting mate for the author of "Evelina." 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 "Thraliana" she says:--"Lady Lade consulted him about her son, Sir
+John. 'Endeavour, Madam,' said he, 'to procure him knowledge; for
+really ignorance to a rich man is like fat to a sick sheep, it only
+serves to call the rooks about him.' On the same occasion it was that
+he observed how a mind unfurnished with subjects and materials for
+thinking can keep up no dignity at all in solitude. 'It is,' says he,
+'in the state of a mill without grist.'"
+
+The attractions of Streatham must have been very strong, to induce
+Johnson to pass so much of his time away from "the busy hum of men"
+in Fleet Street, and "the full tide of human existence" at Charing
+Cross. He often found fault with Mrs. Thrale for living so much in
+the country, "feeding the chickens till she starved her
+understanding." Walking in a wood when it rained, she tells us, "was
+the only rural image he pleased his fancy with; for he would say,
+after one has gathered the apples in an orchard, one wishes them well
+baked, and removed to a London eating-house for enjoyment." This is
+almost as bad as the foreigner, who complained that there was no ripe
+fruit in England but the roasted apples. Amongst other modes of
+passing time in the country, Johnson once or twice tried hunting and,
+mounted on an old horse of Mr. Thrale's, acquitted himself to the
+surprise of the "field," one of whom delighted him by exclaiming,
+"Why Johnson rides as well, for ought I see, as the most illiterate
+fellow in England." But a trial or two satisfied him--
+
+ "He thought at heart like courtly Chesterfield,
+ Who after a long chase o'er hills, dales, fields,
+ And what not, though he rode beyond all price,
+ Ask'd next day,'If men ever hunted twice?'"
+
+It is very strange, and very melancholy, was his reflection, that the
+paucity of human pleasures should persuade us ever to call hunting
+one of them. The mode of locomotion in which he delighted was the
+vehicular. As he was driving rapidly in a postchaise with Boswell, he
+exclaimed, "Life has not many things better than this." On their way
+from Dr. Taylor's to Derby in 1777, he said, "If I had no duties, and
+no reference to futurity, I would spend my life in driving briskly in
+a postchaise with a pretty woman, but she should be one who could
+understand me, and would add something to the conversation."
+
+Mr. Croker attributes his enjoyment to the novelty of the pleasure;
+his poverty having in early life prevented him from travelling post.
+But a better reason is given by Mrs. Thrale:
+
+"I asked him why he doated on a coach so? and received for answer,
+that in the first place, the company were shut in with him _there_;
+and could not escape, as out of a room; in the next place, he heard
+all that was said in a carriage, where it was my turn to be deaf; and
+very impatient was he at my occasional difficulty of hearing. On this
+account he wished to travel all over the world: for the very act of
+going forward was delightful to him, and he gave himself no concern
+about accidents, which he said never happened; nor did the
+running-away of the horses at the edge of a precipice between Vernon
+and St. Denys in France convince him to the contrary: 'for nothing
+came of it,' he said, 'except that Mr. Thrale leaped out of the
+carriage into a chalk-pit, and then came up again, looking as
+_white_!' When the truth was, all their lives were saved by the
+greatest providence ever exerted in favour of three human creatures:
+and the part Mr. Thrale took from desperation was the likeliest thing
+in the world to produce broken limbs and death."
+
+The drawbacks on his gratification and on that of his fellow
+travellers were his physical defects, and his utter insensibility to
+the beauty of nature, as well as to the fine arts, in so far as they
+were addressed to the senses of sight and hearing. "He delighted,"
+says Mrs. Thrale, "no more in music than painting; he was almost as
+deaf as he was blind; travelling with Dr. Johnson was, for these
+reasons, tiresome enough. Mr. Thrale loved prospects, and was
+mortified that his friend could not enjoy the sight of those
+different dispositions of wood and water, hill and valley, that
+travelling through England and France affords a man. But when he
+wished to point them out to his companion: 'Never heed such
+nonsense,' would be the reply: 'a blade of grass is always a blade of
+grass, whether in one country or another: let us, if we _do_ talk,
+talk about something; men and women are my subjects of inquiry; let
+us see how these differ from those we have left behind."
+
+It is no small deduction from our admiration of Johnson, and no
+trifling enhancement of his friends' kindness in tolerating his
+eccentricities, that he seldom made allowance for his own palpable
+and undeniable deficiencies. As well might a blind man deny the
+existence of colours, as a purblind man assert that there was no
+charm in a prospect, or in a Claude or Titian, because he could see
+none. Once, by way of pleasing Reynolds, he pretended to lament that
+the great painter's genius was not exerted on stuff more durable than
+canvas, and suggested copper. Sir Joshua urged the difficulty of
+procuring plates large enough for historical subjects. "What foppish
+obstacles are these!" exclaimed Johnson. "Here is Thrale has a
+thousand ton of copper: you may paint it all round if you will, I
+suppose; it will serve him to brew in afterwards. Will it not, Sir?"
+(to Thrale, who sate by.)
+
+He always "civilised" to Dr. Burney, who has supplied the following
+anecdote:
+
+"After having talked slightingly of music, he was observed to listen
+very attentively while Miss Thrale played on the harpsichord; and
+with eagerness he called to her, 'Why don't you dash away like
+Burney?' Dr. Burney upon this said to him, 'I believe, Sir, we shall
+make a musician of you at last.' Johnson with candid complacency
+replied, 'Sir, I shall be glad to have a new sense given to me.'"
+
+In 1774, the Thrales made a tour in Wales, mainly for the purpose of
+revisiting her birthplace and estates. They were accompanied by
+Johnson, who kept a diary of the expedition, beginning July 5th and
+ending September 24th. It was preserved by his negro servant, and
+Boswell had no suspicion of its existence, for he says, "I do not
+find that he kept any journal or notes of what he saw there." The
+diary was first published by Mr. Duppa in 1816; and some manuscript
+notes by Mrs. Thrale which reached that gentleman too late for
+insertion, have been added in Mr. Murray's recent edition of the
+Life. The first entry is:
+
+"_Tuesday, July 5_.--We left Streatham 11 A.M. Price of four horses
+two shillings a mile. Barnet 1.40 P.M. On the road I read 'Tully's
+Epistles.' At night at Dunstable." At Chester, he records:--"We
+walked round the walls, which are complete, and contain one mile,
+three quarters, and one hundred and one yards." Mrs. Thrale's comment
+is, "Of those ill-fated walls Dr. Johnson might have learned the
+extent from any one. He has since put me fairly out of countenance by
+saying, 'I have known _my mistress_ fifteen years, and never saw her
+fairly out of humour but on Chester wall.' It was because he would
+keep Miss Thrale beyond her hour of going to bed to walk on the wall,
+where from the want of light, I apprehended some accident to her,
+perhaps to him."
+
+He thus describes Mrs. Thrale's family mansion:
+
+"_Saturday, July 30._--We went to Bâch y Graig, where we found an old
+house, built 1567, in an uncommon and incommodious form--My mistress
+chatted about tiring, but I prevailed on her to go to the top--The
+floors have been stolen: the windows are stopped--The house was less
+than I seemed to expect--The River Clwyd is a brook with a bridge of
+one arch, about one third of a mile--The woods have many trees,
+generally young; but some which seem to decay--They have been
+lopped--The house never had a garden--The addition of another story
+would make an useful house, but it cannot be great."
+
+On the 4th August, they visited Rhuddlan Castle and Bodryddan[1], of
+which he says:--
+
+[Footnote 1: Now the property of Mr. Shipley Conway, the
+great-grandson of Johnson's acquaintance, the Bishop of St. Asaph,
+and representative, through females, of Sir John Conway or Conwy, to
+whom Rhuddlan Castle, with its domain, was granted by Edward the
+First.]
+
+"Stapylton's house is pretty: there are pleasing shades about it,
+with a constant spring that supplies a cold bath. We then went out to
+see a cascade. I trudged unwillingly, and was not sorry to find it
+dry. The water was, however, turned on, and produced a very striking
+cataract."[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: Bowles, the poet, on the unexpected arrival of a party
+to see his grounds, was overheard giving a hurried order to set the
+fountain playing and carry the hermit his beard.]
+
+Mrs. Piozzi remarks on this passage: "He teased Mrs. Cotton about her
+dry cascade till she was ready to cry."
+
+Mrs. Cotton, _née_ Stapylton, married the eldest son of Sir Lynch
+Cotton, and was the mother of Field-Marshal Viscount Combermere. She
+said that Johnson, despite of his rudeness, was at times delightful,
+having a manner peculiar to himself in relating anecdotes that could
+not fail to attract both old and young. Her impression was that Mrs.
+Thrale was very vexatious in wishing to engross all his attention,
+which annoyed him much. This, I fancy, is no uncommon impression,
+when we ourselves are anxious to attract notice.
+
+The range of hills bordering the valley or delta of the Clwyd, is
+very fine. On their being pointed out to him by his host, he
+exclaimed: "Hills, do you call them?--mere mole-hills to the Alps or
+to those in Scotland." On being told that Sir Richard Clough had
+formed a plan for making the river navigable to Rhyddlan, he broke
+out into a loud fit of laughter, and shouted--"why, Sir, I could
+clear any part of it by a leap." He probably had seen neither the
+hills nor the river, which might easily be made navigable.
+
+On two occasions, Johnson incidentally imputes a want of liberality
+to Mrs. Thrale, which the general tenor of her conduct belies:
+
+"_August 2._--We went to Dymerchion Church, where the old clerk
+acknowledged his mistress. It is the parish church of Bâch y Graig; a
+mean fabric; Mr. Salusbury (Mrs. Thrale's father) was buried in
+it.... The old clerk had great appearance of joy, and foolishly said
+that he was now willing to die. He had only a crown given him by my
+mistress."
+
+"_August 4._--Mrs. Thrale lost her purse. She expressed so much
+uneasiness that I concluded the sum to be very great; but when I
+heard of only seven guineas, I was glad to find she had so much
+sensibility of money."
+
+Johnson might have remarked, that the annoyance we experience from a
+loss is seldom entirely regulated by the pecuniary value of the thing
+lost.
+
+On the way to Holywell he sets down: "Talk with mistress about
+flattery;" on which she notes: "He said I flattered the people to
+whose houses we went: I was saucy and said I was obliged to be civil
+for two, meaning himself and me.[1] He replied nobody would thank me
+for compliments they did not understand. At Gwanynog (Mr.
+Middleton's), however, _he_ was flattered, and was happy of course."
+
+[Footnote 1: Madame D'Arblay reports Mrs. Thrale saying to Johnson at
+Streatham, in September, 1778: "I remember, Sir, when we were
+travelling in Wales, how you called me to account for my civility to
+the people; 'Madam,' you said, 'let me have no more of this idle
+commendation of nothing. Why is it, that whatever you see, and
+whoever you see, you are to be so indiscriminately lavish of praise?'
+'Why I'll tell you, Sir,' said I, 'when I am with you, and Mr.
+Thrale, and Queeny, I am obliged to be civil for four!'"]
+
+The other entries referring to the Thrales are:
+
+"_August_ 22.--We went to visit Bodville, the place where Mrs. Thrale
+was born, and the churches called Tydweilliog and Llangwinodyl, which
+she holds by impropriation."
+
+"_August_ 24.--We went to see Bodville. Mrs. Thrale remembered the
+rooms, and wandered over them, with recollections of her childhood.
+This species of pleasure is always melancholy.... Mr. Thrale purposes
+to beautify the churches, and, if he prospers, will probably restore
+the tithes. Mrs. Thrale visited a house where she had been used to
+drink milk, which was left, with an estate of 200_l._ a year, by one
+Lloyd, to a married woman who lived with him."
+
+"_August_ 26.--_Note_. Queeny's goats, 149, I think."
+
+Without Mr. Duppa's aid this last entry would be a puzzle for
+commentators. His note is:
+
+"Mr. Thrale was near-sighted, and could not see the goats browsing on
+Snowdon, and he promised his daughter, who was a child of ten years
+old, a penny for every goat she would show him, and Dr. Johnson kept
+the account; so that it appears her father was in debt to her one
+hundred and forty-nine pence. _Queeny_ was an epithet, which had its
+origin in the nursery, by which (in allusion to _Queen_ Esther) Miss
+Thrale (whose name was Esther) was always distinguished by Johnson."
+She was named, after her mother, Hester, not Esther.
+
+On September 13, Johnson sets down: "We came, to Lord Sandys', at
+Ombersley, where we were treated with great civility." It was here,
+as he told Mrs. Thrale, that for the only time in his life he had as
+much wall fruit as he liked; yet she says that he was in the habit of
+eating six or seven peaches before breakfast during the fruit season
+at Streatham. Swift was also fond of fruit: "observing (says Scott)
+that a gentleman in whose garden he walked with some friends, seemed
+to have no intention to request them to eat any, the Dean remarked
+that it was a saying of his dear grandmother:
+
+ "'Always pull a peach
+ When it is within your reach;'
+
+and helping himself accordingly, his example was followed by the
+whole company." Thomson, the author of the "Castle of Indolence," was
+once seen lounging round Lord Burlington's garden, with his hands in
+his waistcoat pockets, biting off the sunny sides of the peaches.
+
+Johnson's dislike to the Lyttletons was not abated by his visit to
+Hagley, of which he says, "We made haste away from a place where all
+were offended." Mrs. Thrale's explanation is: "Mrs. Lyttelton,
+_ci-devant_ Caroline Bristow, forced me to play at whist against my
+liking, and her husband took away Johnson's candle that he wanted to
+read by at the other end of the room. Those, I trust, were the
+offences."
+
+He was not in much better humour at Combermere Abbey, the seat of her
+relative, Sir Lynch Cotton, which is beautifully situated on one of
+the finest lakes in England. He commends the place grudgingly, passes
+a harsh judgment on Lady Cotton, and is traditionally recorded to
+have made answer to the baronet who inquired what he thought of a
+neighbouring peer (Lord Kilmorey): "A dull, commonplace sort of man,
+just like you and your brother."
+
+In a letter to Levet, dated Lleweny, in Denbighshire, August 16,
+1774, printed by Boswell, is this sentence: "Wales, so far as I have
+yet seen of it, is a very beautiful and rich country, all enclosed
+and planted." Her marginal note is: "Yet to please Mr. Thrale, he
+feigned abhorrence of it."
+
+I am indebted to an intelligent and accurate in-formant for a curious
+incident of the Welsh tour:
+
+"Dr. Johnson was taken by Mr. and Mrs. Thrale to dine at Maesnynan,
+with my relation, Mr. Lloyd, who, with his pretty young daughter
+(motherless), received them at the door. All came out of the carriage
+except the great lexicographer, who was crouching in what my uncle
+jokingly called the Poets' Corner, deeply interested evidently with
+the book he was reading. A wink from Mrs. Thrale, and a touch of her
+hand, silenced the host. She bade the coachman not move, and desired
+the people in the house to let Mr. Johnson read on till dinner was on
+the table, when she would go and whistle him to it. She always had a
+whistle hung at her girdle, and this she used, when in Wales, to
+summon him and her daughters[1], when in or out of doors. Mr. Lloyd
+and all the visitors went to see the effect of the whistle, and found
+him reading intently with one foot on the step of the carriage, where
+he had been (a looker-on said) five minutes."
+
+[Footnote 1:
+
+ "He cast off his friends as a huntsman his pack,
+ For he knew when he pleas'd he could whistle them back."]
+
+"This scene is well told by Miss Burney, in her 'Camilla'[1] _ex
+relatione_ Mrs. Williams (Lady Cotton's sister, who was present) and
+Beata Lloyd, whose brother, Colonel Thomas Lloyd, of the Guards, was
+the Brummell of his day, celebrated for his manly beauty and
+accomplishments. I heard Lord Crewe say that Colonel Lloyd's horse,
+and his graceful manner of mounting him, used to attract members of
+both Houses (he among them) to _turn out_ to see him mount guard; and
+the Princesses were forbidden, when driving out, to go so often that
+way and at that time."
+
+[Footnote 1: Book viii. chap, iv., Dr. Orkborne is described standing
+on the staircase of an inn absorbed in the composition of a paragraph
+whilst the party are at dinner.]
+
+Their impressions of one another as travelling companions were
+sufficiently favourable to induce the party (with the addition of
+Baretti) to make a short tour in France in the autumn of the year
+following, 1775, during part of which Johnson kept a diary in the
+same laconic and elliptical style. The only allusion to either of his
+friends is:
+
+"We went to Sansterre, a brewer. He brews with about as much malt as
+Mr. Thrale, and sells his beer at the same price, though he pays no
+duty for malt, and little more than half as much for beer. Beer is
+sold retail at sixpence a bottle."
+
+In a letter to Levet, dated Paris, Oct. 22, 1775, he says:
+
+"We went to see the king and queen at dinner, and the queen was so
+impressed by Miss, that she sent one of the gentlemen to inquire who
+she was. I find all true that you have ever told me at Paris. Mr.
+Thrale is very liberal, and keeps us two coaches, and a very fine
+table; but I think our cookery very bad. Mrs. Thrale got into a
+convent of English nuns, and I talked with her through the grate, and
+I am very kindly used by the English Benedictine friars."
+
+A striking instance of Johnson's occasional impracticability occurred
+during this journey:
+
+"When we were at Rouen together," says Mrs. Thrale, "he took a great
+fancy to the Abbe Kofiette, with whom he conversed about the
+destruction of the order of Jesuits, and condemned it loudly, as a
+blow to the general power of the church, and likely to be followed
+with many and dangerous innovations, which might at length become
+fatal to religion itself, and shake even the foundation of
+Christianity. The gentleman seemed to wonder and delight in his
+conversation: the talk was all in Latin, which both spoke fluently,
+and Mr. Johnson pronounced a long eulogium upon Milton with so much
+ardour, eloquence, and ingenuity, that the abbé rose from his seat
+and embraced him. My husband seeing them apparently so charmed with
+the company of each other, politely invited the abbé to England,
+intending to oblige his friend; who, instead of thanking, reprimanded
+him severely before the man, for such a sudden burst of tenderness
+towards a person he could know nothing at all of; and thus put a
+sudden finish to all his own and Mr. Thrale's entertainment from the
+company of the Abbé Roffette."
+
+In a letter dated May 9, 1780, also, Mrs. Thrale alludes to more than
+one disagreement in France:
+
+"When did I ever plague you about contour, and grace, and expression?
+I have dreaded them all three since that hapless day at Compiegne,
+when you teased me so, and Mr. Thrale made what I hoped would have
+proved a lasting peace; but French ground is unfavourable to fidelity
+perhaps, and so now you begin again: after having taken five years'
+breath, you might have done more than this. Say another word, and I
+will bring up afresh the history of your exploits at St. Denys and
+how cross you were for nothing--but some how or other, our travels
+never make any part either of our conversation or correspondence."
+
+Joseph Baretti, who now formed one of the family, is so mixed up with
+their history that some account of him becomes indispensable. He was
+a Piedmontese, whose position in his native country was not of a kind
+to tempt him to remain in it, when Lord Charlemont, to whom he had
+been useful in Italy, proposed his coming to England. His own story
+was that he had lost at play the little property he had inherited
+from his father, an architect. The education given him by his parents
+was limited to Latin; he taught himself English, French, Spanish, and
+Portuguese. His talents, acquirements, and strength of mind must have
+been considerable, for they soon earned him the esteem and friendship
+of the most eminent members of the Johnsonian circle, in despite of
+his arrogance. He came to England in 1753; is kindly mentioned in one
+of Johnson's letters in 1754; and when he was in Italy in 1761, his
+illustrious friend's letters to him are marked by a tone of
+affectionate interest. Ceremony and tenderness are oddly blended in
+the conclusion of one of them:
+
+"May you, my Baretti, be very happy at Milan, or some other place
+nearer to, Sir, your most affectionate humble servant, SAMUEL
+JOHNSON."
+
+Johnson remarked of Baretti in 1768: "I know no man who carries his
+head higher in conversation than Baretti. There are strong powers in
+his mind. He has not indeed many hooks, but with what hooks he has,
+he grapples very forcibly." Cornelia Knight was "disgusted by his
+satirical madness of manner," although admitting him to be a man of
+great learning and information. Madame D'Arblay was more struck by
+his rudeness and violence than by his intellectual vigour.
+"Thraliana" confirms Johnson's estimate of Baretti's capacity:
+
+"Will. Burke was tart upon Mr. Baretti for being too dogmatical in
+his talk about politics. 'You have,' says he, 'no business to be
+investigating the characters of Lord Falkland or Mr. Hampden. You
+cannot judge of their merits, they are no countrymen of yours.'
+'True,' replied Baretti, 'and you should learn by the same rule to
+speak very cautiously about Brutus and Mark Antony; they are my
+countrymen, and I must have their characters tenderly treated by
+foreigners.'
+
+"Baretti could not endure to be called, or scarcely thought, a
+foreigner, and indeed it did not often occur to his company that he
+was one; for his accent was wonderfully proper, and his language
+always copious, always nervous, always full of various allusions,
+flowing too with a rapidity worthy of admiration, and far beyond the
+power of nineteen in twenty natives. He had also a knowledge of the
+solemn language and the gay, could be sublime with Johnson, or
+blackguard with the groom; could dispute, could rally, could quibble,
+in our language. Baretti has, besides, some skill in music, with a
+bass voice, very agreeable, besides a falsetto which he can manage so
+as to mimic any singer he hears. I would also trust his knowledge of
+painting a long way. These accomplishments, with his extensive power
+over every modern language, make him a most pleasing companion while
+he is in good humour; and his lofty consciousness of his own
+superiority, which made him tenacious of every position, and drew him
+into a thousand distresses, did not, I must own, ever disgust me,
+till he began to exercise it against myself, and resolve to reign in
+our house by fairly defying the mistress of it. Pride, however,
+though shocking enough, is never despicable, but vanity, which he
+possessed too, in an eminent degree, will sometimes make a man near
+sixty ridiculous.
+
+"France displayed all Mr. Baretti's useful powers--he bustled for us,
+he catered for us, he took care of the child, he secured an apartment
+for the maid, he provided for our safety, our amusement, our repose;
+without him the pleasure of that journey would never have balanced
+the pain. And great was his disgust, to be sure, when he caught us,
+as he often did, ridiculing French manners, French sentiments, &c. I
+think he half cryed to Mrs. Payne, the landlady at Dover, on our
+return, because we laughed at French cookery, and French
+accommodations. Oh, how he would court the maids at the inns abroad,
+abuse the men perhaps! and that with a facility not to be exceeded,
+as they all confessed, by any of the natives. But so he could in
+Spain, I find, and so 'tis plain he could here. I will give one
+instance of his skill in our low street language. Walking in a field
+near Chelsea, he met a fellow, who, suspecting him from dress and
+manner to be a foreigner, said sneeringly, 'Come, Sir, will you show
+me the way to France?' 'No, Sir,' says Baretti, instantly, 'but I
+will show you the way to Tyburn.' Such, however, was his ignorance in
+a certain line, that he once asked Johnson for information who it was
+composed the Pater Noster, and I heard him tell Evans[1] the story of
+Dives and Lazarus as the subject of a poem he once had composed in
+the Milanese dialect, expecting great credit for his powers of
+invention. Evans owned to me that he thought the man drunk, whereas
+poor Baretti was, both in eating and drinking, a model of temperance.
+Had he guessed Evans's thoughts, the parson's gown would scarcely
+have saved him a knouting from the ferocious Italian."
+
+[Footnote 1: Evans was a clergyman and rector of Southwark.]
+
+On Oct. 20, 1769, Baretti was tried at the Old Bailey on a charge of
+murder, for killing with a pocket knife one of three men who, with a
+woman of the town, hustled him in the Haymarket.[1] He was acquitted,
+and the event is principally memorable for the appearance of Johnson,
+Burke, Grarrick, and Beauclerc as witnesses to character. The
+substance of Johnson's evidence is thus given in the "Gentleman's
+Magazine":
+
+[Footnote 1: In his defence, he said:--"I hope it will be seen that
+my knife was neither a weapon of offence or defence. I wear it to
+carve fruit and sweetmeats, and not to kill my fellow creatures. It
+is a general custom in France not to put knives on the table, so that
+even ladies wear them in their pockets for general use."]
+
+"_Dr. J_.--I believe I began to be acquainted with Mr. Baretti about
+the year 1753 or 1754. I have been intimate with him. He is a man of
+literature, a very studious man, a man of great diligence. He gets
+his living by study. I have no reason to think he was ever disordered
+with liquor in his life. A man that I never knew to be otherwise than
+peaceable, and a man that I take to be rather timorous.--_Q_. Was he
+addicted to pick up women in the streets?--_Dr. J. I_ never knew that
+he was.--_Q_. How is he as to eyesight?--_Dr. J._ He does not see me
+now, nor do I see him. I do not believe he could be capable of
+assaulting any body in the street, without great provocation."
+
+It would seem that Johnson's sensibility, such as it was, was not
+very severely taxed.
+
+"_Boswell_.--But suppose now, Sir, that one of your intimate friends
+were apprehended for an offence for which he might be hanged?
+
+"_Johnson_.---I should do what I could to bail him; but if he were
+once fairly hanged, I should not suffer.
+
+"_Boswell_.--Would you eat your dinner that day, Sir?
+
+"_Johnson_.--Yes, Sir, and eat it as if he were eating it with me.
+Why, there's Baretti, who is to be tried for his life to-morrow.
+Friends have risen up for him on every side, yet if he should be
+hanged, none of them will eat a slice of plum-pudding the less. Sir,
+that sympathetic feeling goes a very little way in depressing the
+mind."
+
+Steevens relates that one evening previous to the trial a
+consultation of Baretti's friends was held at the house of Mr. Cox,
+the solicitor. Johnson and Burke were present, and differed as to
+some point of the defence. On Steevens observing to Johnson that the
+question had been agitated with rather too much warmth, "It may be
+so," replied the sage, "for Burke and I should have been of one
+opinion if we had had no audience." This is coming very near to--
+
+ "Would rather that the man should die
+ Than his prediction prove a lie."
+
+Two anecdotes of Baretti during his imprisonment are preserved in
+"Thraliana":
+
+"When Johnson and Burke went to see Baretti in Newgate, they had
+small comfort to give him, and bid him not hope too strongly. 'Why
+what can _he_ fear,' says Baretti, placing himself between 'em, 'that
+holds two such hands as I do?'
+
+"An Italian came one day to Baretti, when he was in Newgate for
+murder, to desire a letter of recommendation for the teaching of his
+scholars, when he (Baretti) should be hanged. 'You rascal,' replies
+Baretti, in a rage, 'if I were not _in my own apartment_, I would
+kick you down stairs directly,'"
+
+The year after his acquittal Baretti published "Travels through
+Spain, Portugal, and France;" thus mentioned by Johnson in a Letter
+to Mrs, Thrale, dated Lichfield, July 20, 1770:
+
+"That Baretti's book would please you all, I made no doubt. I know
+not whether the world has ever seen such travels before. Those whose
+lot it is to ramble can seldom write, and those who know how to write
+can seldom ramble." The rate of pay showed that the world was aware
+of the value of the acquisition. He gained _500l._ by this book. His
+"Frusta Letteraria," published some time before in Italy, had also
+attracted much attention, and, according to Johnson, he was the first
+who ever received money for copyright in Italy,
+
+In a biographical notice of Baretti which appeared in the
+"Gentleman's Magazine" for May, 1789, written by Dr. Vincent, Dean of
+Westminster, it is stated that it was not distress which compelled
+him to accept Mr. Thrale's hospitality, but that he was overpersuaded
+by Johnson, contrary to his own inclination, to undertake the
+instruction of the Misses Thrale in Italian. "He was either nine or
+eleven years almost entirely in that family," says the Dean, "though
+he still rented a lodging in town, during which period he expended
+his own _500l._, and received nothing in return for his instruction,
+but the participation of a good table, and _150l._ by way of
+presents. Instead of his letters to Mrs. Piozzi in the 'European
+Magazine,' had he told this plain unvarnished tale, he would have
+convicted that lady of avarice and ingratitude, without incurring the
+danger of a reply, or exposing his memory to be insulted by her
+advocates."
+
+He was less than three years in the family. As he had a pension of
+_80l._ a year, besides the interest of his _500l._, he did not want
+money. If he had been allowed to want it, the charge of avarice would
+lie at Mr., not Mrs., Thrale's door; and his memory was exposed to no
+insult beyond the stigma which (as we shall presently see) his
+conduct and language necessarily fixed upon it. All his literary
+friends did not entertain the same high opinion of him. An
+unpublished letter from Dr. Warton to his brother contains the
+following passage:
+
+"He (Huggins, the translator of Ariosto) abuses Baretti infernally,
+and says that he one day lent Baretti a gold watch, and could never
+get it afterwards; that after many excuses Baretti, skulked, and then
+got Johnson to write to Mr. Huggins a suppliant letter; that this
+letter stopped Huggins awhile, while Baretti got a protection from
+the Sardinian ambassador; and that, at last, with great difficulty,
+the watch was got from a pawnbroker to whom Baretti had sold it."
+
+This extract is copied from a valuable contribution to the literary
+annals of the eighteenth century, for which we are indebted to the
+colonial press.[1] It is the diary of an Irish clergyman, containing
+strong internal evidence of authenticity, although nothing more is
+known of it than that the manuscript was discovered behind an old
+press in one of the offices of the Supreme Court of New South Wales.
+That such a person saw a good deal of Johnson in 1775, is proved by
+Boswell, whose accuracy is frequently confirmed in return. In one
+marginal note Mrs. Thrale says: "He was a fine showy talking man.
+Johnson liked him of all things in a year or two." In another: "Dr.
+Campbell was a very tall handsome man, and, speaking of some other
+_High_-bernian, used this expression: 'Indeed now, and upon my honour,
+Sir, I am but a Twitter to him.'"[2]
+
+[Footnote 1: Diary of a Visit to England in 1775. By an Irishman (the
+Rev. Doctor Thomas Campbell, author of "A Philosophical Survey of the
+South of Ireland.") And other Papers by the same hand. With Notes by
+Samuel Raymond, M.A., Prothonotary of the Supreme Court of New South
+Wales. Sydney. Waugh and Cox. 1854.]
+
+[Footnote 2: He is similarly described in the "Letters," vol. i. p.
+329.]
+
+Several of his entries throw light on the Thrale establishment:
+
+"_14th._--This day I called at Mr. Thrale's, where I was received
+with all respect by Mr. and Mrs. Thrale. She is a very learned lady,
+and joins to the charms of her own sex, the manly understanding of
+ours. The immensity of the brewery astonished me."
+
+"_16th._--Dined with Mr. Thrale along with Dr. Johnson, and Baretti.
+Baretti is a plain sensible man, who seems to know the world well. He
+talked to me of the invitation given him by the College of Dublin,
+but said it (100_l._ a year and rooms) was not worth his acceptance;
+and if it had been, he said, in point of profit, still he would not
+have accepted it, for that now he could not live out of London. He
+had returned a few years ago to his own country, but he could not
+enjoy it; and he was obliged to return to London, to those connexions
+he had been making for near thirty years past. He told me he had
+several families with whom, both in town and country, he could go at
+any time and spend a month: he is at this time on these terms at Mr.
+Thrale's, and he knows how to keep his ground. Talking as we were at
+tea of the magnitude of the beer vessels, he said there was one thing
+in Mr. Thrale's house still more extraordinary;--meaning his wife.
+She gulped the pill very prettily,--so much for Baretti!
+
+"Johnson, you are the very man Lord Chesterfield describes: a
+Hottentot indeed, and though your abilities are respectable, you
+never can be respected yourself! He has the aspect of an idiot,
+without the faintest ray of sense gleaming from any one feature--with
+the most awkward garb, and unpowdered grey wig, on one side only of
+his head--he is for ever dancing the devil's jig, and sometimes he
+makes the most driveling effort to whistle some thought in his absent
+paroxysms."
+
+"_25th._--Dined at Mr. Thrale's where there were ten or more
+gentlemen, and but one lady besides Mrs. Thrale. The dinner was
+excellent: first course, soups at head and foot, removed by fish and
+a saddle of mutton; second course, a fowl they call galena at head,
+and a capon larger than some of our Irish turkeys, at foot; third
+course, four different sorts of ices, pine-apple, grape, raspberry,
+and a fourth; in each remove there were I think fourteen dishes. The
+two first courses were served in massy plate. I sat beside Baretti,
+which was to me the richest part of the entertainment. He and Mr. and
+Mrs. Thrale joined in expressing to me Dr. Johnson's concern that he
+could not give me the meeting that day, but desired that I should go
+and see him."
+
+"_April 1st._--Dined at Mr. Thrale's, whom in proof of the magnitude
+of London, I cannot help remarking, no coachman, and this is the
+third I have called, could find without inquiry. But of this by the
+way. There was Murphy, Boswell, and Baretti: the two last, as I
+learned just before I entered, are mortal foes, so much so that
+Murphy and Mrs. Thrale agreed that Boswell expressed a desire that
+Baretti should be hanged upon that unfortunate affair of his killing,
+&c. Upon this hint, I went, and without any sagacity, it was easily
+discernible, for upon Baretti's entering Boswell did not rise, and
+upon Baretti's descry of Boswell he grinned a perturbed glance.
+Politeness however smooths the most hostile brows, and theirs were
+smoothed. Johnson was the subject, both before and after dinner, for
+it was the boast of all but myself, that under that roof were the
+Doctor's fast friends. His _bon-mots_ were retailed in such plenty,
+that they, like a surfeit, could not lie upon my memory."
+
+"N.B. The 'Tour to the Western Isles' was written an twenty days, and
+the 'Patriot' in three; 'Taxation no Tyranny,' within a week: and not
+one of them would have yet seen the light, had it not been for Mrs.
+Thrale and Baretti, who stirred him up by laying wagers."
+
+"_April 8th._--Dined with Thrale, where Dr. Johnson was, and Boswell
+(and Baretti as usual). The Doctor was not in as good spirits as he
+was at Dilly's. He had supped the night before with Lady ----, Miss
+Jeffries, one of the maids of honour, Sir Joshua Reynolds, &c., at
+Mrs. Abington's. He said Sir C. Thompson, and some others who were
+there, spoke like people who had seen good company, and so did Mrs.
+Abington herself, who could not have seen good company."
+
+Boswell's note, alluding to the same topic, is:
+
+"On Saturday, April 8, I dined with him at Mr. Thrale's, where we met
+the Irish Dr. Campbell. Johnson had supped the night before at Mrs.
+Abington's with some fashionable people whom he named; and he seemed
+much pleased with having made one in so elegant a circle. Nor did he
+omit to pique his _mistress_ a little with jealousy of her
+housewifery; for he said, with a smile, 'Mrs. Abington's jelly, my
+dear lady, was better than yours.'"
+
+The next year is chiefly memorable for the separation from Baretti,
+thus mentioned in "Thraliana":
+
+"Baretti had a comical aversion to Mrs. Macaulay, and his aversions
+are numerous and strong. If I had not once written his character in
+verse,[1] I would now write it in prose, for few people know him
+better: he was--_Dieu me pardonne_, as the French say--my inmate for
+very near three years; and though I really liked the man once for his
+talents, and at last was weary of him for the use he made of them, I
+never altered my sentiments concerning him; for his character is
+easily seen, and his soul above disguise, haughty and insolent, and
+breathing defiance against all mankind; while his powers of mind
+exceed most people's, and his powers of purse are so slight that they
+leave him dependent on all. Baretti is for ever in the state of a
+stream dammed up: if he could once get loose, he would bear down all
+before him.
+
+"Every soul that visited at our house while he was master of it, went
+away abhorring it; and Mrs. Montagu, grieved to see my meekness so
+imposed upon, had thoughts of writing me on the subject an anonymous
+letter, advising me to break with him. Seward, who tried at last to
+reconcile us, confessed his wonder that we had lived together so
+long. Johnson used to oppose and battle him, but never with his own
+consent: the moment he was cool, he would always condemn himself for
+exerting his superiority over a man who was his friend, a foreigner,
+and poor: yet I have been told by Mrs. Montagu that he attributed his
+loss of our family to Johnson: ungrateful and ridiculous! if it had
+not been for his mediation, I would not so long have borne trampling
+on, as I did for the last two years of our acquaintance.
+
+"Not a servant, not a child, did he leave me any authority over; if I
+would attempt to correct or dismiss them, there was instant appeal to
+Mr. Baretti, who was sure always to be against me in every dispute.
+With Mr. Thrale I was ever cautious of contending, conscious that a
+misunderstanding there could never answer, as I have no friend or
+relation in the world to protect me from the rough treatment of a
+husband, should he chuse to exert his prerogatives; but when I saw
+Baretti openly urging Mr. Thrale to cut down some little fruit trees
+my mother had planted and I had begged might stand, I confess I did
+take an aversion to the creature, and secretly resolved his stay
+should not be prolonged by my intreaties whenever his greatness chose
+to take huff and be gone. As to my eldest daughter, his behaviour was
+most ungenerous; he was perpetually spurring her to independence,
+telling her she had more sense and would have a better fortune than
+her mother, whose admonitions she ought therefore to despise; that
+she ought to write and receive her own letters _now_, and not submit
+to an authority I could not keep up if she once had the spirit to
+challenge it; that, if I died in a lying-in which happened while he
+lived here, he hoped Mr. Thrale would marry Miss Whitbred, who would
+be a pretty companion for Hester, and not tyrannical and overbearing
+like me. Was I not fortunate to see myself once quit of a man like
+this? who thought his dignity was concerned to set me at defiance,
+and who was incessantly telling lies to my prejudice in the ears of
+my husband and children? When he walked out of the house on the 6th
+day of July, 1776, I wrote down what follows in my table book.
+
+"_6 July, 1776._--This day is made remarkable by the departure of Mr.
+Baretti, who has, since October, 1773, been our almost constant
+inmate, companion, and, I vainly hoped, our friend. On the 11th of
+November, 1773, Mr. Thrale let him have _50l._ and at our return from
+France _50l._ more, besides his clothes and pocket money: in return
+to all this, he instructed our eldest daughter--or thought he
+did--and puffed her about the town for a wit, a genius, a linguist,
+&c. At the beginning of the year 1776, we purposed visiting Italy
+under his conduct, but were prevented by an unforeseen and heavy
+calamity: that Baretti, however, might not be disappointed of money
+as well as of pleasure, Mr. Thrale presented him with 100 guineas,
+which at first calmed his wrath a little, but did not, perhaps, make
+amends for his vexation; this I am the more willing to believe, as
+Dr. Johnson not being angry too, seemed to grieve him no little,
+after all our preparations made.
+
+"Now Johnson's virtue was engaged; and he, I doubt not, made it a
+point of conscience not to increase the distresses of a family
+already oppressed with affliction. Baretti, however, from this time
+grew sullen and captious; he went on as usual notwithstanding, making
+Streatham his home, carrying on business there, when he thought he
+had any to do, and teaching his pupil at by-times when he chose so to
+employ himself; for he always took his choice of hours, and would
+often spitefully fix on such as were particularly disagreeable to me,
+whom he has now not liked a long while, if ever he did. He professed,
+however, a violent attachment to our eldest daughter; said if _she_
+had died instead of her poor brother, he should have destroyed
+himself, with many as wild expressions of fondness. Within these few
+days, when my back was turned, he would often be telling her that he
+would go away and stay a month, with other threats of the same
+nature; and she, not being of a caressing or obliging disposition,
+never, I suppose, soothed his anger or requested his stay.
+
+"Of all this, however, I can know nothing but from _her_, who is very
+reserved, and whose kindness I cannot so confide in as to be sure she
+would tell me all that passed between them; and her attachment is
+probably greater to him than me, whom he has always endeavoured to
+lessen as much as possible, both in her eyes and--what was worse--her
+father's, by telling him how my parts had been over-praised by
+Johnson, and over-rated by the world; that my daughter's skill in
+languages, even at the age of fourteen, would vastly exceed mine, and
+such other idle stuff; which Mr. Thrale had very little care about,
+but which Hetty doubtless thought of great importance. Be this as it
+may, no angry words ever passed between him and me, except perhaps
+now and then a little spar or so when company was by, in the way of
+raillery merely.
+
+"Yesterday, when Sir Joshua and Fitzmaurice dined here, I addressed
+myself to him with great particularity of attention, begging his
+company for Saturday, as I expected ladies, and said he must come and
+flirt with them, &c. My daughter in the meantime kept on telling me
+that Mr. Baretti was grown very old and very cross, would not look at
+her exercises, but said he would leave this house soon, for it was no
+better than Pandæmonium. Accordingly, the next day he packed up his
+cloke-bag, which he had not done for three years, and sent it to
+town; and while we were wondering what he would say about it at
+breakfast, he was walking to London himself, without taking leave of
+any one person, except it may be the girl, who owns they had much
+talk, in the course of which he expressed great aversion to me and
+even to her, who, he said, he once thought well of.
+
+"Now whether she had ever told the man things that I might have said
+of him in his absence, by way of provoking him to go, and so rid
+herself of his tuition; whether he was puffed up with the last 100
+guineas and longed to be spending it _all' Italiano;_ whether he
+thought Mr. Thrale would call him back, and he should be better
+established here than ever; or whether he really was idiot enough to
+be angry at my threatening to whip Susan and Sophy for going out of
+bounds, although _he_ had given them leave, for Hetty said that was
+the first offence he took huff at, I never now shall know, for he
+never expressed himself as an offended man to me, except one day when
+he was not shaved at the proper hour forsooth, and then I would not
+quarrel with him, because nobody was by, and I knew him be so vile a
+lyar that I durst not trust his tongue with a dispute. He is gone,
+however, loaded with little presents from me, and with a large share
+too of my good opinion, though I most sincerely rejoice in his
+departure, and hope we shall never meet more but by chance.
+
+"Since our quarrel I had occasion to talk of him with Tom Davies, who
+spoke with horror of his ferocious temper; 'and yet,' says I, 'there
+is great sensibility about Baretti: I have seen tears often stand in
+his eyes.' 'Indeed,' replies Davies, 'I should like to have seen that
+sight vastly, when--even butchers weep.'"
+
+[Footnote 1: In "The Streatham Portraits." (See Vol. II.)]
+
+His intractable character appears from his own account of the
+rupture:
+
+"When Madam took it into her head to give herself airs, and treat me
+with some coldness and superciliousness, I did not hesitate to set
+down at breakfast my dish of tea not half drank, go for my hat and
+stick that lay in the corner of the room, turn my back to the house
+_insalutato hospite_, and walk away to London without uttering a
+syllable, fully resolved never to see her again, as was the case
+during no less than four years; nor had she and I ever met again as
+friends if she and her husband had not chanced upon me after that
+lapse of time at the house of a gentleman near Beckenham, and coaxed
+me into a reconciliation, which, as almost all reconciliations prove,
+was not very sincere on her side or mine; so that there was a total
+end of it on Mr. Thrale's demise, which happened about three years
+after."[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: The European Magazine, 1788.]
+
+The monotony of a constant residence at Streatham was varied by trips
+to Bath or Brighton; and it was so much a matter of course for
+Johnson to make one of the party, that when (1776), not expecting him
+so soon back from a journey with Boswell, the Thrale family and
+Baretti started for Bath without him, Boswell is disposed to treat
+their departure without the lexicographer as a slight:
+
+"This was not showing the attention which might have been expected to
+the 'guide, philosopher, and friend;' the _Imlac_ who had hastened
+from the country to console a distressed mother, who he understood
+was very anxious for his return. They had, I found, without ceremony,
+proceeded on their journey. I was glad to understand from him that it
+was still resolved that his tour to Italy with Mr. and Mrs. Thrale
+should take place, of which he had entertained some doubt, on account
+of the loss which they had suffered; and his doubts afterwards
+appeared to be well founded. He observed, indeed, very justly, that
+'their loss was an additional reason for their going abroad; and if
+it had not been fixed that he should have been one of the party, he
+would force them out; but he would not advise them unless his advice
+was asked, lest they might suspect that he recommended what he wished
+on his own account.' I was not pleased that his intimacy with Mr.
+Thrale's family, though it no doubt contributed much to his comfort
+and enjoyment, was not without some degree of restraint[1]: not, as
+has been grossly suggested[2], that it was required of him as a task
+to talk for the entertainment of them and their company; but that he
+was not quite at his ease: which, however, might partly be owing to
+his own honest pride--that dignity of mind which is always jealous of
+appearing too compliant."
+
+[Footnote 1: (_Marginal note_). "What restraint can he mean? Johnson
+kept every one else under restraint."]
+
+[Footnote 2: (_Marginal note._) "I do not believe it ever was
+suggested."]
+
+In his first letter of condolence on Mr. Thrale's death, Johnson
+speaks of her having enjoyed happiness in marriage, "to a degree of
+which, without personal knowledge, I should have thought the
+description fabulous." The "Autobiography" and "Thraliana" tell a
+widely different tale. The mortification of not finding herself
+appreciated by her husband was poignantly increased, during the last
+years of his life, by finding another offensively preferred to her.
+He was so fascinated by one of her fair friends, as to lose sight
+altogether of what was due to appearances or to the feelings of his
+wife.
+
+A full account of the lady in question is given in the "Thraliana":
+
+"_Miss Streatfield_.--I have since heard that Dr. Collier picked up a
+more useful friend, a Mrs. Streatfield, a widow, high in fortune and
+rather eminent both for the beauties of person and mind; her
+children, I find, he has been educating; and her eldest daughter is
+just now coming out into the world with a great character for
+elegance and literature.--_20 November, 1776._"
+
+"_19 May, 1778._--The person who wrote the title of this book at the
+top of the page, on the other side--left hand--in the black letter,
+was the identical Miss Sophia Streatfield, mentioned in 'Thraliana,'
+as pupil to poor dear Doctor Collier, after he and I had parted. By
+the chance meeting of some of the currents which keep this ocean of
+human life from stagnating, this lady and myself were driven together
+nine months ago at Brighthelmstone: we soon grew intimate from having
+often heard of each other, and I have now the honour and happiness of
+calling her my friend. Her face is eminently pretty; her carriage
+elegant; her heart affectionate, and her mind cultivated. There is
+above all this an attractive sweetness in her manner, which claims
+and promises to repay one's confidence, and which drew from me the
+secret of my keeping a 'Thraliana,' &c. &c. &c."
+
+"_Jan. 1779._--Mr. Thrale is fallen in love, really and seriously,
+with Sophy Streatfield; but there is no wonder in that; she is very
+pretty, very gentle, soft, and insinuating; hangs about him, dances
+round him, cries when she parts from him, squeezes his hand slyly,
+and with her sweet eyes full of tears looks so fondly in his
+face[1]--and all for love of me as she pretends; that I can hardly,
+sometimes, help laughing in her face. A man must not be a _man_ but
+an _it_, to resist such artillery. Marriott said very well,
+
+ "'Man flatt'ring man, not always can prevail,
+ But woman flatt'ring man, can never fail.'
+
+"Murphy did not use, I think, to have a good opinion of me, but he
+seems to have changed his mind this Christmas, and to believe better
+of me. I am glad on't to be sure: the suffrage of such a man is well
+worth having: he sees Thrale's love of the fair S.S. I suppose:
+approves my silent and patient endurance of what I could not prevent
+by more rough and sincere behaviour."
+
+[Footnote 1:
+
+ "And Merlin look'd and half believed her true,
+ So tender was her voice, so fair her face,
+ So sweetly gleam'd her eyes behind her tears,
+ Like sunlight on the plain, behind a shower."
+ _Idylls of The King.--Vivien._]
+
+"20 _January_, 1780.--Sophy Streatfield is come to town: she is in
+the 'Morning Post' too, I see (to be in the 'Morning Post' is no good
+thing). She has won Wedderburne's heart from his wife, I believe, and
+few married women will bear _that_ patiently if I do; they will some
+of them wound her reputation, so that I question whether it can
+recover. Lady Erskine made many odd inquiries about her to me
+yesterday, and winked and looked wise at her sister. The dear S.S.
+must be a little on her guard; nothing is so spiteful as a woman
+robbed of a heart she thinks she has a claim upon. She will not lose
+_that_ with temper, which she has taken perhaps no pains at all to
+preserve: and I do not observe with any pleasure, I fear, that my
+husband prefers Miss Streatfield to me, though I must acknowledge her
+younger, handsomer, and a better scholar. Of her chastity, however, I
+never had a doubt: she was bred by Dr. Collier in the strictest
+principles of piety and virtue; she not only knows she will be always
+chaste, but she knows why she will be so.[1] Mr. Thrale is now by
+dint of disease quite out of the question, so I am a disinterested
+spectator; but her coquetry is very dangerous indeed, and I wish she
+were married that there might be an end on't. Mr. Thrale loves her,
+however, sick or well, better by a thousand degrees than he does me
+or any one else, and even now desires nothing on earth half so much
+as the sight of his Sophia.
+
+ "'E'en from the tomb the voice of nature cries!
+ E'en in our ashes live their wonted fires!'
+
+"The Saturday before Mr. Thrale was taken ill, Saturday, 19th
+February--he was struck Monday, 21st February--we had a large party
+to tea, cards, and supper; Miss Streatfield was one, and as Mr.
+Thrale sate by her, he pressed her hand to his heart (as she told me
+herself), and said 'Sophy, we shall not enjoy this long, and to-night
+I will not be cheated of my only comfort.' Poor soul! how shockingly
+tender! On the first Fryday that he spoke after his stupor, she came
+to see him, and as she sate by the bedside pitying him, 'Oh,' says
+he, 'who would not suffer even all that I have endured to be pitied
+by you!' This I heard myself."
+
+[Footnote 1:
+
+ "Besides, her inborn virtue fortify,
+ They are most firmly good, who best know why."]
+
+"Here is Sophy Streatfield again, handsomer than ever, and flushed
+with new conquests; the Bishop of Chester feels her power, I am sure;
+she showed me a letter from him that was as tender and had all the
+tokens upon it as strong as ever I remember to have seen 'em; I
+repeated to her out of Pope's Homer--'Very well, Sophy,' says I:
+
+ "'Range undisturb'd among the hostile crew,
+ But touch not Hinchliffe[1], Hinchliffe is my due.'
+
+Miss Streatfield (says my master) could have quoted these lines in
+the Greek; his saying so piqued me, and piqued me because it was
+true. I wish I understood Greek! Mr. Thrale's preference of her to me
+never vexed me so much as my consciousness--or fear at least--that he
+has reason for his preference. She has ten times my beauty, and five
+times my scholarship: wit and knowledge has she none."
+
+[Footnote 1: For Hector. Hinchliffe was Bishop of Peterborough.]
+
+"_May_, 1781.--Sophy Streatfield is an incomprehensible girl; here
+has she been telling me such tender passages of what passed between
+her and Mr. Thrale, that she half frights me somehow, at the same
+time declaring her attachment to Vyse yet her willingness to marry
+Lord Loughborough. Good God! what an uncommon girl! and handsome
+almost to perfection, I think: delicate in her manners, soft in her
+voice, and strict in her principles: I never saw such a character,
+she is wholly out of my reach; and I can only say that the man who
+runs mad for Sophy Streatfield has no reason to be ashamed of his
+passion; few people, however, seem disposed to take her for
+life--everybody's admiration, as Mrs. Byron says, and nobody's
+choice.
+
+"_Streatham, January 1st_, 1782.--Sophy Streatfield has begun the new
+year nicely with a new conquest. Poor dear Doctor Burney! _he_ is now
+the reigning favourite, and she spares neither pains nor caresses to
+turn that good man's head, much to the vexation of his family;
+particularly my Fanny, who is naturally provoked to see sport made of
+her father in his last stage of life by a young coquet, whose sole
+employment in this world seems to have been winning men's hearts on
+purpose to fling them away. How she contrives to keep bishops, and
+brewers, and doctors, and directors of the East India Company, all in
+chains so, and almost all at the same time, would amaze a wiser
+person than me; I can only say let us mark the end! Hester will
+perhaps see her out and pronounce, like Solon, on her wisdom and
+conduct."
+
+As this lady has excited great interest, and was much with the
+Thrales, I will add what I have been able to ascertain concerning
+her. She is frequently mentioned in Madame D'Arblay's Diary:
+
+"_Streatham, Sept_. 1778.--To be sure she (Mrs. Thrale) saw it was
+not totally disagreeable to me; though I was really astounded when
+she hinted at my becoming a rival to Miss Streatfield in the Doctor's
+good graces.
+
+"'I had a long letter,' she said, 'from Sophy Streatfield t'other
+day, and she sent Dr. Johnson her elegant edition of the 'Classics;'
+but when he had read the letter, he said 'she is a sweet creature,
+and I love her much; but my little Burney writes a better letter.'
+Now,' continued she, 'that is just what I wished him to say of you
+both.'"
+
+"_Streatham, Sept_. 1779.--Mr. Seward, you know, told me that she had
+tears at command, and I begin to think so too, for when Mrs. Thrale,
+who had previously told me I should see her cry, began coaxing her to
+stay, and saying, 'If you go, I shall know you don't love me so well
+as Lady Gresham,'--she did cry, not loud indeed, nor much, but the
+tears came into her eyes, and rolled down her fine cheeks.
+
+"'Come hither, Miss Burney,' cried Mrs. Thrale; 'come and see Miss
+Streatfield cry!'
+
+"I thought it a mere _badinage_. I went to them, but when I saw real
+tears, I was shocked, and saying, 'No, I won't look at her,' ran away
+frightened, lest she should think I laughed at her, which Mrs. Thrale
+did so openly, that, as I told her, had she served me so, I should
+have been affronted with her ever after.
+
+"Miss Streatfield, however, whether from a sweetness not to be
+ruffled, or from not perceiving there was any room for taking
+offence, gently wiped her eyes, and was perfectly composed!"
+
+"_Streatham, June_, 1779.--Seward, said Mrs. Thrale, had affronted
+Johnson, and then Johnson affronted Seward, and then the S.S. cried.
+
+"_Sir Philip_ (_Clerke_).--Well, I have heard so much of these tears,
+that I would give the universe to have a sight of them.
+
+"_Mrs. Thrale_.--Well, she shall cry again, if you like it.
+
+"_S.S._.--No, pray, Mrs. Thrale.
+
+"_Sir Philip_.--Oh, pray do! pray let me see a little of it.
+
+"_Mrs. Thrale_.--Yes, do cry a little Sophy [in a wheedling voice],
+pray do! Consider, now, you are going to-day, and it's very hard if
+you won't cry a little: indeed, S.S., you ought to cry.
+
+"Now for the wonder of wonders. When Mrs. Thrale, in a coaxing voice,
+suited to a nurse soothing a baby, had run on for some time,--while
+all the rest of us, in laughter, joined in the request,--two crystal
+tears came into the soft eyes of the S.S., and rolled gently down her
+cheeks! Such a sight I never saw before, nor could I have believed.
+She offered not to conceal or dissipate them: on the contrary, she
+really contrived to have them seen by everybody. She looked, indeed,
+uncommonly handsome; for her pretty face was not, like Chloe's,
+blubbered; it was smooth and elegant, and neither her features nor
+complexion were at all ruffled; nay, indeed, she was smiling all the
+time.
+
+"'Look, look!' cried Mrs. Thrale; 'see if the tears are not come
+already.'
+
+"Loud and rude bursts of laughter broke from us all at once. How,
+indeed, could they be restrained?"
+
+"_Streatham, Sunday, June_ 13, 1779.--After church we all strolled
+round the grounds, and the topic of our discourse was Miss
+Streatfield. Mrs. Thrale asserted that she had a power of captivation
+that was irresistible; that her beauty, joined to her softness, her
+caressing manners, her tearful eyes, and alluring looks, would
+insinuate her into the heart of any man she thought worth attacking.
+
+"Sir Philip declared himself of a totally different opinion, and
+quoted Dr. Johnson against her, who had told him that, taking away
+her Greek, she was as ignorant as a butterfly.
+
+"Mr. Seward declared her Greek was all against her with him, for
+that, instead of reading Pope, Swift, or the Spectator--books from
+which she might derive useful knowledge and improvement--it had led
+her to devote all her reading time to the first eight books of Homer.
+
+"'But,' said Mrs. Thrale, 'her Greek, you must own, has made all her
+celebrity;--you would have heard no more of her than of any other
+pretty girl, but for that.'
+
+"'What I object to,' said Sir Philip, 'is her avowed preference for
+this parson. Surely it is very indelicate in any lady to let all the
+world know with whom she is in love!"
+
+"'The parson,' said the severe Mr. Seward, 'I suppose, spoke
+first,--or she would as soon have been in love with you, or with me!'
+
+"You will easily believe I gave him no pleasant look."
+
+The parson was the Rev. Dr. Vyse, Rector of Lambeth. He had made an
+imprudent marriage early in life, and was separated from his wife, of
+whom he hoped to get rid either by divorce or by her death, as she
+was reported to be in bad health. Under these circumstances, he had
+entered into a conditional engagement with the fair S.S.; but
+eventually threw her over, either in despair at his wife's longevity
+or from caprice. On the mention of his name by Boswell, Mrs. Piozzi
+writes opposite: "whose connection with Sophia Streatfield was
+afterwards so much talked about, and I suppose never understood:
+certainly not at all by H.L.P." To return to the D'Arblay Diary:
+
+"_Streatham, June_ 14, 1781.--We had my dear father and Sophy
+Streatfield, who, as usual, was beautiful, caressing, amiable, sweet,
+and--fatiguing."
+
+"_Streatham, Aug_. 1781.--Some time after Sophy Streatfield was
+talked of,--Oh, with how much impertinence! as if she was at the
+service of any man who would make proposals to her! Yet Mr. Seward
+spoke of her with praise and tenderness all the time, as if, though
+firmly of this opinion, he was warmly her admirer. From such admirers
+and such admiration Heaven guard me! Mr. Crutchley said but little;
+but that little was bitter enough.
+
+"'However,' said Mr. Seward, 'after all that can be said, there is
+nobody whose manners are more engaging, nobody more amiable than the
+little Sophy; and she is certainly very pretty; I must own I have
+always been afraid to trust myself with her.'
+
+"Here Mr. Crutchley looked very sneeringly.
+
+"'Nay, 'squire,' cried Mr. Seward, 'she is very dangerous, I can tell
+you; and if she had you at a fair trial, she would make an impression
+that would soften-even your hard heart.'
+
+"'No need of any further trial,' said he, laughing, 'for she has done
+that already; and so soft was the impression that it absolutely all
+dissolved!--melted quite away, and not a trace of it left!'
+
+"Mr. Seward then proposed that she should marry Sir John Miller, who
+has just lost his wife; and very gravely said, he had a great mind to
+set out for Tunbridge, and carry her with him to Bath, and so make
+the match without delay!
+
+"'But surely,' said Mrs. Thrale, 'if you fail, you will think
+yourself bound in honour to marry her yourself?'
+
+"'Why, that's the thing,' said he; 'no, I can't take the little Sophy
+myself; I should have too many rivals; rivals; no, that won't do.'
+
+"How abominably conceited and _sure_ these pretty gentlemen are!
+However, Mr. Crutchley here made a speech that half won my heart.
+
+"'I wish,' said he, 'Miss Streatfield was here at this moment to cuff
+you, Seward!'
+
+"'Cuff me,' cried he. 'What, the little Sophy!--and why?'
+
+"'For disposing of her so freely. I think a man deserves to be cuffed
+for saying _any_ lady will marry him.'
+
+"I seconded this speech with much approbation."
+
+"_London, Jan._ 1783.--Before they went came Miss Streatfield,
+looking pale, but very elegant and pretty. She was in high spirits,
+and I hope has some reason. She made, at least, speeches that
+provoked such surmises. When the Jacksons went,--
+
+"'That,' said I, 'is the celebrated Jackson of Exeter; I dare say you
+would like him if you knew him.'
+
+"'I dare say I should,' cried she, simpering; 'for he has the two
+requisites for me,--he is tall and thin.'
+
+"To be sure, this did not at all call for raillery! Dr. Vyse has
+always been distinguished by these two epithets. I said, however,
+nothing, as my mother was present; but she would not let my looks
+pass unnoticed.
+
+"'Oh!' cried she, 'how wicked you look!--No need of seeing Mrs.
+Siddons for expression!--However, you know how much that is my
+taste,--tall and thin!--but you don't know how _apropos_ it is just
+now!'"
+
+Nine years after the last entry, we find:
+
+"_May_ 25, 1792.--We now met Mrs. Porteous; and who should be with
+her but the poor pretty S.S., whom so long I had not seen, and who
+has now lately been finally given up by her long-sought and very
+injurious lover, Dr. Vyse?
+
+"She is sadly faded, and looked disturbed and unhappy but still
+beautiful, though no longer blooming; and still affectionate, though
+absent and evidently absorbed. We had a little chat together about
+the Thrales. In mentioning our former intimacy with them, 'Ah,
+those,' she cried, 'were happy times!' and her eyes glistened. Poor
+thing! hers has been a lamentable story!--Imprudence and vanity have
+rarely been mixed with so much sweetness, and good-humour, and
+candour, and followed with more reproach and ill success. We agreed
+to renew acquaintance next winter; at present she will be little more
+in town."
+
+In a letter to Madame D'Arblay, Oct. 20, 1820, Mrs. Piozzi says:
+"Fell, the bookseller in Bond Street, told me a fortnight or three
+weeks ago, that Miss Streatfield lives where she did in his
+neighbourhood, Clifford Street, S.S. still." On the 18th January,
+1821: "'The once charming S.S. had inquired for me of Nornaville and
+Fell, the Old Bond Street book-sellers, so I thought she meditated
+writing, but was deceived."
+
+The story she told the author of "Piozziana," in proof of Johnson's
+want of firmness, clearly refers to this lady:
+
+"I had remarked to her that Johnson's readiness to condemn any moral
+deviation in others was, in a man so entirely before the public as he
+was, nearly a proof of his own spotless purity of conduct. She said,
+'Yes, Johnson was, on the whole, a rigid moralist; but he could be
+ductile, I may say, servile; and I will give you an instance. We had
+a large dinner-party at our house; Johnson sat on one side of me, and
+Burke on the other; and in the company there was a young female (Mrs.
+Piozzi named her), to whom I, in my peevishness, thought Mr. Thrale
+superfluously attentive, to the neglect of me and others; especially
+of myself, then near my confinement, and dismally low-spirited;
+notwithstanding which, Mr. T. very unceremoniously begged of me to
+change place with Sophy ----, who was threatened with a sore throat,
+and might be injured by sitting near the door. I had scarcely
+swallowed a spoonful of soup when this occurred, and was so overset
+by the coarseness of the proposal, that I burst into tears, said
+something petulant--that perhaps ere long, the lady might be at the
+head of Mr. T.'s table, without displacing the mistress of the house,
+&c., and so left the apartment. I retired to the drawing-room, and
+for an hour or two contended with my vexation, as I best could, when
+Johnson and Burke came up. On seeing them, I resolved to give a
+_jobation_ to both, but fixed on Johnson for my charge, and asked him
+if he had noticed what passed, what I had suffered, and whether
+allowing for the state of my nerves, I was much to blame? He
+answered, "Why, possibly not; your feelings were outraged." I said,
+"Yes, greatly so; and I cannot help remarking with what blandness and
+composure you _witnessed_ the outrage. Had this transaction been told
+of others, your anger would have known no bounds; but, towards a man
+who gives good dinners &c., you were meekness itself!" Johnson
+coloured, and Burke, I thought, looked foolish; but I had not a word
+of answer from either.'"
+
+The only excuse for Mr. Thrale is to be found in his mental and
+bodily condition at the time, which made it impossible for Johnson or
+Burke to interfere without a downright quarrel with him, nor without
+making matters worse. This, however, is not the only instance in
+which Johnson witnessed Thrale's laxity of morals without reproving
+it. Opposite the passage in which Boswell reports Johnson as
+palliating infidelity in a husband by the remark, that the man
+imposes no bastards on his wife, she writes: "Sometimes he does.
+Johnson knew a man who did, and the lady took very tender care of
+them."
+
+Madame D'Arblay was not uniformly such a source of comfort to her as
+that lady supposed. The entries in "Thraliana" relating to her show
+this:
+
+"_August,_ 1779.--Fanny Burney has been a long time from me; I was
+glad to see her again; yet she makes me miserable too in many
+respects, so restlessly and apparently anxious, lest I should give
+myself airs of patronage or load her with the shackles of dependance.
+I live with her always in a degree of pain that precludes
+friendship--dare not ask her to buy me a ribbon--dare not desire her
+to touch the bell, lest she should think herself injured--lest she
+should forsooth appear in the character of Miss Neville, and I in
+that of the widow Bromley. See Murphy's 'Know Your Own Mind.'"
+
+"Fanny Burney has kept her room here in my house seven days, with a
+fever or something that she called a fever; I gave her every medicine
+and every slop with my own hand; took away her dirty cups, spoons,
+&c.; moved her tables: in short, was doctor, and nurse and maid--for
+I did not like the servants should have additional trouble lest they
+should hate her for it. And now,--with the true gratitude of a wit,
+she tells me that the world thinks the better of me for my civilities
+to her. It does? does it?"
+
+"Miss Burney was much admired at Bath (1780); the puppy-men said,
+'She had such a drooping air and such a timid intelligence;' or, 'a
+timid air,' I think it was,' and a drooping intelligence;' never sure
+was such a collection of pedantry and affectation as rilled Bath when
+we were on that spot. How everything else and everybody set off my
+gallant bishop. 'Quantum lenta solent inter viburna Cupressi.' Of all
+the people I ever heard read verse in my whole life, the best, the
+most perfect reader, is the Bishop of Peterboro' (Hinchcliffe.)"[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: In a marginal note on Boswell, she says: "The people (in
+1783) did read shamefully. Yet Mr. Lee, the poet, many years before
+Johnson was born, read so gracefully, the players would not accept
+his tragedies till they had heard them from other lips: his own (they
+said) sweetened all which proceeded from them." Speaker Onslow
+equally was celebrated for his manner of reading.]
+
+"_July 1st_, 1780.--Mrs. Byron, who really loves me, was disgusted at
+Miss Burney's carriage to me, who have been such a friend and
+benefactress to her: not an article of dress, not a ticket for public
+places, not a thing in the world that she could not command from me:
+yet always insolent, always pining for home, always preferring the
+mode of life in St. Martin's Street to all I could do for her. She is
+a saucy-spirited little puss to be sure, but I love her dearly for
+all that; and I fancy she has a real regard for me, if she did not
+think it beneath the dignity of a wit, or of what she values
+more--the dignity of Dr. Burnett's daughter--to indulge it. Such
+dignity! the Lady Louisa of Leicester Square![1] In good time!"
+
+[Footnote 1: Alluding to a character in "Evelina."]
+
+"1781.--What a blockhead Dr. Burney is to be always sending for his
+daughter home so! what a monkey! is she not better and happier with
+me than she can be anywhere else? Johnson is enraged at the silliness
+of their family conduct, and Mrs. Byron disgusted; I confess myself
+provoked excessively, but I love the girl so dearly--and the Doctor,
+too, for that matter, only that he has such odd notions of
+superiority in his own house, and will have his children under his
+feet forsooth, rather than let 'em live in peace, plenty, and comfort
+anywhere from home. If I did not provide Fanny with every
+wearable--every wishable, indeed,--it would not vex me to be served
+so; but to see the impossibility of compensating for the pleasures of
+St. Martin's Street, makes one at once merry and mortified.
+
+"Dr. Burney did not like his daughter should learn Latin even of
+Johnson, who offered to teach her for friendship, because then she
+would have been as wise as himself forsooth, and Latin was too
+masculine for Misses. A narrow-souled goose-cap the man must be at
+last, agreeable and amiable all the while too, beyond almost any
+other human creature. Well, mortal man is but a paltry animal! the
+best of us have such drawbacks both upon virtue, wisdom, and
+knowledge."
+
+In what his daughter calls a doggrel list of his friends and his
+feats, Dr. Burney has thus mentioned the Thrales:
+
+ "1776.--This year's acquaintance began with the Thrales,
+ Where I met with great talents 'mongst females and males,
+ But the best thing it gave me from that time to this,
+ Was the freedom it gave me to sound the abyss,
+ At my ease and my leisure, of Johnson's great mind,
+ Where new treasures unnumber'd I constantly find."
+
+Highly to her credit, Mrs. Thrale did not omit any part of her own
+duties to her husband because he forgot his. In March, 1780, she
+writes to Johnson:
+
+"I am willing to show myself in Southwark, or in any place, for my
+master's pleasure or advantage; but have no present conviction that
+to be re-elected would be advantageous, so shattered a state as his
+nerves are in just now.--Do not you, however, fancy for a moment,
+that I shrink from fatigue--or desire to escape from doing my
+duty;--spiting one's antagonist is a reason that never ought to
+operate, and never does operate with me: I care nothing about a rival
+candidate's innuendos, I care only about my husband's health and
+fame; and if we find that he earnestly wishes to be once more member
+for the Borough--he _shall_ be member, if anything done or suffered
+by me will help make him so."
+
+In the May following she writes: "Meanwhile, Heaven send this
+Southwark election safe, for a disappointment would half kill my
+husband, and there is no comfort in tiring every friend to death in
+such a manner and losing the town at last."
+
+This was an agitating month. In "Thraliana ":
+
+"_20th May_, 1780.--I got back to Bath again and staid there till the
+riots[1] drove us all away the first week in June: we made a dawdling
+journey, cross country, to Brighthelmstone, where all was likely to
+be at peace: the letters we found there, however, shewed us how near
+we were to ruin here in the Borough: where nothing but the
+astonishing presence of mind shewed by Perkins in amusing the mob
+with meat and drink and huzzas, till Sir Philip Jennings Clerke could
+get the troops and pack up the counting-house bills, bonds, &c. and
+carry them, which he did, to Chelsea College for safety,--could have
+saved us from actual undoing. The villains _had_ broke in, and our
+brewhouse would have blazed in ten minutes, when a property of
+£150,000 would have been utterly lost, and its once flourishing
+possessors quite undone.
+
+"Let me stop here to give God thanks for so very undeserved, so
+apparent, an interposition of Providence in our favour.
+
+"I left Mr. Thrale at Brighthelmstone and came to town again to see
+what was left to be done: we have now got arms and mean to defend
+ourselves by force if further violence is intended. Sir Philip comes
+every day at some hour or another--good creature, how kind he is! and
+how much I ought to love him! God knows I am not in this case wanting
+to my duty. I have presented Perkins, with my Master's permission,
+with two hundred guineas, and a silver urn for his lady, with his own
+cypher on it and this motto--Mollis responsio, Iram avertit."
+
+[Footnote 1: The Lord George Gordon Riots.]
+
+In the spring of 1781, "I found," says Boswell, "on visiting 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." She has
+written opposite: "Spiteful again! He went by direction of his
+physicians where they could easiest attend to him."
+
+The removal to Grosvenor Square is thus mentioned in "Thraliana":
+
+"_Monday, January 29th_, 1781.--So now we are to spend this winter in
+Grosvenor Square; my master has taken a ready-furnished lodging-house
+there, and we go in to-morrow. He frighted me cruelly a while ago; he
+would have Lady Shelburne's house, one of the finest in London; he
+would buy, he would build, he would give twenty to thirty guineas a
+week for a house. Oh Lord, thought I, the people will sure enough
+throw stones at me now when they see a dying man go to such mad
+expenses, and all, as they will naturally think, to please a wife
+wild with the love of expense. This was the very thing I endeavoured
+to avoid by canvassing the borough for him, in hopes of being through
+that means tyed to the brewhouse where I always hated to live till
+now, that I conclude his constitution lost, and that the world will
+say _I_ tempt him in his weak state of body and mind to take a fine
+house for me at the flashy end of the town." "He however, dear
+creature, is as absolute, ay, and ten times more so, than ever, since
+he suspects his head to be suspected, and to Grosvenor Square we are
+going, and I cannot be sorry, for it will doubtless be comfortable
+enough to see one's friends commodiously, and I have long wished to
+quit _Harrow Corner_, to be sure; how could one help it? though I did
+
+ "'Call round my casks each object of desire'
+
+all last winter: but it was a heavy drag too, and what signifies
+resolving _never_ to be pleased? I will make myself comfortable in my
+new habitation, and be thankful to God and my husband."
+
+On February 7, 1781, she writes to Madame D'Arblay:
+
+"Yesterday I had a conversazione. Mrs. Montagu was brilliant in
+diamonds, solid in judgment, critical in talk. Sophy smiled, Piozzi
+sung, Pepys panted with admiration, Johnson was good humoured, Lord
+John Clinton attentive, Dr. Bowdler lame, and my master not asleep.
+Mrs. Ord looked elegant, Lady Rothes dainty, Mrs. Davenant dapper,
+and Sir Philip's curls were all blown about by the wind. Mrs. Byron
+rejoices that her Admiral and I agree so well; the way to his heart
+is connoisseurship it seems, and for a background and contorno, who
+comes up to Mrs. Thrale, you know."
+
+In "Thraliana":
+
+"_Sunday, March 18th_, 1781.--Well! Now I have experienced the
+delights of a London winter, spent in the bosom of flattery, gayety,
+and Grosvenor Square; 'tis a poor thing, however, and leaves a void
+in the mind, but I have had my compting-house duties to attend, my
+sick master to watch, my little children to look after, and how much
+good have I done in any way? Not a scrap as I can see; the pecuniary
+affairs have gone on perversely: how should they chuse [an omission
+here] when the sole proprietor is incapable of giving orders, yet not
+so far incapable as to be set aside! Distress, fraud, folly, meet me
+at every turn, and I am not able to fight against them all, though
+endued with an iron constitution, which shakes not by sleepless
+nights or days severely fretted.
+
+"Mr. Thrale talks now of going to Spa and Italy again; how shall we
+drag him thither? A man who cannot keep awake four hours at a stroke
+&c. Well! this will indeed be a tryal of one's patience; and who must
+go with us on this expedition? Mr. Johnson!--he will indeed be the
+only happy person of the party; he values nothing _under_ heaven but
+his own mind, which is a spark _from_ heaven, and that will be
+invigorated by the addition of new ideas. If Mr. Thrale dies on the
+road, Johnson will console himself by learning how it is to travel
+with a corpse: and, after all, such reasoning is the true
+philosophy--one's heart is a mere incumbrance--would I could leave
+mine behind. The children shall go to their sisters at Kensington,
+Mrs. Cumyns may take care of them all. God grant us a happy meeting
+some _where_ and some _time_!
+
+"Baretti should attend, I think; there is no man who has so much of
+every language, and can manage so well with Johnson, is so tidy on
+the road, so active top to obtain good accommodations. He is the man
+in the world, I think, whom I most abhor, and who _hates_ and
+_professes_ to _hate me_ the most; but what does that signifie? He
+will be careful of Mr. Thrale and Hester whom he _does_ love--and he
+won't strangle _me_, I suppose. Somebody we _must_ have. Croza would
+court our daughter, and Piozzi could not talk to Johnson, nor, I
+suppose, do one any good but sing to one,--and how should we _sing
+songs in a strange land_? Baretti must be the man, and I will beg it
+of him as a favour. Oh, the triumph he will have! and the lyes he
+will tell!" Thrale's death is thus described in "Thraliana":
+
+"On the Sunday, the 1st of April, I went to hear the Bishop of
+Peterborough preach at May Fair Chapel, and though the sermon had
+nothing in it particularly pathetic, I could not keep my tears within
+my eyes. I spent the evening, however, at Lady Rothes', and was
+cheerful. Found Sir John Lade, Johnson, and Boswell, with Mr. Thrale,
+at my return to the Square. On Monday morning Mr. Evans came to
+breakfast; Sir Philip and Dr. Johnson to dinner--so did Baretti. Mr.
+Thrale eat voraciously--so voraciously that, encouraged by Jebb and
+Pepys, who had charged me to do so, I checked him rather severely,
+and Mr. Johnson added these remarkable words: "Sir, after the
+denunciation of your physicians this morning, such eating is little
+better than suicide." He did not, however, desist, and Sir Philip
+said, he eat apparently in defiance of control, and that it was
+better for us to say nothing to him. Johnson observed that he thought
+so too; and that he spoke more from a sense of duty than a hope of
+success. Baretti and these two spent the evening with me, and I was
+enumerating the people who were to meet the Indian ambassadors on the
+Wednesday. I had been to Negri's and bespoke an elegant
+entertainment.
+
+"On the next day, Tuesday the 3rd, Mrs. Hinchliffe called on me in
+the morning to go see Webber's drawings of the South Sea rareties. We
+met the Smelts, the Ords, and numberless _blues_ there, and displayed
+our pedantry at our pleasure. Going and coming, however, I quite
+teazed Mrs. Hinchliffe with my low-spirited terrors about Mr. Thrale,
+who had not all this while one symptom worse than he had had for
+months; though the physicians this Tuesday morning agreed that a
+continuation of such dinners as he had lately made would soon
+dispatch a life so precarious and uncertain. When I came home to
+dress, Piozzi, who was in the next room teaching Hester to sing,
+began lamenting that he was engaged to Mrs. Locke on the following
+evening, when I had such a world of company to meet these fine
+Orientals; he had, however, engaged Roncaglia and Sacchini to begin
+with, and would make a point of coming himself at nine o'clock if
+possible. I gave him the money I had collected for his
+benefit--35_l_. I remember it was--a banker's note--and burst out o'
+crying, and said, I was sure I should not go to it. The man was
+shocked, and wondered what I meant. Nay, says I, 'tis mere lowness of
+spirits, for Mr. Thrale is very well now, and is gone out in his
+carriage to spit cards, as I call'd it--sputar le carte. Just then
+came a letter from Dr. Pepys, insisting to speak with me in the
+afternoon, and though there was nothing very particular in the letter
+considering our intimacy, I burst out o' crying again, and threw
+myself into an agony, saying, I was sure Mr. Thrale would dye.
+
+"Miss Owen came to dinner, and Mr. Thrale came home so well! and in
+such spirits! he had invited more people to my concert, or
+conversazione, or musical party, of the next day, and was delighted
+to think what a show we should make. He eat, however, more than
+enormously. Six things the day before, and eight on this day, with
+strong beer in such quantities! the very servants were frighted, and
+when Pepys came in the evening he said this could not last--either
+there must be _legal_[1] restraint or certain death. Dear Mrs. Byron
+spent the evening with me, and Mr. Crutchley came from Sunning-hill
+to be ready for the morrow's flash. Johnson was at the Bishop of
+Chester's. I went down in the course of the afternoon to see after my
+master as usual, and found him not asleep, but sitting with his legs
+up--_because_, as he express'd it. I kissed him, and said how good he
+was to be so careful of himself. He enquired who was above, but had
+no disposition to come up stairs. Miss Owen and Mrs. Byron now took
+their leave. The Dr. had been gone about twenty minutes when Hester
+went down to see her papa, and found him on the floor. What's the
+meaning of this? says she, in an agony. I chuse it, replies Mr.
+Thrale firmly; I lie so o' purpose. She ran, however, to call his
+valet, who was gone out--happy to leave him so particularly _well_,
+as he thought. When my servant went instead, Mr. Thrale bid him
+begone, in a firm tone, and added that he was very well and chose to
+lie so. By this time, however, Mr. Crutchley was run down at Hetty's
+intreaty, and had sent to fetch Pepys back. He was got but into Upper
+Brook Street, and found his friend in a most violent fit of the
+apoplexy, from which he only recovered to relapse into another, every
+one growing weaker as his strength grew less, till six o'clock on
+Wednesday morning, 4th April, 1781, when he died. Sir Richard Jebb,
+who was fetched at the beginning of the distress, seeing death
+certain, quitted the house without even prescribing. Pepys did all
+that could be done, and Johnson, who was sent for at eleven o'clock,
+never left him, for while breath remained he still hoped. I ventured
+in once, and saw them cutting his clothes off to bleed him, but I saw
+no more."
+
+[Footnote 1: (_Note_ by Mrs. T.). "I rejected all propositions of the
+sort, and said, as he had got the money, he had the best right to
+throw it away.... I should always prefer my husband, to my children:
+let him do his _own_ way."]
+
+We learn from Madame D'Arblay's Journal, that, towards the end of
+March, 1781, Mr. Thrale had resolved on going abroad with his wife,
+and that Johnson was to accompany them, but a subsequent entry states
+that the doctors condemned the plan; and "therefore," she adds, "it
+is settled that a great meeting of his friends is to take place
+before he actually prepares for the journey, and they are to encircle
+him in a body, and endeavour, by representations and entreaties, 'to
+prevail with him to give it up; and I have little doubt myself but,
+amongst us, we shall be able to succeed." This is one of the oddest
+schemes ever projected by a set of learned and accomplished gentlemen
+and ladies for the benefit of a hypochondriac patient. Its execution
+was prevented by his death. A hurried note from Mrs. Thrale
+announcing the event, beginning, "Write to me, pray for me," is
+endorsed by Madame D'Arblay: "Written a few hours after the death of
+Mr. Thrale, which happened by a sudden stroke of apoplexy, on the
+morning of a day on which half the fashion of London had been invited
+to an intended assembly at his house in Grosvenor Square." These
+invitations had been sent out by his own express desire: so little
+was he aware of his danger.
+
+Letters and messages of condolence poured in from all sides. Johnson
+(in a letter dated April 5th) said all that could be said in the way
+of counsel or consolation:
+
+"I do not exhort you to reason yourself into tranquillity. We must
+first pray, and then labour; first implore the blessing of God, and
+those means which He puts into our hands. Cultivated ground, has few
+weeds; a mind occupied by lawful business, has little room for
+useless regret.
+
+"We read the will to-day; but I will not fill my first letter with
+any other account than that, with all my zeal for your advantage, I
+am satisfied; and that the other executors, more used to consider
+property than I, commended it for wisdom and equity. Yet, why should
+I not tell you that you have five hundred pounds for your immediate
+expenses, and two thousand pounds a-year, with both the houses and
+all the goods?
+
+"Let us pray for one another, that the time, whether long or short,
+that shall yet be granted us, may be well spent; and that when this
+life, which at the longest is very short, shall come to an end, a
+better may begin which shall never end."
+
+On April 9th he writes:
+
+"DEAREST MADAM,--That you are gradually recovering your tranquillity,
+is the effect to be humbly expected from trust in God. Do not
+represent life as darker than it is. Your loss has been very great,
+but you retain more than almost any other can hope to possess. You
+are high in the opinion of mankind; you have children from whom much
+pleasure may be expected; and that you will find many friends, you
+have no reason to doubt. Of my friendship, be it worth more or less,
+I hope you think yourself certain, without much art or care. It will
+not be easy for me to repay the benefits that I have received; but I
+hope to be always ready at your call. 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. Let me have your prayers and those of my dear
+Queeny.
+
+"The prudence and resolution of your design to return so soon to your
+business and your duty deserves great praise; I shall communicate it
+on Wednesday to the other executors. Be pleased to let me know
+whether you would have me come to Streatham to receive you, or stay
+here till the next day."
+
+Johnson was one of the executors and took pride in discharging his
+share of the trust. Mrs. Thrale's account of the pleasure he took in
+signing the documents and cheques, is incidentally confirmed by
+Boswell:
+
+"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. Lord Lucan
+tells a very good story, which, if not precisely exact, is certainly
+characteristical; 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.'"
+
+The executors had legacies of 200_l._ each; Johnson, to the surprise
+of his friends, being placed on no better footing than the rest. He
+himself was certainly disappointed. Mrs. Thrale says that his
+complacency towards Thrale was not wholly devoid of interested
+motives; and she adds that his manner towards Reynolds and Dr. Taylor
+was also softened by the vague expectation of being named in their
+wills. One of her marginal notes is: "Johnson mentioned to Reynolds
+that he had been told by Taylor he was to be his heir. His fondness
+for Reynolds, ay, and for Thrale, had a dash of interest to keep it
+warm." Again, on his saying to Reynolds, "I did not mean to offend
+you,"--"He never would offend Reynolds: he had his reason."
+
+Many and heavy as were the reproaches subsequently heaped upon the
+widow, no one has accused her of having been found wanting in energy,
+propriety, or self-respect at this period. She took the necessary
+steps for promoting her own interests and those of her children with
+prudence and promptitude. Madame D'Arblay, who was carrying on a
+flirtation with one of the executors (Mr. Crutchley), and had
+personal motives for watching their proceedings, writes, April
+29th:--
+
+"Miss Thrale is steady and constant, and very sincerely grieved for
+her father.
+
+"The four executors, Mr. Cator, Mr. Crutchley, Mr. Henry Smith, and
+Dr. Johnson, have all behaved generously and honourably, and seem
+determined to give Mrs. Thrale all the comfort and assistance in
+their power. She is to carry on the business jointly with them. Poor
+soul! it is a dreadful toil and worry to her."
+
+In "Thraliana":
+
+"_Streatham, 1st May_, 1781.--I have now appointed three days a week
+to attend at the counting-house. If an angel from heaven had told me
+twenty years ago that the man I knew by the name of _Dictionary
+Johnson_ should one day become partner with me in a great trade, and
+that we should jointly or separately sign notes, drafts, &c., for
+three or four thousand pounds of a morning, how unlikely it would
+have seemed ever to happen! Unlikely is no word tho',--it would have
+seemed _incredible_, neither of us then being worth a groat, God
+knows, and both as immeasurably removed from commerce as birth,
+literature, and inclination could get us. Johnson, however, who
+desires above all other good the accumulation of new ideas, is but
+too happy with his present employment; and the influence I have over
+him, added to his own solid judgment and a regard for truth, will at
+last find it in a small degree difficult to win him from the dirty
+delight of seeing his name in a new character flaming away at the
+bottom of bonds and leases."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"Apropos to writing verses in a language one don't understand, there
+is always the allowance given, and that allowance (like our excise
+drawbacks) commonly larger than it ought to be. The following
+translation of the verses written with a knife, has been for this
+reason uncommonly commended, though they have no merit except being
+done quick. Piozzi asked me on Sunday morning if ever I had seen
+them, and could explain them to _him_, for that he heard they were
+written by his friend Mr. Locke. The book in which they were
+reposited was not ferreted out, however, till Monday night, and on
+Tuesday morning I sent him verses and translation: we used to think
+the original was Garrick's, I remember."
+
+Translation of the verses written with a knife.
+
+ "Taglia Amore un coltello,
+ Cara, l'hai sentita dire;
+ Per l'Amore alla Moda,
+ Esso poco può soffrire.
+ Cuori che non mai fur giunti
+ Pronti stanno a separar,
+ Cari nodi come i nostri
+ Non son facili tagliar.
+ Questo dico, che se spezza
+ Tua tenera bellezza,
+ Molto ancor ci resterà;
+ Della mia buona fede
+ Il Coltello non s'avvede,
+ Nè di tua gran bontà.
+ Che tagliare speranze
+ Ben tutto si puo,
+ Per piaceri goduti
+ Oh, questo poi no?
+ Dolci segni!
+ Cari pegni!
+ Di felècità passata,
+ Non temer la coltellata,
+ Resterete--Io loro:
+ Se del caro ben gradita,
+ Trovo questa donatura,
+ Via pur la tagliatura
+ Sol d'Amore sta ferita."
+
+"The power of emptying one's head of a great thing and filling it
+with little ones to amuse care, is no small power, and I am proud of
+being able to write Italian verses while I am bargaining 150,000_l_.,
+and settling an event of the highest consequence to my own and my
+children's welfare. David Barclay, the rich Quaker, will treat for
+our brewhouse, and the negotiation is already begun. My heart
+palpitates with hope and fear--my head is bursting with anxiety and
+calculation; yet I can listen to a singer and translate verses about
+a knife."
+
+"Mrs. Montagu has been here; she says I ought to have a statue
+erected to me for my diligent attendance on my compting-house duties.
+The _wits_ and the _blues_ (as it is the fashion to call them) will
+be happy enough, no doubt, to have me safe at the brewery--_out of
+their way_."
+
+"A very strange thing happened in the year 1776, and I never wrote it
+down,--I must write it down now. A woman came to London from a
+distant county to prosecute some business, and fell into distress;
+she was sullen and silent, and the people with whom her affairs
+connected her advised her to apply for assistance to some friend.
+What friends can I have in London? says the woman, nobody here knows
+anything of me. One can't tell _that_, was the reply. Where have you
+lived? I have wandered much, says she, but I am originally from
+Litchfield. Who did you know in Litchfield in your youth? Oh, nobody
+of any note, I'll warrant: I knew one _David Garrick_, indeed, but I
+once heard that he turned strolling player, and is probably dead long
+ago; I also knew an obscure man, _Samuel Johnson_, very good he was
+too; but who can know anything of poor Johnson? I was likewise
+acquainted with _Robert James_, a quack doctor. _He_ is, I suppose,
+no very reputable connection if I could find him. Thus did this woman
+name and discriminate the three best known characters in
+London--perhaps in Europe."
+
+"'Such,' says Mrs. Montagu, 'is the dignity of Mrs. Thrale's virtue,
+and such her superiority in all situations of life, that nothing now
+is wanting but an earthquake to show how she will behave on _that_
+occasion.' Oh, brave Mrs. Montagu! She is a monkey, though, to
+quarrel with Johnson so about Lyttleton's life: if he was a great
+character, nothing said of him in that book can hurt him; if he was
+not a great character, they are bustling about nothing."
+
+"Mr. Crutchley lives now a great deal with me; the business of
+executor to Mr. Thrale's will makes much of his attendance necessary,
+and it begins to have its full effect in seducing and attaching him
+to the house,--Miss Burney's being always about me is probably
+another reason for his close attendance, and I believe it is so. What
+better could befall Miss Burney, or indeed what better could befall
+_him_, than to obtain a woman of honour, and character, and
+reputation for superior understanding? I would be glad, however, that
+he fell honestly in love with her, and was not trick'd or trapp'd
+into marriage, poor fellow; he is no match for the arts of a
+novel-writer. A mighty particular character Mr. Crutchley is:
+strangely mixed up of meanness and magnificence; liberal and splendid
+in large sums and on serious occasions, narrow and confined in the
+common occurrences of life; warm and generous in some of his motives,
+frigid and suspicious, however, for eighteen hours at least out of
+the twenty-four; likely to be duped, though always expecting fraud,
+and easily disappointed in realities, though seldom flattered by
+fancy. He is supposed by those that knew his mother and her
+connections to be Mr. Thrale's natural son, and in many things he
+resembles him, but not in person: as he is both ugly and awkward. Mr.
+Thrale certainly believed he was his son, and once told me as much
+when Sophy Streatfield's affair was in question but nobody could
+persuade him to court the S.S. Oh! well does the Custom-house officer
+Green say,--
+
+ "'Coquets! leave off affected arts,
+ Gay fowlers at a flock of hearts;
+ Woodcocks, to shun your snares have skill,
+ You show so plain you strive to kill.'"
+
+"_3rd June_, 1781.--Well! here have I, with the grace of God and the
+assistance of good friends, completed--I really think very
+happily--the greatest event of my life. I have sold my brewhouse to
+Barclay, the rich Quaker, for 135,000_l_., to be in four years' time
+paid. I have by this bargain purchased peace and a stable fortune,
+restoration to my original rank in life, and a situation undisturbed
+by commercial jargon, unpolluted by commercial frauds, undisgraced by
+commercial connections. They who succeed me in the house have
+purchased the power of being rich beyond the wish of rapacity[1], and
+I have procured the improbability of being made poor by flights of
+the fairy, speculation. 'Tis thus that a woman and men of feminine
+minds always--I speak popularly--decide upon life, and chuse certain
+mediocrity before probable superiority; while, as Eton Graham says
+sublimely,--
+
+ "'Nobler souls,
+ Fir'd with the tedious and disrelish'd good,
+ Seek their employment in acknowledg'd ill,
+ Danger, and toil, and pain.'
+
+"On this principle partly, and partly on worse, was dear Mr. Johnson
+something unwilling--but not much at last--to give up a trade by
+which in some years 15,000_l._ or 16,000_l._ had undoubtedly been
+got, but by which, in some years, its possessor had suffered agonies
+of terror and tottered twice upon the verge of bankruptcy. Well! if
+thy own conscience acquit, who shall condemn thee? Not, I hope, the
+future husbands of our daughters, though I should think it likely
+enough; however, as Johnson says very judiciously, they must either
+think right or wrong: if they think right, let us now think with
+them; if wrong, let us never care what they think. So adieu to
+brewhouse, and borough wintering; adieu to trade, and tradesmen's
+frigid approbation; may virtue and wisdom sanctify our contract, and
+make buyer and seller happy in the bargain!"
+
+[Footnote 1: There is a curious similarity here to Johnson's phrase,
+"the potentiality of becoming rich beyond the dreams of avarice."]
+
+After mentioning some friends who disapproved of the sale, she adds:
+"Mrs. Montagu has sent me her approbation in a letter exceedingly
+affectionate and polite. 'Tis over now, tho', and I'll clear my head
+of it and all that belongs to it; I will go to church, give God
+thanks, receive the sacrament and forget the frauds, follies, and
+inconveniences of a commercial life this day."
+
+Madame D'Arblay was at Streatham on the day of the sale, and gives a
+dramatic colour to the ensuing scene:
+
+"_Streatham, Thursday_.--This was the great and most important day to
+all this house, upon which the sale of the brewery was to be decided.
+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
+pocket-handkerchief out of the coach window.
+
+"Four o'clock came and dinner was ready, and no Mrs. Thrale. Five
+o'clock followed, 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 pocket-handkerchief was
+waved from it. I ran to the door of it to meet her, and she jumped
+out of it, and gave me a thousand embraces while I gave my
+congratulations. We went instantly to her dressing-room, where she
+told me, in brief, how the matter had been transacted, and then we
+went down to dinner. Dr. Johnson and Mr. Crutchley had accompanied
+her home."
+
+The event is thus announced to Langton by Johnson, in a letter
+printed by Boswell, dated June 16, 1781: "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 135,000_l_. Is the nation ruined." _Marginal note_: "I
+suppose he was neither glad nor sorry."
+
+Thrale died on the 4th April, 1781, and Mrs. Thrale left Streatham on
+the 7th October, 1782. The intervening eighteen months have been made
+the subject of an almost unprecedented amount of misrepresentation.
+Hawkins, Boswell, Madame D'Arblay, and Lord Macaulay have vied with
+each other in founding uncharitable imputations on her conduct at
+this period of her widowhood; and it has consequently become
+necessary to recapitulate the authentic evidence relating to it. As
+Piozzi's name will occur occasionally, he must now be brought upon
+the scene.
+
+He is first mentioned in "Thraliana" thus:
+
+"_Brighton, July_, 1780.--I have picked up Piozzi here, the great
+Italian singer. He is amazingly like my father. He shall teach
+Hester."
+
+A detailed account of the commencement of the acquaintance is given
+in one of the autobiographical fragments. She says he was recommended
+to her by letter by Madame D'Arblay as "a man likely to lighten the
+burthen of life to her," and that both she and Mr. Thrale took to him
+at once. Madame D'Arblay is silent as to the introduction or
+recommendation; but gives an amusing account of one of their first
+meetings:
+
+"A few months after the Streathamite morning visit to St. Martin's
+Street, an evening party was arranged by Dr. Burney, for bringing
+thither again Dr. Johnson and Mrs. Thrale, at the desire of Mr. and
+Mrs. Greville and Mrs. Crewe; who wished, under the quiet roof of Dr.
+Burney, to make acquaintance with these celebrated personages." The
+conversation flagged, and recourse was had to music--
+
+"Piozzi, a first-rate singer, whose voice was deliciously sweet, and
+whose expression was perfect, sung in his very best manner, from his
+desire to do honour to _il Capo di Casa_; but _il Capo di Casa_ and
+his family alone did justice to his strains: neither the Grevilles
+nor the Thrales heeded music beyond what belonged to it as fashion:
+the expectations of the Grevilles were all occupied by Dr. Johnson;
+and those of the Thrales by the authoress of the Ode to Indifference.
+When Piozzi, therefore, arose, the party remained as little advanced
+in any method or pleasure for carrying on the evening, as upon its
+first entrance into the room....
+
+"Dr. Burney now began to feel considerably embarrassed; though still
+he cherished hopes of ultimate relief from some auspicious
+circumstance that, sooner or later, would operate, he hoped, in his
+favour, through the magnetism of congenial talents.
+
+"Vainly, however, he sought to elicit some observations that might
+lead to disserting discourse; all his attempts received only quiet,
+acquiescent replies, 'signifying nothing.' Every one was awaiting
+some spontaneous opening from Dr. Johnson.
+
+"Mrs. Thrale, of the whole coterie, was alone at her ease. She feared
+not Dr. Johnson; for fear made no part of her composition; and with
+Mrs. Greville, as a fair rival genius, she would have been glad, from
+curiosity, to have had the honour of a little tilt, in full
+carelessness of its event; for though triumphant when victorious, she
+had spirits so volatile, and such utter exemption from envy or
+spleen, that she was gaily free from mortification when vanquished.
+But she knew the meeting to have been fabricated for Dr. Johnson;
+and, therefore, though not without difficulty, constrained herself to
+be passive.
+
+"When, however, she observed the sardonic disposition of Mr. Greville
+to stare around him at the whole company in curious silence, she felt
+a defiance against his aristocracy beat in every pulse; for, however
+grandly he might look back to the long ancestry of the Brookes and
+the Grevilles, she had a glowing consciousness that her own blood,
+rapid and fluent, flowed in her veins from Adam of Saltsberg; and, at
+length, provoked by the dullness of a taciturnity that, in the midst
+of such renowned interlocutors, produced as narcotic a torpor as
+could have been caused by a dearth the most barren of human
+faculties; she grew tired of the music, and yet more tired of
+remaining, what as little suited her inclinations as her abilities, a
+mere cipher in the company; and, holding such a position, and all its
+concomitants, to be ridiculous, her spirits rose rebelliously above
+her control; and, in a fit of utter recklessness of what might be
+thought of her by her fine new acquaintance, she suddenly, but
+softly, arose, and stealing on tip-toe behind Signor Piozzi, who was
+accompanying himself on the piano-forte to an animated _arria
+parlante_, with his back to the company, and his face to the wall;
+she ludicrously began imitating him by squaring her elbows, elevating
+them with ecstatic shrugs of the shoulders, and casting up her eyes,
+while languishingly reclining her head; as if she were not less
+enthusiastically, though somewhat more suddenly, struck with the
+transports of harmony than himself.
+
+"This grotesque ebullition of ungovernable gaiety was not perceived
+by Dr. Johnson, who faced the fire, with his back to the performer
+and the instrument. But the amusement which such an unlooked for
+exhibition caused to the party, was momentary; for Dr. Burney,
+shocked lest the poor Signor should observe, and be hurt by this
+mimicry, glided gently round to Mrs. Thrale, and, with something
+between pleasantness and severity, 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?'
+
+"It was now that shone the brightest attribute of Mrs. Thrale,
+sweetness of temper. She took this rebuke with a candour, and a sense
+of its justice the most amiable: she nodded her approbation of the
+admonition; and, returning to her chair, quietly sat down, as she
+afterwards said, like a pretty little miss, for the remainder of one
+of the most humdrum evenings that she had ever passed.
+
+"Strange, indeed, strange and most strange, the event considered, was
+this opening intercourse between Mrs. Thrale and Signor Piozzi.
+Little could she imagine that the person she was thus called away
+from holding up to ridicule, would become, but a few years
+afterwards, the idol of her fancy and the lord of her destiny! And
+little did the company present imagine, that this burlesque scene was
+but the first of a drama the most extraordinary of real life, of
+which these two persons were to be the hero and heroine: though, when
+the catastrophe was known, this incident, witnessed by so many, was
+recollected and repeated from coterie to coterie throughout London,
+with comments and sarcasms of endless variety."[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: Memoirs of Dr. Burney, &c., vol. ii, pp. 105--111.]
+
+Madame D'Arblay mentioned the same circumstance in conversation to
+the Rev. W. Harness: yet it seems strange in connection with an entry
+in "Thraliana" from which it would appear that her friend was far
+from wanting in susceptibility to sweet sounds:
+
+"13 _August_, 1780.--Piozzi is become a prodigious favourite with me,
+he is so intelligent a creature, so discerning, one can't help
+wishing for his good opinion; his singing surpasses everybody's for
+taste, tenderness, and true elegance; his hand on the forte piano too
+is so soft, so sweet, so delicate, every tone goes to the heart, I
+think, and fills the mind with emotions one would not be without,
+though inconvenient enough sometimes. He wants nothing from us: he
+comes for his health he says: I see nothing ail the man but pride.
+The newspapers yesterday told what all the musical folks gained, and
+set Piozzi down 1200_l_. o' year."
+
+On the 24th August, 1780, Madame D'Arblay writes: "I have not seen
+Piozzi: he left me your letter, which indeed is a charming one,
+though its contents puzzled me much whether to make me sad or merry."
+Mrs. Thrale was still at Brighton; so that the scene at Dr. Burney's
+must have occurred subsequently; when she had already begun to find
+Piozzi what the Neapolitan ladies understand by _simpatico_. Madame
+D'Arblay's "Memoirs," as I shall have occasion to point out, are by
+no means so trustworthy a register of dates, facts, or impressions as
+her "Diary."
+
+Whilst Thrale lived, Mrs. Thrale's regard for Piozzi was certainly
+not of a nature to cause scandal or provoke censure, and as it
+ripened into love, it may be traced, step by step, from the frankest
+and fullest of all possible unveilings of the heart. Rare indeed are
+the instances in which such revelations as we find in "Thraliana"
+could be risked by either man or woman, without giving scope to
+malevolence; and they should not only be judged as a whole and by the
+context, but the most favourable construction should be put upon
+them. When, in this sort of self-communing, every passing emotion,
+every transitory inclination, is set down, it would be unfair and
+even foolish to infer that the emotion at once became a passion, or
+that the inclination was criminally indulged.
+
+The next notice of Piozzi occurs in Madame D'Arblay's "Diary" for
+July 10th, 1781:
+
+"You will believe I was not a little surprised to see Sacchini. He is
+going to the Continent with Piozzi, and Mrs. Thrale invited them both
+to spend the last day at Streatham, and from hence proceed to
+Margate.... The first song he sang, beginning 'En quel amabil volto,'
+you may perhaps know, but I did not; it is a charming mezza bravura.
+He and Piozzi then sung together the duet of the 'Amore Soldato;' and
+nothing could be much more delightful; Piozzi taking pains to sing
+his very best, and Sacchini, with his soft but delicious whisper,
+almost thrilling me by his exquisite and pathetic expression. They
+then went through that opera, great part of 'Creso,' some of
+'Erifile,' and much of 'Rinaldo.'"
+
+Piozzi's attentions had attracted Johnson's notice without troubling
+his peace. On November 24th, 1781, he wrote from Ashbourne: "Piozzi,
+I find, is coming in spite of Miss Harriet's prediction, or second
+sight, and when _he_ comes and _I_ come, you will have two about you
+that love you; and I question if either of us heartily care how few
+more you have. But how many soever they may be, I hope you keep your
+kindness for me, and I have a great mind to have Queeny's kindness
+too."
+
+Again, December 3rd, 1781: "You have got Piozzi again,
+notwithstanding pretty Harriet's dire denunciations. The Italian
+translation which he has brought, you will find no great accession to
+your library, for the writer seems to understand very little English.
+When we meet we can compare some passages. Pray contrive a multitude
+of good things for us to do when we meet. Something that may _hold
+all together_; though if any thing makes _me_ love you more, it is
+going from you."
+
+We learn from "Thraliana," that the entanglement with Piozzi was not
+the only one of which Streatham was contemporaneously the scene:
+
+"_August,_ 1781.--I begin to wish in good earnest that Miss Burney
+should make impression on Mr. Crutchley. I think she honestly loves
+the man, who in his turn appears to be in love with some one
+else--Hester, I fear, Oh! that would indeed be unlucky! People have
+said so a long while, but I never thought it till now; young men and
+women will always be serving one so, to be sure, if they live at all
+together, but I depended on Burney keeping him steady to herself.
+Queeny behaves like an angel about it. Mr. Johnson says the name of
+Crutchley comes from _croix lea_, the cross meadow; _lea_ is a
+meadow, I know, and _crutch_, a crutch stick, is so called from
+having the handle go _crosswise_."
+
+"_September,_ 1781.--My five fair daughters too! I have so good a
+pretence to wish for long life to see them settled. Like the old
+fellow in 'Lucian,' one is never at a loss for an excuse. They are
+five lovely creatures to be sure, but they love not me. Is it my
+fault or theirs?"
+
+"_12th October_, 1781.--Yesterday was my wedding-day; it was a
+melancholy thing to me to pass it without the husband of my youth.
+
+ "'Long tedious years may neither moan,
+ Sad, deserted, and alone;
+ May neither long condemned to stay
+ Wait the second bridal day!!!'[1]
+
+"Let me thank God for my children, however, my fortune, and my
+friends, and be contented if I cannot be happy."
+
+[Footnote 1: _Note by Mrs. T._: "Samuel Wesley's verses, making part
+of an epithalamium."]
+
+"_15th October_, 1781.--My maid Margaret Rice dreamed last night that
+my eldest daughter was going to be married to Mr. Crutchley, but that
+Mr. Thrale _himself_ prevented her. An odd thing to me, who think Mr.
+Crutchley is his son."
+
+Although the next day but one after Thrale's death Johnson carried
+Boswell to dine at the Queen's Arms' Club, his grief was deep and
+durable. Indeed, it is expressed so often and so earnestly as to
+rebut the presumption that "my mistress" was the sole or chief tie
+which bound him to Streatham. Amongst his Prayers and Meditations is
+the following:
+
+"_Good Friday, April 13th_, 1781.--On Wednesday, 11th, was buried my
+dear friend Thrale, who died on Wednesday, 4th; and with him were
+buried many of my hopes and pleasures. About five, I think, on
+Wednesday morning, he expired. 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 or benignity.
+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."
+
+On the same paper is a note: "My first knowledge of Thrale was in
+1765. I enjoyed his favours for almost a fourth part of my life."
+
+On the 20th March, 1782, he wrote thus to Langton:
+
+"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; 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."
+
+There is ample evidence that he neither felt nor suspected any
+diminution of kindness or regard, and continued, till their final
+departure from Streatham, to treat it as his home.
+
+In November she writes, "Do not forget Streatham and its inhabitants,
+who are all much yours;" and he replies:
+
+"Birmingham, Dec. 8th, 1781.
+
+"DEAR MADAM,--I am come to this place on my way to London and to
+Streatham. I hope to be in London on Tuesday or Wednesday, and
+Streatham on Thursday, by your kind conveyance. I shall have nothing
+to relate either wonderful or delightful. But remember that you sent
+me away, and turned me out into the world, and you must take the
+chance of finding me better or worse. This you may know at present,
+that my affection for you is not diminished, and my expectation from
+you is increased. Do not neglect me, nor relinquish me. Nobody will
+ever love you better or honour you more."
+
+"Feb. 16th, 1782.
+
+"DEAREST LADY,--I am better, but not yet well; but hope springs
+eternal. As soon as I can think myself not troublesome, you may be
+sure of seeing me, _for such a place to visit nobody ever had_.
+Dearest Madam, do not think me worse than I am; be sure, at least,
+that whatever happens to me, I am with all the regard that admiration
+of excellence and gratitude for kindness can excite, Madam, your" &c.
+
+In "Thraliana":
+
+"_23rd February, 1782 (Harley Street)_.--The truth is, Mr. Johnson
+has some occult disorder that I cannot understand; Jebb and Bromfield
+fancy it is water between the heart and pericardium--I do not think
+it is _that_, but I do not know what it is. He apprehends no danger
+himself, and he knows more of the matter than any of them all."
+
+On February 27th, 1782, he writes to Malone: "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."
+
+On March 20th, 1782, to Mrs. Grastrell and Mrs. Aston: "When Dr.
+Falconer saw me, I was at home only by accident, for I lived much
+with Mrs. Thrale, and had all the care from her that she could take
+or could be taken."
+
+April 26th, 1782, to Mrs. Thrale:
+
+"MADAM,--I have been very much out of order since you sent me away;
+but why should I tell you, who do not care, nor desire to know? I
+dined with Mr. Paradise on Monday, with the Bishop of St. Asaph
+yesterday, with the Bishop of Chester I dine to-day, and with the
+Academy on Saturday, with Mr. Hoole on Monday, and with Mrs. Garrick
+on Thursday, the 2nd of May, and then--what care you? _What then_?
+
+"The news run, that we have taken seventeen French transports; that
+Langton's lady is lying down with her eighth child, all alive; and
+Mrs. Carter's Miss Sharpe is going to marry a schoolmaster sixty-two
+years old.
+
+"Do not let Mr. Piozzi nor any body else put me quite out of your
+head, and do not think that any body will love you like your" &c.
+
+"April 30th, 1782.
+
+"Mrs. Sheridan refused to sing, at the Duchess of Devonshire's
+request, a song to the Prince of Wales. They pay for the Theatre
+neither principal nor interest; and poor Garrick's funeral expenses
+are yet unpaid, though the undertaker is broken. Could you have a
+better purveyor for a little scandal? But I wish I was at Streatham.
+I beg Miss to come early, and I may perhaps reward you with more
+mischief."
+
+She went to Streatham on the 18th April, 1782, and Johnson evidently
+with her. In "Thraliana" she writes:
+
+"_Saturday, 9th May, 1782._--To-day I bring home to Streatham my poor
+Dr. Johnson: he went to town a week ago by the way of amusing
+himself, and got so very ill that I thought I should never get him
+home alive,"--by _home_ meaning Streatham.
+
+Johnson to Mrs. Thrale:
+
+"June 4th, 1782.
+
+"This day I dined upon skate, pudding, goose, and your asparagus, and
+could have eaten more, but was prudent. Pray for me, dear Madam; I
+hope the tide has turned. The change that I feel is more than I durst
+have hoped, or than I thought possible; but there has not yet passed
+a whole day, and I may rejoice perhaps too soon. Come and see me, and
+when you think best, upon due consideration, take me away."
+
+From her to him:
+
+"Streatham, June 14th, 1782.
+
+"DEAR SIR,--I am glad you confess yourself peevish, for confession
+must precede amendment. Do not study to be more unhappy than you are,
+and if you can eat and sleep well, do not be frighted, for there can
+be no real danger. Are you acquainted with Dr. Lee, the master of
+Baliol College? And are you not delighted with his gaiety of manners
+and youthful vivacity now that he is eighty-six years old? I never
+heard a more perfect or excellent pun than his, when some one told
+him how, in a late dispute among the Privy Counsellors, the Lord
+Chancellor (Thurlow) struck the table with such violence that he
+split it. 'No, no,' replied the Master, drily, 'I can hardly persuade
+myself that he _split the table_, though I believe he _divided the
+Board_.' Will you send me anything better from Oxford than this? for
+there must be no more fastidiousness now; no more refusing to laugh
+at a good quibble, when you so loudly profess the want of amusement
+and the necessity of diversion."
+
+From him to her:
+
+"Oxford, June 17th, 1782.
+
+"Oxford has done, I think, what for the present it can do, and I am
+going slyly to take a place in the coach for Wednesday, and you or my
+sweet Queeny will fetch me on Thursday, and see what you can make of
+me."
+
+Hannah More met him during this visit to Oxford, and writes, June
+13th, 1782: "Who do you think is my principal cicerone at Oxford?
+only Dr. Johnson! and we do so gallant it about."
+
+Madame D'Arblay, then at Streatham, writes, June 26th, 1782: "Dr.
+Johnson, who had been in town some days, returned, and Mr. Crutchley
+came also, as well as my father." After describing some lively
+conversation, she adds: "I have _very often_, though I mention them
+not, long and melancholy discourses with Dr. Johnson, about our dear
+deceased master, whom, indeed, he regrets unceasingly; but I love not
+to dwell on subjects of sorrow when I can drive them away, especially
+to you (her sister), upon this account as you were so much a stranger
+to that excellent friend, whom you only lamented for the sake of
+those who survived him." He had only returned that very day, and she
+had been absent from Streatham, as she states elsewhere, till "the
+Cecilian business was arranged," _i.e._ till the end of May.
+
+On the 24th August, 1782 (this date is material) Johnson writes to
+Boswell:
+
+"DEAR SIR,--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."
+
+This was two days after Mrs. Thrale, with his full concurrence, had
+made up her mind to let Streatham. He treats it, notwithstanding, as
+at his disposal for a residence so long as she remains in it.
+
+The books and printed letters from which most of these extracts are
+taken, have been all along accessible to her assailants. Those from
+"Thraliana," which come next, are new:
+
+"_25th November_, 1781.--I have got my Piozzi[1] home at last; he
+looks thin and battered, but always kindly upon me, I think. He
+brought me an Italian sonnet written in his praise by Marco Capello,
+which I instantly translated of course; but he, prudent creature,
+insisted on my burning it, as he said it would inevitably get about
+the town how _he_ was praised, and how Mrs. Thrale translated and
+echoed the praises, so that, says he, I shall be torn in pieces, and
+you will have some _infamità_ said of you that will make you hate the
+sight of me. He was so earnest with me that I could not resist, so
+burnt my sonnet, which was actually very pretty; and now I repent I
+did not first write it into the Thraliana. Over leaf, however, shall
+go the translation, which happens to be done very closely, and the
+last stanza is particularly exact. I must put it down while I
+remember it:
+
+1.
+
+ "'Favoured of Britain's pensive sons,
+ Though still thy name be found,
+ Though royal Thames where'er he runs
+ Returns the flattering sound,
+
+2.
+
+ Though absent thou, on every joy
+ Her gloom privation flings,
+ And Pleasure, pining for employ,
+ Now droops her nerveless wings,
+
+3.
+
+ Yet since kind Fates thy voice restore
+ To charm our land again[2],--
+ Return not to their rocky shore,
+ Nor tempt the angry main.
+
+4.
+
+ Nor is their praise of so much worth,
+ Nor is it justly given,
+ That angels sing to them on earth
+ Who slight the road to heaven.'
+
+"He tells me--Piozzi does--that his own country manners greatly
+disgusted him, after having been used to ours; but Milan is a
+comfortable place, I find. If he does not fix himself for life here,
+he will settle to lay his bones at Milan. The Marquis D'Araciel, his
+friend and patron, who resides there, divides and disputes his heart
+with me: I shall be loth to resign it."
+
+[Footnote 1: This mode of expression did not imply then what it might
+now. See _ante_, p. 92, where Johnson writes to "my Baretti."]
+
+[Footnote 2: "Capello is a Venetian poet."]
+
+"_17th December, 1781._--Dear Mr. Johnson is at last returned; he has
+been a vast while away to see his country folks at Litchfield. My
+fear is lest he should grow paralytick,--there are really some
+symptoms already discoverable, I think, about the mouth particularly.
+He will drive the gout away so when it comes, and it must go
+_somewhere_. Queeny works hard with him at the classicks; I hope she
+will be _out_ of leading-strings at least before he gets _into_ them,
+as poor women say of their children."
+
+"_1st January, 1782._--Let me not, while censuring the behaviour of
+others, however, give cause of censure by my own. I am beginning a
+new year in a new character. May it be worn decently yet lightly! I
+wish not to be rigid and fright my daughters by too much severity. I
+will not be wild and give them reason to lament the levity of my
+life. Resolutions, however, are vain. To pray for God's grace is the
+sole way to obtain it--'Strengthen Thou, O Lord, my virtue and my
+understanding, preserve me from temptation, and acquaint me with
+myself; fill my heart with thy love, restrain it by thy fear, and
+keep my soul's desires fixed wholly on that place where only true
+joys are to be found, through Jesus Christ our Lord,--Amen.'"
+
+_January_, 1782.--(After stating her fear of illness and other ills.)
+"_If_ nothing of all these misfortunes, however, befall one; _if_ for
+my sins God should take from me my monitor, my friend, my inmate, my
+dear Doctor Johnson; _if_ neither I should marry, nor the brewhouse
+people break; _if_ the ruin of the nation should not change the
+situation of affairs so that one could not receive regular
+remittances from England: and _if_ Piozzi should not pick him up a
+wife and fix his abode in this country,--_if_, therefore, and _if_
+and _if_ and _if_ again all should conspire to keep my present
+resolution warm, I certainly would, at the close of the four years
+from the sale of the Southwark estate, set out for Italy, with my two
+or three eldest girls, and see what the world could show me."
+
+In a marginal note, she adds:
+
+"Travelling with Mr. Johnson _I_ cannot bear, and leaving him behind
+_he_ could not bear, so his life or death must determine the
+execution or laying aside my schemes. I wish it were within reason to
+_hope_ he could live four years."
+
+"_Streatham, 4th January_, 1782.--I have taken a house in Harley
+Street for these three months next ensuing, and hope to have some
+society,--not company tho': crowds are out of the question, but
+people will not come hither on short days, and 'tis too dull to live
+all alone so. The world will watch me at first, and think I come o'
+husband-hunting for myself or my fair daughters, but when I have
+behaved prettily for a while, they will change their mind."
+
+"_Harley Street, 14th January_, 1782.--The first seduction comes from
+Pepys. I had a letter to-day desiring me to dine in Wimpole Street,
+to meet Mrs. Montagu and a whole _army of blues_, to whom I trust my
+refusal will afford very pretty speculation ... and they may settle
+my character and future conduct at their leisure. Pepys is a
+worthless fellow at last; he and his brother run about the town,
+spying and enquiring what Mrs. Thrale is to do this winter, what
+friends she is to see, what men are in her confidence, how soon she
+will be _married_, &c.; the brother Dr.--the Medico, as we call
+him--lays wagers about me, I find; God forgive me, but they'll make
+me hate them both, and they are no better than two fools for their
+pains, for I was willing to have taken them to my heart."
+
+"They say Pacchierotti, the famous soprano singer, is ill, and _they
+say_ Lady Mary Duncan, his frightful old protectress, has made him so
+by her _caresses dénaturées_. A little envy of the new woman,
+Allegrante, has probably not much mended his health, for
+Pacchierotti, dear creature, is envious enough. I was, however,
+turning over Horace yesterday, to look for the expression _tenui
+fronte_[1], in vindication of my assertion to Johnson that low
+foreheads were classical, when the 8th Ode of the First Book of
+Horace struck me so, I could not help imitating it while the scandal
+was warm in my mind:
+
+1.
+
+ "'He's sick indeed! and very sick,
+ For if it is not all a trick
+ You'd better look about ye.
+ Dear Lady Mary, prythee tell
+ Why thus by loving him too well
+ You kill your Pacchierotti?
+
+2.
+
+ Nor sun nor dust can he abide,
+ Nor careless in a snaffle ride,
+ The steed we saw him mount ill.
+ _You_ stript him of his manly force,
+ When tumbling headlong from his horse
+ He pressed the plains of Fonthill.[2]
+
+3.
+
+ Why the full opera should he shun?
+ Where crowds of critics smiling run,
+ To applaud their Allegrante.
+ Why is it worse than viper's sting,
+ To see them clap, or hear her sing?
+ Surely he's envious, ain't he?
+
+4.
+
+ Forbear his house, nor haunt his bed
+ With that strange wig and fearful head,
+ Then, though he now so ill is,
+ We o'er his voice again may doze,
+ When, cover'd warm with women's clothes,
+ He acts a young Achilles.'"
+
+[Footnote 1: Insignem tenui fronte Lycorida Cyri torret amor--
+
+But _tenuis_ is _small_ or _narrow_ rather than _low_. One of
+Fielding's beauties, Sophia Western, has a low forehead: another,
+Fanny, a high one.]
+
+[Footnote 2: _Note by Mrs. T.:_ "Fonthill, the seat of young
+Beckford. They set him o' horseback, and he tumbled off."]
+
+"_1st February, 1782._--Here is Mr. Johnson ill, very ill indeed,
+and--I do not see what ails him; 'tis repelled gout, I fear, fallen
+on the lungs and breath of course. What shall we do for him? If I
+lose _him_, I am more than undone; friend, father, guardian,
+confident!--God give me health and patience. What shall I do?"
+
+"_Harley Street, 13th April, 1782._--When I took off my mourning, the
+watchers watched me very exactly, 'but they whose hands were
+mightiest have found nothing:' so I shall leave the town, I hope, in
+a good disposition towards me, though I am sullen enough with the
+town for fancying me such an amorous idiot that I am dying to enjoy
+every filthy fellow. God knows how distant such dispositions are from
+the heart and constitution of H.L.T. Lord Loughboro', Sir Richard
+Jebb, Mr. Piozzi, Mr. Selwyn, Dr. Johnson, every man that comes to
+the house, is put in the papers for me to marry. In good time, I
+wrote to-day to beg the 'Morning Herald' would say no more about me,
+good or bad."
+
+"_Streatham, 17th April, 1782._--I am returned to Streatham, pretty
+well in health and very sound in heart, notwithstanding the watchers
+and the wager-layers, who think more of the charms of their sex by
+half than I who know them better. Love and friendship are distinct
+things, and I would go through fire to serve many a man whom nothing
+less than fire would force me to go to bed to. Somebody mentioned my
+going to be married t'other day, and Johnson was joking about it. I
+suppose, Sir, said I, they think they are doing me honour with these
+imaginary matches, when, perhaps the man does not exist who would do
+me honour by marrying me! This, indeed, was said in the wild and
+insolent spirit of Baretti, yet 'tis nearer the truth than one would
+think for. A woman of passable person, ancient family, respectable
+character, uncommon talents, and three thousand a year, has a right
+to think herself any man's equal, and has nothing to seek but return
+of affection from whatever partner she pitches on. To marry for love
+would therefore be rational in me, who want no advancement of birth
+or fortune, and _till I am in love_, I will not marry, nor perhaps
+then."
+
+"_22nd August, 1782._--An event of no small consequence to our little
+family must here be recorded in the 'Thraliana.' After having long
+intended to go to Italy for pleasure, we are now settling to go
+thither for convenience. The establishment of expense here at
+Streatham is more than my income will answer; my lawsuit with Lady
+Salusbury turns out worse in the event and infinitely more costly
+than I could have dreamed on; 8000_l._ is supposed necessary to the
+payment of it, and how am I to raise 8000_l_.? My trees will (after
+all my expectations from them) fetch but 4000_l_., the money lent
+Perkins on his bond 1600_l_., the Hertfordshire copyholds may perhaps
+be worth 1000_l_., and where is the rest to spring from? I must go
+abroad and save money. To show Italy to my girls, and be showed it by
+Piozzi, has long been my dearest wish, but to leave Mr. Johnson
+shocked me, and to take him appeared impossible. His recovery,
+however, from an illness we all thought dangerous, gave me courage to
+speak to him on the subject, and this day (after having been let
+blood) I mustered up resolution to tell him the necessity of changing
+a way of life I had long been displeased with. I added that I had
+mentioned the matter to my eldest daughter, whose prudence and solid
+judgment, unbiassed by passion, is unequalled, as far as my
+experience has reached; that she approved the scheme, and meant to
+partake it, though of an age when she might be supposed to form
+connections here in England--attachments of the tenderest nature;
+that she declared herself free and resolved to follow my fortunes,
+though perfectly aware temptations might arise to prevent me from
+ever returning--a circumstance she even mentioned herself.
+
+"Mr. Johnson thought well of the project, and wished me to put it
+early in execution: seemed less concerned at parting with me than I
+wished him: thought his pupil Miss Thrale quite right in forbearing
+to marry young, and seemed to entertain no doubt of living to see us
+return rich and happy in two or three years' time. He told Hester in
+my absence that he would not go with me if I asked him. See the
+importance of a person to himself. I fancied Mr. Johnson could not
+have existed without me, forsooth, as we have now lived together for
+above eighteen years. I have so fondled him in sickness and in
+health. Not a bit of it. He feels nothing in parting with me, nothing
+in the least; but thinks it a prudent scheme, and goes to his books
+as usual. This is philosophy and truth; he always said he hated a
+_feeler_....
+
+"The persecution I endure from men too who want to marry me--in good
+time--is another reason for my desiring to be gone. I wish to marry
+none of them, and Sir Philip's teazing me completed my mortification;
+to see that one can rely on _nobody!_ The expences of this house,
+however, which are quite past my power to check, is the true and
+rational cause of our departure. In Italy we shall live with twice
+the respect and at half the expence we do here; the language is
+familiar to me and I love the Italians; I take with me all I love in
+the world except my two baby daughters, who will be left safe at
+school; and since Mr. Johnson cares nothing for the loss of my
+personal friendship and company, there is no danger of any body else
+breaking their hearts. My sweet Burney and Mrs. Byron will perhaps
+think they are sorry, but my consciousness that no one _can_ have the
+cause of concern that Johnson has, and my conviction that he has _no
+concern at all_, shall cure me of lamenting friends left behind."
+
+In the margin of this entry she has written, "I begin to see (now
+everything shows it) that Johnson's connection with me is merely an
+interested one; he _loved_ Mr. Thrale, I believe, but only wished to
+find in me a careful nurse and humble friend for his sick and his
+lounging hours; yet I really thought he could not have _existed_
+without _my conversation_ forsooth! He cares more for my roast beef
+and plum pudden, which he now devours too dirtily for endurance; and
+since he is glad to get rid of me, I'm sure I have good cause to
+desire the getting rid of him."
+
+No great stress should be laid on this ebullition of mortified
+self-love; but it occurs oddly enough at the very time when,
+according to Lord Macaulay, she was labouring to produce the very
+feeling that irritated her.
+
+"_August 28th_, 1782.--He (Piozzi) thinks still more than he says,
+that I shall give him up; and if Queeney made herself more amiable to
+me, and took the proper methods--I suppose I should."
+
+"_20 September_ 1782, _Streatham_.--And now I am going to leave
+Streatham (I have let the house and grounds to Lord Shelburne, the
+expence of it eat me up) for three years, where I lived--never
+happily indeed, but always easily: the more so perhaps from the total
+absence of love and ambition--
+
+ "'Else these two passions by the way
+ Might chance to show us scurvy play.'"
+
+Ten days later (October 1st) she thus argues out the question of
+marriage:
+
+"Now! that dear little discerning creature, Fanny Burney, says I'm in
+love with Piozzi: very likely; he is so amiable, so honourable, so
+much above his situation by his abilities, that if
+
+ "'Fate had not fast bound her
+ With Styx nine times round her,
+ Sure musick and love were victorious.'
+
+But if he is ever so worthy, ever so lovely, he is _below me_
+forsooth! In what is he below me? In virtue? I would I were above
+him. In understanding? I would mine were from this instant under the
+guardianship of his. In birth? To be sure he is below me in birth,
+and so is almost every man I know or have a chance to know. But he is
+below me in fortune: is mine sufficient for us both?--more than amply
+so. Does he deserve it by his conduct, in which he has always united
+warm notions of honour with cool attention to oeconomy, the spirit of
+a gentleman with the talents of a professor? How shall any man
+deserve fortune, if he does not? But I am the guardian of five
+daughters by Mr. Thrale, and must not disgrace _their_ name and
+family. Was then the man my mother chose for me of higher extraction
+than him I have chosen for myself? No,--but his fortune was
+higher.... I wanted fortune then, perhaps: do I want it now?--Not at
+all; but I am not to think about myself; I married the first time to
+please my mother, I must marry the second time to please my daughter.
+I have always sacrificed my own choice to that of others, so I must
+sacrifice it again: but why? Oh, because I am a woman of superior
+understanding, and must not for the world degrade myself from my
+situation in life. But if I _have_ superior understanding, let me at
+least make use of it for once, and rise to the rank of a human being
+conscious of its own power to discern good from ill. The person who
+has uniformly acted by the will of others has hardly that dignity to
+boast.
+
+"But once again: I am guardian to five girls; agreed: will this
+connection prejudice their bodies, souls, or purse? My marriage may
+assist _my_ health, but I suppose it will not injure _theirs_. Will
+his company or companions corrupt their morals? God forbid; if I did
+not believe him one of the best of our fellow beings, I would reject
+him instantly. Can it injure their fortunes? Could he impoverish (if
+he would) five women, to whom their father left _20,000l._ each,
+independent almost of possibilities?--To what then am I guardian? to
+their pride and prejudice? and is anything else affected by the
+alliance? Now for more solid objections. Is not the man of whom I
+desire protection, a foreigner? unskilled in the laws and language of
+our country? Certainly. Is he not, as the French say, _Arbitre de mon
+sort?_ and from the hour he possesses my person and fortune, have I
+any power of decision how or where I may continue or end my life? Is
+not the man, upon the continuance of whose affection my whole
+happiness depends, _younger_ than myself[1], and is it wise to place
+one's happiness on the continuance of _any_ man's affection? Would it
+not be painful to owe his appearance of regard more to his honour
+than his love? and is not my person, already faded, likelier to fade
+sooner, than his? On the other hand, is his life a good one? and
+would it not be lunacy even to risque the wretchedness of losing all
+situation in the world for the sake of living with a man one loves,
+and then to lose both companion and consolation? When I lost Mr.
+Thrale, every one was officious to comfort and to soothe me; but
+which of my children or quondam friends would look with kindness upon
+Piozzi's widow? If I bring children by him, must they not be
+Catholics, and must not I live among people the _ritual_ part of
+whose religion I disapprove?
+
+"These are _my_ objections, these _my_ fears: not those of being
+censured by the world, as it is called, a composition of vice and
+folly, though 'tis surely no good joke to be talked of
+
+ "'By each affected she that tells my story,
+ And blesses her good stars that _she_ was prudent.'
+
+"These objections would increase in strength, too, if my present
+state was a happy one, but it really is not. I live a quiet life, but
+not a pleasant one. My children govern without loving me; my servants
+devour and despise me; my friends caress and censure me; my money
+wastes in expences I do not enjoy, and my time in trifles I do not
+approve. Every one is made insolent, and no one comfortable; my
+reputation unprotected, my heart unsatisfied, my health unsettled. I
+will, however, resolve on nothing. I will take a voyage to the
+Continent in spring, enlarge my knowledge and repose my purse. Change
+of place may turn the course of these ideas, and external objects
+supply the room of internal felicity. If he follow me, I may reject
+or receive at pleasure the addresses of a man who follows on _no
+explicit promise_, nor much probability of success, for I would
+really wish to marry no more without the consent of my children (such
+I mean as are qualified to give their opinions); and how should _Miss
+Thrales_ approve of my marrying _Mr. Piozzi_? Here then I rest, and
+will torment my mind no longer, but commit myself, as he advises, to
+the hand of Providence, and all will end _all' ottima perfezzione_.
+
+"Written at Streatham, 1st October, 1782."
+
+[Footnote 1: _Note by Mrs. Piozzi_: "He was half a year _older_ when
+our registers were both examined."]
+
+"_October, 1782._--There is no mercy for me in this island. I am more
+and more disposed to try the continent. One day the paper rings with
+my marriage to Johnson, one day to Crutchley, one day to Seward. I
+give no reason for such impertinence, but cannot deliver myself from
+it. Whitbred, the rich brewer, is in love with me too; oh, I would
+rather, as Ann Page says, be set breast deep in the earth[1] and
+bowled to death with turnips.
+
+"Mr. Crutchley bid me make a curtsey to my daughters for keeping me
+out of a goal (_sic_), and the newspapers insolent as he! How shall I
+get through? How shall I get through? I have not deserved it of any
+of them, as God knows.
+
+"Philip Thicknesse put it about Bath that I was a poor girl, a mantua
+maker, when Mr. Thrale married me. It is an odd thing, but Miss
+Thrales like, I see, to have it believed."
+
+[Footnote 1: Anne Page says, "quick in the earth."]
+
+The general result down to this point is that, whatever the
+disturbance in Mrs. Thrale's heart and mind, Johnson had no ground of
+complaint, nor ever thought he had, which is the essential point in
+controversy. In other words, he was not driven, hinted, or manoeuvred
+out of Streatham. Yet almost all his worshippers have insisted that
+he was. Hawkins, after mentioning the kind offices undertaken by
+Johnson (which constantly took him to Streatham) says:--"Nevertheless
+it was observed by myself, and other of Johnson's friends, that soon
+after the decease of Mr. Thrale, his visits to Streatham became less
+and less frequent, and that he studiously avoided the mention of the
+place or the family." This statement is preposterous, and is only to
+be partially accounted for by the fact that Hawkins, as his daughter
+informs us, had no personal acquaintance with Mrs. Thrale or
+Streatham. Boswell, who was in Scotland when Johnson and Mrs. Thrale
+left Streatham together, gratuitously infers that he left it alone,
+angry and mortified, in consequence of her altered manner:
+
+"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 6th of October this year we find him making a
+'parting use of the library' at Streatham, and pronouncing a prayer
+which he composed on leaving Mr. Thrale's family.
+
+"'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, O
+Lord! have mercy upon me! 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.'
+
+"One cannot read this prayer without some emotions not very
+favourable to the lady whose conduct occasioned it.
+
+"The next day, he made the following memorandum:
+
+"'_October 7._--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 Acts, and then read fortuitously in the Gospels,--which was my
+parting use of the library.'"
+
+Mr. Croker, whose protest against the groundless insinuations of
+Boswell should have put subsequent writers on their guard, states in
+a note:--"He seems to have taken leave of the kitchen as well as the
+church at Streatham in Latin." The note of his last dinner there,
+done into English, would run thus:
+
+"Oct. 6th, Sunday, 1782.
+
+"I dined at Streatham on boiled leg of lamb, with spinach, the
+stuffing of flour and raisins, round of beef, and turkey poult; and
+after the meat service, figs, grapes, not yet ripe in consequence of
+the bad season, with peaches, also hard. I took my place at table in
+no joyful mood, and partook of the food moderately, lest I should
+finish by intemperance. If I rightly remember, the banquet at the
+funeral of Hadon came into my mind.[1] When shall I revisit
+Streatham?"
+
+[Footnote 1: "Si recte memini in mentem venerunt epulæ in exequiis
+Hadoni celebratæ." I cannot explain this allusion.]
+
+The exclamation "When shall I revisit Streatham?" loses much of its
+pathos when connected with these culinary details.
+
+Madame D'Arblay's description of the last year at Streatham is too
+important to be much abridged:
+
+"Dr. Burney, _when the Cecilian business was arranged_[1], again
+conveyed the Memorialist to Streatham. No further reluctance on his
+part, nor exhortations on that of Mr. Crisp, sought to withdraw her
+from that spot, where, while it was in its glory, they had so
+recently, and with pride, seen her distinguished. And truly eager was
+her own haste, when mistress of her time, to try once more to soothe
+those sorrows and chagrins in which she had most largely
+participated, by answering to the call, which had never ceased
+tenderly to pursue her, of return.
+
+"With alacrity, therefore, though not with gaiety, they re-entered
+the Streatham gates--but they soon perceived that they found not what
+they had left!
+
+"Changed, indeed, was Streatham! Gone its chief, and changed his
+relict! unaccountably, incomprehensibly, indefinably changed! She was
+absent and agitated; not two minutes could she remain in a place; she
+scarcely seemed to know whom she saw; her speech was so hurried it
+was hardly intelligible; her eyes were assiduously averted from those
+who sought them; and her smiles were faint and forced."
+
+[Footnote 1: This may mean when the arrangements were made for the
+publication, or when the book was published. It was published about
+the beginning of June, 1782.]
+
+"The mystery, however, soon ceased; the solicitations of the most
+affectionate sympathy could not long be urged in vain;--the mystery
+passed away--not so the misery! That, when revealed, was but to both
+parties doubled, from the different feelings set in movement by its
+disclosure.
+
+"The astonishing history of the enigmatical attachment which impelled
+Mrs. Thrale to her second marriage, is now as well known as her name:
+but its details belong not to the history of Dr. Burney; though the
+fact too deeply interested him, and was too intimately felt in his
+social habits, to be passed over in silence in any memoirs of his
+life.
+
+"But while ignorant yet of its cause, more and more struck he became
+at every meeting, by a species of general alienation which pervaded
+all around at Streatham. His visits, which, heretofore, had seemed
+galas to Mrs. Thrale, were now begun and ended almost without notice:
+and all others,--Dr. Johnson not excepted,--were cast into the same
+gulph of general neglect, or forgetfulness;--all,--save singly this
+Memorialist!--to whom, the fatal secret once acknowledged, Mrs.
+Thrale clung for comfort; though she saw, and generously pardoned,
+how wide she was from meeting approbation.
+
+"In this retired, though far from tranquil manner, _passed many
+months; during which_, with the acquiescent consent of the Doctor,
+his daughter, wholly devoted to her unhappy friend, _remained
+uninterruptedly at sad and altered Streatham;_ sedulously avoiding,
+what at other times she most wished, a _tête-à-tête_ with her father.
+Bound by ties indissoluble of honour not to betray a trust that, in
+the ignorance of her pity, she had herself unwittingly sought, even
+to him she was as immutably silent, on this subject, as to all
+others--save, singly, to the eldest daughter of the house: whose
+conduct, through scenes of dreadful difficulty, notwithstanding her
+extreme youth, was even exemplary; and to whom the self-beguiled, yet
+generous mother, gave full and free permission to confide every
+thought and feeling to the Memorialist."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"Various incidental circumstances began, at length, to open the
+reluctant eyes of Dr. Burney to an impelled, though clouded
+foresight, of the portentous event which might latently be the cause
+of the alteration of all around at Streatham. He then naturally
+wished for some explanation with his daughter, though he never
+forced, or even claimed her confidence; well knowing, that
+voluntarily to give it him had been her earliest delight.
+
+"But in taking her home with him one morning, to pass a day in St.
+Martin's Street, he almost involuntarily, in driving from the
+paddock, turned back his head towards the house, and, in a tone the
+most impressive, sighed out: 'Adieu, Streatham!--Adieu!'"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"_A few weeks earlier_, the Memorialist had passed a nearly similar
+scene with Dr. Johnson. Not, however, she believes, from the same
+formidable species of surmise; but from the wounds inflicted upon his
+injured sensibility, through the palpably altered looks, tone, and
+deportment, of the bewildered lady of the mansion; who, cruelly aware
+what would be his wrath, and how overwhelming his reproaches against
+her projected union, wished to break up their residing under the same
+roof before it should be proclaimed.
+
+"This gave to her whole behaviour towards Dr. Johnson, a sort of
+restless petulancy, of which she was sometimes hardly conscious, at
+others, nearly reckless; but which hurt him far more than she
+purposed, _though short of the point at which she aimed_, of
+precipitating a change of dwelling that would elude its being cast,
+either by himself or the world, upon a passion that her understanding
+blushed to own, even while she was sacrificing to it all of inborn
+dignity that she had been bred to hold most sacred.
+
+"Dr. Johnson, while still uninformed of an entanglement it was
+impossible he should conjecture, attributed her varying humours to
+the effect of wayward health meeting a sort of sudden wayward power:
+and imagined that caprices, which he judged to be partly feminine,
+_and partly wealthy_, would soberise themselves away in being
+unnoticed."
+
+"But at length, as she became more and more dissatisfied with her own
+situation, and impatient for its relief, she grew less and less
+scrupulous with regard to her celebrated guest: she slighted his
+counsel; did not heed his remonstrances; avoided his society; was
+ready at a moment's hint to lend him her carriage when he wished to
+return to Bolt Court; but awaited a formal request to accord it for
+bringing him back.
+
+"The Doctor then began to be stung; his own aspect became altered;
+and depression, with indignant uneasiness, sat upon his venerable
+front.
+
+"It was at this moment that, finding the Memorialist was going one
+morning to St. Martin's Street, he desired a cast thither in the
+carriage, and then to be set down at Bolt Court.
+
+"Aware of his disturbance, and far too well aware how short it was of
+what it would become when the cause of all that passed should be
+detected, it was in trembling that the Memorialist accompanied him to
+the coach, filled with dread of offending him by any reserve, should
+he force upon her any inquiry; and yet impressed with the utter
+impossibility of betraying a trusted secret.
+
+"His look was stern, though dejected, as he followed her into the
+vehicle; but when his eye, which, however short-sighted, was quick to
+mental perception, saw how ill at ease appeared his companion, all
+sternness subsided into an undisguised expression of the strongest
+emotion, that seemed to claim her sympathy, though to revolt from her
+compassion; 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 exclaiming: 'That house ... is lost to
+_me_--for ever!'
+
+"During a moment he then fixed upon her an interrogative eye, that
+impetuously demanded: 'Do you not perceive the change I am
+experiencing?'
+
+"A sorrowing sigh was her only answer.
+
+"Pride and delicacy then united to make him leave her to her
+taciturnity.
+
+"He was too deeply, however, disturbed to start or to bear any other
+subject; and neither of them uttered a single word till the coach
+stopt in St. Martin's Street, and the house and the carriage door
+were opened for their separation! He then suddenly and expressively
+looked at her, abruptly grasped her hand, and, with an air of
+affection, though in a low, husky voice, murmured rather than said:
+'Good morning, dear lady!' but turned his head quickly away, to avoid
+any species of answer."
+
+"She was deeply touched by so gentle an acquiescence in her declining
+the confidential discourse upon which he had indubitably meant to
+open, relative to this mysterious alienation. But she had the comfort
+to be satisfied, that he saw and believed in her sincere
+participation in his feelings; while he allowed for the grateful
+attachment that bound her to a friend so loved; who, to her at least,
+still manifested a fervour of regard that resisted all change; alike
+from this new partiality, and from the undisguised, and even
+strenuous opposition of the Memorialist to its indulgence."
+
+The Memoirs of Dr. Burney, by his daughter, published in 1832,
+together with her Diary and Letters, supplied the materials of Lord
+Macaulay's celebrated article on Madame D'Arblay in the "Edinburgh
+Review" for January, 1843, since reprinted amongst his Essays. He
+describes the Memoirs as a book "which it is impossible to read
+without a sensation made up of mirth, shame, and loathing," and
+adds:--"The two works are lying side by side before us; and we never
+turn from the Memoirs to the Diary without a sense of relief. The
+difference is as great as the difference between the atmosphere of a
+perfumer's shop, scented with lavender water and jasmine soap, and
+the air of a heath on a fine morning in May."[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: Critical and Historical Essays (one volume edition),
+1851, p. 652. The Memoirs were composed between 1828 and 1832, more
+than forty years after the occurrence of the scenes I have quoted
+from them.]
+
+The passages I have quoted amply establish the justice of this
+comparison, for they are utterly irreconcileable with the unvarnished
+statements of the Diary; from which we learn that "Cecilia" was
+published about the beginning of June, when Johnson was absent from
+Streatham; that the Diarist had left Streatham prior to August 12th,
+and did not return to it again that year. How could she have passed
+many months there after she was entrusted with the great secret,
+which (as stated in "Thraliana") she only guessed in September or
+October?
+
+How again could Johnson have attributed Mrs. Thrale's conduct to
+caprices "partly wealthy," when he knew that one main source of her
+troubles was pecuniary; or how can his alleged sense of ill-treatment
+be reconciled with his own letters? That he groaned over the terrible
+disturbance of his habits involved in the abandonment of Streatham,
+is likely enough; but as the only words he uttered were, "That house
+is lost to _me_ for ever," and "Good morning, dear lady," the
+accompanying look is about as safe a foundation for a theory of
+conduct or feeling as Lord Burleigh's famous nod in "The Critic." The
+philosopher was at this very time an inmate of Streatham, and
+probably returned that same evening to register a sample of its
+hospitality. At all events, we know that, spite of hints and
+warnings, sighs and groans, he stuck to Streatham to the last; and
+finally left it with Mrs. Thrale, as a member of her family, to
+reside in her house at Brighton, as her guest, for six weeks.[1] To
+talk of conscious ill-treatment or wounded dignity, in the teeth of
+facts like these, is laughable.
+
+[Footnote 1: The Edinburgh reviewer says, "Johnson went in Oct. 1782
+from Streatham to Brighton, where he lived a kind of boarding-house
+life;" and adds, "he was not asked out into company with his
+fellow-lodgers." The Thrales had a handsome furnished house at
+Brighton, which is mentioned both in the Correspondence and
+Autobiography.
+
+It is amusing enough to watch these attempts to shade away the
+ruinous effect of the Brighton trip on Lord Macaulay's Streatham
+pathos.]
+
+Madame D'Arblay joined the party as Mrs. Thrale's guest on the 26th
+October, and on the 28th she writes:
+
+"At dinner, we had Dr. Delap and Mr. Selwyn, who accompanied us in
+the evening to a ball; as did also Dr. Johnson, 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,' he said, 'it cannot be worse than being alone.'
+Strange that he should think so! I am sure I am not of his mind."
+
+On the 29th, she records that Johnson behaved very rudely to Mr.
+Pepys, and fairly drove him from the house. The entry for November
+10th is remarkable:--"We spent this evening at Lady De Ferrars, where
+Dr. Johnson accompanied us, for the first time he has been invited of
+our parties since my arrival." On the 20th November, she tells us
+that Mrs. and the three Miss Thrales and herself got up early to
+bathe. "We then returned home, and dressed by candle-light, and, _as
+soon as we could get Dr. Johnson ready_, we set out upon our journey
+in a coach and a chaise, and arrived in Argyll Street at dinner time.
+Mrs. Thrale has there fixed her tent for this short winter, which
+will end with the beginning of April, when her foreign journey takes
+place."
+
+One incident of this Brighton trip is mentioned in the "Anecdotes":
+
+"We had got a little French print among us at Brighthelmstone, in
+November 1782, of some people skaiting, with these lines written
+under:
+
+ 'Sur un mince chrystal l'hyver conduit leurs pas,
+ Le precipice est sous la glace;
+ Telle est de nos plaisirs la légère surface,
+ Glissez, mortels; n'appuyez pas.'
+
+"And I begged translations from every body: Dr. Johnson gave me this:
+
+ 'O'er ice the rapid skater flies,
+ With sport above and death below;
+ Where mischief lurks in gay disguise,
+ Thus lightly touch and quickly go.'
+
+"He was, however, most exceedingly enraged when he knew that in the
+course of the season I had asked half a dozen acquaintance to do the
+same thing; and said, it was a piece of treachery, and done to make
+every body else look little when compared to my favourite friends the
+_Pepyses_, whose translations were unquestionably the best."[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: By Sir Lucas:
+
+ "O'er the ice, as o'er pleasure, you lightly should glide,
+ Both have gulphs which their flattering surfaces hide."
+
+By Sir William:
+
+ "Swift o'er the level how the skaiters slide,
+ And skim the glitt'ring surface as they go:
+ Thus o'er life's specious pleasures lightly glide,
+ But pause not, press not on the gulph below."]
+
+Madame D'Arblay's Diary describes the outward and visible state of
+things at Brighton. "Thraliana" lays bare the internal history, the
+struggles of the understanding and the heart:
+
+"At Brighthelmstone, whither I went when I left Streatham, 7th
+October 1782, I heard this comical epigram about the Irish
+Volunteers:
+
+ "'There's not one of us all, my brave boys, but would rather
+ Do ought than offend great King George our good father;
+ But our country, you know, my dear lads, is our _mother_,
+ And that is a much surer side than the other.'"
+
+"I had looked ill, or perhaps appeared to feel so much, that my
+eldest daughter would, out of tenderness perhaps, force me to an
+explanation. I could, however, have evaded it if I would; but my
+heart was bursting, and partly from instinctive desire of unloading
+it--partly, I hope, from principle, too--I called her into my room
+and fairly told her the truth; told her the strength of my passion
+for Piozzi, the impracticability of my living without him, the
+opinion I had of his merit, and the resolution I had taken to marry
+him. Of all this she could not have been ignorant before. I confessed
+my attachment to him and her together with many tears and agonies one
+day at Streatham; told them both that I wished I had two hearts for
+their sakes, but having only one I would break it between them, and
+give them each _ciascheduno la metà!_ After that conversation she
+consented to go abroad with me, and even appointed the place (Lyons),
+to which Piozzi meant to follow us. He and she talked long together
+on the subject; yet her never mentioning it again made me fear she
+was not fully apprized of my intent, and though her concurrence might
+have been more easily obtained when left only to my influence in a
+distant country, where she would have had no friend to support her
+different opinion--yet I scorned to take such mean advantage, and
+told her my story _now_, with the winter before her in which to take
+her measures--her guardians at hand--all displeased at the journey:
+and to console her private distress I called into the room to her my
+own bosom friend, my beloved Fanny Burney, whose interest as well as
+judgment goes all against my marriage; whose skill in life and
+manners is superior to that of any man or woman in this age or
+nation; whose knowledge of the world, ingenuity of expedient,
+delicacy of conduct, and zeal in the cause, will make her a
+counsellor invaluable, and leave me destitute of every comfort, of
+every hope, of every expectation.
+
+"Such are the hands to which I have cruelly committed thy cause--my
+honourable, ardent, artless Piozzi!! Yet I should not deserve the
+union I desire with the most disinterested of all human hearts, had I
+behaved with less generosity, or endeavoured to gain by cunning what
+is withheld by prejudice. Had I set my heart upon a scoundrel, I
+might have done virtuously to break it and get loose; but the man I
+love, I love for his honesty, for his tenderness of heart, his
+dignity of mind, his piety to God, his duty to his mother, and his
+delicacy to me. In being united to this man only can I be happy in
+this world, and short will be my stay in it, if it is not passed with
+him."
+
+"_Brighthelmstone, 16th November 1782_.--For him I have been
+contented to reverse the laws of nature, and request of my child that
+concurrence which, at my age and a widow, I am not required either by
+divine or human institutions to ask even of a parent. The life I gave
+her she may now more than repay, only by agreeing to what she will
+with difficulty prevent; and which, if she does prevent, will give
+her lasting remorse; for those who stab _me_ shall hear me groan:
+whereas if she will--but how can she?--gracefully or even
+compassionately consent; if she will go abroad with me upon the
+chance of his death or mine preventing our union, and live with me
+till she is of age-- ... perhaps there is no heart so callous by
+avarice, no soul so poisoned by prejudice, no head so feather'd by
+foppery, that will forbear to excuse her when she returns to the rich
+and the gay--for having saved the life of a mother thro' compliance,
+extorted by anguish, contrary to the received opinions of the world."
+
+"_Brighthelmstone, 19th November, 1782_.--What is above written,
+though intended only to unload my heart by writing it, I shewed in a
+transport of passion to Queeney and to Burney. Sweet Fanny Burney
+cried herself half blind over it; said there was no resisting such
+pathetic eloquence, and that, if she was the daughter instead of the
+friend, she should be tempted to attend me to the altar; but that,
+while she possessed her reason, nothing should seduce her to approve
+what reason itself would condemn: that children, religion, situation,
+country, and character--besides the diminution of fortune by the
+certain loss of 800_l._ a year, were too much to sacrifice for any
+_one man_. If, however, I were resolved to make the sacrifice, _a la
+bonne heure!_ it was an astonishing proof of an attachment very
+difficult for mortal man to repay."
+
+"I will talk no more about it."
+
+What comes next was written in London:
+
+"_Nov. 27, 1782_.--I have given my Piozzi some hopes--dear, generous,
+prudent, noble-minded creature; he will hardly permit himself to
+believe it ever can be--_come quei promessi miracoli_, says he, _che
+non vengono mai_. For rectitude of mind and native dignity of soul I
+never saw his fellow."
+
+"_Dec. 1, 1782_.--The guardians have met upon the scheme of putting
+our girls in Chancery. I was frighted at the project, not doubting
+but the Lord Chancellor would stop us from leaving England, as he
+would certainly see no joke in three young heiresses, his wards,
+quitting the kingdom to frisk away with their mother into Italy:
+besides that I believe Mr. Crutchley proposed it merely for a
+stumbling-block to my journey, as he cannot bear to have Hester out
+of his sight.
+
+"Nobody much applauded my resolution in going, but Johnson and Cator
+said they would not concur in stopping me by violence, and Crutchley
+was forced to content himself with intending to put the ladies under
+legal protection as soon as we should be across the sea. This measure
+I much applaud, for if I die or marry in Italy their fortunes will be
+safer in Chancery than any how else. Cator[1] said _I_ had a right to
+say that going to Italy would benefit the children as much as _they_
+had to say it would _not_; but I replied that as I really did not
+mean anything but my own private gratification by the voyage, nothing
+should make me say I meant _their_ good by it; and that it would be
+like saying I eat roast beef to mend my daughters' complexions. The
+result of all is that we certainly _do go_. I will pick up what
+knowledge and pleasure I can here this winter to divert myself, and
+perhaps my _compagno fidele_ in distant climes and future times, with
+the recollection of England and its inhabitants, all which I shall be
+happy and content to leave _for him_."
+
+[Footnote 1: _Note by Mrs. T.:_ "Cator said likewise that the
+attorney's bill ought to be paid by the ladies as a bill of Mr.
+Thrale's, but I replied that perhaps I might marry and give my estate
+away, and if so it would be unjust that they should pay the bill
+which related to that estate only. Besides, if I should leave it to
+Hester, says I, ... why should Susan and Sophy and Cecilia and
+Harriet pay the lawyer's bill for their sister's land? He agreed to
+this plea, and I will live on bread and water, but I will pay Norris
+myself. 'Tis but being a better huswife in pins."]
+
+Madame D'Arblay writes, Friday, December 27th, 1782:
+
+"I dined with Mrs. Thrale and Dr. Johnson, who was very comic and
+good-humoured.... Mrs. Thrale, who was to have gone with me to Mrs.
+Orde's, gave up her visit in order to stay with Dr. Johnson. Miss
+Thrale, therefore, and I went together."
+
+I return to "Thraliana":
+
+"_January_, 1783.--A fit of jealousy seized me the other day: some
+viper had stung me up to a notion that my Piozzi was fond of a Miss
+Chanon. I call'd him gently to account, and after contenting myself
+with slight excuses, told him that, whenever we married, I should,
+however, desire to see as little as possible of the lady _chez
+nous_."
+
+There is a large gap in "Thraliana" just in the most interesting part
+of the story of her parting with Piozzi in 1783, and his recall.
+
+"_January 29, 1783_.--Adieu to all that's dear, to all that's lovely;
+I am parted from my life, my soul, my Piozzi. If I can get health and
+strength to write my story here, 'tis all I wish for now--oh misery!
+[Here are four pages missing.] The cold dislike of my eldest daughter
+I thought might wear away by familiarity with his merit, and that we
+might live tolerably together, or, at least, part friends--but no;
+her aversion increased daily, and she communicated it to the others;
+they treated _me_ insolently, and _him_ very strangely--running away
+whenever he came as if they saw a serpent--and plotting with their
+governess--a cunning Italian--how to invent lyes to make me hate him,
+and twenty such narrow tricks. By these means the notion of my
+partiality took air, and whether Miss Thrale sent him word slily or
+not I cannot tell, but on the 25th January, 1783, Mr. Crutchley came
+hither to conjure me not to go to Italy; he had heard such things, he
+said, and by _means_ next to _miraculous_. The next day, Sunday,
+26th, Fanny Burney came, said I must marry him instantly or give him
+up; that my reputation would be lost else.
+
+"I actually groaned with anguish, threw myself on the bed in an agony
+which my fair daughter beheld with frigid indifference. She had
+indeed never by one tender word endeavoured to dissuade me from the
+match, but said, coldly, that if I _would_ abandon my children I
+_must_; that their father had not deserved such treatment from me;
+that I should be punished by Piozzi's neglect, for that she knew he
+hated me; and that I turned out my offspring to chance for his sake,
+like puppies in a pond to swim or drown according as Providence
+pleased; that for her part she must look herself out a place like the
+other servants, for my face would she never see more.' 'Nor write to
+me?' said I. 'I shall not, madam,' replied she with a cold sneer,
+'easily find out your address; for you are going you know not
+whither, I believe.'
+
+"Susan and Sophy said nothing at all, but they taught the two young
+ones to cry 'Where are you going, mama? will you leave us and die as
+our poor papa did?' There was no standing _that_., so I wrote my
+lover word that my mind was all distraction, and bid him come to me
+the next morning, 27th January--my birthday--and spent the Sunday
+night in torture not to be described. My falsehood to my Piozzi, my
+strong affection for him, the incapacity I felt in myself to resign
+the man I so adored, the hopes I had so cherished, inclined me
+strongly to set them all at defiance, and go with him to church to
+sanctify the promises I had so often made him; while the idea of
+abandoning the children of my first husband, who left me so nobly
+provided for, and who depended on my attachment to his offspring,
+awakened the voice of conscience, and threw me on my knees to pray
+for _His_ direction who was hereafter to judge my conduct. His grace
+illuminated me, His power strengthened me, and I flew to my
+daughter's bed in the morning and told her my resolution to resign my
+own, my dear, my favourite purpose, and to prefer my children's
+interest to my love. She questioned my ability to make the sacrifice;
+said one word from him would undo all my--[Here two pages are
+missing].
+
+"I told Dr. Johnson and Mr. Crutchley three days ago that I had
+determined--seeing them so averse to it--that I would not go abroad,
+but that, if I did not leave England, I _would_ leave London, where I
+had not been treated to my mind, and where I had flung away much
+unnecessary money with little satisfaction; that I was greatly in
+debt, and somewhat like distress'd: that borrowing was always bad,
+but of one's children worst: that Mr. Crutchley's objection to their
+lending me their money when I had a mortgage to offer as security,
+was unkind and harsh: that I would go live in a little way at Bath
+till I had paid all my debts and cleared my income: that I would no
+more be tyrannized over by people who hated or people who plundered
+me, in short that I would retire and save my money and lead this
+uncomfortable life no longer. They made little or no reply, and I am
+resolved to do as I declared. I will draw in my expenses, lay by
+every shilling I can to pay off debts and mortgages, and perhaps--who
+knows? I may in six or seven years be freed from all incumbrances,
+and carry a clear income of 2500_l._ a year and an estate of 500_l._
+in land to the man of my heart. May I but live to discharge my
+obligations to those who _hate me_; it will be paradise to discharge
+them to him who _loves me_."
+
+"_April, 1783_.--I will go to Bath: nor health, nor strength, nor my
+children's affections, have I. My daughter does not, I suppose, much
+delight in this scheme [viz, retrenchment of expenses and removal to
+Bath], but why should I lead a life of delighting her, who would not
+lose a shilling of interest or an ounce of pleasure to save my life
+from perishing? When I was near losing my existence from the
+contentions of my mind, and was seized with a temporary delirium in
+Argyll Street, she and her two eldest sisters laughed at my distress,
+and observed to dear Fanny Burney, that it was _monstrous droll_.
+_She_ could hardly suppress her indignation.
+
+"Piozzi was ill.... A sore throat, Pepys said it was, with four
+ulcers in it: the people about me said it had been lanced, and I
+mentioned it slightly before the girls.' Has he cut his own throat?'
+says Miss Thrale in her quiet manner. This was less inexcusable
+because she hated him, and the other was her sister; though, had she
+exerted the good sense I thought her possessed of, she would not have
+treated him so: had she adored, and fondled, and respected him as he
+deserved from her hands, and from the heroic conduct he shewed in
+January when he gave into her hands, that dismal day, all my letters
+containing promises of marriage, protestations of love, &c., who
+knows but she might have kept us separated? But never did she once
+caress or thank me, never treat him with common civility, except on
+the very day which gave her hopes of our final parting. Worth while
+to be sure it was, to break one's heart for her! The other two are,
+however, neither wiser nor kinder; all swear by her I believe, and
+follow her footsteps exactly. Mr. Thrale had not much heart, but his
+fair daughters have none at all."[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: This is the very accusation they brought against her.]
+
+Johnson was not called in to counsel on these matters of the heart,
+but he was not cast off or neglected. Madame D'Arblay lands him in
+Argyll Street on the 20th November, 1782. We hear of him at Mrs.
+Thrale's house or in her company repeatedly from Madame D'Arblay and
+Dr. Lort. "Johnson," writes Dr. Lort, January 28th, 1783, "is much
+better. I saw him the other evening at Madame Thrale's in very good
+spirits." Boswell says:
+
+"On Friday, March 21, (1783) having arrived in London the night
+before, I was glad to find him at Mrs. Thrale's house, in Argyle
+Street, appearances of friendship between them being still kept up. I
+was shown into his room; and after the first salutation he said, 'I
+am glad you are come; I am very ill'....
+
+"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."
+
+This is quite decisive so far as Boswell is concerned, and disposes
+at once of all his preceding insinuations to her disadvantage. He had
+not seen her before since Thrale's death; and now, finding them
+together and jealously scrutinising their tone and manner towards
+each, he imagined all to be as well as formerly.[1] That they were on
+the point of living apart, and of keeping up their habitual
+interchange of mind exclusively by letters, is no proof that either
+was capriciously or irrecoverably estranged.
+
+[Footnote 1: "Now on March 21, 1783, fifteen months before the
+marriage in question, Boswell speaks of the severance of the old
+friendship as effected: 'appearances of friendship,' he says, 'were
+still maintained between them.' Boswell was at feud with the lady
+when he wrote, as we all know. But his evidence is surely sufficient
+as to the fact of the rupture, though not as to its causes."--_(Edin.
+Rev._ p. 510.) Boswell's concluding evidence, that to the best of his
+knowledge and observation, there was no change or rupture, is
+suppressed!]
+
+The pleasures of intimacy in friendship depend far more on external
+circumstances than people of a sentimental turn of mind are willing
+to concede; and when constant companionship ceases to suit the
+convenience of both parties, the chances are that it will be dropped
+on the first favourable opportunity. Admiration, esteem, or affection
+may continue to be felt for one whom, from altered habits or new
+ties, we can no longer receive as an inmate or an established member
+of the family. Johnson was now in his seventy-fourth year, haunted by
+the fear of death, and fond of dwelling nauseously on his ailments
+and proposed remedies. From what passed at Brighton, it would seem
+that there were moods in which he was positively unbearable, and
+could not be received in a house without driving every one else out
+of it. In a roomy mansion like Streatham he might be endured, because
+he could be kept out of the way; but in an ordinary town-house or
+small establishment, such a guest would resemble an elephant in a
+private menagerie.
+
+There is also a very great difference, when arrangements are to be
+made for the domestication of a male visitor, between a family with a
+male head, and one consisting exclusively of females. Let any widow
+with daughters make the case her own, and imagine herself
+domesticated in Argyll or Harley Street with the lexicographer. The
+manly authority of Thrale was required to keep Johnson in order quite
+as much as to steady the imputed flightiness of the lady; and his
+idolaters must really remember that she was a sentient being, with
+feelings and affections which she was fully entitled to consult in
+arranging her scheme of life. When Lord Macaulay and his school
+tacitly assume that these are to weigh as dust in the balance against
+the claims of learning, they argue like sundry upholders of the
+temporal sovereignty of the Pope, who contend that his subjects
+should complacently endure any amount of oppression rather than
+endanger (what they deem) the vital interests of the Church. When it
+is maintained that the discomfort was amply repaid by the glory he
+conferred, we are reminded of what the Strasbourg goose undergoes for
+fame: "Crammed with food, deprived of drink, and fixed near a great
+fire, before which it is nailed with its feet upon a plank, this
+goose passes, it must be owned, an uncomfortable life. The torment
+would indeed be intolerable, if the idea of the lot which awaits him
+did not serve as a consolation. But when he reflects that his liver,
+bigger than himself, loaded with truffles, and clothed in a
+scientific _patè_, will, through the instrumentality of M. Corcellet,
+diffuse all over Europe the glory of his name, he resigns himself to
+his destiny, and suffers not a tear to flow."[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: Almanach des Gourmands.]
+
+Her case for a separation _de corps_ is thus stated in the "Anecdotes
+":
+
+"All these exactnesses in a man who was nothing less than exact
+himself, made him extremely impracticable as an inmate, though most
+instructive as a companion, and useful as a friend. Mr. Thrale too
+could sometimes overrule his rigidity, by saying coldly, 'There,
+there, now we have had enough for one lecture, Dr. Johnson, we will
+not be upon education any more till after dinner, if you please,'--or
+some such speech; but when there was nobody to restrain his dislikes,
+it was extremely difficult to find any body with whom he could
+converse, without living always on the verge of a quarrel, or of
+something too like a quarrel to be pleasing. I came into the room,
+for example, one evening, where he and a gentleman, whose abilities
+we all respected exceedingly, were sitting; a lady who had walked in
+two minutes before me had blown 'em both into a flame, by whispering
+something to Mr. S----d, which he endeavoured to explain away, so as
+not to affront the Doctor, whose suspicions were all alive. 'And have
+a care, Sir,' said he, just as I came in; 'the old lion will not bear
+to be tickled.'[1] The other was pale with rage, the lady wept at the
+confusion she had caused, and I could only say with Lady Macbeth,
+
+ 'So! you've displaced the mirth, broke the good meeting
+ With most admir'd disorder.'
+
+"Such accidents, however, occurred too often, and I was forced to
+take advantage of my lost lawsuit, and plead inability of purse to
+remain longer in London or its vicinage. I had been crossed in my
+intentions of going abroad, and found it convenient, for every reason
+of health, peace, and pecuniary circumstances, to retire to Bath,
+where I knew Mr. Johnson would not follow me, and where I could for
+that reason command some little portion of time for my own use; a
+thing impossible while I remained at Streatham or at London, as my
+hours, carriage, and servants, had long been at his command, who
+would not rise in the morning till twelve o'clock perhaps, and oblige
+me to make breakfast for him till the bell rung for dinner, though
+much displeased if the toilet was neglected, and though much of the
+time we passed together was spent in blaming or deriding, very
+justly, my neglect of economy, and waste of that money which might
+make many families happy. The original reason of our connexion, his
+_particularly disordered health and spirits_[2], had been long at an
+end, and he had no other ailments than old age and general infirmity,
+which every professor of medicine was ardently zealous and generally
+attentive to palliate, and to contribute all in their power for the
+prolongation of a life so valuable.
+
+"Veneration for his virtue, reverence for his talents, delight in his
+conversation, and habitual endurance of a yoke my husband first put
+upon me, and of which he contentedly bore his share for sixteen or
+seventeen years, made me go on so long with Mr. Johnson; but the
+perpetual confinement I will own to have been terrifying in the first
+years of our friendship, and irksome in the last, nor could I pretend
+to support it without help, when my coadjutor was no more. To the
+assistance we gave him, the shelter our house afforded to his uneasy
+fancies, and to the pains we took to soothe or repress them, the
+world perhaps is indebted for the three political pamphlets, the new
+edition and correction of his Dictionary, and for the Poets' Lives,
+which he would scarce have lived, I think, and kept his faculties
+entire, to have written, had not incessant care been exerted at the
+time of his first coming to be our constant guest in the country; and
+several times after that, when he found himself particularly
+oppressed with diseases incident to the most vivid and fervent
+imaginations. I shall for ever consider it as the greatest honour
+which could be conferred on any one, to have been the confidential
+friend of Dr. Johnson's health; and to have in some measure, with Mr.
+Thrale's assistance, saved from distress at least, if not from worse,
+a mind great beyond the comprehension of common mortals and good
+beyond all hope of imitation from perishable beings."
+
+[Footnote 1: This must be the quarrel between Johnson and Seward at
+which Miss Streatfield cried. _(Antè,_ p. 116.)]
+
+[Footnote 2: These words are underlined in the manuscript.]
+
+This was written in Italy in 1785, when, painfully alive to the
+insults heaped upon her on Johnson's account, she may be excused for
+dwelling on what she had endured for his sake. But if, as may be
+inferred from her statement, some of the cordiality shewn him during
+the palmy days of their intimacy was forced, this rather enhances
+than lessens the merit of her services, which thus become elevated
+into sacrifices. The question is not how she uniformly felt, but how
+she uniformly behaved to him; and the fact of her being obliged to
+retire to Bath to get out of his way proves that there had been no
+rupture, no coolness, no serious offence given or taken on either
+side, up to April, 1783; just one year-and-a-half after the alleged
+expulsion from Streatham.
+
+There were ample avowable reasons for her retirement, and no
+suspicion could have crossed Johnson's mind that he was an
+incumbrance, or he would not have been found at her house by Boswell,
+as he was found on the 21st March, 1783, when she said "she was going
+to Bath, and should have been sorry to leave Dr. Johnson before I
+came." Considering the heart-rending struggle in which she was
+engaged at this time, with the aggravated infliction of an
+unsympathising and dogmatic friend, the wonder is how she retained
+her outward placidity at all.
+
+"_Sunday Morning, 6th April_, 1783.--I have been very busy preparing
+to go to Bath and save my money; the Welch settlement has been
+examined and rewritten by Cator's desire in such a manner that a will
+can revoke it or charge the estate, or anything. I signed my
+settlement yesterday, and, before I slept, wrote my will, charging
+the estate with pretty near _3000l_. But what signifies it? My
+daughters deserve no thanks from my tenderness and they want no
+pecuniary help from my purse--let me provide in some measure, for my
+dear, my absent Piozzi.--God give me strength to part with him
+courageously.--I expect him every instant to breakfast with me for
+the _last time_.--Gracious Heavens, what words are these! Oh no, for
+mercy may we but meet again! and without diminished kindness. Oh my
+love, my love!
+
+"We did meet and part courageously. I persuaded him to bring his old
+friend Mecci, who goes abroad with him and has long been his
+confidant, to keep the meeting from being too tender, the separation
+from being too poignant--his presence was a restraint on our conduct,
+and a witness of our vows, which we renewed with fervour, and will
+keep sacred in absence, adversity, and age. When all was over I flew
+to my dearest, loveliest friend, my Fanny Burney, and poured all my
+sorrows into her tender bosom."
+
+"_Bath, April 14th, 1783._--Here I am, settled in my plan of economy,
+with three daughters, three maids and a man," &c.
+
+Piozzi left England the night of the 8th May, 1783.
+
+ "Come, friendly muse! some rhimes discover
+ With which to meet my dear at Dover,
+ Fondly to bless my wandering lover
+ And make him dote on dirty Dover.
+ Call each fair wind to waft him over,
+ Nor let him linger long at Dover,
+ But there from past fatigues recover,
+ And write his love some lines from Dover.
+ Too well he knows his skill to move her,
+ To meet him two years hence at Dover,
+ When happy with her handsome rover
+ She'll bless the day she din'd at Dover."
+
+"_Russell Street, Bath, Thursday, 8th May_, 1783.--I sent him these
+verses to divert him on his passage. Dear angel! _this day_ he leaves
+a nation to which he was sent for my felicity perhaps, I hope for his
+own. May I live but to make him happy, and hear him say 'tis _me_
+that make him so!"--
+
+In a note on the passage in which he states that Johnson studiously
+avoided all mention of Streatham or the family after Thrale's death,
+Hawkins says:--"It seems that between him and the widow there was a
+formal taking of leave, for I find in his Diary the following note:
+'1783, April 5th, I took leave of Mrs. Thrale. I was much moved. I
+had some expostulations with her. She said she was likewise affected.
+I commended the Thrales with great good will to God; may my petitions
+have been heard.'" This being the day before her parting interview
+with Piozzi, no doubt she was much affected: and as the newspapers
+had already taken up the topic of her engagement, the expostulations
+probably referred to it.
+
+Preceding commentators were not bound to know what is now learned
+from "Thraliana"; but they were bound to know what might always have
+been learned from Johnson's printed letters; and the tone of these
+from the separation in April, 1783, to the marriage in July, 1784, is
+identically the same as at any period of the intimacy which can be
+specified. There are the same warm expressions of regard, the same
+gratitude for acknowledged kindness, the same alternations of hope
+and disappointment, the same medical details, and the same reproaches
+for silence or fancied coldness, in which he habitually indulged
+towards all his female correspondents. Shew me a complaint or
+reproach, and I will instantly match it with one from a period when
+the intimacy was confessedly and notoriously at its height. If her
+occasional explosions of irritability are to be counted, what
+inference is to be drawn from Johnson's depreciatory remarks on her,
+and indeed on everybody, so carefully treasured up by Hawkins and
+Boswell?
+
+On June 13th, 1783, he writes to her:
+
+"Your last letter was very pleasing; it expressed kindness to me, and
+some degree of placid acquiescence in your present mode of life,
+_which is, I think, the best which is at present within your reach_.
+
+"My powers and attention have for a long time been almost wholly
+employed upon my health, I hope not wholly without success, but
+solitude is very tedious."
+
+She replies:
+
+"Bath, June 15th, 1783.
+
+"I believe it is too true, my dear Sir, that you think on little
+except yourself and your own health, but then they are subjects on
+which every one else would think too--and that is a great
+consolation.
+
+"I am willing enough to employ all my thoughts upon _myself_, but
+there is nobody here who wishes to think with or about me, so I am
+very sick and a little sullen, and disposed now and then to say, like
+king David, 'My lovers and my friends have been put away from me, and
+my acquaintance hid out of my sight.' If the last letter I wrote
+showed some degree of placid acquiescence in a situation, which,
+however displeasing, is the best I can get at just now, I pray God to
+keep me in that disposition, and to lay no more calamity upon me
+which may again tempt me to murmur and complain. _In the meantime
+assure yourself of my undiminished kindness and veneration: they have
+been long out of accident's power either to lessen or increase."_....
+
+"That _you_ should be solitary is a sad thing, and a strange one too,
+when every body is willing to drop in, and for a quarter of an hour
+at least, save you from a _tête-à-tête_ with yourself. I never could
+catch a moment when you were alone whilst we were in London, and Miss
+Thrale says the same thing."
+
+A few days afterwards, June 19th, he writes:
+
+"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."
+
+Two days before, he had suffered a paralytic stroke, and lost the
+power of speech for a period. After minutely detailing his ailments
+and their treatment by his medical advisers, he proceeds:
+
+"How this will be received by you I know not. I hope you will
+sympathise with me; but perhaps
+
+ "My mistress gracious, mild, and good,
+ Cries! Is he dumb? 'Tis time he should.
+
+"But can this be possible? I hope it cannot. I hope that what, when I
+could speak, I spoke of you, and to you, will be in a sober and
+serious hour remembered by you; and surely it cannot be remembered
+but with some degree of kindness. I have loved you 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.
+
+"O God! give me comfort and confidence in Thee; forgive my sins; and
+if it be thy good pleasure, relieve my diseases for Jesus Christ's
+sake. Amen.
+
+_"I am almost ashamed of this querulous letter, but now it is
+written, let it go."_
+
+The Edinburgh reviewer quotes the first paragraph of this letter to
+prove Johnson's consciousness of change on her side, and omits all
+mention of the passages in which he turns to her as "a settled and
+unalienable friend," and apologises for his querulousness!
+
+Some time before (November 1782), she had written to him:
+
+"My health is growing very bad, to be sure. I will starve still more
+rigidly for a while, and watch myself carefully; but more than six
+months will I not bestow upon that subject; you shall not have in me
+a valetudinary correspondent, _who is always writing such letters,
+that to read the labels tied on bottles by an apothecary's boy would
+be more eligible and amusing_; nor will I live, like Flavia in 'Law's
+Serious Call,' who spends half her time and money on herself, with
+sleeping draughts, and waking draughts, and cordials and broths. My
+desire is always to determine against my own gratification, so far as
+shall be possible for my body to co-operate with my mind, and you
+will not suspect me of wearing blisters, and living wholly upon
+vegetables for sport. If that will do, the disorder may be removed;
+but if health is gone, and gone for ever, we will act as Zachary
+Pearce the famous bishop of Rochester did, when he lost the wife he
+loved so--call for one glass to the health of her who is departed,
+never more to return--and so go quietly back to the usual duties of
+life, and forbear to mention her again from that time till the last
+day of it."
+
+Instead of acting on the same principle, he perseveres in addressing
+his "ideal Urania" as if she had been a consulting physician:
+
+"London, June 20th, 1783.
+
+"DEAREST MADAM,--I think to send you for some time a regular diary.
+You will forgive the gross images which disease must necessarily
+present. Dr. Lawrence said that medical treatises should be always in
+Latin. The two vesicatories did not perform well," &c. &c.
+
+"June 23, 1783.
+
+"_Your offer, dear Madam, of coming to me, is charmingly kind_; but I
+will lay it up for future use, and then let it not be considered as
+obsolete; _a time of dereliction may come, when I may have hardly any
+other friend_, but in the present exigency I cannot name one who has
+been deficient in civility or attention. What man can do for man has
+been done for me. Write to me very often."
+
+That the offer was serious and heartfelt, is clear from "Thraliana":
+
+"_Bath, June 24th_, 1783.--A stroke of the palsy has robbed Johnson
+of his speech, I hear. Dreadful event! and I at a distance. Poor
+fellow! A letter from himself, _in his usual style_, convinces me
+that none of his faculties have failed, and his physicians say that
+all present danger is over."
+
+He writes:
+
+"June 24th, 1783.
+
+"Both Queeny's letter and yours gave me, to-day, great pleasure.
+Think as well and as kindly of me as you can, but do not flatter me.
+Cool reciprocations of esteem are the great comforts of life;
+hyberbolical praise only corrupts the tongue of the one, and the ear
+of the other."
+
+"June 28th, 1783.
+
+"Your letter is just such as I desire, and as from you I hope always
+to deserve."
+
+Her own state of mind at this time may be collected from "Thraliana":
+
+"_June, _1783.--Most sincerely do I regret the sacrifice I have made
+of health, happiness, and the society of a worthy and amiable
+companion, to the pride and prejudice of three insensible girls, who
+would see nature perish without concern ... were their gratification
+the cause.
+
+"The two youngest have, for ought I see, hearts as impenetrable as
+their sister. They will all starve a favourite animal--all see with
+unconcern the afflictions of a friend; and when the anguish I
+suffered on their account last winter, in Argyll Street, nearly took
+away my life and reason, the younger ridiculed as a jest those
+agonies which the eldest despised as a philosopher. When all is said,
+they are exceeding valuable girls--beautiful in person, cultivated in
+understanding, and well-principled in religion: high in their
+notions, lofty in their carriage, and of intents equal to their
+expectations; wishing to raise their own family by connections with
+some more noble ... and superior to any feeling of tenderness which
+might clog the wheels of ambition. What, however, is my state? who am
+condemned to live with girls of this disposition? to teach without
+authority; to be heard without esteem; to be considered by them as
+their superior in fortune, while I live by the money borrowed from
+them; and in good sense, when they have seen me submit my judgment to
+theirs at the hazard of my life and wits. Oh, 'tis a pleasant
+situation! and whoever would wish, as the Greek lady phrased it, to
+teize himself and repent of his sins, let him borrow his children's
+money, be in love against their interest and prejudice, forbear to
+marry by their advice, and then shut himself up and live with
+them."[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: After Buckingham had been some time married to Fairfax's
+daughter, he said it was like marrying the devil's daughter and
+keeping house with your father-in-law.]
+
+Is it possible to misconstrue such a letter as the following from
+Johnson to her, now that the querulous and desponding tone of the
+writer is familiar to us?
+
+"London, Nov. 13th, 1783.
+
+"DEAR MADAM,--Since you have written to me with the attention and
+tenderness of ancient time, your letters give me a great part of the
+pleasure which a life of solitude admits. You will never bestow any
+share of your good-will on one who deserves better. Those that have
+loved longest, love best. A sudden blaze of kindness may by a single
+blast of coldness be extinguished, but that fondness which length of
+time has connected with many circumstances and occasions, though it
+may for a while be suppressed by disgust or resentment, with or
+without a cause, is hourly revived by accidental recollection.[1] To
+those that have lived long together, every thing heard and every
+thing seen recals some pleasure communicated, or some benefit
+conferred, some petty quarrel, or some slight endearment. Esteem of
+great powers, or amiable qualities newly discovered, may embroider a
+day or a week, but a friendship of twenty years is interwoven with
+the texture of life. A friend may be often found and lost, but an
+_old friend_ never can be found, and Nature has provided that he
+cannot easily be lost."
+
+[Footnote 1:
+
+ "Yet, oh yet thyself deceive not:
+ Love may sink by slow decay,
+ But by sudden wrench believe not
+ Hearts can thus be torn away."--BYRON.]
+
+The date of the following scene, as described by Madame D'Arblay in
+the "Memoirs," is towards the end of November, 1783:
+
+"Nothing had yet publicly transpired, with certainty or authority,
+relative to the projects of Mrs. Thrale, who had now been nearly a
+year at Bath[1]; though nothing was left unreported, or unasserted,
+with respect to her proceedings. Nevertheless, how far Dr. Johnson
+was himself informed, or was ignorant on the subject, neither Dr.
+Burney nor his daughter could tell; and each equally feared to learn.
+
+"Scarcely an instant, however, was the latter left alone in Bolt
+Court, ere she saw the justice of her long apprehensions; for while
+she planned speaking upon some topic that might have a chance to
+catch the attention of the Doctor, a sudden change from kind
+tranquillity to strong austerity took place in his altered
+countenance; and, startled and affrighted, she held her peace....
+
+"Thus passed a few minutes, in which she scarcely dared breathe;
+while the respiration of the Doctor, on the contrary, was of
+asthmatic force and loudness; then, suddenly turning to her, with an
+air of mingled wrath and woe, he hoarsely ejaculated: 'Piozzi!'
+
+"He evidently meant to say more; but the effort with which he
+articulated that name robbed him of any voice for amplification, and
+his whole frame grew tremulously convulsed.
+
+"His guest, appalled, could not speak; but he soon discerned that it
+was grief from coincidence, not distrust from opposition of
+sentiment, that caused her taciturnity. This perception calmed him,
+and he then exhibited a face 'in sorrow more than anger.' His
+see-sawing abated of its velocity, and, again fixing his looks upon
+the fire, he fell into pensive rumination.
+
+"At length, and with great agitation, he broke forth with: 'She cares
+for no one! You, only--You, she loves still!--but no one--and nothing
+else!--You she still loves----'
+
+"A half smile now, though of no very gay character, softened a little
+the severity of his features, while he tried to resume some
+cheerfulness in adding: 'As ... she loves her little finger!'
+
+"It was plain by this burlesque, or, perhaps, playfully literal
+comparison, that he meant now, and tried, to dissipate the solemnity
+of his concern.
+
+"The hint was taken; his guest started another subject; and this he
+resumed no more. He saw how distressing was the theme to a hearer
+whom he ever wished to please, not distress; and he named Mrs. Thrale
+no more! Common topics took place, till they were rejoined by Dr.
+Burney, whom then, and indeed always, he likewise spared upon this
+subject."
+
+[Footnote 1: About six months.]
+
+After quoting this description at length, Lord Brougham remarks:
+
+"Now Johnson was, perhaps unknown to himself, in love with Mrs.
+Thrale, but for Miss Burney's thoughtless folly there can be no
+excuse. And her father, a person of the very same rank and profession
+with Mr. Piozzi, appears to have adopted the same senseless cant, as
+if it were less lawful to marry an Italian musician than an English.
+To be sure, Miss Burney says, that Mrs. Thrale was lineally descended
+from Adam de Saltsburg, who came over with the Conqueror. But
+assuredly that worthy, unable to write his name, would have held Dr.
+Johnson himself in as much contempt as his fortunate rival, and would
+have regarded his alliance as equally disreputable with the
+Italian's, could his consent have been asked."[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: Lives of Men of Letters, &c, vol. ii.]
+
+If the scene took place at all, it must have taken place within a few
+days after the profession of satisfied and unaltered friendship
+contained in Johnson's letter of November 13th. His next letter is to
+Miss Thrale:
+
+"Nov. 18th, 1783.
+
+"Dear Miss,--Here is a whole week, and nothing heard from your house.
+Baretti said what a wicked house it would be, and a wicked house it
+is. Of you, however, I have no complaint to make, for I owe you a
+letter. Still 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."
+
+On February 24th, 1784, Dr. Lort writes to Bishop Percy:
+
+"Poor Dr. Johnson has had a very bad winter, attended by Heberden and
+Brocklesby, who neither of them expected he would have survived the
+frost: that being gone, he still remains, and I hope will now
+continue, at least till the next severe one. It has indeed carried
+off a great many old people."
+
+Johnson to Mrs. Thrale:
+
+"March 10th, 1784.
+
+"Your kind expressions gave me great pleasure; do not reject me from
+your thoughts. Shall we ever exchange confidence by the fireside
+again?"
+
+He was so absorbed with his own complaints as to make no allowance
+for hers. Yet her health was in a very precarious state, and in the
+autumn of the same year, his complaints of silence and neglect were
+suspended by the intelligence that her daughter Sophia was lying at
+death's door. On March 27th, 1784, she writes:
+
+"You tell one of my daughters that you know not with distinctness the
+cause of my complaints. I believe she who lives with me knows them no
+better; one very dreadful one is however removed by dear Sophia's
+recovery. It is kind in you to quarrel no more about expressions
+which were not meant to offend; but unjust to suppose, I have not
+lately thought myself dying. Let us, however, take the Prince of
+Abyssinia's advice, _and not add to the other evils of life the
+bitterness of controversy._ If courage is a noble and generous
+quality, let us exert it _to_ the last, and _at_ the last: if faith
+is a Christian virtue, let us willingly receive and accept that
+support it will most surely bestow--and do permit me to repeat those
+words with which I know not why you were displeased: _Let us leave
+behind us the best example that we can_.
+
+"All this is not written by a person in high health and happiness,
+but by a fellow-sufferer, who has more to endure than she can tell,
+or you can guess; and now let us talk of the Severn salmons, which
+will be coming in soon; I shall send you one of the finest, and shall
+be glad to hear that your appetite is good."
+
+Johnson to Mrs. Thrale:
+
+"April 21st, 1784.
+
+"The Hooles, Miss Burney, and Mrs. Hull (Wesley's sister), feasted
+yesterday with me very cheerfully on your noble salmon. Mr. Allen
+could not come, and I sent him a piece, and a great tail is still
+left."
+
+"April 26th, 1784.
+
+"Mrs. Davenant called to pay me a guinea, but I gave two for you.
+Whatever reasons you have for frugality, it is not worth while to
+save a guinea a year by withdrawing it from a public charity."
+
+"Whilst I am writing, the post has brought me your kind letter. Do
+not think with dejection of your own condition: a little patience
+will probably give you health: it will certainly give you riches, and
+all the accommodations that riches can procure."
+
+Up to this time she had put an almost killing restraint on her
+inclinations, and had acted according to Johnson's advice in
+everything but the final abandonment of Piozzi; yet Boswell reports
+him as saying, May 16th: "Sir, she has done everything wrong since
+Thrale's bridle was off her neck."
+
+The next extracts are from "Thraliana":
+
+"_Bath, Nov. 30th, 1783._--Sophia will live and do well; I have saved
+my daughter, perhaps obtained a friend. They are weary of seeing me
+suffer so, and the eldest beg'd me yesterday not to sacrifice my life
+to her convenience. She now saw my love of Piozzi was incurable, she
+said. Absence had no effect on it, and my health was going so fast
+she found that I should soon be useless either to her or him. It was
+the hand of God and irresistible, she added, and begged me not to
+endure any longer such unnecessary misery.
+
+"So now we may be happy if we will, and now I trust _some_ [_(sic)
+query "no?_"] other cross accident will start up to torment us; I
+wrote my lover word that he might come and fetch me, but the Alps are
+covered with snow, and if his prudence is not greater than his
+affection--my life will yet be lost, for it depends on his safety.
+Should he come at my call, and meet with any misfortune on the road
+... death, with accumulated agonies, would end me. May Heaven avert
+such insupportable distress!"
+
+"_Dec._ 1783.--My dearest Piozzi's Miss Chanon is in distress. I will
+send her 10_l_. Perhaps he loved her; perhaps she loved _him_;
+perhaps both; yet I have and will have confidence in his honour. I
+will not suffer love or jealousy to narrow a heart devoted to _him_.
+He would assist her if he were in England, and _she_ shall not suffer
+for his absence, tho' I _do_. She and her father have reported many
+things to my prejudice; she will be ashamed of herself when she sees
+me forgive and assist her. O Lord, give me grace so to return good
+for evil as to obtain thy gracious favour who died to procure the
+salvation of thy professed enemies. 'Tis a good Xmas work!"
+
+"_Bath, Jan. 27th_, 1784.--On this day twelvemonths ... oh
+dreadfullest of all days to me I did I send for my Piozzi and tell
+him we must part. The sight of my countenance terrified Dr. Pepys, to
+whom I went into the parlour for a moment, and the sight of the
+agonies I endured in the week following would have affected anything
+but interest, avarice, and pride personified, ... with such, however,
+I had to deal, so my sorrows were unregarded. Seeing them continue
+for a whole year, indeed, has mollified my strong-hearted companions,
+and they _now_ relent in earnest and wish me happy: I would now
+therefore be _loath to dye_, yet how shall I recruit my constitution
+so as to live? The pardon certainly did arrive the very instant of
+execution--for I was ill beyond all power of description, when my
+eldest daughter, bursting into tears, bid me call home the man of my
+heart, and not expire by slow torture in the presence of my children,
+who had my life in their power. 'You are dying _now_,' said she. 'I
+know it,' replied I, 'and I should die in peace had I but seen him
+_once again_.' 'Oh send for him,' said she, 'send for him quickly!'
+'He is at Milan, child,' replied I, 'a thousand miles off!' 'Well,
+well,' returns she, 'hurry him back, or I myself will send him an
+express.' At these words I revived, and have been mending ever since.
+This was the first time that any of us had named the name of Piozzi
+to each other since we had put our feet into the coach to come to
+Bath. I had always thought it a point of civility and prudence never
+to mention what could give nothing but offence, and cause nothing but
+disgust, while they desired nothing less than a revival of old
+uneasiness; so we were all silent on the subject, and Miss Thrale
+thought him dead."
+
+According to the Autobiography, the daughters did not conclusively
+relent till the end of April or the beginning of May, when a missive
+was dispatched for Piozzi, and Mrs. Thrale went to London to make the
+requisite preparations.
+
+ _Mrs. Thrale to Miss F. Burney_.
+
+ "Mortimer Street, Cavendish Square,
+ "Tuesday Night, May, 1784.
+
+"I am come, dearest Burney. It is neither dream nor fiction; though I
+love you dearly, or I would not have come. Absence and distance do
+nothing towards wearing out real affection; so you shall always find
+it in your true and tender H.L.T.
+
+"I am somewhat shaken bodily, but 'tis the mental shocks that have
+made me unable to bear the corporeal ones. 'Tis past ten o'clock,
+however, and I must lay myself down with the sweet expectation of
+seeing my charming friend in the morning to breakfast. I love Dr.
+Burney too well to fear him, and he loves me too well to say a word
+which should make me love him less."
+
+
+_Journal (Madame D'Arblay's) Resumed_.
+
+"May 17.--Let me now, my Susy, acquaint you a little more connectedly
+than I have done of late how I have gone on. The rest of that week I
+devoted almost wholly to sweet Mrs. Thrale, whose society was truly
+the most delightful of cordials to me, however, at times mixed with
+bitters the least palatable.
+
+"One day I dined with Mrs. Grarrick to meet Dr. Johnson, Mrs. Carter,
+Miss Hamilton, and Dr. and Miss Cadogan; and one evening I went to
+Mrs. Vesey, to meet almost everybody,--the Bishop of St. Asaph, and
+all the Shipleys, Bishop Chester and Mrs. Porteous, Mrs. and Miss
+Ord, Sir Joshua Reynolds and Miss Palmer, Mrs. Buller, all the
+Burrows, Mr. Walpole, Mrs. Boscawen, Mrs. Grarrick, and Miss More,
+and some others. But all the rest of my time I gave wholly to dear
+Mrs. Thrale, who lodged in Mortimer Street, and who saw nobody else.
+Were I not sensible of her goodness, and full of incurable affection
+for her, should I not be a monster?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"I parted most reluctantly with my dear Mrs. Thrale, whom, when or
+how, I shall see again, Heaven only knows! but in sorrow we
+parted--on _my_ side in real affliction."
+
+The excursion is thus mentioned in "Thraliana": "_28th May_,
+1784.--Here is the most sudden and beautiful spring ever seen after a
+dismal winter: so may God grant me a renovation of comfort after my
+many and sharp afflictions. I have been to London for a week to visit
+Fanny Burney, and to talk over my intended (and I hope approaching)
+nuptials, with Mr. Borghi: a man, as far as I can judge in so short
+an acquaintance with him, of good sense and real honour:--who loves
+my Piozzi, _likes_ my conversation, and wishes to serve us sincerely.
+He has recommended Duane to take my power of attorney, and Cator's
+loss will be the less felt. Duane's name is as high as the Monument,
+and his being known familiarly to Borghi will perhaps quicken his
+attention to our concerns.
+
+"Dear Burney, who loves me _kindly_ but the world _reverentially_,
+was, I believe, equally pained as delighted with my visit: ashamed to
+be seen in my company, much of her fondness for me must of course be
+diminished; yet she had not chatted freely so long with anybody but
+Mrs. Philips, that my coming was a comfort to her. We have told all
+to her father, and he behaved with the utmost propriety.
+
+"Nobody likes my settling at Milan except myself and Piozzi; but I
+think 'tis nobody's affair but our own: it seems to me quite
+irrational to expose ourselves to unnecessary insults, and by going
+straight to Italy all will be avoided."
+
+The crisis is told in "Thraliana":
+
+"_10th June_, 1784.--I sent these lines to meet Piozzi on his return.
+They are better than those he liked so last year at Dover:
+
+ "Over mountains, rivers, vallies,
+ See my love returns to Calais,
+ After all their taunts and malice,
+ Ent'ring safe the gates of Calais,
+ While delay'd by winds he dallies,
+ Fretting to be kept at Calais,
+ Muse, prepare some sprightly sallies
+ To divert my dear at Calais,
+ Say how every rogue who rallies
+ Envies him who waits at Calais
+ For her that would disdain a Palace
+ Compar'd to Piozzi, Love, and Calais."
+
+"_24th June_, 1784.--He is set out sure enough, here are letters from
+Turin to say so.... Now the Misses _must_ move; they are very loath
+to stir: from affection perhaps, or perhaps from art--'tis difficult
+to know.--Oh 'tis, yes, it is from tenderness, they want me to go
+with them to see Wilton, Stonehenge, &c.--I _will_ go with them to be
+sure."
+
+"_27th June, Sunday_.--We went to Wilton, and also to Fonthill; they
+make an admirable and curious contrast between ancient magnificence
+and modern glare: Gothic and Grecian again, however. A man of taste
+would rather possess Lord Pembroke's seat, or indeed a single room in
+it; but one feels one should live happier at Beckford's.--My
+daughters parted with me at last prettily enough _considering_ (as
+the phrase is). We shall perhaps be still better friends apart than
+together. Promises of correspondence and kindness were very sweetly
+reciprocated, and the eldest wished for Piozzi's safe return very
+obligingly.
+
+"I fancy two days more will absolutely bring him to Bath. The present
+moments are critical and dreadful, and would shake stronger nerves
+than mine! Oh Lord, strengthen me to do Thy will I pray."
+
+"_28th June_.--I am not _yet sure of_ seeing him again--not _sure_ he
+lives, not _sure_ he loves me _yet_.... Should anything happen now!!
+Oh, I will not trust myself with such a fancy: it will either kill me
+or drive me distracted."
+
+"_Bath, 2nd July_, 1784.--The happiest day of my whole life, I
+think--Yes, quite the happiest: my Piozzi came home yesterday and
+dined with me; but my spirits were too much agitated, my heart was
+too much dilated. I was too _painfully_ happy _then_; my sensations
+are more quiet to-day, and my felicity less tumultuous."
+
+Written in the margin of the last entry--"We shall go to London about
+the affairs, and there be married in the Romish Church."
+
+"_25th July_, 1784.--I am returned from church the happy wife of my
+lovely faithful Piozzi ... subject of my prayers, object of my
+wishes, my sighs, my reverence, my esteem.--His nerves have been
+horribly shaken, yet he lives, he loves me, and will be mine for
+ever. He has sworn, in the face of God and the whole Christian
+Church; Catholics, Protestants, all are witnesses."
+
+In one of her memorandum books she has set down:
+
+"We were married according to the Romish Church in one of our
+excursions to London, by Mr. Smith, Padre Smit as they called him,
+chaplain to the Spanish Ambassador.... Mr. Morgan tacked us together
+at St. James's, Bath, 25th July, 1784, and on the first day I think
+of September, certainly the first week, we took leave of England."
+
+When her first engagement with Piozzi became known, the newspapers
+took up the subject, and rang the changes on the amorous disposition
+of the widow, and the adroit cupidity of the fortune-hunter. On the
+announcement of the marriage, they recommenced the attack, and people
+of our day can hardly form a notion of the storm of obloquy that
+broke upon her, except from its traces, which have never been erased.
+To this hour, we may see them in the confirmed prejudices of writers
+like Mr. Croker and Lord Macaulay, who, agreeing in little else,
+agree in denouncing "this miserable _més_alliance" with one who
+figures in their pages sometimes as a music-master, sometimes as a
+fiddler, never by any accident in his real character of a
+professional singer and musician of established reputation, pleasing
+manners, ample means, and unimpeachable integrity. The repugnance of
+the daughters to the match was reasonable and intelligible, but to
+appreciate the tone taken by her friends, we must bear in mind the
+social position of Italian singers and musical performers at the
+period. "Amusing vagabonds" are the epithets by which Lord Byron
+designates Catalani and Naldi, in 1809[1]; and such is the light in
+which they were undoubtedly regarded in 1784. Mario would have been
+treated with the same indiscriminating illiberality as Piozzi.
+
+[Footnote 1:
+
+ "Well may the nobles of our present race
+ Watch each distortion of a Naldi's face;
+ Well may they smile on Italy's buffoons,
+ And worship Catalani's pantaloons."
+
+"Naldi and Catalani require little notice; for the visage of the one
+and the salary of the other will enable us long to recollect these
+amusing vagabonds."--_English Bards and Scotch Reviewers_. Artists in
+general, and men of letters by profession, did not rank much higher
+in the fine world. (See Miss Berry's "England and France," vol. ii.
+p. 42.) A German author, non-noble, had a _liaison_ with a Prussian
+woman of rank. On her husband's death he proposed marriage, and was
+indignantly refused. The lady was conscious of no degradation from
+being his mistress, but would have forfeited both caste and
+self-respect by becoming his wife.]
+
+Did those who took the lead in censuring or repudiating Mrs. Piozzi,
+ever attempt to enter into her feelings, or weigh her conduct with
+reference to its tendency to promote her own happiness? Could they
+have done so, had they tried? Rarely can any one so identify himself
+or herself with another as to be sure of the soundness of the counsel
+or the justice of the reproof. She was neither impoverishing her
+children (who had all independent fortunes) nor abandoning them. She
+was setting public opinion at defiance, which is commonly a foolish
+thing to do; but what is public opinion to a woman whose heart is
+breaking, and who finds, after a desperate effort, that she is
+unequal to the sacrifice demanded of her? She accepted Piozzi
+deliberately, with full knowledge of his character; and she never
+repented of her choice.
+
+The Lady Cathcart, whose romantic story is mentioned in "Castle
+Rackrent," was wont to say:--"I have been married three times; the
+first for money, the second for rank, the third for love; and the
+third was worst of all." Mrs. Piozzi's experience would have led to
+an opposite conclusion. Her love match was a singularly happy one;
+and the consciousness that she had transgressed conventional
+observances or prejudices, not moral rules, enabled her to outlive
+and bear down calumny.[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: The _pros_ and _cons_ of the main question at issue are
+well stated in _Corinne_: "Ah, pour heureux,' interrompit le Comte
+d'Erfeuil, 'je n'en crois rien: on n'est heureux que par ce qui est
+convenable. La société a, quoi qu'on fasse, beaucoup d'empire sur le
+bonheur; et ce qu'elle n'approuve pas, il ne faut jamais le faire.'
+'On vivrait done toujours pour ce que la société dira de nous,'
+reprit Oswald; 'et ce qu'on pense et, ce qu'on sent ne servirait
+jamais de guide.' 'C'est très bien dit,' reprit le comte,
+'très-philosophiquement pensé; mais avec ces maximes là, l'on se
+perd; et quand l'amour est passé, le blâme de l'opinion reste. Moi
+qui vous paraîs léger, je ne ferai jamais rien qui puisse m'attirer
+la désapprobation du monde. On peut se permettre de petites libertés,
+d'aimables plaisanteries, qui annoncent de l'indépendance dans la
+manière d'agir; car, quand cela touche au sérieux.'--'Mais le
+sérieux, repondit Lord Nelvil, 'c'est l'amour et le
+bonheur.'"--_Corinne_, liv. ix. ch. 1.]
+
+In reference to these passages, the Edinburgh reviewer remarks:
+
+"Nothing can be more reasonable; and we should certainly live in a
+more peaceful (if not more entertaining) world, if nobody in it
+reproved another until he had so far identified himself with the
+culprit as to be sure of the justice of the reproof; perhaps, also,
+if a fiddler were rated higher in society than a duke without
+accomplishments, and a carpenter far higher than either. But neither
+reasoning nor gallantry will alter the case, nor prevail over the
+world's prejudice against unequal marriages, any more than its
+prejudices in favour of birth and fashion. It has never been quite
+established to the satisfaction of the philosophic mind, why the rule
+of society should be that 'as the husband, so the wife is,' and why a
+lady who contracts a marriage below her station is looked on with far
+severer eyes than a gentleman _qui s'encanaille_ to the same degree.
+But these things are so,--as the next dame of rank and fortune, and
+widow of an M.P., who, rashly relying on Mr. Hayward's assertion that
+the world has grown wiser, espouses a foreign 'professional,' will
+assuredly find to her cost, although she may escape the ungenerous
+public attacks which poor Mrs. Piozzi earned by her connexion with
+literary men."
+
+In 1784 they hanged for crimes which we should think adequately
+punished by a short imprisonment; as they hooted and libelled for
+transgressions or errors which, whatever their treatment by a portion
+of our society, would certainly not provoke the thunders of our
+press. I think (though I made no assertion of the kind) that the
+world has grown wiser; and the reviewer admits as much when he says
+that his supposititious widow "may escape the ungenerous public
+attacks which poor Mrs. Piozzi earned by her connexion with literary
+men." But where do I recommend unequal marriages, or dispute the
+claims of birth and fashion, or maintain that a fiddler should be
+rated higher than a duke without accomplishments, and a carpenter
+_far_ higher than either? All this is utterly beside the purpose; and
+surely there is nothing reprehensible in the suggestion that, before
+harshly reproving another, we should do our best to test the justice
+of the reproof by trying to make the case our own. Goethe proposed to
+extend the self-same rule to criticism. One of his favourite canons
+was that a critic should always endeavour to place himself
+temporarily in the author's point of view. If the reviewer had done
+so, he might have avoided several material misapprehensions and
+misstatements, which it is difficult to reconcile with the friendly
+tone of the article or the known ability of the writer.
+
+Envy at Piozzi's good fortune sharpened the animosity of assailants
+like Baretti, and the loss of a pleasant house may have had a good
+deal to do with the sorrowing indignation of her set. Her meditated
+social extinction amongst them might have been commemorated in the
+words of the French epitaph:
+
+ "Ci git une de qui la vertu
+ Etait moins que la table encensée;
+ On ne plaint point la femme abattue,
+ Mais bien la table renversée."
+
+Which may be freely rendered:
+
+ "Here lies one who adulation
+ By dinners more than virtues earn'd;
+ Whose friends mourned not her reputation--
+ But her table--overturned."
+
+Madame D'Arblay has recorded what took place between Mrs. Piozzi and
+herself on the occasion:
+
+_Miss F. Burney to Mrs. Piozzi_.
+
+"Norbury Park, Aug. 10, 1784.
+
+"When my wondering eyes first looked over the letter I received last
+night, my mind instantly dictated a high-spirited vindication of the
+consistency, integrity, and faithfulness of the friendship thus
+abruptly reproached and cast away. But a sleepless night gave me
+leisure to recollect that you were ever as generous as precipitate,
+and that your own heart would do justice to mine, in the cooler
+judgment of future reflection. Committing myself, therefore, to that
+period, I determined simply to assure you, that if my last letter
+hurt either you or Mr. Piozzi, I am no less sorry than surprised; and
+that if it offended you, I sincerely beg your pardon.
+
+"Not to that time, however, can I wait to acknowledge the pain an
+accusation so unexpected has caused me, nor the heartfelt
+satisfaction with which I shall receive, when you are able to write
+it, a softer renewal of regard.
+
+"May Heaven direct and bless you!
+
+"F.B.
+
+"N.B. This is the sketch of the answer which F.B. most painfully
+wrote to the unmerited reproach of not sending _cordial
+congratulations_ upon a marriage which she had uniformly, openly, and
+with deep and avowed affliction, thought wrong."
+
+_Mrs. Piozzi to Miss Burney_.
+
+ "'Wellbeck Street, No. 33, Cavendish Square.
+ "'Friday, Aug. 13, 1784.
+
+"'Give yourself no serious concern, sweetest Burney, All is well, and
+I am too happy myself to make a friend otherwise; quiet your kind
+heart immediately, and love my husband if you love his and your
+
+"'H.L. PIOZZI.'
+
+"N.B. To this kind note, F.B. wrote the warmest and most affectionate
+and heartfelt reply; but never received another word! And here and
+thus stopped a correspondence of six years of almost unequalled
+partiality, and fondness on her side; and affection, gratitude,
+admiration, and sincerity on that of F.B., who could only conjecture
+the cessation to be caused by the resentment of Piozzi, when informed
+of her constant opposition to the union."
+
+If F.B. thought it wrong, she knew it to be inevitable, and in the
+conviction that it was so, she and her father had connived at the
+secret preparations for it in the preceding May.
+
+A very distinguished friend, whose masterly works are the result of a
+consummate study of the passions, after dwelling on the
+"impertinence" of the hostility her marriage provoked, writes: "She
+was evidently a very vain woman, but her vanity was sensitive, and
+very much allied to that exactingness of heart which gives charm and
+character to woman. I suspect it was this sensitiveness which made
+her misunderstood by her children." The justness of this theory of
+her conduct is demonstrated by the self-communings in "Thraliana;"
+and she misunderstood them as much as they misunderstood her. By her
+own showing she had little reason to complain of what they _did_ in
+the matter of the marriage; it was what they said, or rather did not
+say, that irritated her. She yearned for sympathy, which was sternly,
+chillingly, almost insultingly withheld.
+
+In 1800, she wrote thus to Dr. Gray: "What a good example have you
+set them (his children)! going to visit dear mama at Twickenham--long
+may they keep their parents, pretty creatures! and long may they have
+sense to know and feel that no love is like parental affection,--the
+only good perhaps which cannot be flung away."[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: "We may have many friends in life, but we can only have
+one mother: a discovery, says Gray, which I never made till it was
+too late."--ROGERS.]
+
+Madame D'Arblay states that her father was not disinclined to admit
+Mrs. Piozzi's right to consult her own notions of happiness in the
+choice of a second husband, had not the paramount duty of watching
+over her unmarried daughters interfered. But they might have
+accompanied her to Italy as was once contemplated; and had they done
+so, they would have seen everything and everybody in it under the
+most favourable auspices. The course chosen for them by the eldest
+was the most perilous of the two submitted for their choice. The
+lady, Miss Nicholson, whom their mother had so carefully selected as
+their companion, soon left them; or according to another version was
+summarily dismissed by Miss Thrale (afterwards Viscountess Keith),
+who fortunately was endowed with high principle, firmness, and
+energy. She could not take up her abode with either of her guardians,
+one a bachelor under forty, the other the prototype of Briggs, the
+old miser in "Cæcilia." She could not accept Johnson's hospitality in
+Bolt Court, still tenanted by the survivors of his menagerie; where,
+a few months later, she sate by his death-bed and received his
+blessing. She therefore called to her aid an old nurse-maid, named
+Tib, who had been much trusted by her father, and with this homely
+but respectable duenna, she shut herself up in the house at Brighton,
+limited her expenses to her allowance of 200_l._ a-year, and
+resolutely set about the course of study which seemed best adapted to
+absorb attention and prevent her thoughts from wandering. Hebrew,
+Mathematics, Fortification, and Perspective have been named to me by
+one of trusted friends as specimens of her acquirements and her
+pursuits.
+
+ "There's a Divinity that shapes our ends,
+ Rough-hew them how we may."
+
+In that solitary abode at Brighton, and in the companionship of Tib,
+may have been laid the foundation of a character than which few,
+through the changeful scenes of a long and prosperous life, have
+exercised more beneficial influence or inspired more genuine esteem.
+On coming of age, and being put into possession of her fortune, she
+hired a house in London, and took her two eldest sisters to live with
+her. They had been at school whilst she was living at Brighton. The
+fourth and youngest, afterwards Mrs. Mostyn, had accompanied the
+mother. On the return of Mr. and Mrs. Piozzi, Miss Thrale made a
+point of paying them every becoming attention, and Piozzi was
+frequently dining with her. Latterly, she used to speak of him as a
+very worthy sort of man, who was not to blame for marrying a rich and
+distinguished woman who took a fancy to him. The other sisters seem
+to have adopted the same tone; and so far as I can learn, no one of
+them is open to the imputation of filial unkindness, or has suffered
+from maternal neglect in a manner to bear out Dr. Burney's
+forebodings by the result. Occasional expressions of querulousness
+are matters of course in family differences, and are seldom totally
+suppressed by the utmost exertion of good feeling and good sense.
+
+Johnson's idolised wife was, at the lowest estimate, twenty-one years
+older than himself when he married her; and her sons were so
+disgusted by the connection, that they dropped the acquaintance. Yet
+it never crossed his mind that "Hetty" had as much right to please
+herself as "Tetty." Of the six letters that passed between him and
+Mrs. Piozzi on the subject of the marriage, only two (Nos. 1 and 5)
+have hitherto been made public; and the incompleteness of the
+correspondence has caused the most embarrassing confusion in the
+minds of biographers and editors, too prone to act on the maxim that,
+wherever female reputation is concerned, we should hope for the best
+and believe the worst. Hawkins, apparently ignorant that she had
+written to Johnson, to announce her intention, says, "He was made
+uneasy by a report" which induced him to write a strong letter of
+remonstrance, of which what he calls an _adumbration_ was published
+in the "Gentleman's Magazine" for December 1784. Mr. Croker, avoiding
+a similar error, says:--"In the lady's own (part) publication of the
+correspondence, this letter (No. 1) is given as from Mrs. Piozzi, and
+is signed with the initial of her name: Dr. Johnson's answer is also
+addressed to Mrs. Piozzi, and both the letters allude to the matter
+as _done_; yet it appears by the periodical publications of the day,
+that the marriage did not take place until the 25th July. The editor
+knew not how to account for this but by supposing that Mrs. Piozzi,
+to avoid Johnson's importunity, had stated that as done which was
+only _settled to be done_."
+
+The matter of fact is made plain by the circular (No. 2) which states
+that "Piozzi is coming back from Italy." He arrived on July 1st,
+after a fourteen months' absence, which proved both his loyalty and
+the sincerity of the struggle in her own heart and mind. Her letter
+(No. 1) as printed, is not signed with the initial of her name; and
+both Dr. Johnson's autograph letters are addressed to _Mrs. Thrale_.
+But she has occasioned the mistake into which so many have fallen, by
+her mode of heading these when she printed the two-volume edition of
+"Letters" in 1788. By the kindness of Mr. Salusbury I am now enabled
+to print the whole correspondence, with the exception of her last
+letter, which she describes.
+
+
+No. 1.
+
+_Mrs. Piozzi to Dr. Johnson_.
+
+"Bath, June 30.
+
+"My Dear Sir,--The enclosed is a circular letter which I have sent to
+all the guardians, but our friendship demands somewhat more; it
+requires that I should beg your pardon for concealing from you a
+connexion which you must have heard of by many, but I suppose never
+believed. Indeed, my dear Sir, it was concealed only to save us both
+needless pain; I could not have borne to reject that counsel it would
+have killed me to take, and I only tell it you now because all is
+irrevocably settled and out of your power to prevent. I will say,
+however, that the dread of your disapprobation has given me some
+anxious moments, and though perhaps I am become by many privations
+the most independent woman in the world, I feel as if acting without
+a parent's consent till you write kindly to
+
+"Your faithful servant."
+
+
+No. 2. _Circular_.
+
+"Sir,--As one of the executors of Mr. Thrale's will and guardian to
+his daughters, I think it my duty to acquaint you that the three
+eldest left Bath last Friday (25th) for their own house at
+Brighthelmstone in company with an amiable friend, Miss Nicholson,
+who has sometimes resided with us here, and in whose society they
+may, I think, find some advantages and certainly no disgrace. I
+waited on them to Salisbury, Wilton, &c., and offered to attend them
+to the seaside myself, but they preferred this lady's company to
+mine, having heard that Mr. Piozzi is coming back from Italy, and
+judging perhaps by our past friendship and continued correspondence
+that his return would be succeeded by our marriage.
+
+"I have the honour to be, Sir, your obedient servant.
+
+"Bath, June 30, 1784."
+
+
+No. 3.[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: What Johnson termed an "adumbration" of this letter
+appeared in the "Gentleman's Magazine" for Dec. 1784:
+
+"MADAM,--If you are already ignominiously married, you are lost
+beyond all redemption;--if you are not, permit me one hour's
+conversation, to convince you that such a marriage must not take
+place. If, after a whole hour's reasoning, you should not be
+convinced, you will still be at liberty to act as you think proper. I
+have been extremely ill, and am still ill; but if you grant me the
+audience I ask, I will instantly take a post-chaise and attend you at
+Bath. Pray do not refuse this favour to a man who hath so many years
+loved and honoured you."]
+
+"MADAM,--If I interpret your letter right, you are ignominiously
+married: if it is yet undone, let us _once_ more _talk_ together. If
+you have abandoned your children and your religion, God forgive your
+wickedness; if you have forfeited your fame and your country, may
+your folly do no further mischief. If the last act is yet to do, I
+who have loved you, esteemed you, reverenced you, and _served
+you_[1], I who long thought you the first of womankind, entreat that,
+before your fate is irrevocable, I may once more see you. I was, I
+once was, Madam, most truly yours,
+
+"SAM. JOHNSON.
+
+"July 2, 1784.
+
+"I will come down, if you permit it."
+
+[Footnote 1: The four words which I have printed in italics are
+indistinctly written, and cannot be satisfactorily made out.]
+
+
+No. 4.
+
+"July 4, 1784.
+
+"SIR,--I have this morning received from you so rough a letter in
+reply to one which was both tenderly and respectfully written, that I
+am forced to desire the conclusion of a correspondence which I can
+bear to continue no longer. The birth of my second husband is not
+meaner than that of my first; his sentiments are not meaner; his
+profession is not meaner, and his superiority in what he professes
+acknowledged by all mankind. It is want of fortune, then, that is
+ignominious; the character of the man I have chosen has no other
+claim to such an epithet. The religion to which he has been always a
+zealous adherent will, I hope, teach him to forgive insults he has
+not deserved; mine will, I hope, enable me to bear them at once with
+dignity and patience. To hear that I have forfeited my fame is indeed
+the greatest insult I ever yet received. My fame is as unsullied as
+snow, or I should think it unworthy of him who must henceforth
+protect it.
+
+"I write by the coach the more speedily and effectually to prevent
+your coming hither. Perhaps by my fame (and I hope it is so) you mean
+only that celebrity which is a consideration of a much lower kind. I
+care for that only as it may give pleasure to my husband and his
+friends.
+
+"Farewell, dear Sir, and accept my best wishes. You have always
+commanded my esteem, and long enjoyed the fruits of a friendship
+_never infringed by one harsh expression on my part during twenty
+years of familiar talk. Never did I oppose your will, or control your
+wish; nor can your unmerited severity itself lessen my regard_; but
+till you have changed your opinion of Mr. Piozzi, let us converse no
+more. God bless you."
+
+
+No. 5.
+
+_To Mrs. Piozzi_.
+
+"London, July 8, 1784.
+
+"DEAR MADAM,--What you have done, however I may lament it, I have no
+pretence to resent, as it has not been injurious to me: I therefore
+breathe out one sigh more of tenderness, perhaps useless, but at
+least sincere.
+
+"I wish that God may grant you every blessing, that you may be happy
+in this world for its short continuance, and eternally happy in a
+better state; and whatever I can contribute to your happiness I am
+very ready to repay, for that kindness which soothed twenty years of
+a life radically wretched.
+
+"Do not think slightly of the advice which I now presume to offer.
+Prevail upon Mr. Piozzi to settle in England: you may live here with
+more dignity than in Italy, and with more security; your rank will be
+higher, and your fortune more under your own eye. I desire not to
+detail all my reasons, but every argument of prudence and interest is
+for England, and only some phantoms of imagination seduce you to
+Italy.
+
+"I am afraid, however, that my counsel is vain, yet I have eased my
+heart by giving it.
+
+"When Queen Mary took the resolution of sheltering herself in
+England, the Archbishop of St. Andrew's, attempting to dissuade her,
+attended on her journey; and when they came to the irremeable
+stream[1] that separated the two kingdoms, walked by her side into
+the water, in the middle of which he seized her bridle, and with
+earnestness proportioned to her danger and his own affection pressed
+her to return. The Queen went forward.--If the parallel reaches thus
+far, may it go no farther.--The tears stand in my eyes.
+
+"I am going into Derbyshire, and hope to be followed by your good
+wishes, for I am, with great affection,
+
+"Your, &c.
+
+"Any letters that come for me hither will be sent me."
+
+[Footnote 1: Queen Mary left the Scottish for the English coast, on
+the Firth of Solway, in a fishing-boat. The incident to which Johnson
+alludes is introduced in "The Abbot;" where the scene is laid on the
+sea-shore. The unusual though expressive term "irremeable," is
+defined in his dictionary, "admitting no return." His authority is
+Dryden's Virgil:
+
+ "The keeper dream'd, the chief without delay
+ Pass'd on, and took th' irremeable way."
+
+The word is a Latin one anglicised:
+
+ "Evaditque celer ripam irremeabilis undæ."]
+
+In a memorandum on this letter, she says:--"I wrote him (No. 6) a
+very kind and affectionate farewell."
+
+Before calling attention to the results of this correspondence, I
+must notice a charge built upon it by the reviewer, with the
+respectable aid of the foul-mouthed and malignant Baretti:
+
+"This letter is now printed for the first time by Mr. Hayward. But he
+has omitted to notice the light which is thrown on it by Baretti's
+account of the marriage. That account is given in the 'European
+Magazine' for 1788. It is very circumstantial, and too long to
+transcribe, but the upshot is this: He says that, in order to meet
+her returning lover, she left Bath with her daughters as for a
+journey to Brighton; quitted them on some pretence at Salisbury, and
+posted off to town, _deceiving Dr. Johnson, who continued to direct
+to her at Bath as usual_.[1] 'In London she kept herself concealed
+for some days in my parish, and not very far distant from my own
+habitation, ... in Suffolk Street, Middlesex Hospital.' 'In a _few
+weeks_,' he adds, 'she was in a condition personally to resort to Mr.
+Greenland (her lawyer) to settle preliminaries, then returned to Bath
+with Piozzi, and there was married.' Now Baretti was a libeller, _and
+not to be believed except upon compulsion_; but if he does speak the
+truth, then the date, 'Bath, June 30,' of her circular letter, is a
+mystification; so is the passage in her letter to Johnson of July
+_4_, about 'sending it by the coach to prevent his coming.' Of course
+she was mortally afraid of the Doctor's coming, for if he had come he
+would have found her flown. According to this supposition, she did
+not return to Bath at all, but remained perdue in London, with her
+lover, during the whole 'Correspondence.' Is it the true one?
+
+"We cannot but suspect that it is, and that the solution of the whole
+of this little domestic mystery is to be found in a passage in the
+'Autobiographical Memoir,' vol. i. p. 277. There were _two_
+marriages:--
+
+"'Miss Nicholson went with us to Stonehenge, Wilton, &c., _whence I
+returned to Bath_ to wait for Piozzi. He was here on the eleventh day
+after he got Dobson's letter. In twenty-six more we were married _in
+London_ by the Spanish ambassador's chaplain, and returned hither to
+be married by Mr. Morgan, of Bath, at St. James's Church, July 25,
+1784.'
+
+"Now in order to make this account tally with Baretti's we must allow
+for a slight exertion of that talent for 'white lies' on the lady's
+part, of which her friends, Johnson included, used half playfully and
+half in earnest to accuse her. And we are afraid Baretti's story does
+appear, on the face of it, the more probable of the two. It does seem
+more likely, since they were to be married in London (of which
+Baretti knew nothing), that she met Piozzi secretly in London on his
+arrival, than that she performed the awkward evolutions of returning
+from Salisbury to Bath to wait for him there, then going to London in
+company with him to be married, and then back to Bath to be married
+over again. But if this be so, then the London marriage most likely
+took place almost immediately on the meeting of the enamoured couple,
+and while the 'Correspondence' was going on. In which case the words
+in the 'Memoir' 'in twenty-six days,' &c., were apparently intended,
+by a little bit of feminine adroitness, to appear to apply to this
+first marriage,--of the suddenness of which she may have been
+ashamed,--while they really apply to the conclusion of the whole
+affair by the _second_. Will any one have the Croker-like curiosity
+to inquire whether any record remains of the dates of marriages
+celebrated by the Spanish ambassador's chaplain?"[2]
+
+[Footnote 1: These words, italicised by the reviewer, contain the
+pith of the charge, which has no reference to her visit to London six
+weeks before.]
+
+[Footnote 2: Edinb. Review, No. 230, p. 522.]
+
+Why Croker-like curiosity? Was there anything censurable in the
+curiosity which led an editor to ascertain whether a novel like
+"Evelina" was written by a girl of eighteen or a woman of twenty-six?
+But Lord Macaulay sneered at the inquiry[1], and his worshippers must
+go on sneering like their model--_vitiis imitabile_. The certificate
+of the London marriage (now before me) shews that it was solemnised
+on the 23rd July, by a clergyman named Richard Smith, in the presence
+of three attesting witnesses. This, and the entries in "Thraliana,"
+prove Baretti's whole story to be false. "Now Baretti was a libeller,
+and not to be believed except upon compulsion;" meaning, I suppose,
+without confirmatory evidence strong enough to dispense with his
+testimony altogether. He was notorious for his _black_ lies. Yet he
+is believed eagerly, willingly, upon no compulsion, and without any
+confirmatory evidence at all.
+
+[Footnote 1: The following passage is reprinted in the corrected
+edition of Lord Macaulay's Essays:--"There was no want of low minds
+and bad hearts in the generation which witnessed her (Miss Burney's)
+first appearance. There was the envious Kenrick and the savage
+Wolcot; the asp George Steevens and the polecat John Williams. It did
+not, however, occur to them to search the parish register of Lynn, in
+order that they might be able to twit a lady with having concealed
+her age. That truly chivalrous exploit was reserved for a bad writer
+of our own time, whose spite she had provoked by not furnishing him
+with materials for a worthless edition of Boswell's Life of Johnson,
+some sheets of which our readers have doubtless seen round parcels of
+better books." There is reason to believe that the entry Mr. Croker
+copied was that of the baptism of an elder sister of the same name
+who died before the birth of the famous Fanny.]
+
+The internal evidence of the improbability of the story has
+disappeared in the reviewer's paraphrase. Baretti says that at
+Salisbury "she suddenly declared that a letter she found of great
+importance demanded her immediate presence _in London_.... But
+Johnson did not know the least tittle of this transaction, and he
+continued to direct his letters to Bath as usual, expressing, no
+doubt, an immense wonder _at her pertinacious silence_." So she told
+her daughters that she was going to London, whilst she deceived
+Johnson, who was sure to learn the truth from them; and he was
+wondering at her pertinacious silence at the very time when he was
+receiving letters from her, dated Bath! Why, having formally
+announced her determination to marry Piozzi, she should not give him
+the meeting in London if she chose, fairly passes my comprehension.
+
+Whilst the reviewer thinks he is strengthening one point, he is
+palpably weakening another. She would not have been "mortally afraid
+of the Doctor's coming," if she had already thrown him off and
+finally broken with him? That she was afraid, and had reason to be
+so, is quite consistent with my theory, quite inconsistent with Lord
+Macaulay's and the critic's. Johnson's letter (No. 3) is that of a
+coarse man who had always been permitted to lecture and dictate with
+impunity. Her letter (No. 4) is that of a sensitive woman, who, for
+the first time, resents with firmness and retorts with dignity. The
+sentences I have printed in italics speak volumes. "Never did I
+oppose your will, or control your wish, nor can your unmitigated
+severity itself lessen my regard." There is a shade of submissiveness
+in her reply, yet, on receiving it, he felt as a falcon might feel if
+a partridge were to shew fight. Nothing short of habitual deference
+on her part, and unrepressed indulgence of temper on _his_, can
+account for or excuse his not writing before this unexpected check as
+he wrote after it. If he had not been systematically humoured and
+flattered, he would have seen at a glance that he had "no pretence to
+resent," and have been ready at once to make the best return in his
+power for "that kindness which soothed twenty years of a life
+radically wretched." She wrote him a kind and affectionate farewell;
+and there (so far as we know) ended their correspondence. But in
+"Thraliana" she sets down:
+
+"_Milan, 27th Nov_. 1784.--I have got Dr. Johnson's picture here, and
+expect Miss Thrale's with impatience. I do love them dearly, as ill
+as they have used me, and always shall. Poor Johnson did not _mean_
+to use me ill. He only grew upon indulgence till patience could
+endure no further."
+
+In a letter to Mr. S. Lysons from Milan, dated December 7th, 1784,
+which proves that she was not frivolously employed, she says:
+
+"My next letter shall talk of the libraries and botanical gardens,
+and twenty other clever things here. I wish you a comfortable
+Christmas, and a happy beginning of the year 1785. Do not neglect Dr.
+Johnson: you will never see any other mortal so wise or so good. I
+keep his picture in my chamber, and his works on my chimney."
+
+ "Forgiveness to the injured doth belong,
+ But they ne'er pardon who have done the wrong."
+
+What he said of her can only be learned from her bitter enemies or
+hollow friends, who have preserved nothing kindly or creditable.
+
+Hawkins states that a letter from Johnson to himself contained these
+words:--"Poor Thrale! I thought that either her virtue or her vice
+(meaning her love of her children or her pride) would have saved 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."
+
+Madame D'Arblay gives two accounts of the last interview she ever had
+with Johnson,--on the 25th November, 1784. In the "Diary" she sets
+down:
+
+"I had seen Miss T. the day before."
+
+"'So,' said he, 'did I.'
+
+"I then said, 'Do you ever, Sir, hear, from her 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.[1] I have
+burnt all I can find. I never speak of her, and I desire never to
+hear of her name. I drive her, as I said, wholly from my mind.'"
+
+[Footnote 1: If this was true, it is strange that he did not destroy
+the letter (No. 4) which gave him so sudden and mortifying a check.
+Miss Hawkins says in her Memoirs: "It was I who discovered the
+letter. I carried it to my father; he enclosed and sent it to her,
+_there never having been any intercourse between them_." Anything
+from Hawkins about Streatham and its inmates must therefore have been
+invention or hearsay.]
+
+In the "Memoirs," describing the same interview, she says:--"We
+talked then of poor Mrs. Thrale, but only for a moment, for I saw him
+greatly incensed, and with such severity of displeasure, that I
+hastened to start another subject, and he solemnly enjoined me to
+mention that no more."
+
+This was only eighteen days before he died, and he might be excused
+for being angry at the introduction of any agitating topic. It would
+stain his memory, not hers, to prove that, belying his recent
+professions of tenderness and gratitude, he directly or indirectly
+encouraged her assailants.
+
+"I was tempted to observe," says the author of "Piozziana," "that I
+thought, as I still do, that Johnson's anger on the event of her
+second marriage was excited by some feeling of disappointment; and
+that I suspected he had formed some hope of attaching her to himself.
+It would be disingenuous on my part to attempt to repeat her answer.
+I forget it; but the impression on my mind is that she did not
+contradict me." Sir James Fellowes' marginal note on this passage is:
+"This was an absurd notion, and I can undertake to say it was the
+last idea that ever entered her head; for when I once alluded to the
+subject, she ridiculed the idea: she told me she always felt for
+Johnson the same respect and veneration as for a Pascal."[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: When Sheridan was accused of making love to Mrs.
+Siddons, he said he should as soon think of making love to the
+Archbishop of Canterbury.]
+
+On the margin of the passage in which Boswell says, "Johnson wishing
+to unite himself with this rich widow was much talked of, but I
+believe without foundation,"--she has written, "I believe so too!!"
+The report sufficed to bring into play the light artillery of the
+wits, one of whose best hits was an "Ode to Mrs. Thrale, by Samuel
+Johnson, LL.D., on their approaching Nuptials," beginning:
+
+ "If e'er my fingers touched 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,
+ Rehold him as your very _Scrub_:
+ Ready to write as author 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 _Thrale's Entire_."
+
+She has written opposite these lines, "Whose fun was this? It is
+better than the other." The other was:
+
+ "Cervisial coctor's viduate dame,
+ Opinst thou this gigantick frame,
+ Procumbing at thy shrine,
+ Shall catinated by thy charms,
+ A captive in thy ambient arms
+ Perennially be thine."
+
+She writes opposite: "Whose silly fun was this? Soame Jenyn's?"
+
+The following paragraph is copied from the note-book of the late Miss
+Williams Wynn[1], who had recently been reading a large collection of
+Mrs. Piozzi's letters addressed to a Welsh neighbour:
+
+[Footnote 1: Daughter of Sir Watkyn Wynn (the fourth baronet) and
+granddaughter of George Grenville, the Minister. She was
+distinguished by her literary taste and acquirements, as well as
+highly esteemed for the uprightness of her character, the excellence
+of her understanding, and the kindness of her heart. Her journals and
+note-books, carefully kept during a long life passed in the best
+society, are full of interesting anecdotes and curious extracts from
+rare books and manuscripts. They are now in the possession of her
+niece, the Honourable Mrs. Rowley.]
+
+"_London, March_, 1825.--I have had an opportunity of talking to old
+Sir William Pepys on the subject of his old friend, Mrs. Piozzi, and
+from his conversation am more than ever impressed with the idea that
+she was one of the most inconsistent characters that ever existed.
+Sir William says he never met with any human being who possessed the
+talent of conversation in such a degree. I naturally felt anxious to
+know whether Piozzi could in any degree add to this pleasure, and
+found, as I expected, that he could not even understand her.
+
+"Her infatuation for him seems perfectly unaccountable. Johnson in
+his rough (I may here call it brutal) manner said to her, 'Why Ma'am,
+he is not only a stupid, ugly dog, but he is an old dog too.' Sir
+William says he really believes that she combated her inclination for
+him as long as possible; so long, that her senses would have failed
+her if she had attempted to resist any longer. She was perfectly
+aware of her degradation. One day, speaking to Sir William of some
+persons whom he had been in the habit of meeting continually at
+Streatham during the lifetime of Mr. Thrale, she said, not one of
+them has taken the smallest notice of me ever since: they dropped me
+before I had done anything wrong. Piozzi was literally at her elbow
+when she said this."
+
+The reviewer quotes the remark, "She was perfectly aware of her
+degradation," as resting on the personal responsibility of Miss Wynn,
+"who knew her in later life in Wales." The context shews that Miss
+Wynn (who did not know her) was simply repeating the impressions of
+Sir William Pepys, one of the bitterest opponents of the marriage, to
+whom she certainly never said anything derogatory to her second
+husband. The uniform tenor of her letters and her conduct shew that
+she never regarded her second marriage as discreditable, and always
+took a high and independent, instead of a subdued or deprecating,
+tone with her alienated friends. A bare statement of the treatment
+she received from them is surely no proof of conscious degradation.
+
+In a letter to a Welsh neighbour, near the end of her life, some time
+in 1818, she says:
+
+"Mrs. Mostyn (her youngest daughter) has written again on the road
+back to Italy, where she likes the Piozzis above all people, she
+says, _if they were not so proud of their family_. Would not that
+make one laugh two hours before one's own death? But I remember when
+Lady Egremont raised the whole nation's ill will here, while the
+Saxons were wondering how Count Bruhle could think of marrying a lady
+born Miss Carpenter. The Lombards doubted in the meantime of my being
+a gentlewoman by birth, because my first husband was a brewer. A
+pretty world, is it not? A Ship of Fooles, according to the old poem;
+and they will upset the vessel by and by."
+
+This is not the language of one who wished to apologise for a
+misalliance.
+
+As to Piozzi's assumed want of youth and good looks, Johnson's
+knowledge of womankind, to say nothing of his self-love, should have
+prevented him from urging this as an insuperable objection. He might
+have recollected the Roman matron in Juvenal, who considers the world
+well lost for an old and disfigured prize-fighter; or he might have
+quoted Spenser's description of one--
+
+ "Who rough and rude and filthy did appear,
+ Unseemly man to please fair lady's eye,
+ Yet he of ladies oft was loved dear,
+ When fairer faces were bid standen by:
+ Oh! who can tell the bent of woman's phantasy?"
+
+Madame Campan, speaking of Caroline of Naples, the sister of Marie
+Antoinette, says, she had great reason to complain of the insolence
+of a Spaniard named Las Casas, whom the king, her father-in-law, had
+sent to persuade her to remove M. Acton[1] from the conduct of
+affairs and from about her person. She had told him, to convince him
+of the nature of her sentiments, that she would have Acton painted
+and sculptured by the most celebrated artists of Italy, and send his
+bust and his portrait to the King of Spain, to prove to him that the
+desire of fixing a man of superior capacity could alone have induced
+her to confer the favour he enjoyed. Las Casas had dared to reply,
+that she would be taking useless trouble; that a man's ugliness did
+not always prevent him from pleasing, and that the King of Spain had
+too much experience to be ignorant that the caprices of a woman were
+inexplicable. Johnson may surely be allowed credit for as much
+knowledge of the sex as the King of Spain.
+
+[Footnote 1: M. Acton, as Madame Campan calls him, was a member of
+the ancient English family of that name. He succeeded to the
+baronetcy in 1791, and was the grandfather of Sir John E.E. Dalberg
+Acton, Bart., M.P., &c.]
+
+Others were simultaneously accusing her of marrying a young man to
+indulge a sensual inclination. The truth is, Piozzi was a few months
+older than herself, and was neither ugly nor disagreeable. Madame
+D'Arblay has been already quoted as to his personal appearance, and
+Miss Seward (October, 1787) writes:
+
+"I am become acquainted with Mr. and Mrs. Piozzi. Her conversation is
+that bright wine of the intellects which has no lees. Dr. Johnson
+told me truth when he said she had more colloquial wit than most of
+our literary women; it is indeed a fountain of perpetual flow. But he
+did not tell me truth when he asserted that Piozzi was an ugly dog,
+without particular skill in his profession. Mr. Piozzi is a handsome
+man, in middle life, with gentle, pleasing, unaffected manners, and
+with very eminent skill in his profession. Though he has not a
+powerful or fine-toned voice, he sings with transcending grace and
+expression. I am charmed with his perfect expression on his
+instrument. Surely the finest sensibilities must vibrate through his
+frame, since they breathe so sweetly through his song."
+
+The concluding sentence contains what Partridge would call a _non
+sequitur_, for the finest musical sensibility may coexist with the
+most commonplace qualities. But the lady's evidence is clear on the
+essential point; and another passage from her letters may assist us
+in determining the precise nature of Johnson's feelings towards Mrs.
+Piozzi, and the extent to which his later language and conduct
+regarding her were influenced by pique:
+
+"Love is the great softener of savage dispositions. Johnson had
+always a metaphysic passion for one princess or another: first, the
+rustic Lucy Porter, before he married her nauseous mother; next the
+handsome, but haughty, Molly Aston; next the sublimated, methodistic
+Hill Boothby, who read her bible in Hebrew; and lastly, the more
+charming Mrs. Thrale, with the beauty of the first, the learning of
+the second, and with more worth than a bushel of such sinners and
+such saints. It is ridiculously diverting to see the old elephant
+forsaking his nature before these princesses:
+
+ "'To make them mirth, use all his might, and writhe,
+ His mighty form disporting.'
+
+"_This last and long-enduring passion for Mrs. Thrale was, however,
+composed perhaps of cupboard love, Platonic love, and vanity tickled
+and gratified, from morn to night, by incessant homage_. The two
+first ingredients are certainly oddly heterogeneous; but Johnson, in
+religion and politics, in love and in hatred, was composed of such
+opposite and contradictory materials, as never before met in the
+human mind. This is the reason why folk are never weary of talking,
+reading, and writing about a man--
+
+ "'So various that he seem'd to be,
+ Not one, but all mankind's epitome.'"
+
+After quoting the sentence printed in italics, the reviewer says: "On
+this hint Mr. Hayward enlarges, nothing loth." I quoted the entire
+letter without a word of comment, and what is given as my "enlarging"
+is an _olla podrida_ of sentences torn from the context in three
+different and unconnected passages of this Introduction. The only one
+of them which has any bearing on the point shews, though garbled,
+that, in attributing motives, I distinguished between Johnson and his
+set.
+
+Having thus laid the ground for fixing on me opinions I had nowhere
+professed, the reviewer asks, "Had Mr. Hayward, when he passed such
+slighting judgment on the motives of the venerable sage who awes us
+still, no fear before his eyes of the anathema aimed by Carlyle at
+Croker for similar disparagement? 'As neediness, and greediness, and
+vain glory are the chief qualities of most men, so no man, not even a
+Johnson, acts, or can think of acting, on any other principle.
+Whatever, therefore, cannot be referred to the two former categories,
+Need and Greed, is without scruple ranged under the latter.'"[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: Edinb, Review, No. 230, p. 511.]
+
+This style of criticism is as loose as it is unjust; for one main
+ingredient in Miss Seward's mixture is Platonic love, which cannot be
+referred to either of the three categories. Her error lay in not
+adding a fourth ingredient,--the admiration which Johnson undoubtedly
+felt for the admitted good qualities of Mrs. Thrale. But the lady was
+nearer the truth than the reviewer, when he proceeds in this strain:
+
+"We take an entirely different view at once of the character and the
+feelings of Johnson. Rude, uncouth, arrogant as he was--spoilt as he
+was, which is far worse, by flattery and toadying and the silly
+homage of inferior worshippers--selfish as he was in his eagerness
+for small enjoyments and disregard of small attentions--that which
+lay at the very bottom of his character, that which constitutes the
+great source of his power in life, and connects him after death with
+the hearts of all of us, is his spirit of imaginative romance. He was
+romantic in almost all things--in politics, in religion, in his
+musings on the supernatural world, in friendship for men, and in love
+for women."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"Such was his fancied 'padrona,' his 'mistress,' his 'Thralia
+dulcis,' a compound of the bright lady of fashion and the ideal
+Urania who rapt his soul into spheres of perfection."
+
+Imaginative romance in politics, in religion, and in musings on the
+supernatural world, is here only another term for prejudice,
+intolerance, bigotry, and credulity--for rabid Toryism, High Church
+doctrines verging on Romanism, and a confirmed belief in ghosts.
+Imaginative romance in love and friendship is an elevating,
+softening, and refining influence, which, especially when it forms
+the basis of character, cannot co-exist with habitual rudeness,
+uncouthness, arrogance, love of toadying, selfishness, and disregard
+of what Johnson himself called the minor morals. Equally
+heterogeneous is the "compound of the bright lady of fashion and the
+ideal Urania." A goddess in crinoline would be a semi-mundane
+creature at best; and the image unluckily suggests that Johnson was
+unphilosophically, not to say vulgarly, fond of rank, fashion, and
+their appendages.
+
+His imagination, far from being of the richest or highest kind, was
+insufficient for the attainment of dramatic excellence, was
+insufficient even for the nobler parts of criticism. Nor had he much
+to boast of in the way of delicacy of perception or sensibility. His
+strength lay in his understanding; his most powerful weapon was
+argument: his grandest quality was his good sense.
+
+Thurlow, speaking of the choice of a successor to Lord Mansfield,
+said, "I hesitated long between the intemperance of Kenyon, and the
+corruption of Buller; not but what there was a d----d deal of
+corruption in Kenyon's intemperance, and a d----d deal of
+intemperance in Buller's corruption." Just so, we may hesitate long
+between the romance and the worldliness of Johnson, not but what
+there was a d----d deal of romance in his worldliness, and a d----d
+deal of worldliness in his romance.
+
+The late Lord Alvanley, whose heart was as inflammable as his wit was
+bright, used to tell how a successful rival in the favour of a
+married dame offered to retire from the field for _5001_., saying, "I
+am a younger son: her husband does not give dinners, and they have no
+country house: no _liaison_ suits me that does not comprise both." At
+the risk of provoking Mr. Carlyle's anathema, I now avow my belief
+that Johnson was, nay, boasted of being, open to similar influences;
+and as for his "ideal Uranias," no man past seventy idealises women
+with whom he has been corresponding for years about his or their
+"natural history," to whom he sends recipes for "lubricity of the
+bowels," with an assurance that it has had the best effect upon his
+own.[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: Letters, vol. ii. p. 397. The letter containing the
+recipe actually begins "My dear Angel." Had Johnson forgotten Swift's
+lines on Celia? or the repudiation of the divine nature by Ermodotus,
+which occurs twice in Plutarch? The late Lord Melbourne complained
+that two ladies of quality, sisters, told him too much of their
+"natural history."]
+
+Rough language, too, although not incompatible with affectionate
+esteem, can hardly be reconciled with imaginative romance--
+
+ "Perhaps it was right to dissemble your love,
+ But why did you kick me down stairs?"
+
+"His ugly old wife," says the reviewer, "was an angel." Yes, an angel
+so far as exalted language could make her one; and he had always
+half-a-dozen angels or goddesses on his list. "_Je change d'objet,
+mais la passion reste_." For this very reason, I repeat, his
+affection for Mrs. Piozzi was not a deep, devoted, or absorbing
+feeling at any time; and the gloom which settled upon the evening of
+his days was owing to his infirmities and his dread of death, not to
+the loosening of cherished ties, nor to the compelled solitude of a
+confined dwelling in Bolt Court. The plain matter of fact is that,
+during the last two years of his life, he was seldom a month together
+at his own house, unless when the state of his health prevented him
+from enjoying the hospitality of his friends. When the fatal marriage
+was announced, he was planning what Boswell calls a jaunt into the
+country; and in a letter dated Lichfield, Oct. 4, 1784, he says: "I
+passed the first part of the summer at Oxford (with Dr. Adams);
+afterwards I went to Lichfield, then to Ashbourne (Dr. Taylor's), and
+a week ago I returned to Lichfield."
+
+In the journal which he kept for Dr. Brocklesby, he writes, Oct. 20:
+"The town is my element; 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 public life; and I
+hope still to keep my station, till God shall bid me _Go in peace_."
+Boswell reports him saying about this time, "Sir, I look upon every
+day to be lost when I do not make a new acquaintance."
+
+After another visit to Dr. Adams, at Pembroke College, he returned on
+the 16th Nov. to London, where he died on the 13th Dec. 1784. The
+proximate cause of his death was dropsy; and there is not the
+smallest sign of its having been accelerated or embittered by
+unkindness or neglect.
+
+Whoever has accompanied me thus far will be fully qualified to form
+an independent opinion of Lord Macaulay's dashing summary of Mrs.
+Piozzi's imputed ill-treatment of Johnson:
+
+"Johnson was now in his seventy-second year. The infirmities of age
+were coming fast upon him. That inevitable event of which he never
+thought without horror was brought near to him; and his whole life
+was darkened by the shadow of death. He had often to pay the cruel
+price of longevity. Every year he lost what could never be replaced.
+The strange dependants to whom he had given shelter, and to whom, in
+spite of their faults, he was strongly attached by habit, dropped off
+one by one; and, in the silence of his home, he regretted even the
+noise of their scolding matches. The kind and generous Thrale was no
+more; and it would have been well if his wife had been laid beside
+him. But she survived to be the laughing-stock of those who had
+envied her, and to draw from the eyes of the old man who had loved
+her beyond any thing in the world, tears far more bitter than he
+would have shed over her grave.
+
+"With some estimable, and many agreeable qualities, she was not made
+to be independent. The control of a mind more steadfast than her own
+was necessary to her respectability. While she was restrained by her
+husband, a man of sense and firmness, indulgent to her taste in
+trifles, but always the undisputed master of his house, her worst
+offences had been impertinent jokes, white lies, and short fits of
+pettishness ending in sunny good humour. But he was gone; and she was
+left an opulent widow of forty, with strong sensibility, volatile
+fancy, and slender judgment. She soon fell in love with a
+music-master from Brescia, in whom nobody but herself could discover
+anything to admire. Her pride, and perhaps some better feelings,
+struggled hard against this degrading passion. But the struggle
+irritated her nerves, soured her temper, and at length endangered her
+health. Conscious that her choice was one which Johnson could not
+approve, she became desirous to escape from his inspection. Her
+manner towards him changed. She was sometimes cold and sometimes
+petulant. She did not conceal her joy when he left Streatham: she
+never pressed him to return; and, if he came unbidden, she received
+him in a manner which convinced him that he was no longer a welcome
+guest. He took the very intelligible hints which she gave. He read,
+for the last time, a chapter of the Greek Testament in the library
+which had been formed by himself. In a solemn and tender prayer he
+commended the house and its inmates to the Divine protection, and,
+with emotions which choked his voice and convulsed his powerful
+frame, left for ever that beloved home for the gloomy and desolate
+house behind Fleet Street, where the few and evil days which still
+remained to him were to run out.
+
+"Here, in June 1783, he had a paralytic stroke, from which, however,
+he recovered, and which does not appear to have at all impaired his
+intellectual faculties. But other maladies came thick upon him. His
+asthma tormented him day and night. Dropsical symptoms made their
+appearance. While sinking under a complication of diseases, he heard
+that the woman whose friendship had been the chief happiness of
+sixteen years of his life, had married an Italian fiddler; that all
+London was crying shame upon her; and that the newspapers and
+magazines were filled with allusions to the Ephesian matron and the
+two pictures in Hamlet. He vehemently said that he would try to
+forget her existence. He never uttered her name. Every memorial of
+her which met his eye he flung into the fire. She meanwhile fled from
+the laughter and hisses of her countrymen and countrywomen to a land
+where she was unknown, hastened across Mount Cenis, and learned,
+while passing a merry Christmas of concerts and lemonade-parties at
+Milan, that the great man with whose name hers is inseparably
+associated, had ceased to exist."[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: "Encyclopædia Britannica," last edition. The Essay on
+Johnson is reprinted in the first volume of Lord Macaulay's
+"Miscellaneous Writings."]
+
+"Splendid recklessness," is the happy expression used by the
+"Saturday Review" in characterising this account of the alleged
+rupture with its consequences; and no reader will fail to admire the
+rhetorical skill with which the expulsion from Streatham with its
+library formed by himself, the chapter in the Greek testament, the
+gloomy and desolate home, the music-master in whom nobody but herself
+could see anything to admire, the few and evil days, the emotions
+that convulsed the frame, the painful and melancholy death, and the
+merry Christmas of concerts and lemonade parties, have been grouped
+together with the view of giving picturesqueness, impressive unity,
+and damnatory vigour to the sketch. "Action, action, action," says
+the orator; "effect, effect, effect," says the historian. Give
+Archimedes a place to stand on, and he would move the world. Give
+Fouché a line of a man's handwriting, and he would engage to ruin
+him. Give Lord Macaulay the semblance of an authority, an insulated
+fact or phrase, a scrap of a journal, or the tag end of a song, and
+on it, by the abused prerogative of genius, he would construct a
+theory of national or personal character, which should confer undying
+glory or inflict indelible disgrace.
+
+Johnson was never driven or expelled from Mrs. Piozzi's house or
+family: if very intelligible hints were given, they certainly were
+not taken; the library was not formed by him; the Testament may or
+may not have been Greek; his powerful frame shook with no convulsions
+but what may have been occasioned by the unripe grapes and hard
+peaches; he did not leave Streatham for his gloomy and desolate house
+behind Fleet Street; the few and evil days (two years, nine weeks)
+did not run out in that house; the music-master was generally admired
+and esteemed; and the merry Christmas of concerts and
+lemonade-parties is simply another sample of the brilliant
+historian's mode of turning the abstract into the concrete in such a
+manner as to degrade or elevate at will. An Italian concert is not a
+merry meeting; and a lemonade-party, I presume, is a party where
+(instead of _eau-sucrée_ as at Paris) the refreshment handed about is
+lemonade: not an enlivening drink at Christmas. In a word, all these
+graphic details are mere creations of the brain, and the general
+impression intended to be conveyed by them is false, substantially
+false; for Mrs. Piozzi never behaved otherwise than kindly and
+considerately to Johnson at any time.
+
+Her life in Italy has been sketched in her best manner by her own
+lively pen in the "Autobiography" and what she calls the "Travel
+Book," to be presently mentioned. Scattered notices of her
+proceedings occur in her letters to Mr. Lysons, and in the printed
+correspondence of her cotemporaries.
+
+On the 19th October, 1784, she writes to Mr. Lysons from Turin:
+
+"We are going to Alexandria, Genoa, and Pavia, and then to Milan for
+the winter, as Mr. Piozzi finds friends everywhere to delay us, and I
+hate hurry and fatigue; it takes away all one's attention. Lyons was
+a delightful place to me, and we were so feasted there by my
+husband's old acquaintances. The Duke and Duchess of Cumberland too
+paid us a thousand caressing civilities where we met with them, and
+we had no means of musical parties neither. The Prince of Sisterna
+came yesterday to visit Mr. Piozzi, and present me with the key of
+his box at the opera for the time we stay at Turin. Here's honour and
+glory for you! When Miss Thrale hears of it, she will write perhaps;
+the other two are very kind and affectionate."
+
+In "Thraliana":
+
+"_3rd November_, 1784.--Yesterday I received a letter from Mr.
+Baretti, full of the most flagrant and bitter insults concerning my
+late marriage with Mr. Piozzi, against whom, however, he can bring no
+heavier charge than that he disputed on the road with an innkeeper
+concerning the bill in his last journey to Italy; while he accuses me
+of murder and fornication in the grossest terms, such as I believe
+have scarcely ever been used even to his old companions in Newgate,
+whence he was released to scourge the families which cherished, and
+bite the hands that have since relieved him. Could I recollect any
+provocation I ever gave the man, I should be less amazed, but he
+heard, perhaps, that Johnson had written me a rough letter, and
+thought he would write me a brutal one: like the Jewish king, who,
+trying to imitate Solomon without his understanding, said, 'My father
+whipped you with whips, but I will whip you with scorpions.'"
+
+"Milan, Dec. 7.
+
+"I correspond constantly and copiously with such of my daughters as
+are willing to answer my letters, and I have at last received one
+cold scrap from the eldest, which I instantly and tenderly replied
+to. Mrs. Lewis too, and Miss Nicholson, have had accounts of my
+health, for I found _them_ disinterested and attached to me: those
+who led the stream, or watched which way it ran, that they might
+follow it, were not, I suppose, desirous of my correspondence, and
+till they are so, shall not be troubled with it."
+
+Miss Nicholson was the lady left with the daughters, and Mrs. Piozzi
+could have heard no harm of her from them or others when she wrote
+thus. The same inference must be drawn from the allusions to this
+lady at subsequent periods. After stating that she "dined at the
+minister's o' Tuesday, and he called all the wise men about me with
+great politeness indeed"--"Once more," she continues, "keep me out of
+the newspapers if you possibly can: they have given me many a
+miserable hour, and my enemies many a merry one: but I have not
+deserved public persecution, and am very happy to live in a place
+where one is free from unmerited insolence, such as London abounds
+with.
+
+ "'Illic credulitas, illic temerarius error.'
+
+God bless you, and may you conquer the many-headed monster which I
+could never charm to silence." In "Thraliana," she says:
+
+"_January_, 1785.--I see the English newspapers are full of gross
+insolence to me: all burst out, as I guessed it would, upon the death
+of Dr. Johnson. But Mr. Boswell (who I plainly see is the author)
+should let the _dead_ escape from his malice at least. I feel more
+shocked at the insults offered to Mr. Thrale's memory than at those
+cast on Mr. Piozzi's person. My present husband, thank God! is well
+and happy, and able to defend himself: but dear Mr. Thrale, that had
+fostered these cursed wits so long! to be stung by their malice even
+in the grave, is too cruel:--
+
+ "'Nor church, nor churchyards, from such fops are free.'"[1]--POPE.
+
+[Footnote 1: Probably misquoted for--
+
+ "No place is sacred, not the church is free."
+
+_Prologue to the Satires_.]
+
+The license of our press is a frequent topic of complaint. But here
+is a woman who had never placed herself before the public in any way
+so as to give them a right to discuss her conduct or affairs, not
+even as an author, made the butt of every description of offensive
+personality for months, with the tacit encouragement of the first
+moralist of the age.
+
+January 20th, 1785, she writes from Milan:--"The Minister, Count
+Wilsick, has shown us many distinctions, and we are visited by the
+first families in Milan. The Venetian Resident will, however, be soon
+sent to the court of London, and give a faithful account, as I am
+sure, to all their _obliging_ inquiries."
+
+In "Thraliana":
+
+"_25th Jan_., 1785.--I have recovered myself sufficiently to think
+what will be the consequence to me of Johnson's death, but must wait
+the event, as all thoughts on the future in this world are vain. Six
+people have already undertaken to write his life, I hear, of which
+Sir John Hawkins, Mr. Boswell, Tom Davies, and Dr. Kippis are four.
+Piozzi says he would have me add to the number, and so I would, but
+that I think my anecdotes too few, and am afraid of saucy answers if
+I send to England for others. The saucy answers _I_ should disregard,
+but my heart is made vulnerable by my late marriage, and I am certain
+that, to spite me, they would insult my husband.
+
+"Poor Johnson! I see they will leave _nothing untold_ that I laboured
+so long to keep secret; and I was so very delicate _in trying to
+conceal his [fancied][1] insanity_ that I retained no proofs of it,
+or hardly any, nor even mentioned it in these books, lest by my dying
+first _they_ might be printed and the secret (for such I thought it)
+discovered. I used to tell him in jest that his biographers would be
+at a loss concerning some orange-peel he used to keep in his pocket,
+and many a joke we had about the lives that would be published.
+Rescue me out of their hands, my dear, and do it yourself, said he;
+Taylor, Adams, and Hector will furnish you with juvenile anecdotes,
+and Baretti will give you all the rest that you have not already, for
+I think Baretti is a lyar only when he speaks of himself. Oh, said I,
+Baretti told me yesterday that you got by heart six pages of
+Machiavel's History once, and repeated them thirty years afterwards
+word for word. Why this is a _gross_ lye, said Johnson, I never read
+the book at all. Baretti too told me of you (said I) that you once
+kept sixteen cats in your chamber, and yet they scratched your legs
+to such a degree, you were forced to use mercurial plaisters for some
+time after. Why this (replied Johnson) is an unprovoked lye indeed; I
+thought the fellow would not have broken through divine and human
+laws thus to make puss his heroine, but I see I was mistaken."
+
+[Footnote 1: Sic in the MS. See _antè_, p. 202.]
+
+On February 3rd, 1785, Horace Walpole writes from London to Sir
+Horace Mann at Florence:--"I have lately been lent a volume of poems
+composed and printed at Florence, in which another of our exheroines,
+Mrs. Piozzi, has a considerable share; her associates three of the
+English bards who assisted in the little garland which Ramsay the
+painter sent me. The present is a plump octavo; and if you have not
+sent me a copy by our nephew, I should be glad if you could get one
+for me: not for the merit of the verses, which are moderate enough
+and faint imitations of our good poets; but for a short and sensible
+and genteel preface by La Piozzi, from whom I have just seen a very
+clever letter to Mrs. Montagu, to disavow a jackanapes who has lately
+made a noise here, one Boswell, by Anecdotes of Dr. Johnson. In a day
+or two we expect another collection by the same Signora."
+
+Her associates were Greathead, Merry, and Parsons. The volume in
+question was "The Florence Miscellany." "A copy," says Mr. Lowndes,
+"having fallen into the hands of W. Grifford, gave rise to his
+admirable satire of the 'Baviad and Moeviad.'"
+
+In his Journal of the Tour to the Hebrides, Boswell makes Johnson say
+of Mrs. Montagu's "Essay on Shakespeare": "Reynolds is fond of her
+book, and I wonder at it; for neither I, nor Beauclerc, nor Mrs.
+Thrale could get through it." This is what Mrs. Piozzi wrote to
+disavow, so far as she was personally concerned. In a subsequent
+letter from Vienna, she says: "Mrs. Montagu has written to me very
+sweetly." The other collection expected from her was her "Anecdotes
+of the late Samuel Johnson, during the last Twenty Years of his Life.
+Printed for T. Cadell in the Strand, 1786."
+
+She opened the matter to Mr. Cadell in the following terms:
+
+"Florence, 7th June, 1785.
+
+"_Sir_.,--As you were at once the bookseller and friend of Dr.
+Johnson, who always spoke of your character in the kindest terms, I
+could wish you likewise to be the publisher of some Anecdotes
+concerning the last twenty years of his life, collected by me during
+the many days I had opportunity to spend in his instructive company,
+and digested into method since I heard of his death. As I have a
+large collection of his letters in England, besides some verses,
+known only to myself, I wish to delay printing till we can make two
+or three little volumes, not unacceptable, perhaps, to the public;
+but I desire my intention to be notified, for divers reasons, and, if
+you approve of the scheme, should wish it to be immediately
+advertized. My return cannot be in less than twelve months, and we
+may be detained still longer, as our intention is to complete the
+tour of Italy; but the book is in forwardness, and it has been seen
+by many English and Italian friends."
+
+On July 27th, 1785, she writes from Florence:
+
+"We celebrated our wedding anniversary two days ago with a
+magnificent dinner and concert, at which the Prince Corsini and his
+brother the Cardinal did us the honour of assisting, and wished us
+joy in the tenderest and politest terms. Lord and Lady Cowper, Lord
+Pembroke, and _all_ the English indeed, doat on my husband, and show
+us every possible attention."
+
+On the 18th July, 1785, she writes again to Mr. Cadell:--"I am
+favoured with your answer and pleased with the advertisement, but it
+will be impossible to print the verses till my return to England, as
+they are all locked up with other papers in the Bank, nor should I
+choose to put the key (which is now at Milan) in any one's hand
+except my own."
+
+She therefore proposes that the "Anecdotes" shall be printed first,
+and published separately. On the 20th October, 1785, she writes from
+Sienna:
+
+"I finished my 'Anecdotes of Dr. Johnson' at Florence, and taking
+them with me to Leghorn, got a clear transcript made there, such as I
+hope will do for you to print from; though there may be some errors,
+perhaps many, which have escaped me, as I am wholly unused to the
+business of sending manuscripts to the press, and must rely on you to
+get everything done properly when, it comes into your hands."
+
+Such was the surviving ascendency of Johnson, or such the placability
+of her disposition, that, but for Piozzi's remonstrances, she would
+have softened down her "Anecdotes" to an extent which would have
+destroyed much of their sterling value.
+
+Mr. Lysons made the final bargain with Cadell, and had full power to
+act for her. She writes thus to Cadell:
+
+"Rome, 28th March, 1786.
+
+"SIR,--I hasten to tell you that I am perfectly pleased and contented
+with the alterations made by my worthy and amiable friends in the
+'Anecdotes of Johnson's Life.' Whatever is done by Sir Lucas Pepys is
+certainly well done, and I am happy in the thoughts of his having
+interested himself about it. Mr. Lysons was very judicious and very
+kind in going to the Bishop of Peterboro', and him and Dr. Lort for
+advice. There is no better to be had in the world, I believe; and it
+is my desire that they should be always consulted about any future
+transactions of the same sort relating to, Sir, your most obedient
+servant,
+
+"H. L. PIOZZI."[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: The letters to Mr. Cadell were published in the
+"Gentleman's Magazine" for March and April, 1852.]
+
+The early portions of "Thraliana" were evidently amongst the papers
+locked up in the Bank, and she consequently wrote most of the
+Anecdotes from memory, which may account for some minor
+discrepancies, like that relating to the year in which she made the
+acquaintance with Johnson.
+
+The book attracted great attention; and whilst some affected to
+discover in it the latent signs of wounded vanity and pique, others
+vehemently impugned its accuracy. Foremost amongst her assailants
+stood Boswell, who had an obvious motive for depreciating her, and he
+attempts to destroy her authority, first, by quoting Johnson's
+supposed imputations on her veracity; and secondly, by individual
+instances of her alleged departure from truth.
+
+Thus, Johnson is reported to have said:--"It is amazing, Sir, what
+deviations there are from precise truth, in the account which is
+given of almost everything. I told Mrs. Thrale, You have so little
+anxiety about truth that you never tax your memory with the exact
+thing."
+
+Her proneness to exaggerated praise especially excited his
+indignation, and he endeavours to make her responsible for his
+rudeness on the strength of it.
+
+"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 _short_. It is nothing. He fills a chair. He is a man of genteel
+appearance, and that is all. 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; you praised that man with such disproportion, that I was
+incited to lessen him, perhaps more than he deserves. _His blood is
+upon your head_. 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;--she would be the only woman,
+could she but command that little whirligig.'"
+
+Opposite the words I have printed in italics she has written: "An
+expression he would not have used; no, not for worlds."
+
+In Boswell's note of a visit to Streatham in 1778, we find:--
+
+"Next morning, while we were at breakfast, Johnson gave a very
+earnest recommendation of what he himself practised with the utmost
+conscientiousness: I mean a strict attention to truth even in the
+most minute particulars. 'Accustom your children,' said he,
+'constantly to this: if a thing happened at one window, and they,
+when relating it, say that it happened at another, do not let it
+pass, but instantly check them: you do not know where deviation from
+truth will end.' _Boswell_. 'It may come to the door: and when once
+an account is at all varied in one circumstance, it may by degrees be
+varied so as to be totally different from what really happened.' Our
+lively hostess, whose fancy was impatient of the rein, fidgeted at
+this, and ventured to say 'Nay, this is too much. If Dr. Johnson
+should forbid me to drink tea, I would comply, as I should feel the
+restraint only twice a day: but little variations in narrative must
+happen a thousand times a day, if one is not perpetually watching.'
+_Johnson_. 'Well, Madam, and you _ought_ to be perpetually watching.
+It is more from carelessness about truth, than from intentional
+lying, that there is so much falsehood in the world.'"
+
+Now for the illustrative incident, which occurred during the same
+visit:--
+
+"I had before dinner repeated a ridiculous story told me by an old
+man, who had been a passenger with me in the stage-coach to-day. Mrs.
+Thrale, having taken occasion to allude to it in talking to me,
+called it, 'The story told you by the old _woman_.' 'Now, Madam,'
+said I, 'give me leave to catch you in the fact: it was not an old
+_woman_, but an old _man_, whom I mentioned as having told me this.'
+I presumed to take an opportunity, in the presence of Johnson, of
+showing this lively lady how ready she was, unintentionally, to
+deviate from exact authenticity of narration."
+
+In the margin: "Mrs. Thrale knew there was no such thing as an Old
+Man: when a man gets superannuated, they call him an Old Woman."
+
+The remarks on the value of truth attributed to Johnson are just and
+sound in the main, but when they are pointed against character, they
+must be weighed in reference to the very high standard he habitually
+insisted upon. He would not allow his servant to say he was not at
+home when he was. "A servant's strict regard for truth," he
+continued, "must be weakened by such a practice. A philosopher may
+know that it is merely a form of denial; but few servants are such
+nice distinguishers. If I accustom a servant to tell a lie for me,
+have I not reason to apprehend that he will tell many lies for
+himself?"
+
+One of his townspeople, Mr. Wickens, of Lichfield, was walking with
+him in a small meandering shrubbery formed so as to hide the
+termination, and observed that it might be taken for an extensive
+labyrinth, but that it would prove a deception, though it was,
+indeed, not an unpardonable one. "Sir," exclaimed Johnson, "don't
+tell me of deception; a lie, Sir, is a lie, whether it be a lie to
+the eye or a lie to the ear." Whilst he was in one of these
+paradoxical humours, there was no pleasing him; and he has been known
+to insult persons of respectability for repeating current accounts of
+events, sounding new and strange, which turned out to be literally
+true; such as the red-hot shot at Gibraltar, or the effects of the
+earthquake at Lisbon. Yet he could be lax when it suited him, as
+speaking of epitaphs: "The writer of an epitaph should not be
+considered as saying nothing but what is strictly true. Allowance
+must be made for some degree of exaggerated praise. In lapidary
+inscriptions a man is not upon oath." Is he upon oath in narrating an
+anecdote? or could he do more than swear to the best of his
+recollection and belief, if he was. Boswell's notes of conversations
+are wonderful results of a peculiar faculty, or combination of
+faculties, but the utmost they can be supposed to convey is the
+substance of what took place, in an exceedingly condensed shape,
+lighted up at intervals by the _ipsissima verba_, of the speaker.
+
+"Whilst he went on talking triumphantly," says Boswell, "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.'" On his boasting of the efficiency of
+his own system of short-hand to Johnson, he was put to the test and
+failed.
+
+Mrs. Piozzi at once admits and accounts for the inferiority of her
+own collection of anecdotes, when she denounces "a trick which I have
+seen played on common occasions, of sitting steadily 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, and a
+conversation assembly room would become tremendous as a court of
+justice." This is a hit at Boswell, who (as regards Johnson himself)
+had full licence to take notes the best way he could. Madame
+D'Arblay's are much fuller, and bear a suspicious resemblance to the
+dialogues in her novels.
+
+In a reply to Boswell, dated December 14th, 1793, Miss Seward
+pointedly remarks:
+
+"Dr. Johnson's frequently-expressed contempt for Mrs. Thrale on
+account of that want of veracity which he imputes to her, at least as
+Mr. Boswell has recorded, either convicts him of narrating what
+Johnson never said, or Johnson himself of that insincerity of which
+there are too many instances, amidst all the recorded proofs of his
+unprovoked personal rudeness, to those with whom he conversed; for,
+this repeated contempt was coeval with his published letters, which
+express such high and perfect esteem for that lady, which declare
+that 'to hear her, was to hear Wisdom, that to see her, was to see
+Virtue.'"
+
+Lord Macaulay and his advocate in the "Edinburgh Review," who speak
+of Mrs. Piozzi's "white lies," have not convicted her of one; and Mr.
+Croker bears strong testimony to her accuracy.
+
+Mrs. Piozzi prefaces some instances of Johnson's rudeness and
+harshness by the remark, that "he did not hate the persons he treated
+with roughness, or despise them whom he drove from him by apparent
+scorn. He really loved and respected many whom he would not suffer to
+love him." Boswell echoes the remark, multiplies the instances, and
+then accuses her of misrepresenting their friend. After mentioning a
+discourteous reply to Robertson the historian, which was subsequently
+confirmed by Boswell, she proceeds to show that Johnson was no
+gentler to herself or those for whom he had the greatest regard.
+"When I one day lamented the loss of a first cousin, killed in
+America, 'Prithee, my dear (said he), have done with canting: how
+would the world be worse for it, I may ask, if all your relations
+were at once spitted like larks and roasted for Presto's
+supper?'--Presto was the dog that lay under the table." To this
+Boswell opposes the version given by Baretti:
+
+"Mrs. Thrale, while supping very heartily upon larks, laid down her
+knife and fork, and abruptly exclaimed, 'O, my dear 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
+_you_ very little concern if all your relations were spitted like
+those larks, and dressed for Presto's supper."
+
+This version, assuming its truth, aggravates the personal rudeness of
+the speech. But her marginal notes on the passage are: "Boswell
+appealing to Baretti for a testimony of the truth is comical enough!
+I never addressed him (Johnson) so familiarly in my life. I never did
+eat any supper, and there were no larks to eat."
+
+"Upon mentioning this story to my friend Mr. Wilkes," adds Boswell,
+"he pleasantly matched it with the following sentimental anecdote. 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 200 louis d'ors. Mr. Wilkes observed the behaviour of
+Mademoiselle, who sighed indeed very piteously, and assumed every
+pathetic air of grief, but ate 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, "Excessive
+sorrow is exceeding dry," but I never heard "Excessive sorrow is
+exceeding hungry." Perhaps one hundred will do. The gentleman took
+the hint." Mrs. Piozzi's marginal ebullition is: "Very like my hearty
+supper of larks, who never eat supper at all, nor was ever a hot dish
+seen on the table after dinner at Streatham Park."
+
+Two instances of inaccuracy, announced as particularly worthy of
+notice, are supplied by "an eminent critic," understood to be Malone,
+who begins by stating, "I have often been in his (Johnson's) company,
+and never _once_ heard him say a severe thing to any one; and many
+others can attest the same." Malone had lived very little with
+Johnson, and to appreciate his evidence, we should know what he and
+Boswell would agree to call a severe thing. Once, on Johnson's
+observing that they had "good talk" on the "preceding evening," "Yes,
+Sir," replied Boswell, "you tossed and gored several persons." Do
+tossing and goring come within the definition of severity? In another
+place he says, "I have seen even Mrs. Thrale stunned;" and Miss
+Reynolds relates that "One day at her own table he spoke so very
+roughly to her, that every one present was surprised that she could
+bear it so placidly; and on the ladies withdrawing, I expressed great
+astonishment that Dr. Johnson should speak so harshly to her, but to
+this she said no more than 'Oh, dear, good man.'"
+
+One of the two instances of Mrs. Piozzi's inaccuracy is as
+follows:--"He once bade a very celebrated lady (Hannah More) 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."
+
+Now, exclaims Mr. Malone, let the genuine anecdote be contrasted with
+this:
+
+"The person thus represented as being harshly treated, though a very
+celebrated lady, was _then_ 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 _laid it on_. '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 compliments, he exclaimed, 'Dearest lady,
+consider with yourself what your flattery is worth, before you bestow
+it so freely.'
+
+"How different does this story appear, when accompanied with all
+those circumstances which really belong to it, but which Mrs. Thrale
+either did not know, or has suppressed!"
+
+How do we know that these circumstances really belong to it? what
+essential difference do they make? and how do they prove Mrs.
+Thrale's inaccuracy, who expressly states the nature of the probable,
+though certainly most inadequate, provocation.
+
+The other instance is a story which she tells on Mr. Thrale's
+authority, of an argument between Johnson and a gentleman, which the
+master of the house, a nobleman, tried to cut short by saying loud
+enough for the doctor to hear, "Our friend has no meaning in all
+this, except just to relate at the Club to-morrow how he teased
+Johnson at dinner to-day; this is all to do himself honour." "No,
+upon my word," replied the other, "I see no honour in it, whatever
+you may do." "Well, Sir," returned Mr. Johnson sternly, "if you do
+not see the honour, I am sure I feel the disgrace." Malone, on the
+authority of a nameless friend, asserts that it was not at the house
+of a nobleman, that the gentleman's remark was uttered in a low tone,
+and that Johnson made no retort at all. As Mrs. Piozzi could hardly
+have invented the story, the sole question is, whether Mr. Thrale or
+Malone's friend was right. She has written in the margin: "It was the
+house of Thomas Fitzmaurice, son to Lord Shelburne, and Pottinger the
+hero."[1]
+
+"Mrs. Piozzi," says Boswell, "has given a similar misrepresentation
+of Johnson's treatment of Garrick in this particular (as to the
+Club), as if he had used these contemptuous expressions: 'If Garrick
+does apply, I'll blackball him. Surely one ought to sit in a society
+like ours--
+
+ "'Unelbow'd by a gamester, pimp, or player.'"
+
+The lady retorts, "He did say so, and Mr. Thrale stood astonished."
+Johnson was constantly depreciating the profession of the stage.[2]
+
+[Footnote 1: "Being in company with Count Z----, at Lord ----'s
+table, the Count thinking the Doctor too dogmatical, observed, he did
+not at all think himself honoured by the conversation.' And what is
+to become of me, my lord, who feel myself actually
+disgraced?"--_Johnsoniana_, p. 143, first edition.]
+
+[Footnote 2: "_Boswell_. There, Sir, you are always heretical, you
+never will allow merit to a player. _Johnson_. Merit, Sir, what
+merit? Do you respect a rope-dancer or a
+ballad-singer?"--_Boswell's Life of Johnson_, p. 556.]
+
+Whilst finding fault with Mrs. Piozzi for inaccuracy in another
+place, Boswell supplies an additional example of Johnson's habitual
+disregard of the ordinary rules of good breeding in society:--
+
+"A learned gentleman [Dr. Vansittart], who, in the course of
+conversation, wished to inform us of this simple fact, that the
+council upon the circuit of Shrewsbury were much bitten by fleas,
+took, I suppose, seven or eight minutes in relating it
+circumstantially. He in a plenitude of phrase told us, that large
+bales of woollen cloth were lodged in the town-hall; that by reason
+of this, fleas nestled there in prodigious numbers; that the lodgings
+of the council were near the town-hall; and that those little animals
+moved from place to place with wonderful agility. Johnson sat in
+great impatience till the gentleman had finished his tedious
+narrative, and then burst out (playfully however), 'It is a pity,
+Sir, that you have not seen a lion; for a flea has taken you such a
+time, that a lion must have served you a twelve-month.'"
+
+He complains in a note that Mrs. Piozzi, to whom he told the
+anecdote, has related it "as if the gentleman had given the natural
+history of the mouse." But, in a letter to Johnson she tells _him_ "I
+have seen the man that saw the mouse," and he replies "Poor V----, he
+is a good man, &c.;" so that her version of the story is the best
+authenticated. Opposite Boswell's aggressive paragraph she has
+written: "I saw old Mitchell of Brighthelmstone affront him (Johnson)
+terribly once about fleas. Johnson, being tired of the subject,
+expressed his impatience of it with coarseness. 'Why, Sir,' said the
+old man, 'why should not Flea bite o'me be treated as Phlebotomy? It
+empties the capillary vessels.'"
+
+Boswell's Life of Johnson was not published till 1791; but the
+controversy kindled by the Tour to the Hebrides and the Anecdotes,
+raged fiercely enough to fix general attention and afford ample scope
+for ridicule: "The Bozzi &c. subjects," writes Hannah More in April
+1786, "are not exhausted, though everybody seems heartily sick of
+them. Everybody, however, conspires not to let them drop. _That_, the
+Cagliostro, and the Cardinal's necklace, spoil all conversation, and
+destroyed a very good evening at Mr. Pepys' last night." In one of
+Walpole's letters about the same time we find:
+
+"All conversation turns on a trio of culprits--Hastings, Fitzgerald,
+and the Cardinal de Rohan.... So much for tragedy. Our comic
+performers are Boswell and Dame Piozzi. The cock biographer has fixed
+a direct lie on the hen, by an advertisement in which he affirms that
+he communicated his manuscript to Madame Thrale, and that she made no
+objection to what he says of her low opinion of Mrs. Montagu's book.
+It is very possible that it might not be her real opinion, but was
+uttered in compliment to Johnson, or for fear he should spit in her
+face if she disagreed with him; but how will she get over her not
+objecting to the passage remaining? She must have known, by knowing
+Boswell, and by having a similar intention herself, that his
+'Anecdotes' would certainly be published: in short, the ridiculous
+woman will be strangely disappointed. As she must have heard that
+_the whole first impression of her book was sold the first day_, no
+doubt she expected on her landing, to be received like the governor
+of Gibraltar, and to find the road strewed with branches of palm.
+She, and Boswell, and their Hero, are the joke of the public. A Dr.
+Walcot, _soi-disant_ Peter Pindar, has published a burlesque eclogue,
+in which Boswell and the Signora are the interlocutors, and all the
+absurdest passages in the works of both are ridiculed. The
+print-shops teem with satiric prints in them: one in which Boswell,
+as a monkey, is riding on Johnson, the bear, has this witty
+inscription, 'My Friend _delineavit_.' But enough of these
+mountebanks."
+
+What Walpole calls the absurdest passages are precisely those which
+possess most interest for posterity; namely, the minute personal
+details, which bring Johnson home to the mind's eye. Peter Pindar,
+however, was simply labouring in his vocation when he made the best
+of them, as in the following lines. His satire is in the form of a
+Town Eclogue, in which Bozzy and Madame Piozzi contend in anecdotes,
+with Hawkins for umpire:
+
+BOZZY.
+
+ "One Thursday morn did Doctor Johnson wake,
+ And call out 'Lanky, Lanky,' by mistake--
+ But recollecting--'Bozzy, Bozzy,' cry'd--
+ For in _contractions_ Johnson took a pride!"
+
+MADAME PIOZZI.
+
+ "I ask'd him if he knock'd Tom Osborn down;
+ As such a tale was current through the town,--
+ Says I, 'Do tell me, Doctor, what befell.'--
+ 'Why, dearest lady, there is nought to _tell_;
+ 'I ponder'd on the _proper'st_ mode to _treat_ him--
+ 'The dog was impudent, and so I beat him!
+ 'Tom, like a fool, proclaim'd his fancied wrongs;
+ '_Others_, that I belabour'd, held their tongues.'"
+
+ "Did any one, that he was _happy_, cry--
+ Johnson would tell him plumply, 'twas a lie.
+ A Lady told him she was really so;
+ On which he sternly answer'd, 'Madam, no!
+ 'Sickly you are, and ugly--foolish, poor;
+ 'And therefore can't he happy, I am sure.
+ ''Twould make a fellow hang himself, whose ear
+ 'Were, from such creatures, forc'd such stuff to hear.'"
+
+BOZZY.
+
+ "Lo, when we landed on the Isle of Mull,
+ The megrims got into the Doctor's skull:
+ With such bad humours he began to fill,
+ I thought he would not go to Icolmkill:
+ But lo! those megrims (wonderful to utter!)
+ Were banish'd all by tea and bread and butter!"
+
+At last they get angry, and tell each other a few
+home truths:--
+
+BOZZY.
+
+ "How could your folly tell, so void of truth,
+ That miserable story of the youth,
+ Who, in your book, of Doctor Johnson begs
+ Most seriously to know if cats laid eggs!"
+
+MADAME PIOZZI.
+
+ "_Who_ told of Mistress Montagu the lie--
+ So palpable a falsehood?--Bozzy, fie!"
+
+BOZZY.
+
+ "_Who_, madd'ning with an anecdotic itch,
+ Declar'd that Johnson call'd his mother _b-tch?_"
+
+MADAME PIOZZI.
+
+ "_Who_, from M'Donald's rage to save his snout,
+ Cut twenty lines of defamation out?"
+
+BOZZY.
+
+ "_Who_ would have said a word about Sam's wig,
+ Or told the story of the peas and pig?
+ Who would have told a tale so very flat,
+ Of Frank the Black, and Hodge the mangy cat?"
+
+MADAME PIOZZI.
+
+ "Good me! you're grown at once confounded _tender_;
+ Of Doctor Johnson's fame a _fierce_ defender:
+ I'm sure you've mention'd many a pretty story
+ Not much redounding to the Doctor's glory.
+ _Now_ for a _saint_ upon us you would palm him--
+ First _murder_ the poor man, and then _embalm him!_"
+
+BOZZY.
+
+ "Well, Ma'am! since all that Johnson said or wrote,
+ You hold so sacred, how have you forgot
+ To grant the wonder-hunting world a reading
+ Of Sam's Epistle, just before your _wedding_:
+ Beginning thus, (in strains not form'd to flatter)
+ 'Madam,
+ '_If that most ignominious matter
+ 'Be not concluded_'--[1]
+ Farther shall I say?
+ No--we shall have it from _yourself_ some day,
+ To justify your passion for the _Youth_,
+ With all the charms of eloquence and truth."
+
+MADAME PIOZZI.
+
+ "What was my marriage, Sir, to _you_ or _him?_
+ _He_ tell me what to do!--a pretty whim!
+ _He_, to _propriety_, (the beast) _resort!_
+ As well might _elephants preside_ at _court_.
+ Lord! let the world to _damn_ my match _agree;_
+ Good God! James Boswell, what's _that world_ to _me?_
+ The folks who paid respects to Mistress Thrale,
+ Fed on her pork, poor souls! and swill'd her ale,
+ May _sicken_ at Piozzi, nine in ten--
+ Turn up the nose of scorn--good God! what then?
+ For _me_, the Dev'l may fetch their souls so _great_;
+ _They_ keep their homes, and _I_, thank God, my meat.
+ When they, poor owls! shall beat their cage, a jail,
+ I, unconfin'd, shall spread my peacock tail;
+ Free as the birds of air, enjoy my ease,
+ Choose my own food, and see what climes I please.
+ _I_ suffer only--if I'm in the wrong:
+ So, now, you prating puppy, hold your tongue."
+
+[Footnote 1: This evidently referred to the "adumbration" of
+Johnson's letter (No. 4), _antè_, p. 239.]
+
+Walpole's opinion of the book itself had been expressed in a
+preceding letter, dated March 28th, 1786:
+
+"Two days ago appeared Madame Piozzi's Anecdotes of Dr. Johnson. I am
+lamentably disappointed--in her, I mean: not in him. I had conceived
+a favourable opinion of her capacity. But this new book is wretched;
+a high-varnished preface to a heap of rubbish in a very vulgar style,
+and too void of method even for such a farrago. . . The Signora talks
+of her doctor's _expanded_ mind and has contributed her mite to show
+that never mind was narrower. In fact, the poor woman is to be
+pitied: he was mad, and his disciples did not find it out[1], but
+have unveiled all his defects; nay, have exhibited all his
+brutalities as wit, and his worst conundrums as humour. Judge! The
+Piozzi relates that a young man asking him where Palmyra was, he
+replied: 'In Ireland: it was a bog planted with palm trees.'"
+
+[Footnote 1: See _antè_, p. 202 and 270.]
+
+Walpole's statement, that the whole first impression was sold the
+first day, is confirmed by one of her letters, and may be placed
+alongside of a statement of Johnson's reported in the book. Clarissa
+being mentioned as a perfect character, "on the contrary (said he)
+you may observe that there is always something which she prefers to
+truth. Fielding's Amelia was the most pleasing heroine of all the
+romances; but that vile broken nose never cured, ruined the sale of
+perhaps the only book, which, being printed off betimes one morning,
+a new edition was called for before night."
+
+When the king sent for a copy of the "Anecdotes" on the evening of
+the publication, there was none to be had.
+
+In April, 1786, Hannah More writes:
+
+"Mrs. Piozzi's book is much in fashion. It is indeed entertaining,
+but there are two or three passages exceedingly unkind to Garrick
+which filled me with indignation. If Johnson had been envious enough
+to utter them, she might have been prudent enough to suppress them."
+
+In a preceding letter she had said:
+
+"Boswell tells me he is printing anecdotes of Dr. Johnson, not his
+_life_, but, as he has the vanity to call it, his _pyramid_, I
+besought his tenderness for our virtuous and most revered departed
+friend, and begged he would mitigate some of his asperities. He said
+roughly, he would not cut off his claws, nor make a tiger a cat to
+please anybody." The retort will serve for both Mrs. Piozzi and
+himself.
+
+Mrs. Piozzi writes from Venice, May 20th, 1786: "Cadell says he never
+yet published a work the sale of which was so rapid, and that
+rapidity of so long continuance. I suppose the fifth edition will
+meet me at my return."
+
+"Milan, July 6th, 1786.
+
+"If Cadell would send me some copies, I should be very much obliged
+to him. _'Tis like living without a looking-glass never to see one's
+own book so_."
+
+The copy of the "Anecdotes" in my possession has two inscriptions on
+the blank leaves before the title-page. The one is in Mrs. Piozzi's
+handwriting: "This little dirty book is kindly accepted by Sir James
+Fellowes from his obliged friend, H.L. Piozzi, 14th February, 1816;"
+the other: "This copy of the 'Anecdotes' was found at Bath, covered
+with dirt, the book having been long out of print[1], and after being
+bound was presented to me by my excellent friend, H.L.P. (signed)
+J.F."
+
+[Footnote 1: The "Anecdotes" were reprinted by Messrs. Longman in
+1856, and form part of their "Traveller's Library."]
+
+It is enriched by marginal notes in her handwriting, which enable us
+to fill up a few puzzling blanks, besides supplying some information
+respecting men and books, which will be prized by all lovers of
+literature.
+
+One of the anecdotes runs thus: "I asked him once concerning the
+conversation powers of a gentleman with whom I was myself
+unacquainted. 'He talked to me at the Club one day (replies our
+Doctor) concerning Catiline's conspiracy; so I withdrew my attention,
+and thought about Tom Thumb.'"
+
+In the margin is written "Charles James Fox." Mr. Croker came to the
+conclusion that the gentleman was Mr. Vesey. Boswell says that Fox
+never talked with any freedom in the presence of Johnson, who
+accounted for his reserve by suggesting that a man who is used to the
+applause of the House of Commons, has no wish for that of a private
+company. But the real cause was his sensitiveness to rudeness, his
+own temper being singularly sweet. By an odd coincidence he occupied
+the presidential chair at the Club on the evening when Johnson
+emphatically declared patriotism the last refuge of a scoundrel.
+
+Again: "On an occasion of less consequence, when he turned his back
+on Lord Bolingbroke in the rooms of Brighthelmstone, he made this
+excuse: 'I am not obliged, Sir,' said he to Mr. Thrale, who stood
+fretting, 'to find reasons for respecting the rank of him who will
+not condescend to declare it by his dress or some other visible mark:
+what are stars and other signs of superiority made for?' The next
+evening, however, he made us comical amends, by sitting by the same
+nobleman, and haranguing very loudly about the nature, and use, and
+abuse, of divorces. Many people gathered round them to hear what was
+said, and when my husband called him away, and told him to whom he
+had been talking, received an answer which I will not write down."
+
+The marginal note is: "He said: 'Why, Sir, I did not know the man. If
+he will put on no other mark of distinction, let us make him wear his
+horns.'" Lord Bolingbroke had divorced his wife, afterwards Lady
+Diana Beauclerc, for infidelity.
+
+A marginal note naming the lady of quality (Lady Catherine Wynne)
+mentioned in the following anecdote, verifies Mr. Croker's
+conjectural statement concerning her:
+
+"For a lady of quality, since dead, who received us at her husband's
+seat in Wales, with less attention than he had long been accustomed
+to, he had a rougher denunciation: 'That woman,' cries Johnson, 'is
+like sour small beer, the beverage of her table, and produce of the
+wretched country she lives in: like that, she could never have been a
+good thing, and even that bad thing is spoiled.' It was in the same
+vein of asperity, and I believe with something like the same
+provocation, that he observed of a Scotch lady, 'that she resembled a
+dead nettle; were she alive,' said he, 'she would sting.'"
+
+From similar notes we learn that the "somebody" who declared Johnson
+"a tremendous converser" was George Grarrick; and that it was Dr.
+Delap, of Sussex, to whom, when lamenting the tender state of his
+_inside_, he cried out: "Dear Doctor, do not be like the spider, man,
+and spin conversation thus incessantly out of thy own bowels."
+
+On the margin of the page in which Hawkins Browne is commended as the
+most delightful of conversers, she has written: "Who wrote the
+'Imitation of all the Poets' in his own ludicrous verses, praising
+the pipe of tobacco. Of Hawkins Browne, the pretty Mrs. Cholmondeley
+said she was soon tired; because the first hour he was so dull, there
+was no bearing him; the second he was so witty, there was no bearing
+him; the third he was so drunk, there was no bearing him." [1]
+
+[Footnote 1: Query, whether this is the gentleman immortalised by
+Peter Plymley: "In the third year of his present Majesty (George
+III.) and in the thirtieth of his own age, Mr. Isaac Hawkins Brown,
+then upon his travels, danced one evening at the court of Naples. His
+dress was a volcano silk, with lava buttons. Whether (as the
+Neapolitan wits said) he had studied dancing under Saint Vitus, or
+whether David, dancing in a linen vest, was his model, is not known;
+but Mr. Brown danced with such inconceivable alacrity and vigour,
+that he threw the Queen of Naples into convulsions of laughter, which
+terminated in a miscarriage, and changed the dynasty of the
+Neapolitan throne."]
+
+In the "Anecdotes" she relates that one day in Wales she meant to
+please Johnson with a dish of young peas. "Are they not charming?"
+said I, while he was eating them. "Perhaps," said he, "they would be
+so--to a pig;" meaning (according to the marginal note), because they
+were too little boiled. Pennant, the historian, used to tell this as
+having happened at Mrs. Cotton's, who, according to him, called out,
+"Then do help yourself, Mr. Johnson." But the well-known high
+breeding of the lady justifies a belief that this is one of the many
+repartees which, if conceived, were never uttered at the time.[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: I have heard on good authority that Pennant afterwards
+owned it as his own invention.]
+
+When a Lincolnshire lady, shewing Johnson a grotto, asked him: "Would
+it not be a pretty cool habitation in summer?" he replied: "I think
+it would, Madam, _for a toad_." Talking of Gray's Odes, he said,
+"They are forced plants, raised in a hotbed; 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." "Yes, Sir," said Johnson, "_for a
+hog_."
+
+To return to the Anecdotes:
+
+"Of the various states and conditions of humanity, he despised none
+more, I think, than the man who marries for maintenance: and of a
+friend who made his alliance on no higher principles, he said once,
+'Now has that fellow,' it was a nobleman of whom we were speaking,
+'at length obtained a certainty of three meals a day, and for that
+certainty, like his brother dog in the fable, he will get his neck
+galled for life with a collar.'" The nobleman was Lord Sandys.
+
+"He recommended, on something like the same principle, that when one
+person meant to serve another, he should not go about it slily, or,
+as we say, underhand, out of a false idea of delicacy, to surprise
+one's friend with an unexpected favour; 'which, ten to one,' says he,
+'fails to oblige your acquaintance, who had some reasons against such
+a mode of obligation, which you might have known but for that
+superfluous cunning which you think an elegance. Oh! never be seduced
+by such silly pretences,' continued he; 'if a wench wants a good
+gown, do not give her a fine smelling-bottle, because that is more
+delicate: as I once knew a lady lend the key of her library to a poor
+scribbling dependant, as if she took the woman for an ostrich that
+could digest iron.'" This lady was Mrs. Montagu.
+
+"I mentioned two friends who were particularly fond of looking at
+themselves in a glass--'They do not surprise me at all by so doing,'
+said Johnson: 'they see reflected in that glass, men who have risen
+from almost the lowest situations in life; one to enormous riches,
+the other to everything this world can give--rank, fame, and fortune.
+They see, likewise, men who have merited their advancement by the
+exertion and improvement of those talents which God had given them;
+and I see not why they should avoid the mirror.'" The one, she
+writes, was Mr. Cator, the other, Wedderburne. Another great lawyer
+and very ugly man, Dunning, Lord Ashburton, was remarkable for the
+same peculiarity, and had his walls covered with looking-glasses. His
+personal vanity was excessive; and his boast that a celebrated
+courtesan had died with one of his letters in her hand, provoked one
+of Wilkes's happiest repartees.
+
+Opposite a passage descriptive of Johnson's conversation she has
+written: "We used to say to one another familiarly at Streatham Park,
+'Come, let us go into the library, and make Johnson speak Ramblers.'"
+
+Dr. Lort writes to Bishop Percy:
+
+"December 16th, 1786.
+
+"I had a letter lately from Mrs. Piozzi, dated Vienna, November 4, in
+which she says that, after visiting Prague and Dresden, she shall
+return home by Brussels, whither I have written to her; and I imagine
+she will be in London early in the new year. Miss Thrale is at her
+own house at Brighthelmstone, accompanied by a very respectable
+companion, an officer's widow, recommended to her as such.[1] There
+is a new life of Johnson published by a Dr. Towers, a Dissenting
+minister and Dr. Kippis's associate in the Biographia Britannica, for
+which work I take it for granted this life is to be hashed up again
+when the letter 'J' takes its turn. There is nothing new in it; and
+the author gives Johnson and his biographers all fair play, except
+when he treats of his political opinions and pamphlets. I was glad to
+hear that Johnson confessed to Dr. Fordyce, a little before his
+death, that he had offended both God and man by his pride of
+understanding.[2] Sir John Hawkins' Life of him is also finished, and
+will be published with the works in February next. From all these I
+suppose Boswell will borrow largely to make up his quarto life;--and
+so our modern authors proceed, preying on one another, and
+complaining sorely of each other."
+
+[Footnote 1: The Hon. Mrs. Murray, afterwards Mrs. Aust!]
+
+[Footnote 2: He used very different language to Langton.]
+
+"March 8th, 1787.
+
+"I had a letter lately from Mrs. Piozzi from Brussels, intimating
+that she should soon be in England, and I expect every day to hear of
+her arrival. I do not believe that she purchased a marquisate abroad;
+but it is said, with some probability, that she will here get the
+King's license, or an act of Parliament, to change her name to
+Salusbury, her maiden name. Sir John Hawkins, I am told, bears hard
+upon her in his 'Life of Johnson.'"
+
+"March 21st, 1787.
+
+"Mr. and Mrs. Piozzi are arrived at an hotel in Pall Mall, and are
+about to take a house in Hanover Square; they were with me last
+Saturday evening, when I asked some of her friends to meet her; she
+looks very well, and seems in good spirits; told me she had been that
+morning at the bank to get 'Johnson's Correspondence' amongst other
+papers, which she means forthwith to commit to the press. There is a
+bookseller has printed two supplementary volumes to Hawkins' eleven,
+consisting almost wholly of the 'Lilliputian Speeches.' Hawkins has
+printed a Review of the 'Sublime and Beautiful' as Johnson's, which
+Murphy says was his."
+
+"March 13th, 1787.
+
+"Mrs. Piozzi and her _caro sposo_ seem very happy here at a good
+house in Hanover Square, where I am invited to a rout next week, the
+first I believe she has attempted, and then will be seen who of her
+old acquaintance continue such. She is now printing Johnson's Letters
+in 2 vols. octavo, with some of her own; but if they are not ready
+before the recess they will not be published till next winter. Poor
+Sir John Hawkins, I am told, is pulled all to pieces in the Review."
+Sir John was treated according to his deserts, and did not escape
+whipping. One of the severest castigations was inflicted by Porson.
+
+Before mentioning her next publication, I will show from "Thraliana"
+her state of mind when about to start for England, and her
+impressions of things and people on her return:
+
+"1786.--It has always been my maxim never to influence the
+inclination of another: Mr. Thrale, in consequence, lived with me
+seventeen and a half years, during which time I tried but twice to
+persuade him to _do_ anything, and but once, and that in vain, to let
+anything alone. Even my daughters, as soon as they could reason, were
+always allowed, and even encouraged, by me to reason their own way,
+and not suffer their respect or affection for me to mislead their
+judgment. Let us keep the mind clear if we can from prejudices, or
+truth will never be found at all.[1] The worst part of this
+disinterested scheme is, that other people are not of my mind, and if
+I resolve not to use my lawful influence to make my children love me,
+the lookers-on will soon use their unlawful influence to make them
+hate me: if I scrupulously avoid persuading my husband to become a
+Lutheran or be of the English church, the Romanists will be diligent
+to teach him all the narrowness and bitterness of their own unfeeling
+sect, and soon persuade him that it is not delicacy but weakness
+makes me desist from the combat. Well! let me do right, and leave the
+consequences in His hand who alone sees every action's motive and the
+true cause of every effect: let me endeavour to please God, and to
+have only my own faults and follies, not those of another, to answer
+for."
+
+[Footnote 1: "Clear your mind of _cant_."--JOHNSON.]
+
+"1787, _May_ 1_st_.--It was not wrong to come home after all, but
+very right. The Italians would have said we were afraid to face
+England, and the English would have said we were confined abroad in
+prisons or convents or some stuff. I find Mr. Smith (one of our
+daughter's guardians) told that poor baby Cecilia a fine staring tale
+how my husband locked me up at Milan and fed me on bread and water,
+to make the child hate Mr. Piozzi. Good God! What infamous
+proceeding was this! My husband never saw the fellow, so could not
+have provoked him."
+
+"_May_ 19_th_.--We bad a fine assembly last night indeed: in my best
+days I never had finer: there were near a hundred people in the rooms
+which were besides much admired."
+
+"1788, _January_ 1_st_.--How little I thought this day four years
+that I should celebrate this 1st of January, 1788, here at Bath,
+surrounded with friends and admirers? The public partial to _me_, and
+almost every individual whose kindness is worth wishing for,
+sincerely attached to my husband."
+
+"Mrs. Byron is converted by Piozzi's assiduity, she really likes him
+now: and sweet Mrs. Lambert told everybody at Bath she was in love
+with him."
+
+"I have passed a delightful winter in spite of them, caressed by my
+friends, adored by my husband, amused with every entertainment that
+is going forward: what need I think about three sullen Misses? ...
+and yet!"----
+
+"_August_ 1_st_--Baretti has been grossly abusive in the 'European
+Magazine' to me: _that_ hurts me but little; what shocks me is that
+those treacherous Burneys should abet and puff him. He is a most
+ungrateful because unprincipled wretch; but I _am_ sorry that
+anything belonging to Dr. Burney should be so monstrously wicked."
+
+"1789, _January_ 17_th_.--Mrs. Siddons dined in a coterie of my
+unprovoked enemies yesterday at Porteous's. She mentioned our
+concerts, and the Erskines lamented their absence from one we gave
+two days ago, at which Mrs. Garrick was present and gave a good
+report to the _Blues_. Charming Blues! blue with venom I think; I
+suppose they begin to be ashamed of their paltry behaviour. Mrs.
+Grarrick, more prudent than any of them, left a loophole for
+returning friendship to fasten through, and it _shall_ fasten: that
+woman has lived a _very wise life_, regular and steady in her
+conduct, attentive to every word she speaks and every step she
+treads, decorous in her manners and graceful in her person. My fancy
+forms the Queen just like Mrs. Grarrick: they are countrywomen and
+have, as the phrase is, had a hard card to play; yet never lurched by
+tricksters nor subdued by superior powers, they will rise from the
+table unhurt either by others or themselves ... having played a
+_saving game. I_ have run risques to be sure, that I have; yet--
+
+ "'When after some distinguished leap
+ She drops her pole and seems to slip,
+ Straight gath'ring all her active strength,
+ She rises higher half her length;'
+
+and better than _now_ I have never stood with the world in general, I
+believe. May the books just sent to press confirm the partiality of
+the Public!"
+
+"1789, _January_.--I have a great deal more prudence than people
+suspect me for: they think I act by chance while I am doing nothing
+in the world unintentionally, and have never, I dare say, in these
+last fifteen years uttered a word to husband, or child, or servant,
+or friend, without being very careful what it should be. Often have I
+spoken what I have repented after, but that was want of _judgment_,
+not of _meaning_. What I said I meant to say at the time, and thought
+it best to say, ... I do not err from haste or a spirit of rattling,
+as people think I do: when I err, 'tis because I make a false
+conclusion, not because I make no conclusion at all; when I rattle, I
+rattle on purpose."
+
+"1789, _May_ 1_st_.--Mrs. Montagu wants to make up with me again. I
+dare say she does; but I will not be taken and left even at the
+pleasure of those who are much nearer and dearer to me than Mrs.
+Montagu. We want no flash, no flattery. I never had more of either in
+my life, nor ever lived half so happily: Mrs. Montagu wrote creeping
+letters when she wanted my help, or foolishly _thought_ she did, and
+then turned her back upon me and set her adherents to do the same. I
+despise such conduct, and Mr. Pepys, Mrs. Ord, &c. now sneak about
+and look ashamed of themselves--well they may!"
+
+"1790, _March_ 18_th_.--I met Miss Burney at an assembly last
+night--'tis six years since I had seen her: she appeared most fondly
+rejoyced, in good time! and Mrs. Locke, at whose house we stumbled on
+each other, pretended that she had such a regard for me, &c. I
+answered with ease and coldness, but in exceeding good humour: and we
+talked of the King and Queen, his Majesty's illness and recovery ...
+and all ended, as it should do, with perfect indifference."
+
+"I saw _Master Pepys_[1] too and Mrs. Ord; and only see how foolish
+and how mortified the people do but look."
+
+[Footnote 1: This is Sir W. Pepys mentioned _antè_, p. 252.]
+
+"Barclay and Perkins live very genteelly. I dined with them at our
+brewhouse one day last week. I felt so oddly in the old house where I
+had lived so long."
+
+"The Pepyses find out that they have used me very ill.... I hope they
+find out too that I do not care, Seward too sues for reconcilement
+underhand ... so they do all; and I sincerely forgive them--but, like
+the linnet in 'Metastasio'--
+
+ "'Cauto divien per prova
+ Nè più tradir si fà.'
+
+ "'When lim'd, the poor bird thus with eagerness strains,
+ Nor regrets his torn wing while his freedom he gains:
+ The loss of his plumage small time will restore,
+ And once tried the false twig--it shall cheat him no more.'"
+
+"1790, _July_ 28_th_.--We have kept our seventh wedding day and
+celebrated our return to _this house_[1] with prodigious splendour
+and gaiety. Seventy people to dinner.... Never was a pleasanter day
+seen, and at night the trees and front of the house were illuminated
+with coloured lamps that called forth our neighbours from all the
+adjacent villages to admire and enjoy the diversion. Many friends
+swear that not less than a thousand men, women, and children might
+have been counted in the house and grounds, where, though all were
+admitted, nothing was stolen, lost, or broken, or even damaged--a
+circumstance almost incredible; and which gave Mr. Piozzi a high
+opinion of English gratitude and respectful attachment."
+
+[Footnote 1: Streatham.]
+
+"1790, _December 1st_.--Dr. Parr and I are in correspondence, and his
+letters are very flattering: I am proud of his notice to be sure, and
+he seems pleased with my acknowledgments of esteem: he is a
+prodigious scholar ... but in the meantime I have lost Dr. Lort."[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: He died November 5th, 1790.]
+
+In the Conway Notes, she thus sums up her life from March 1787 to
+1791:
+
+"On first reaching London, we drove to the Royal Hotel in Pall Mall,
+and, arriving early, I proposed going to the Play. There was a small
+front box, in those days, which held only two; it made the division,
+or connexion, with the side boxes, and, being unoccupied, we sat in
+it, and saw Mrs. Siddons act Imogen, I well remember, and Mrs.
+Jordan, Priscilla Tomboy. Mr. Piozzi was amused, and the next day was
+spent in looking at houses, counting the cards left by old
+acquaintances, &c. The lady-daughters came, behaved with cold
+civility, and asked what I thought of _their_ decision concerning
+Cecilia, then at school. No reply was made, or a gentle one; but she
+was the first cause of contention among us. The lawyers gave her into
+my care, and we took her home to our new habitation in Hanover
+Square, which we opened with music, cards, &c., on, I think, the 22nd
+March. Miss Thrales refused their company; so we managed as well as
+we could. Our affairs were in good order, and money ready for
+spending. The World, as it is called, appeared good-humoured, and we
+were soon followed, respected, and admired. The summer months sent us
+about visiting and pleasuring, ... and after another gay London
+season, Streatham Park, unoccupied by tenants, called us as if
+_really home_. Mr. Piozzi, with more generosity than prudence, spent
+two thousand pounds on repairing and furnishing it in 1790;--and we
+had danced all night, I recollect, when the news came of Louis
+Seize's escape from, and recapture by, his rebel subjects.'"
+
+The following are some of the names most frequently mentioned in her
+Diary as visiting or corresponding with her after her return from
+Italy: Lord Fife, Dr. Moore, the Kembles, Dr. Currie, Mrs. Lewis
+(widow of the Dean of Ossory), Dr. Lort, Sir Lucas Pepys, Mr. Selwin,
+Sammy Lysons (_sic_), Sir Philip Clerke, Hon. Mrs. Byron, Mrs.
+Siddons, Arthur Murphy, Mr. and Mrs. Whalley, the Greatheads, Mr.
+Parsons, Miss Seward, Miss Lee, Dr. Barnard (Bishop of Killaloe,
+better known as Dean of Derry), Hinchcliffe (Bishop of Peterborough),
+Mrs. Lambert, the Staffords, Lord Huntingdon, Lady Betty Cobb and her
+daughter Mrs. Gould, Lord Dudley, Lord Cowper, Lord Pembroke, Marquis
+Araciel, Count Marteningo, Count Meltze, Mrs. Drummond Smith, Mr.
+Chappelow, Mrs. Hobart, Miss Nicholson, Mrs. Locke, Lord Deerhurst.
+
+Resentment for her imputed unkindness to Johnson might have been
+expected to last longest at his birthplace. But Miss Seward writes
+from Lichfield, October 6th, 1787:
+
+"Mrs. Piozzi completely answers your description: her conversation is
+indeed that bright wine of the intellects which has no lees.... I
+shall always feel indebted to him (Mr. Perkins) for eight or nine
+hours of Mr. and Mrs. Piozzi's society. They passed one evening here,
+and I the next with them at their inn."
+
+Again to Miss Helen Williams, Lichfield, December, 25th, 1787:
+
+"Yes, it is very true, on the evening he (Colonel Barry) mentioned to
+you, when Mrs. Piozzi honoured this roof, his conversation greatly
+contributed to its Attic spirit. Till that day I had never conversed
+with her. There has been no exaggeration, there could be none, in the
+description given you of Mrs. Piozzi's talents for conversation; at
+least in the powers of classic allusion and brilliant wit."
+
+Mrs. Piozzi's next publication was "Letters To and From the late
+Samuel Johnson, LL.D., &c." In the Preface she speaks of the
+"Anecdotes" having been received with a degree of approbation she
+hardly dared to hope, and exclaims, "May these Letters in some
+measure pay my debt of gratitude! they will not surely be the
+_first_, the _only_ thing written by Johnson, with which our nation
+has not been pleased." ... "The good taste by which our countrymen
+are distinguished, will lead them to prefer the native thoughts and
+unstudied phrases scattered over these pages to the more laboured
+elegance of his other works; as bees have been observed to reject
+roses, and fix upon the wild fragrance of a neighbouring heath."
+
+Whenever Johnson took pen in hand, the chances were, that what he
+produced would belong to the composite order; the unstudied phrases
+were reserved for his "talk;" and he wished his Letters to be
+preserved.[1] The main value of these consists in the additional
+illustrations they afford of his conduct in private life, and of his
+opinions on the management of domestic affairs. The lack of literary
+and public interest is admitted and excused:
+
+[Footnote 1: "Do you keep my letters? I am not of your opinion that I
+shall not like to read them hereafter."--_Letters_, vol. i. p. 295.]
+
+"None but domestic and familiar events can be expected from a private
+correspondence; no reflexions but such as they excite can be found
+there; yet whoever turns away disgusted by the insipidity with which
+this, and I suppose every correspondence must naturally and almost
+necessarily begin--will here be likely to lose some genuine pleasure,
+and some useful knowledge of what our heroic Milton was himself
+contented to respect, as
+
+ "'That which before thee lies in daily life.'
+
+"And should I be charged with obtruding trifles on the public, I
+might reply, that the meanest animals preserved in amber become of
+value to those who form collections of natural history; that the fish
+found in Monte Bolca serve as proofs of sacred writ; and that the
+cart-wheel stuck in the rock of Tivoli, is now found useful in
+computing the rotation of the earth."
+
+In "Thraliana" she thus refers to the reception of the book:
+
+"The Letters are out. They were published on Saturday, 8th of March.
+Cadell printed 2,000 copies, and says 1,100 are already sold. My
+letter to Jack Rice on his marriage (Vol. i. p. 96), seems the
+universal favourite. The book is well spoken of on the whole; yet
+Cadell murmurs. I cannot make out why."
+
+This entry is not dated; the next is dated March 27th, 1788.
+
+"This collection," says Boswell, "as a proof of the high estimation
+set on any thing that came from his pen, was sold by that lady for
+the sum of 500_l_." She has written on the margin: "How spiteful."
+
+Boswell states that "Horace Walpole thought Johnson a more amiable
+character after reading his Letters to Mrs. Thrale, but never was one
+of the true admirers of that great man." Madame D'Arblay came to an
+opposite conclusion; in her Diary, January 9th, 1788, she writes:
+
+"To-day Mrs. Schwellenberg did me a real favour, and with real good
+nature, for she sent me the letters of my poor lost friends, Dr.
+Johnson and Mrs. Thrale, which she knew me to be almost pining to
+procure. The book belongs to the Bishop of Carlisle, who lent it to
+Mr. Turbulent, from whom it was again lent to the Queen, and so
+passed on to Mrs. S. It is still unpublished. With what a sadness
+have I been reading! What scenes has it revived! What regrets
+renewed! These letters have not been more improperly published in the
+whole than they are injudiciously displayed in their several parts.
+She has given all, every word, and thinks that perhaps a justice to
+Dr. Johnson, which, in fact, is the greatest injury to his memory.
+
+"The few she has selected of her own do her, indeed, much credit; she
+has discarded all that were trivial and merely local, and given only
+such as contain something instructive, amusing, or ingenious."
+
+She admits only four of Johnson's letters to be worthy of his exalted
+powers: one upon Death, in considering its approach, as we are
+surrounded, or not, by mourners; another upon the sudden death of
+Mrs. Thrale's only son. Her chief motive for "almost pining" for the
+book, steeped as she was in egotism, may be guessed:
+
+"Our name once occurred; how I started at its sight! 'Tis to mention
+the party that planned the first visit to our house."
+
+She says she had so many attacks upon "her (Mrs. Piozzi's) subject,"
+that at last she fairly begged quarter. Yet nothing she could say
+could put a stop to, "How can you defend her in this? how can you
+justify her in that? &c. &c." "Alas! that I cannot defend her is
+precisely the reason I can so ill bear to speak of her. How
+differently and how sweetly has the Queen conducted herself upon this
+occasion. Eager to see the Letters, she began reading them with the
+utmost avidity. A natural curiosity arose to be informed of several
+names and several particulars, which she knew I could satisfy; yet
+when she perceived how tender a string she touched, she soon
+suppressed her inquiries, or only made them with so much gentleness
+towards the parties mentioned, that I could not be distressed in my
+answers; and even in a short time I found her questions made in so
+favourable a disposition, that I began secretly to rejoice in them,
+as the means by which I reaped opportunity of clearing several points
+that had been darkened by calumny, and of softening others that had
+been viewed wholly through false lights. To lessen disapprobation of
+a person, and so precious to me in the opinion of another, so
+respectable both in rank and virtue, was to me a most soothing task,
+&c."
+
+This is precisely what many will take the liberty to doubt; or why
+did she shrink from it, or why did she not afford to others the
+explanations which proved so successful with the Queen?
+
+The day following (Jan. 10th), her feelings were so worked upon by
+the harsh aspersions on her friend, that she was forced, she tells
+us, abruptly to quit the room; leaving not her own (like Sir Peter
+Teazle) but her friend's character behind her:
+
+"I returned when I could, and the subject was over. When all were
+gone, Mrs. Schwellenberg said, 'I have told it Mr. Fisher, that he
+drove you out from the room, and he says he won't do it no more.'
+
+"She told me next, that in the second volume I also, was mentioned.
+Where she may have heard this I cannot gather, but it has given me a
+sickness at heart, inexpressible. It is not that I expect severity;
+for at the time of that correspondence, at all times indeed previous
+to the marriage with Piozzi, if Mrs. Thrale loved not F. B., where
+shall we find faith in words, or give credit to actions. But her
+present resentment, however unjustly incurred, of my constant
+disapprobation of her conduct, may prompt some note, or other mark,
+to point out her change of sentiment. But let me try to avoid such
+painful expectations; at least not to dwell upon them. O, little does
+she know how tenderly at this moment I could run into her arms, so
+often opened to receive me with a cordiality I believed inalienable.
+And it was sincere then, I am satisfied; pride, resentment of
+disapprobation, and consciousness if unjustifiable proceedings--these
+have now changed her; but if we met, and she saw and believed my
+faithful regard, how would she again feel all her own return! Well,
+what a dream I am making!"
+
+The ingrained worldliness of the diarist is ill-concealed by the mask
+of sensibility. The correspondence that passed between the ladies
+during their temporary rupture (_antè_, p. 230) shews that there was
+nothing to prevent her from flying into her friend's arms, could she
+have made up her mind to be seen on open terms of affectionate
+intimacy with one who was repudiated by the Court. In a subsequent
+conversation with which the Queen honoured her on the subject, she
+did her best to impress her Majesty with the belief that Mrs.
+Piozzi's conduct had rendered it impossible for her former friends to
+allude to her without regret, and she ended by thanking her royal
+mistress for her forbearance.
+
+"Indeed," cried she, with eyes strongly expressive of the complacency
+with which she heard me, "I have always spoken as little as possible
+upon this affair. I remember but twice that I have named it: once I
+said to the Bishop of Carlisle that I thought most of these letters
+had better have been spared the printing; and once to Mr. Langton, at
+the drawing-room I said, 'Your friend Dr. Johnson, Sir, has had many
+friends busy to publish his books, and his memoirs, and his
+meditations, and his thoughts; but I think he wanted one friend
+more.' 'What for, Ma'am?' cried he. 'A friend to suppress them,' I
+answered. And, indeed, this is all I ever said about the business."
+
+Hannah More's opinion of the Letters is thus expressed in her
+Memoirs:
+
+"They are such as ought to have been written but ought not to have
+been printed: a few of them are very good: sometimes he is moral, and
+sometimes he is kind. The imprudence of editors and executors is an
+additional reason why men of parts should be afraid to die.[1] Burke
+said to me the other day, in allusion to the innumerable lives,
+anecdotes, remains, &c. of this great man, 'How many maggots have
+crawled out of that great body!'"
+
+[Footnote 1: In reference to the late Lord Campbell's "Lives of the
+Lord Chancellors," it was remarked, that, as regards persons who had
+attained the dignity, the threatened continuation of the work had
+added a new pang to death. I am assured by the Ex-Chancellor to whom
+I attributed this joke, that it was made by Sir Charles Wetherell at
+a dinner at Lincoln's-Inn.]
+
+Miss Seward writes to Mrs. Knowles, April, 1788:
+
+"And now what say you to the last publication of your sister wit,
+Mrs. Piozzi? It is well that she has had the good nature to extract
+almost all the corrosive particles from the old growler's letters. By
+means of her benevolent chemistry, these effusions of that expansive
+but gloomy spirit taste more oily and sweet than one could have
+imagined possible."
+
+The letters contained two or three passages relating to Baretti,
+which exasperated him to the highest pitch. One was in a letter from
+Johnson, dated July 15th, 1775:
+
+"The doctor says, that if Mr. Thrale comes so near as Derby without
+seeing us, it will be a sorry trick. I wish, for my part, that he may
+return soon, and rescue the fair captives from the tyranny of B----i.
+Poor B----i! do not quarrel with him; to neglect him a little will be
+sufficient. He means only to be frank, and manly, and independent,
+and perhaps, as you say, a little wise. To be frank, he thinks is to
+be cynical, and to be independent, is to be rude. Forgive him,
+dearest lady, the rather, because of his misbehaviour, I am afraid he
+learned part of me. I hope to set him hereafter a better example."
+
+The most galling was in a letter of hers to Dr. Johnson:
+
+"How does Dr. Taylor do? He was very kind I remember when my
+thunder-storm came first on, so was Count Manucci, so was Mrs.
+Montagu, so was everybody. The world is not guilty of much general
+harshness, nor inclined I believe to increase pain which they do not
+perceive to be deserved.--Baretti alone tried to irritate a wound so
+very deeply inflicted, and he will find few to approve his cruelty.
+Your friendship is our best cordial; continue it to us, dear Sir, and
+write very soon."
+
+In the margin of the printed copy is written, "Cruel, cruel Baretti."
+He had twitted her, whilst mourning over a dead child, with having
+killed it by administering a quack medicine instead of attending to
+the physician's prescriptions; a charge which he acknowledged and
+repeated in print. He published three successive papers in "The
+European Magazine" for 1788, assailing her with the coarsest
+ribaldry. "I have just read for the first time," writes Miss Seward
+in June, 1788, "the base, ungentleman-like, unmanly abuse of Mrs.
+Piozzi by that Italian assassin, Baretti. The whole literary world
+should unite in publicly reprobating such venomed and foul-mouthed
+railing." He died soon afterwards, May 5th, 1789, and the notice of
+him in the "Gentleman's Magazine" begins: "Mrs. Piozzi has reason to
+rejoice in the death of Mr. Baretti, for he had a very long memory
+and malice to relate all he knew." And a good deal that he did not
+know, into the bargain; as when he prints a pretended conversation
+between Mr. and Mrs. Thrale about Piozzi, which he afterwards admits
+to be a gratuitous invention and rhetorical figure of his own, for
+conveying what is a foolish falsehood on the face of it.
+
+Baretti's death is thus noticed in "Thraliana," 8th May, 1789:
+
+"Baretti is dead. Poor Baretti! I am sincerely sorry for him, and as
+Zanga says, 'If I lament thee, sure thy worth was great.' He was a
+manly character, at worst, and died, as he lived, less like a
+Christian than a philosopher, refusing all spiritual or corporeal
+assistance, both which he considered useless to him, and perhaps they
+were so. He paid his debts, called in some single acquaintance, told
+him he was dying, and drove away that _Panada_ conversation which
+friends think proper to administer at sick-bedsides with becoming
+steadiness, bid him write his brothers word that he was dead, and
+gently desired a woman who waited to leave him quite alone. No
+interested attendants watching for ill-deserved legacies, no harpy
+relatives clung round the couch of Baretti. He died!
+
+ "'And art thou dead? so is my enmity:
+ I war not with the dead.'
+
+"Baretti's papers--manuscripts I mean--have been all burnt by his
+executors without examination, they tell me. So great was his
+character as a mischief-maker, that Vincent and Fendall saw no nearer
+way to safety than that hasty and compendious one. Many people think
+'tis a good thing for me, but as I never trusted the man, I see
+little harm he could have done me."
+
+In the fury of his onslaught Baretti forgot that he was strengthening
+her case against Johnson, of whom he says: "His austere reprimand,
+and unrestrained upbraidings, when face to face with her, always
+delighted Mr. Thrale and were approved even by her children. 'Harry,'
+said his father to her son, 'are you listening to what the doctor and
+mamma are talking about?' 'Yes, papa.' And quoth Mr. Thrale, 'What
+are they saying?' 'They are disputing, and mamma has just such a
+chance with Dr. Johnson as Presto (a little dog) would have were he
+to fight Dash (a big one).'" He adds that she left the room in a huff
+to the amusement of the party. If scenes like this were frequent, no
+wonder the "yoke" became unendurable.
+
+Baretti was obliged to admit that, when Johnson died, they were not
+on speaking terms. His explanation is that Johnson irritated him by
+an allusion to his being beaten by Omai, the Sandwich Islander, at
+chess. Mrs. Piozzi's marginal note on Omai is: "When Omai played at
+chess and at backgammon with Baretti, everybody admired at the
+savage's good breeding and at the European's impatient spirit."
+
+Amongst her papers was the following sketch of his character, written
+for "The World" newspaper.
+
+"_Mr. Conductor_.--Let not the death of Baretti pass unnoticed by
+'The World,' seeing that Baretti was a wit if not a scholar: and had
+for five-and-thirty years at least lived in a foreign country, whose
+language he so made himself completely master of, that he could
+satirise its inhabitants in their own tongue, better than they knew
+how to defend themselves; and often pleased, without ever praising
+man or woman in book or conversation. Long supported by the private
+bounty of friends, he rather delighted to insult than flatter; he at
+length obtained competence from a public he esteemed not: and died,
+refusing that assistance he considered as useless--leaving no debts
+(but those of gratitude) undischarged; and expressing neither regret
+of the past, nor fear of the future, I believe. Strong in his
+prejudices, haughty and independent in his spirit, cruel in his
+anger,--even when unprovoked; vindictive to excess, if he through
+misconception supposed himself even slightly injured, pertinacious in
+his attacks, invincible in his aversions: the description of Menelaus
+in 'Homer's Iliad,' as rendered by Pope, exactly suits the character
+of Baretti:
+
+ "'So burns the vengeful Hornet, soul all o'er,
+ Repuls'd in vain, and thirsty still for gore;
+ Bold son of air and heat on angry wings,
+ Untamed, untired, he turns, attacks, and stings.'"
+
+In reference to this article, she remarks in "Thraliana":
+
+"There seems to be a language now appropriated to the newspapers, and
+a very wretched and unmeaning language it is. Yet a certain set of
+expressions are so necessary to please the diurnal readers, that when
+Johnson and I drew up an advertisement for charity once, I remember
+the people altered our expressions and substituted their own, with
+good effect too. The other day I sent a Character of Baretti to 'The
+World,' and read it two mornings after more altered than improved in
+my mind: but no matter: they will talk of _wielding_ a language, and
+of _barbarous_ infamy,--sad stuff, to be sure, but such is the taste
+of the times. They altered even my quotation from Pope; but that was
+too impudent."
+
+The comparison of Baretti to the hornet was truer than she
+anticipated: _animamque in vulnere ponit_. Internal evidence leads
+almost irresistibly to the conclusion that he was the author or
+prompter of "The _Sentimental_ Mother: a Comedy in Five Acts. The
+Legacy of an Old Friend, and his 'Last Moral Lesson' to Mrs. Hester
+Lynch Thrale, now Mrs. Hester Lynch Piozzi. London: Printed for James
+Ridgeway, York Street, St. James's Square, 1789. Price three
+shillings." The principal _dramatis personæ_ are Mr. Timothy Tunskull
+(Thrale), Lady Fantasma Tunskull, two Misses Tunskull, and Signor
+Squalici.
+
+Lady Fantasma is vain, affected, silly, and amorous to excess. Not
+satisfied with Squalici as her established gallant, she makes
+compromising advances to her daughter's lover on his way to a
+_tête-à-téte_ with the young lady, who takes her wonted place on his
+knee with his arm round her waist. Squalici is also a domestic spy,
+and in league with the mother to cheat the daughters of their
+patrimony. Mr. Tunskull is a respectable and complacent nonentity.
+
+The dialogue is seasoned with the same malicious insinuations which
+mark Baretti's letters in the "European Magazine;" without the saving
+clause with which shame or fear induced him to qualify them, namely,
+that no breach of chastity was suspected or believed. It is difficult
+to imagine who else would have thought of reverting to Thrale's
+establishment eight years after it had been broken up by death; and
+in one of his papers in the "European Magazine," he holds out a
+threat that she might find herself the subject of a play: "Who knows
+but some one of our modern dramatic geniusses may hereafter entertain
+the public with a laughable comedy in five long acts, entitled, with
+singular propriety, 'the _Scientific_ Mother'?"
+
+Mrs. Piozzi had some-how contracted a belief, to which she alludes
+more than once with unfeigned alarm, that Mr. Samuel Lysons had
+formed a collection of all the libels and caricatures of which she
+was the subject on the occasion of her marriage. His collections have
+been carefully examined, and the sole semblance of warrant for her
+fears is an album or scrap-book containing numerous extracts from the
+reviews and newspapers, relating to her books. The only caricature
+preserved in it is the celebrated one by Sayers entitled "Johnson's
+Ghost." The ghost, a flattering likeness of the doctor, addresses a
+pretty woman seated at a writing table:
+
+ "When Streatham spread its pleasant board,
+ I opened learning's valued hoard,
+ And as I feasted, prosed.
+ Good things I said, good things I eat,
+ I gave you knowledge for your meat,
+ And thought th' account was closed.
+
+ "If obligations still I owed,
+ You sold each item to the crowd,
+ I suffered by the tale.
+ For God's sake, Madam, let me rest,
+ No longer vex your _quondam_ guest,
+ I'll pay you for your ale."
+
+When a prize was offered for the best address on the rebuilding of
+Drury Lane, Sheridan proposed an additional reward for one without a
+phoenix. Equally acceptable for its rarity would be a squib on Mrs.
+Piozzi without a reference to the brewery.
+
+Her manuscript notes on the two volumes of Letters are numerous and
+important, comprising some curious fragments of autobiography,
+written on separate sheets of paper and pasted into the volumes
+opposite to the passages which they expand or explain. They would
+create an inconvenient break in the narrative if introduced here, and
+they are reserved for a separate section.
+
+Her next literary labour is thus mentioned in "Thraliana":
+
+"While Piozzi was gone to London I worked at my Travel Book, and
+wrote it in two months complete--but 'tis all to correct and copy
+over again. While my husband was away I wrote him these lines: he
+staid just a fortnight:
+
+ "I think I've worked exceeding hard
+ To finish five score pages.
+ I write you this upon a card,
+ In hopes you'll pay my wages.
+ The servants all get drunk or mad,
+ This heat their blood enrages,
+ But your return will make me glad,--
+ That hope one pain assuages.
+
+ "To shew more kindness, we defy
+ All nations and all ages,
+ And quite prefer your company
+ To all the seven sages.
+ Then hasten home, oh, haste away!
+ And lengthen not your stages;
+ We then will sing, and dance and play,
+ And quit awhile our cages."
+
+She had now taken rank as a popular writer, and thought herself
+entitled to use corresponding language to her publisher:
+
+"MR. CADELL,--Sir, this is a letter of business. I have finished the
+book of observations and reflections made in the course of my journey
+thro' France, Italy, and Germany, and if you have a mind to purchase
+the MS. I make you the first offer of it. Here, if complaints had any
+connection with business, I would invent a thousand, and they should
+be very kind ones too; but it is better to tell you the size and
+price of the book. My calculations bring it to a thousand pages of
+letter-press like Dr. Moore's; or you might print it in three small
+volumes, to go with the 'Anecdotes.' Be that as it will, the price,
+at a word (as the advertisers say of their horse), is 500 guineas and
+twelve copies to give away, though I will not, like them, warrant it
+free from blemishes. No creature has looked over the papers but Lord
+Huntingdon, and he likes them exceedingly. Direct your answer here,
+if you write immediately; if not, send the letter under cover to Mrs.
+Lewis, London Street, Reading, Berks; and believe me, dear Sir, your
+faithful humble servant,
+
+ "H. L. PIOZZI.
+
+ "Bennet Street, Bath,
+ Friday, Nov. 14th, 1788."
+
+Whether these terms were accepted, does not appear; but in Dec. 1789
+she published (Cadell and Strahan) "Observations and Reflections made
+in the course of a Journey through France, Italy, and Germany," in
+two volumes octavo of about 400 pages each. As happened to almost
+everything she did or wrote, this book, which she calls the
+"Travel-book," was by turns assailed with inveterate hostility and
+praised with animated zeal. It would seem that sustained calumny had
+seasoned her against the malevolence of criticism. On the passage in
+Johnson's letter to T. Warton, "I am little afraid for myself," her
+comment is: "That is just what I feel when insulted, not about
+literary though, but social quarrels. The others are not worth a
+thought." In "Thraliana," Dec. 30th, 1789, she writes: "I think my
+Observations and Reflexions in Italy, &c., have been, upon the whole,
+exceedingly well liked, and much read."
+
+Walpole writes to Mrs. Carter, June 13th, 1789:
+
+"I do not mean to misemploy much of your time, which I know is always
+passed in good works, and usefully. You have, therefore, probably not
+looked into Piozzi's Travels. I, who have been almost six weeks lying
+on a couch, have gone through them. It was said that Addison might
+have written his without going out of England. By the excessive
+vulgarisms so plentiful in these volumes, one might suppose the
+writer had never stirred out of the parish of St. Giles. Her Latin,
+French, and Italian, too, are so miserably spelt, that she had better
+have studied her own language before she floundered into other
+tongues. Her friends plead that she piques herself on writing as she
+talks: methinks, then, she should talk as she would write. There are
+many indiscretions too in her work of which she will perhaps be told
+though Baretti is dead."
+
+Miss Seward, much to her credit, repeated to Mrs. Piozzi both the
+praise and the blame she had expressed to others. On December 21st,
+1789, she writes:
+
+"Suffer me now to speak to you of your highly ingenious, instructive,
+and entertaining publication; yet shall it be with the sincerity of
+friendship, rather than with the flourish of compliment. No work of
+the sort I ever read possesses, in an equal degree, the power of
+placing the reader in the scenes and amongst the people it describes.
+Wit, knowledge, and imagination illuminate its pages--but the
+infinite inequality of the style!--Permit me to acknowledge to you
+what I have acknowledged to others, that it excites my exhaustless
+wonder, that Mrs. Piozzi, the child of genius, the pupil of Johnson,
+should pollute, with the vulgarisms of unpolished conversation, her
+animated pages!--that, while she frequently displays her power of
+commanding the most chaste and beautiful style imaginable, she should
+generally use those inelegant, those strange _dids_, and _does_, and
+_thoughs_, and _toos_, which produce jerking angles, and stop-short
+abruptness, fatal at once to the grace and ease of the
+sentence;--which are, in language, what the rusty black silk
+handkerchief and the brass ring are upon the beautiful form of the
+Italian countess she mentions, arrayed in embroidery, and blazing in
+jewels."
+
+Mrs. Piozzi's theory was that books should he written in the same
+colloquial and idiomatic language which is employed by cultivated
+persons in conversation, "Be thou familiar, but by no means vulgar;"
+and vulgar she certainly was not, although she sometimes indulged her
+fondness for familiarity too far. The period was unluckily chosen for
+carrying such a theory into practice; for Johnson's authority had
+discountenanced idiomatic writing, whilst many phrases and forms of
+speech, which would not be endured now, were tolerated in polite
+society.
+
+The laws of spelling, too, were unfixed or vague, and those of
+pronunciation, which more or less affect spelling, still more so.
+"When," said Johnson, "I published the plan of my dictionary, Lord
+Chesterfield told me that the word _great_ should be pronounced so as
+to rhyme to _state_; and Sir William Yonge sent me word that it
+should be pronounced so as to rhyme to _seat_, and that none but an
+Irishman would pronounce it _grait_. Now here were two men of the
+highest rank, one the best speaker in the House of Lords, the other
+the best speaker in the House of Commons, differing entirely." Mrs.
+Piozzi has written on the margin:--"Sir William was in the right."
+Two well-known couplets of Pope imply similar changes:--
+
+ "Dreading e'en fools, by flatterers besieged,
+ And so obliging that he ne'er obliged."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "Here thou, great Anna, whom three realms obey,
+ Dost sometimes counsel take, and sometimes tea."
+
+Within living memory, elderly people of quality, both in writing and
+conversation, stuck to Lunnun, Brummagem, and Cheyny (China). Charles
+Fox would not give up "Bour_dux_." Johnson pronounced "heard"
+_heerd_. In 1800 "flirtation" was deemed a vulgar word.[1] Lord Byron
+wrote _redde_ (for _read_, in the past tense), and Lord Dudley
+declined being helped to apple _tart_. When, therefore, we find Mrs.
+Piozzi using words or idioms rejected by modern taste or
+fastidiousness, we must not be too ready to accuse her of ignorance
+or vulgarity. I have commonly retained her original syntax, and her
+spelling, which frequently varies within a page.
+
+[Footnote 1: "Those abstractions of different pairs from the rest of
+the society, which I must call 'flirtation,' spite of the vulgarity
+of the term."--_Journal kept during a Visit to Germany_ in 1799 and
+1800. Edited by the Dean of Westminster (not published), p. 38.]
+
+Two days afterwards, Walpole returns to the charge in a letter to
+Miss Berry, which is alone sufficient to prove the worthlessness of
+his literary judgments:--
+
+"Read 'Sindbad the Sailor's Voyages,' and you will be sick of
+Æneas's. What woful invention were the nasty poultry that dunged on
+his dinner, and ships on fire turned into Nereids! A barn
+metamorphosed into a cascade in a pantomime is full as sublime an
+effort of genius.... I do not think the Sultaness's narratives very
+natural or very probable, but there is a wildness in them that
+captivates. However, if you could wade through two octavos of Dame
+Piozzi's _though's_ and _so's_ and _I trows_, and cannot listen to
+seven volumes of Scheherezade's narratives, I will sue for a divorce
+in foro Parnassi, and Boccalini shall be my proctor."
+
+A single couplet of Gifford's was more damaging than all Walpole's
+petulance:
+
+ "See Thrale's grey widow with a satchel roam,
+ And bring in pomp laborious nothings home."[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: "She, one evening, asked me abruptly if I did not
+remember the scurrilous lines in which she had been depicted by
+Gifford in his 'Baviad and Moeviad.' And, not waiting for my answer,
+for I was indeed too much embarrassed to give one quickly, she
+recited the verses in question, and added, 'how do you think
+"Thrale's grey widow" revenged herself? I contrived to get myself
+invited to meet him at supper at a friend's house, (I think she said
+in Pall Mall), soon after the publication of his poem, sate opposite
+to him, saw that he was "perplexed in the extreme;" and smiling,
+proposed a glass of wine as a libation to our future good fellowship.
+Gifford was sufficiently a man of the world to understand me, and
+nothing could be more courteous and entertaining than he was while we
+remained together.'"--_Piozziana_.]
+
+This condemnatory verse is every way unjust. The nothings, or
+somethings, which form the staple of the book, are not laboured; and
+they are presented without the semblance of pomp or pretension. The
+Preface commences thus:
+
+"I was made to observe at Rome some vestiges of an ancient custom
+very proper in those days. It was the parading of the street by a set
+of people called Preciæ, who went some minutes before the Flamen
+Dialis, to bid the inhabitants leave work or play, and attend wholly
+to the procession; but if ill-omens prevented the pageants from
+passing, or if the occasion of the show was scarce deemed worthy its
+celebration, these Precise stood a chance of being ill-treated by the
+spectators. A prefatory introduction to a work like this can hope
+little better usage from the public than they had. It proclaims the
+approach of what has often passed by before; adorned most certainly
+with greater splendour, perhaps conducted with greater regularity and
+skill. Yet will I not despair of giving at least a momentary
+amusement to my countrymen in general; while their entertainment
+shall serve as a vehicle for conveying expressions of particular
+kindness to those foreign individuals, whose tenderness softened the
+sorrows of absence, and who eagerly endeavoured by unmerited
+attentions to supply the loss of their company, on whom nature and
+habit had given me stronger claims."
+
+The Preface concludes with the happy remark that--"the labours of the
+press resemble those of the toilette: both should be attended to and
+finished with care; but once completed, should take up no more of our
+attention, unless we are disposed at evening to destroy all effect of
+our morning's study."
+
+It would be difficult to name a book of travels in which anecdotes,
+observations, and reflections are more agreeably mingled, or one from
+which a clearer bird's-eye view of the external state of countries
+visited in rapid succession may be caught. I can only spare room for
+a few short extracts:
+
+"The contradictions one meets with every moment at Paris likewise
+strike even a cursory observer,--a countess in a morning, her hair
+dressed, with diamonds too perhaps, a dirty black handkerchief about
+her neck, and a flat silver ring on her finger, like our ale-wives; a
+_femme publique_, dressed avowedly for the purposes of alluring the
+men, with a not very small crucifix hanging at her bosom;--and the
+Virgin Mary's sign at an ale-house door, with these words,
+
+ "'Je suis la mère de mon Dieu,
+ Et la gardienne de ce lieu.'"
+
+"I have stolen a day to visit my old acquaintance the English Austin
+Nuns at the Foffèe, and found the whole community alive and cheerful;
+they are many of them agreeable women, and having seen Dr. Johnson
+with me when I was last abroad, inquired much for him: Mrs, Fermor,
+the Prioress, niece to Belinda in the Rape of the Lock, taking
+occasion to tell me, comically enough, 'that she believed there was
+but little comfort to be found in a house that harboured _poets_; for
+that she remembered Mr. Pope's praise made her aunt very troublesome
+and conceited, while his numberless caprices would have employed ten
+servants to wait on him; and he gave one,' (said she) 'no amends by
+his talk neither, for he only sate dozing all day, when the sweet
+wine was out, and made his verses chiefly in the night; during which
+season he kept himself awake by drinking coffee, which it was one of
+the maids' business to make for him, and they took it by turns.'"
+
+At Milan she institutes a delicate inquiry: "The women are not
+behind-hand in openness of confidence and comical sincerity. We have
+all heard much of Italian cicisbeism; I had a mind to know how
+matters really stood; and took the nearest way to information by
+asking a mighty beautiful and apparently artless young creature, _not
+noble_, how that affair was managed, for there is no harm done _I am
+sure_, said I: 'Why no,' replied she, 'no great _harm_ to be sure:
+except wearisome attentions from a man one cares little about; for my
+own part,' continued she, 'I detest the custom, as I happen to love
+my husband excessively, and desire nobody's company in the world but
+his. We are not _people of fashion_ though you know, nor at all rich;
+so how should we set fashions for our betters? They would only say,
+see how jealous he is! if _Mr. Such-a-one_ sat much with me at home,
+or went with me to the Corso; and I _must_ go with some gentleman you
+know: and the men are such ungenerous creatures, and have such ways
+with them: I want money often, and this _cavaliere servente_ pays the
+bills, and so the connection draws closer--_that's all_.' And your
+husband! said I--'Oh, why he likes to see me well dressed; he is very
+good-natured, and very charming; I love him to my heart.' And your
+confessor! cried I.--'Oh! why he is _used to it_'--in the Milanese
+dialect--_è assuefaà."_
+
+ "An English lady asked of an Italian
+ What were the actual and official duties
+ Of the strange thing, some women set a value on,
+ Which hovers oft about some married beauties,
+ Called 'cavalier servente,' a Pygmalion
+ Whose statues warm, I fear! too true 't is
+ Beneath his art. The dame, press'd to disclose them,
+ Said, Lady, I beseech you to _suppose them_."[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: "Don Juan," Canto ix. See also "Beppo," verses 36, 37:
+
+ "But Heaven preserve Old England from such courses!
+ Or what becomes of damage and divorces?"]
+
+At Venice, the tone was somewhat different from what would be
+employed now by the finest lady on the Grand Canal:
+
+"This firmly-fixed idea of subordination (which I once heard a
+Venetian say, he believed must exist in heaven from one angel to
+another), accounts immediately for a little conversation which I am
+now going to relate.
+
+"Here were two men taken up last week, one for murdering his
+fellow-servant in cold blood, while the undefended creature had the
+lemonade tray in his hand going in to serve company; the other for
+breaking the new lamps lately set up with intention to light this
+town in the manner of the streets at Paris. 'I hope,' said I, 'that
+they will hang the murderer.' 'I rather hope,' replied a very
+sensible lady who sate near me, 'that they will hang the person who
+broke the lamps: for,' added she, 'the first committed his crime only
+out of revenge, poor fellow!! because the other had got his mistress
+from him by treachery; but this creature has had the impudence to
+break our fine new lamps, all for the sake of spiting _the
+Arch-duke!!_' The Arch-duke meantime hangs nobody at all; but sets
+his prisoners to work upon the roads, public buildings, &c., where
+they labour in their chains; and where, strange to tell! they often
+insult passengers who refuse them alms when asked as they go by; and,
+stranger still, they are not punished for it when they do." ...
+
+The lover sacrificing his reputation, his liberty, or his life, to
+save the fair fame of his mistress, is not an unusual event in
+fiction, whatever it may be in real life. Balzac, Charles de Bernard,
+and M. de Jarnac have each made a self-sacrifice of this kind the
+basis of a romance. But neither of them has hit upon a better plot
+than might be formed out of the following Venetian story:
+
+"Some years ago then, perhaps a hundred, one of the many spies who
+ply this town by night, ran to the state inquisitor, with information
+that such a nobleman (naming him) had connections with the French
+ambassador, and went privately to his house every night at a certain
+hour. The _messergrando_, as they call him, could not believe, nor
+would proceed, without better and stronger proof, against a man for
+whom he had an intimate personal friendship, and on whose virtue he
+counted with very particular reliance. Another spy was therefore set,
+and brought back the same intelligence, adding the description of his
+disguise: on which the worthy magistrate put on his mask and bauta,
+and went out himself; when his eyes confirming the report of his
+informants, and the reflection on his duty stifling all remorse, he
+sent publicly for _Foscarini_ in the morning, whom the populace
+attended all weeping to his door.
+
+"Nothing but resolute denial of the crime alleged could however be
+forced from the firm-minded citizen, who, sensible of the discovery,
+prepared for that punishment he knew to be inevitable, and submitted
+to the fate his friend was obliged to inflict: no less than a dungeon
+for life, that dungeon so horrible that I have heard Mr. Howard was
+not permitted to see it.
+
+"The people lamented, but their lamentations were vain. The
+magistrate who condemned him never recovered the shock: but Foscarini
+was heard of no more, till an old lady died forty years after in
+Paris, whose last confession declared she was visited with amorous
+intentions by a nobleman of Venice whose name she never knew, while
+she resided there as companion to the ambassadress. So was Foscarini
+lost! so died he a martyr to love, and tenderness for female
+reputation!"
+
+The Mendicanti was a Venetian institution which deserves to be
+commemorated for its singularity:
+
+"Apropos to singing;--we were this evening carried to a well-known
+conservatory called the Mendicanti, who performed an oratorio in the
+church with great, and I dare say deserved applause. It was difficult
+for me to persuade myself that all the performers were women, till,
+watching carefully, our eyes convinced us, as they were but slightly
+grated. The sight of girls, however, handling the double bass, and
+blowing into the bassoon, did not much please _me_; and the
+deep-toned voice of her who sung the part of Saul seemed an odd
+unnatural thing enough.
+
+"Well! these pretty sirens were delighted to seize upon us, and
+pressed our visit to their parlour with a sweetness that I know not
+who would have resisted. We had no such intent; and amply did their
+performance repay my curiosity for visiting Venetian beauties, so
+justly celebrated for their seducing manners and soft address. They
+accompanied their voices with the forte-piano, and sung a thousand
+buffo songs, with all that gay voluptuousness for which their country
+is renowned.
+
+"The school, however, is running to ruin apace; and perhaps the
+conduct of the married women here may contribute to make such
+_conservatorios_ useless and neglected. When the Duchess of Montespan
+asked the famous Louison D'Arquien, by way of insult, as she pressed
+too near her, '_Comment alloit le metier_?' '_Depuis que les dames
+s'en mèlent_,' (replied the courtesan with no improper spirit,) '_il
+ne vaut plus rien_.'"
+
+Describing Florence, she says:--
+
+"Sir Horace Mann is sick and old; but there are conversations at his
+house of a Saturday evening, and sometimes a dinner, to which we have
+been almost always asked."
+
+So much for Walpole's assertion that "she had broken with his Horace,
+because he could not invite her husband with the Italian nobility."
+She held her own, if she did not take the lead, in whatever society
+she happened to be thrown, and no one could have objected to Piozzi
+without breaking with her. In point of fact, no one did object to
+him.
+
+One of her notes on Naples is:
+
+"Well, well! if the Neapolitans do bury Christians like dogs, they
+make some singular compensations we will confess, by nursing dogs
+like Christians. A very veracious man informed me yester morning,
+that his poor wife was half broken-hearted at hearing such a
+Countess's dog was run over; 'for,' said he, 'having suckled the
+pretty creature herself, she loved it like one of her children.' I
+bid him repeat the circumstance, that no mistake might be made: he
+did so; but seeing me look shocked, or ashamed, or something he did
+not like,--'Why, Madam,' said the fellow, 'it is a common thing
+enough for ordinary men's wives to suckle the lap-dogs of ladies of
+quality:' adding, that they were paid for their milk, and he saw no
+harm in gratifying one's _superiors_. As I was disposed to see
+nothing _but_ harm in disputing with such a competitor, our
+conference finished soon; but the fact is certain."
+
+On the margin she has written:
+
+"Mrs. Greathead could scarcely be made to credit so hideous a fact,
+till I showed her the portrait (at a broker's shop) of a woman
+_suckling a cat_."
+
+Cornelia Knight says: "Mr. and Mrs. Piozzi passed the winter at
+Naples and gave little concerts. He played with great taste on the
+pianoforte, and used to carry about a miniature one in his carriage."
+
+Whilst discussing the propriety of complying with the customs of the
+country, she relates:
+
+"Poor Dr. Goldsmith said once--'I would advise every young fellow
+setting out in life _to love gravy_:'--and added, that he had
+formerly seen a glutton's eldest nephew disinherited, because his
+uncle never could persuade him to say he liked gravy."
+
+Mr. Forster thinks that the concluding anecdote conveys a false
+impression of one
+
+ "Who wrote like an angel, but talked like poor Poll."
+
+"Mrs. Piozzi, in her travels, quite solemnly sets forth that poor Dr.
+Goldsmith said once, 'I would advise every young fellow setting forth
+in life to love gravy,' alleging for it the serious reason that 'he
+had formerly seen a glutton's eldest nephew disinherited because his
+uncle never could persuade him to say he liked gravy.' Imagine the
+dullness that would convert a jocose saying of this kind into an
+unconscious utterance of grave absurdity."[1] In his index may be
+read: "Mrs. Piozzi's absurd instance of Goldsmith's absurdity." Mrs.
+Piozzi does not quote the saying as an instance of absurdity; nor set
+it forth solemnly. She repeats it, as an illustration of her
+argument, in the same semi-serious spirit in which it was originally
+hazarded. Sydney Smith took a different view of this grave gravy
+question. On a young lady's declining gravy, he exclaimed: "I have
+been looking all my life for a person who, on principle, rejected
+gravy: let us vow eternal friendship."
+
+[Footnote 1: Life of Goldsmith, vol. ii. p. 205. Mr. Forster allows
+her the credit of discovering the lurking irony in Goldsmith's verses
+on Cumberland, vol. ii. p. 203.]
+
+The "British Synonymy" appeared in 1794. It was thus assailed by
+Gifford:
+
+"Though 'no one better knows his own house' than I the vanity of this
+woman; yet the idea of her undertaking such a work had never entered
+my head; and I was thunderstruck when I first saw it announced. To
+execute it with any tolerable degree of success, required a rare
+combination of talents, among the least of which may be numbered
+neatness of style, acuteness of perception, and a more than common
+accuracy of discrimination; and Mrs. Piozzi brought to the task, a
+jargon long since become proverbial for its vulgarity, an utter
+incapability of defining a single term in the language, and just as
+much Latin from a child's Syntax, as sufficed to expose the ignorance
+she so anxiously labours to conceal. 'If such a one be fit to write
+on Synonimes, speak.' Pignotti himself laughs in his sleeve; and his
+countrymen, long since undeceived, prize the lady's talents at their
+true worth,
+
+ "Et centum Tales[1] curto centusse licentur."
+
+[Footnote 1: Quere Thrales?--_Printer's Devil_."]
+
+Other critics have been more lenient or more just. Enough
+philosophical knowledge and acuteness were discovered in the work to
+originate a rumour that she had retained some of the great
+lexicographer's manuscripts, or derived a posthumous advantage, in
+some shape, from her former intimacy with him. In "Thraliana,"
+Denbigh, 2nd January, 1795, she writes:
+
+"My 'Synonimes' have been reviewed at last. The critics are all civil
+for aught I see, and nearly just, except when they say that Johnson
+left some fragments of a work upon Synonymy: of which God knows I
+never heard till now one syllable; never had he and I, in all the
+time we lived together, any conversation upon the subject."
+
+Even Walpole admits that it has some marked and peculiar merits,
+although its value consists rather in the illustrative matter, than
+in the definitions and etymologies. Thus, in distinguishing between
+_lavish_, _profuse_ and _prodigal_, she relates:
+
+"Two gentlemen were walking leisurely up the Hay-Market some time in
+the year 1749, lamenting the fate of the famous Cuzzona, an actress
+who some time before had been in high vogue, but was then as they
+heard in a very pitiable situation. 'Let us go and visit her,' said
+one of them, 'she lives but over the way.' The other consented; and
+calling at the door, they were shown up stairs, but found the faded
+beauty dull and spiritless, unable or unwilling to converse on any
+subject. 'How's this?' cried one of her consolers, 'are you ill? or
+is it but low spirits chains your tongue so?'--'Neither,' replied
+she: ''tis hunger I suppose. I ate nothing yesterday, and now 'tis
+past six o'clock, and not one penny have I in the world to buy me any
+food.'--'Come with us instantly to a tavern; we will treat you with
+the best roast fowls and Port wine that London can produce.'--'But I
+will have neither my dinner nor my place of eating it prescribed to
+_me_,' answered Cuzzona, in a sharper tone, 'else I need never have
+wanted.' 'Forgive me,' cries the friend; 'do your own way; but eat in
+the name of God, and restore fainting nature.'--She thanked him then;
+and, calling to her a friendly wretch who inhabited the same theatre
+of misery, gave _him_ the guinea the visitor accompanied his last
+words with; 'and run with this money,' said she, 'to such a
+wine-merchant,' (naming him); 'he is the only one keeps good Tokay by
+him. 'Tis a guinea a bottle, mind you,' to the boy; 'and bid the
+gentleman you buy it of give you a loaf into the bargain,--he won't
+refuse.' In half an hour or less the lad returned with the Tokay.
+'But where,' cries Cuzzona, 'is the loaf I spoke for?' 'The merchant
+would give me no loaf,' replies her messenger; 'he drove me from the
+door, and asked if I took him for a baker.' 'Blockhead!' exclaims
+she; 'why I must have bread to my wine, you know, and I have not a
+penny to purchase any. Go beg me a loaf directly.' The fellow returns
+once more with one in his hand and a halfpenny, telling 'em the
+gentleman threw him three, and laughed at his impudence. She gave her
+Mercury the money, broke the bread into a wash-hand basin which stood
+near, poured the Tokay over it, and devoured the whole with
+eagerness. This was indeed a heroine in PROFUSION. Some active
+well-wishers procured her a benefit after this; she gained about
+350_l_., 'tis said, and laid out two hundred of the money instantly
+in a _shell-cap_. They wore such things then."
+
+When Savage got a guinea, he commonly spent it in a tavern at a
+sitting; and referring to the memorable morning when the "Vicar of
+Wakefield" was produced, Johnson says: "I sent him (Goldsmith) a
+guinea, and promised to come to him directly. I accordingly went as
+soon as I was dressed, and found that his landlady had arrested him
+for his rent. I perceived that he had already changed my guinea, and
+had got a bottle of Madeira and a glass before him." Mrs. Piozzi
+continues:
+
+"But Doctor Johnson had always some story at hand to check
+extravagant and wanton wastefulness. His improviso verses made on a
+young heir's coming of age are highly capable of restraining such
+folly, if it is to be restrained: they never yet were printed, I
+believe.
+
+ "'Long expected one-and-twenty,
+ Lingering year, at length is flown;
+ Pride and pleasure, pomp and plenty,
+ Great Sir John, 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,
+ Show 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--
+ 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--
+ You can hang or drown at last.'"
+
+These verses were addressed to Thrale's nephew, Sir John Lade, in
+August, 1780. They bear a strong resemblance to some of Burns' in his
+"Beggar's Sonata," written in 1785:--
+
+ "What is title, what is treasure,
+ What is reputation's care;
+ If we lead a life of pleasure,
+ Can it matter how or where?"
+
+Boswell's "Life of Johnson" was published in May, 1791. It is thus
+mentioned in "Thraliana":--
+
+"_May_, 1791.--Mr. Boswell's book is coming out, and the wits expect
+me to tremble: what will the fellow say? ... that has not been said
+already."
+
+No date, but previous to 25th May, 1791.--"I have been now laughing
+and crying by turns, for two days, over Boswell's book. That poor man
+should have a _Bon Bouillon_ and be put to bed ... he is quite
+light-headed, yet madmen, drunkards, and fools tell truth, they say
+... and if Johnson was to me the back friend he has represented ...
+let it cure me of ever making friendship more with any human being."
+
+"_25th May_, 1791.--The death of my son, so suddenly, so horribly
+produced before my eyes now suffering from the tears then shed ... so
+shockingly brought forward in Boswell's two guinea book, made me very
+ill this week, very ill indeed[1]; it would make the modern friends
+all buy the work I fancy, did they but know how sick the _ancient_
+friends had it in their power to make me, but I had more wit than
+tell any of 'em. And what is the folly among all these fellows of
+wishing we may know one another in the next world.... Comical enough!
+when we have only to expect deserved reproaches for breach of
+confidence and cruel usage. Sure, sure I hope, rancour and resentment
+will at least be put off in the last moments: ... sure, surely, we
+shall meet no more, except on the great day when each is to answer to
+other and before other.... After _that_ I hope to keep better company
+than any of them."
+
+[Footnote 1: The death of her son is not unkindly mentioned by
+Boswell. See p. 491, roy. oct. edit. But the imputations on her
+veracity rest exclusively on his prejudiced testimony.]
+
+In 1801, Mrs. Piozzi published "Retrospection; or a Review of the
+Most Striking and Important Events, Characters, Situations, and their
+Consequences, which the Last Eighteen Hundred Years have presented to
+the View of Mankind." It is in two volumes quarto, containing rather
+more than 1000 pages. A fitting motto for it would have been _De
+omnibus rebus et quibusdam aliis._ The subject, or range of subjects,
+was beyond her grasp; and the best that can be said of the book is
+that a good general impression of the stream of history, lighted up
+with some striking traits of manners and character, may be obtained
+from it. It would have required the united powers and acquirements of
+Raleigh, Burke, Gibbon, and Voltaire to fill so vast a canvass with
+appropriate groups and figures; and she is more open to blame for the
+ambitious conception of the work than for her comparative failure in
+the execution. In 1799 she writes to Dr. Gray: "The truth is, my
+plans stretch too far for these times, or for my own age; but the
+wish, though scarce hope, of my heart, is to finish the work I am
+engaged in, get you to look it over for me, and print in March 1801."
+She published it in January 1801, but it was not looked over by her
+learned correspondent. Some slight misgiving is betrayed in the
+Preface:
+
+"If I should have made improper choice of facts, and if I should be
+found at length most to resemble Maister Fabyan of old, who writing
+the life of Henry V. lays heaviest stress on a new weathercock set-up
+on St. Paul's steeple during that eventful reign, my book must share
+the fate of his, and be like that forgotten: reminding before its
+death perhaps a friend or two of a poor man (Macbean) living in later
+times, that Doctor Johnson used to tell us of; who being advised to
+take subscriptions for a new Geographical Dictionary, hastened to
+Bolt Court and begged advice. There having listened carefully for
+half-an-hour, 'Ah, but dear Sir,' exclaimed the admiring parasite,
+'if I am to make all this eloquent ado about Athens and Rome, where
+shall we find place, do you think, for Richmond, or Aix La
+Chapelle?'"
+
+Writing from Bath, December 15th, 1802, she says:
+
+"The 'Gentleman's Magazine' for July 1801 contained my answer to such
+critics as confined themselves to faults I could have helped
+committing--had they been faults. Those who merely told disagreeable
+truths concerning my person, or dress, or age, or such stuff,
+expected, of course, no reply. There are innumerable press errors in
+the book, from my being obliged to print on new year's day--during an
+insurrection of the printers. These the 'Critical Review' laid hold
+of with an acuteness sharpened by malignity."
+
+Moore, who was staying at Bowood, sets down in his diary for April,
+1823: "Lord L. in the evening, quoted a ridiculous passage from the
+Preface to Mrs. Piozzi's 'Retrospections,' in which, anticipating the
+ultimate perfection of the human race, she says she does not despair
+of the time arriving when 'Vice will take refuge in the arms of
+impossibility.' Mentioned also an ode of hers to Posterity,
+beginning, 'Posterity, gregarious dame,' the only meaning of which
+must be, a lady _chez qui_ numbers assemble--a lady at _home_."[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: Memoirs, &c., vol. iv. p. 38.]
+
+There is no such passage in the Preface to "Retrospection," and the
+ode is her "Ode to Society," who is not improperly addressed as
+"gregarious."
+
+"I repeated," adds Moore, "what Jekyll told the other day of
+Bearcroft saying to Mrs. Piozzi, when Thrale, after she had
+repeatedly called him Mr. Beercraft: 'Beercraft is not my name,
+Madam; it may be your trade, but it is not my name.'" It may always
+be questioned whether this offensive description of repartee was
+really uttered at the time. But Bearcroft was capable of it. He began
+his cross-examination of Mr. Vansittart by--"With your leave, Sir, I
+will call you Mr. Van for shortness." "As you please, Sir, and I will
+call you Mr. Bear."
+
+Towards the end of 1795, Mrs. Piozzi left Streatham for her seat in
+North Wales, where (1800 or 1801) she was visited by a young
+nobleman, now an eminent statesman, distinguished by his love of
+literature and the fine arts, who has been good enough to recall and
+write down his impressions of her for me:
+
+"I did certainly know Madame Piozzi, but had no habits of
+acquaintance with her, and she never lived in London to my knowledge.
+When in my youth I made a tour in Wales--times when all inns were
+bad, and all houses hospitable--I put up for a day at her house, I
+think in Denbighshire, the proper name of which was Bryn, and to
+which, on the occasion of her marriage I was told, she had recently
+added the name of Bella. I remember her taking me into her bed-room
+to show me the floor covered with folios, quartos, and octavos, for
+consultation, and indicating the labour she had gone through in
+compiling an immense volume she was then publishing, called
+'Retrospection.' She was certainly what was called, and is still
+called, blue, and that of a deep tint, but good humoured and lively,
+though affected; her husband, a quiet civil man, with his head full
+of nothing but music.
+
+"I afterwards called on her at Bath, where she chiefly resided. I
+remember it was at the time Madame de Staël's 'Delphine,' and
+'Corinne,' came out[1], and that we agreed in preferring 'Delphine,'
+which nobody reads now, to 'Corinne,' which most people read then,
+and a few do still. She rather avoided talking of Johnson. These are
+trifles, not worth recording, but I have put them down that you might
+not think me neglectful of your wishes; but now _j'ai vuidé mon
+sac_."
+
+[Footnote 1: "Delphine" appeared in 1804; "Corinne," in 1806.]
+
+Her mode of passing her time when she had ceased writing books, with
+the topics which interested her, will be best learned from her
+letters. Her vivacity never left her, and the elasticity of her
+spirits bore up against every kind of depression. A lady who met her
+on her way to Wynnstay in January, 1803, describes her as "skipping
+about like a kid, quite a figure of fun, in a tiger skin shawl, lined
+with scarlet, and _only_ five colours upon her head-dress--on the top
+of a flaxen wig a bandeau of blue velvet, a bit of tiger ribbon, a
+white beaver hat and plume of black feathers--as gay as a lark."
+
+In a letter, dated Jan. 1799, to a Welsh neighbour, Mrs. Piozzi says:
+
+"Mr. Piozzi has lost considerably in purse, by the cruel inroads of
+the French in Italy, and of all his family driven from their quiet
+homes, has at length with difficulty saved one little boy who is now
+just turned of five years old. We have got him here (Bath) since I
+wrote last, and his uncle will take him to school next week; for as
+our John has nothing but his talents and education to depend upon, he
+must be a scholar, and we will try hard to make him a very good one.
+
+"My poor little boy from Lombardy said as I walked him across our
+market, 'These are sheeps' heads, are they not, aunt? I saw a basket
+of men's heads at Brescia.'
+
+"As he was by a lucky chance baptized, in compliment to me, John
+Salusbury, five years ago, when happier days smiled on his family, he
+will be known in England by no other, and it will be forgotten he is
+a foreigner. A lucky circumstance for one who is intended to work his
+way among our islanders by talent, diligence, and education."
+
+She thus mentions this event in "Thraliana," January 17th, 1798:
+
+"Italy is ruined and England threatened. I have sent for one little
+boy from among my husband's nephews. He was christened John
+Salusbury: he shall be naturalised, and then we will see whether he
+will be more grateful and natural and comfortable than Miss Thrales
+have been to the mother they have at length driven to desperation."
+
+She could hardly have denied her husband the satisfaction of rescuing
+a single member of his family from the wreck; and they were bound to
+provide handsomely for the child of their adoption. Whether she
+carried the sentiment too far in giving him the entire estate (not a
+large one) is a very different question; on which she enters
+fearlessly in one of the fragments of the Autobiography. In a
+marginal note on one of the printed letters in which Johnson writes:
+"Mrs. Davenant says you regain your health,"--she remarks: "Mrs.
+Davenant neither knew nor cared, as she wanted her brother Harry
+Cotton to marry Lady Keith, and I offered my estate with her. Miss
+Thrale said she wished to have nothing to do either with my family or
+my fortune. They were all cruel and all insulting." Her fits of
+irritation and despondency never lasted long.
+
+Her mode of bringing up her adopted nephew was more in accordance
+with her ultimate liberality, than with her early intentions or
+professions of teaching him to "work his way among our islanders."
+Instead of suffering him to travel to and from the University by
+coach, she insisted on his travelling post; and she is said to have
+remarked to the mother of a Welsh baronet, who was similarly anxious
+for the comfort and dignity of her heir, "Other people's children are
+baked in coarse common pie dishes, ours in patty-pans."
+
+She was misreported, or afterwards improved upon the thought; for, in
+June 1810, she writes to Dr. Gray: "He is a boy of excellent
+principle. Education at a private school has an effect like baking
+loaves in a tin. The bread is more insipid, but it comes out _clean_;
+and Mr. Gray laughed, when at breakfast this morning, our undercrusts
+suggested the comparison."
+
+In the Conway Notes, she says:
+
+"Had we vexations enough? We had certainly many pleasures. The house
+in Wales was beautiful, and the Boy was beautiful too. Mr. Piozzi
+said I had spoiled my own children and was spoiling his. My reply
+was, that I loved spoiling people, and hated any one I could not
+spoil. Am I not now trying to spoil dear Mr. Conway?"
+
+When she talks of spoiling, she must not be understood literally. In
+1817 she writes from Bath to Dr. Gray:
+
+"Sir John and Lady Salusbury staid with me six or seven weeks, and
+made themselves most beloved among us. They are very good young
+creatures.... My children read your _Key_ to each other on Sunday
+noons: the _Connection_ on Sunday nights. You remember me hoping and
+proposing to make dear Salusbury a gentleman, a Christian, and a
+scholar; and when one has succeeded in the first two wishes, there is
+no need to fret if the third does fail a _little_. Such is my
+situation concerning my _adopted_, as you are accustomed to call
+him."
+
+Before she died she had the satisfaction of seeing him sheriff of his
+county; and on carrying up an address, he was knighted and became Sir
+John Salusbury Piozzi Salusbury. Miss Williams Wynn has preserved a
+somewhat apocryphal anecdote of his disinterestedness:
+
+"When I read her (Mrs. P.'s) lamentations over her poverty, I could
+not help believing that Sir J. Salusbury had proved ungrateful to his
+benefactress. For the honour of human nature I rejoice to find this
+is not the case. When he made known to his aunt his wish to marry,
+she promised to make over to him the property of Brynbella. Even
+before the marriage was concluded she had distressed herself by her
+lavish expenditure at Streatham. I saw by the letters that Gillow's
+bill amounted to near 2,400_l_., and Mr. (the late Sir John) Williams
+tells me she had continually very large parties from London. Sir John
+Salusbury then came to her, offered to relinquish all her promised
+gifts and the dearest wish of his heart, saying he should be most
+grateful to her if she would only give him a commission in the army,
+and let him seek his fortune. At the same time he added that he made
+this offer because all was still in his power, but that from the
+moment he married, she must be aware that it would be no longer so,
+that he should not feel himself justified in bringing a wife into
+distress of circumstances, nor in entailing poverty on children
+unborn.[1] She refused; he married; and she went on in her course of
+extravagance. She had left herself a life income only, and large as
+it was, no tradesman would wait a reasonable time for payment; she
+was nearly eighty; and they knew that at her death nothing would be
+left to pay her debts, and so they seized the goods."
+
+[Footnote 1: If the estate was settled in the usual manner, he would
+have only a life estate; and I believe it was so settled.]
+
+When Fielding, the novelist, rather boastingly avowed that he never
+knew, and believed he never should know, the difference between a
+shilling and sixpence, he was told: "Yes, the time will come when you
+will know it--when you have only eighteen pence left." If the author
+of "Tom Jones" could not be taught the value of money, we must not be
+too hard on Mrs. Piozzi for not learning it, after lesson upon lesson
+in the hard school of "impecuniosity." Whilst Piozzi lived, her
+affairs were faithfully and carefully administered. Although they
+built Brynbella, spent a good deal of money on Streatham, and lived
+handsomely, they never wanted money. He had a moderate fortune, the
+produce of his professional labours, and left it, neither impaired
+nor materially increased, to his family. With peculiar reference
+probably to her habits of profuse expenditure, he used to say that
+"white monies were good for ladies, yellow for gentlemen." He took
+the guineas under his especial charge, leaving only the silver to
+her. This was a matter of notoriety in the neighbourhood, and the
+tenants, to please her or humour the joke, sometimes brought bags of
+shillings and sixpences in part payment of their rents.
+
+In the Conway Notes she says:
+
+"Our head-quarters were in Wales, where dear Piozzi repaired my
+church, built a new vault for my old ancestors, chose the place in it
+where he and I are to repose together.... He lived some twenty-five
+years with me, however, but so punished with gout that we found Bath
+the best wintering-place for many, many seasons.--Mrs. Siddons' last
+appearance there he witnessed, when she played Calista to Dimond's
+Lothario, in which he looked _so_ like Garrick, it shocked us _all
+three_, I believe; for Garrick adored Mr. Piozzi, and Siddons hated
+the little great man to her heart. Poor Dimond! he was a well-bred,
+pleasing, worthy creature, and did the honours of his own house and
+table with peculiar grace indeed. No likeness in private life or
+manner,--none at all; no wit, no fun, no frolic humour had Mr.
+Dimond:--no grace, no dignity, no real unaffected elegance of mien or
+behaviour had his predecessor, David,--whose partiality to my
+fastidious husband was for that reason never returned. Merriment,
+difficult for _him_ to comprehend, made no amends for the want of
+that which no one understood better,--so he hated all the wits but
+Murphy."
+
+There is hardly a family of note or standing within visiting distance
+of their place, that has not some tradition or reminiscence to relate
+concerning them; and all agree in describing him as a worthy good
+sort of man, obliging, inoffensive, kind to the poor, principally
+remarkable for his devotion to music, and utterly unable to his dying
+day to familiarise himself with the English language or manners. It
+is told of him that being required to pay a turnpike toll near the
+house of a country neighbour whom he was on his way to visit, he took
+it for granted that the toll went into his neighbour's pocket, and
+proposed setting up a gate near Brynbella with the view of levying
+toll in his turn.
+
+In September, 1800, she wrote from Brynbella to Dr. Gray:
+
+"Dear Mr. Piozzi, who takes men out of misery so far as his power
+extends in this neighbourhood, feels flattered and encouraged by your
+very kind approbation. He has been getting rugs for the cottagers'
+beds to keep them warm this winter, while we are away, and they all
+take me into their sleeping rooms when I visit them _now_, to show
+how comfortably they live. As for the old hut you so justly abhorred,
+and so kindly noticed--it is knocked down and its coarse name too,
+Potlicko: we call it Cottage-o'-the-Park. Some recurrence to the
+original derivation in soup season will not, however, be much amiss I
+suppose."
+
+"Amongst the company," says Moore, "was Mrs. John Kemble. She
+mentioned an anecdote of Piozzi, who upon calling upon some old lady
+of quality, was told by the servant, she was 'indifferent.' 'Is she
+indeed?' answered Piozzi, huffishly, 'then pray tell her I can be as
+indifferent as she;' and walked away."[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: Moore's Memoirs, vol. iv. p. 329.]
+
+Till he was disabled by the gout, his principal occupation was his
+violin, and it was her delight to listen to him. She more than once
+observed to the vicar, "Such music is quite heavenly." "I am in
+despair," cried out the village fiddler, "I may now stick my fiddle
+in my thatched roof, for a greater performer is come to reside in the
+parish." The existing superstition of the country is that his spirit,
+playing on his favourite instrument, still haunts one wing of
+Brynbella. If he designed the building, his architectural taste does
+not merit the praises she lavishes on it. The exterior is not
+prepossessing; but there is a look of comfort about the house; the
+interior is well arranged: the situation, which commands a fine and
+extensive view of the upper part of the valley of the Clywd, is
+admirably chosen; the garden and grounds are well laid out; and the
+walks through the woods on either side, especially one called the
+Lovers' Walk, are remarkably picturesque. Altogether, Brynbella may
+be fairly held to merit the appellation of a "pretty villa." The name
+implies a compliment to Piozzi's country as well as to his taste; for
+she meant it to typify the union between Wales and Italy in his and
+her own proper persons. She says in the Conway Notes:
+
+"Mr. Piozzi built the house for me, he said; my own old chateau,
+Bachygraig by name, tho' very curious, was wholly uninhabitable; and
+we called the Italian villa he set up as mine in the Vale of Cluid,
+Brynbella, or the beautiful brow, making the name half Welsh and half
+Italian, as _we_ were."
+
+Dr. Burney, in a letter to his daughter, thus described the position
+and feelings of the couple towards each other in 1808:
+
+"During my invalidity at Bath I had an unexpected visit from your
+Streatham friend, of whom I had lost sight for more than ten years.
+She still looks very well, but is graver, and candour itself; though
+she still says good things, and writes admirable notes and letters, I
+am told, to my granddaughters C. and M., of whom she is very fond. We
+shook hands very cordially, and avoided any allusion to our long
+separation and its cause. The _caro sposo_ still lives, but is such
+an object from the gout, that the account of his sufferings made me
+pity him sincerely; he wished, she told me, 'to see his old and
+worthy friend,' and _un beau matin_ I could not refuse compliance
+with his wish. She nurses him with great affection and tenderness,
+never goes out or has company when he is in pain."
+
+In the Conway Notes she says:
+
+"Piozzi's fine hand upon the organ and pianoforte deserted him. Gout,
+such as I never knew, fastened on his fingers, distorting them into
+every dreadful shape.... A little girl, shown to him as a musical
+wonder of five years old, said, 'Pray, Sir, why are your fingers
+wrapped up in black silk so?' 'My dear,' replied he, 'they are in
+mourning for my voice.' 'Oh, me!' cries the child, '_is she dead?_'
+He sung an easy song, and the baby exclaimed, 'Ah, Sir! you are very
+naughty--you tell fibs!' Poor dears! and both gone now!"
+
+"When life was gradually, but perceptibly, closing round him at Bath,
+in 1808, I asked him if he would wish to converse with a Romish
+priest,--we had full opportunity there. 'By no means,' said he. 'Call
+Mr. Leman of the Crescent.' We did so,--poor Bessy ran and fetched
+him. Mr. Piozzi received the blessed Sacrament at his hands; but
+recovered sufficiently to go home and die in his own house."
+
+He died of gout at Brynbella in March 1809, and was buried in a vault
+constructed by her desire in Dymerchion Church. There is a portrait
+of him (period and painter unknown) still preserved amongst the
+family portraits at Brynbella. It is that of a good-looking man of
+about forty, in a straight-cut brown coat with metal buttons, lace
+frill and ruffles, and some leaves of music in his hand. There are
+also two likenesses of Mrs. Piozzi: one a three-quarter length
+(kit-kat), taken apparently when she was about forty; the other a
+miniature of her at an advanced age. Both confirm her description of
+herself as too strong-featured to be pretty. The hands in the
+three-quarter length are gloved.
+
+Brynbella continued her headquarters till 1814, when she gave it up
+to Sir John Salusbury. From that period she resided principally at
+Bath and Clifton, occasionally visiting Streatham or making summer
+trips to the seaside.
+
+That she and her eldest daughter should ever be again (if they ever
+were) on a perfect footing of confidence and affection, was a moral
+impossibility. Estrangements are commonly durable in proportion to
+the closeness of the tie that has been severed; and it is no more
+than natural that each party, yearning for a reconciliation and not
+knowing that the wish is reciprocated, should persevere in casting
+the blame of the prolonged coldness on the other. Occasional sarcasms
+no more prove disregard or indifference, than Swift's "only a woman's
+hair" implies contempt for the sex.
+
+Miss Thrale's marriage with Lord Keith in 1808 is thus mentioned in
+"Thraliana":
+
+"The 'Thraliana' is coming to an end; so are the Thrales. The eldest
+is married now. Admiral Lord Keith the man; a _good_ man for ought I
+hear: a _rich_ man for ought I am told: a _brave_ man we have always
+heard: and a _wise_ man I trow by his choice. The name no new one,
+and excellent for a charade, _e.g_.
+
+ "A Faery my first, who to fame makes pretence;
+ My second a Rock, dear Britannia's defence;
+ In my third when combined will too quickly be shown
+ The Faery and Rock in our brave Elphin-stone."
+
+Her way of life after Piozzi's death may be collected from the
+Letters, with the exception of one strange episode towards the end.
+When nearly eighty, she took a fancy for an actor named Conway, who
+came out on the London boards in 1813, and had the honour of acting
+Romeo and Jaffier to the Juliet and Belvidera of Miss O'Neill (Lady
+Becher). He also acted with her in Dean Milman's fine play, "Fazio."
+But it was his ill fate to reverse Churchill's famous lines:
+
+ "Before such merits all objections fly,
+ Pritchard's genteel, and Garrick's six feet high."
+
+Conway was six feet high, and a very handsome man to boot; but his
+advantages were purely physical; not a spark of genius animated his
+fine features and commanding figure, and he was battling for a
+moderate share of provincial celebrity, when Mrs. Piozzi fell in with
+him at Bath. It has been rumoured in Flintshire that she wished to
+marry him, and offered Sir John Salusbury a large sum in ready money
+(which she never possessed) to give up Brynbella (which he could not
+give up), that she might settle it on the new object of her
+affections. But none of the letters or documents that have fallen in
+my way afford even plausibility to the rumour, and some of the
+testamentary papers in which his name occurs, go far towards
+discrediting the belief that her attachment ever went beyond
+admiration and friendship expressed in exaggerated terms.[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: Since the appearance of the first edition of this work,
+it has been stated on the authority of a distinguished man of letters
+that Conway shewed the late Charles Mathews a letter from Mrs.
+Piozzi, offering marriage.--_New Monthly Magazine_ (edited by Mr.
+Harrison Ainsworth) for April, 1861.]
+
+Conway threw himself overboard and was drowned in a voyage from New
+York to Charleston in 1828. His effects were sold at New York, and
+amongst them a copy of the folio edition of Young's "Night Thoughts,"
+in which he had made a note of its having been presented to him by
+his "dearly attached friend, the celebrated Mrs. Piozzi." In the
+preface to "Love Letters of Mrs. Piozzi, Written when she was Eighty,
+to William Augustus Conway," published in London in 1842, it is
+stated that the originals, seven in number, were purchased by an
+American "lady," who permitted a "gentleman" to take copies and use
+them as he might think fit. What this "gentleman" thought fit, was to
+publish them with a catchpenny title and an alleged extract by way of
+motto to sanction it. The genuineness of the letters is doubtful, and
+the interpolation of three or four sentences would alter their entire
+tenor. But taken as they stand, their language is not warmer than an
+old woman of vivid fancy and sensibility might have deemed warranted
+by her age. "Tell Mr. Johnson I love him exceedingly," is the mission
+given by the old Countess of Eglinton to Boswell in 1778. _L'age n'a
+point de sexe_; and no one thought the worse of Madame Du Deffand for
+the impassioned tone in which she addressed Horace Walpole, whose
+dread of ridicule induced him to make a most ungrateful return to her
+fondness.[1] Years before the formation of this acquaintance, Mrs.
+Piozzi had acquired the difficult art of growing old; _je sais
+vieillir_: she dwells frequently but naturally on her age: she
+contemplates the approach of death with firmness and without
+self-deception: and her elasticity of spirit never for a moment
+suggests the image of an antiquated coquette. Of the seven letters in
+question, the one cited as most compromising is the sixth, in which
+Conway is exhorted to bear patiently a rebuff he had just received
+from some younger beauty:
+
+[Footnote 1: "The old woman's fancy for Mr. Conway represents a
+relation of warm friendship that is of every-day occurrence between
+youth and age that is not crabbed."--_The Examiner_, Feb. 16, 1861.]
+
+"'Tis not a year and a quarter since, dear Conway, accepting of my
+portrait sent to Birmingham, said to the bringer, 'Oh if _your lady_
+but retains her friendship: oh if I can but keep _her_ patronage, I
+care not for the rest.' And now, when that friendship follows you
+through sickness and through sorrow; now that her patronage is daily
+rising in importance: upon a lock of hair given or refused by une
+petite Traitresse, hangs all the happiness of my once high-spirited
+and high-blooded friend. Let it not be so. EXALT THY LOVE: DEJECTED
+HEART--and rise superior to such narrow minds. Do not however fancy
+she will ever be punished in the way you mention: no, no; she'll
+wither on the thorny stem dropping the faded and ungathered
+leaves:--a China rose, of no good scent or flavour--false in apparent
+sweetness, deceitful when depended on--unlike the flower produced in
+colder climates, which is sought for in old age, preserved _even
+after death_, a lasting and an elegant perfume,--a medicine, too, for
+those whose shattered nerves require _astringent remedies_.
+
+"And now, dear Sir, let me request of you--to love yourself--and to
+reflect on the necessity of not dwelling on any _particular subject_
+too long, or too intensely. It is really very dangerous to the health
+of body and soul. Besides that our time here is but short; a mere
+preface to the great book of eternity: and 'tis scarce worthy of a
+reasonable being not to keep the end of human existence so far in
+view that we may tend to it--either directly or obliquely in every
+step. This is preaching--but remember how the sermon is written at
+three, four, and five o'clock by an octogenary pen--a heart (as Mrs.
+Lee says) twenty-six years old: and as H.L.P. feels it to be,--ALL
+YOUR OWN. Suffer your dear noble self to be in some measure benefited
+by the talents which are left _me_; your health to be restored by
+soothing consolations while _I remain here_, and am able to bestow
+them. All is not lost yet. You _have_ a friend, and that friend is
+PIOZZI."
+
+Conway's "high blood" was as great a recommendation to Mrs. Piozzi as
+his good looks, and he vindicated his claim to noble descent by his
+conduct, which was disinterested and gentlemanlike throughout.
+
+Moore sets down in his Diary, April 28, 1819: "Breakfasted with the
+Fitzgeralds. Took me to call on Mrs. Piozzi; a wonderful old lady;
+faces of other times seemed to crowd over her as she sat,--the
+Johnsons, Reynoldses, &c. &c.: though turned eighty, she has all the
+quickness and intelligence of a gay young woman."
+
+Nichol, the bookseller, had said that "Johnson was the link that
+connected Shakespeare with the rest of mankind." On hearing this,
+Mrs. Piozzi at eighty exclaimed, "Oh, the dear fellow, I must give
+him a kiss for that idea." When Nichol told the story, he added, "I
+never got it, and she went out of the world a kiss in my debt."
+
+One of the most characteristic feats or freaks of this extraordinary
+woman was the celebration of her eightieth birthday by a concert,
+ball, and supper, to between six and seven hundred people, at the
+Kingston Rooms, Bath, on the 27th January, 1820. At the conclusion of
+the supper, her health was proposed by Admiral Sir James Sausmarez,
+and drunk with three times three. The dancing began at two, when she
+led off with her adopted son, Sir John Salusbury, dancing (according
+to the author of "Piozziana," an eye-witness) "with astonishing
+elasticity, and with all the true air of dignity which might have
+been expected of one of the best bred females in society." When fears
+were expressed that she had done too much, she replied:--"No: this
+sort of thing is greatly in the mind; and I am almost tempted to say
+the same of growing old at all, especially as it regards those of the
+usual concomitants of age, viz., laziness, defective sight, and
+ill-temper."
+
+"So far from feeling fatigued or exhausted on the following day by
+her exertions," remarks Sir James Fellowes in a note on this event,
+"she amused us by her sallies of wit, and her jokes on 'Tully's
+Offices,' of which her guests had so eagerly availed themselves.".
+Tully was the cook and confectioner, the Bath Gunter, who provided
+the supper.
+
+Mrs. Piozzi died in May, 1821. Her death is circumstantially
+communicated in a letter from Mrs. Pennington, the lady mentioned in
+Miss Seward's correspondence as the beautiful and agreeable Sophia
+Weston:--
+
+
+"Hot Wells, May 5th, 1821.
+
+"Dear Miss Willoughby,--It is my painful task to communicate to you,
+who have so lately been the kind associate of dearest Mrs. Piozzi,
+the irreparable loss we have all sustained in that incomparable woman
+and beloved friend.
+
+"She closed her various life about nine o'clock on Wednesday, after
+an illness of ten days, with as little suffering as could be imagined
+under these awful circumstances. Her bed-side was surrounded by her
+weeping daughters: Lady Keith and Mrs. Hoare arrived in time to be
+fully recognised[1]; Miss Thrale, who was absent from town, only just
+before she expired, but with the satisfaction of seeing her breathe
+her last in peace.
+
+"Nothing could behave with more tenderness and propriety than these
+ladies, whose conduct, I am convinced, has been much misrepresented
+and calumniated by those who have only attended to _one_ side of the
+history: but may all that is past be now buried in oblivion!
+Retrospection seldom improves our view of any subject. Sir John
+Salusbury was too distant, the close of her illness being so rapid,
+for us to entertain any expectation of his arriving in time to see
+the dear deceased. He only reached Clifton late _last_ night. I have
+not yet seen him; my whole time has been devoted to the afflicted
+ladies."
+
+[Footnote 1: On hearing of their arrival she is reported to have
+said, "Now, I shall die in state."]
+
+Mrs. Pennington told a friend that Mrs. Piozzi's last words were: "I
+die in the trust and the fear of God." When she was attended by Sir
+George Gibbes, being unable to articulate, she traced a coffin in the
+air with her hands and lay calm. Her will, dated the 29th March,
+1816, makes Sir John Salusbury Piozzi Salusbury heir to all her real
+and personal property with the exception of some small bequests, Sir
+James Fellowes and Sir John Salusbury being appointed executors.
+
+A Memorandum signed by Sir James Fellowes runs thus:--"After I had
+read the Will, Lady Keith and her two sisters present, said they had
+long been prepared for the contents and for such a disposition of the
+property, and they acknowledged the validity of the Will."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In any endeavour to solve the difficult problem of Mrs. Piozzi's
+conduct and character, it should be kept in view that the highest
+testimony to her worth has been volunteered by those with whom she
+passed the last years of her life in the closest intimacy. She had
+become completely reconciled to Madame D'Arblay, with whom she was
+actively corresponding when she died, and her mixed qualities of head
+and heart are thus summed up in that lady's Diary, May, 1821:
+
+"I have lost now, just lost, my once most dear, intimate, and admired
+friend, Mrs. Thrale Piozzi, who preserved her fine faculties, her
+imagination, her intelligence, her powers of allusion and citation,
+her extraordinary memory, and her almost unexampled vivacity, to the
+last of her existence. She was in her eighty-second year, and yet
+owed not her death to age nor to natural decay, but to the effects of
+a fall in a journey from Penzance to Clifton. On her eightieth
+birthday she gave a great ball, concert, and supper, in the public
+rooms at Bath, to upwards of two hundred persons, and the ball she
+opened herself. She was, in truth, a most wonderful character for
+talents and eccentricity, for wit, genius, generosity, spirit, and
+powers of entertainment.
+
+"She had a great deal both of good and not good, in common with
+Madame de Staël Holstein. They had the same sort of highly superior
+intellect, the same depth of learning, the same general acquaintance
+with science, the same ardent love of literature, the same thirst for
+universal knowledge, and the same buoyant animal spirits, such as
+neither sickness, sorrow, nor even terror, could subdue. Their
+conversation was equally luminous, from the sources of their own
+fertile minds, and from their splendid acquisitions from the works
+and acquirements of others. Both were zealous to serve, liberal to
+bestow, and graceful to oblige; and both were truly high-minded in
+prizing and praising whatever was admirable that came in their way.
+Neither of them was delicate nor polished, though each was flattering
+and caressing; but both had a fund inexhaustible of good humour, and
+of sportive gaiety, that made their intercourse with those they
+wished to please attractive, instructive, and delightful; and though
+not either of them had the smallest real malevolence in their
+compositions, neither of them could ever withstand the pleasure of
+uttering a repartee, let it wound whom it might, even though each
+would serve the very person they goaded with all the means in their
+power. Both were kind, charitable, and munificent, and therefore
+beloved; both were sarcastic, careless, and daring, and therefore
+feared. The morality of Madame de Staël was by far the most faulty,
+but so was the society to which she belonged; so were the general
+manners of those by whom she was encircled."
+
+There is one real point of similarity between Madame de Staël and
+Mrs. Piozzi, which has been omitted in the parallel. Both were
+treated much in the same manner by the amiable, sensitive, and
+unsophisticated Fanny Burney. In Feb. 1793, she wrote to her father,
+then at Paris, to announce her intimacy with a small "colony" of
+distinguished emigrants settled at Richmond, the cynosure of which
+was the far-famed daughter of Necker. He writes to caution her on the
+strength of a suspicious _liaison_ with M. de Narbonne. She replies
+by declaring her belief that the charge is a gross calumny. "Indeed,
+I think you could not spend a day with them and not see that their
+commerce is that of pure, but exalted and most elegant, friendship. I
+would, nevertheless, give the world to avoid being a guest under
+their roof, now that I have heard even the shadow of such a rumour."
+
+If Mr. Croker was right, she was then in her forty-second year; at
+all events, no tender, timid, delicate maiden, ready to start at a
+hint or semblance of impropriety; and she waved her scruples without
+hesitation when they stood in the way of her intercourse with M.
+D'Arblay, whom she married in July 1793, he being then employed in
+transcribing Madame de Staël's Essay on the Influence of the
+Passions.
+
+As to the parallel, with all due deference to Madame D'Arblay's
+proved sagacity aided by her personal knowledge of her two gifted
+friends, it may be suggested that they present fewer points of
+resemblance than any two women of at all corresponding celebrity.[1]
+The superiority in the highest qualities of mind will be awarded
+without hesitation to the French woman, although M. Thiers terms her
+writings the perfection of mediocrity. She grappled successfully with
+some of the weightiest and subtlest questions of social and political
+science; in criticism she displayed powers which Schlegel might have
+envied while he aided their fullest development in her "Germany"; and
+her "Corinne" ranks amongst the best of those works of fiction which
+excel in description, reflection, and sentiment, rather than in
+pathos, fancy, stirring incident, or artfully contrived plot. But her
+tone of mind was so essentially and notoriously masculine, that when
+she asked Talleyrand whether he had read her "Delphine," he answered,
+"Non, Madame, mais on m'a dit que-nous y sommes tous les deux
+déguisés en femmes."[2] This was a material drawback on her
+agreeability: in a moment of excited consciousness, she exclaimed,
+that she would give all her fame for the power of fascinating; and
+there was no lack of bitterness in her celebrated repartee to the man
+who, seated between her and Madame Recamier, boasted of being between
+Wit and Beauty, "Oui, et sans posséder ni l'un ni l'autre."[3] The
+view from Richmond Park she called "calme et animée, ce qu'on doit
+être, et que je ne suis pas."
+
+[Footnote 1: Lady Morgan and Madame de Genlis have been suggested as
+each presenting a better subject for a parallel.]
+
+[Footnote 2: "To understand the point of this answer," says Mr.
+Mackintosh, "it must be known that an old countess is introduced in
+the novel full of cunning, finessing, and trick, who was intended to
+represent Talleyrand, and Delphine was intended for herself."--_Life
+of Sir James Mackintosh_, vol. ii. p. 453.]
+
+[Footnote 3: This _mot_ is given to Talleyrand in Lady Holland's Life
+of Sydney Smith. But it may be traced to one mentioned by Hannah More
+in 1787, as then current in Paris. One of the _notables_ fresh from
+his province was teased by two _petits maîtres_ to tell them who he
+was. "Eh bien donc, le voici: je suis ni sot ni fat, mais je suis
+entre les deux."--_Memoirs of Hannah More_, vol. ii. p. 57.]
+
+In London she was soon voted a bore by the wits and people of
+fashion. She thought of convincing whilst they thought of dining.
+Sheridan and Brummell delighted in mystifying her. Byron complained
+that she was always talking of himself or herself[1], and concludes
+his account of a dinner-party by the remark:--"But we got up too soon
+after the women; and Mrs. Corinne always lingers so long after
+dinner, that we wish her--in the drawing-room." In another place he
+says: "I saw Curran presented to Madame de Staël at Mackintosh's; it
+was the grand confluence between the Rhone and the Saône, and they
+were both so d--d ugly that I could not help wondering how the best
+intellects of France and England could have taken up respectively
+such residences." He afterwards qualifies this opinion: "Her figure
+was not bad; her legs tolerable; her arms good: altogether I can
+conceive her having been a desirable woman, allowing a little
+imagination for her soul, and so forth. She would have made a great
+man."
+
+[Footnote 1: Johnson told Boswell: "You have only two topics,
+yourself and myself, and I am heartily sick of both."]
+
+This is just what Mrs. Piozzi never would have made. Her mind,
+despite her masculine acquirements, was thoroughly feminine: she had
+more tact than genius, more sensibility and quickness of perception
+than depth, comprehensiveness, or continuity of thought. But her very
+discursiveness prevented her from becoming wearisome: her varied
+knowledge supplied an inexhaustible store of topics and
+illustrations; her lively fancy placed them in attractive lights; and
+her mind has been well likened to a kaleidoscope which, whenever its
+glittering and heterogeneous contents are moved or shaken, surprises
+by some new combination of colour or of form. She professed to write
+as she talked; but her conversation was doubtless better than her
+books: her main advantages being a well-stored memory, fertility of
+images, aptness of allusion, and _apropos_.
+
+Her colloquial excellence and her agreeability are established by the
+unanimous testimony of her cotemporaries. Her fame in this respect
+rests on the same basis as that of all great wits, all great actors,
+and many great orators. To question it for want of more tangible and
+durable proofs, would be as unreasonable as to question Sydney
+Smith's humour, Hook's powers of improvisation, Garrick's Richard, or
+Sheridan's Begum speech. But _ex pede Herculem_. Marked indications
+of her quality will be found in her letters and her books. "Both,"
+remarks an acute and by no means partial critic[1], "are full of
+happy touches, and here and there will be found in them those deep
+and piercing thoughts which come intuitively to people of genius."
+
+[Footnote 1: The Athenæum. Jan. 26th, 1861.]
+
+Surely these are happy touches:
+
+"I hate a general topic as a pretty woman hates a general mourning
+when black does not become her complexion."
+
+"Life is a schoolroom, not a playground."
+
+In allusion to the rage for scientific experiment in 1811: "Never was
+poor Nature so put to the rack, and never, of course, was she made to
+tell so many lies."
+
+"Science (i.e. learning), which acted as a sceptre in the hand of
+Johnson, and was used as a club by Dr. Parr, became a lady's fan,
+when played with by George Henry Glasse."
+
+"Hope is drawn with an anchor always, and Common Sense is never
+strong enough to draw it up."
+
+"The poppy which Nature sows among the corn, to shew us that sleep is
+as necessary as bread." [1]
+
+[Footnote 1: Or to shew us that the harvest diminishes with sloth,
+and that what we gain in sleep we lose in bread. But _qui dort,
+dine_.]
+
+"The best writers are not the best friends; and the last character is
+more to be valued than the first by cotemporaries: after fifty years,
+indeed, the others carry away all the applause."
+
+This is the reason why posterity always takes part with the famous
+author or man of genius against those who witnessed his meanness or
+suffered from his selfishness; why fresh apologists will constantly
+be found for Bacon's want of principle and Johnson's want of manners.
+
+In the course of his famous definition or description of wit, Barrow
+says: "Sometimes it lieth in pat allusion to a known story, or in
+seasonable application of a trivial saying: sometimes it playeth in
+words and phrases, taking advantage from the ambiguity of their sense
+or the affinity of their sound." If this be so, she possessed it in
+abundance. In a letter, dated Bath, 26th April, 1818,--about the time
+when Talleyrand said of Lady F.S.'s robe: "_Elle commence trop tard
+et finit trop tôt_,"--she writes:
+
+"A genteel young clergyman, in our Upper Crescent, told his mamma
+about ten days ago, that he had lost his heart to pretty Miss
+Prideaux, and that he must absolutely marry her or die. _La chère
+mère_ of course replied gravely: 'My dear, you have not been
+acquainted with the lady above a fortnight: let me recommend you to
+see more of her.' 'More of her!' exclaimed the lad, 'why I have seen
+down to the fifth rib on each side already.' This story will serve to
+convince Captain T. Fellowes and yourself, that as you have always
+acknowledged the British Belles to _exceed_ those of every other
+nation, you may now say with truth, that they _outstrip_ them."
+
+On the 1st July, 1818:
+
+"The heat has certainly exhausted my faculties, and I have but just
+life enough left to laugh at the fourteen tailors who, united under a
+flag with '_Liberty and Independence_' on it, went to vote for some
+of these gay fellows, I forget which, but the motto is ill chosen,
+said I, they should have written up, '_Measures not Men_'"
+
+Her verses are advantageously distinguished amongst those of her
+blue-stocking contemporaries by happy turns of thought and
+expression, natural playfulness, and an abundant flow of idiomatic
+language. But her facility was a fatal gift, as it has proved to most
+female aspirants to poetic fame, who rarely stoop to the labour of
+the file. Although the first rule laid down by Goldsmith's
+connoisseur[1] is far from universally applicable to productions of
+the pencil or the pen, all fruitful writers would do well to act upon
+it, and what Mrs. Piozzi could do when she took pains is decisively
+proved by her "Streatham Portraits."
+
+[Footnote 1: "Upon my asking him how he had acquired the art of a
+conoscente so very suddenly, he assured me that nothing was more
+easy. The whole secret consisted in an adherence to two rules: the
+one always to observe that the picture might have been better if the
+painter had taken more pains; and the other to praise the works of
+Pietro Perugino."--_The Vicar of Wakefield_, ch. xx.]
+
+She was wanting in refinement, which very few of the eighteenth
+century wits and authors possessed according to more modern notions;
+and she abounded in vanity, which, if not necessarily a baneful or
+unamiable quality, is a fruitful source of folly and peculiarly
+calculated to provoke censure or ridicule. In her, fortunately, its
+effects were a good deal modified by the frankness of its avowal and
+display, by her habits of self-examination, by her impulsive
+generosity of character, and by her readiness to admit the claims and
+consult the feelings of others. To seek out and appreciate merit as
+she appreciated it, is a high merit in itself.
+
+Her piety was genuine; and old-fashioned politicians, whose watchword
+is Church and King, will be delighted with her politics. Literary
+men, considering how many curious inquiries depend upon her accuracy,
+will be more anxious about her truthfulness, and I have had ample
+opportunities of testing it; having not only been led to compare her
+narratives with those of others, but to collate her own statements of
+the same transactions or circumstances at distant intervals or to
+different persons. It is difficult to keep up a large correspondence
+without frequent repetition. Sir Walter Scott used to write precisely
+the same things to three or four fine-lady friends, and Mrs. Piozzi
+could no more be expected to find a fresh budget of news or gossip
+for each epistle than the author of "Waverley." Thus, in 1815, she
+writes to a Welsh baronet from Bath:
+
+"We have had a fine Dr. Holland here.[1] He has seen and written
+about the Ionian Islands; and means now to practise as a physician,
+exchanging the Cyclades, say we wits and wags, for the Sick Ladies.
+We made quite a lion of the man. I was invited to every house he
+visited at for the last three days; so I got the _Queue du lion_
+despairing of _le Coeur_."
+
+[Footnote 1: Sir Henry Holland, Bart., who, with many other titles to
+distinction, is one of the most active and enterprising of modern
+travellers.]
+
+Two other letters written about the same time contain the same piece
+of intelligence and the same joke. She was very fond of writing
+marginal notes; and after annotating one copy of a book, would take
+up another and do the same. I have never detected a substantial
+variation in her narratives, even in those which were more or less
+dictated by pique; and as she generally drew upon the "Thraliana" for
+her materials, this, having been carefully and calmly compiled,
+affords an additional guarantee for her accuracy.
+
+Her taste for reading never left her or abated to the last. In
+reference to a remark (in Boswell) on the irksomeness of books to
+people of advanced age, she writes: "Not to me at eighty years old:
+being grieved that year (1819) particularly, I was forced upon study
+to relieve my mind, and it had the due effect. I wrote this note in
+1820."
+
+She sometimes gives anecdotes of authors. Thus, in the letter just
+quoted, she says: "Lord Byron protests his wife was a fortune without
+money, a belle without beauty, and a blue-stocking without either wit
+or learning." But her literary information grew scanty as she grew
+old: "The literary world (she writes in 1821) is to me terra
+incognita, far more deserving of the name, now Parry and Ross are
+returned, than any part of the polar regions:" and her opinions of
+the rising authors are principally valuable as indications of the
+obstacles which budding reputations must overcome. "Pindar's fine
+remark respecting the different effects of music on different
+characters, holds equally true of genius: so many as are not
+delighted by it are disturbed, perplexed, irritated. The beholder
+either recognises it as a projected form of his own being, that moves
+before him with a glory round its head, or recoils from it as a
+spectre."[1] The octogenarian critic of the Johnsonian school recoils
+from "Frankenstein" as from an incarnation of the Evil Spirit: she
+does not know what to make of the "Tales of my Landlord"; and she
+inquires of an Irish acquaintance whether she retained recollection
+enough of her own country to be entertained with "that strange
+caricature, Castle Rack Rent." Contemporary judgments such as these
+(not more extravagant than Horace Walpole's) are to the historian of
+literature what fossil remains are to the geologist.
+
+[Footnote 1: Coleridge, "Aids to Reflection."]
+
+Although perhaps no biographical sketch was ever executed, as a
+labour of love, without an occasional attack of what Lord Macaulay
+calls the _Lues Boswelliana_ or fever of admiration, I hope it is
+unnecessary for me to say that I am not setting up Mrs. Piozzi as a
+model letter-writer, or an eminent author, or a pattern of the
+domestic virtues, or a fitting object of hero or heroine worship in
+any capacity. All I venture to maintain is, that her life and
+character, if only for the sake of the "associate forms," deserve to
+be vindicated against unjust reproach, and that she has written many
+things which are worth snatching from oblivion or preserving from
+decay.
+
+
+END OF THE FIRST VOLUME.
+
+
+
+
+LONDON
+
+PRINTED BY SPOTTISWOODE AND CO.
+
+NEW-STREET SQUARE
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Autobiography, Letters and Literary
+Remains of Mrs. Piozzi (Thrale) (2nd ed.) (2 vols.), by Mrs. Hester Lynch Piozzi
+
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+ Autobiograyhy Letters and Literary Remains of Mrs. Piozzi
+ (Thrale)
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Autobiography, Letters and Literary Remains
+of Mrs. Piozzi (Thrale) (2nd ed.) (2 vols.), by Mrs. Hester Lynch Piozzi
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Autobiography, Letters and Literary Remains of Mrs. Piozzi (Thrale) (2nd ed.) (2 vols.)
+ Edited with notes and Introductory Account of her life and writings
+
+Author: Mrs. Hester Lynch Piozzi
+
+Release Date: February 14, 2005 [EBook #15045]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LITERARY REMAINS OF MRS. PIOZZI ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Jonathan Ingram, Leonard Johnson and the PG Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+ <div class="ctr">
+ <a id="image01" name="image01"></a> <img src="images/image01.jpg"
+ alt="Portrait of Mrs. Piozzi." title=
+ "Portrait of Mrs. Piozzi." />
+ <p class="caption">
+ Portrait of Mrs. Piozzi
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="title">
+ <h1>
+ AUTOBIOGRAPHY
+ </h1>
+ <h1>
+ LETTERS AND LITERARY REMAINS
+ </h1>
+ <h5>
+ OF
+ </h5>
+ <h1>
+ MRS. PIOZZI (THRALE)
+ </h1>
+ <h3>
+ EDITED WITH NOTES
+ </h3>
+ <h5>
+ AND
+ </h5>
+ <h3>
+ AN INTRODUCTORY ACCOUNT OF HER LIFE AND WRITINGS
+ </h3>
+ <h5>
+ BY
+ </h5>
+ <h1>
+ A. HAYWARD, ESQ. Q.C.
+ </h1>
+ </div>
+ <hr />
+ <h5>
+ Welcome, Associate Forms, where'er we turn Fill, Streatham's
+ Hebe, the Johnsonian urn&mdash;St. Stephen's
+ </h5>
+ <hr />
+ <h5>
+ In Two Volumes
+ <br />
+ VOL. I.
+ </h5>
+ <h5>
+ SECOND EDITION
+ </h5>
+ <h3>
+ LONDON
+ <br />
+ LONGMAN, GREEN, LONGMAN, AND ROBERTS
+ <br />
+ 1861
+ </h3>
+ <hr />
+ <h2>
+ PREFACE
+ </h2>
+ <h2>
+ TO
+ </h2>
+ <h2>
+ THE SECOND EDITION.
+ </h2>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ THE first edition of a work of this kind is almost necessarily
+ imperfect; since the editor is commonly dependent for a great
+ deal of the required information upon sources the very existence
+ of which is unknown to him till reminiscences are revived, and
+ communications invited, by the announcement or publication of the
+ book. Some valuable contributions reached me too late to be
+ properly placed or effectively worked up; some, too late to be
+ included at all. The arrangement in this edition will therefore,
+ I trust, be found less faulty than in the first, whilst the
+ additions are large and valuable. They principally consist of
+ fresh extracts from Mrs. Piozzi's private diary ("Thraliana"),
+ amounting to more than fifty pages; of additional marginal notes
+ on books, and of copious extracts from letters hitherto
+ unpublished.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Amongst the effects of her friend Conway, the actor, after his
+ untimely death by drowning in North America, were a copy of Mrs.
+ Piozzi's "Travel Book" and a copy of Johnson's "Lives of the
+ Poets," each enriched by marginal notes in her handwriting. Such
+ of those in the "Travel Book" as were thought worth printing
+ appeared in "The Atlantic Monthly" for June last, from which I
+ have taken the liberty of copying the best. The "Lives of the
+ Poets" is now the property of Mr. William Alexander Smith, of New
+ York, who was so kind as to open a communication with me on the
+ subject, and to have the whole of the marginal notes transcribed
+ for my use at his expense.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Animated by the same liberal wish to promote a literary
+ undertaking, Mr. J.E. Gray, son of the Rev. Dr. Robert Gray, late
+ Bishop of Bristol, has placed at my disposal a series of letters
+ from Mrs. Piozzi to his father, extending over nearly twenty-five
+ years (from 1797 to the year of her death) and exceeding a
+ hundred in number. These have been of the greatest service in
+ enabling me to complete and verify the summary of that period of
+ her life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So much light is thrown by the new matter, especially by the
+ extracts from "Thraliana," on the alleged rupture between Johnson
+ and Mrs. Piozzi, that I have re-cast or re-written the part of
+ the Introduction relating to it, thinking that no pains should be
+ spared to get at the merits of a controversy which now involves,
+ not only the moral and social qualities of the great
+ lexicographer, but the degree of confidence to be placed in the
+ most brilliant and popular of modern critics, biographers and
+ historians. It is no impeachment of his integrity, no detraction
+ from the durable elements of his fame, to offer proof that his
+ splendid imagination ran away with him, or that reliance on his
+ wonderful memory made him careless of verifying his original
+ impressions before recording them in the most gorgeous and
+ memorable language.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No one likes to have foolish or erroneous notions imputed to him,
+ and I have pointed out some of the misapprehensions into which an
+ able writer in the "Edinburgh Review" (No. 231) has been hurried
+ by his eagerness to vindicate Lord Macaulay. Moreover, this
+ struck me to be as good a form as any for re-examining the
+ subject in all its bearings; and now that it has become common to
+ reprint articles in a collected shape, the comments of a
+ first-rate review can no longer be regarded as transitory.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I gladly seize the present opportunity to offer my best
+ acknowledgments for kind and valuable aid in various shapes, to
+ the Marquis of Lansdowne, His Excellency M. Sylvain Van de Weyer
+ (the Belgian Minister), the Viscountess Combermere, Mr. and the
+ Hon. Mrs. Monckton Milnes, the Hon. Mrs. Rowley, Miss Angharad
+ Lloyd, and the Rev. W.H. Owen, Vicar of St. Asaph and Dymerchion.
+ </p>
+ <div class="quotsig">
+ <p>
+ 8, St. James's Street:
+ <br />
+ Oct. 18th, 1861.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <hr />
+ <h2>
+ CONTENTS
+ </h2>
+ <h5>
+ OF
+ </h5>
+ <h2>
+ THE FIRST VOLUME
+ </h2>
+ <p class="quotdate">
+ PAGE
+ </p>
+ <ul class="toc">
+ <li>Origin and Materials of the Work<span class=
+ "tocright"><a href="#pg003">3</a>-<a href="#pg007">7</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Object of the Introduction<span class="tocright"><a href=
+ "#pg007">7</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Origin, Education, and Character of Thrale<span class=
+ "tocright"><a href="#pg007">7</a>-<a href="#pg011">11</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Introduction of Johnson to the Thrales<span class="tocright">
+ <a href="#pg011">11</a>-<a href="#pg014">14</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Johnson's Habits at the Period<span class=
+ "tocright"><a href="#pg014">14</a>-<a href=
+ "#pg020">20</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>His Household<span class="tocright"><a href=
+ "#pg021">21</a>-<a href="#pg024">24</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>His Social Position<span class="tocright"><a href=
+ "#pg025">25</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Society at Streatham<span class="tocright"><a href="#pg026">
+ 26</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Blue Stocking Parties<span class="tocright"><a href="#pg027">
+ 27</a>-<a href="#pg028">28</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Johnson's Fondness for Female Society<span class="tocright">
+ <a href="#pg029">29</a>-<a href="#pg035">35</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Nature of his Intimacy with Mrs. Thrale<span class=
+ "tocright"><a href="#pg035">35</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>His Verses to her<span class="tocright"><a href=
+ "#pg036">36</a>-<a href="#pg038">38</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Her Age<span class="tocright"><a href=
+ "#pg039">39</a>-<a href="#pg040">40</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Her Personal Appearance and Handwriting<span class=
+ "tocright"><a href="#pg041">41</a>-<a href="#pg042">42</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Portraits of her<span class="tocright"><a href=
+ "#pg043">43</a>-<a href="#pg044">44</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Boswell at Streatham<span class="tocright"><a href="#pg044">
+ 44</a>-<a href="#pg048">48</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Her Behaviour to Johnson<span class="tocright"><a href=
+ "#pg048">48</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Her Acquirements<span class="tocright"><a href=
+ "#pg049">49</a>-<a href="#pg052">52</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Johnson's Estimate of her<span class="tocright"><a href=
+ "#pg053">53</a>-<a href="#pg057">57</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Popular Estimate of her<span class="tocright"><a href=
+ "#pg058">58</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Manners of her Time<span class="tocright"><a href=
+ "#pg059">59</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Madame D'Arblay at Streatham<span class="tocright"><a href=
+ "#pg060">60</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Her Account of Conversations there<span class=
+ "tocright"><a href="#pg061">61</a>-<a href="#pg067">67</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Johnson's Politeness<span class="tocright"><a href="#pg068">
+ 68</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Mrs. Thrale's Domestic Trials<span class=
+ "tocright"><a href="#pg069">69</a>-<a href=
+ "#pg070">70</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Electioneering with Johnson<span class="tocright"><a href=
+ "#pg071">71</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Thrale's Embarrassments, and Johnson's Advice<span class=
+ "tocright"><a href="#pg072">72</a>-<a href="#pg074">74</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Johnson on Housekeeping and Dress<span class=
+ "tocright"><a href="#pg075">75</a>-<a href="#pg077">77</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>His Opinions on Marriage<span class="tocright"><a href=
+ "#pg078">78</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Johnson in the Country<span class="tocright"><a href=
+ "#pg079">79</a>-<a href="#pg080">80</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Johnson fond of riding in a Carriage, but a bad
+ Traveller<span class="tocright"><a href=
+ "#pg080">80</a>-<a href="#pg081">81</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>His Want of Taste for Music or Painting<span class=
+ "tocright"><a href="#pg082">82</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Tour in Wales<span class="tocright"><a href=
+ "#pg082">82</a>-<a href="#pg089">89</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Tour in France<span class="tocright"><a href=
+ "#pg090">90</a>-<a href="#pg091">91</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Baretti<span class="tocright"><a href=
+ "#pg091">91</a>-<a href="#pg099">99</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Campbell's Diary<span class="tocright"><a href=
+ "#pg099">99</a>-<a href="#pg102">102</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Mrs. Thrale's Account of her Quarrel with
+ Baretti<span class="tocright"><a href="#pg103">103</a>-<a href=
+ "#pg108">108</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>His Account<span class="tocright"><a href=
+ "#pg108">108</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Alleged Slight to Johnson<span class="tocright"><a href=
+ "#pg109">109</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Miss Streatfield<span class="tocright"><a href=
+ "#pg110">110</a>-<a href="#pg122">122</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Thrale's Infidelity<span class="tocright"><a href=
+ "#pg123">123</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Madame D'Arblay as an Inmate<span class="tocright"><a href=
+ "#pg124">124</a>-<a href="#pg126">126</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Dr. Burney<span class="tocright"><a href=
+ "#pg127">127</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Mrs. Thrale canvassing Southwark<span class=
+ "tocright"><a href="#pg127">127</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Attack by Rioters on the Brewhouse<span class=
+ "tocright"><a href="#pg128">128</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Thrale's Illness and Winter in Grosvenor Square<span class=
+ "tocright"><a href="#pg129">129</a>-<a href=
+ "#pg131">131</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Proposed Tour<span class="tocright"><a href=
+ "#pg131">131</a>-<a href="#pg132">132</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Thrale's Death<span class="tocright"><a href=
+ "#pg132">132</a>-<a href="#pg136">136</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>His Will<span class="tocright"><a href=
+ "#pg137">137</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Johnson as Executor<span class="tocright"><a href=
+ "#pg138">138</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Her Management of the Brewery<span class=
+ "tocright"><a href="#pg139">139</a>-<a href=
+ "#pg140">140</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Italian Translation<span class="tocright"><a href=
+ "#pg141">141</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>A strange Incident<span class="tocright"><a href=
+ "#pg142">142</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Mrs. Montagu&mdash;Mr. Crutchley<span class=
+ "tocright"><a href="#pg143">143</a>-<a href=
+ "#pg144">144</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Sale of the Brewery<span class="tocright"><a href=
+ "#pg144">144</a>-<a href="#pg147">147</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Mrs. Thrale's Introduction to Piozzi<span class=
+ "tocright"><a href="#pg147">147</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Scene with him at Dr. Burney's<span class=
+ "tocright"><a href="#pg148">148</a>-<a href=
+ "#pg151">151</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Her early Impressions of him<span class="tocright"><a href=
+ "#pg152">152</a>-<a href="#pg153">153</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Melancholy Reflections<span class="tocright"><a href=
+ "#pg154">154</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Johnson's Regard for Thrale<span class="tocright"><a href=
+ "#pg155">155</a>-<a href="#pg156">156</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Mrs. Thrale's and Johnson's Feelings towards each
+ other<span class="tocright"><a href="#pg156">156</a>-<a href=
+ "#pg160">160</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Johnson at Streatham after Thrale's Death<span class=
+ "tocright"><a href="#pg161">161</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Piozzi&mdash;Verses to him<span class="tocright"><a href=
+ "#pg162">162</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Johnson's Health<span class="tocright"><a href=
+ "#pg163">163</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Self-Communings<span class="tocright"><a href=
+ "#pg164">164</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Town Gossip<span class="tocright"><a href=
+ "#pg165">165</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Verses on Pacchierotti<span class="tocright"><a href=
+ "#pg165">165</a>-<a href="#pg167">167</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Fears for Johnson<span class="tocright"><a href=
+ "#pg167">167</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Reports of her marrying again<span class=
+ "tocright"><a href="#pg167">167</a>-<a href=
+ "#pg168">168</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Reasons for quitting Streatham<span class=
+ "tocright"><a href="#pg169">169</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Resolution to quit approved by Johnson<span class="tocright">
+ <a href="#pg169">169</a>-<a href="#pg170">170</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Complaints of Johnson's Indifference<span class=
+ "tocright"><a href="#pg171">171</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Piozzi&mdash;to marry or not to marry<span class="tocright">
+ <a href="#pg172">172</a>-<a href="#pg175">175</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Was Johnson driven out of Streatham<span class=
+ "tocright"><a href="#pg176">176</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>His Farewell to Streatham<span class="tocright"><a href=
+ "#pg177">177</a>-<a href="#pg178">178</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>His last Year there<span class="tocright"><a href=
+ "#pg179">179</a>-<a href="#pg185">185</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Johnson and Mrs. Thrale at Brighton<span class=
+ "tocright"><a href="#pg186">186</a>-<a href=
+ "#pg188">188</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Conflicting Feelings<span class="tocright"><a href="#pg189">
+ 189</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Gives up Piozzi<span class="tocright"><a href=
+ "#pg190">190</a>-<a href="#pg191">191</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Meditated Journey to Italy<span class="tocright"><a href=
+ "#pg192">192</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Parting with Piozzi<span class="tocright"><a href=
+ "#pg193">193</a>-<a href="#pg195">195</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Unkindness of Daughters<span class="tocright"><a href=
+ "#pg197">197</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Position as regards Johnson<span class="tocright"><a href=
+ "#pg198">198</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Objections to him as an Inmate<span class=
+ "tocright"><a href="#pg199">199</a>-<a href=
+ "#pg204">204</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Parting with Piozzi<span class="tocright"><a href=
+ "#pg205">205</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Verses to him on his Departure<span class=
+ "tocright"><a href="#pg206">206</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Her undiminished Regard for Johnson proved by
+ </li>
+ <li>their Correspondence<span class="tocright"><a href="#pg207">
+ 207</a>-<a href="#pg214">214</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Character of Daughters<span class="tocright"><a href=
+ "#pg212">212</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Madame D'Arblay, Scene with Johnson<span class=
+ "tocright"><a href="#pg214">214</a>-<a href=
+ "#pg216">216</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Lord Brougham's Commentary<span class="tocright"><a href=
+ "#pg216">216</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Correspondence with Johnson<span class="tocright"><a href=
+ "#pg217">217</a>-<a href="#pg219">219</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Recall of Piozzi<span class="tocright"><a href=
+ "#pg220">220</a>-<a href="#pg221">221</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Trip to London<span class="tocright"><a href=
+ "#pg222">222</a>-<a href="#pg223">223</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Verses to Piozzi on his Return<span class=
+ "tocright"><a href="#pg224">224</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Journey with Daughters<span class="tocright"><a href=
+ "#pg225">225</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Feelings on Piozzi's Return, and Marriage<span class=
+ "tocright"><a href="#pg226">226</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Objections to her Second Marriage discussed<span class=
+ "tocright"><a href="#pg227">227</a>-<a href=
+ "#pg230">230</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Correspondence with Madame D'Arblay on the
+ Marriage<span class="tocright"><a href=
+ "#pg231">231</a>-<a href="#pg233">233</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Objections of Daughters&mdash;Lady Keith<span class=
+ "tocright"><a href="#pg233">233</a>-<a href=
+ "#pg236">236</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Correspondence with Johnson as to the Marriage<span class=
+ "tocright"><a href="#pg236">236</a>-<a href=
+ "#pg243">243</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Baretti's Story of her alleged Deceit<span class="tocright">
+ <a href="#pg243">243</a>-<a href="#pg247">247</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Her uniform Kindness to Johnson<span class=
+ "tocright"><a href="#pg247">247</a>-<a href=
+ "#pg248">248</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Johnson's Feelings and Conduct<span class=
+ "tocright"><a href="#pg249">249</a>-<a href=
+ "#pg251">251</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Miss Wynn's Commonplace Book<span class="tocright"><a href=
+ "#pg251">251</a>-<a href="#pg253">253</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Johnson's unfounded Objections to the Marriage and erroneous
+ Impressions of Piozzi<span class="tocright"><a href=
+ "#pg254">254</a>-<a href="#pg255">255</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Miss Seward's Account of his Loves<span class=
+ "tocright"><a href="#pg256">256</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Misrepresentation and erroneous Theory of a
+ Critic<span class="tocright"><a href="#pg257">257</a>-<a href=
+ "#pg260">260</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Last Days and Death of Johnson<span class=
+ "tocright"><a href="#pg261">261</a>-<a href=
+ "#pg262">262</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Lord Macaulay's Summary of Mrs. Piozzi's Treatment of
+ Johnson<span class="tocright"><a href="#pg262">262</a>-<a href=
+ "#pg266">266</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Life in Italy<span class="tocright"><a href=
+ "#pg266">266</a>-<a href="#pg269">269</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Projected Work on Johnson<span class="tocright"><a href=
+ "#pg269">269</a>-<a href="#pg270">270</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>The Florence Miscellany<span class="tocright"><a href=
+ "#pg271">271</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Correspondence with Cadell and Publication of the
+ "Anecdotes"<span class="tocright"><a href=
+ "#pg272">272</a>-<a href="#pg274">274</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Her alleged Inaccuracy, with Instances<span class="tocright">
+ <a href="#pg274">274</a>-<a href="#pg285">285</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>H. Walpole<span class="tocright"><a href=
+ "#pg286">286</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Peter Pindar<span class="tocright"><a href=
+ "#pg287">287</a>-<a href="#pg289">289</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>H. Walpole again<span class="tocright"><a href=
+ "#pg290">290</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Hannah More<span class="tocright"><a href=
+ "#pg291">291</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Marginal Notes on the "Anecdotes"<span class=
+ "tocright"><a href="#pg292">292</a>-<a href=
+ "#pg297">297</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Extracts from Dr. Lort's Letters<span class=
+ "tocright"><a href="#pg297">297</a>-<a href=
+ "#pg299">299</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Her Thoughts on her Return from Italy<span class="tocright">
+ <a href="#pg299">299</a>-<a href="#pg302">302</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Her Reception<span class="tocright"><a href=
+ "#pg303">303</a>-<a href="#pg306">306</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Miss Seward's Impressions of her and Piozzi<span class=
+ "tocright"><a href="#pg307">307</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Publication of the "Letters"<span class="tocright"><a href=
+ "#pg307">307</a>-<a href="#pg308">308</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Opinions on them&mdash;Madame D'Arblay, Queen Charlotte,
+ <br />
+ Hannah More, and Miss Seward<span class="tocright"><a href=
+ "#pg309">309</a>-<a href="#pg314">314</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Baretti's libellous Attacks<span class="tocright"><a href=
+ "#pg314">314</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Her Character of him on his Death<span class=
+ "tocright"><a href="#pg315">315</a>-<a href=
+ "#pg318">318</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>"The Sentimental Mother"<span class="tocright"><a href=
+ "#pg319">319</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>"Johnson's Ghost"<span class="tocright"><a href=
+ "#pg320">320</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>The Travel Book<span class="tocright"><a href=
+ "#pg321">321</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Offer to Cadell<span class="tocright"><a href=
+ "#pg322">322</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Publication of the Book and Criticisms&mdash;Walpole and Miss
+ Seward<span class="tocright"><a href="#pg322">322</a>-<a href=
+ "#pg324">324</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Mrs. Piozzi's Theory of Style<span class=
+ "tocright"><a href="#pg325">325</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Attacked by Walpole and Gifford<span class=
+ "tocright"><a href="#pg326">326</a>-<a href=
+ "#pg327">327</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>The Preface<span class="tocright"><a href=
+ "#pg327">327</a>-<a href="#pg328">328</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Extracts<span class="tocright"><a href=
+ "#pg329">329</a>-<a href="#pg335">335</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Anecdote of Goldsmith<span class="tocright"><a href="#pg336">
+ 336</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Publication of her "Synonyms"&mdash;Gifford's
+ Attack<span class="tocright"><a href="#pg337">337</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Extract<span class="tocright"><a href=
+ "#pg338">338</a>-<a href="#pg341">341</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Remarks on the Appearance of Boswell's Life of
+ Johnson<span class="tocright"><a href="#pg342">342</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>"Retrospection"<span class="tocright"><a href=
+ "#pg343">343</a>-<a href="#pg344">344</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Moore's Anecdotes of her and Piozzi<span class=
+ "tocright"><a href="#pg344">344</a>-<a href=
+ "#pg345">345</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Lord Lansdowne's Visit and Impressions<span class="tocright">
+ <a href="#pg345">345</a>-<a href="#pg346">346</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Adoption and Education of Piozzi's Nephew, afterwards Sir
+ John Salusbury<span class="tocright"><a href=
+ "#pg347">347</a>-<a href="#pg350">350</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Life in Wales<span class="tocright"><a href=
+ "#pg351">351</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Character and Habits of Piozzi<span class=
+ "tocright"><a href="#pg352">352</a>-<a href=
+ "#pg353">353</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Brynbella<span class="tocright"><a href=
+ "#pg354">354</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Illness and Death of Piozzi<span class="tocright"><a href=
+ "#pg355">355</a>-<a href="#pg356">356</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Miss Thrale's Marriage<span class="tocright"><a href=
+ "#pg358">358</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>The Conway Episode<span class="tocright"><a href=
+ "#pg357">357</a>-<a href="#pg361">361</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Anecdotes<span class="tocright"><a href=
+ "#pg361">361</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Celebration of her Eightieth Birthday<span class="tocright">
+ <a href="#pg361">361</a>-<a href="#pg362">362</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Her Death and Will<span class="tocright"><a href=
+ "#pg362">362</a>-<a href="#pg364">364</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Madame D'Arblay's Parallel between Mrs. Piozzi and Madame de
+ Staël<span class="tocright"><a href="#pg364">364</a>-<a href=
+ "#pg369">369</a></span>
+ </li>
+ <li>Character of Mrs. Piozzi, Moral and
+ Intellectual<span class="tocright"><a href=
+ "#pg369">369</a>-<a href="#pg375">375</a></span>
+ </li>
+ </ul>
+ <hr />
+ <p class="ctr">
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg001" id="pg001">001</a></span>
+ AUTOBIOGRAPHY &amp;c. OF MRS. PIOZZI
+ </p>
+ <p class="ctr">
+ VOL. I
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg002" id="pg002">002</a></span>
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg003" id="pg003">003</a></span>
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ INTRODUCTION:
+ </h2>
+ <h2>
+ LIFE AND WRITINGS OF MRS. PIOZZI.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Dr. Johnson was hailed the colossus of Literature by a generation
+ who measured him against men of no common mould&mdash;against
+ Hume, Robertson, Gibbon, Warburton, the Wartons, Fielding,
+ Richardson, Smollett, Gray, Goldsmith, and Burke. Any one of
+ these may have surpassed the great lexicographer in some branch
+ of learning or domain of genius; but as a man of letters, in the
+ highest sense of the term, he towered pre-eminent, and his
+ superiority to each of them (except Burke) in general
+ acquirements, intellectual power, and force of expression, was
+ hardly contested by his contemporaries. To be associated with his
+ name has become a title of distinction in itself; and some
+ members of his circle enjoy, and have fairly earned, a peculiar
+ advantage in this respect. In their capacity of satellites
+ revolving round the sun of their idolatry, they attracted and
+ reflected his light and heat. As humble companions of their
+ <i>Magnolia grandiflora</i>, they did more than live with
+ it<span class="fnref">[1]</span>; they gathered and <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg004" id="pg004">004</a></span> preserved the
+ choicest of its flowers. Thanks to them, his reputation is kept
+ alive more by what has been saved of his conversation than by his
+ books; and his colloquial exploits necessarily revive the memory
+ of the friends (or victims) who elicited and recorded them.
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] "Je ne suis pas la rose, mais j'ai vécu près
+ d'elle."&mdash;<i>Constant</i>.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ If the two most conspicuous among these have hitherto gained
+ notoriety rather than what is commonly understood by fame, a
+ discriminating posterity is already beginning to make reparation
+ for the wrong. Boswell's "Letters to Temple," edited by Mr.
+ Francis, with "Boswelliana," printed for the Philobiblion Society
+ by Mr. Milnes, led, in 1857, to a revisal of the harsh sentence
+ passed on one whom the most formidable of his censors, Lord
+ Macaulay, has declared to be not less decidedly the first of
+ biographers, than Homer is the first of heroic poets, Shakspeare
+ the first of dramatists, or Demosthenes the first of orators. The
+ result was favourable to Boswell, although the vulnerable points
+ of his character were still more glaringly displayed. The appeal
+ about to be hazarded on behalf of Mrs. Piozzi, will involve
+ little or no risk of this kind. Her ill-wishers made the most of
+ the event which so injuriously affected her reputation at the
+ time of its occurrence; and the marked tendency of every
+ additional disclosure of the circumstances has been to elevate
+ her. No candid person will read her Autobiography, or her
+ Letters, without arriving at the conclusion that her long life
+ was morally, if not conventionally, irreproachable; and that her
+ talents were <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg005" id=
+ "pg005">005</a></span> sufficient to confer on her writings a
+ value and attraction of their own, apart from what they possess
+ as illustrations of a period or a school. When the papers which
+ form the basis of this work were laid before Lord Macaulay, he
+ gave it as his opinion that they afforded materials for a "most
+ interesting and durably popular volume."<span class=
+ "fnref">[1]</span>
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] His letter, dated August 22, 1859, was addressed to Mr. T.
+ Longman. The editorship of the papers was not proposed to me
+ till after his death, and I had never any personal
+ communication with him on the subject; although in the
+ Edinburgh Review for July 1857, I ventured, with the same
+ freedom which I have used in vindicating Mrs. Piozzi, to
+ dispute the paradoxical judgment he had passed on Boswell. The
+ materials which reached me after I had undertaken the work, and
+ of which he was not aware, would nearly fill a volume.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ They comprise:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1. Autobiographical Memoirs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. Letters, mostly addressed to the late Sir James Fellowes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3. Fugitive pieces of her composition, most of which have never
+ appeared in print.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4. Manuscript notes by her on Wraxall's Memoirs, and on her own
+ published works, namely: "Anecdotes of the late Samuel Johnson,
+ LL.D., during the last twenty years of his life," one volume,
+ 1786: "Letters to and from the late Samuel Johnson, LL.D.,
+ &amp;c.," in two volumes, 1788: "Observations and Reflections
+ made in the course of a journey through France, Italy, and
+ Germany," in two volumes, 1789: "Retrospection; or, Review of the
+ most striking and important Events, Characters, Situations, and
+ their Consequences <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg006" id=
+ "pg006">006</a></span> which the last Eighteen Hundred Years have
+ presented to the View of Mankind," in two volumes, quarto, 1801.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The "Autobiographical Memoirs," and the annotated books, were
+ given by her to the late Sir James Fellowes, of Adbury House,
+ Hants, M.D., F.R.S., to whom the letters were addressed. He and
+ the late Sir John Piozzi Salusbury were her executors, and the
+ present publication takes place in pursuance of an agreement with
+ their personal representatives, the Rev. G.A. Salusbury, Rector
+ of Westbury, Salop, and Captain J. Butler Fellowes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Large and valuable additions to the original stock of materials
+ have reached me since the announcement of the work.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Rev. Dr. Wellesley, Principal of New Inn Hall, has kindly
+ placed at my disposal his copy of Boswell's "Life of Johnson"
+ (edition of 1816), plentifully sprinkled with marginal notes by
+ Mrs. Piozzi.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Rev. Samuel Lysons, of Hempsted Court, Gloucester, has
+ liberally allowed me the free use of his valuable collection of
+ books and manuscripts, including numerous letters from Mrs.
+ Piozzi to his father and uncle, the Rev. Daniel Lysons and Mr.
+ Samuel Lysons.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From 1776 to 1809 Mrs. Piozzi kept a copious diary and note-book,
+ called "Thraliana." Johnson thus alludes to it in a letter of
+ September 6th, 1777: "As you have little to do, I suppose you are
+ pretty diligent at the 'Thraliana;' and a very curious collection
+ posterity will find it. Do not remit the practice <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg007" id="pg007">007</a></span> of writing
+ down occurrences as they arise, of whatever kind, and be very
+ punctual in annexing the dates. Chronology, you know, is the eye
+ of history. Do not omit painful casualties or unpleasing
+ passages; they make the variegation of existence; and there are
+ many passages of which I will not promise, with Æneas, <i>et hæc
+ olim meminisse juvabit</i>." "Thraliana," which at one time she
+ thought of burning, is now 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 and much valuable information extracted from it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I shall have many minor obligations to acknowledge as I proceed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Unless Mrs. Piozzi's character and social position are freshly
+ remembered, her reminiscences and literary remains will lose much
+ of their interest and utility. It has therefore been thought
+ advisable to recapitulate, by way of introduction, what has been
+ ascertained from other sources concerning her; especially during
+ her intimacy with Johnson, which lasted nearly twenty years, and
+ exercised a marked influence on his tone of mind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This year (1765)," says Boswell, "was distinguished by his
+ (Johnson) being introduced into the family of Mr. Thrale, one of
+ the most eminent brewers in England, and member of Parliament for
+ the borough of Southwark.... Johnson used to give this account of
+ the rise of Mr. Thrale's father: 'He worked at six shillings a
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg008" id="pg008">008</a></span>
+ week for twenty years in the great brewery, which afterwards was
+ his own. The proprietor of it had an only daughter, who was
+ married to a nobleman. It was not fit that a peer should continue
+ the business. On the old man's death, therefore, the brewery was
+ to be sold. To find a purchaser for so large a property was a
+ difficult matter; and after some time, it was suggested that it
+ would be advisable to treat with Thrale, a sensible, active,
+ honest man, who had been employed in the house, and to transfer
+ the whole to him for thirty thousand pounds, security being taken
+ upon the property. This was accordingly settled. In eleven years
+ Thrale paid the purchase money. He acquired a large fortune, and
+ lived to be a member of Parliament for Southwark. But what was
+ most remarkable was the liberality with which he used his riches.
+ He gave his son and daughters the best education. The esteem
+ which his good conduct procured him from the nobleman who had
+ married his master's daughter made him be treated with much
+ attention; and his son, both at school and at the University of
+ Oxford, associated with young men of the first rank. His
+ allowance from his father, after he left college, was splendid;
+ not less than a thousand a year. This, in a man who had risen as
+ old Thrale did, was a very extraordinary instance of generosity.
+ He used to say, 'If this young dog does not find so much after I
+ am gone as he expects, let him remember that he has had a great
+ deal in my own time.'"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What is here stated regarding Thrale's origin, on <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg009" id="pg009">009</a></span> the alleged
+ authority of Johnson, is incorrect. The elder Thrale was the
+ nephew of Halsey, the proprietor of the brewery whose daughter
+ was married to a nobleman (Lord Cobham), and he naturally
+ nourished hopes of being his uncle's successor. In the Abbey
+ Church of St. Albans, there is a monument to some members of the
+ Thrale family who died between 1676 and 1704, adorned with a
+ shield of arms and a crest on a ducal coronet. Mrs. Thrale's
+ marginal note on Boswell's account of her husband's family is
+ curious and characteristic:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Edmund Halsey was son to a miller at St. Albans, with whom he
+ quarrelled, like Ralph in the 'Maid of the Mill,' and ran away to
+ London with a very few shillings in his pocket.<span class=
+ "fnref">[1]</span> He was eminently handsome, and old Child of
+ the Anchor Brewhouse, Southwark, took him in as what we call a
+ broomstick clerk, to sweep the yard, &amp;c. Edmund Halsey
+ behaved so well he was soon preferred to be a house-clerk, and
+ then, having free access to his master's table, married his only
+ daughter, and succeeded to the business upon Child's demise.
+ Being now rich and prosperous, he turned his eyes homewards,
+ where he learned that sister Sukey had married a hardworking man
+ at Offley in Hertfordshire, and had many children. He sent for
+ one of them to London (my Mr. Thrale's father); said he would
+ make a man of him, and did so: but made him work very hard, and
+ treated him very roughly, Halsey <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+ "pg010" id="pg010">010</a></span> being more proud than tender,
+ and his only child, a daughter, married to Lord Cobham.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Old Thrale, however, as these fine writers call him,&mdash;then
+ a young fellow, and, like his uncle, eminent for personal
+ beauty,&mdash;made himself so useful to Mr. Halsey that the
+ weight of the business fell entirely on him; and while Edmund was
+ canvassing the borough and visiting the viscountess, Ralph Thrale
+ was getting money both for himself and his principal: who,
+ envious of his success with a wench they both liked but who
+ preferred the young man to the old one, died, leaving him never a
+ guinea, and he bought the brewhouse of Lord and Lady Cobham,
+ making an excellent bargain, with the money he had saved."
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] In "Thraliana" she says: "strolled to London with only
+ 4<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> in his pocket."
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ When, in the next page but one, Boswell describes Thrale as
+ presenting the character of a plain independent English squire,
+ she writes: "No, no! Mr. Thrale's manners presented the character
+ of a gay man of the town: like Millamant, in Congreve's comedy,
+ he abhorred the country and everything in it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In "Thraliana" after a corresponding statement, she adds: "He
+ (the elder Thrale) educated his son and three daughters quite in
+ a high style. His son he wisely connected with the Cobhams and
+ their relations, Grenvilles, Lyttletons, and Pitts, to whom he
+ lent money, and they lent assistance of every other kind, so that
+ my Mr. Thrale was bred up at Stowe, and Stoke and Oxford, and
+ every genteel place; had been abroad with Lord Westcote, whose
+ expenses old Thrale cheerfully paid, I suppose, who was thus a
+ kind of tutor to the <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg011" id=
+ "pg011">011</a></span> young man, who had not failed to profit by
+ these advantages, and who was, when he came down to Offley to see
+ his father's birthplace, a very handsome and well accomplished
+ gentleman."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After expatiating on the advantages of birth, and the presumption
+ of new men in attempting to found a new system of gentility,
+ Boswell proceeds: "Mr. Thrale had married Miss Hester Lynch
+ Salusbury, of good Welsh extraction, a lady of lively talents,
+ improved by education. That Johnson's introduction into Mr.
+ Thrale's family, which contributed so much to the happiness of
+ his life, was owing to her desire for his conversation, is a very
+ probable and the general supposition; but it is not the truth.
+ Mr. Murphy, who was intimate with Mr. Thrale, having spoken very
+ highly of Dr. Johnson, he was requested to make them acquainted.
+ This being mentioned to Johnson, he accepted of an invitation to
+ dinner at Thrale's, and was so much pleased with his reception
+ both by Mr. and Mrs. Thrale, and they so much pleased with him,
+ that his invitations to their house were more and more frequent,
+ till at last he became one of the family, and an apartment was
+ appropriated to him, both in their house at Southwark and in
+ their villa at Streatham."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Long before this was written, Boswell had quarrelled with Mrs.
+ Thrale (as it is most convenient to call her till her second
+ marriage), and he takes every opportunity of depreciating her. He
+ might at least, however, have stated that, instead of sanctioning
+ the "general supposition" as to the introduction, she herself
+ supplied <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg012" id=
+ "pg012">012</a></span> the account of it which he adopts. In her
+ "Anecdotes" she says:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The first time I ever saw this extraordinary man was in the year
+ 1764, when Mr. Murphy, who had long been the friend and
+ confidential intimate of Mr. Thrale, persuaded him to wish for
+ Johnson's conversation, extolling it in terms which that of no
+ other person could have deserved, till we were only in doubt how
+ to obtain his company, and find an excuse for the invitation. The
+ celebrity of Mr. Woodhouse, a shoemaker, whose verses were at
+ that time the subject of common discourse, soon afforded a
+ pretence<span class="fnref">[1]</span>, and Mr. Murphy brought
+ Johnson to meet him, giving me general caution not to be
+ surprised at his figure, dress, or behaviour<span class=
+ "fnref">[1]</span>.... Mr. Johnson liked his new acquaintance so
+ much, however, that from that time he dined with us every
+ Thursday through the winter, and in the autumn of the next year
+ he followed us to Brighthelmstone, whence we were gone before his
+ arrival; so he was disappointed and enraged, and wrote us a
+ letter expressive of anger, which we were very desirous to
+ pacify, and to obtain his company again if <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg013" id="pg013">013</a></span> possible. Mr.
+ Murphy brought him back to us again very kindly, and from that
+ time his visits grew more frequent, till in the year 1766 his
+ health, which he had always complained of, grew so exceedingly
+ bad, that he could not stir out of his room in the court he
+ inhabited for many weeks together, I think months."
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] "He (Johnson) spoke with much contempt of the notice taken
+ of Woodhouse, the poetical shoemaker. He said that it was all
+ vanity and childishness, and that such objects were to those
+ who patronised them, mere mirrors of their own superiority.
+ They had better, said he, furnish the man with good implements
+ for his trade, than raise subscriptions for his poems. He may
+ make an excellent shoemaker, but can never make a good poet. A
+ schoolboy's exercise may be a pretty thing for a schoolboy, but
+ it is no treat to a man."&mdash;<i>Maxwell's Collectanea</i>.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ The "Anecdotes" were written in Italy, where she had no means of
+ reference. The account given in "Thraliana" has a greater air of
+ freshness, and proves Boswell right as to the year.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It was on the second Thursday of the month of January, 1765,
+ that I first saw Mr. Johnson in a room. Murphy, whose intimacy
+ with Mr. Thrale had been of many years' standing, was one day
+ dining with us at our house in Southwark, and was zealous that we
+ should be acquainted with Johnson, of whose moral and literary
+ character he spoke in the most exalted terms; and so whetted our
+ desire of seeing him soon that we were only disputing <i>how</i>
+ he should be invited, <i>when</i> he should be invited, and what
+ should be the pretence. At last it was resolved that one
+ Woodhouse, a shoemaker, who had written some verses, and been
+ asked to some tables, should likewise be asked to ours, and made
+ a temptation to Mr. Johnson to meet him: accordingly he came, and
+ Mr. Murphy at four o'clock brought Mr. Johnson to dinner. We
+ liked each other so well that the next Thursday was appointed for
+ the same company to meet, exclusive of the shoemaker, and since
+ then Johnson has remained till this day our constant
+ acquaintance, visitor, companion, and friend." <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg014" id="pg014">014</a></span>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the "Anecdotes" she goes on to say that when she and her
+ husband called on Johnson one morning in Johnson's Court, Fleet
+ Street, he gave way to such an uncontrolled burst of despair
+ regarding the world to come, that Mr. Thrale tried to stop his
+ mouth by placing one hand before it, and desired her to prevail
+ on him to quit his close habitation for a period and come with
+ them to Streatham. He complied, and took up his abode with them
+ from before Midsummer till after Michaelmas in that year. During
+ the next sixteen years a room in each of their houses was set
+ apart for him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The principal difficulty at first was to induce him to live
+ peaceably with her mother, who took a strong dislike to him, and
+ constantly led the conversation to topics which he detested, such
+ as foreign news and politics. He revenged himself by writing to
+ the newspapers accounts of events which never happened, for the
+ sole purpose of mystifying her; and probably not a few of his
+ mischievous fictions have passed current for history. They made
+ up their differences before her death, and a Latin epitaph of the
+ most eulogistic order from his pen is inscribed upon her tomb.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It had been well for Mrs. Thrale and her guests if there had
+ existed no more serious objection to Johnson as an inmate. At the
+ commencement of the acquaintance, he was fifty-six; an age when
+ habits are ordinarily fixed: and many of his were of a kind which
+ it required no common temper and tact to tolerate or control.
+ They had been formed at a period when he was <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg015" id="pg015">015</a></span> frequently
+ subjected to the worst extremities of humiliating poverty and
+ want. He describes Savage, without money to pay for a night's
+ lodging in a cellar, walking about the streets till he was weary,
+ and sleeping in summer upon a bulk or in winter amongst the ashes
+ of a glass-house. He was Savage's associate on several occasions
+ of the sort. He told Sir Joshua Reynolds that, one night in
+ particular, when Savage and he walked round St. James's Square
+ for want of a lodging, they were not at all depressed; but in
+ high spirits, and brimful of patriotism, traversed the square for
+ several hours, inveighed against the minister, and "resolved they
+ would stand by their country." Whilst at college he threw away
+ the shoes left at his door to replace the worn-out pair in which
+ he appeared daily. His clothes were in so tattered a state whilst
+ he was writing for the "Gentleman's Magazine" that, instead of
+ taking his seat at Cave's table, he sate behind a screen and had
+ his victuals sent to him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Talking of the symptoms of Christopher Smart's madness, he said,
+ "Another charge was that he did not love clean linen; and I have
+ no passion for it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His deficiency in this respect seems to have made a lasting
+ impression on his hostess. Referring to a couplet in "The Vanity
+ of Human Wishes":&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ "Through all his veins the fever of renown
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Spreads</i> from the strong contagion of the gown,"
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ "he had desired me (says Boswell) to change <i>spreads</i> into
+ <i>burns.</i> I thought this alteration not only cured
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg016" id="pg016">016</a></span>
+ the fault, but was more poetical, as it might carry an allusion
+ to the shirt by which Hercules was inflamed." She has written in
+ the margin: "Every fever burns I believe; but Bozzy could think
+ only on Nessus' dirty shirt, or Dr. Johnson's." In another
+ marginal note she disclaims that attention to the Doctor's
+ costume for which Boswell gives her credit, when, after relating
+ how he had been called into a shop by Johnson to assist in the
+ choice of a pair of silver buckles, he adds: "Probably this
+ alteration in dress had been suggested by Mrs. Thrale, by
+ associating with whom his external appearance was much improved."
+ She writes: "it was suggested by Mr. Thrale, not by his wife."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In general his wigs were very shabby, and their foreparts were
+ burned away by the near approach of the candle, which his
+ short-sightedness rendered necessary in reading. At Streatham,
+ Mr. Thrale's valet had always a better wig ready, with which he
+ met Johnson at the parlour door when dinner was announced, and as
+ he went up stairs to bed, the same man followed him with another.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One of his applications to Cave for a trifling advance of money
+ is signed <i>Impransus</i> (Dinnerless); and he told Boswell that
+ he could fast two days without inconvenience, and had never been
+ hungry but once. What he meant by hungry is not easy to explain,
+ for his every day manner of eating was that of a half-famished
+ man. When at table, he was totally absorbed in the business of
+ the moment; his looks were riveted to his plate, till he had
+ satisfied his appetite; which was indulged with such in-*
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg017" id="pg017">017</a></span>
+ tenseness, that the veins of his forehead swelled, and generally
+ a strong perspiration was visible. Until he left off drinking
+ fermented liquors altogether, he acted on the maxim "claret for
+ boys, port for men, brandy for heroes." He preferred the
+ strongest because he said it did its work (<i>i.e.</i>
+ intoxicate) the soonest. He used to pour capillaire into his port
+ wine, and melted butter into his chocolate. His favourite dishes
+ are accurately enumerated by Peter Pindar:
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <h4>
+ MADAME PIOZZI <i>(loquitur).</i>
+ </h4>
+ <p>
+ "Dear Doctor Johnson loved a leg of pork,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And hearty on it would his grinders work:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He lik'd to eat it so much over done,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That <i>one</i> might shake the flesh from off the bone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A veal pye too, with sugar crammed and plums,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Was wondrous grateful to the Doctor's gums.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Though us'd from morn to night on fruit to stuff,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He vow'd his belly never had enough."
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Thackeray relates in his "Irish Sketches" that on his asking
+ for currant jelly for his venison at a public dinner, the waiter
+ replied, "It's all gone, your honour, but there's some capital
+ lobster sauce left." This would have suited Johnson equally well,
+ or better: he was so fond of lobster sauce that he would call for
+ the sauce-boat and pour the whole of its remaining contents over
+ his plum pudding. A clergyman who once travelled with him
+ relates, "The coach halted as usual for dinner, which seemed to
+ be a deeply interesting business to Johnson, who vehemently
+ attacked a dish of stewed carp, using his fingers only in feeding
+ himself." <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg018" id=
+ "pg018">018</a></span> At the dinner when he passed his
+ celebrated sentence on the leg of mutton&mdash;"That it was as
+ bad as bad could be: ill-fed, ill-killed, ill-kept, and
+ ill-dressed"&mdash;the ladies, his fellow-passengers, observed
+ his loss or equanimity with wonder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two of Mrs. Thrale's marginal notes on Boswell refer to her
+ illustrious friend's mode of eating. On his reported remark, that
+ "a dog will take a small bit of meat as readily as a large, when
+ both are before him," she adds, "which Johnson would never have
+ done." When Boswell, describing the dinner with Wilkes at
+ Davies', says, "No man eat more heartily than Johnson, or loved
+ better what was nice and delicate," she strikes in
+ with&mdash;"What was gustful rather: what was strong that he
+ could taste it, what was tender that he could chew it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Boswell describes him as occupied for a considerable time in
+ reading the "Memoirs of Fontenelle," leaning and swinging upon
+ the low gate into the court (at Streatham) without his hat, her
+ note is: "I wonder how he liked the story of the
+ asparagus,"&mdash;an obvious hint at his selfish habits of
+ indulgence at table.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With all this he affected great nicety of palate, and did not
+ like being asked to a plain dinner. "It was a good dinner
+ enough," he would remark, "but it was not a dinner to ask a man
+ to." He was so displeased with the performances of a nobleman's
+ French cook, that he exclaimed with vehemence, "I'd throw such a
+ rascal into the river;" and in reference to one of his Edinburgh
+ hosts he said, "As for Maclaurin's imitation of a made dish, it
+ was a wretched attempt." <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg019"
+ id="pg019">019</a></span>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His voice was loud, and his gesticulations, voluntary or
+ involuntary, singularly uncouth. He had superstitious fancies
+ about crossing thresholds or squares in the carpet with the right
+ or left leg foremost, and when he did not appear at dinner might
+ be found vainly endeavouring to pass a particular spot in the
+ anteroom. He loved late hours, or more properly (say Mrs. Thrale)
+ hated early ones. Nothing was more terrifying to him than the
+ idea of going to bed, which he never would call going to rest, or
+ suffer another to call it so. "I lie down that my acquaintance
+ may sleep; but I lie down to endure oppressive misery, and soon
+ rise again to pass the night in anxiety and pain." When people
+ could be induced to sit up with him, they were often amply
+ compensated by his rich flow of mind; but the resulting sacrifice
+ of health and comfort in an establishment where this sitting up
+ became habitual, was inevitably great.<span class=
+ "fnref">[1]</span> Instead of being grateful, he always
+ maintained that no one forbore his own gratification for the
+ purpose of pleasing another, and "if one did sit up, it was
+ probably to amuse oneself." Boswell excuses his wife for not
+ coinciding in his enthusiasm, by admitting that his illustrious
+ friend's irregular hours and uncouth habits, such as turning the
+ candles with their ends downwards when they did not burn bright
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg020" id="pg020">020</a></span>
+ enough, and letting the wax drop upon the carpet, could not but
+ be displeasing to a lady. He was generally last at breakfast, but
+ one morning happened to be first and waited some time alone; when
+ afterwards twitted by Mrs. Thrale with irregularity, he replied,
+ "Madam, I do not like to come down to vacuity."
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] Dr. Burney states that in 1765 "he very frequently met
+ Johnson at Streatham, where they had many long conversations,
+ after sitting up as long as the fire and candles lasted, and
+ much longer than the patience of the servants subsisted."
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ He was subject to dreadful fits of depression, caused or
+ accompanied by compunction for venial or fancied sins, by the
+ fear of death or madness&mdash;(the only things he did fear), and
+ by ingrained ineradicable disease. When Boswell speaks of his
+ "striving against evil," "Ay," she writes in the margin, "and
+ against the King's evil."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If his early familiarity with all the miseries of destitution,
+ aggravated by disease, had increased his natural roughness and
+ irritability, on the other hand it had helped largely to bring
+ out his sterling virtues,&mdash;his discriminating charity, his
+ genuine benevolence, his well-timed generosity, his large-hearted
+ sympathy with real suffering. But he required it to be material
+ and positive, and scoffed at mere mental or sentimental woes.
+ "The sight of people who want food and raiment is so common in
+ great cities, that a surly fellow like me has no compassion to
+ spare for wounds given only to vanity or softness." He said it
+ was enough to make a plain man sick to hear pity lavished on a
+ family reduced by losses to exchange a fine house for a snug
+ cottage; and when condolence was demanded for a lady of rank in
+ mourning for a baby, he contrasted her with a <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg021" id="pg021">021</a></span> washerwoman
+ with half-a-dozen children dependent on her daily labour for
+ their daily bread.<span class="fnref">[1]</span>
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] "It's weel wi' you gentles that can sit in the house wi'
+ handkerchers at your een when ye lose a friend; but the like o'
+ us maun to our wark again, if our hearts were beating as hard
+ as any hammer."&mdash;<i>The Antiquary</i>. For this very
+ reason the "gentles" commonly suffer most.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Lord Macaulay thus portrays the objects of Johnson's hospitality
+ as soon as he had got a house to cover them. "It was the home of
+ the most extraordinary assemblage of inmates that ever was
+ brought together. At the head of the establishment he had placed
+ an old lady named Williams, whose chief recommendations were her
+ blindness and her poverty. But in spite of her murmurs and
+ reproaches, he gave an asylum to another lady who was as poor as
+ herself, Mrs. Desmoulins, whose family he had known many years
+ before in Staffordshire. Room was found for the daughter of Mrs.
+ Desmoulins, and for another destitute damsel, who was generally
+ addressed as Mrs. Carmichael, but whom her generous host called
+ Polly. An old quack doctor called Levet, who bled and dosed
+ coalheavers and hackney coachmen, and received for fees crusts of
+ bread, bits of bacon, glasses of gin, and sometimes a little
+ copper, completed this menagerie."<span class="fnref">[1]</span>
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] Miscellaneous Writings, vol. i. p. 293.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Williams was the daughter of a physician, and of a good
+ Welsh family, who did not leave her dependent on Johnson. She is
+ termed by Madame D'Arblay a very pretty poet, and was treated
+ with uniform respect <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg022" id=
+ "pg022">022</a></span> by him.<span class="fnref">[1]</span> All
+ the authorities for the account of Levet were collected by
+ Hawkins<span class="fnref">[2]</span>: from these it appears that
+ his patients were "chiefly of the lowest class of tradesmen," and
+ that, although he took all that was offered him by way of fee,
+ including meat and drink, he demanded nothing from the poor, nor
+ was known in any instance to have enforced the payment of even
+ what was justly his due. Hawkins adds that he (Levet) had acted
+ for many years in the capacity of surgeon and apothecary to
+ Johnson under the direction of Dr. Lawrence.
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] Miss Cornelia Knight, in her "Autobiography," warmly
+ vindicates her respectability, and refers to a memoir, by Lady
+ Knight, in the "European Magazine" for Oct. 1799.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [2] Life of Johnson, p. 396-400.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ "When fainting Nature called for aid,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And hovering death prepared the blow,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His vigorous remedy display'd
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The power of Art without the show;
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ No summons mocked by chill delay,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>No petty gains disdained by pride,</i>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The modest wants of every day
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The toil of every day supplied."
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Johnson's verses, compared with Lord Macaulay's prose, strikingly
+ shew how the same subject can be degraded or elevated by the mode
+ of treatment; and how easily the historian or biographer, who
+ expands his authorities by picturesque details, may brighten or
+ darken characters at will.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To complete the picture of Johnson's interior, it should be added
+ that the inmates of his house were <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+ "pg023" id="pg023">023</a></span> quarrelling from, morning to
+ night with one another, with his negro servant, or with himself.
+ In one of his letters to Mrs. Thrale, he says, "Williams hates
+ everybody: Levet hates Desmoulins, and does not love Williams:
+ Desmoulins hates them both: Poll (Miss Carmichael) loves none of
+ them." In a conversation at Streatham, reported by Madame
+ D'Arblay, the <i>menagerie</i> was thus humorously
+ described:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Mrs. Thrale</i>.&mdash;Mr. Levet, I suppose, Sir, has the
+ office of keeping the hospital in health? for he is an
+ apothecary.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Dr. J</i>.&mdash;Levet, Madam, is a brutal fellow, but I have
+ a good regard for him; for his brutality is in his manners, not
+ his mind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Mr. Thrale</i>.&mdash;But how do you get your dinners drest?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Dr. J</i>.&mdash;Why De Mullin has the chief management of
+ the kitchen; but our roasting is not magnificent, for we have no
+ jack.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Mr. T</i>.&mdash;No jack? Why how do they manage without?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Dr. J</i>.&mdash;Small joints, I believe, they manage with a
+ string, and larger are done at the tavern. I have some thoughts
+ (with a profound gravity) of buying a jack, because I think a
+ jack is some credit to a house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Mr. T</i>.&mdash;Well, but you will have a spit, too?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Dr. J</i>.&mdash;No, Sir, no; that would be superfluous; for
+ we shall never use it; and if a jack is seen, a spit will be
+ presumed!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Mrs. T</i>.&mdash;But pray, Sir, who is the Poll you talk
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg024" id="pg024">024</a></span>
+ of? She that you used to abet in her quarrels with Mrs. Williams,
+ and call out,' At her again, Poll! Never flinch, Poll!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Dr. J</i>.&mdash;Why I took to Poll very well at first, but
+ she won't do upon a nearer examination.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Mrs. T</i>.&mdash;How came she among you, Sir?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Dr. J</i>.&mdash;Why I don't rightly remember, but we could
+ spare her very well from us. Poll is a stupid slut; I had some
+ hopes of her at first; but when I talked to her tightly and
+ closely, I could make nothing of her; she was wiggle waggle, and
+ I could never persuade her to be categorical."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The effect of an unbroken residence with such inmates, on a man
+ of irritable temper subject to morbid melancholy, may be guessed;
+ and the merit of the Thrales in rescuing him from it, and in
+ soothing down his asperities, can hardly be over-estimated. Lord
+ Macaulay says, they were flattered by finding that a man so
+ widely celebrated preferred their house to every other in London;
+ and suggests that even the peculiarities which seem to unfit him
+ for civilised society, including his gesticulations, his
+ rollings, his puffings, his mutterings, and the ravenous
+ eagerness with which he devoured his food, increased the interest
+ which his new associates took in him. His hostess does not appear
+ to have viewed them in that light, and she was able to command
+ the best company of the intellectual order without the aid of a
+ "lion," or a bear. If his conversation attracted many, it drove
+ away many, and silenced more. He accounted for the little
+ attention <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg025" id=
+ "pg025">025</a></span> paid him by the great, by saying that
+ "great lords and great ladies do not like to have their mouths
+ stopped," as if this was peculiar to them as a class. "My
+ leddie," remarks Cuddie in "Old Mortality," "canna weel bide to
+ be contradicted, as I ken neabody likes, if they could help
+ themselves."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Johnson was in the zenith of his fame when literature, politics,
+ and fashion began to blend together again by hardly perceptible
+ shades, like the colours in shot-silk, as they had partially done
+ in the Augustan age of Queen Anne. One marked sign was the
+ formation of the Literary Club (The Club, as it still claims to
+ be called), which brought together Fox, Burke, Gibbon, Johnson,
+ Goldsmith, Garrick, Reynolds, and Beauclerc, besides blackballing
+ a bishop (the Bishop of Chester), and a lord-chancellor
+ (Camden).<span class="fnref">[1]</span> Yet it is curious to
+ observe within how narrow a circle of good houses the Doctor's
+ engagements were restricted. Reynolds, Paoli, Beauclerc, Allan
+ Ramsay, Hoole, Dilly, Strahan, Lord Lucan, Langton, Garrick, and
+ the Club formed his main reliance as regards dinners; and we find
+ Boswell recording with manifest symptoms of exultation in 1781:
+ "I dined with him at a bishop's where were Sir Joshua Reynolds,
+ Mr. Berenger, and some more company. He had dined the day before
+ at another bishop's." His reverence for the episcopal bench well
+ merited some return on their part. Mr. <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg026" id="pg026">026</a></span> Seward saw
+ him presented to the Archbishop of York, and described his bow to
+ an Archbishop as such a studied elaboration of homage, such an
+ extension of limb, such a flexion of body, as have seldom or ever
+ been equalled. The lay nobility were not equally grateful,
+ although his deference for the peerage was extreme. Except in
+ Scotland or on his travels, he is seldom found dining with a
+ nobleman.
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] Canning was blackballed the first time he was proposed. He
+ was elected in 1798, Mr. Windham being his proposer, and Dr.
+ Burney his seconder.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ It is therefore hardly an exaggeration to say that he owed more
+ social enjoyment to the Thrales than to all the rest of his
+ acquaintance put together. Holland House alone, and in its best
+ days, would convey to persons living in our time an adequate
+ conception of the Streatham circle, when it comprised Burke,
+ Reynolds, Garrick, Goldsmith, Boswell, Murphy, Dr. Burney and his
+ daughter, Mrs. Montagu, Mrs. Boscawen, Mrs. Crewe, Lord
+ Loughborough, Dunning (afterwards Lord Ashburton), Lord Mulgrave,
+ Lord Westcote, Sir Lucas and Mr. (afterwards Sir William) Pepys,
+ Major Holroyd afterwards Lord Sheffield, the Bishop of London and
+ Mrs. Porteous, the Bishop of Peterborough and Mrs. Hinchcliffe,
+ Miss Gregory, Miss Streatfield, &amp;c. As at Holland House, the
+ chief scene of warm colloquial contest or quiet interchange of
+ mind was the library, a large and handsome room, which the pencil
+ of Reynolds gradually enriched with portraits of all the
+ principal persons who had conversed or studied in it. To supply
+ any deficiencies on the shelves, a hundred pounds, Madame
+ D'Arblay states, was placed at Johnson's disposal to expend in
+ books; and we may take it for <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+ "pg027" id="pg027">027</a></span> granted that any new
+ publication suggested by him was ordered at once. But a bookish
+ couple, surrounded by a literary set, were surely not exclusively
+ dependent on him for this description of help, nor laid under any
+ extraordinary obligation by reason of it. Whilst the "Lives of
+ the Poets" was in progress, Dr. Johnson "would frequently produce
+ one of the proof sheets to embellish the breakfast table, which
+ was always in the library, and was certainly the most sprightly
+ and agreeable meeting of the day." ... "These proof sheets Mrs.
+ Thrale was permitted to read aloud, and the discussions to which
+ they led were in the highest degree entertaining."<span class=
+ "fnref">[1]</span>
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] "Memoirs of Dr. Burney," &amp;c., by his daughter, Madame
+ D'Arblay. In three volumes, 1832. Vol. ii. p. 173-178.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ It was mainly owing to his domestication with the Thrales that he
+ began to frequent drawing-rooms at an age when the arm-chair at
+ home or at the club has an irresistible charm for most men of
+ sedentary pursuits. It must be admitted that the evening parties
+ in which he was seen, afforded a chance of something better than
+ the "unidead chatter of girls," with an undue fondness for which
+ he reproached Langton; for the <i>Blue Stocking</i> clubs had
+ just come into fashion,&mdash;so called from a casual allusion to
+ the blue stockings of an <i>habitué</i>, Mr.
+ Stillingfleet.<span class="fnref">[1]</span> Their founders were
+ Mrs. Vesey and <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg028" id=
+ "pg028">028</a></span> Mrs. Montagu; but according to Madame
+ D'Arblay, "more bland and more gleeful than that of either of
+ them, was the personal celebrity of Mrs. Thrale. Mrs. Vesey,
+ indeed, gentle and diffident, dreamed not of any competition, but
+ Mrs. Montagu and Mrs. Thrale had long been set up as rival
+ candidates for colloquial eminence, and each of them thought the
+ other alone worthy to be her peer. Openly therefore when they
+ met, they combated for precedence of admiration, with placid
+ though high-strained intellectual exertion on the one side, and
+ an exuberant pleasantry or classical allusion or quotation on the
+ other; without the smallest malice in either."
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] The first of these was then (about 1768) in the meridian of
+ its lustre, but had been instituted many years previously at
+ Bath, It owed its name to an apology made by Mr. Stillingfleet
+ in declining to accept an invitation to a literary meeting at
+ Mrs. Vesey's, from not being, he said, in the habit of
+ displaying a proper equipment for an evening assembly. "Pho,
+ pho," said she, "don't mind dress. Come in your blue
+ stockings." With which words, humorously repeating them as he
+ entered the apartment of the chosen coterie, Mr. Stillingfleet
+ claimed permission for entering according to order. And these
+ words, ever after, were fixed, in playful stigma, upon Mrs.
+ Vesey's associations. <i>(Madame D'Arblay.)</i> Boswell also
+ traces the term to Stillingfleet's blue stockings; and Hannah
+ More's "Bas-Bleu" gave it a permanent place in literature.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ A different account of the origin of Bluestocking parties was
+ given by Lady Crewe to a lady who has allowed me to copy her note
+ of the conversation, made at the time (1816):
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Lady Crewe told me that her mother (Mrs. Greville), the Duchess
+ of Portland, and Mrs. Montagu were the first who began the
+ conversation parties in imitation of the noted ones, <i>temp.</i>
+ Madame de Sevigne', at Rue St. Honore. Madame de Polignac, one of
+ the first guests, came in blue silk stockings, then the newest
+ fashion in Paris. Mrs. Greville and all the lady members of Mrs.
+ Montagu's <i>club</i>, adopted the <i>mode</i>. A foreign
+ gentleman, after spending an evening at Mrs. Montagu's
+ <i>soirée</i>, wrote to tell a friend of the charming
+ intellectual party, who had one rule; 'they wear blue stockings
+ as a distinction.'" <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg029" id=
+ "pg029">029</a></span>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Wraxall, who makes the same comparison, remarks: "Mrs. Thrale
+ always appeared to me to possess at least as much information, a
+ mind as cultivated, and more brilliancy of intellect than Mrs.
+ Montagu, but she did not descend among men from such an eminence,
+ and she talked much more, as well as more unguardedly, on every
+ subject. She was the provider and conductress of Johnson, who
+ lived almost constantly under her roof, or more properly under
+ that of Mr. Thrale, both in Town and at Streatham. He did not,
+ however, spare her more than other women in his attacks if she
+ courted and provoked his animadversions."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Although he seldom appeared to greater advantage than when under
+ the combined spell of feminine influence and rank, his demeanour
+ varied with his mood. On Miss Monkton's (afterwards Countess of
+ Cork) insisting, one evening, that Sterne's writings were very
+ pathetic, Johnson bluntly denied it. "I am sure," she rejoined,
+ "they have affected me." "Why," said Johnson, smiling and rolling
+ himself about, "that is because, dearest, you're a dunce." 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>
+ He did not come off so well on another occasion, when the
+ presence of women he respected might be expected to operate as a
+ cheek. Talking, at Mrs. Garrick's, of a very respectable author,
+ he told us, says Boswell, "a curious circumstance in his life,
+ which was that he had married a printer's devil. <i>Reynolds</i>.
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg030" id="pg030">030</a></span>
+ 'A printer's devil, Sir! why, I thought a printer's devil was a
+ creature with a black face and in rags.' <i>Johnson</i>. '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;&mdash;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 slily 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
+ despotic power, glanced sternly around, and called out in a
+ strong tone, 'Where's the merriment?' Then collecting himself,
+ and looking awful, 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."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This resembles the influence exercised by the "great commoner"
+ over the House of Commons. An instance being mentioned of his
+ throwing an adversary into irretrievable confusion by an arrogant
+ expression of contempt, the late Mr. Charles Butler asked the
+ relator, an eye-witness, whether the House did not laugh at the
+ ridiculous figure of the poor member. "No, <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg031" id="pg031">031</a></span> Sir," was the
+ reply, "we were too much awed to laugh."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a marked feature in Johnson's character that he was fond
+ of female society; so fond, indeed, that on coming to London he
+ was obliged to be on his guard against the temptations to which
+ it exposed him. He left off attending the Green Room, telling
+ Grarrick, "I'll come no more behind your scenes, Davy; for the
+ silk stockings and white bosoms of your actresses excite my
+ amorous propensities."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The proneness of his imagination to wander in this forbidden
+ field is unwittingly betrayed by his remarking at Sky, in support
+ of the doctrine that animal substances are less cleanly than
+ vegetable: "I have <i>often</i> thought that, if I kept a
+ seraglio, the ladies should all wear linen gowns, or cotton, I
+ mean stuffs made of vegetable substances. I would have no silks:
+ you cannot tell when it is clean: it will be very nasty before it
+ is perceived to be so; linen detects its own dirtiness." His
+ virtue thawed instead of becoming more rigid in the North. "This
+ evening," records Boswell of their visit to an Hebridean chief,
+ "one of our married ladies, a lively pretty little woman,
+ good-humouredly sat down upon Dr. Johnson's knee, and being
+ encouraged by some of the company, put her hands round his neck
+ and kissed him. 'Do it again,' said he, 'and let us see who will
+ tire first.' He kept her on his knee some time whilst he and she
+ drank tea."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Rev. Dr. Maxwell relates in his "Collectanea," that "Two
+ young women from Staffordshire visited <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg032" id="pg032">032</a></span> him when I
+ was present, to consult him on the subject of Methodism, to which
+ they were inclined. 'Come,' said he, 'you pretty fools, dine with
+ Maxwell and me at the Mitre, and we will talk over that subject:'
+ which they did, and after dinner he took one of them upon his
+ knee, and fondled her for half an hour together." <span class=
+ "fnref">[1]</span>
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] "Amongst his singularities, his love of conversing with the
+ prostitutes he met in the streets, was not the least. He has
+ been known to carry some of these unfortunate creatures into a
+ tavern, for the sake of striving to awaken in them a proper
+ sense of their condition. I remember, he said, once asking one
+ of them for what purpose she supposed her Maker had bestowed on
+ her so much beauty. Her answer was, 'To please the gentlemen,
+ to be sure; for what other purpose could it be given me?"
+ <i>(Johnsoniana.)</i> He once carried one, fainting from
+ exhaustion, home on his back.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Women almost always like men who like women; or as the phenomenon
+ is explained by Pope&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ "Lust, through some certain strainers well refined,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Is gentle love, and charms all womankind."
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Johnson, despite of his unwieldy figure, scarred features and
+ uncouth gestures, was a favourite with the fair, and talked of
+ affairs of the heart as things of which he was entitled to speak
+ from personal experience as confidently as of any other moral or
+ social topics. He told Mrs. Thrale, without the smallest
+ consciousness of presumption or what Mr. Square would term the
+ unfitness of things, of his and Lord Lyttleton's having contended
+ for Miss Boothby's preference with an emulation that occasioned
+ hearty disgust and ended in lasting animosity. "You may see," he
+ added, when the Lives of the Poets were printed, "that dear
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg033" id="pg033">033</a></span>
+ Boothby is at my heart still. She would delight in that fellow
+ Lyttleton's company though, all that I could do, and I cannot
+ forgive even his memory the preference given by a mind like
+ hers." <span class="fnref">[1]</span>
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] In point of personal advantages the man of rank and fashion
+ and the scholar were nearly on a par.
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ "But who is this astride the pony,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So long, so lean, so lank, so bony?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dat be de great orator, Littletony."
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Croker surmises that "Molly Aston," not "dear Boothby," must
+ have been the object of this rivalry<span class=
+ "fnref">[1]</span>; and the surmise is strengthened by Johnson's
+ calling Molly the loveliest creature he ever saw; adding (to Mrs.
+ Thrale), "My wife was a little jealous, and happening one day
+ when walking in the country to meet a fortune-hunting gipsy, Mrs.
+ Johnson made the wench look at my hand, but soon repented of her
+ curiosity,'for,' says the gipsy, 'your heart is divided between a
+ Betty and a Molly: Betty loves you best, but you take most
+ delight in Molly's company.' When I turned about to laugh, I saw
+ my wife was crying. Pretty charmer, she had no reason." This
+ pretty charmer was in her forty-eighth year when he married her,
+ he being then twenty-seven. He told Beauclerc that it was a love
+ match on both sides; and Garrick used to draw ludicrous pictures
+ of their mutual fondness, which he heightened by representing her
+ as short, fat, tawdrily dressed, and highly rouged.
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] See "Croker's Boswell," p. 672, and Malone's note in the
+ prior edition.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ On the question whether "Molly Aston" or "dear <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg034" id="pg034">034</a></span> Boothby" was
+ the cause of his dislike of Lyttleton, one of Mrs. Piozzi's
+ marginal notes is decisive. "Mrs. Thrale (says Boswell) suggests
+ that he was offended by Molly Aston's preference of his lordship
+ to him." She retorts: "I never said so. I believe Lord Lyttleton
+ and Molly Aston were not acquainted. No, no: it was Miss Boothby
+ whose preference he professed to have been jealous of, and so I
+ said in the 'Anecdotes.'"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One of Rochefoucauld's maxims is: "Young women who do not wish to
+ appear <i>coquette</i>, and men of advanced years who do not wish
+ to appear ridiculous, should never speak of love as of a thing in
+ which they might take part." Mrs. Thrale relates an amusing
+ instance of Johnson's adroitness in escaping from the dilemma:
+ "As we had been saying one day that no subject failed of
+ receiving dignity from the manner in which Mr. Johnson treated
+ it, a lady at my house said, she would make him talk about love;
+ and took her measures accordingly, deriding the novels of the day
+ because they treated about love. 'It is not,' replied our
+ philosopher, 'because they treat, as you call it, about love, but
+ because they treat of nothing, that they are despicable: we must
+ not ridicule a passion which he who never felt, never was happy,
+ and he who laughs at, never deserves to feel&mdash;a passion
+ which has caused the change of empires, and the loss of
+ worlds&mdash;a passion which has inspired heroism and subdued
+ avarice.' He thought he had already said too much. 'A passion, in
+ short,' added he, with an altered tone, 'that consumes me away
+ for my pretty Fanny here, <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg035"
+ id="pg035">035</a></span> and she 'is very cruel,' speaking of
+ another lady (Miss Burney) in the room."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the high-flown language which he occasionally employed in
+ addressing or discussing women, has originated a theory that the
+ basis or essence of his character was romance, it may be as well
+ to contrast what he said in soberer moods on love. He remarked to
+ Dr. Maxwell, that "its violence and ill-effects were much
+ exaggerated; for who knows any real sufferings on that head, more
+ than from the exorbitancy of any other passion?" On Boswell
+ asking him whether he did not suppose that there are fifty women
+ in the world with any of whom a man may be as happy as with any
+ one woman in particular, he replied, "Ay, Sir, fifty thousand. I
+ believe marriages would in general be as happy, and often more
+ so, if they were all made by the lord-chancellor upon a due
+ consideration of the characters and circumstances without the
+ parties having any choice in the matter." On another occasion he
+ observed that sensible men rarely married for love.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These peculiarities throw light on more questions than one
+ relating to Johnson's prolonged intimacy and alleged quarrel with
+ Mrs. Thrale. His gallantry, and the flattering air of deferential
+ tenderness which he threw into his commerce with his female
+ favourites, may have had little less to do with his domestication
+ at Streatham than his celebrity, his learning, or his wit. The
+ most submissive wife will manage to dislodge an inmate who is
+ displeasing to her, "Aye, a marriage, man," said Bucklaw to his
+ led captain, "but wherefore droops thy mighty <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg036" id="pg036">036</a></span> spirit? The
+ board will have a corner, and the corner will have a trencher,
+ and the trencher will have a glass beside it; and the board end
+ shall be filled, and the trencher and the glass shall be
+ replenished for thee, if all the petticoats in Lothian had sworn
+ the contrary." "So says many an honest fellow," said Craigenfelt,
+ "and some of my special friends; but curse me if I know the
+ reason, the women could never bear me, and always contrived to
+ trundle me out before the honey-moon was over."<span class=
+ "fnref">[1]</span>
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] Bride of Lammermoor.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ It was all very well for Johnson to tell Boswell, "I know no man
+ who is more master of his wife and family than Thrale. If he
+ holds up a finger, he is obeyed." The sage never acted on the
+ theory, and instead of treating the wife as a cipher, lost no
+ opportunity of paying court to her, though in a manner quite
+ compatible with his own lofty spirit of independence and
+ self-respect. Thus, attention having been called to some Italian
+ verses by Baretti, he converted them into an elegant compliment
+ to her by an improvised paraphrase:
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ "Viva! viva la padrona!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tutta bella, e tutta buona,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ La padrona e un angiolella
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tutta buona e tutta bella;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tutta bella e tutta buona;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Viva! viva la padrona!"
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ "Long may live my lovely Hetty!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Always young and always pretty; <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg037" id="pg037">037</a></span>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Always pretty, always young,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Live my lovely Hetty long!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Always young and always pretty;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Long may live my lovely Hetty!"
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Her marginal note in the copy of the "Anecdotes" presented by her
+ to Sir James Fellowes in 1816 is:&mdash;"I heard these verses
+ sung at Mr. Thomas's by three voices not three weeks ago."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was in the eighth year of their acquaintance that Johnson
+ solaced his fatigue in the Hebrides by writing a Latin ode to
+ her. "About fourteen years since," wrote Sir Walter Scott, in
+ 1829, "I landed in Sky with a party of friends, and had the
+ curiosity to ask what was the first idea on every one's mind at
+ landing. All answered separately that it was this ode." Thinking
+ Miss Cornelia Knight's version too diffuse, I asked Mr. Milnes
+ for a translation or paraphrase, and he kindly complied by
+ producing these spirited stanzas:
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ "Where constant mist enshrouds the rocks,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Shattered in earth's primeval shocks,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And niggard Nature ever mocks
+ </p>
+ <p class="i8">
+ The labourer's toil,
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ I roam through clans of savage men,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Untamed by arts, untaught by pen;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Or cower within some squalid den
+ </p>
+ <p class="i8">
+ O'er reeking soil.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ Through paths that halt from stone to stone,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Amid the din of tongues unknown,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One image haunts my soul alone,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i8">
+ Thine, gentle Thrale!
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ Soothes she, I ask, her spouse's care?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Does mother-love its charge prepare?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Stores she her mind with knowledge rare,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i8">
+ Or lively tale? <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg038" id=
+ "pg038">038</a></span>
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ Forget me not! thy faith I claim,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Holding a faith that cannot die,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That fills with thy benignant name
+ </p>
+ <p class="i8">
+ These shores of Sky."
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ "On another occasion," says Mrs. Thrale, in the "Anecdotes," "I
+ can boast verses from Dr. Johnson. As I went into his room the
+ morning of my birthday once and said to him, 'Nobody sends me any
+ verses now, because I am five-and-thirty years old; and Stella
+ was fed with them till forty-six, I remember.' My being just
+ recovered from illness and confinement will account for the
+ manner in which he burst out suddenly, for so he did without the
+ least previous hesitation whatsoever, and without having
+ entertained the smallest intention towards it half a minute
+ before:
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ "Oft in danger, yet alive,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We are come to thirty-five;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Long may better years arrive,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Better years than thirty-five.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Could philosophers contrive
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Life to stop at thirty-five,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Time his hours should never drive
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ O'er the bounds of thirty-five.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ High to soar, and deep to dive,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nature gives at thirty-five.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ladies, stock and tend your hive,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Trifle not at thirty-five;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For howe'er we boast and strive,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Life declines from thirty-five;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He that ever hopes to thrive
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Must begin by thirty-five;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And all who wisely wish to wive
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Must look on Thrale at thirty-five."
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ "'And now,' said he, as I was writing them down, <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg039" id="pg039">039</a></span> 'you may see
+ what it is to come for poetry to a dictionary-maker; you may
+ observe that the rhymes run in alphabetical order exactly.' And
+ so they do."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Byron's estimate of life at the same age, is somewhat different:
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ "Too old for youth&mdash;too young, at thirty-five
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ To herd with boys, or hoard with good threescore,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I wonder people should he left alive.
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ But since they are, that epoch is a bore."
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Lady Aldborough, whose best witticisms unluckily lie under the
+ same merited ban as Rochester's best verses, resolved not to pass
+ twenty-five, and had her passport made out accordingly till her
+ death at eighty-five. She used to boast that, whenever a foreign
+ official objected, she never failed to silence him by the remark,
+ that he was the first gentleman of his country who ever told a
+ lady she was older than she said she was. Actuated probably by a
+ similar feeling, and in the hope of securing to herself the
+ benefit of the doubt, Mrs. Thrale omitted in the "Anecdotes" the
+ year when these verses were addressed to her, and a sharp
+ controversy has been raised as to the respective ages of herself
+ and Dr. Johnson at the time. It is thus summed up by one of the
+ combatants:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "In one place Mr. Croker says that at the commencement of the
+ intimacy between Dr. Johnson and Mrs. Thrale, in 1765, the lady
+ was twenty-five years old. In other places he says that Mrs.
+ Thrale's thirty-fifth year coincided with Johnson's seventieth.
+ Johnson was born <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg040" id=
+ "pg040">040</a></span> in 1709. If, therefore, Mrs. Thrale's
+ thirty-fifth year coincided with Johnson's seventieth, she could
+ have been only twenty-one years old in 1765. This is not all. Mr.
+ Croker, in another place, assigns the year 1777 as the date of
+ the complimentary lines which Johnson made on Mrs. Thrale's
+ thirty-fifth birthday. If this date be correct Mrs. Thrale must
+ have been born in 1742, and could have been only twenty-three
+ when her acquaintance commenced. Mr. Croker, therefore, gives us
+ three different statements as to her age. Two of the three must
+ be incorrect. We will not decide between them."<span class=
+ "fnref">[1]</span>
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] Macaulay's Essays.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Salusbury, referring to a china bowl in his possession, says:
+ "The slip of paper now in it is in my father's handwriting, and
+ copied, I have heard him say, from the original slip, which was
+ worn out by age and fingering. The exact words are, 'In this
+ bason was baptised Hester Lynch Salusbury, 16th Jan. 1740-41 old
+ style, at Bodville in Carnarvonshire.'"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The incident of the verses is thus narrated in "Thraliana": "And
+ this year, 1777<span class="fnref">[1]</span>, when I told him
+ that it was my birthday, and that I was then thirty-five years
+ old, he repeated me these verses, which I wrote down from his
+ mouth as he made them." If she was born in 1740-41, she must have
+ been thirty-six in 1777; and there is no perfectly satisfactory
+ settlement of the controversy, which many will think derives its
+ sole importance from the two chief controversialists.
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] In one of her Memorandum books, 1776. <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg041" id="pg041">041</a></span>
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ The highest authorities differ equally about her looks. "My
+ readers," says Boswell, "will naturally wish for some
+ representation of the figures of this couple. Mr. Thrale was
+ tall, well-proportioned, and stately. As for <i>Madam</i>, or
+ <i>My Mistress</i>, by which epithets Johnson used to mention
+ Mrs. Thrale, she was short, plump, and brisk." "He should have
+ added," observes Mr. Croker, "that she was very pretty." This was
+ not her own opinion, nor that of her cotemporaries, although her
+ face was attractive from animation and expression, and her
+ personal appearance pleasing on the whole. Sometimes, when
+ visiting the author of "Piozziana,"<span class="fnref">[1]</span>
+ she used to look at her little self, as she called it, and spoke
+ drolly of what she once was, as if speaking of some one else; and
+ one day, turning to him, she exclaimed: "No, I never was
+ handsome: I had always too many strong points in my face for
+ beauty." On his expressing a doubt of this, and hinting that Dr.
+ Johnson was certainly an admirer of her personal charms, she
+ replied that his devotion was at least as warm towards the table
+ and the table-cloth at Streatham.
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] "Piozziana; or Recollections of the late Mrs. Piozzi, with
+ Remarks. By a Friend." (The Rev. E. Mangin.) Moxon, 1833. These
+ reminiscences, unluckily limited to the last eight or ten years
+ of her life at Bath, contain much curious information, and
+ leave a highly favourable impression of Mrs. Piozzi.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ One day when he was ill, exceedingly low-spirited, and persuaded
+ that death was not far distant, she appeared before him in a
+ dark-coloured gown, which <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg042"
+ id="pg042">042</a></span> his bad sight, and worse apprehensions,
+ made him mistake for an iron-grey. "'Why do you delight,' said
+ he, 'thus to thicken the gloom of misery that surrounds me? is
+ not here sufficient accumulation of horror without anticipated
+ mourning?'&mdash;'This is not mourning, Sir!' said I, drawing the
+ curtain, that the light might fall upon the silk, and show it was
+ a purple mixed with green.&mdash;'Well, well!' replied he,
+ changing his voice; 'you little creatures should never wear those
+ sort of clothes, however; they are unsuitable in every way. What!
+ have not all insects gay colours?'"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ According to the author of "Piozziana," who became acquainted
+ with her late in life, "She was short, and though
+ well-proportioned, broad, and deep-chested. Her hands were
+ muscular and almost coarse, but her writing was, even in her
+ eightieth year, exquisitely beautiful; and one day, while
+ conversing with her on the subject of education, she observed
+ that 'all Misses now-a-days, wrote so like each other, that it
+ was provoking;' adding, 'I love to see individuality of
+ character, and abhor sameness, especially in what is feeble and
+ flimsy.' Then, spreading her hand, she said, 'I believe I owe
+ what you are pleased to call my good writing, to the shape of
+ this hand, for my uncle, Sir Robert Cotton, thought it was too
+ manly to be employed in writing like a boarding-school girl; and
+ so I came by my vigorous, black manuscript.'"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was fortunate that the hand-writing compensated for the hands;
+ and as she attached great importance to blood and race, that she
+ did not live to read Byron's <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+ "pg043" id="pg043">043</a></span> "thoroughbred and tapering
+ fingers," or to be shocked by his theory that "the hand is almost
+ the only sign of blood which aristocracy can generate." Her Bath
+ friend appeals to a miniature (engraved for this work) by Roche,
+ of Bath, taken when she was in her seventy-seventh year. Like
+ Cromwell, who told the painter that if he softened a harsh line
+ or so much as omitted a wart, he should never be paid a
+ sixpence,&mdash;she desired the artist to paint her face deeply
+ rouged, which it always was<span class="fnref">[1]</span>, and to
+ introduce a trivial deformity of the jaw, produced by a horse
+ treading on her as she lay on the ground after a fall. In this
+ respect she proved superior to Johnson; who, with all his love of
+ truth, could not bear to be painted with his defects. He was
+ displeased at being drawn holding a pen close to his eye; and on
+ its being suggested that Reynolds had painted himself holding his
+ ear in his <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg044" id=
+ "pg044">044</a></span> hand to catch the sound, he replied: "He
+ may paint himself as deaf as he pleases, but I will not be
+ Blinking Sam."
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] "One day I called early at her house, and as I entered her
+ drawing-room, she passed me, saying, 'Dear Sir, I will be with
+ you in a few minutes; but, while I think of it, I must go to my
+ dressing-closet and paint my face, which I forgot to do this
+ morning.' Accordingly she soon returned, wearing the requisite
+ quantity of bloom; which, it must be noticed, was not in the
+ least like that of youth and beauty. I then said that I was
+ surprised she should so far sacrifice to fashion, as to take
+ that trouble. Her answer was that, as I might conclude, her
+ practice of painting did not proceed from any silly compliance
+ with Bath fashion, or any fashion; still less, if possible,
+ from the desire of appearing younger than she was, but from
+ this circumstance, that in early life she had worn rouge, as
+ other young persons did in her day, as a part of dress; and
+ after continuing the habit for some years, discovered that it
+ had introduced a dull yellow colour into her complexion, quite
+ unlike that of her natural skin, and that she wished to conceal
+ the deformity."&mdash;<i>Piozziana</i>.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Reynolds' portrait of Mrs. Thrale conveys a highly agreeable
+ impression of her; and so does Hogarth's, when she sat to him for
+ the principal figure in "The Lady's Last Stake." She was then
+ only fourteen; and he probably idealised his model; but that he
+ also produced a striking likeness, is obvious on comparing his
+ picture with the professed portraits. The history of this picture
+ (which has been engraved, at Lord Macaulay's suggestion, for this
+ work) will be found in the Autobiography and the Letters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Boswell's account of his first visit to Streatham gives a
+ tolerably fair notion of the footing on which Johnson stood
+ there, and the manner in which the interchange of mind was
+ carried on between him and the hostess. This visit took place in
+ October, 1769, four years after Johnson's introduction to her;
+ and Boswell's absence from London, in which he had no fixed
+ residence during Johnson's life, will hardly account for the
+ neglect of his illustrious friend in not procuring him a
+ privilege which he must have highly coveted and would doubtless
+ have turned to good account.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "On the 6th of October I complied with this obliging invitation;
+ and found, at an elegant villa, six miles from town, every
+ circumstance that can make society pleasing. Johnson, though
+ quite at home, was yet looked up to with an awe, tempered by
+ affection, and <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg045" id=
+ "pg045">045</a></span> seemed to be equally the care of his host
+ and hostess. I rejoiced at seeing him so happy."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Mrs. Thrale disputed with him on the merit of Prior. He attacked
+ him powerfully; said he wrote of love like a man who had never
+ felt it; his love verses were college verses: and he repeated the
+ song, 'Alexis shunn'd his fellow swains,' &amp;c. in so ludicrous
+ a manner, as to make us all wonder how any one could have been
+ pleased with such fantastical stuff. Mrs. Thrale stood to her
+ guns with great courage, in defence of amorous ditties, which
+ Johnson despised, till he at last silenced her by saving, 'My
+ dear lady, talk no more of this. Nonsense can be defended but by
+ nonsense.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Mrs. Thrale then praised Garrick's talents for light gay poetry;
+ and, as a specimen, repeated his song in 'Florizel and Perdita,'
+ and dwelt with peculiar pleasure on this line:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ "'I'd smile with the simple, and feed with the poor.'
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Johnson.</i>&mdash;'Nay, my dear lady, this will never do.
+ Poor David! Smile with the simple!&mdash;what folly is that? And
+ who would feed with the poor that can help it? No, no; let me
+ smile with the wise, and feed with the rich.'" Boswell adds, that
+ he repeated this sally to Glarrick, and wondered to find his
+ sensibility as a writer not a little irritated by it; on which
+ Mrs. Thrale remarks, "How odd to go and tell the man!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The independent tone she took when she deemed the Doctor
+ unreasonable, is also proved by Boswell in his report of what
+ took place at Streatham in reference to <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg046" id="pg046">046</a></span> Lord
+ Marchmont's offer to supply information for the Life of Pope:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Elated with the success of my spontaneous exertion to procure
+ material and respectable aid to Johnson for his very favourite
+ work, 'the Lives of the Poets,' I hastened down to Mr. Thrale's,
+ at Streatham, where he now was, that I might insure his being at
+ home next day; and after dinner, when I thought he would receive
+ the good news in the best humour, I announced it eagerly: 'I have
+ been at work for you to-day, Sir. I have been with Lord
+ Marchmont. He bade me tell you he has a great respect for you,
+ and will call on you to-morrow at one o'clock, and communicate
+ all he knows about Pope.' <i>Johnson.</i> 'I shall not be in town
+ to-morrow. I don't care to know about Pope.' <i>Mrs. Thrale</i>
+ (surprised, as I was, and a little angry). 'I suppose, Sir, Mr.
+ Boswell thought that as you are to write Pope's Life, you would
+ wish to know about him.' <i>Johnson.</i> 'Wish! why yes. If it
+ rained knowledge, I'd hold out my hand; but I would not give
+ myself the trouble to go in quest of it.' There was no arguing
+ with him at the moment. Sometime afterwards he said, 'Lord
+ Marchmont will call upon me, and then I shall call on Lord
+ Marchmont.' Mrs. Thrale was uneasy at this unaccountable caprice:
+ and told me, that if I did not take care to bring about a meeting
+ between Lord Marchmont and him, it would never take place, which
+ would be a great pity."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The ensuing conversation is a good sample of the freedom and
+ variety of "talk" in which Johnson luxuriated, <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg047" id="pg047">047</a></span> and shows how
+ important a part Mrs. Thrale played in it:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Mrs. Thrale told us, that a curious clergyman of our
+ acquaintance (Dr. Lort is named in the margin) had discovered a
+ licentious stanza, which Pope had originally in his 'Universal
+ Prayer,' before the stanza,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ "'What conscience dictates to be done,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ Or warns us not to do,' &amp;c.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ It was this:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ "'Can sins of moment claim the rod
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ Of everlasting fires?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And that offend great Nature's God
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ Which Nature's self inspires."
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ and that Dr. Johnson observed, it had been borrowed from
+ <i>Guarini</i>. There are, indeed, in <i>Pastor Fido</i>, many
+ such flimsy superficial reasonings as that in the last two lines
+ of this stanza.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Boswell</i>. 'In that stanza of Pope's, "<i>rod of fires</i>"
+ is certainly a bad metaphor.' <i>Mrs. Thrale</i>. 'And "sins of
+ <i>moment</i>" is a faulty expression; for its true import is
+ <i>momentous</i>, which cannot be intended.' <i>Johnson</i>. 'It
+ must have been written "of <i>moments</i>." Of <i>moment</i>, is
+ <i>momentous</i>; of <i>moments, momentary</i>. I warrant you,
+ however, Pope wrote this stanza, and some friend struck it out.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Talking of divorces, I asked if Othello's doctrine was not
+ plausible:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ "'He that is robb'd, not wanting what is stolen,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let him not know't, and he's not robb'd at all.'
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg048" id="pg048">048</a></span>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dr. Johnson and Mrs. Thrale joined against this. <i>Johnson</i>.
+ 'Ask any man if he'd wish not to know of such an injury.'
+ <i>Boswell</i>. 'Would you tell your friend to make him unhappy?'
+ <i>Johnson</i>. 'Perhaps, Sir, I should not: but that would be
+ from prudence on my own account. A man would tell his father.'
+ <i>Boswell</i>. 'Yes; because he would not have spurious children
+ to get any share of the family inheritance.' <i>Mrs. Thrale</i>.
+ 'Or he would tell his brother.' <i>Boswell</i>. 'Certainly his
+ <i>elder</i> brother.... Would you tell Mr. &mdash;&mdash;?'
+ (naming a gentleman who assuredly was not in the least danger of
+ so miserable a disgrace, though married to a fine woman).
+ <i>Johnson</i>. 'No, Sir: because it would do no good; he is so
+ sluggish, he'd never go to Parliament and get through a
+ divorce.'" <i>Marginal Note</i>: "Langton."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is every reason to believe that her behaviour to Johnson
+ was uniformly marked by good-breeding and delicacy. She treated
+ him with a degree of consideration and respect which he did not
+ always receive from other friends and admirers. A foolish rumour
+ having got into the newspapers that he had been learning to dance
+ of Vestris, it was agreed that Lord Charlemont should ask him if
+ it was true, and his lordship with (it is shrewdly observed) the
+ characteristic spirit of a general of Irish volunteers, actually
+ put the question, which provoked a passing feeling of irritation.
+ Opposite Boswell's account of this incident she has written, "Was
+ he not right in hating to be so treated? and would he not have
+ been right to have <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg049" id=
+ "pg049">049</a></span> loved me better than any of them, because
+ I never did make a Lyon of him?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One great charm of her companionship to cultivated men was her
+ familiarity with the learned languages, as well as with French,
+ Italian, and Spanish. The author of "Piozziana" says: "She not
+ only read and wrote Hebrew, Greek, and Latin, but had for sixty
+ years constantly and ardently studied the Scriptures and the
+ works of commentators in the original languages." She did not
+ know Greek, and he probably over-estimated her other
+ acquirements, which Boswell certainly underestimates when he
+ speaks slightingly of them on the strength of Johnson's having
+ said: "It is a great mistake to suppose that she is above him
+ (Thrale) in literary attainments. She is more flippant, but he
+ has ten times her learning: he is a regular scholar; but her
+ learning is that of a school-boy in one of the lower forms." If
+ this were so, it is strange that Thrale should cut so poor a
+ figure, should seem little better than a nonentity, whilst every
+ imaginable topic was under animated discussion at his table; for
+ Boswell was more ready to report the husband's sayings than the
+ wife's. In a marginal note on one of the printed letters she
+ says: "Mr. Thrale was a very merry talking man in 1760; but the
+ distress of 1772, which affected his health, his hopes, and his
+ whole soul, affected his temper too. Perkins called it being
+ planet struck, and I am not sure he was ever completely the same
+ man again." The notes of his conversation during the antecedent
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg050" id="pg050">050</a></span>
+ period are equally meagre.<span class="fnref">[1]</span> He is
+ described by Madame D'Arblay as taking a singular amusement in
+ hearing, instigating, and provoking a war of words, alternating
+ triumph and overthrow, between clever and ambitious colloquial
+ combatants.
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] "Pray, Doctor, said a gentleman to Johnson, is Mr. Thrale a
+ man of conversation, or is he only wise and silent?' 'Why, Sir,
+ his conversation does not show the <i>minute</i> hand; but he
+ generally strikes the hour very
+ correctly.'"&mdash;<i>Johnsoniana</i>.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ No one would have expected to find her as much at home in Greek
+ and Latin authors as a man of fair ability who had received and
+ profited by an University education, but she could appreciate a
+ classical allusion or quotation, and translate off-hand a Latin
+ epigram.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Mary Aston," said Johnson, "was a beauty and a scholar, and a
+ wit and a whig; and she talked all in praise of liberty; and so I
+ made this epigram upon her. She was the loveliest creature I ever
+ saw!
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ "'Liber ut esse velim, suasisti, pulchra Maria,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ut maneam liber, pulchra Maria, vale!'
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ "Will it do this way in English, Sir? (said Mrs. Thrale)&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ "'Persuasions to freedom fall oddly from you,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If freedom we seek, fair Maria, adieu."
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Croker's version is:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ "'You wish me, fair Maria, to be free,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then, fair Maria, I must fly from thee.'
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Boswell also has tried his hand at it; and a correspondent
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg051" id="pg051">051</a></span>
+ of the "Gentleman's Magazine" suggests that Johnson had in his
+ mind an epigram on a young lady who appeared at a masquerade in
+ Paris, habited as a Jesuit, during the height of the contention
+ between the Jansenists and Molinists concerning free will:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ "On s'étonne ici que Calviniste
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eût pris l'habit de Moliniste,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Puisque que cette jeune beauté
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ôte à chacun sa liberté,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ N'est ce pas une Janséniste."<span class="fnref">[1]</span>
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] "Menagiana," vol. iii. p. 376. Edition of 1716. Equally
+ happy were Lord Chesterfield's lines to a young lady who
+ appeared at a Dublin ball, with an orange breastknot:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Thrale took the lead even when her husband might be
+ expected to strike in, as when Johnson was declaiming
+ paradoxically against action in oratory: "Action can have no
+ effect on reasonable minds. It may augment noise, but it never
+ can enforce argument." <i>Mrs. Thrale</i>. "What then, Sir,
+ becomes of Demosthenes' saying, Action, action, action?"
+ <i>Johnson</i>. "Demosthenes, Madam, spoke to an assembly of
+ brutes, to a barbarous people." "The polished Athenians!" is
+ her marginal protest, and a conclusive one.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In English literature she was rarely at fault. In
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ "Pretty Tory, where's the jest
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To wear that riband on thy breast,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When that same breast betraying shows
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The whiteness of the rebel rose?"
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ White was adopted by the malcontent Irish as the French emblem.
+ Johnson's epigram may have been suggested by Propertius:
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ "Nullus liber erit si quis amare volet."
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg052" id="pg052">052</a></span>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ reference to the flattery lavished on Garrick by Lord Mansfield
+ and Lord Chatham, Johnson had said, "When he whom everybody else
+ flatters, flatters me, then I am truly happy." <i>Mrs.
+ Thrale</i>. "The sentiment is in Congreve, I think."
+ <i>Johnson</i>. "Yes, Madam, in 'The Way of the World.'
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ "'If there's delight in love, 'tis when I see
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The heart that others bleed for, bleed for me.'"
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ When Johnson is reported saying, "Those who have a style of
+ distinguished excellence can always be distinguished," she
+ objects: "It seems not. The lines always quoted as Dryden's,
+ beginning,
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ 'To die is landing on some silent shore,'
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ are Garth's after all." Johnson would have been still less
+ pleased at her discovery that a line in his epitaph on Phillips,
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ "Till angels wake thee with a note like thine,"
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ was imitated from Pope's
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ "And saints embrace thee with a love like mine."
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ In one of her letters to him (June, 1782) she writes: "Meantime
+ let us be as <i>merry</i> as reading Burton upon
+ <i>Melancholy</i> will make us. You bid me study that book in
+ your absence, and now, what have I found? Why, I have found, or
+ fancied, that he has been cruelly plundered: that Milton's first
+ idea of 'L'Allegro' and 'Il Penseroso' were suggested by the
+ verses at the beginning; that Savage's speech of Suicide in the
+ 'Wanderer' grew <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg053" id=
+ "pg053">053</a></span> up out of a passage you probably remember
+ towards the 216th page; that Swift's tale of the woman that holds
+ water in her mouth, to regain her husband's love by silence, had
+ its source in the same farrago; and that there is an odd
+ similitude between my Lord's trick upon Sly the Tinker, in
+ Shakspeare's 'Taming of the Shrew,' and some stuff I have been
+ reading in Burton."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It would be easy to heap proof upon proof of the value and
+ variety of Mrs. Thrale's contributions to the colloquial
+ treasures accumulated by Boswell and other members of the set;
+ and Johnson's deliberate testimony to her good qualities of head
+ and heart will far more than counterbalance any passing
+ expressions of disapproval or reproof with her mistimed vivacity,
+ or alleged disregard of scrupulous accuracy in narrative, may
+ have called forth. No two people ever lived much together for a
+ series of years without many fretful, complaining, dissatisfied,
+ uncongenial moments,&mdash;without letting drop captious or
+ unkind expressions, utterly at variance with their habitual
+ feelings and their matured judgments of each other. The hasty
+ word, the passing sarcasm, the sly hit at an acknowledged foible,
+ should count for nothing in the estimate, when contrasted with
+ earnest and deliberate assurances, proceeding from one who was
+ commonly too proud to flatter, and in no mood for idle compliment
+ when he wrote.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Never (he writes in 1773) imagine that your letters are long;
+ they are always too short for my curiosity. I do not know that I
+ was ever content with a single perusal.... My nights are grown
+ again very uneasy <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg054" id=
+ "pg054">054</a></span> and troublesome. I know not that the
+ country will mend them; but I hope your company will mend my
+ days. Though I cannot now expect much attention, and would not
+ wish for more than can be spared from the poor dear lady (her
+ mother), yet I shall see you and hear you every now and then; and
+ to see and hear you, is always to hear wit, and to see virtue."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He would not suffer her to be lightly spoken of in his presence,
+ nor permit his name to be coupled jocularly with hers. "I
+ yesterday told him," says Boswell, when they were traversing the
+ Highlands, "I was thinking of writing a poetical letter to him,
+ on his return from Scotland, in the style of Swift's humorous
+ epistle in the character of Mary Gulliver to her husband, Captain
+ Lemuel Gulliver, on his return to England from the country of the
+ Houyhnhnms:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ "'At early morn I to the market haste,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Studious in ev'ry thing to please thy taste.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A curious <i>fowl</i> and <i>sparagrass</i> I chose;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ (For I remember you were fond of those:)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Three shillings cost the first, the last seven groats;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sullen you turn from both, and call for OATS.'
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ He laughed, and asked in whose name I would write it. I said in
+ Mrs. Thrale's. He was angry. 'Sir, if you have any sense of
+ decency or delicacy, you won't do that.' <i>Boswell</i>. 'Then
+ let it be in Cole's, the landlord of the Mitre tavern, where we
+ have so often sat together.' <i>Johnson</i>. 'Ay, that may do.'"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Again, at Inverary, when Johnson called for a gill of whiskey
+ that he might know what makes a Scotchman <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg055" id="pg055">055</a></span> happy, and
+ Boswell proposed Mrs. Thrale as their toast, he would not have
+ <i>her</i> drunk in whiskey. Peter Pindar has maliciously added
+ to this reproof:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ "We supped most royally, were vastly frisky,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Johnson ordered up a gill of whiskey.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Taking the glass, says I, 'Here's Mistress Thrale,'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Drink her in <i>whiskey</i> not,' said he, 'but <i>ale</i>.'"
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ So far from making light of her scholarship, he frequently
+ accepted her as a partner in translations from the Latin. The
+ translations from Boethius, printed in the second volume of the
+ Letters, are their joint composition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After recapitulating Johnson's other contributions to literature
+ in 1766, Boswell says, "'The Fountains,' a beautiful little fairy
+ tale in prose, written with exquisite simplicity, is one of
+ Johnson's productions; and I cannot withhold from Mrs. Thrale the
+ praise of being the author of that admirable poem 'The Three
+ Warnings.'" <i>Marginal note</i>: "How sorry he is!" Both the
+ tale and the poem were written for a collection of
+ "Miscellanies," published by Mrs. Williams in that year. The
+ character of Floretta in "The Fountains" was intended for Mrs.
+ Thrale, and she thus gracefully alludes to it in a letter to
+ Johnson in Feb. 1782:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The newspapers would spoil my few comforts that are left if they
+ could; but you tell me that's only because I have the reputation,
+ whether true or false, of being a <i>wit</i> forsooth; and you
+ remember <i>poor Floretta</i>, who was teased into wishing away
+ her spirit, her <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg056" id=
+ "pg056">056</a></span> beauty, her fortune, and at last even her
+ life, never could bear the bitter water which was to have washed
+ away her wit; which she resolved to keep with all its
+ consequences."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her fugitive pieces, mostly in verse, thrown off from time to
+ time at all periods of her life, are numerous; and the best of
+ them that have been recovered will be included in these volumes.
+ In a letter to the author of "Piozziana," she says:&mdash;"When
+ Wilkes and Liberty were at their highest tide, I was bringing or
+ losing children every year; and my studies were confined to my
+ nursery; so, it came into my head one day to send an infant
+ alphabet to the 'St. James Chronicle':&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ "'A was an Alderman, factious and proud;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ B was a Bellas that blustered aloud, &amp;c.'
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ "In a week's time Dr. Johnson asked me if I knew who wrote it?
+ 'Why, who did write it, Sir?' said I. 'Steevens,' was the reply.
+ Some time after that, years for aught I know, he mentioned to me
+ Steevens's veracity! 'No, no;' answered H.L.P., anything but
+ that;' and told my story; showing him by incontestable proofs
+ that it was mine. Johnson did not utter a word, and we never
+ talked about it any more. I durst not introduce the subject; but
+ it served to hinder S. from visiting at the house: I suppose
+ Johnson kept him away."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It does not appear that Steevens claimed the Alphabet; which may
+ have suggested the celebrated squib that appeared in the "New
+ Whig Guide," and was <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg057" id=
+ "pg057">057</a></span> popularly attributed to Mr. Croker. It was
+ headed "The Political Alphabet; or, the Young Member's A B C,"
+ and begins:
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ "A was an Althorpe, as dull as a hog:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ B was black Brougham, a surly cur dog:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ C was a Cochrane, all stripped of his lace."
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ What widely different associations are now awakened by these
+ names! The sting is in the tail:
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ "W was a Warre, 'twixt a wasp and a worm,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But X Y and Z are not found in this form,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Unless Moore, Martin, and Creevey be said
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ (As the last of mankind) to be X Y and Z."
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Amongst Miss Reynolds' "Recollections" will be found:&mdash;"On
+ the praises of Mrs. Thrale, he (Johnson) used to dwell with a
+ peculiar delight, a paternal fondness, expressive of conscious
+ exultation in being so intimately acquainted with her. One day,
+ in speaking of her to Mr. Harris, author of 'Hermes,' and
+ expatiating on her various perfections,&mdash;the solidity of her
+ virtues, the brilliancy of her wit, and the strength of her
+ understanding, &amp;c.&mdash;he quoted some lines (a stanza, I
+ believe, but from what author I know not<span class=
+ "fnref">[1]</span>), with which he concluded his most eloquent
+ eulogium, and of these I retained but the two last lines:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ 'Virtues&mdash;of such a generous kind,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pure in the last recesses of the mind.'"
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] Dryden's Translation of Persius.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ The place assigned to Mrs. Thrale by the popular voice
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg058" id="pg058">058</a></span>
+ amongst the most cultivated and accomplished women of the day, is
+ fixed by some verses printed in the "Morning Herald" of March
+ 12th, 1782, which attracted much attention. They were commonly
+ attributed to Mr. (afterwards Sir W.W.) Pepys, and Madame
+ d'Arblay, who alludes to them complacently, thought them his; but
+ he subsequently repudiated the authorship, and the editor of her
+ Memoirs believes that they were written by Dr. Burney. They were
+ provoked by the proneness of the Herald to indulge in
+ complimentary allusions to ladies of the demirep genus:
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ "Herald, wherefore thus proclaim
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nought of women but the <i>shame</i>?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Quit, oh, quit, at least awhile,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Perdita's too luscious smile;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Wanton Worsley, stilted Daly,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heroines of each blackguard alley;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Better sure record in story
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such as shine their sex's glory!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Herald! haste, with me proclaim
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Those of literary fame.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hannah More's pathetic pen,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Painting high th' impassion'd scene;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Carter's piety and learning,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Little Burney's quick discerning;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cowley's neatly pointed wit,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Healing those her satires hit;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Smiling Streatfield's iv'ry neck,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nose, and notions&mdash;<i>à la Grecque!</i>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let Chapone retain a place,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And the mother of her Grace<span class="fnref">[1]</span>,
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg059" id="pg059">059</a></span>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Each art of conversation knowing,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ High-bred, elegant Boscawen;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thrale, in whose expressive eyes
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sits a soul above disguise,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Skill'd with-wit and sense t'impart
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Feelings of a generous heart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lucan, Leveson, Greville, Crewe;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fertile-minded Montagu,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Who makes each rising art her care,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'And brings her knowledge from afar!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whilst her tuneful tongue defends
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Authors dead, and absent friends;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bright in genius, pure in fame:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Herald, haste, and these proclaim!"
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] Mrs. Boscawen was the mother of the Duchess of Beaufort and
+ Mrs. Leveson Gower:
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ "All Leveson's sweetness, and all Beaufort's grace."
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ These lines merit attention for the sake of the comparison they
+ invite. An outcry has recently been raised against the laxity of
+ modern fashion, in permitting venal beauty to receive open homage
+ in our parks and theatres, and to be made the subject of prurient
+ gossip by maids and matrons who should ignore its existence. But
+ we need not look far beneath the surface of social history to
+ discover that the irregularity in question is only a partial
+ revival of the practice of our grandfathers and grandmothers,
+ much as a crinoline may be regarded as a modified reproduction of
+ the hoop. Junius thus denounces the Duke of Grafton's indecorous
+ devotion to Nancy Parsons: "It is not the private indulgence, but
+ the public insult, of which I complain. The name of Miss Parsons
+ would hardly have been known, if the First Lord of the Treasury
+ had not led her in triumph through the Opera House, even in the
+ presence of the Queen." Lord March (afterwards Duke of
+ Queensberry) was a lord of the bedchamber in the decorous court
+ of <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg060" id=
+ "pg060">060</a></span> George the Third, when he wrote thus to
+ Selwyn: "I was prevented from writing to you last Friday, by
+ being at Newmarket with my little girl (Signora Zamperini, a
+ noted dancer and singer). I had the whole family and Cocchi. The
+ beauty went with me in my chaise, and the rest in the old
+ landau."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We have had Boswell's impression of his first visit to Streatham;
+ and Madame D'Arblay's account of hers confirms the notion that My
+ Mistress, not My Master, was the presiding genius of the place.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>London, August</i> (1778).&mdash;I have now to write an
+ account of the most consequential day I have spent since my
+ birth: namely, my Streatham visit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Our journey to Streatham was the least pleasant part of the day,
+ for the roads were dreadfully dusty, and I was really in the
+ fidgets from thinking what my reception might be, and from
+ fearing they would expect a less awkward and backward kind of
+ person than I was sure they would find.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Mr. Thrale's house is white, and very pleasantly situated, in a
+ fine paddock. Mrs. Thrale was strolling about, and came to us as
+ we got out of the chaise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "She then received me, taking both my hands, and with mixed
+ politeness and cordiality welcomed me to Streatham. She led me
+ into the house, and addressed herself almost wholly for a few
+ minutes to my father, as if to give me an assurance she did not
+ mean to regard me as a show, or to distress or frighten me by
+ drawing me out. Afterwards she took me up stairs, and showed me
+ the house, and said she had very much <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg061" id="pg061">061</a></span> wished to see
+ me at Streatham, and should always think herself much obliged to
+ Dr. Burney for his goodness in bringing me, which she looked upon
+ as a very great favour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But though we were some time together, and though she was so
+ very civil, she did not <i>hint</i> at my book, and I love her
+ much more than ever for her delicacy in avoiding a subject which
+ she could not but see would have greatly embarrassed me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "When we returned to the music-room, we found Miss Thrale was
+ with my father. Miss Thrale is a very fine girl, about fourteen
+ years of age, but cold and reserved, though full of knowledge and
+ intelligence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Soon after, Mrs. Thrale took me to the library; she talked a
+ little while upon common topics, and then, at last, she mentioned
+ 'Evelina.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I now prevailed upon Mrs. Thrale to let me amuse myself, and she
+ went to dress. I then prowled about to choose some book, and I
+ saw, upon the reading-table, 'Evelina.' I had just fixed upon a
+ new translation of Cicero's 'Lælius,' when the library door was
+ opened, and Mr. Seward entered. I instantly put away my book,
+ because I dreaded being thought studious and affected. He offered
+ his service to find anything for me, and then, in the same
+ breath, ran on to speak of the book with which I had myself
+ 'favoured the world!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The exact words he began with I cannot recollect, for I was
+ actually confounded by the attack; and his abrupt manner of
+ letting me know he was <i>au fait</i> <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg062" id="pg062">062</a></span> equally
+ astonished and provoked me. How different from the delicacy of
+ Mr. and Mrs. Thrale!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A high French authority has laid down that good breeding consists
+ in rendering to all what is socially their due. This definition
+ is imperfect. Good breeding is best displayed by putting people
+ at their ease; and Mrs. Thrale's manner of putting the young
+ authoress at her ease was the perfection of delicacy and tact.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If Johnson's entrance on the stage had been premeditated, it
+ could hardly have been more dramatically ordered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "When we were summoned to dinner, Mrs. Thrale made my father and
+ me sit on each side of her. I said that I hoped I did not take
+ Dr. Johnson's place;&mdash;for he had not yet appeared.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'No,' answered Mrs. Thrale, 'he will sit by you, which I am sure
+ will give him great pleasure.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Soon after we were seated, this great man entered. I have so
+ true a veneration for him, that the very sight of him inspires me
+ with delight and reverence, notwithstanding the cruel infirmities
+ to which he is subject; for he has almost perpetual convulsive
+ movements, either of his hands, lips, feet, or knees, and
+ sometimes of all together.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Mrs. Thrale introduced me to him, and he took his place. We had
+ a noble dinner, and a most elegant dessert. Dr. Johnson, in the
+ middle of dinner, asked Mrs. Thrale what was in some little pies
+ that were near him. <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg063" id=
+ "pg063">063</a></span>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Mutton,' answered she, 'so I don't ask you to eat any, because
+ I know you despise it.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'No, Madam, no,' cried he: 'I despise nothing that is good of
+ its sort; but I am too proud now to eat of it. Sitting by Miss
+ Burney makes me very proud to-day!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Miss Burney,' said Mrs. Thrale, laughing, 'you must take great
+ care of your heart if Dr. Johnson attacks it; for I assure you he
+ is not often successless.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'What's that you say, Madam?' cried he; 'are you making mischief
+ between the young lady and me already?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "A little while after he drank Miss Thrale's health and mine, and
+ then added:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Tis a terrible thing that we cannot wish young ladies well,
+ without wishing them to become old women.'"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Madame D'Arblay's memoirs are sadly defaced by egotism, and
+ gratified vanity may have had a good deal to do with her
+ unqualified admiration of Mrs. Thrale; for "Evelina" (recently
+ published) was the unceasing topic of exaggerated eulogy during
+ the entire visit. Still so acute an observer could not be
+ essentially wrong in an account of her reception, which is in the
+ highest degree favourable to her newly acquired friend. Of her
+ second visit she says:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Our journey was charming. The kind Mrs. Thrale would give
+ courage to the most timid. She did not ask me questions, or
+ catechise me upon what I knew, or use any means to draw me out,
+ but made it her <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg064" id=
+ "pg064">064</a></span> business to draw herself out&mdash;that
+ is, to start subjects, to support them herself, and take all the
+ weight of the conversation, as if it behoved her to find me
+ entertainment. But I am so much in love with her, that I shall be
+ obliged to run away from the subject, or shall write of nothing
+ else.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "When we arrived here, Mrs. Thrale showed me my room, which is an
+ exceeding pleasant one, and then conducted me to the library,
+ there to divert myself while she dressed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Miss Thrale soon joined me: and I begin to like her. Mr. Thrale
+ was neither well nor in spirits all day. Indeed, he seems not to
+ be a happy man, though he has every means of happiness in his
+ power. But I think I have rarely seen a very rich man with a
+ light heart and light spirits."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The concluding remark, coming from such a source, may supply an
+ improving subject of meditation or inquiry; if found true, it may
+ help to suppress envy and promote contentment. Thrale's state of
+ health, however, accounts for his depression independently of his
+ wealth, which rested on too precarious a foundation to allow of
+ unbroken confidence and gaiety.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "At tea (continues the diarist) we all met again, and Dr. Johnson
+ was gaily sociable. He gave a very droll account of the children
+ of Mr. Langton&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'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 <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg065" id=
+ "pg065">065</a></span> 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. But he could not have
+ chosen a man who would have been less entertained by such means.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'I believe not!' cried Mrs. Thrale: 'nothing is more ridiculous
+ than parents cramming their children's nonsense down other
+ people's throats. I keep mine as much out of the way as I can.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Yours, Madam,' answered he, 'are in nobody's way; no children
+ can be better managed or less troublesome; but your fault is, a
+ too great perverseness in not allowing anybody to give them
+ anything. Why should they not have a cherry, or a gooseberry, as
+ well as bigger children?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Indeed, the freedom with which Dr. Johnson condemns whatever he
+ disapproves, is astonishing; and the strength of words he uses
+ would, to most people, be intolerable; but Mrs. Thrale seems to
+ have a sweetness of disposition that equals all her other
+ excellences, and far from making a point of vindicating herself,
+ she generally receives his admonitions with the most respectful
+ silence."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But it must not be supposed that this was done without an effort.
+ When Boswell speaks of Johnson's "accelerating her pulsation,"
+ she adds, "he checked it often enough, to be sure."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another of the conversations which occurred during this visit is
+ characteristic of all parties:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We had been talking of colours, and of the fantastic
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg066" id="pg066">066</a></span>
+ names given to them, and why the palest lilac should be called a
+ <i>soupir étouffé</i>.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Why, Madam,' said he, with wonderful readiness, 'it is called a
+ stifled sigh because it is checked in its progress, and only half
+ a colour.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I could not help expressing my amazement at his universal
+ readiness upon all subjects, and Mrs. Thrale said to him,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Sir, Miss Burney wonders at your patience with such stuff; but
+ I tell her you are used to me, for I believe I torment you with
+ more foolish questions than anybody else dares do.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'No, Madam,' said he, 'you don't torment me;&mdash;you teaze me,
+ indeed, sometimes.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Ay, so I do, Dr. Johnson, and I wonder you bear with my
+ nonsense.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'No, Madam, you never talk nonsense; you have as much sense, and
+ more wit, than any woman I know!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Oh,' cried Mrs. Thrale, blushing, 'it is my turn to go under
+ the table this morning, Miss Burney!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'And yet,' continued the Doctor, with the most comical look, 'I
+ have known all the wits, from Mrs. Montagu down to Bet Flint!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Bet Flint,' cried Mrs. Thrale; 'pray who is she?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Oh, a fine character, Madam! She was habitually a slut and a
+ drunkard, and occasionally a thief and a harlot.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'And, for heaven's sake, how came you to know her?' <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg067" id="pg067">067</a></span>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Why, Madam, she figured in the literary world, too! Bet Flint
+ wrote her own life, and called herself Cassandra, and it was in
+ verse. So Bet brought me her verses to correct; but I gave her a
+ half-a-crown, and she liked it as well.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'And pray what became of her, Sir?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Why, Madam, she stole a quilt from the man of the house, and he
+ had her taken up: but Bet Flint had a spirit not to be subdued;
+ so when she found herself obliged to go to jail, she ordered a
+ sedan chair, and bid her footboy walk before her. However, the
+ boy proved refractory, for he was ashamed, though his mistress
+ was not.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'And did she ever get out of jail again, Sir?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Yes, Madam; when she came to her trial, the judge acquitted
+ her. "So now," she said to me, "the quilt is my own, and now I'll
+ make a petticoat of it."<span class="fnref">[1]</span> Oh, I
+ loved Bet Flint!'
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] This story is told by Boswell, roy. 8vo, edit. p. 688.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ "Bless me, Sir!' cried Mrs. Thrale, 'how can all these vagabonds
+ contrive to get at <i>you</i>, of all people?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Oh the dear creatures!' cried he, laughing heartily, 'I can't
+ but be glad to see them!'"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Madame D'Arblay's notes (in her Diary) of the conversation and
+ mode of life at Streatham are full and spirited, and exhibit
+ Johnson in moods and situations in which he was seldom seen by
+ Boswell. The adroitness with which he divided his attentions
+ amongst the ladies, blending approval with instruction, and
+ softening contradiction <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg068" id=
+ "pg068">068</a></span> or reproof by gallantry, gives
+ plausibility to his otherwise paradoxical claim to be considered
+ a polite man.<span class="fnref">[1]</span> He obviously knew how
+ to set about it, and (theoretically at least) was no mean
+ proficient in that art of pleasing which attracts
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ "Rather by deference than compliment,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And wins e'en by a delicate dissent."
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] "When the company were retired, we happened to be talking
+ of Dr. Barnard, the provost of Eton, who died about that time;
+ and after a long and just eulogium on his wit, his learning,
+ and goodness of heart&mdash;'He was the only man, too,' says
+ Mr. Johnson, quite seriously, 'that did justice to my good
+ breeding; and you may observe that I am well-bred to a degree
+ of needless scrupulosity. No man,' continued he, not observing
+ the amazement of his hearers, 'no man is so cautious not to
+ interrupt another; no man thinks it so necessary to appear
+ attentive when others are speaking; no man so steadily refuses
+ preference to himself, or so willingly bestows it on another,
+ as I do; nobody holds so strongly as I do the necessity of
+ ceremony, and the ill effects which follow the breach of it:
+ yet people think me rude; but Barnard did me
+ justice.'"&mdash;<i>Anecdotes</i>. "I think myself a very
+ polite man,"&mdash;<i>Boswell</i>. 1778.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Sir Henry Bulwer (in his "France") says that Louis the Fourteenth
+ was entitled to be called a man of genius, if only from the
+ delicate beauty of his compliments. Mrs. Thrale awards the palm
+ of excellence in the same path to Johnson. "Your compliments,
+ Sir, are made seldom, but when they are made, they have an
+ elegance unequalled; but then, when you are angry, who dares make
+ speeches so bitter and so cruel?" "I am sure," she adds, after a
+ semblance of defence on his part, "I have had my share of
+ scolding from you." <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg069" id=
+ "pg069">069</a></span> <i>Johnson</i>. "It is true, you have, but
+ you have borne it like an angel, and you have been the better for
+ it." As the discussion proceeds, he accuses her of often
+ provoking him to say severe things by unreasonable commendation;
+ a common mode of acquiring a character for amiability at the
+ expense of one's intimates, who are made to appear uncharitable
+ by being thus constantly placed on the depreciating side.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some years prior to this period (1778) Mrs. Thrale's mind and
+ character had undergone a succession of the most trying ordeals,
+ and was tempered and improved, without being hardened, by them.
+ In allusion to what she suffered in child-bearing, she said later
+ in life that she had nine times undergone the sentence of a
+ convict,&mdash;confinement with hard labour. Child after child
+ died at the age when the bereavement is most affecting to a
+ mother. Her husband's health kept her in a constant state of
+ apprehension for his life, and his affairs became embarrassed to
+ the very verge of bankruptcy. So long as they remained
+ prosperous, he insisted on her not meddling with them in any way,
+ and even required her to keep to her drawing-room and leave the
+ conduct of their domestic establishment to the butler and
+ housekeeper. But when (from circumstances detailed in the
+ "Autobiography") his fortune was seriously endangered, he wisely
+ and gladly availed himself of her prudence and energy, and was
+ saved by so doing. I have now before me a collection of autograph
+ letters from her to Mr. Perkins, then manager and afterwards one
+ of the proprietors of <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg070" id=
+ "pg070">070</a></span> the brewery, from which it appears that
+ she paid the most minute attention to the business, besides
+ undertaking the superintendence of her own hereditary estate in
+ Wales. On September 28, 1773, she writes to Mr. Perkins, who was
+ on a commercial journey:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Mr. Thrale is still upon his little tour; I opened a letter from
+ you at the counting-house this morning, and am sorry to find you
+ have so much trouble with Grant and his affairs. How glad I shall
+ be to hear that matter is settled at all to your satisfaction.
+ His letter and remittance came while I was there to-day....
+ Careless, of the 'Blue Posts,' has turned refractory, and applied
+ to Hoare's people, who have sent him in their beer. I called on
+ him to-day, however, and by dint of an unwearied solicitation,
+ (for I kept him at the coach side a full half-hour) I got his
+ order for six butts more as the final trial."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Examples of fine ladies pressing tradesmen for their votes with
+ compromising importunity are far from rare, but it would be
+ difficult to find a parallel for Johnson's Hetty doing duty as a
+ commercial traveller. She was simultaneously obliged to
+ anticipate the electioneering exploits of the Duchess of
+ Devonshire and Mrs. Crewe; and in after life, having occasion to
+ pass through Southwark, she expresses her astonishment at no
+ longer recognising a place, every hole and corner of which she
+ had three times visited as a canvasser.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After the death of Mr. Thrale, a friend of Mr. H. Thornton
+ canvassed the borough on behalf of that gentleman. He waited on
+ Mrs. Thrale, who promised her <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+ "pg071" id="pg071">071</a></span> support. She concluded her
+ obliging expressions by saying:&mdash;"I wish your friend
+ success, and I think he will have it: he may probably come in for
+ two parliaments, but if he tries for a third, were he an angel
+ from heaven, the people of Southwark would cry, 'Not <i>this</i>
+ man, but Barabbas.'"<span class="fnref">[1]</span>
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] Miss Laetitia Matilda Hawkins vouches for this
+ story.&mdash;"Memoir, &amp;c." vol. i. p.66, note, where she
+ adds:&mdash;"I have heard it said, that into whatever company
+ she (Mrs. T.) fell, she could be the most agreeable person in
+ it."
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ On one of her canvassing expeditions, Johnson accompanied her,
+ and a rough fellow, a hatter by trade, seeing the moralist's hat
+ in a state of decay, seized it suddenly with one hand, and
+ clapping him on the back with the other, cried out, "Ah, Master
+ Johnson, this is no time to be thinking about hats." "No, no,
+ Sir," replied the Doctor, "hats are of no use now, as you say,
+ except to throw up in the air and huzzah with;" accompanying his
+ words with the true election halloo.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thrale had serious thoughts of repaying Johnson's electioneering
+ aid in kind, by bringing him into Parliament. Sir John Hawkins
+ says that Thrale had two meetings with the minister (Lord North),
+ who at first seemed inclined to find Johnson a seat, but
+ eventually discountenanced the project. Lord Stowell told Mr.
+ Croker that Lord North did not feel quite sure that Johnson's
+ support might not sometimes prove rather an incumbrance than a
+ help. "His lordship perhaps thought, and not unreasonably, that,
+ like the elephant <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg072" id=
+ "pg072">072</a></span> in the battle, he was quite as likely to
+ trample down his friends as his foes." Flood doubted whether
+ Johnson, being long used to sententious brevity and the short
+ flights of conversation, would have succeeded in the expanded
+ kind of argument required in public speaking. Burke's opinion
+ was, that if he had come early into Parliament, he would have
+ been the greatest speaker ever known in it. Upon being told this
+ by Reynolds, he exclaimed, "I should like to try my hand now." On
+ Boswell's adding that he wished he <i>had</i>, Mrs. Thrale
+ writes: "Boswell had leisure for curiosity: Ministers had not.
+ Boswell would have been equally amused by his failure as by his
+ success; but to Lord North there would have been no joke at all
+ in the experiment ending untowardly."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was equally ready with advice and encouragement during the
+ difficulties connected with the brewery. He was not of opinion
+ with Aristotle and Parson Adams, that trade is below a
+ philosopher<span class="fnref">[1]</span>; and he eagerly buried
+ himself in computing the cost of the malt and the possible
+ profits on the ale. In October 1772, he writes from Lichfield:
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] "Trade, answered Adams, is below a philosopher, as
+ Aristotle proves in his first chapter of 'Politics,' and
+ unnatural, as it is managed now."&mdash;<i>Joseph Andrews</i>.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ "Do not suffer little things to disturb you. The brew-house must
+ be the scene of action, and the subject of speculation. The first
+ consequence of our late trouble ought to be, an endeavour to brew
+ at a cheaper rate; an endeavour not violent and transient, but
+ steady and <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg073" id=
+ "pg073">073</a></span> continual, prosecuted with total contempt
+ of censure or wonder, and animated by resolution not to stop
+ while more can be done. Unless this can be done, nothing can help
+ us; and if this be done, we shall not want help. Surely there is
+ something to be saved; there is to be saved whatever is the
+ difference between vigilance and neglect, between parsimony and
+ profusion. The price of malt has risen again. It is now two
+ pounds eight shillings the quarter. Ale is sold in the
+ public-houses at sixpence a quart, a price which I never heard of
+ before."
+ </p>
+ <p class="break">
+ In November of the same year, from Ashbourne:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "DEAR MADAM,&mdash;So many days and never a
+ letter!&mdash;<i>Fugere fides, pietasque pudorque</i>. This is
+ Turkish usage. And I have been hoping and hoping. But you are so
+ glad to have me out of your mind.<span class="fnref">[1]</span>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I think you were quite right in your advice about the thousand
+ pounds, for the payment could not have been delayed long; and a
+ short delay would have lessened credit, without advancing
+ interest. But in great matters you are hardly ever mistaken."
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] This tone of playful reproach, when adopted by Johnson at a
+ later period, has been cited as a proof of actual
+ ill-treatment.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p class="break">
+ In May 17, 1773:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why should Mr. T&mdash;&mdash; suppose, that what I took the
+ liberty of suggesting was concerted with you? He does not know
+ how much I revolve his affairs, and how honestly I desire his
+ prosperity. I hope he has let the hint take some hold of his
+ mind."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the copy of the printed letters presented by Mrs. <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg074" id="pg074">074</a></span> Thrale to Sir
+ James Fellowes, the blank is filled up with the name of Thrale,
+ and the passage is thus annotated in her handwriting:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Concerning his (Thrale's) connection with quack chemists, quacks
+ of all sorts; jumping up in the night to go to Marlbro' Street
+ from Southwark, after some advertising mountebank, at hazard of
+ his life," In "Thraliana":
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "18<i>th July</i>, 1778.&mdash;Mr. Thrale overbrewed himself last
+ winter and made an artificial scarcity of money in the family
+ which has extremely lowered his spirits. Mr. Johnson endeavoured
+ last night, and so did I, to make him promise that he would never
+ more brew a larger quantity of beer in one winter than 80,000
+ barrels<span class="fnref">[1]</span>, but my Master, mad with
+ the noble ambition of emulating Whitbread and Calvert, two
+ fellows that he despises,&mdash;could scarcely be prevailed on to
+ promise even <i>this</i>, that he will not brew more than four
+ score thousand barrels a year for five years to come. He did
+ promise that much, however; and so Johnson bade me write it down
+ in the 'Thraliana';&mdash;and so the wings of Speculation are
+ clipped a little&mdash;very fain would I have pinioned her, but I
+ had not strength to perform the operation."
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] "If he got but <i>2s. 6d.</i> by each barrel, 80,000 half
+ crowns are £10,000; and what more would mortal man desire than
+ an income of ten thousand a year&mdash;five to spend, and five
+ to lay up?"
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ That Johnson's advice was neither thrown away nor undervalued,
+ may be inferred from an incident related by Boswell. Mr. Perkins
+ had hung up in the counting-house <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+ "pg075" id="pg075">075</a></span> a fine proof of the mezzotinto
+ of Dr. Johnson by Doughty; and when Mrs. Thrale asked him,
+ somewhat flippantly, "Why do you put him up in the
+ counting-house?" Mr. Perkins answered, "Because, Madam, I wish to
+ have one wise man there." "Sir," said Johnson, "I thank you. It
+ is a very handsome compliment, and I believe you speak
+ sincerely."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was in the habit of paying the most minute attention to every
+ branch of domestic economy, and his suggestions are invariably
+ marked by shrewdness and good sense. Thus when Mrs. Thrale was
+ giving evening parties, he told her that though few people might
+ be hungry after a late dinner, she should always have a good
+ supply of cakes and sweetmeats on a side table, and that some
+ cold meat and a bottle of wine would often be found acceptable.
+ Notwithstanding the imperfection of his eyesight, and his own
+ slovenliness, he was a critical observer of dress and demeanour,
+ and found fault without ceremony or compunction when any of his
+ canons of taste or propriety were infringed. Several amusing
+ examples are enumerated by Mrs. Thrale:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I commended a young lady for her beauty and pretty behaviour one
+ day, however, to whom I thought no objections could have been
+ made. 'I saw her,' said Dr. Johnson, 'take a pair of scissors in
+ her left hand though; and for all her father is now become a
+ nobleman, and as you say excessively rich, I should, were I a
+ youth of quality ten years hence, hesitate between a girl so
+ neglected, and a <i>negro</i>.' <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+ "pg076" id="pg076">076</a></span>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It was indeed astonishing how he <i>could</i> remark such
+ minuteness with a sight so miserably imperfect; but no accidental
+ position of a riband escaped him, so nice was his observation,
+ and so rigorous his demands of propriety. When I went with him to
+ Litchfield, and came downstairs to breakfast at the inn, my dress
+ did not please him, and he made me alter it entirely before he
+ would stir a step with us about the town, saying most satirical
+ things concerning the appearance I made in a riding-habit; and
+ adding, ''Tis very strange that such eyes as yours cannot discern
+ propriety of dress: if I had a sight only half as good, I think I
+ should see to the centre.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Another lady, whose accomplishments he never denied, came to our
+ house one day covered with diamonds, feathers, &amp;c., and he
+ did not seem inclined to chat with her as usual. I asked him why?
+ when the company was gone. 'Why, her head looked so like that of
+ a woman who shows puppets,' said he, 'and her voice so confirmed
+ the fancy, that I could not bear her to-day; when she wears a
+ large cap, I can talk to her.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "When the ladies wore lace trimmings to their clothes, he
+ expressed his contempt of the reigning fashion in these terms: 'A
+ Brussels trimming is like bread-sauce,' said he, 'it takes away
+ the glow of colour from the gown, and gives you nothing instead
+ of it; but sauce was invented to heighten the flavour of our
+ food, and trimming is an ornament to the manteau, or it is
+ nothing. Learn,' said he, 'that there is propriety <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg077" id="pg077">077</a></span> or
+ impropriety in every thing how slight soever, and get at the
+ general principles of dress and of behaviour; if you then
+ transgress them, you will at least know that they are not
+ observed.'"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Madame D'Arblay confirms this account. He had just been finding
+ fault with a bandeau worn by Lady Lade, a very large woman,
+ standing six feet high without her shoes:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Dr. J.</i>&mdash;The truth is, women, take them in general,
+ have no idea of grace. Fashion is all they think of. I don't mean
+ Mrs. Thrale and Miss Burney, when I talk of women!&mdash;they are
+ goddesses!&mdash;and therefore I except them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Mrs. Thrale.</i>&mdash;Lady Lade never wore the bandeau, and
+ said she never would, because it is unbecoming.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Dr. J. (laughing.)</i>&mdash;Did not she? then is Lady Lade a
+ charming woman, and I have yet hopes of entering into engagements
+ with her!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Mrs. T.</i>&mdash;Well, as to that I can't say; but to be
+ sure, the only similitude I have yet discovered in you, is in
+ size: there you agree mighty well.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Dr. J.</i>&mdash;Why, if anybody could have worn the bandeau,
+ it must have been Lady Lade; for there is enough of her to carry
+ it off; but you are too little for anything ridiculous; that
+ which seems nothing upon a Patagonian, will become very
+ conspicuous upon a Lilliputian, and of you there is so little in
+ all, that one single absurdity would swallow up half of you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Matrimony was one of his favourite subjects, and he was fond of
+ laying down and refining on the duties of <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg078" id="pg078">078</a></span> the married
+ state, with the amount of happiness and comfort to be found in
+ it. But once when he was musing over the fire in the drawing-room
+ at Streatham, a young gentleman called to him suddenly, "Mr.
+ Johnson, would you advise me to marry?" "I would advise no man to
+ marry, Sir," replied the Doctor in a very angry tone, "who is not
+ likely to propagate understanding;" and so left the room. "Our
+ companion," adds Mrs. Thrale, in the "Anecdotes," "looked
+ confounded, and I believe had scarce recovered the consciousness
+ of his own existence, when Johnson came back, and, drawing his
+ chair among us, with altered looks and a softened voice, joined
+ in the general chat, insensibly led the conversation to the
+ subject of marriage, where he laid himself out in a dissertation
+ so useful, so elegant, so founded on the true knowledge of human
+ life, and so adorned with beauty of sentiment, that no one ever
+ recollected the offence, except to rejoice in its consequences."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The young gentleman was Mr. Thrale's nephew, Sir John Lade; who
+ was proposed, half in earnest, whilst still a minor, by the
+ Doctor as a fitting mate for the author of "Evelina." 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In "Thraliana" she says:&mdash;"Lady Lade consulted him about her
+ son, Sir John. 'Endeavour, Madam,' said he, 'to procure him
+ knowledge; for really ignorance to a rich man is like fat to a
+ sick sheep, it only serves <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg079"
+ id="pg079">079</a></span> to call the rooks about him.' On the
+ same occasion it was that he observed how a mind unfurnished with
+ subjects and materials for thinking can keep up no dignity at all
+ in solitude. 'It is,' says he, 'in the state of a mill without
+ grist.'"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The attractions of Streatham must have been very strong, to
+ induce Johnson to pass so much of his time away from "the busy
+ hum of men" in Fleet Street, and "the full tide of human
+ existence" at Charing Cross. He often found fault with Mrs.
+ Thrale for living so much in the country, "feeding the chickens
+ till she starved her understanding." Walking in a wood when it
+ rained, she tells us, "was the only rural image he pleased his
+ fancy with; for he would say, after one has gathered the apples
+ in an orchard, one wishes them well baked, and removed to a
+ London eating-house for enjoyment." This is almost as bad as the
+ foreigner, who complained that there was no ripe fruit in England
+ but the roasted apples. Amongst other modes of passing time in
+ the country, Johnson once or twice tried hunting and, mounted on
+ an old horse of Mr. Thrale's, acquitted himself to the surprise
+ of the "field," one of whom delighted him by exclaiming, "Why
+ Johnson rides as well, for ought I see, as the most illiterate
+ fellow in England." But a trial or two satisfied him&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ "He thought at heart like courtly Chesterfield,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Who after a long chase o'er hills, dales, fields,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And what not, though he rode beyond all price,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ask'd next day,'If men ever hunted twice?'"
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ It is very strange, and very melancholy, was his reflection,
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg080" id="pg080">080</a></span>
+ that the paucity of human pleasures should persuade us ever to
+ call hunting one of them. The mode of locomotion in which he
+ delighted was the vehicular. As he was driving rapidly in a
+ postchaise with Boswell, he exclaimed, "Life has not many things
+ better than this." On their way from Dr. Taylor's to Derby in
+ 1777, he said, "If I had no duties, and no reference to futurity,
+ I would spend my life in driving briskly in a postchaise with a
+ pretty woman, but she should be one who could understand me, and
+ would add something to the conversation."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Croker attributes his enjoyment to the novelty of the
+ pleasure; his poverty having in early life prevented him from
+ travelling post. But a better reason is given by Mrs. Thrale:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I asked him why he doated on a coach so? and received for
+ answer, that in the first place, the company were shut in with
+ him <i>there</i>; and could not escape, as out of a room; in the
+ next place, he heard all that was said in a carriage, where it
+ was my turn to be deaf; and very impatient was he at my
+ occasional difficulty of hearing. On this account he wished to
+ travel all over the world: for the very act of going forward was
+ delightful to him, and he gave himself no concern about
+ accidents, which he said never happened; nor did the running-away
+ of the horses at the edge of a precipice between Vernon and St.
+ Denys in France convince him to the contrary: 'for nothing came
+ of it,' he said, 'except that Mr. Thrale leaped out of the
+ carriage into a chalk-pit, and then came up again, looking as
+ <i>white</i>!' <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg081" id=
+ "pg081">081</a></span> When the truth was, all their lives were
+ saved by the greatest providence ever exerted in favour of three
+ human creatures: and the part Mr. Thrale took from desperation
+ was the likeliest thing in the world to produce broken limbs and
+ death."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The drawbacks on his gratification and on that of his fellow
+ travellers were his physical defects, and his utter insensibility
+ to the beauty of nature, as well as to the fine arts, in so far
+ as they were addressed to the senses of sight and hearing. "He
+ delighted," says Mrs. Thrale, "no more in music than painting; he
+ was almost as deaf as he was blind; travelling with Dr. Johnson
+ was, for these reasons, tiresome enough. Mr. Thrale loved
+ prospects, and was mortified that his friend could not enjoy the
+ sight of those different dispositions of wood and water, hill and
+ valley, that travelling through England and France affords a man.
+ But when he wished to point them out to his companion: 'Never
+ heed such nonsense,' would be the reply: 'a blade of grass is
+ always a blade of grass, whether in one country or another: let
+ us, if we <i>do</i> talk, talk about something; men and women are
+ my subjects of inquiry; let us see how these differ from those we
+ have left behind."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is no small deduction from our admiration of Johnson, and no
+ trifling enhancement of his friends' kindness in tolerating his
+ eccentricities, that he seldom made allowance for his own
+ palpable and undeniable deficiencies. As well might a blind man
+ deny the existence of colours, as a purblind man assert that
+ there was no charm in a prospect, or in a Claude or <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg082" id="pg082">082</a></span> Titian,
+ because he could see none. Once, by way of pleasing Reynolds, he
+ pretended to lament that the great painter's genius was not
+ exerted on stuff more durable than canvas, and suggested copper.
+ Sir Joshua urged the difficulty of procuring plates large enough
+ for historical subjects. "What foppish obstacles are these!"
+ exclaimed Johnson. "Here is Thrale has a thousand ton of copper:
+ you may paint it all round if you will, I suppose; it will serve
+ him to brew in afterwards. Will it not, Sir?" (to Thrale, who
+ sate by.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He always "civilised" to Dr. Burney, who has supplied the
+ following anecdote:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "After having talked slightingly of music, he was observed to
+ listen very attentively while Miss Thrale played on the
+ harpsichord; and with eagerness he called to her, 'Why don't you
+ dash away like Burney?' Dr. Burney upon this said to him, 'I
+ believe, Sir, we shall make a musician of you at last.' Johnson
+ with candid complacency replied, 'Sir, I shall be glad to have a
+ new sense given to me.'"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In 1774, the Thrales made a tour in Wales, mainly for the purpose
+ of revisiting her birthplace and estates. They were accompanied
+ by Johnson, who kept a diary of the expedition, beginning July
+ 5th and ending September 24th. It was preserved by his negro
+ servant, and Boswell had no suspicion of its existence, for he
+ says, "I do not find that he kept any journal or notes of what he
+ saw there." The diary was first published by Mr. Duppa in 1816;
+ and some manuscript notes by Mrs. Thrale which reached that
+ gentleman too late for <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg083" id=
+ "pg083">083</a></span> insertion, have been added in Mr. Murray's
+ recent edition of the Life. The first entry is:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Tuesday, July 5</i>.&mdash;We left Streatham 11 A.M. Price of
+ four horses two shillings a mile. Barnet 1.40 P.M. On the road I
+ read 'Tully's Epistles.' At night at Dunstable." At Chester, he
+ records:&mdash;"We walked round the walls, which are complete,
+ and contain one mile, three quarters, and one hundred and one
+ yards." Mrs. Thrale's comment is, "Of those ill-fated walls Dr.
+ Johnson might have learned the extent from any one. He has since
+ put me fairly out of countenance by saying, 'I have known <i>my
+ mistress</i> fifteen years, and never saw her fairly out of
+ humour but on Chester wall.' It was because he would keep Miss
+ Thrale beyond her hour of going to bed to walk on the wall, where
+ from the want of light, I apprehended some accident to her,
+ perhaps to him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He thus describes Mrs. Thrale's family mansion:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Saturday, July 30.</i>&mdash;We went to Bâch y Graig, where
+ we found an old house, built 1567, in an uncommon and
+ incommodious form&mdash;My mistress chatted about tiring, but I
+ prevailed on her to go to the top&mdash;The floors have been
+ stolen: the windows are stopped&mdash;The house was less than I
+ seemed to expect&mdash;The River Clwyd is a brook with a bridge
+ of one arch, about one third of a mile&mdash;The woods have many
+ trees, generally young; but some which seem to decay&mdash;They
+ have been lopped&mdash;The house never had a garden&mdash;The
+ addition of another story would make an useful house, but it
+ cannot be great." <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg084" id=
+ "pg084">084</a></span>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the 4th August, they visited Rhuddlan Castle and
+ Bodryddan<span class="fnref">[1]</span>, of which he says:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] Now the property of Mr. Shipley Conway, the great-grandson
+ of Johnson's acquaintance, the Bishop of St. Asaph, and
+ representative, through females, of Sir John Conway or Conwy,
+ to whom Rhuddlan Castle, with its domain, was granted by Edward
+ the First.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ "Stapylton's house is pretty: there are pleasing shades about it,
+ with a constant spring that supplies a cold bath. We then went
+ out to see a cascade. I trudged unwillingly, and was not sorry to
+ find it dry. The water was, however, turned on, and produced a
+ very striking cataract."<span class="fnref">[1]</span>
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] Bowles, the poet, on the unexpected arrival of a party to
+ see his grounds, was overheard giving a hurried order to set
+ the fountain playing and carry the hermit his beard.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Piozzi remarks on this passage: "He teased Mrs. Cotton about
+ her dry cascade till she was ready to cry."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Cotton, <i>née</i> Stapylton, married the eldest son of Sir
+ Lynch Cotton, and was the mother of Field-Marshal Viscount
+ Combermere. She said that Johnson, despite of his rudeness, was
+ at times delightful, having a manner peculiar to himself in
+ relating anecdotes that could not fail to attract both old and
+ young. Her impression was that Mrs. Thrale was very vexatious in
+ wishing to engross all his attention, which annoyed him much.
+ This, I fancy, is no uncommon impression, when we ourselves are
+ anxious to attract notice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The range of hills bordering the valley or delta of the Clwyd, is
+ very fine. On their being pointed out to him by his host, he
+ exclaimed: "Hills, do you call <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+ "pg085" id="pg085">085</a></span> them?&mdash;mere mole-hills to
+ the Alps or to those in Scotland." On being told that Sir Richard
+ Clough had formed a plan for making the river navigable to
+ Rhyddlan, he broke out into a loud fit of laughter, and
+ shouted&mdash;"why, Sir, I could clear any part of it by a leap."
+ He probably had seen neither the hills nor the river, which might
+ easily be made navigable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On two occasions, Johnson incidentally imputes a want of
+ liberality to Mrs. Thrale, which the general tenor of her conduct
+ belies:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>August 2.</i>&mdash;We went to Dymerchion Church, where the
+ old clerk acknowledged his mistress. It is the parish church of
+ Bâch y Graig; a mean fabric; Mr. Salusbury (Mrs. Thrale's father)
+ was buried in it.... The old clerk had great appearance of joy,
+ and foolishly said that he was now willing to die. He had only a
+ crown given him by my mistress."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>August 4.</i>&mdash;Mrs. Thrale lost her purse. She expressed
+ so much uneasiness that I concluded the sum to be very great; but
+ when I heard of only seven guineas, I was glad to find she had so
+ much sensibility of money."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Johnson might have remarked, that the annoyance we experience
+ from a loss is seldom entirely regulated by the pecuniary value
+ of the thing lost.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the way to Holywell he sets down: "Talk with mistress about
+ flattery;" on which she notes: "He said I flattered the people to
+ whose houses we went: I was saucy and said I was obliged to be
+ civil for two, meaning <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg086" id=
+ "pg086">086</a></span> himself and me.<span class=
+ "fnref">[1]</span> He replied nobody would thank me for
+ compliments they did not understand. At Gwanynog (Mr.
+ Middleton's), however, <i>he</i> was flattered, and was happy of
+ course."
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] Madame D'Arblay reports Mrs. Thrale saying to Johnson at
+ Streatham, in September, 1778: "I remember, Sir, when we were
+ travelling in Wales, how you called me to account for my
+ civility to the people; 'Madam,' you said, 'let me have no more
+ of this idle commendation of nothing. Why is it, that whatever
+ you see, and whoever you see, you are to be so indiscriminately
+ lavish of praise?' 'Why I'll tell you, Sir,' said I, 'when I am
+ with you, and Mr. Thrale, and Queeny, I am obliged to be civil
+ for four!'"
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ The other entries referring to the Thrales are:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>August</i> 22.&mdash;We went to visit Bodville, the place
+ where Mrs. Thrale was born, and the churches called Tydweilliog
+ and Llangwinodyl, which she holds by impropriation."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>August</i> 24.&mdash;We went to see Bodville. Mrs. Thrale
+ remembered the rooms, and wandered over them, with recollections
+ of her childhood. This species of pleasure is always
+ melancholy.... Mr. Thrale purposes to beautify the churches, and,
+ if he prospers, will probably restore the tithes. Mrs. Thrale
+ visited a house where she had been used to drink milk, which was
+ left, with an estate of 200<i>l.</i> a year, by one Lloyd, to a
+ married woman who lived with him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>August</i> 26.&mdash;<i>Note</i>. Queeny's goats, 149, I
+ think."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Without Mr. Duppa's aid this last entry would be a puzzle for
+ commentators. His note is:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Mr. Thrale was near-sighted, and could not see the goats
+ browsing on Snowdon, and he promised his <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg087" id="pg087">087</a></span> daughter, who
+ was a child of ten years old, a penny for every goat she would
+ show him, and Dr. Johnson kept the account; so that it appears
+ her father was in debt to her one hundred and forty-nine pence.
+ <i>Queeny</i> was an epithet, which had its origin in the
+ nursery, by which (in allusion to <i>Queen</i> Esther) Miss
+ Thrale (whose name was Esther) was always distinguished by
+ Johnson." She was named, after her mother, Hester, not Esther.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On September 13, Johnson sets down: "We came, to Lord Sandys', at
+ Ombersley, where we were treated with great civility." It was
+ here, as he told Mrs. Thrale, that for the only time in his life
+ he had as much wall fruit as he liked; yet she says that he was
+ in the habit of eating six or seven peaches before breakfast
+ during the fruit season at Streatham. Swift was also fond of
+ fruit: "observing (says Scott) that a gentleman in whose garden
+ he walked with some friends, seemed to have no intention to
+ request them to eat any, the Dean remarked that it was a saying
+ of his dear grandmother:
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ "'Always pull a peach
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When it is within your reach;'
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ and helping himself accordingly, his example was followed by the
+ whole company." Thomson, the author of the "Castle of Indolence,"
+ was once seen lounging round Lord Burlington's garden, with his
+ hands in his waistcoat pockets, biting off the sunny sides of the
+ peaches. <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg088" id=
+ "pg088">088</a></span>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Johnson's dislike to the Lyttletons was not abated by his visit
+ to Hagley, of which he says, "We made haste away from a place
+ where all were offended." Mrs. Thrale's explanation is: "Mrs.
+ Lyttelton, <i>ci-devant</i> Caroline Bristow, forced me to play
+ at whist against my liking, and her husband took away Johnson's
+ candle that he wanted to read by at the other end of the room.
+ Those, I trust, were the offences."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was not in much better humour at Combermere Abbey, the seat of
+ her relative, Sir Lynch Cotton, which is beautifully situated on
+ one of the finest lakes in England. He commends the place
+ grudgingly, passes a harsh judgment on Lady Cotton, and is
+ traditionally recorded to have made answer to the baronet who
+ inquired what he thought of a neighbouring peer (Lord Kilmorey):
+ "A dull, commonplace sort of man, just like you and your
+ brother."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In a letter to Levet, dated Lleweny, in Denbighshire, August 16,
+ 1774, printed by Boswell, is this sentence: "Wales, so far as I
+ have yet seen of it, is a very beautiful and rich country, all
+ enclosed and planted." Her marginal note is: "Yet to please Mr.
+ Thrale, he feigned abhorrence of it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I am indebted to an intelligent and accurate in-formant for a
+ curious incident of the Welsh tour:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Dr. Johnson was taken by Mr. and Mrs. Thrale to dine at
+ Maesnynan, with my relation, Mr. Lloyd, who, with his pretty
+ young daughter (motherless), received them at the door. All came
+ out of the carriage except the great lexicographer, who was
+ crouching in what <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg089" id=
+ "pg089">089</a></span> my uncle jokingly called the Poets'
+ Corner, deeply interested evidently with the book he was reading.
+ A wink from Mrs. Thrale, and a touch of her hand, silenced the
+ host. She bade the coachman not move, and desired the people in
+ the house to let Mr. Johnson read on till dinner was on the
+ table, when she would go and whistle him to it. She always had a
+ whistle hung at her girdle, and this she used, when in Wales, to
+ summon him and her daughters<span class="fnref">[1]</span>, when
+ in or out of doors. Mr. Lloyd and all the visitors went to see
+ the effect of the whistle, and found him reading intently with
+ one foot on the step of the carriage, where he had been (a
+ looker-on said) five minutes."
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1]
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ "He cast off his friends as a huntsman his pack,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For he knew when he pleas'd he could whistle them back."
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ "This scene is well told by Miss Burney, in her
+ 'Camilla'<span class="fnref">[1]</span> <i>ex relatione</i> Mrs.
+ Williams (Lady Cotton's sister, who was present) and Beata Lloyd,
+ whose brother, Colonel Thomas Lloyd, of the Guards, was the
+ Brummell of his day, celebrated for his manly beauty and
+ accomplishments. I heard Lord Crewe say that Colonel Lloyd's
+ horse, and his graceful manner of mounting him, used to attract
+ members of both Houses (he among them) to <i>turn out</i> to see
+ him mount guard; and the Princesses were forbidden, when driving
+ out, to go so often that way and at that time."
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] Book viii. chap, iv., Dr. Orkborne is described standing on
+ the staircase of an inn absorbed in the composition of a
+ paragraph whilst the party are at dinner.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Their impressions of one another as travelling companions were
+ sufficiently favourable to induce the party <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg090" id="pg090">090</a></span> (with the
+ addition of Baretti) to make a short tour in France in the autumn
+ of the year following, 1775, during part of which Johnson kept a
+ diary in the same laconic and elliptical style. The only allusion
+ to either of his friends is:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We went to Sansterre, a brewer. He brews with about as much malt
+ as Mr. Thrale, and sells his beer at the same price, though he
+ pays no duty for malt, and little more than half as much for
+ beer. Beer is sold retail at sixpence a bottle."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In a letter to Levet, dated Paris, Oct. 22, 1775, he says:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We went to see the king and queen at dinner, and the queen was
+ so impressed by Miss, that she sent one of the gentlemen to
+ inquire who she was. I find all true that you have ever told me
+ at Paris. Mr. Thrale is very liberal, and keeps us two coaches,
+ and a very fine table; but I think our cookery very bad. Mrs.
+ Thrale got into a convent of English nuns, and I talked with her
+ through the grate, and I am very kindly used by the English
+ Benedictine friars."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A striking instance of Johnson's occasional impracticability
+ occurred during this journey:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "When we were at Rouen together," says Mrs. Thrale, "he took a
+ great fancy to the Abbe Kofiette, with whom he conversed about
+ the destruction of the order of Jesuits, and condemned it loudly,
+ as a blow to the general power of the church, and likely to be
+ followed with many and dangerous innovations, which might at
+ length become fatal to religion itself, and shake even
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg091" id="pg091">091</a></span>
+ the foundation of Christianity. The gentleman seemed to wonder
+ and delight in his conversation: the talk was all in Latin, which
+ both spoke fluently, and Mr. Johnson pronounced a long eulogium
+ upon Milton with so much ardour, eloquence, and ingenuity, that
+ the abbé rose from his seat and embraced him. My husband seeing
+ them apparently so charmed with the company of each other,
+ politely invited the abbé to England, intending to oblige his
+ friend; who, instead of thanking, reprimanded him severely before
+ the man, for such a sudden burst of tenderness towards a person
+ he could know nothing at all of; and thus put a sudden finish to
+ all his own and Mr. Thrale's entertainment from the company of
+ the Abbé Roffette."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In a letter dated May 9, 1780, also, Mrs. Thrale alludes to more
+ than one disagreement in France:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "When did I ever plague you about contour, and grace, and
+ expression? I have dreaded them all three since that hapless day
+ at Compiegne, when you teased me so, and Mr. Thrale made what I
+ hoped would have proved a lasting peace; but French ground is
+ unfavourable to fidelity perhaps, and so now you begin again:
+ after having taken five years' breath, you might have done more
+ than this. Say another word, and I will bring up afresh the
+ history of your exploits at St. Denys and how cross you were for
+ nothing&mdash;but some how or other, our travels never make any
+ part either of our conversation or correspondence."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Joseph Baretti, who now formed one of the family, is so mixed up
+ with their history that some account <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg092" id="pg092">092</a></span> of him
+ becomes indispensable. He was a Piedmontese, whose position in
+ his native country was not of a kind to tempt him to remain in
+ it, when Lord Charlemont, to whom he had been useful in Italy,
+ proposed his coming to England. His own story was that he had
+ lost at play the little property he had inherited from his
+ father, an architect. The education given him by his parents was
+ limited to Latin; he taught himself English, French, Spanish, and
+ Portuguese. His talents, acquirements, and strength of mind must
+ have been considerable, for they soon earned him the esteem and
+ friendship of the most eminent members of the Johnsonian circle,
+ in despite of his arrogance. He came to England in 1753; is
+ kindly mentioned in one of Johnson's letters in 1754; and when he
+ was in Italy in 1761, his illustrious friend's letters to him are
+ marked by a tone of affectionate interest. Ceremony and
+ tenderness are oddly blended in the conclusion of one of them:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "May you, my Baretti, be very happy at Milan, or some other place
+ nearer to, Sir, your most affectionate humble servant, SAMUEL
+ JOHNSON."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Johnson remarked of Baretti in 1768: "I know no man who carries
+ his head higher in conversation than Baretti. There are strong
+ powers in his mind. He has not indeed many hooks, but with what
+ hooks he has, he grapples very forcibly." Cornelia Knight was
+ "disgusted by his satirical madness of manner," although
+ admitting him to be a man of great learning and information.
+ Madame D'Arblay was more struck <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+ "pg093" id="pg093">093</a></span> by his rudeness and violence
+ than by his intellectual vigour. "Thraliana" confirms Johnson's
+ estimate of Baretti's capacity:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Will. Burke was tart upon Mr. Baretti for being too dogmatical
+ in his talk about politics. 'You have,' says he, 'no business to
+ be investigating the characters of Lord Falkland or Mr. Hampden.
+ You cannot judge of their merits, they are no countrymen of
+ yours.' 'True,' replied Baretti, 'and you should learn by the
+ same rule to speak very cautiously about Brutus and Mark Antony;
+ they are my countrymen, and I must have their characters tenderly
+ treated by foreigners.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Baretti could not endure to be called, or scarcely thought, a
+ foreigner, and indeed it did not often occur to his company that
+ he was one; for his accent was wonderfully proper, and his
+ language always copious, always nervous, always full of various
+ allusions, flowing too with a rapidity worthy of admiration, and
+ far beyond the power of nineteen in twenty natives. He had also a
+ knowledge of the solemn language and the gay, could be sublime
+ with Johnson, or blackguard with the groom; could dispute, could
+ rally, could quibble, in our language. Baretti has, besides, some
+ skill in music, with a bass voice, very agreeable, besides a
+ falsetto which he can manage so as to mimic any singer he hears.
+ I would also trust his knowledge of painting a long way. These
+ accomplishments, with his extensive power over every modern
+ language, make him a most pleasing companion while he is in good
+ humour; and his lofty consciousness of his own superiority, which
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg094" id="pg094">094</a></span>
+ made him tenacious of every position, and drew him into a
+ thousand distresses, did not, I must own, ever disgust me, till
+ he began to exercise it against myself, and resolve to reign in
+ our house by fairly defying the mistress of it. Pride, however,
+ though shocking enough, is never despicable, but vanity, which he
+ possessed too, in an eminent degree, will sometimes make a man
+ near sixty ridiculous.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "France displayed all Mr. Baretti's useful powers&mdash;he
+ bustled for us, he catered for us, he took care of the child, he
+ secured an apartment for the maid, he provided for our safety,
+ our amusement, our repose; without him the pleasure of that
+ journey would never have balanced the pain. And great was his
+ disgust, to be sure, when he caught us, as he often did,
+ ridiculing French manners, French sentiments, &amp;c. I think he
+ half cryed to Mrs. Payne, the landlady at Dover, on our return,
+ because we laughed at French cookery, and French accommodations.
+ Oh, how he would court the maids at the inns abroad, abuse the
+ men perhaps! and that with a facility not to be exceeded, as they
+ all confessed, by any of the natives. But so he could in Spain, I
+ find, and so 'tis plain he could here. I will give one instance
+ of his skill in our low street language. Walking in a field near
+ Chelsea, he met a fellow, who, suspecting him from dress and
+ manner to be a foreigner, said sneeringly, 'Come, Sir, will you
+ show me the way to France?' 'No, Sir,' says Baretti, instantly,
+ 'but I will show you the way to Tyburn.' Such, however, was his
+ ignorance in a certain line, that he once asked Johnson for
+ information <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg095" id=
+ "pg095">095</a></span> who it was composed the Pater Noster, and
+ I heard him tell Evans<span class="fnref">[1]</span> the story of
+ Dives and Lazarus as the subject of a poem he once had composed
+ in the Milanese dialect, expecting great credit for his powers of
+ invention. Evans owned to me that he thought the man drunk,
+ whereas poor Baretti was, both in eating and drinking, a model of
+ temperance. Had he guessed Evans's thoughts, the parson's gown
+ would scarcely have saved him a knouting from the ferocious
+ Italian."
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] Evans was a clergyman and rector of Southwark.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ On Oct. 20, 1769, Baretti was tried at the Old Bailey on a charge
+ of murder, for killing with a pocket knife one of three men who,
+ with a woman of the town, hustled him in the
+ Haymarket.<span class="fnref">[1]</span> He was acquitted, and
+ the event is principally memorable for the appearance of Johnson,
+ Burke, Grarrick, and Beauclerc as witnesses to character. The
+ substance of Johnson's evidence is thus given in the "Gentleman's
+ Magazine":
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] In his defence, he said:&mdash;"I hope it will be seen that
+ my knife was neither a weapon of offence or defence. I wear it
+ to carve fruit and sweetmeats, and not to kill my fellow
+ creatures. It is a general custom in France not to put knives
+ on the table, so that even ladies wear them in their pockets
+ for general use."
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Dr. J</i>.&mdash;I believe I began to be acquainted with Mr.
+ Baretti about the year 1753 or 1754. I have been intimate with
+ him. He is a man of literature, a very studious man, a man of
+ great diligence. He gets his living by study. I have no reason to
+ think he was ever disordered with liquor in his life. A man that
+ I never knew to be otherwise than peaceable, and a man that I
+ take to be rather timorous.&mdash;<i>Q</i>. Was he addicted
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg096" id="pg096">096</a></span>
+ to pick up women in the streets?&mdash;<i>Dr. J. I</i> never knew
+ that he was.&mdash;<i>Q</i>. How is he as to
+ eyesight?&mdash;<i>Dr. J.</i> He does not see me now, nor do I
+ see him. I do not believe he could be capable of assaulting any
+ body in the street, without great provocation."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It would seem that Johnson's sensibility, such as it was, was not
+ very severely taxed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Boswell</i>.&mdash;But suppose now, Sir, that one of your
+ intimate friends were apprehended for an offence for which he
+ might be hanged?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Johnson</i>.&mdash;-I should do what I could to bail him; but
+ if he were once fairly hanged, I should not suffer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Boswell</i>.&mdash;Would you eat your dinner that day, Sir?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Johnson</i>.&mdash;Yes, Sir, and eat it as if he were eating
+ it with me. Why, there's Baretti, who is to be tried for his life
+ to-morrow. Friends have risen up for him on every side, yet if he
+ should be hanged, none of them will eat a slice of plum-pudding
+ the less. Sir, that sympathetic feeling goes a very little way in
+ depressing the mind."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Steevens relates that one evening previous to the trial a
+ consultation of Baretti's friends was held at the house of Mr.
+ Cox, the solicitor. Johnson and Burke were present, and differed
+ as to some point of the defence. On Steevens observing to Johnson
+ that the question had been agitated with rather too much warmth,
+ "It may be so," replied the sage, "for Burke and I should have
+ been of one opinion if we had had no audience." This is coming
+ very near to&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ "Would rather that the man should die
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Than his prediction prove a lie."
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg097" id="pg097">097</a></span>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two anecdotes of Baretti during his imprisonment are preserved in
+ "Thraliana":
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "When Johnson and Burke went to see Baretti in Newgate, they had
+ small comfort to give him, and bid him not hope too strongly.
+ 'Why what can <i>he</i> fear,' says Baretti, placing himself
+ between 'em, 'that holds two such hands as I do?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "An Italian came one day to Baretti, when he was in Newgate for
+ murder, to desire a letter of recommendation for the teaching of
+ his scholars, when he (Baretti) should be hanged. 'You rascal,'
+ replies Baretti, in a rage, 'if I were not <i>in my own
+ apartment</i>, I would kick you down stairs directly,'"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The year after his acquittal Baretti published "Travels through
+ Spain, Portugal, and France;" thus mentioned by Johnson in a
+ Letter to Mrs, Thrale, dated Lichfield, July 20, 1770:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That Baretti's book would please you all, I made no doubt. I
+ know not whether the world has ever seen such travels before.
+ Those whose lot it is to ramble can seldom write, and those who
+ know how to write can seldom ramble." The rate of pay showed that
+ the world was aware of the value of the acquisition. He gained
+ <i>500l.</i> by this book. His "Frusta Letteraria," published
+ some time before in Italy, had also attracted much attention,
+ and, according to Johnson, he was the first who ever received
+ money for copyright in Italy,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In a biographical notice of Baretti which appeared in the
+ "Gentleman's Magazine" for May, 1789, written by Dr. Vincent,
+ Dean of Westminster, it is stated that it was <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg098" id="pg098">098</a></span> not distress
+ which compelled him to accept Mr. Thrale's hospitality, but that
+ he was overpersuaded by Johnson, contrary to his own inclination,
+ to undertake the instruction of the Misses Thrale in Italian. "He
+ was either nine or eleven years almost entirely in that family,"
+ says the Dean, "though he still rented a lodging in town, during
+ which period he expended his own <i>500l.</i>, and received
+ nothing in return for his instruction, but the participation of a
+ good table, and <i>150l.</i> by way of presents. Instead of his
+ letters to Mrs. Piozzi in the 'European Magazine,' had he told
+ this plain unvarnished tale, he would have convicted that lady of
+ avarice and ingratitude, without incurring the danger of a reply,
+ or exposing his memory to be insulted by her advocates."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was less than three years in the family. As he had a pension
+ of <i>80l.</i> a year, besides the interest of his <i>500l.</i>,
+ he did not want money. If he had been allowed to want it, the
+ charge of avarice would lie at Mr., not Mrs., Thrale's door; and
+ his memory was exposed to no insult beyond the stigma which (as
+ we shall presently see) his conduct and language necessarily
+ fixed upon it. All his literary friends did not entertain the
+ same high opinion of him. An unpublished letter from Dr. Warton
+ to his brother contains the following passage:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He (Huggins, the translator of Ariosto) abuses Baretti
+ infernally, and says that he one day lent Baretti a gold watch,
+ and could never get it afterwards; that after many excuses
+ Baretti, skulked, and then got Johnson to write to Mr. Huggins a
+ suppliant letter; <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg099" id=
+ "pg099">099</a></span> that this letter stopped Huggins awhile,
+ while Baretti got a protection from the Sardinian ambassador; and
+ that, at last, with great difficulty, the watch was got from a
+ pawnbroker to whom Baretti had sold it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This extract is copied from a valuable contribution to the
+ literary annals of the eighteenth century, for which we are
+ indebted to the colonial press.<span class="fnref">[1]</span> It
+ is the diary of an Irish clergyman, containing strong internal
+ evidence of authenticity, although nothing more is known of it
+ than that the manuscript was discovered behind an old press in
+ one of the offices of the Supreme Court of New South Wales. That
+ such a person saw a good deal of Johnson in 1775, is proved by
+ Boswell, whose accuracy is frequently confirmed in return. In one
+ marginal note Mrs. Thrale says: "He was a fine showy talking man.
+ Johnson liked him of all things in a year or two." In another:
+ "Dr. Campbell was a very tall handsome man, and, speaking of some
+ other <i>High</i>-bernian, used this expression: 'Indeed now, and
+ upon my honour, Sir, I am but a Twitter to him.'"<span class=
+ "fnref">[2]</span>
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] Diary of a Visit to England in 1775. By an Irishman (the
+ Rev. Doctor Thomas Campbell, author of "A Philosophical Survey
+ of the South of Ireland.") And other Papers by the same hand.
+ With Notes by Samuel Raymond, M.A., Prothonotary of the Supreme
+ Court of New South Wales. Sydney. Waugh and Cox. 1854.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [2] He is similarly described in the "Letters," vol. i. p. 329.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Several of his entries throw light on the Thrale establishment:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>14th.</i>&mdash;This day I called at Mr. Thrale's, where I
+ was received with all respect by Mr. and Mrs. Thrale. She
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg100" id="pg100">100</a></span>
+ is a very learned lady, and joins to the charms of her own sex,
+ the manly understanding of ours. The immensity of the brewery
+ astonished me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>16th.</i>&mdash;Dined with Mr. Thrale along with Dr. Johnson,
+ and Baretti. Baretti is a plain sensible man, who seems to know
+ the world well. He talked to me of the invitation given him by
+ the College of Dublin, but said it (100<i>l.</i> a year and
+ rooms) was not worth his acceptance; and if it had been, he said,
+ in point of profit, still he would not have accepted it, for that
+ now he could not live out of London. He had returned a few years
+ ago to his own country, but he could not enjoy it; and he was
+ obliged to return to London, to those connexions he had been
+ making for near thirty years past. He told me he had several
+ families with whom, both in town and country, he could go at any
+ time and spend a month: he is at this time on these terms at Mr.
+ Thrale's, and he knows how to keep his ground. Talking as we were
+ at tea of the magnitude of the beer vessels, he said there was
+ one thing in Mr. Thrale's house still more
+ extraordinary;&mdash;meaning his wife. She gulped the pill very
+ prettily,&mdash;so much for Baretti!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Johnson, you are the very man Lord Chesterfield describes: a
+ Hottentot indeed, and though your abilities are respectable, you
+ never can be respected yourself! He has the aspect of an idiot,
+ without the faintest ray of sense gleaming from any one
+ feature&mdash;with the most awkward garb, and unpowdered grey
+ wig, on one side only of his head&mdash;he is for ever dancing
+ the devil's <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg101" id=
+ "pg101">101</a></span> jig, and sometimes he makes the most
+ driveling effort to whistle some thought in his absent
+ paroxysms."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>25th.</i>&mdash;Dined at Mr. Thrale's where there were ten or
+ more gentlemen, and but one lady besides Mrs. Thrale. The dinner
+ was excellent: first course, soups at head and foot, removed by
+ fish and a saddle of mutton; second course, a fowl they call
+ galena at head, and a capon larger than some of our Irish
+ turkeys, at foot; third course, four different sorts of ices,
+ pine-apple, grape, raspberry, and a fourth; in each remove there
+ were I think fourteen dishes. The two first courses were served
+ in massy plate. I sat beside Baretti, which was to me the richest
+ part of the entertainment. He and Mr. and Mrs. Thrale joined in
+ expressing to me Dr. Johnson's concern that he could not give me
+ the meeting that day, but desired that I should go and see him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>April 1st.</i>&mdash;Dined at Mr. Thrale's, whom in proof of
+ the magnitude of London, I cannot help remarking, no coachman,
+ and this is the third I have called, could find without inquiry.
+ But of this by the way. There was Murphy, Boswell, and Baretti:
+ the two last, as I learned just before I entered, are mortal
+ foes, so much so that Murphy and Mrs. Thrale agreed that Boswell
+ expressed a desire that Baretti should be hanged upon that
+ unfortunate affair of his killing, &amp;c. Upon this hint, I
+ went, and without any sagacity, it was easily discernible, for
+ upon Baretti's entering Boswell did not rise, and upon Baretti's
+ descry of Boswell he grinned a perturbed glance. Politeness
+ however smooths the most hostile brows, and theirs <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg102" id="pg102">102</a></span> were
+ smoothed. Johnson was the subject, both before and after dinner,
+ for it was the boast of all but myself, that under that roof were
+ the Doctor's fast friends. His <i>bon-mots</i> were retailed in
+ such plenty, that they, like a surfeit, could not lie upon my
+ memory."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "N.B. The 'Tour to the Western Isles' was written an twenty days,
+ and the 'Patriot' in three; 'Taxation no Tyranny,' within a week:
+ and not one of them would have yet seen the light, had it not
+ been for Mrs. Thrale and Baretti, who stirred him up by laying
+ wagers."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>April 8th.</i>&mdash;Dined with Thrale, where Dr. Johnson
+ was, and Boswell (and Baretti as usual). The Doctor was not in as
+ good spirits as he was at Dilly's. He had supped the night before
+ with Lady &mdash;&mdash;, Miss Jeffries, one of the maids of
+ honour, Sir Joshua Reynolds, &amp;c., at Mrs. Abington's. He said
+ Sir C. Thompson, and some others who were there, spoke like
+ people who had seen good company, and so did Mrs. Abington
+ herself, who could not have seen good company."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Boswell's note, alluding to the same topic, is:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "On Saturday, April 8, I dined with him at Mr. Thrale's, where we
+ met the Irish Dr. Campbell. Johnson had supped the night before
+ at Mrs. Abington's with some fashionable people whom he named;
+ and he seemed much pleased with having made one in so elegant a
+ circle. Nor did he omit to pique his <i>mistress</i> a little
+ with jealousy of her housewifery; for he said, with a smile,
+ 'Mrs. Abington's jelly, my dear lady, was better than yours.'"
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg103" id="pg103">103</a></span>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next year is chiefly memorable for the separation from
+ Baretti, thus mentioned in "Thraliana":
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Baretti had a comical aversion to Mrs. Macaulay, and his
+ aversions are numerous and strong. If I had not once written his
+ character in verse,<span class="fnref">[1]</span> I would now
+ write it in prose, for few people know him better: he
+ was&mdash;<i>Dieu me pardonne</i>, as the French say&mdash;my
+ inmate for very near three years; and though I really liked the
+ man once for his talents, and at last was weary of him for the
+ use he made of them, I never altered my sentiments concerning
+ him; for his character is easily seen, and his soul above
+ disguise, haughty and insolent, and breathing defiance against
+ all mankind; while his powers of mind exceed most people's, and
+ his powers of purse are so slight that they leave him dependent
+ on all. Baretti is for ever in the state of a stream dammed up:
+ if he could once get loose, he would bear down all before him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Every soul that visited at our house while he was master of it,
+ went away abhorring it; and Mrs. Montagu, grieved to see my
+ meekness so imposed upon, had thoughts of writing me on the
+ subject an anonymous letter, advising me to break with him.
+ Seward, who tried at last to reconcile us, confessed his wonder
+ that we had lived together so long. Johnson used to oppose and
+ battle him, but never with his own consent: the moment he was
+ cool, he would always condemn himself for exerting his
+ superiority over a man who was his friend, a foreigner, and poor:
+ yet I have been told <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg104" id=
+ "pg104">104</a></span> by Mrs. Montagu that he attributed his
+ loss of our family to Johnson: ungrateful and ridiculous! if it
+ had not been for his mediation, I would not so long have borne
+ trampling on, as I did for the last two years of our
+ acquaintance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not a servant, not a child, did he leave me any authority over;
+ if I would attempt to correct or dismiss them, there was instant
+ appeal to Mr. Baretti, who was sure always to be against me in
+ every dispute. With Mr. Thrale I was ever cautious of contending,
+ conscious that a misunderstanding there could never answer, as I
+ have no friend or relation in the world to protect me from the
+ rough treatment of a husband, should he chuse to exert his
+ prerogatives; but when I saw Baretti openly urging Mr. Thrale to
+ cut down some little fruit trees my mother had planted and I had
+ begged might stand, I confess I did take an aversion to the
+ creature, and secretly resolved his stay should not be prolonged
+ by my intreaties whenever his greatness chose to take huff and be
+ gone. As to my eldest daughter, his behaviour was most
+ ungenerous; he was perpetually spurring her to independence,
+ telling her she had more sense and would have a better fortune
+ than her mother, whose admonitions she ought therefore to
+ despise; that she ought to write and receive her own letters
+ <i>now</i>, and not submit to an authority I could not keep up if
+ she once had the spirit to challenge it; that, if I died in a
+ lying-in which happened while he lived here, he hoped Mr. Thrale
+ would marry Miss Whitbred, who would be a pretty companion for
+ Hester, and not tyrannical <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg105"
+ id="pg105">105</a></span> and overbearing like me. Was I not
+ fortunate to see myself once quit of a man like this? who thought
+ his dignity was concerned to set me at defiance, and who was
+ incessantly telling lies to my prejudice in the ears of my
+ husband and children? When he walked out of the house on the 6th
+ day of July, 1776, I wrote down what follows in my table book.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>6 July, 1776.</i>&mdash;This day is made remarkable by the
+ departure of Mr. Baretti, who has, since October, 1773, been our
+ almost constant inmate, companion, and, I vainly hoped, our
+ friend. On the 11th of November, 1773, Mr. Thrale let him have
+ <i>50l.</i> and at our return from France <i>50l.</i> more,
+ besides his clothes and pocket money: in return to all this, he
+ instructed our eldest daughter&mdash;or thought he did&mdash;and
+ puffed her about the town for a wit, a genius, a linguist,
+ &amp;c. At the beginning of the year 1776, we purposed visiting
+ Italy under his conduct, but were prevented by an unforeseen and
+ heavy calamity: that Baretti, however, might not be disappointed
+ of money as well as of pleasure, Mr. Thrale presented him with
+ 100 guineas, which at first calmed his wrath a little, but did
+ not, perhaps, make amends for his vexation; this I am the more
+ willing to believe, as Dr. Johnson not being angry too, seemed to
+ grieve him no little, after all our preparations made.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Now Johnson's virtue was engaged; and he, I doubt not, made it a
+ point of conscience not to increase the distresses of a family
+ already oppressed with affliction. Baretti, however, from this
+ time grew sullen and captious; he went on as usual
+ notwithstanding, <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg106" id=
+ "pg106">106</a></span> making Streatham his home, carrying on
+ business there, when he thought he had any to do, and teaching
+ his pupil at by-times when he chose so to employ himself; for he
+ always took his choice of hours, and would often spitefully fix
+ on such as were particularly disagreeable to me, whom he has now
+ not liked a long while, if ever he did. He professed, however, a
+ violent attachment to our eldest daughter; said if <i>she</i> had
+ died instead of her poor brother, he should have destroyed
+ himself, with many as wild expressions of fondness. Within these
+ few days, when my back was turned, he would often be telling her
+ that he would go away and stay a month, with other threats of the
+ same nature; and she, not being of a caressing or obliging
+ disposition, never, I suppose, soothed his anger or requested his
+ stay.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Of all this, however, I can know nothing but from <i>her</i>,
+ who is very reserved, and whose kindness I cannot so confide in
+ as to be sure she would tell me all that passed between them; and
+ her attachment is probably greater to him than me, whom he has
+ always endeavoured to lessen as much as possible, both in her
+ eyes and&mdash;what was worse&mdash;her father's, by telling him
+ how my parts had been over-praised by Johnson, and over-rated by
+ the world; that my daughter's skill in languages, even at the age
+ of fourteen, would vastly exceed mine, and such other idle stuff;
+ which Mr. Thrale had very little care about, but which Hetty
+ doubtless thought of great importance. Be this as it may, no
+ angry words ever passed between him and me, <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg107" id="pg107">107</a></span> except
+ perhaps now and then a little spar or so when company was by, in
+ the way of raillery merely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yesterday, when Sir Joshua and Fitzmaurice dined here, I
+ addressed myself to him with great particularity of attention,
+ begging his company for Saturday, as I expected ladies, and said
+ he must come and flirt with them, &amp;c. My daughter in the
+ meantime kept on telling me that Mr. Baretti was grown very old
+ and very cross, would not look at her exercises, but said he
+ would leave this house soon, for it was no better than
+ Pandæmonium. Accordingly, the next day he packed up his
+ cloke-bag, which he had not done for three years, and sent it to
+ town; and while we were wondering what he would say about it at
+ breakfast, he was walking to London himself, without taking leave
+ of any one person, except it may be the girl, who owns they had
+ much talk, in the course of which he expressed great aversion to
+ me and even to her, who, he said, he once thought well of.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Now whether she had ever told the man things that I might have
+ said of him in his absence, by way of provoking him to go, and so
+ rid herself of his tuition; whether he was puffed up with the
+ last 100 guineas and longed to be spending it <i>all'
+ Italiano;</i> whether he thought Mr. Thrale would call him back,
+ and he should be better established here than ever; or whether he
+ really was idiot enough to be angry at my threatening to whip
+ Susan and Sophy for going out of bounds, although <i>he</i> had
+ given them leave, for Hetty said that was the first offence he
+ took huff at, <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg108" id=
+ "pg108">108</a></span> I never now shall know, for he never
+ expressed himself as an offended man to me, except one day when
+ he was not shaved at the proper hour forsooth, and then I would
+ not quarrel with him, because nobody was by, and I knew him be so
+ vile a lyar that I durst not trust his tongue with a dispute. He
+ is gone, however, loaded with little presents from me, and with a
+ large share too of my good opinion, though I most sincerely
+ rejoice in his departure, and hope we shall never meet more but
+ by chance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Since our quarrel I had occasion to talk of him with Tom Davies,
+ who spoke with horror of his ferocious temper; 'and yet,' says I,
+ 'there is great sensibility about Baretti: I have seen tears
+ often stand in his eyes.' 'Indeed,' replies Davies, 'I should
+ like to have seen that sight vastly, when&mdash;even butchers
+ weep.'"
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] In "The Streatham Portraits." (See Vol. II.)
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ His intractable character appears from his own account of the
+ rupture:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "When Madam took it into her head to give herself airs, and treat
+ me with some coldness and superciliousness, I did not hesitate to
+ set down at breakfast my dish of tea not half drank, go for my
+ hat and stick that lay in the corner of the room, turn my back to
+ the house <i>insalutato hospite</i>, and walk away to London
+ without uttering a syllable, fully resolved never to see her
+ again, as was the case during no less than four years; nor had
+ she and I ever met again as friends if she and her husband had
+ not chanced upon me after that lapse of time at the house of a
+ gentleman near Beckenham, and coaxed me into a reconciliation,
+ which, <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg109" id=
+ "pg109">109</a></span> as almost all reconciliations prove, was
+ not very sincere on her side or mine; so that there was a total
+ end of it on Mr. Thrale's demise, which happened about three
+ years after."<span class="fnref">[1]</span>
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] The European Magazine, 1788.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ The monotony of a constant residence at Streatham was varied by
+ trips to Bath or Brighton; and it was so much a matter of course
+ for Johnson to make one of the party, that when (1776), not
+ expecting him so soon back from a journey with Boswell, the
+ Thrale family and Baretti started for Bath without him, Boswell
+ is disposed to treat their departure without the lexicographer as
+ a slight:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This was not showing the attention which might have been
+ expected to the 'guide, philosopher, and friend;' the
+ <i>Imlac</i> who had hastened from the country to console a
+ distressed mother, who he understood was very anxious for his
+ return. They had, I found, without ceremony, proceeded on their
+ journey. I was glad to understand from him that it was still
+ resolved that his tour to Italy with Mr. and Mrs. Thrale should
+ take place, of which he had entertained some doubt, on account of
+ the loss which they had suffered; and his doubts afterwards
+ appeared to be well founded. He observed, indeed, very justly,
+ that 'their loss was an additional reason for their going abroad;
+ and if it had not been fixed that he should have been one of the
+ party, he would force them out; but he would not advise them
+ unless his advice was asked, lest they might suspect that he
+ recommended what he wished on his own <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg110" id="pg110">110</a></span> account.' I
+ was not pleased that his intimacy with Mr. Thrale's family,
+ though it no doubt contributed much to his comfort and enjoyment,
+ was not without some degree of restraint<span class=
+ "fnref">[1]</span>: not, as has been grossly
+ suggested<span class="fnref">[2]</span>, that it was required of
+ him as a task to talk for the entertainment of them and their
+ company; but that he was not quite at his ease: which, however,
+ might partly be owing to his own honest pride&mdash;that dignity
+ of mind which is always jealous of appearing too compliant."
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] (<i>Marginal note</i>). "What restraint can he mean?
+ Johnson kept every one else under restraint."
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [2] (<i>Marginal note.</i>) "I do not believe it ever was
+ suggested."
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ In his first letter of condolence on Mr. Thrale's death, Johnson
+ speaks of her having enjoyed happiness in marriage, "to a degree
+ of which, without personal knowledge, I should have thought the
+ description fabulous." The "Autobiography" and "Thraliana" tell a
+ widely different tale. The mortification of not finding herself
+ appreciated by her husband was poignantly increased, during the
+ last years of his life, by finding another offensively preferred
+ to her. He was so fascinated by one of her fair friends, as to
+ lose sight altogether of what was due to appearances or to the
+ feelings of his wife.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A full account of the lady in question is given in the
+ "Thraliana":
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Miss Streatfield</i>.&mdash;I have since heard that Dr.
+ Collier picked up a more useful friend, a Mrs. Streatfield, a
+ widow, high in fortune and rather eminent both for the beauties
+ of person and mind; her children, I find, <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg111" id="pg111">111</a></span> he has been
+ educating; and her eldest daughter is just now coming out into
+ the world with a great character for elegance and
+ literature.&mdash;<i>20 November, 1776.</i>"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>19 May, 1778.</i>&mdash;The person who wrote the title of
+ this book at the top of the page, on the other side&mdash;left
+ hand&mdash;in the black letter, was the identical Miss Sophia
+ Streatfield, mentioned in 'Thraliana,' as pupil to poor dear
+ Doctor Collier, after he and I had parted. By the chance meeting
+ of some of the currents which keep this ocean of human life from
+ stagnating, this lady and myself were driven together nine months
+ ago at Brighthelmstone: we soon grew intimate from having often
+ heard of each other, and I have now the honour and happiness of
+ calling her my friend. Her face is eminently pretty; her carriage
+ elegant; her heart affectionate, and her mind cultivated. There
+ is above all this an attractive sweetness in her manner, which
+ claims and promises to repay one's confidence, and which drew
+ from me the secret of my keeping a 'Thraliana,' &amp;c. &amp;c.
+ &amp;c."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Jan. 1779.</i>&mdash;Mr. Thrale is fallen in love, really and
+ seriously, with Sophy Streatfield; but there is no wonder in
+ that; she is very pretty, very gentle, soft, and insinuating;
+ hangs about him, dances round him, cries when she parts from him,
+ squeezes his hand slyly, and with her sweet eyes full of tears
+ looks so fondly in his face<span class=
+ "fnref">[1]</span>&mdash;and <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+ "pg112" id="pg112">112</a></span> all for love of me as she
+ pretends; that I can hardly, sometimes, help laughing in her
+ face. A man must not be a <i>man</i> but an <i>it</i>, to resist
+ such artillery. Marriott said very well,
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ "'Man flatt'ring man, not always can prevail,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But woman flatt'ring man, can never fail.'
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ "Murphy did not use, I think, to have a good opinion of me, but
+ he seems to have changed his mind this Christmas, and to believe
+ better of me. I am glad on't to be sure: the suffrage of such a
+ man is well worth having: he sees Thrale's love of the fair S.S.
+ I suppose: approves my silent and patient endurance of what I
+ could not prevent by more rough and sincere behaviour."
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1]
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ "And Merlin look'd and half believed her true,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So tender was her voice, so fair her face,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So sweetly gleam'd her eyes behind her tears,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Like sunlight on the plain, behind a shower."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Idylls of The King.&mdash;Vivien.</i>
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ "20 <i>January</i>, 1780.&mdash;Sophy Streatfield is come to
+ town: she is in the 'Morning Post' too, I see (to be in the
+ 'Morning Post' is no good thing). She has won Wedderburne's heart
+ from his wife, I believe, and few married women will bear
+ <i>that</i> patiently if I do; they will some of them wound her
+ reputation, so that I question whether it can recover. Lady
+ Erskine made many odd inquiries about her to me yesterday, and
+ winked and looked wise at her sister. The dear S.S. must be a
+ little on her guard; nothing is so spiteful as a woman robbed of
+ a heart she thinks she has a claim upon. She will not lose
+ <i>that</i> with temper, which she has taken perhaps no pains at
+ all to preserve: and I do not observe with any pleasure, I fear,
+ that my husband prefers Miss Streatfield to me, though I must
+ acknowledge her younger, handsomer, and a better scholar.
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg113" id="pg113">113</a></span>
+ Of her chastity, however, I never had a doubt: she was bred by
+ Dr. Collier in the strictest principles of piety and virtue; she
+ not only knows she will be always chaste, but she knows why she
+ will be so.<span class="fnref">[1]</span> Mr. Thrale is now by
+ dint of disease quite out of the question, so I am a
+ disinterested spectator; but her coquetry is very dangerous
+ indeed, and I wish she were married that there might be an end
+ on't. Mr. Thrale loves her, however, sick or well, better by a
+ thousand degrees than he does me or any one else, and even now
+ desires nothing on earth half so much as the sight of his Sophia.
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ "'E'en from the tomb the voice of nature cries!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ E'en in our ashes live their wonted fires!'
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ "The Saturday before Mr. Thrale was taken ill, Saturday, 19th
+ February&mdash;he was struck Monday, 21st February&mdash;we had a
+ large party to tea, cards, and supper; Miss Streatfield was one,
+ and as Mr. Thrale sate by her, he pressed her hand to his heart
+ (as she told me herself), and said 'Sophy, we shall not enjoy
+ this long, and to-night I will not be cheated of my only
+ comfort.' Poor soul! how shockingly tender! On the first Fryday
+ that he spoke after his stupor, she came to see him, and as she
+ sate by the bedside pitying him, 'Oh,' says he, 'who would not
+ suffer even all that I have endured to be pitied by you!' This I
+ heard myself."
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1]
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ "Besides, her inborn virtue fortify,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They are most firmly good, who best know why."
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ "Here is Sophy Streatfield again, handsomer than <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg114" id="pg114">114</a></span> ever, and
+ flushed with new conquests; the Bishop of Chester feels her
+ power, I am sure; she showed me a letter from him that was as
+ tender and had all the tokens upon it as strong as ever I
+ remember to have seen 'em; I repeated to her out of Pope's
+ Homer&mdash;'Very well, Sophy,' says I:
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ "'Range undisturb'd among the hostile crew,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But touch not Hinchliffe<span class="fnref">[1]</span>,
+ Hinchliffe is my due.'
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Miss Streatfield (says my master) could have quoted these lines
+ in the Greek; his saying so piqued me, and piqued me because it
+ was true. I wish I understood Greek! Mr. Thrale's preference of
+ her to me never vexed me so much as my consciousness&mdash;or
+ fear at least&mdash;that he has reason for his preference. She
+ has ten times my beauty, and five times my scholarship: wit and
+ knowledge has she none."
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] For Hector. Hinchliffe was Bishop of Peterborough.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ "<i>May</i>, 1781.&mdash;Sophy Streatfield is an incomprehensible
+ girl; here has she been telling me such tender passages of what
+ passed between her and Mr. Thrale, that she half frights me
+ somehow, at the same time declaring her attachment to Vyse yet
+ her willingness to marry Lord Loughborough. Good God! what an
+ uncommon girl! and handsome almost to perfection, I think:
+ delicate in her manners, soft in her voice, and strict in her
+ principles: I never saw such a character, she is wholly out of my
+ reach; and I can only say that the man who runs mad for Sophy
+ Streatfield has no reason to be ashamed of his passion; few
+ people, however, <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg115" id=
+ "pg115">115</a></span> seem disposed to take her for
+ life&mdash;everybody's admiration, as Mrs. Byron says, and
+ nobody's choice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Streatham, January 1st</i>, 1782.&mdash;Sophy Streatfield has
+ begun the new year nicely with a new conquest. Poor dear Doctor
+ Burney! <i>he</i> is now the reigning favourite, and she spares
+ neither pains nor caresses to turn that good man's head, much to
+ the vexation of his family; particularly my Fanny, who is
+ naturally provoked to see sport made of her father in his last
+ stage of life by a young coquet, whose sole employment in this
+ world seems to have been winning men's hearts on purpose to fling
+ them away. How she contrives to keep bishops, and brewers, and
+ doctors, and directors of the East India Company, all in chains
+ so, and almost all at the same time, would amaze a wiser person
+ than me; I can only say let us mark the end! Hester will perhaps
+ see her out and pronounce, like Solon, on her wisdom and
+ conduct."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As this lady has excited great interest, and was much with the
+ Thrales, I will add what I have been able to ascertain concerning
+ her. She is frequently mentioned in Madame D'Arblay's Diary:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Streatham, Sept</i>. 1778.&mdash;To be sure she (Mrs. Thrale)
+ saw it was not totally disagreeable to me; though I was really
+ astounded when she hinted at my becoming a rival to Miss
+ Streatfield in the Doctor's good graces.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'I had a long letter,' she said, 'from Sophy Streatfield t'other
+ day, and she sent Dr. Johnson her elegant edition of the
+ 'Classics;' but when he had read the <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg116" id="pg116">116</a></span> letter, he
+ said 'she is a sweet creature, and I love her much; but my little
+ Burney writes a better letter.' Now,' continued she, 'that is
+ just what I wished him to say of you both.'"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Streatham, Sept</i>. 1779.&mdash;Mr. Seward, you know, told
+ me that she had tears at command, and I begin to think so too,
+ for when Mrs. Thrale, who had previously told me I should see her
+ cry, began coaxing her to stay, and saying, 'If you go, I shall
+ know you don't love me so well as Lady Gresham,'&mdash;she did
+ cry, not loud indeed, nor much, but the tears came into her eyes,
+ and rolled down her fine cheeks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Come hither, Miss Burney,' cried Mrs. Thrale; 'come and see
+ Miss Streatfield cry!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I thought it a mere <i>badinage</i>. I went to them, but when I
+ saw real tears, I was shocked, and saying, 'No, I won't look at
+ her,' ran away frightened, lest she should think I laughed at
+ her, which Mrs. Thrale did so openly, that, as I told her, had
+ she served me so, I should have been affronted with her ever
+ after.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Miss Streatfield, however, whether from a sweetness not to be
+ ruffled, or from not perceiving there was any room for taking
+ offence, gently wiped her eyes, and was perfectly composed!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Streatham, June</i>, 1779.&mdash;Seward, said Mrs. Thrale,
+ had affronted Johnson, and then Johnson affronted Seward, and
+ then the S.S. cried.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Sir Philip</i> (<i>Clerke</i>).&mdash;Well, I have heard so
+ much of these tears, that I would give the universe to have a
+ sight of them. <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg117" id=
+ "pg117">117</a></span>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Mrs. Thrale</i>.&mdash;Well, she shall cry again, if you like
+ it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>S.S.</i>.&mdash;No, pray, Mrs. Thrale.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Sir Philip</i>.&mdash;Oh, pray do! pray let me see a little
+ of it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Mrs. Thrale</i>.&mdash;Yes, do cry a little Sophy [in a
+ wheedling voice], pray do! Consider, now, you are going to-day,
+ and it's very hard if you won't cry a little: indeed, S.S., you
+ ought to cry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Now for the wonder of wonders. When Mrs. Thrale, in a coaxing
+ voice, suited to a nurse soothing a baby, had run on for some
+ time,&mdash;while all the rest of us, in laughter, joined in the
+ request,&mdash;two crystal tears came into the soft eyes of the
+ S.S., and rolled gently down her cheeks! Such a sight I never saw
+ before, nor could I have believed. She offered not to conceal or
+ dissipate them: on the contrary, she really contrived to have
+ them seen by everybody. She looked, indeed, uncommonly handsome;
+ for her pretty face was not, like Chloe's, blubbered; it was
+ smooth and elegant, and neither her features nor complexion were
+ at all ruffled; nay, indeed, she was smiling all the time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Look, look!' cried Mrs. Thrale; 'see if the tears are not come
+ already.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Loud and rude bursts of laughter broke from us all at once. How,
+ indeed, could they be restrained?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Streatham, Sunday, June</i> 13, 1779.&mdash;After church we
+ all strolled round the grounds, and the topic of our discourse
+ was Miss Streatfield. Mrs. Thrale asserted that she had a power
+ of captivation that was irresistible; <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg118" id="pg118">118</a></span> that her
+ beauty, joined to her softness, her caressing manners, her
+ tearful eyes, and alluring looks, would insinuate her into the
+ heart of any man she thought worth attacking.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Sir Philip declared himself of a totally different opinion, and
+ quoted Dr. Johnson against her, who had told him that, taking
+ away her Greek, she was as ignorant as a butterfly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Mr. Seward declared her Greek was all against her with him, for
+ that, instead of reading Pope, Swift, or the
+ Spectator&mdash;books from which she might derive useful
+ knowledge and improvement&mdash;it had led her to devote all her
+ reading time to the first eight books of Homer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'But,' said Mrs. Thrale, 'her Greek, you must own, has made all
+ her celebrity;&mdash;you would have heard no more of her than of
+ any other pretty girl, but for that.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'What I object to,' said Sir Philip, 'is her avowed preference
+ for this parson. Surely it is very indelicate in any lady to let
+ all the world know with whom she is in love!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'The parson,' said the severe Mr. Seward, 'I suppose, spoke
+ first,&mdash;or she would as soon have been in love with you, or
+ with me!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You will easily believe I gave him no pleasant look."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The parson was the Rev. Dr. Vyse, Rector of Lambeth. He had made
+ an imprudent marriage early in life, and was separated from his
+ wife, of whom he hoped <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg119" id=
+ "pg119">119</a></span> to get rid either by divorce or by her
+ death, as she was reported to be in bad health. Under these
+ circumstances, he had entered into a conditional engagement with
+ the fair S.S.; but eventually threw her over, either in despair
+ at his wife's longevity or from caprice. On the mention of his
+ name by Boswell, Mrs. Piozzi writes opposite: "whose connection
+ with Sophia Streatfield was afterwards so much talked about, and
+ I suppose never understood: certainly not at all by H.L.P." To
+ return to the D'Arblay Diary:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Streatham, June</i> 14, 1781.&mdash;We had my dear father and
+ Sophy Streatfield, who, as usual, was beautiful, caressing,
+ amiable, sweet, and&mdash;fatiguing."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Streatham, Aug</i>. 1781.&mdash;Some time after Sophy
+ Streatfield was talked of,&mdash;Oh, with how much impertinence!
+ as if she was at the service of any man who would make proposals
+ to her! Yet Mr. Seward spoke of her with praise and tenderness
+ all the time, as if, though firmly of this opinion, he was warmly
+ her admirer. From such admirers and such admiration Heaven guard
+ me! Mr. Crutchley said but little; but that little was bitter
+ enough.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'However,' said Mr. Seward, 'after all that can be said, there
+ is nobody whose manners are more engaging, nobody more amiable
+ than the little Sophy; and she is certainly very pretty; I must
+ own I have always been afraid to trust myself with her.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Here Mr. Crutchley looked very sneeringly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Nay, 'squire,' cried Mr. Seward, 'she is very dangerous, I can
+ tell you; and if she had you at a fair trial, <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg120" id="pg120">120</a></span> she would
+ make an impression that would soften-even your hard heart.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'No need of any further trial,' said he, laughing, 'for she has
+ done that already; and so soft was the impression that it
+ absolutely all dissolved!&mdash;melted quite away, and not a
+ trace of it left!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Mr. Seward then proposed that she should marry Sir John Miller,
+ who has just lost his wife; and very gravely said, he had a great
+ mind to set out for Tunbridge, and carry her with him to Bath,
+ and so make the match without delay!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'But surely,' said Mrs. Thrale, 'if you fail, you will think
+ yourself bound in honour to marry her yourself?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Why, that's the thing,' said he; 'no, I can't take the little
+ Sophy myself; I should have too many rivals; rivals; no, that
+ won't do.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "How abominably conceited and <i>sure</i> these pretty gentlemen
+ are! However, Mr. Crutchley here made a speech that half won my
+ heart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'I wish,' said he, 'Miss Streatfield was here at this moment to
+ cuff you, Seward!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Cuff me,' cried he. 'What, the little Sophy!&mdash;and why?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'For disposing of her so freely. I think a man deserves to be
+ cuffed for saying <i>any</i> lady will marry him.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I seconded this speech with much approbation."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>London, Jan.</i> 1783.&mdash;Before they went came Miss
+ Streatfield, looking pale, but very elegant and pretty.
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg121" id="pg121">121</a></span>
+ She was in high spirits, and I hope has some reason. She made, at
+ least, speeches that provoked such surmises. When the Jacksons
+ went,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'That,' said I, 'is the celebrated Jackson of Exeter; I dare say
+ you would like him if you knew him.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'I dare say I should,' cried she, simpering; 'for he has the two
+ requisites for me,&mdash;he is tall and thin.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "To be sure, this did not at all call for raillery! Dr. Vyse has
+ always been distinguished by these two epithets. I said, however,
+ nothing, as my mother was present; but she would not let my looks
+ pass unnoticed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Oh!' cried she, 'how wicked you look!&mdash;No need of seeing
+ Mrs. Siddons for expression!&mdash;However, you know how much
+ that is my taste,&mdash;tall and thin!&mdash;but you don't know
+ how <i>apropos</i> it is just now!'"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nine years after the last entry, we find:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>May</i> 25, 1792.&mdash;We now met Mrs. Porteous; and who
+ should be with her but the poor pretty S.S., whom so long I had
+ not seen, and who has now lately been finally given up by her
+ long-sought and very injurious lover, Dr. Vyse?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "She is sadly faded, and looked disturbed and unhappy but still
+ beautiful, though no longer blooming; and still affectionate,
+ though absent and evidently absorbed. We had a little chat
+ together about the Thrales. In mentioning our former intimacy
+ with them, 'Ah, those,' she cried, 'were happy times!' and her
+ eyes glistened. Poor thing! hers has been a <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg122" id="pg122">122</a></span> lamentable
+ story!&mdash;Imprudence and vanity have rarely been mixed with so
+ much sweetness, and good-humour, and candour, and followed with
+ more reproach and ill success. We agreed to renew acquaintance
+ next winter; at present she will be little more in town."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In a letter to Madame D'Arblay, Oct. 20, 1820, Mrs. Piozzi says:
+ "Fell, the bookseller in Bond Street, told me a fortnight or
+ three weeks ago, that Miss Streatfield lives where she did in his
+ neighbourhood, Clifford Street, S.S. still." On the 18th January,
+ 1821: "'The once charming S.S. had inquired for me of Nornaville
+ and Fell, the Old Bond Street book-sellers, so I thought she
+ meditated writing, but was deceived."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The story she told the author of "Piozziana," in proof of
+ Johnson's want of firmness, clearly refers to this lady:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I had remarked to her that Johnson's readiness to condemn any
+ moral deviation in others was, in a man so entirely before the
+ public as he was, nearly a proof of his own spotless purity of
+ conduct. She said, 'Yes, Johnson was, on the whole, a rigid
+ moralist; but he could be ductile, I may say, servile; and I will
+ give you an instance. We had a large dinner-party at our house;
+ Johnson sat on one side of me, and Burke on the other; and in the
+ company there was a young female (Mrs. Piozzi named her), to whom
+ I, in my peevishness, thought Mr. Thrale superfluously attentive,
+ to the neglect of me and others; especially of myself, then near
+ my confinement, and dismally low-spirited; <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg123" id="pg123">123</a></span>
+ notwithstanding which, Mr. T. very unceremoniously begged of me
+ to change place with Sophy &mdash;&mdash;, who was threatened
+ with a sore throat, and might be injured by sitting near the
+ door. I had scarcely swallowed a spoonful of soup when this
+ occurred, and was so overset by the coarseness of the proposal,
+ that I burst into tears, said something petulant&mdash;that
+ perhaps ere long, the lady might be at the head of Mr. T.'s
+ table, without displacing the mistress of the house, &amp;c., and
+ so left the apartment. I retired to the drawing-room, and for an
+ hour or two contended with my vexation, as I best could, when
+ Johnson and Burke came up. On seeing them, I resolved to give a
+ <i>jobation</i> to both, but fixed on Johnson for my charge, and
+ asked him if he had noticed what passed, what I had suffered, and
+ whether allowing for the state of my nerves, I was much to blame?
+ He answered, "Why, possibly not; your feelings were outraged." I
+ said, "Yes, greatly so; and I cannot help remarking with what
+ blandness and composure you <i>witnessed</i> the outrage. Had
+ this transaction been told of others, your anger would have known
+ no bounds; but, towards a man who gives good dinners &amp;c., you
+ were meekness itself!" Johnson coloured, and Burke, I thought,
+ looked foolish; but I had not a word of answer from either.'"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The only excuse for Mr. Thrale is to be found in his mental and
+ bodily condition at the time, which made it impossible for
+ Johnson or Burke to interfere without a downright quarrel with
+ him, nor without making matters worse. This, however, is not the
+ only instance <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg124" id=
+ "pg124">124</a></span> in which Johnson witnessed Thrale's laxity
+ of morals without reproving it. Opposite the passage in which
+ Boswell reports Johnson as palliating infidelity in a husband by
+ the remark, that the man imposes no bastards on his wife, she
+ writes: "Sometimes he does. Johnson knew a man who did, and the
+ lady took very tender care of them."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Madame D'Arblay was not uniformly such a source of comfort to her
+ as that lady supposed. The entries in "Thraliana" relating to her
+ show this:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>August,</i> 1779.&mdash;Fanny Burney has been a long time
+ from me; I was glad to see her again; yet she makes me miserable
+ too in many respects, so restlessly and apparently anxious, lest
+ I should give myself airs of patronage or load her with the
+ shackles of dependance. I live with her always in a degree of
+ pain that precludes friendship&mdash;dare not ask her to buy me a
+ ribbon&mdash;dare not desire her to touch the bell, lest she
+ should think herself injured&mdash;lest she should forsooth
+ appear in the character of Miss Neville, and I in that of the
+ widow Bromley. See Murphy's 'Know Your Own Mind.'"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Fanny Burney has kept her room here in my house seven days, with
+ a fever or something that she called a fever; I gave her every
+ medicine and every slop with my own hand; took away her dirty
+ cups, spoons, &amp;c.; moved her tables: in short, was doctor,
+ and nurse and maid&mdash;for I did not like the servants should
+ have additional trouble lest they should hate her for it. And
+ now,&mdash;with the true gratitude of a wit, she tells me
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg125" id="pg125">125</a></span>
+ that the world thinks the better of me for my civilities to her.
+ It does? does it?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Miss Burney was much admired at Bath (1780); the puppy-men said,
+ 'She had such a drooping air and such a timid intelligence;' or,
+ 'a timid air,' I think it was,' and a drooping intelligence;'
+ never sure was such a collection of pedantry and affectation as
+ rilled Bath when we were on that spot. How everything else and
+ everybody set off my gallant bishop. 'Quantum lenta solent inter
+ viburna Cupressi.' Of all the people I ever heard read verse in
+ my whole life, the best, the most perfect reader, is the Bishop
+ of Peterboro' (Hinchcliffe.)"<span class="fnref">[1]</span>
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] In a marginal note on Boswell, she says: "The people (in
+ 1783) did read shamefully. Yet Mr. Lee, the poet, many years
+ before Johnson was born, read so gracefully, the players would
+ not accept his tragedies till they had heard them from other
+ lips: his own (they said) sweetened all which proceeded from
+ them." Speaker Onslow equally was celebrated for his manner of
+ reading.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ "<i>July 1st</i>, 1780.&mdash;Mrs. Byron, who really loves me,
+ was disgusted at Miss Burney's carriage to me, who have been such
+ a friend and benefactress to her: not an article of dress, not a
+ ticket for public places, not a thing in the world that she could
+ not command from me: yet always insolent, always pining for home,
+ always preferring the mode of life in St. Martin's Street to all
+ I could do for her. She is a saucy-spirited little puss to be
+ sure, but I love her dearly for all that; and I fancy she has a
+ real regard for me, if she did not think it beneath the dignity
+ of a wit, or of what she values more&mdash;the dignity of Dr.
+ Burnett's daughter&mdash;to <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg126"
+ id="pg126">126</a></span> indulge it. Such dignity! the Lady
+ Louisa of Leicester Square!<span class="fnref">[1]</span> In good
+ time!"
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] Alluding to a character in "Evelina."
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ "1781.&mdash;What a blockhead Dr. Burney is to be always sending
+ for his daughter home so! what a monkey! is she not better and
+ happier with me than she can be anywhere else? Johnson is enraged
+ at the silliness of their family conduct, and Mrs. Byron
+ disgusted; I confess myself provoked excessively, but I love the
+ girl so dearly&mdash;and the Doctor, too, for that matter, only
+ that he has such odd notions of superiority in his own house, and
+ will have his children under his feet forsooth, rather than let
+ 'em live in peace, plenty, and comfort anywhere from home. If I
+ did not provide Fanny with every wearable&mdash;every wishable,
+ indeed,&mdash;it would not vex me to be served so; but to see the
+ impossibility of compensating for the pleasures of St. Martin's
+ Street, makes one at once merry and mortified.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Dr. Burney did not like his daughter should learn Latin even of
+ Johnson, who offered to teach her for friendship, because then
+ she would have been as wise as himself forsooth, and Latin was
+ too masculine for Misses. A narrow-souled goose-cap the man must
+ be at last, agreeable and amiable all the while too, beyond
+ almost any other human creature. Well, mortal man is but a paltry
+ animal! the best of us have such drawbacks both upon virtue,
+ wisdom, and knowledge." <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg127" id=
+ "pg127">127</a></span>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In what his daughter calls a doggrel list of his friends and his
+ feats, Dr. Burney has thus mentioned the Thrales:
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ "1776.&mdash;This year's acquaintance began with the Thrales,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Where I met with great talents 'mongst females and males,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the best thing it gave me from that time to this,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Was the freedom it gave me to sound the abyss,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At my ease and my leisure, of Johnson's great mind,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Where new treasures unnumber'd I constantly find."
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Highly to her credit, Mrs. Thrale did not omit any part of her
+ own duties to her husband because he forgot his. In March, 1780,
+ she writes to Johnson:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am willing to show myself in Southwark, or in any place, for
+ my master's pleasure or advantage; but have no present conviction
+ that to be re-elected would be advantageous, so shattered a state
+ as his nerves are in just now.&mdash;Do not you, however, fancy
+ for a moment, that I shrink from fatigue&mdash;or desire to
+ escape from doing my duty;&mdash;spiting one's antagonist is a
+ reason that never ought to operate, and never does operate with
+ me: I care nothing about a rival candidate's innuendos, I care
+ only about my husband's health and fame; and if we find that he
+ earnestly wishes to be once more member for the Borough&mdash;he
+ <i>shall</i> be member, if anything done or suffered by me will
+ help make him so."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the May following she writes: "Meanwhile, Heaven send this
+ Southwark election safe, for a disappointment would half kill my
+ husband, and there is <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg128" id=
+ "pg128">128</a></span> no comfort in tiring every friend to death
+ in such a manner and losing the town at last."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was an agitating month. In "Thraliana ":
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>20th May</i>, 1780.&mdash;I got back to Bath again and staid
+ there till the riots<span class="fnref">[1]</span> drove us all
+ away the first week in June: we made a dawdling journey, cross
+ country, to Brighthelmstone, where all was likely to be at peace:
+ the letters we found there, however, shewed us how near we were
+ to ruin here in the Borough: where nothing but the astonishing
+ presence of mind shewed by Perkins in amusing the mob with meat
+ and drink and huzzas, till Sir Philip Jennings Clerke could get
+ the troops and pack up the counting-house bills, bonds, &amp;c.
+ and carry them, which he did, to Chelsea College for
+ safety,&mdash;could have saved us from actual undoing. The
+ villains <i>had</i> broke in, and our brewhouse would have blazed
+ in ten minutes, when a property of £150,000 would have been
+ utterly lost, and its once flourishing possessors quite undone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Let me stop here to give God thanks for so very undeserved, so
+ apparent, an interposition of Providence in our favour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I left Mr. Thrale at Brighthelmstone and came to town again to
+ see what was left to be done: we have now got arms and mean to
+ defend ourselves by force if further violence is intended. Sir
+ Philip comes every day at some hour or another&mdash;good
+ creature, how kind he is! and how much I ought to love him! God
+ knows <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg129" id=
+ "pg129">129</a></span> I am not in this case wanting to my duty.
+ I have presented Perkins, with my Master's permission, with two
+ hundred guineas, and a silver urn for his lady, with his own
+ cypher on it and this motto&mdash;Mollis responsio, Iram
+ avertit."
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] The Lord George Gordon Riots.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ In the spring of 1781, "I found," says Boswell, "on visiting 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."
+ She has written opposite: "Spiteful again! He went by direction
+ of his physicians where they could easiest attend to him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The removal to Grosvenor Square is thus mentioned in "Thraliana":
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Monday, January 29th</i>, 1781.&mdash;So now we are to spend
+ this winter in Grosvenor Square; my master has taken a
+ ready-furnished lodging-house there, and we go in to-morrow. He
+ frighted me cruelly a while ago; he would have Lady Shelburne's
+ house, one of the finest in London; he would buy, he would build,
+ he would give twenty to thirty guineas a week for a house. Oh
+ Lord, thought I, the people will sure enough throw stones at me
+ now when they see a dying man go to such mad expenses, and all,
+ as they will naturally think, to please a wife wild with the love
+ of expense. This was the very thing I endeavoured to avoid by
+ canvassing the borough for him, in hopes of being through that
+ means tyed to the brewhouse where I always hated to live till
+ now, that I conclude his constitution lost, and that the world
+ will say <i>I</i> tempt him in his weak state of body and mind
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg130" id="pg130">130</a></span>
+ to take a fine house for me at the flashy end of the town." "He
+ however, dear creature, is as absolute, ay, and ten times more
+ so, than ever, since he suspects his head to be suspected, and to
+ Grosvenor Square we are going, and I cannot be sorry, for it will
+ doubtless be comfortable enough to see one's friends
+ commodiously, and I have long wished to quit <i>Harrow
+ Corner</i>, to be sure; how could one help it? though I did
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ "'Call round my casks each object of desire'
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ all last winter: but it was a heavy drag too, and what signifies
+ resolving <i>never</i> to be pleased? I will make myself
+ comfortable in my new habitation, and be thankful to God and my
+ husband."
+ </p>
+ <p class="break">
+ On February 7, 1781, she writes to Madame D'Arblay:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yesterday I had a conversazione. Mrs. Montagu was brilliant in
+ diamonds, solid in judgment, critical in talk. Sophy smiled,
+ Piozzi sung, Pepys panted with admiration, Johnson was good
+ humoured, Lord John Clinton attentive, Dr. Bowdler lame, and my
+ master not asleep. Mrs. Ord looked elegant, Lady Rothes dainty,
+ Mrs. Davenant dapper, and Sir Philip's curls were all blown about
+ by the wind. Mrs. Byron rejoices that her Admiral and I agree so
+ well; the way to his heart is connoisseurship it seems, and for a
+ background and contorno, who comes up to Mrs. Thrale, you know."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In "Thraliana":
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Sunday, March 18th</i>, 1781.&mdash;Well! Now I have
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg131" id="pg131">131</a></span>
+ experienced the delights of a London winter, spent in the bosom
+ of flattery, gayety, and Grosvenor Square; 'tis a poor thing,
+ however, and leaves a void in the mind, but I have had my
+ compting-house duties to attend, my sick master to watch, my
+ little children to look after, and how much good have I done in
+ any way? Not a scrap as I can see; the pecuniary affairs have
+ gone on perversely: how should they chuse [an omission here] when
+ the sole proprietor is incapable of giving orders, yet not so far
+ incapable as to be set aside! Distress, fraud, folly, meet me at
+ every turn, and I am not able to fight against them all, though
+ endued with an iron constitution, which shakes not by sleepless
+ nights or days severely fretted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Mr. Thrale talks now of going to Spa and Italy again; how shall
+ we drag him thither? A man who cannot keep awake four hours at a
+ stroke &amp;c. Well! this will indeed be a tryal of one's
+ patience; and who must go with us on this expedition? Mr.
+ Johnson!&mdash;he will indeed be the only happy person of the
+ party; he values nothing <i>under</i> heaven but his own mind,
+ which is a spark <i>from</i> heaven, and that will be invigorated
+ by the addition of new ideas. If Mr. Thrale dies on the road,
+ Johnson will console himself by learning how it is to travel with
+ a corpse: and, after all, such reasoning is the true
+ philosophy&mdash;one's heart is a mere incumbrance&mdash;would I
+ could leave mine behind. The children shall go to their sisters
+ at Kensington, Mrs. Cumyns may take care of them all. God grant
+ us a happy meeting some <i>where</i> and some <i>time</i>!
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg132" id="pg132">132</a></span>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Baretti should attend, I think; there is no man who has so much
+ of every language, and can manage so well with Johnson, is so
+ tidy on the road, so active top to obtain good accommodations. He
+ is the man in the world, I think, whom I most abhor, and who
+ <i>hates</i> and <i>professes</i> to <i>hate me</i> the most; but
+ what does that signifie? He will be careful of Mr. Thrale and
+ Hester whom he <i>does</i> love&mdash;and he won't strangle
+ <i>me</i>, I suppose. Somebody we <i>must</i> have. Croza would
+ court our daughter, and Piozzi could not talk to Johnson, nor, I
+ suppose, do one any good but sing to one,&mdash;and how should we
+ <i>sing songs in a strange land</i>? Baretti must be the man, and
+ I will beg it of him as a favour. Oh, the triumph he will have!
+ and the lyes he will tell!" Thrale's death is thus described in
+ "Thraliana":
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "On the Sunday, the 1st of April, I went to hear the Bishop of
+ Peterborough preach at May Fair Chapel, and though the sermon had
+ nothing in it particularly pathetic, I could not keep my tears
+ within my eyes. I spent the evening, however, at Lady Rothes',
+ and was cheerful. Found Sir John Lade, Johnson, and Boswell, with
+ Mr. Thrale, at my return to the Square. On Monday morning Mr.
+ Evans came to breakfast; Sir Philip and Dr. Johnson to
+ dinner&mdash;so did Baretti. Mr. Thrale eat voraciously&mdash;so
+ voraciously that, encouraged by Jebb and Pepys, who had charged
+ me to do so, I checked him rather severely, and Mr. Johnson added
+ these remarkable words: "Sir, after the denunciation of your
+ physicians this morning, such eating is little better than
+ suicide." He did not, however, desist, and <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg133" id="pg133">133</a></span> Sir Philip
+ said, he eat apparently in defiance of control, and that it was
+ better for us to say nothing to him. Johnson observed that he
+ thought so too; and that he spoke more from a sense of duty than
+ a hope of success. Baretti and these two spent the evening with
+ me, and I was enumerating the people who were to meet the Indian
+ ambassadors on the Wednesday. I had been to Negri's and bespoke
+ an elegant entertainment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "On the next day, Tuesday the 3rd, Mrs. Hinchliffe called on me
+ in the morning to go see Webber's drawings of the South Sea
+ rareties. We met the Smelts, the Ords, and numberless
+ <i>blues</i> there, and displayed our pedantry at our pleasure.
+ Going and coming, however, I quite teazed Mrs. Hinchliffe with my
+ low-spirited terrors about Mr. Thrale, who had not all this while
+ one symptom worse than he had had for months; though the
+ physicians this Tuesday morning agreed that a continuation of
+ such dinners as he had lately made would soon dispatch a life so
+ precarious and uncertain. When I came home to dress, Piozzi, who
+ was in the next room teaching Hester to sing, began lamenting
+ that he was engaged to Mrs. Locke on the following evening, when
+ I had such a world of company to meet these fine Orientals; he
+ had, however, engaged Roncaglia and Sacchini to begin with, and
+ would make a point of coming himself at nine o'clock if possible.
+ I gave him the money I had collected for his
+ benefit&mdash;35<i>l</i>. I remember it was&mdash;a banker's
+ note&mdash;and burst out o' crying, and said, I was sure I should
+ not go to it. The man was shocked, and wondered what I meant.
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg134" id="pg134">134</a></span>
+ Nay, says I, 'tis mere lowness of spirits, for Mr. Thrale is very
+ well now, and is gone out in his carriage to spit cards, as I
+ call'd it&mdash;sputar le carte. Just then came a letter from Dr.
+ Pepys, insisting to speak with me in the afternoon, and though
+ there was nothing very particular in the letter considering our
+ intimacy, I burst out o' crying again, and threw myself into an
+ agony, saying, I was sure Mr. Thrale would dye.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Miss Owen came to dinner, and Mr. Thrale came home so well! and
+ in such spirits! he had invited more people to my concert, or
+ conversazione, or musical party, of the next day, and was
+ delighted to think what a show we should make. He eat, however,
+ more than enormously. Six things the day before, and eight on
+ this day, with strong beer in such quantities! the very servants
+ were frighted, and when Pepys came in the evening he said this
+ could not last&mdash;either there must be
+ <i>legal</i><span class="fnref">[1]</span> restraint or certain
+ death. Dear Mrs. Byron spent the evening with me, and Mr.
+ Crutchley came from Sunning-hill to be ready for the morrow's
+ flash. Johnson was at the Bishop of Chester's. I went down in the
+ course of the afternoon to see after my master as usual, and
+ found him not asleep, but sitting with his legs
+ up&mdash;<i>because</i>, as he express'd it. I kissed him, and
+ said how good he was to be so careful of himself. He enquired who
+ was above, but had no disposition to <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg135" id="pg135">135</a></span> come up
+ stairs. Miss Owen and Mrs. Byron now took their leave. The Dr.
+ had been gone about twenty minutes when Hester went down to see
+ her papa, and found him on the floor. What's the meaning of this?
+ says she, in an agony. I chuse it, replies Mr. Thrale firmly; I
+ lie so o' purpose. She ran, however, to call his valet, who was
+ gone out&mdash;happy to leave him so particularly <i>well</i>, as
+ he thought. When my servant went instead, Mr. Thrale bid him
+ begone, in a firm tone, and added that he was very well and chose
+ to lie so. By this time, however, Mr. Crutchley was run down at
+ Hetty's intreaty, and had sent to fetch Pepys back. He was got
+ but into Upper Brook Street, and found his friend in a most
+ violent fit of the apoplexy, from which he only recovered to
+ relapse into another, every one growing weaker as his strength
+ grew less, till six o'clock on Wednesday morning, 4th April,
+ 1781, when he died. Sir Richard Jebb, who was fetched at the
+ beginning of the distress, seeing death certain, quitted the
+ house without even prescribing. Pepys did all that could be done,
+ and Johnson, who was sent for at eleven o'clock, never left him,
+ for while breath remained he still hoped. I ventured in once, and
+ saw them cutting his clothes off to bleed him, but I saw no
+ more."
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] (<i>Note</i> by Mrs. T.). "I rejected all propositions of
+ the sort, and said, as he had got the money, he had the best
+ right to throw it away.... I should always prefer my husband,
+ to my children: let him do his <i>own</i> way."
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ We learn from Madame D'Arblay's Journal, that, towards the end of
+ March, 1781, Mr. Thrale had resolved on going abroad with his
+ wife, and that Johnson was to accompany them, but a subsequent
+ entry states that the doctors condemned the plan; and
+ "therefore," she adds, "it is settled that a great meeting of his
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg136" id="pg136">136</a></span>
+ friends is to take place before he actually prepares for the
+ journey, and they are to encircle him in a body, and endeavour,
+ by representations and entreaties, 'to prevail with him to give
+ it up; and I have little doubt myself but, amongst us, we shall
+ be able to succeed." This is one of the oddest schemes ever
+ projected by a set of learned and accomplished gentlemen and
+ ladies for the benefit of a hypochondriac patient. Its execution
+ was prevented by his death. A hurried note from Mrs. Thrale
+ announcing the event, beginning, "Write to me, pray for me," is
+ endorsed by Madame D'Arblay: "Written a few hours after the death
+ of Mr. Thrale, which happened by a sudden stroke of apoplexy, on
+ the morning of a day on which half the fashion of London had been
+ invited to an intended assembly at his house in Grosvenor
+ Square." These invitations had been sent out by his own express
+ desire: so little was he aware of his danger.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Letters and messages of condolence poured in from all sides.
+ Johnson (in a letter dated April 5th) said all that could be said
+ in the way of counsel or consolation:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I do not exhort you to reason yourself into tranquillity. We
+ must first pray, and then labour; first implore the blessing of
+ God, and those means which He puts into our hands. Cultivated
+ ground, has few weeds; a mind occupied by lawful business, has
+ little room for useless regret.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We read the will to-day; but I will not fill my first letter
+ with any other account than that, with all my <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg137" id="pg137">137</a></span> zeal for your
+ advantage, I am satisfied; and that the other executors, more
+ used to consider property than I, commended it for wisdom and
+ equity. Yet, why should I not tell you that you have five hundred
+ pounds for your immediate expenses, and two thousand pounds
+ a-year, with both the houses and all the goods?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Let us pray for one another, that the time, whether long or
+ short, that shall yet be granted us, may be well spent; and that
+ when this life, which at the longest is very short, shall come to
+ an end, a better may begin which shall never end."
+ </p>
+ <p class="break">
+ On April 9th he writes:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "DEAREST MADAM,&mdash;That you are gradually recovering your
+ tranquillity, is the effect to be humbly expected from trust in
+ God. Do not represent life as darker than it is. Your loss has
+ been very great, but you retain more than almost any other can
+ hope to possess. You are high in the opinion of mankind; you have
+ children from whom much pleasure may be expected; and that you
+ will find many friends, you have no reason to doubt. Of my
+ friendship, be it worth more or less, I hope you think yourself
+ certain, without much art or care. It will not be easy for me to
+ repay the benefits that I have received; but I hope to be always
+ ready at your call. Our sorrow has different effects; you are
+ withdrawn into solitude, and I am driven into company. <i>I</i>
+ am afraid of thinking what I have lost. I never had such a friend
+ before. Let me have your prayers and those of my dear Queeny.
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg138" id="pg138">138</a></span>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The prudence and resolution of your design to return so soon to
+ your business and your duty deserves great praise; I shall
+ communicate it on Wednesday to the other executors. Be pleased to
+ let me know whether you would have me come to Streatham to
+ receive you, or stay here till the next day."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Johnson was one of the executors and took pride in discharging
+ his share of the trust. Mrs. Thrale's account of the pleasure he
+ took in signing the documents and cheques, is incidentally
+ confirmed by Boswell:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "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. Lord Lucan tells a very good story, which, if not precisely
+ exact, is certainly characteristical; 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.'"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The executors had legacies of 200<i>l.</i> each; Johnson, to the
+ surprise of his friends, being placed on no better footing than
+ the rest. He himself was certainly disappointed. Mrs. Thrale says
+ that his complacency towards Thrale was not wholly devoid of
+ interested motives; and she adds that his manner towards Reynolds
+ and Dr. Taylor was also softened by the vague <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg139" id="pg139">139</a></span> expectation
+ of being named in their wills. One of her marginal notes is:
+ "Johnson mentioned to Reynolds that he had been told by Taylor he
+ was to be his heir. His fondness for Reynolds, ay, and for
+ Thrale, had a dash of interest to keep it warm." Again, on his
+ saying to Reynolds, "I did not mean to offend you,"&mdash;"He
+ never would offend Reynolds: he had his reason."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Many and heavy as were the reproaches subsequently heaped upon
+ the widow, no one has accused her of having been found wanting in
+ energy, propriety, or self-respect at this period. She took the
+ necessary steps for promoting her own interests and those of her
+ children with prudence and promptitude. Madame D'Arblay, who was
+ carrying on a flirtation with one of the executors (Mr.
+ Crutchley), and had personal motives for watching their
+ proceedings, writes, April 29th:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Miss Thrale is steady and constant, and very sincerely grieved
+ for her father.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The four executors, Mr. Cator, Mr. Crutchley, Mr. Henry Smith,
+ and Dr. Johnson, have all behaved generously and honourably, and
+ seem determined to give Mrs. Thrale all the comfort and
+ assistance in their power. She is to carry on the business
+ jointly with them. Poor soul! it is a dreadful toil and worry to
+ her."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In "Thraliana":
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Streatham, 1st May</i>, 1781.&mdash;I have now appointed
+ three days a week to attend at the counting-house. <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg140" id="pg140">140</a></span> If an angel
+ from heaven had told me twenty years ago that the man I knew by
+ the name of <i>Dictionary Johnson</i> should one day become
+ partner with me in a great trade, and that we should jointly or
+ separately sign notes, drafts, &amp;c., for three or four
+ thousand pounds of a morning, how unlikely it would have seemed
+ ever to happen! Unlikely is no word tho',&mdash;it would have
+ seemed <i>incredible</i>, neither of us then being worth a groat,
+ God knows, and both as immeasurably removed from commerce as
+ birth, literature, and inclination could get us. Johnson,
+ however, who desires above all other good the accumulation of new
+ ideas, is but too happy with his present employment; and the
+ influence I have over him, added to his own solid judgment and a
+ regard for truth, will at last find it in a small degree
+ difficult to win him from the dirty delight of seeing his name in
+ a new character flaming away at the bottom of bonds and leases."
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ "Apropos to writing verses in a language one don't understand,
+ there is always the allowance given, and that allowance (like our
+ excise drawbacks) commonly larger than it ought to be. The
+ following translation of the verses written with a knife, has
+ been for this reason uncommonly commended, though they have no
+ merit except being done quick. Piozzi asked me on Sunday morning
+ if ever I had seen them, and could explain them to <i>him</i>,
+ for that he heard they were written by his friend Mr. Locke. The
+ book in which they were reposited was not ferreted out, however,
+ till Monday night, and on Tuesday morning I sent him verses and
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg141" id="pg141">141</a></span>
+ translation: we used to think the original was Garrick's, I
+ remember."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Translation of the verses written with a knife.
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ "Taglia Amore un coltello,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cara, l'hai sentita dire;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Per l'Amore alla Moda,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Esso poco può soffrire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cuori che non mai fur giunti
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pronti stanno a separar,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cari nodi come i nostri
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Non son facili tagliar.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Questo dico, che se spezza
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tua tenera bellezza,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Molto ancor ci resterà;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Della mia buona fede
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Il Coltello non s'avvede,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nè di tua gran bontà.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Che tagliare speranze
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ Ben tutto si puo,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Per piaceri goduti
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ Oh, questo poi no?
+ </p>
+ <p class="i4">
+ Dolci segni!
+ </p>
+ <p class="i4">
+ Cari pegni!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Di felècità passata,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Non temer la coltellata,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Resterete&mdash;Io loro:
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ Se del caro ben gradita,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ Trovo questa donatura,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ Via pur la tagliatura
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ Sol d'Amore sta ferita."
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg142" id="pg142">142</a></span>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The power of emptying one's head of a great thing and filling it
+ with little ones to amuse care, is no small power, and I am proud
+ of being able to write Italian verses while I am bargaining
+ 150,000<i>l</i>., and settling an event of the highest
+ consequence to my own and my children's welfare. David Barclay,
+ the rich Quaker, will treat for our brewhouse, and the
+ negotiation is already begun. My heart palpitates with hope and
+ fear&mdash;my head is bursting with anxiety and calculation; yet
+ I can listen to a singer and translate verses about a knife."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Mrs. Montagu has been here; she says I ought to have a statue
+ erected to me for my diligent attendance on my compting-house
+ duties. The <i>wits</i> and the <i>blues</i> (as it is the
+ fashion to call them) will be happy enough, no doubt, to have me
+ safe at the brewery&mdash;<i>out of their way</i>."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "A very strange thing happened in the year 1776, and I never
+ wrote it down,&mdash;I must write it down now. A woman came to
+ London from a distant county to prosecute some business, and fell
+ into distress; she was sullen and silent, and the people with
+ whom her affairs connected her advised her to apply for
+ assistance to some friend. What friends can I have in London?
+ says the woman, nobody here knows anything of me. One can't tell
+ <i>that</i>, was the reply. Where have you lived? I have wandered
+ much, says she, but I am originally from Litchfield. Who did you
+ know in Litchfield in your youth? Oh, nobody of any note, I'll
+ warrant: I knew one <i>David Garrick</i>, indeed, but I once
+ heard <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg143" id=
+ "pg143">143</a></span> that he turned strolling player, and is
+ probably dead long ago; I also knew an obscure man, <i>Samuel
+ Johnson</i>, very good he was too; but who can know anything of
+ poor Johnson? I was likewise acquainted with <i>Robert James</i>,
+ a quack doctor. <i>He</i> is, I suppose, no very reputable
+ connection if I could find him. Thus did this woman name and
+ discriminate the three best known characters in
+ London&mdash;perhaps in Europe."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Such,' says Mrs. Montagu, 'is the dignity of Mrs. Thrale's
+ virtue, and such her superiority in all situations of life, that
+ nothing now is wanting but an earthquake to show how she will
+ behave on <i>that</i> occasion.' Oh, brave Mrs. Montagu! She is a
+ monkey, though, to quarrel with Johnson so about Lyttleton's
+ life: if he was a great character, nothing said of him in that
+ book can hurt him; if he was not a great character, they are
+ bustling about nothing."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Mr. Crutchley lives now a great deal with me; the business of
+ executor to Mr. Thrale's will makes much of his attendance
+ necessary, and it begins to have its full effect in seducing and
+ attaching him to the house,&mdash;Miss Burney's being always
+ about me is probably another reason for his close attendance, and
+ I believe it is so. What better could befall Miss Burney, or
+ indeed what better could befall <i>him</i>, than to obtain a
+ woman of honour, and character, and reputation for superior
+ understanding? I would be glad, however, that he fell honestly in
+ love with her, and was not trick'd or trapp'd into marriage, poor
+ fellow; he is no match for the arts of a novel-writer. A mighty
+ particular character <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg144" id=
+ "pg144">144</a></span> Mr. Crutchley is: strangely mixed up of
+ meanness and magnificence; liberal and splendid in large sums and
+ on serious occasions, narrow and confined in the common
+ occurrences of life; warm and generous in some of his motives,
+ frigid and suspicious, however, for eighteen hours at least out
+ of the twenty-four; likely to be duped, though always expecting
+ fraud, and easily disappointed in realities, though seldom
+ flattered by fancy. He is supposed by those that knew his mother
+ and her connections to be Mr. Thrale's natural son, and in many
+ things he resembles him, but not in person: as he is both ugly
+ and awkward. Mr. Thrale certainly believed he was his son, and
+ once told me as much when Sophy Streatfield's affair was in
+ question but nobody could persuade him to court the S.S. Oh! well
+ does the Custom-house officer Green say,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ "'Coquets! leave off affected arts,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gay fowlers at a flock of hearts;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Woodcocks, to shun your snares have skill,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ You show so plain you strive to kill.'"
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ "<i>3rd June</i>, 1781.&mdash;Well! here have I, with the grace
+ of God and the assistance of good friends, completed&mdash;I
+ really think very happily&mdash;the greatest event of my life. I
+ have sold my brewhouse to Barclay, the rich Quaker, for
+ 135,000<i>l</i>., to be in four years' time paid. I have by this
+ bargain purchased peace and a stable fortune, restoration to my
+ original rank in life, and a situation undisturbed by commercial
+ jargon, unpolluted by commercial frauds, undisgraced by
+ commercial connections. They who succeed me in the house have
+ purchased the power <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg145" id=
+ "pg145">145</a></span> of being rich beyond the wish of
+ rapacity<span class="fnref">[1]</span>, and I have procured the
+ improbability of being made poor by flights of the fairy,
+ speculation. 'Tis thus that a woman and men of feminine minds
+ always&mdash;I speak popularly&mdash;decide upon life, and chuse
+ certain mediocrity before probable superiority; while, as Eton
+ Graham says sublimely,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p class="i12">
+ "'Nobler souls,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fir'd with the tedious and disrelish'd good,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Seek their employment in acknowledg'd ill,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Danger, and toil, and pain.'
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ "On this principle partly, and partly on worse, was dear Mr.
+ Johnson something unwilling&mdash;but not much at last&mdash;to
+ give up a trade by which in some years 15,000<i>l.</i> or
+ 16,000<i>l.</i> had undoubtedly been got, but by which, in some
+ years, its possessor had suffered agonies of terror and tottered
+ twice upon the verge of bankruptcy. Well! if thy own conscience
+ acquit, who shall condemn thee? Not, I hope, the future husbands
+ of our daughters, though I should think it likely enough;
+ however, as Johnson says very judiciously, they must either think
+ right or wrong: if they think right, let us now think with them;
+ if wrong, let us never care what they think. So adieu to
+ brewhouse, and borough wintering; adieu to trade, and tradesmen's
+ frigid approbation; may virtue and wisdom sanctify our contract,
+ and make buyer and seller happy in the bargain!"
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] There is a curious similarity here to Johnson's phrase,
+ "the potentiality of becoming rich beyond the dreams of
+ avarice."
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ After mentioning some friends who disapproved of <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg146" id="pg146">146</a></span> the sale, she
+ adds: "Mrs. Montagu has sent me her approbation in a letter
+ exceedingly affectionate and polite. 'Tis over now, tho', and
+ I'll clear my head of it and all that belongs to it; I will go to
+ church, give God thanks, receive the sacrament and forget the
+ frauds, follies, and inconveniences of a commercial life this
+ day."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Madame D'Arblay was at Streatham on the day of the sale, and
+ gives a dramatic colour to the ensuing scene:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Streatham, Thursday</i>.&mdash;This was the great and most
+ important day to all this house, upon which the sale of the
+ brewery was to be decided. Mrs. Thrale went early to town, to
+ meet all the executors, and Mr. Barclay, the Quaker, who was the
+ <i>bidder</i>. She was in great agitation of mind, and told me,
+ if all went well she would wave a white pocket-handkerchief out
+ of the coach window.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Four o'clock came and dinner was ready, and no Mrs. Thrale. Five
+ o'clock followed, 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
+ pocket-handkerchief was waved from it. I ran to the door of it to
+ meet her, and she jumped out of it, and gave me a thousand
+ embraces while I gave my congratulations. We went instantly to
+ her dressing-room, where she told me, in brief, how the matter
+ had been transacted, and then we went down to dinner. Dr. Johnson
+ and Mr. Crutchley had accompanied her home." <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg147" id="pg147">147</a></span>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The event is thus announced to Langton by Johnson, in a letter
+ printed by Boswell, dated June 16, 1781: "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 135,000<i>l</i>. Is the nation
+ ruined." <i>Marginal note</i>: "I suppose he was neither glad nor
+ sorry."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thrale died on the 4th April, 1781, and Mrs. Thrale left
+ Streatham on the 7th October, 1782. The intervening eighteen
+ months have been made the subject of an almost unprecedented
+ amount of misrepresentation. Hawkins, Boswell, Madame D'Arblay,
+ and Lord Macaulay have vied with each other in founding
+ uncharitable imputations on her conduct at this period of her
+ widowhood; and it has consequently become necessary to
+ recapitulate the authentic evidence relating to it. As Piozzi's
+ name will occur occasionally, he must now be brought upon the
+ scene.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He is first mentioned in "Thraliana" thus:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Brighton, July</i>, 1780.&mdash;I have picked up Piozzi here,
+ the great Italian singer. He is amazingly like my father. He
+ shall teach Hester."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A detailed account of the commencement of the acquaintance is
+ given in one of the autobiographical fragments. She says he was
+ recommended to her by letter by Madame D'Arblay as "a man likely
+ to lighten the burthen of life to her," and that both she and Mr.
+ Thrale took to him at once. Madame D'Arblay is silent as to the
+ introduction or recommendation; but gives an amusing account of
+ one of their first meetings: <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+ "pg148" id="pg148">148</a></span>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "A few months after the Streathamite morning visit to St.
+ Martin's Street, an evening party was arranged by Dr. Burney, for
+ bringing thither again Dr. Johnson and Mrs. Thrale, at the desire
+ of Mr. and Mrs. Greville and Mrs. Crewe; who wished, under the
+ quiet roof of Dr. Burney, to make acquaintance with these
+ celebrated personages." The conversation flagged, and recourse
+ was had to music&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Piozzi, a first-rate singer, whose voice was deliciously sweet,
+ and whose expression was perfect, sung in his very best manner,
+ from his desire to do honour to <i>il Capo di Casa</i>; but <i>il
+ Capo di Casa</i> and his family alone did justice to his strains:
+ neither the Grevilles nor the Thrales heeded music beyond what
+ belonged to it as fashion: the expectations of the Grevilles were
+ all occupied by Dr. Johnson; and those of the Thrales by the
+ authoress of the Ode to Indifference. When Piozzi, therefore,
+ arose, the party remained as little advanced in any method or
+ pleasure for carrying on the evening, as upon its first entrance
+ into the room....
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Dr. Burney now began to feel considerably embarrassed; though
+ still he cherished hopes of ultimate relief from some auspicious
+ circumstance that, sooner or later, would operate, he hoped, in
+ his favour, through the magnetism of congenial talents.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Vainly, however, he sought to elicit some observations that
+ might lead to disserting discourse; all his attempts received
+ only quiet, acquiescent replies, 'signifying nothing.' Every one
+ was awaiting some spontaneous opening from Dr. Johnson.
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg149" id="pg149">149</a></span>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Mrs. Thrale, of the whole coterie, was alone at her ease. She
+ feared not Dr. Johnson; for fear made no part of her composition;
+ and with Mrs. Greville, as a fair rival genius, she would have
+ been glad, from curiosity, to have had the honour of a little
+ tilt, in full carelessness of its event; for though triumphant
+ when victorious, she had spirits so volatile, and such utter
+ exemption from envy or spleen, that she was gaily free from
+ mortification when vanquished. But she knew the meeting to have
+ been fabricated for Dr. Johnson; and, therefore, though not
+ without difficulty, constrained herself to be passive.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "When, however, she observed the sardonic disposition of Mr.
+ Greville to stare around him at the whole company in curious
+ silence, she felt a defiance against his aristocracy beat in
+ every pulse; for, however grandly he might look back to the long
+ ancestry of the Brookes and the Grevilles, she had a glowing
+ consciousness that her own blood, rapid and fluent, flowed in her
+ veins from Adam of Saltsberg; and, at length, provoked by the
+ dullness of a taciturnity that, in the midst of such renowned
+ interlocutors, produced as narcotic a torpor as could have been
+ caused by a dearth the most barren of human faculties; she grew
+ tired of the music, and yet more tired of remaining, what as
+ little suited her inclinations as her abilities, a mere cipher in
+ the company; and, holding such a position, and all its
+ concomitants, to be ridiculous, her spirits rose rebelliously
+ above her control; and, in a fit of utter recklessness of what
+ might be thought of her by her fine new acquaintance,
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg150" id="pg150">150</a></span>
+ she suddenly, but softly, arose, and stealing on tip-toe behind
+ Signor Piozzi, who was accompanying himself on the piano-forte to
+ an animated <i>arria parlante</i>, with his back to the company,
+ and his face to the wall; she ludicrously began imitating him by
+ squaring her elbows, elevating them with ecstatic shrugs of the
+ shoulders, and casting up her eyes, while languishingly reclining
+ her head; as if she were not less enthusiastically, though
+ somewhat more suddenly, struck with the transports of harmony
+ than himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This grotesque ebullition of ungovernable gaiety was not
+ perceived by Dr. Johnson, who faced the fire, with his back to
+ the performer and the instrument. But the amusement which such an
+ unlooked for exhibition caused to the party, was momentary; for
+ Dr. Burney, shocked lest the poor Signor should observe, and be
+ hurt by this mimicry, glided gently round to Mrs. Thrale, and,
+ with something between pleasantness and severity, 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?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It was now that shone the brightest attribute of Mrs. Thrale,
+ sweetness of temper. She took this rebuke with a candour, and a
+ sense of its justice the most amiable: she nodded her approbation
+ of the admonition; and, returning to her chair, quietly sat down,
+ as she afterwards said, like a pretty little miss, for the
+ remainder of one of the most humdrum evenings that she had ever
+ passed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Strange, indeed, strange and most strange, the event
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg151" id="pg151">151</a></span>
+ considered, was this opening intercourse between Mrs. Thrale and
+ Signor Piozzi. Little could she imagine that the person she was
+ thus called away from holding up to ridicule, would become, but a
+ few years afterwards, the idol of her fancy and the lord of her
+ destiny! And little did the company present imagine, that this
+ burlesque scene was but the first of a drama the most
+ extraordinary of real life, of which these two persons were to be
+ the hero and heroine: though, when the catastrophe was known,
+ this incident, witnessed by so many, was recollected and repeated
+ from coterie to coterie throughout London, with comments and
+ sarcasms of endless variety."<span class="fnref">[1]</span>
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] Memoirs of Dr. Burney, &amp;c., vol. ii, pp. 105&mdash;111.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Madame D'Arblay mentioned the same circumstance in conversation
+ to the Rev. W. Harness: yet it seems strange in connection with
+ an entry in "Thraliana" from which it would appear that her
+ friend was far from wanting in susceptibility to sweet sounds:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "13 <i>August</i>, 1780.&mdash;Piozzi is become a prodigious
+ favourite with me, he is so intelligent a creature, so
+ discerning, one can't help wishing for his good opinion; his
+ singing surpasses everybody's for taste, tenderness, and true
+ elegance; his hand on the forte piano too is so soft, so sweet,
+ so delicate, every tone goes to the heart, I think, and fills the
+ mind with emotions one would not be without, though inconvenient
+ enough sometimes. He wants nothing from us: he comes for his
+ health he says: I see nothing ail the man but pride. The
+ newspapers <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg152" id=
+ "pg152">152</a></span> yesterday told what all the musical folks
+ gained, and set Piozzi down 1200<i>l</i>. o' year."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the 24th August, 1780, Madame D'Arblay writes: "I have not
+ seen Piozzi: he left me your letter, which indeed is a charming
+ one, though its contents puzzled me much whether to make me sad
+ or merry." Mrs. Thrale was still at Brighton; so that the scene
+ at Dr. Burney's must have occurred subsequently; when she had
+ already begun to find Piozzi what the Neapolitan ladies
+ understand by <i>simpatico</i>. Madame D'Arblay's "Memoirs," as I
+ shall have occasion to point out, are by no means so trustworthy
+ a register of dates, facts, or impressions as her "Diary."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whilst Thrale lived, Mrs. Thrale's regard for Piozzi was
+ certainly not of a nature to cause scandal or provoke censure,
+ and as it ripened into love, it may be traced, step by step, from
+ the frankest and fullest of all possible unveilings of the heart.
+ Rare indeed are the instances in which such revelations as we
+ find in "Thraliana" could be risked by either man or woman,
+ without giving scope to malevolence; and they should not only be
+ judged as a whole and by the context, but the most favourable
+ construction should be put upon them. When, in this sort of
+ self-communing, every passing emotion, every transitory
+ inclination, is set down, it would be unfair and even foolish to
+ infer that the emotion at once became a passion, or that the
+ inclination was criminally indulged.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next notice of Piozzi occurs in Madame D'Arblay's "Diary" for
+ July 10th, 1781: <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg153" id=
+ "pg153">153</a></span>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You will believe I was not a little surprised to see Sacchini.
+ He is going to the Continent with Piozzi, and Mrs. Thrale invited
+ them both to spend the last day at Streatham, and from hence
+ proceed to Margate.... The first song he sang, beginning 'En quel
+ amabil volto,' you may perhaps know, but I did not; it is a
+ charming mezza bravura. He and Piozzi then sung together the duet
+ of the 'Amore Soldato;' and nothing could be much more
+ delightful; Piozzi taking pains to sing his very best, and
+ Sacchini, with his soft but delicious whisper, almost thrilling
+ me by his exquisite and pathetic expression. They then went
+ through that opera, great part of 'Creso,' some of 'Erifile,' and
+ much of 'Rinaldo.'"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Piozzi's attentions had attracted Johnson's notice without
+ troubling his peace. On November 24th, 1781, he wrote from
+ Ashbourne: "Piozzi, I find, is coming in spite of Miss Harriet's
+ prediction, or second sight, and when <i>he</i> comes and
+ <i>I</i> come, you will have two about you that love you; and I
+ question if either of us heartily care how few more you have. But
+ how many soever they may be, I hope you keep your kindness for
+ me, and I have a great mind to have Queeny's kindness too."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Again, December 3rd, 1781: "You have got Piozzi again,
+ notwithstanding pretty Harriet's dire denunciations. The Italian
+ translation which he has brought, you will find no great
+ accession to your library, for the writer seems to understand
+ very little English. When we meet we can compare some passages.
+ Pray contrive a multitude of good things for us to do when we
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg154" id="pg154">154</a></span>
+ meet. Something that may <i>hold all together</i>; though if any
+ thing makes <i>me</i> love you more, it is going from you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We learn from "Thraliana," that the entanglement with Piozzi was
+ not the only one of which Streatham was contemporaneously the
+ scene:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>August,</i> 1781.&mdash;I begin to wish in good earnest that
+ Miss Burney should make impression on Mr. Crutchley. I think she
+ honestly loves the man, who in his turn appears to be in love
+ with some one else&mdash;Hester, I fear, Oh! that would indeed be
+ unlucky! People have said so a long while, but I never thought it
+ till now; young men and women will always be serving one so, to
+ be sure, if they live at all together, but I depended on Burney
+ keeping him steady to herself. Queeny behaves like an angel about
+ it. Mr. Johnson says the name of Crutchley comes from <i>croix
+ lea</i>, the cross meadow; <i>lea</i> is a meadow, I know, and
+ <i>crutch</i>, a crutch stick, is so called from having the
+ handle go <i>crosswise</i>."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>September,</i> 1781.&mdash;My five fair daughters too! I have
+ so good a pretence to wish for long life to see them settled.
+ Like the old fellow in 'Lucian,' one is never at a loss for an
+ excuse. They are five lovely creatures to be sure, but they love
+ not me. Is it my fault or theirs?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>12th October</i>, 1781.&mdash;Yesterday was my wedding-day;
+ it was a melancholy thing to me to pass it without the husband of
+ my youth. <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg155" id=
+ "pg155">155</a></span>
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ "'Long tedious years may neither moan,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ Sad, deserted, and alone;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ May neither long condemned to stay
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ Wait the second bridal day!!!'<span class="fnref">[1]</span>
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ "Let me thank God for my children, however, my fortune, and my
+ friends, and be contented if I cannot be happy."
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] <i>Note by Mrs. T.</i>: "Samuel Wesley's verses, making
+ part of an epithalamium."
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ "<i>15th October</i>, 1781.&mdash;My maid Margaret Rice dreamed
+ last night that my eldest daughter was going to be married to Mr.
+ Crutchley, but that Mr. Thrale <i>himself</i> prevented her. An
+ odd thing to me, who think Mr. Crutchley is his son."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Although the next day but one after Thrale's death Johnson
+ carried Boswell to dine at the Queen's Arms' Club, his grief was
+ deep and durable. Indeed, it is expressed so often and so
+ earnestly as to rebut the presumption that "my mistress" was the
+ sole or chief tie which bound him to Streatham. Amongst his
+ Prayers and Meditations is the following:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Good Friday, April 13th</i>, 1781.&mdash;On Wednesday, 11th,
+ was buried my dear friend Thrale, who died on Wednesday, 4th; and
+ with him were buried many of my hopes and pleasures. About five,
+ I think, on Wednesday morning, he expired. 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 or benignity. Farewell. May God, that delighteth in
+ mercy, have had mercy on <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg156"
+ id="pg156">156</a></span> 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."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the same paper is a note: "My first knowledge of Thrale was in
+ 1765. I enjoyed his favours for almost a fourth part of my life."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the 20th March, 1782, he wrote thus to Langton:
+ </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; 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."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is ample evidence that he neither felt nor suspected any
+ diminution of kindness or regard, and continued, till their final
+ departure from Streatham, to treat it as his home.
+ </p>
+ <p class="break">
+ In November she writes, "Do not forget Streatham and its
+ inhabitants, who are all much yours;" and he replies:
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg157" id="pg157">157</a></span>
+ </p>
+ <p class="quotdate">
+ "Birmingham, Dec. 8th, 1781.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "DEAR MADAM,&mdash;I am come to this place on my way to London
+ and to Streatham. I hope to be in London on Tuesday or Wednesday,
+ and Streatham on Thursday, by your kind conveyance. I shall have
+ nothing to relate either wonderful or delightful. But remember
+ that you sent me away, and turned me out into the world, and you
+ must take the chance of finding me better or worse. This you may
+ know at present, that my affection for you is not diminished, and
+ my expectation from you is increased. Do not neglect me, nor
+ relinquish me. Nobody will ever love you better or honour you
+ more."
+ </p>
+ <p class="quotdate">
+ "Feb. 16th, 1782.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "DEAREST LADY,&mdash;I am better, but not yet well; but hope
+ springs eternal. As soon as I can think myself not troublesome,
+ you may be sure of seeing me, <i>for such a place to visit nobody
+ ever had</i>. Dearest Madam, do not think me worse than I am; be
+ sure, at least, that whatever happens to me, I am with all the
+ regard that admiration of excellence and gratitude for kindness
+ can excite, Madam, your" &amp;c.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In "Thraliana":
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>23rd February, 1782 (Harley Street)</i>.&mdash;The truth is,
+ Mr. Johnson has some occult disorder that I cannot understand;
+ Jebb and Bromfield fancy it is water between the heart and
+ pericardium&mdash;I do not think it is <i>that</i>, but I do not
+ know what it is. He apprehends no danger himself, and he knows
+ more of the matter than any of them all." <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg158" id="pg158">158</a></span>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On February 27th, 1782, he writes to Malone: "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."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On March 20th, 1782, to Mrs. Grastrell and Mrs. Aston: "When Dr.
+ Falconer saw me, I was at home only by accident, for I lived much
+ with Mrs. Thrale, and had all the care from her that she could
+ take or could be taken."
+ </p>
+ <p class="break">
+ April 26th, 1782, to Mrs. Thrale:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "MADAM,&mdash;I have been very much out of order since you sent
+ me away; but why should I tell you, who do not care, nor desire
+ to know? I dined with Mr. Paradise on Monday, with the Bishop of
+ St. Asaph yesterday, with the Bishop of Chester I dine to-day,
+ and with the Academy on Saturday, with Mr. Hoole on Monday, and
+ with Mrs. Garrick on Thursday, the 2nd of May, and
+ then&mdash;what care you? <i>What then</i>?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The news run, that we have taken seventeen French transports;
+ that Langton's lady is lying down with her eighth child, all
+ alive; and Mrs. Carter's Miss Sharpe is going to marry a
+ schoolmaster sixty-two years old.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Do not let Mr. Piozzi nor any body else put me quite out of your
+ head, and do not think that any body will love you like your"
+ &amp;c.
+ </p>
+ <p class="quotdate">
+ "April 30th, 1782.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Mrs. Sheridan refused to sing, at the Duchess of Devonshire's
+ request, a song to the Prince of Wales. They pay for the Theatre
+ neither principal nor interest; <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+ "pg159" id="pg159">159</a></span> and poor Garrick's funeral
+ expenses are yet unpaid, though the undertaker is broken. Could
+ you have a better purveyor for a little scandal? But I wish I was
+ at Streatham. I beg Miss to come early, and I may perhaps reward
+ you with more mischief."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She went to Streatham on the 18th April, 1782, and Johnson
+ evidently with her. In "Thraliana" she writes:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Saturday, 9th May, 1782.</i>&mdash;To-day I bring home to
+ Streatham my poor Dr. Johnson: he went to town a week ago by the
+ way of amusing himself, and got so very ill that I thought I
+ should never get him home alive,"&mdash;by <i>home</i> meaning
+ Streatham.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Johnson to Mrs. Thrale:
+ </p>
+ <p class="quotdate">
+ "June 4th, 1782.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This day I dined upon skate, pudding, goose, and your asparagus,
+ and could have eaten more, but was prudent. Pray for me, dear
+ Madam; I hope the tide has turned. The change that I feel is more
+ than I durst have hoped, or than I thought possible; but there
+ has not yet passed a whole day, and I may rejoice perhaps too
+ soon. Come and see me, and when you think best, upon due
+ consideration, take me away."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From her to him:
+ </p>
+ <p class="quotdate">
+ "Streatham, June 14th, 1782.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "DEAR SIR,&mdash;I am glad you confess yourself peevish, for
+ confession must precede amendment. Do not study to be more
+ unhappy than you are, and if you can eat and sleep well, do not
+ be frighted, for there can be no real danger. Are you acquainted
+ with Dr. Lee, the <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg160" id=
+ "pg160">160</a></span> master of Baliol College? And are you not
+ delighted with his gaiety of manners and youthful vivacity now
+ that he is eighty-six years old? I never heard a more perfect or
+ excellent pun than his, when some one told him how, in a late
+ dispute among the Privy Counsellors, the Lord Chancellor
+ (Thurlow) struck the table with such violence that he split it.
+ 'No, no,' replied the Master, drily, 'I can hardly persuade
+ myself that he <i>split the table</i>, though I believe he
+ <i>divided the Board</i>.' Will you send me anything better from
+ Oxford than this? for there must be no more fastidiousness now;
+ no more refusing to laugh at a good quibble, when you so loudly
+ profess the want of amusement and the necessity of diversion."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From him to her:
+ </p>
+ <p class="quotdate">
+ "Oxford, June 17th, 1782.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oxford has done, I think, what for the present it can do, and I
+ am going slyly to take a place in the coach for Wednesday, and
+ you or my sweet Queeny will fetch me on Thursday, and see what
+ you can make of me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hannah More met him during this visit to Oxford, and writes, June
+ 13th, 1782: "Who do you think is my principal cicerone at Oxford?
+ only Dr. Johnson! and we do so gallant it about."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Madame D'Arblay, then at Streatham, writes, June 26th, 1782: "Dr.
+ Johnson, who had been in town some days, returned, and Mr.
+ Crutchley came also, as well as my father." After describing some
+ lively conversation, she adds: "I have <i>very often</i>, though
+ I <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg161" id="pg161">161</a></span>
+ mention them not, long and melancholy discourses with Dr.
+ Johnson, about our dear deceased master, whom, indeed, he regrets
+ unceasingly; but I love not to dwell on subjects of sorrow when I
+ can drive them away, especially to you (her sister), upon this
+ account as you were so much a stranger to that excellent friend,
+ whom you only lamented for the sake of those who survived him."
+ He had only returned that very day, and she had been absent from
+ Streatham, as she states elsewhere, till "the Cecilian business
+ was arranged," <i>i.e.</i> till the end of May.
+ </p>
+ <p class="break">
+ On the 24th August, 1782 (this date is material) Johnson writes
+ to Boswell:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "DEAR SIR,&mdash;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 was two days after Mrs. Thrale, with his full concurrence,
+ had made up her mind to let Streatham. He treats it,
+ notwithstanding, as at his disposal for a residence so long as
+ she remains in it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The books and printed letters from which most of these extracts
+ are taken, have been all along accessible to her assailants.
+ Those from "Thraliana," which come next, are new:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>25th November</i>, 1781.&mdash;I have got my
+ Piozzi<span class="fnref">[1]</span> home <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg162" id="pg162">162</a></span> at last; he
+ looks thin and battered, but always kindly upon me, I think. He
+ brought me an Italian sonnet written in his praise by Marco
+ Capello, which I instantly translated of course; but he, prudent
+ creature, insisted on my burning it, as he said it would
+ inevitably get about the town how <i>he</i> was praised, and how
+ Mrs. Thrale translated and echoed the praises, so that, says he,
+ I shall be torn in pieces, and you will have some <i>infamità</i>
+ said of you that will make you hate the sight of me. He was so
+ earnest with me that I could not resist, so burnt my sonnet,
+ which was actually very pretty; and now I repent I did not first
+ write it into the Thraliana. Over leaf, however, shall go the
+ translation, which happens to be done very closely, and the last
+ stanza is particularly exact. I must put it down while I remember
+ it:
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <h4>
+ 1.
+ </h4>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ "'Favoured of Britain's pensive sons,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ Though still thy name be found,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Though royal Thames where'er he runs
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ Returns the flattering sound,
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <h4>
+ 2.
+ </h4>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ Though absent thou, on every joy
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ Her gloom privation flings,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And Pleasure, pining for employ,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ Now droops her nerveless wings,
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <h4>
+ 3.
+ </h4>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ Yet since kind Fates thy voice restore
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ To charm our land again<span class="fnref">[2]</span>,&mdash;
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg163" id=
+ "pg163">163</a></span>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Return not to their rocky shore,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ Nor tempt the angry main.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <h4>
+ 4.
+ </h4>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ Nor is their praise of so much worth,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ Nor is it justly given,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That angels sing to them on earth
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ Who slight the road to heaven.'
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ "He tells me&mdash;Piozzi does&mdash;that his own country manners
+ greatly disgusted him, after having been used to ours; but Milan
+ is a comfortable place, I find. If he does not fix himself for
+ life here, he will settle to lay his bones at Milan. The Marquis
+ D'Araciel, his friend and patron, who resides there, divides and
+ disputes his heart with me: I shall be loth to resign it."
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] This mode of expression did not imply then what it might
+ now. See <i>ante</i>, p. 92, where Johnson writes to "my
+ Baretti."
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [2] "Capello is a Venetian poet."
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ "<i>17th December, 1781.</i>&mdash;Dear Mr. Johnson is at last
+ returned; he has been a vast while away to see his country folks
+ at Litchfield. My fear is lest he should grow
+ paralytick,&mdash;there are really some symptoms already
+ discoverable, I think, about the mouth particularly. He will
+ drive the gout away so when it comes, and it must go
+ <i>somewhere</i>. Queeny works hard with him at the classicks; I
+ hope she will be <i>out</i> of leading-strings at least before he
+ gets <i>into</i> them, as poor women say of their children."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>1st January, 1782.</i>&mdash;Let me not, while censuring the
+ behaviour of others, however, give cause of censure by my own. I
+ am beginning a new year in a new character. May it be worn
+ decently yet lightly! I wish not to be rigid and fright my
+ daughters by too much <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg164" id=
+ "pg164">164</a></span> severity. I will not be wild and give them
+ reason to lament the levity of my life. Resolutions, however, are
+ vain. To pray for God's grace is the sole way to obtain
+ it&mdash;'Strengthen Thou, O Lord, my virtue and my
+ understanding, preserve me from temptation, and acquaint me with
+ myself; fill my heart with thy love, restrain it by thy fear, and
+ keep my soul's desires fixed wholly on that place where only true
+ joys are to be found, through Jesus Christ our
+ Lord,&mdash;Amen.'"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>January</i>, 1782.&mdash;(After stating her fear of illness
+ and other ills.) "<i>If</i> nothing of all these misfortunes,
+ however, befall one; <i>if</i> for my sins God should take from
+ me my monitor, my friend, my inmate, my dear Doctor Johnson;
+ <i>if</i> neither I should marry, nor the brewhouse people break;
+ <i>if</i> the ruin of the nation should not change the situation
+ of affairs so that one could not receive regular remittances from
+ England: and <i>if</i> Piozzi should not pick him up a wife and
+ fix his abode in this country,&mdash;<i>if</i>, therefore, and
+ <i>if</i> and <i>if</i> and <i>if</i> again all should conspire
+ to keep my present resolution warm, I certainly would, at the
+ close of the four years from the sale of the Southwark estate,
+ set out for Italy, with my two or three eldest girls, and see
+ what the world could show me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In a marginal note, she adds:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Travelling with Mr. Johnson <i>I</i> cannot bear, and leaving
+ him behind <i>he</i> could not bear, so his life or death must
+ determine the execution or laying aside my schemes. I wish it
+ were within reason to <i>hope</i> he could live four years."
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg165" id="pg165">165</a></span>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Streatham, 4th January</i>, 1782.&mdash;I have taken a house
+ in Harley Street for these three months next ensuing, and hope to
+ have some society,&mdash;not company tho': crowds are out of the
+ question, but people will not come hither on short days, and 'tis
+ too dull to live all alone so. The world will watch me at first,
+ and think I come o' husband-hunting for myself or my fair
+ daughters, but when I have behaved prettily for a while, they
+ will change their mind."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Harley Street, 14th January</i>, 1782.&mdash;The first
+ seduction comes from Pepys. I had a letter to-day desiring me to
+ dine in Wimpole Street, to meet Mrs. Montagu and a whole <i>army
+ of blues</i>, to whom I trust my refusal will afford very pretty
+ speculation ... and they may settle my character and future
+ conduct at their leisure. Pepys is a worthless fellow at last; he
+ and his brother run about the town, spying and enquiring what
+ Mrs. Thrale is to do this winter, what friends she is to see,
+ what men are in her confidence, how soon she will be
+ <i>married</i>, &amp;c.; the brother Dr.&mdash;the Medico, as we
+ call him&mdash;lays wagers about me, I find; God forgive me, but
+ they'll make me hate them both, and they are no better than two
+ fools for their pains, for I was willing to have taken them to my
+ heart."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "They say Pacchierotti, the famous soprano singer, is ill, and
+ <i>they say</i> Lady Mary Duncan, his frightful old protectress,
+ has made him so by her <i>caresses dénaturées</i>. A little envy
+ of the new woman, Allegrante, has probably not much mended his
+ health, for Pacchierotti, dear creature, is envious enough. I
+ was, however, turning <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg166" id=
+ "pg166">166</a></span> over Horace yesterday, to look for the
+ expression <i>tenui fronte</i><span class="fnref">[1]</span>, in
+ vindication of my assertion to Johnson that low foreheads were
+ classical, when the 8th Ode of the First Book of Horace struck me
+ so, I could not help imitating it while the scandal was warm in
+ my mind:
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <h4>
+ 1.
+ </h4>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ "'He's sick indeed! and very sick,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For if it is not all a trick
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ You'd better look about ye.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dear Lady Mary, prythee tell
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Why thus by loving him too well
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ You kill your Pacchierotti?
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <h4>
+ 2.
+ </h4>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ Nor sun nor dust can he abide,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nor careless in a snaffle ride,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ The steed we saw him mount ill.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>You</i> stript him of his manly force,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When tumbling headlong from his horse
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ He pressed the plains of Fonthill.<span class=
+ "fnref">[2]</span>
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <h4>
+ 3.
+ </h4>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ Why the full opera should he shun?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Where crowds of critics smiling run,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ To applaud their Allegrante. <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+ "pg167" id="pg167">167</a></span>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Why is it worse than viper's sting,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To see them clap, or hear her sing?
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ Surely he's envious, ain't he?
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <h4>
+ 4.
+ </h4>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ Forbear his house, nor haunt his bed
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With that strange wig and fearful head,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ Then, though he now so ill is,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We o'er his voice again may doze,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When, cover'd warm with women's clothes,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ He acts a young Achilles.'"
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] Insignem tenui fronte Lycorida Cyri torret amor&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But <i>tenuis</i> is <i>small</i> or <i>narrow</i> rather than
+ <i>low</i>. One of Fielding's beauties, Sophia Western, has a
+ low forehead: another, Fanny, a high one.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [2] <i>Note by Mrs. T.:</i> "Fonthill, the seat of young
+ Beckford. They set him o' horseback, and he tumbled off."
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ "<i>1st February, 1782.</i>&mdash;Here is Mr. Johnson ill, very
+ ill indeed, and&mdash;I do not see what ails him; 'tis repelled
+ gout, I fear, fallen on the lungs and breath of course. What
+ shall we do for him? If I lose <i>him</i>, I am more than undone;
+ friend, father, guardian, confident!&mdash;God give me health and
+ patience. What shall I do?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Harley Street, 13th April, 1782.</i>&mdash;When I took off my
+ mourning, the watchers watched me very exactly, 'but they whose
+ hands were mightiest have found nothing:' so I shall leave the
+ town, I hope, in a good disposition towards me, though I am
+ sullen enough with the town for fancying me such an amorous idiot
+ that I am dying to enjoy every filthy fellow. God knows how
+ distant such dispositions are from the heart and constitution of
+ H.L.T. Lord Loughboro', Sir Richard Jebb, Mr. Piozzi, Mr. Selwyn,
+ Dr. Johnson, every man that comes to the house, is put in the
+ papers <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg168" id=
+ "pg168">168</a></span> for me to marry. In good time, I wrote
+ to-day to beg the 'Morning Herald' would say no more about me,
+ good or bad."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Streatham, 17th April, 1782.</i>&mdash;I am returned to
+ Streatham, pretty well in health and very sound in heart,
+ notwithstanding the watchers and the wager-layers, who think more
+ of the charms of their sex by half than I who know them better.
+ Love and friendship are distinct things, and I would go through
+ fire to serve many a man whom nothing less than fire would force
+ me to go to bed to. Somebody mentioned my going to be married
+ t'other day, and Johnson was joking about it. I suppose, Sir,
+ said I, they think they are doing me honour with these imaginary
+ matches, when, perhaps the man does not exist who would do me
+ honour by marrying me! This, indeed, was said in the wild and
+ insolent spirit of Baretti, yet 'tis nearer the truth than one
+ would think for. A woman of passable person, ancient family,
+ respectable character, uncommon talents, and three thousand a
+ year, has a right to think herself any man's equal, and has
+ nothing to seek but return of affection from whatever partner she
+ pitches on. To marry for love would therefore be rational in me,
+ who want no advancement of birth or fortune, and <i>till I am in
+ love</i>, I will not marry, nor perhaps then."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>22nd August, 1782.</i>&mdash;An event of no small consequence
+ to our little family must here be recorded in the 'Thraliana.'
+ After having long intended to go to Italy for pleasure, we are
+ now settling to go thither for convenience. <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg169" id="pg169">169</a></span> The
+ establishment of expense here at Streatham is more than my income
+ will answer; my lawsuit with Lady Salusbury turns out worse in
+ the event and infinitely more costly than I could have dreamed
+ on; 8000<i>l.</i> is supposed necessary to the payment of it, and
+ how am I to raise 8000<i>l</i>.? My trees will (after all my
+ expectations from them) fetch but 4000<i>l</i>., the money lent
+ Perkins on his bond 1600<i>l</i>., the Hertfordshire copyholds
+ may perhaps be worth 1000<i>l</i>., and where is the rest to
+ spring from? I must go abroad and save money. To show Italy to my
+ girls, and be showed it by Piozzi, has long been my dearest wish,
+ but to leave Mr. Johnson shocked me, and to take him appeared
+ impossible. His recovery, however, from an illness we all thought
+ dangerous, gave me courage to speak to him on the subject, and
+ this day (after having been let blood) I mustered up resolution
+ to tell him the necessity of changing a way of life I had long
+ been displeased with. I added that I had mentioned the matter to
+ my eldest daughter, whose prudence and solid judgment, unbiassed
+ by passion, is unequalled, as far as my experience has reached;
+ that she approved the scheme, and meant to partake it, though of
+ an age when she might be supposed to form connections here in
+ England&mdash;attachments of the tenderest nature; that she
+ declared herself free and resolved to follow my fortunes, though
+ perfectly aware temptations might arise to prevent me from ever
+ returning&mdash;a circumstance she even mentioned herself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Mr. Johnson thought well of the project, and wished <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg170" id="pg170">170</a></span> me to put it
+ early in execution: seemed less concerned at parting with me than
+ I wished him: thought his pupil Miss Thrale quite right in
+ forbearing to marry young, and seemed to entertain no doubt of
+ living to see us return rich and happy in two or three years'
+ time. He told Hester in my absence that he would not go with me
+ if I asked him. See the importance of a person to himself. I
+ fancied Mr. Johnson could not have existed without me, forsooth,
+ as we have now lived together for above eighteen years. I have so
+ fondled him in sickness and in health. Not a bit of it. He feels
+ nothing in parting with me, nothing in the least; but thinks it a
+ prudent scheme, and goes to his books as usual. This is
+ philosophy and truth; he always said he hated a <i>feeler</i>....
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The persecution I endure from men too who want to marry
+ me&mdash;in good time&mdash;is another reason for my desiring to
+ be gone. I wish to marry none of them, and Sir Philip's teazing
+ me completed my mortification; to see that one can rely on
+ <i>nobody!</i> The expences of this house, however, which are
+ quite past my power to check, is the true and rational cause of
+ our departure. In Italy we shall live with twice the respect and
+ at half the expence we do here; the language is familiar to me
+ and I love the Italians; I take with me all I love in the world
+ except my two baby daughters, who will be left safe at school;
+ and since Mr. Johnson cares nothing for the loss of my personal
+ friendship and company, there is no danger of any body else
+ breaking their hearts. My sweet Burney <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg171" id="pg171">171</a></span> and Mrs.
+ Byron will perhaps think they are sorry, but my consciousness
+ that no one <i>can</i> have the cause of concern that Johnson
+ has, and my conviction that he has <i>no concern at all</i>,
+ shall cure me of lamenting friends left behind."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the margin of this entry she has written, "I begin to see (now
+ everything shows it) that Johnson's connection with me is merely
+ an interested one; he <i>loved</i> Mr. Thrale, I believe, but
+ only wished to find in me a careful nurse and humble friend for
+ his sick and his lounging hours; yet I really thought he could
+ not have <i>existed</i> without <i>my conversation</i> forsooth!
+ He cares more for my roast beef and plum pudden, which he now
+ devours too dirtily for endurance; and since he is glad to get
+ rid of me, I'm sure I have good cause to desire the getting rid
+ of him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No great stress should be laid on this ebullition of mortified
+ self-love; but it occurs oddly enough at the very time when,
+ according to Lord Macaulay, she was labouring to produce the very
+ feeling that irritated her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>August 28th</i>, 1782.&mdash;He (Piozzi) thinks still more
+ than he says, that I shall give him up; and if Queeney made
+ herself more amiable to me, and took the proper methods&mdash;I
+ suppose I should."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>20 September</i> 1782, <i>Streatham</i>.&mdash;And now I am
+ going to leave Streatham (I have let the house and grounds to
+ Lord Shelburne, the expence of it eat me up) for three years,
+ where I lived&mdash;never happily indeed, but always easily: the
+ more so perhaps from the total absence of love and
+ ambition&mdash; <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg172" id=
+ "pg172">172</a></span>
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ "'Else these two passions by the way
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Might chance to show us scurvy play.'"
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Ten days later (October 1st) she thus argues out the question of
+ marriage:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Now! that dear little discerning creature, Fanny Burney, says
+ I'm in love with Piozzi: very likely; he is so amiable, so
+ honourable, so much above his situation by his abilities, that if
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ "'Fate had not fast bound her
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ With Styx nine times round her,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i4">
+ Sure musick and love were victorious.'
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ But if he is ever so worthy, ever so lovely, he is <i>below
+ me</i> forsooth! In what is he below me? In virtue? I would I
+ were above him. In understanding? I would mine were from this
+ instant under the guardianship of his. In birth? To be sure he is
+ below me in birth, and so is almost every man I know or have a
+ chance to know. But he is below me in fortune: is mine sufficient
+ for us both?&mdash;more than amply so. Does he deserve it by his
+ conduct, in which he has always united warm notions of honour
+ with cool attention to oeconomy, the spirit of a gentleman with
+ the talents of a professor? How shall any man deserve fortune, if
+ he does not? But I am the guardian of five daughters by Mr.
+ Thrale, and must not disgrace <i>their</i> name and family. Was
+ then the man my mother chose for me of higher extraction than him
+ I have chosen for myself? No,&mdash;but his fortune was
+ higher.... I wanted fortune then, perhaps: do I want it
+ now?&mdash;Not <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg173" id=
+ "pg173">173</a></span> at all; but I am not to think about
+ myself; I married the first time to please my mother, I must
+ marry the second time to please my daughter. I have always
+ sacrificed my own choice to that of others, so I must sacrifice
+ it again: but why? Oh, because I am a woman of superior
+ understanding, and must not for the world degrade myself from my
+ situation in life. But if I <i>have</i> superior understanding,
+ let me at least make use of it for once, and rise to the rank of
+ a human being conscious of its own power to discern good from
+ ill. The person who has uniformly acted by the will of others has
+ hardly that dignity to boast.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But once again: I am guardian to five girls; agreed: will this
+ connection prejudice their bodies, souls, or purse? My marriage
+ may assist <i>my</i> health, but I suppose it will not injure
+ <i>theirs</i>. Will his company or companions corrupt their
+ morals? God forbid; if I did not believe him one of the best of
+ our fellow beings, I would reject him instantly. Can it injure
+ their fortunes? Could he impoverish (if he would) five women, to
+ whom their father left <i>20,000l.</i> each, independent almost
+ of possibilities?&mdash;To what then am I guardian? to their
+ pride and prejudice? and is anything else affected by the
+ alliance? Now for more solid objections. Is not the man of whom I
+ desire protection, a foreigner? unskilled in the laws and
+ language of our country? Certainly. Is he not, as the French say,
+ <i>Arbitre de mon sort?</i> and from the hour he possesses my
+ person and fortune, have I any power of decision how or where I
+ may continue or end my life? Is not the man, upon the continuance
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg174" id="pg174">174</a></span>
+ of whose affection my whole happiness depends, <i>younger</i>
+ than myself<span class="fnref">[1]</span>, and is it wise to
+ place one's happiness on the continuance of <i>any</i> man's
+ affection? Would it not be painful to owe his appearance of
+ regard more to his honour than his love? and is not my person,
+ already faded, likelier to fade sooner, than his? On the other
+ hand, is his life a good one? and would it not be lunacy even to
+ risque the wretchedness of losing all situation in the world for
+ the sake of living with a man one loves, and then to lose both
+ companion and consolation? When I lost Mr. Thrale, every one was
+ officious to comfort and to soothe me; but which of my children
+ or quondam friends would look with kindness upon Piozzi's widow?
+ If I bring children by him, must they not be Catholics, and must
+ not I live among people the <i>ritual</i> part of whose religion
+ I disapprove?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "These are <i>my</i> objections, these <i>my</i> fears: not those
+ of being censured by the world, as it is called, a composition of
+ vice and folly, though 'tis surely no good joke to be talked of
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ "'By each affected she that tells my story,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And blesses her good stars that <i>she</i> was prudent.'
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ "These objections would increase in strength, too, if my present
+ state was a happy one, but it really is not. I live a quiet life,
+ but not a pleasant one. My children govern without loving me; my
+ servants devour and despise me; my friends caress and censure me;
+ my money wastes in expences I do not enjoy, and my time
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg175" id="pg175">175</a></span>
+ in trifles I do not approve. Every one is made insolent, and no
+ one comfortable; my reputation unprotected, my heart unsatisfied,
+ my health unsettled. I will, however, resolve on nothing. I will
+ take a voyage to the Continent in spring, enlarge my knowledge
+ and repose my purse. Change of place may turn the course of these
+ ideas, and external objects supply the room of internal felicity.
+ If he follow me, I may reject or receive at pleasure the
+ addresses of a man who follows on <i>no explicit promise</i>, nor
+ much probability of success, for I would really wish to marry no
+ more without the consent of my children (such I mean as are
+ qualified to give their opinions); and how should <i>Miss
+ Thrales</i> approve of my marrying <i>Mr. Piozzi</i>? Here then I
+ rest, and will torment my mind no longer, but commit myself, as
+ he advises, to the hand of Providence, and all will end <i>all'
+ ottima perfezzione</i>.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Written at Streatham, 1st October, 1782."
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] <i>Note by Mrs. Piozzi</i>: "He was half a year
+ <i>older</i> when our registers were both examined."
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ "<i>October, 1782.</i>&mdash;There is no mercy for me in this
+ island. I am more and more disposed to try the continent. One day
+ the paper rings with my marriage to Johnson, one day to
+ Crutchley, one day to Seward. I give no reason for such
+ impertinence, but cannot deliver myself from it. Whitbred, the
+ rich brewer, is in love with me too; oh, I would rather, as Ann
+ Page says, be set breast deep in the earth<span class=
+ "fnref">[1]</span> and bowled to death with turnips.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Mr. Crutchley bid me make a curtsey to my daughters for keeping
+ me out of a goal (<i>sic</i>), and the <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg176" id="pg176">176</a></span> newspapers
+ insolent as he! How shall I get through? How shall I get through?
+ I have not deserved it of any of them, as God knows.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Philip Thicknesse put it about Bath that I was a poor girl, a
+ mantua maker, when Mr. Thrale married me. It is an odd thing, but
+ Miss Thrales like, I see, to have it believed."
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] Anne Page says, "quick in the earth."
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ The general result down to this point is that, whatever the
+ disturbance in Mrs. Thrale's heart and mind, Johnson had no
+ ground of complaint, nor ever thought he had, which is the
+ essential point in controversy. In other words, he was not
+ driven, hinted, or manoeuvred out of Streatham. Yet almost all
+ his worshippers have insisted that he was. Hawkins, after
+ mentioning the kind offices undertaken by Johnson (which
+ constantly took him to Streatham) says:&mdash;"Nevertheless it
+ was observed by myself, and other of Johnson's friends, that soon
+ after the decease of Mr. Thrale, his visits to Streatham became
+ less and less frequent, and that he studiously avoided the
+ mention of the place or the family." This statement is
+ preposterous, and is only to be partially accounted for by the
+ fact that Hawkins, as his daughter informs us, had no personal
+ acquaintance with Mrs. Thrale or Streatham. Boswell, who was in
+ Scotland when Johnson and Mrs. Thrale left Streatham together,
+ gratuitously infers that he left it alone, angry and mortified,
+ in consequence of her altered manner:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The death of Mr. Thrale had made a very material alteration with
+ respect to Johnson's reception in that <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg177" id="pg177">177</a></span> 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 6th of October this year we find him making a 'parting use of
+ the library' at Streatham, and pronouncing a prayer which he
+ composed on leaving Mr. Thrale's family.
+ </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, O Lord! have mercy upon me! 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.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "One cannot read this prayer without some emotions not very
+ favourable to the lady whose conduct occasioned it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The next day, he made the following memorandum:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'<i>October 7.</i>&mdash;I was called early. I packed up my
+ bundles, and used the foregoing prayer, with my morning
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg178" id="pg178">178</a></span>
+ devotions somewhat, I think, enlarged. Being earlier than the
+ family, I read St. Paul's farewell in the Acts, and then read
+ fortuitously in the Gospels,&mdash;which was my parting use of
+ the library.'"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Croker, whose protest against the groundless insinuations of
+ Boswell should have put subsequent writers on their guard, states
+ in a note:&mdash;"He seems to have taken leave of the kitchen as
+ well as the church at Streatham in Latin." The note of his last
+ dinner there, done into English, would run thus:
+ </p>
+ <p class="quotdate">
+ "Oct. 6th, Sunday, 1782.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I dined at Streatham on boiled leg of lamb, with spinach, the
+ stuffing of flour and raisins, round of beef, and turkey poult;
+ and after the meat service, figs, grapes, not yet ripe in
+ consequence of the bad season, with peaches, also hard. I took my
+ place at table in no joyful mood, and partook of the food
+ moderately, lest I should finish by intemperance. If I rightly
+ remember, the banquet at the funeral of Hadon came into my
+ mind.<span class="fnref">[1]</span> When shall I revisit
+ Streatham?"
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] "Si recte memini in mentem venerunt epulæ in exequiis
+ Hadoni celebratæ." I cannot explain this allusion.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ The exclamation "When shall I revisit Streatham?" loses much of
+ its pathos when connected with these culinary details.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Madame D'Arblay's description of the last year at Streatham is
+ too important to be much abridged:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Dr. Burney, <i>when the Cecilian business was
+ arranged</i><span class="fnref">[1]</span>, <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg179" id="pg179">179</a></span> again
+ conveyed the Memorialist to Streatham. No further reluctance on
+ his part, nor exhortations on that of Mr. Crisp, sought to
+ withdraw her from that spot, where, while it was in its glory,
+ they had so recently, and with pride, seen her distinguished. And
+ truly eager was her own haste, when mistress of her time, to try
+ once more to soothe those sorrows and chagrins in which she had
+ most largely participated, by answering to the call, which had
+ never ceased tenderly to pursue her, of return.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "With alacrity, therefore, though not with gaiety, they
+ re-entered the Streatham gates&mdash;but they soon perceived that
+ they found not what they had left!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Changed, indeed, was Streatham! Gone its chief, and changed his
+ relict! unaccountably, incomprehensibly, indefinably changed! She
+ was absent and agitated; not two minutes could she remain in a
+ place; she scarcely seemed to know whom she saw; her speech was
+ so hurried it was hardly intelligible; her eyes were assiduously
+ averted from those who sought them; and her smiles were faint and
+ forced."
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] This may mean when the arrangements were made for the
+ publication, or when the book was published. It was published
+ about the beginning of June, 1782.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ "The mystery, however, soon ceased; the solicitations of the most
+ affectionate sympathy could not long be urged in vain;&mdash;the
+ mystery passed away&mdash;not so the misery! That, when revealed,
+ was but to both parties doubled, from the different feelings set
+ in movement by its disclosure. <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+ "pg180" id="pg180">180</a></span>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The astonishing history of the enigmatical attachment which
+ impelled Mrs. Thrale to her second marriage, is now as well known
+ as her name: but its details belong not to the history of Dr.
+ Burney; though the fact too deeply interested him, and was too
+ intimately felt in his social habits, to be passed over in
+ silence in any memoirs of his life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But while ignorant yet of its cause, more and more struck he
+ became at every meeting, by a species of general alienation which
+ pervaded all around at Streatham. His visits, which, heretofore,
+ had seemed galas to Mrs. Thrale, were now begun and ended almost
+ without notice: and all others,&mdash;Dr. Johnson not
+ excepted,&mdash;were cast into the same gulph of general neglect,
+ or forgetfulness;&mdash;all,&mdash;save singly this
+ Memorialist!&mdash;to whom, the fatal secret once acknowledged,
+ Mrs. Thrale clung for comfort; though she saw, and generously
+ pardoned, how wide she was from meeting approbation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "In this retired, though far from tranquil manner, <i>passed many
+ months; during which</i>, with the acquiescent consent of the
+ Doctor, his daughter, wholly devoted to her unhappy friend,
+ <i>remained uninterruptedly at sad and altered Streatham;</i>
+ sedulously avoiding, what at other times she most wished, a
+ <i>tête-à-tête</i> with her father. Bound by ties indissoluble of
+ honour not to betray a trust that, in the ignorance of her pity,
+ she had herself unwittingly sought, even to him she was as
+ immutably silent, on this subject, as to all others&mdash;save,
+ singly, to the eldest daughter of the house: <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg181" id="pg181">181</a></span> whose
+ conduct, through scenes of dreadful difficulty, notwithstanding
+ her extreme youth, was even exemplary; and to whom the
+ self-beguiled, yet generous mother, gave full and free permission
+ to confide every thought and feeling to the Memorialist."
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ "Various incidental circumstances began, at length, to open the
+ reluctant eyes of Dr. Burney to an impelled, though clouded
+ foresight, of the portentous event which might latently be the
+ cause of the alteration of all around at Streatham. He then
+ naturally wished for some explanation with his daughter, though
+ he never forced, or even claimed her confidence; well knowing,
+ that voluntarily to give it him had been her earliest delight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But in taking her home with him one morning, to pass a day in
+ St. Martin's Street, he almost involuntarily, in driving from the
+ paddock, turned back his head towards the house, and, in a tone
+ the most impressive, sighed out: 'Adieu,
+ Streatham!&mdash;Adieu!'"
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ "<i>A few weeks earlier</i>, the Memorialist had passed a nearly
+ similar scene with Dr. Johnson. Not, however, she believes, from
+ the same formidable species of surmise; but from the wounds
+ inflicted upon his injured sensibility, through the palpably
+ altered looks, tone, and deportment, of the bewildered lady of
+ the mansion; who, cruelly aware what would be his wrath, and how
+ overwhelming his reproaches against her projected <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg182" id="pg182">182</a></span> union, wished
+ to break up their residing under the same roof before it should
+ be proclaimed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This gave to her whole behaviour towards Dr. Johnson, a sort of
+ restless petulancy, of which she was sometimes hardly conscious,
+ at others, nearly reckless; but which hurt him far more than she
+ purposed, <i>though short of the point at which she aimed</i>, of
+ precipitating a change of dwelling that would elude its being
+ cast, either by himself or the world, upon a passion that her
+ understanding blushed to own, even while she was sacrificing to
+ it all of inborn dignity that she had been bred to hold most
+ sacred.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Dr. Johnson, while still uninformed of an entanglement it was
+ impossible he should conjecture, attributed her varying humours
+ to the effect of wayward health meeting a sort of sudden wayward
+ power: and imagined that caprices, which he judged to be partly
+ feminine, <i>and partly wealthy</i>, would soberise themselves
+ away in being unnoticed."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But at length, as she became more and more dissatisfied with her
+ own situation, and impatient for its relief, she grew less and
+ less scrupulous with regard to her celebrated guest: she slighted
+ his counsel; did not heed his remonstrances; avoided his society;
+ was ready at a moment's hint to lend him her carriage when he
+ wished to return to Bolt Court; but awaited a formal request to
+ accord it for bringing him back.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Doctor then began to be stung; his own aspect became
+ altered; and depression, with indignant uneasiness, sat upon his
+ venerable front. <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg183" id=
+ "pg183">183</a></span>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It was at this moment that, finding the Memorialist was going
+ one morning to St. Martin's Street, he desired a cast thither in
+ the carriage, and then to be set down at Bolt Court.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Aware of his disturbance, and far too well aware how short it
+ was of what it would become when the cause of all that passed
+ should be detected, it was in trembling that the Memorialist
+ accompanied him to the coach, filled with dread of offending him
+ by any reserve, should he force upon her any inquiry; and yet
+ impressed with the utter impossibility of betraying a trusted
+ secret.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "His look was stern, though dejected, as he followed her into the
+ vehicle; but when his eye, which, however short-sighted, was
+ quick to mental perception, saw how ill at ease appeared his
+ companion, all sternness subsided into an undisguised expression
+ of the strongest emotion, that seemed to claim her sympathy,
+ though to revolt from her compassion; 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
+ exclaiming: 'That house ... is lost to <i>me</i>&mdash;for ever!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "During a moment he then fixed upon her an interrogative eye,
+ that impetuously demanded: 'Do you not perceive the change I am
+ experiencing?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "A sorrowing sigh was her only answer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Pride and delicacy then united to make him leave her to her
+ taciturnity. <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg184" id=
+ "pg184">184</a></span>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He was too deeply, however, disturbed to start or to bear any
+ other subject; and neither of them uttered a single word till the
+ coach stopt in St. Martin's Street, and the house and the
+ carriage door were opened for their separation! He then suddenly
+ and expressively looked at her, abruptly grasped her hand, and,
+ with an air of affection, though in a low, husky voice, murmured
+ rather than said: 'Good morning, dear lady!' but turned his head
+ quickly away, to avoid any species of answer."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "She was deeply touched by so gentle an acquiescence in her
+ declining the confidential discourse upon which he had
+ indubitably meant to open, relative to this mysterious
+ alienation. But she had the comfort to be satisfied, that he saw
+ and believed in her sincere participation in his feelings; while
+ he allowed for the grateful attachment that bound her to a friend
+ so loved; who, to her at least, still manifested a fervour of
+ regard that resisted all change; alike from this new partiality,
+ and from the undisguised, and even strenuous opposition of the
+ Memorialist to its indulgence."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Memoirs of Dr. Burney, by his daughter, published in 1832,
+ together with her Diary and Letters, supplied the materials of
+ Lord Macaulay's celebrated article on Madame D'Arblay in the
+ "Edinburgh Review" for January, 1843, since reprinted amongst his
+ Essays. He describes the Memoirs as a book "which it is
+ impossible to read without a sensation made up of mirth, shame,
+ and loathing," and adds:&mdash;"The two works are lying side by
+ side before us; and we never <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+ "pg185" id="pg185">185</a></span> turn from the Memoirs to the
+ Diary without a sense of relief. The difference is as great as
+ the difference between the atmosphere of a perfumer's shop,
+ scented with lavender water and jasmine soap, and the air of a
+ heath on a fine morning in May."<span class="fnref">[1]</span>
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] Critical and Historical Essays (one volume edition), 1851,
+ p. 652. The Memoirs were composed between 1828 and 1832, more
+ than forty years after the occurrence of the scenes I have
+ quoted from them.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ The passages I have quoted amply establish the justice of this
+ comparison, for they are utterly irreconcileable with the
+ unvarnished statements of the Diary; from which we learn that
+ "Cecilia" was published about the beginning of June, when Johnson
+ was absent from Streatham; that the Diarist had left Streatham
+ prior to August 12th, and did not return to it again that year.
+ How could she have passed many months there after she was
+ entrusted with the great secret, which (as stated in "Thraliana")
+ she only guessed in September or October?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How again could Johnson have attributed Mrs. Thrale's conduct to
+ caprices "partly wealthy," when he knew that one main source of
+ her troubles was pecuniary; or how can his alleged sense of
+ ill-treatment be reconciled with his own letters? That he groaned
+ over the terrible disturbance of his habits involved in the
+ abandonment of Streatham, is likely enough; but as the only words
+ he uttered were, "That house is lost to <i>me</i> for ever," and
+ "Good morning, dear lady," the accompanying look is about as safe
+ a foundation for a theory <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg186"
+ id="pg186">186</a></span> of conduct or feeling as Lord
+ Burleigh's famous nod in "The Critic." The philosopher was at
+ this very time an inmate of Streatham, and probably returned that
+ same evening to register a sample of its hospitality. At all
+ events, we know that, spite of hints and warnings, sighs and
+ groans, he stuck to Streatham to the last; and finally left it
+ with Mrs. Thrale, as a member of her family, to reside in her
+ house at Brighton, as her guest, for six weeks.<span class=
+ "fnref">[1]</span> To talk of conscious ill-treatment or wounded
+ dignity, in the teeth of facts like these, is laughable.
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] The Edinburgh reviewer says, "Johnson went in Oct. 1782
+ from Streatham to Brighton, where he lived a kind of
+ boarding-house life;" and adds, "he was not asked out into
+ company with his fellow-lodgers." The Thrales had a handsome
+ furnished house at Brighton, which is mentioned both in the
+ Correspondence and Autobiography.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is amusing enough to watch these attempts to shade away the
+ ruinous effect of the Brighton trip on Lord Macaulay's
+ Streatham pathos.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Madame D'Arblay joined the party as Mrs. Thrale's guest on the
+ 26th October, and on the 28th she writes:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "At dinner, we had Dr. Delap and Mr. Selwyn, who accompanied us
+ in the evening to a ball; as did also Dr. Johnson, to the
+ universal amazement of all who saw him there:&mdash;but he said
+ he had found it so dull being quite alone the preceding evening,
+ that he determined upon going with us: 'for,' he said, 'it cannot
+ be worse than being alone.' Strange that he should think so! I am
+ sure I am not of his mind."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the 29th, she records that Johnson behaved very rudely to Mr.
+ Pepys, and fairly drove him from the <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg187" id="pg187">187</a></span> house. The
+ entry for November 10th is remarkable:&mdash;"We spent this
+ evening at Lady De Ferrars, where Dr. Johnson accompanied us, for
+ the first time he has been invited of our parties since my
+ arrival." On the 20th November, she tells us that Mrs. and the
+ three Miss Thrales and herself got up early to bathe. "We then
+ returned home, and dressed by candle-light, and, <i>as soon as we
+ could get Dr. Johnson ready</i>, we set out upon our journey in a
+ coach and a chaise, and arrived in Argyll Street at dinner time.
+ Mrs. Thrale has there fixed her tent for this short winter, which
+ will end with the beginning of April, when her foreign journey
+ takes place."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One incident of this Brighton trip is mentioned in the
+ "Anecdotes":
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We had got a little French print among us at Brighthelmstone, in
+ November 1782, of some people skaiting, with these lines written
+ under:
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ 'Sur un mince chrystal l'hyver conduit leurs pas,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ Le precipice est sous la glace;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Telle est de nos plaisirs la légère surface,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ Glissez, mortels; n'appuyez pas.'
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ "And I begged translations from every body: Dr. Johnson gave me
+ this:
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ 'O'er ice the rapid skater flies,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ With sport above and death below;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Where mischief lurks in gay disguise,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ Thus lightly touch and quickly go.'
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ "He was, however, most exceedingly enraged when he knew that in
+ the course of the season I had asked half a dozen acquaintance to
+ do the same thing; and <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg188" id=
+ "pg188">188</a></span> said, it was a piece of treachery, and
+ done to make every body else look little when compared to my
+ favourite friends the <i>Pepyses</i>, whose translations were
+ unquestionably the best."<span class="fnref">[1]</span>
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] By Sir Lucas:
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ "O'er the ice, as o'er pleasure, you lightly should glide,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Both have gulphs which their flattering surfaces hide."
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ By Sir William:
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ "Swift o'er the level how the skaiters slide,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And skim the glitt'ring surface as they go:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus o'er life's specious pleasures lightly glide,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But pause not, press not on the gulph below."
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Madame D'Arblay's Diary describes the outward and visible state
+ of things at Brighton. "Thraliana" lays bare the internal
+ history, the struggles of the understanding and the heart:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "At Brighthelmstone, whither I went when I left Streatham, 7th
+ October 1782, I heard this comical epigram about the Irish
+ Volunteers:
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ "'There's not one of us all, my brave boys, but would rather
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Do ought than offend great King George our good father;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But our country, you know, my dear lads, is our <i>mother</i>,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And that is a much surer side than the other.'"
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ "I had looked ill, or perhaps appeared to feel so much, that my
+ eldest daughter would, out of tenderness perhaps, force me to an
+ explanation. I could, however, have evaded it if I would; but my
+ heart was bursting, and partly from instinctive desire of
+ unloading it&mdash;partly, I hope, from principle, too&mdash;I
+ called her into my room and fairly told her the truth; told her
+ the <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg189" id=
+ "pg189">189</a></span> strength of my passion for Piozzi, the
+ impracticability of my living without him, the opinion I had of
+ his merit, and the resolution I had taken to marry him. Of all
+ this she could not have been ignorant before. I confessed my
+ attachment to him and her together with many tears and agonies
+ one day at Streatham; told them both that I wished I had two
+ hearts for their sakes, but having only one I would break it
+ between them, and give them each <i>ciascheduno la metà!</i>
+ After that conversation she consented to go abroad with me, and
+ even appointed the place (Lyons), to which Piozzi meant to follow
+ us. He and she talked long together on the subject; yet her never
+ mentioning it again made me fear she was not fully apprized of my
+ intent, and though her concurrence might have been more easily
+ obtained when left only to my influence in a distant country,
+ where she would have had no friend to support her different
+ opinion&mdash;yet I scorned to take such mean advantage, and told
+ her my story <i>now</i>, with the winter before her in which to
+ take her measures&mdash;her guardians at hand&mdash;all
+ displeased at the journey: and to console her private distress I
+ called into the room to her my own bosom friend, my beloved Fanny
+ Burney, whose interest as well as judgment goes all against my
+ marriage; whose skill in life and manners is superior to that of
+ any man or woman in this age or nation; whose knowledge of the
+ world, ingenuity of expedient, delicacy of conduct, and zeal in
+ the cause, will make her a counsellor invaluable, and leave me
+ destitute of every comfort, of every hope, of every expectation.
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg190" id="pg190">190</a></span>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Such are the hands to which I have cruelly committed thy
+ cause&mdash;my honourable, ardent, artless Piozzi!! Yet I should
+ not deserve the union I desire with the most disinterested of all
+ human hearts, had I behaved with less generosity, or endeavoured
+ to gain by cunning what is withheld by prejudice. Had I set my
+ heart upon a scoundrel, I might have done virtuously to break it
+ and get loose; but the man I love, I love for his honesty, for
+ his tenderness of heart, his dignity of mind, his piety to God,
+ his duty to his mother, and his delicacy to me. In being united
+ to this man only can I be happy in this world, and short will be
+ my stay in it, if it is not passed with him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Brighthelmstone, 16th November 1782</i>.&mdash;For him I have
+ been contented to reverse the laws of nature, and request of my
+ child that concurrence which, at my age and a widow, I am not
+ required either by divine or human institutions to ask even of a
+ parent. The life I gave her she may now more than repay, only by
+ agreeing to what she will with difficulty prevent; and which, if
+ she does prevent, will give her lasting remorse; for those who
+ stab <i>me</i> shall hear me groan: whereas if she will&mdash;but
+ how can she?&mdash;gracefully or even compassionately consent; if
+ she will go abroad with me upon the chance of his death or mine
+ preventing our union, and live with me till she is of age&mdash;
+ ... perhaps there is no heart so callous by avarice, no soul so
+ poisoned by prejudice, no head so feather'd by foppery, that will
+ forbear to excuse her when she returns to the rich and the
+ gay&mdash;for having saved the life of a <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg191" id="pg191">191</a></span> mother thro'
+ compliance, extorted by anguish, contrary to the received
+ opinions of the world."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Brighthelmstone, 19th November, 1782</i>.&mdash;What is above
+ written, though intended only to unload my heart by writing it, I
+ shewed in a transport of passion to Queeney and to Burney. Sweet
+ Fanny Burney cried herself half blind over it; said there was no
+ resisting such pathetic eloquence, and that, if she was the
+ daughter instead of the friend, she should be tempted to attend
+ me to the altar; but that, while she possessed her reason,
+ nothing should seduce her to approve what reason itself would
+ condemn: that children, religion, situation, country, and
+ character&mdash;besides the diminution of fortune by the certain
+ loss of 800<i>l.</i> a year, were too much to sacrifice for any
+ <i>one man</i>. If, however, I were resolved to make the
+ sacrifice, <i>a la bonne heure!</i> it was an astonishing proof
+ of an attachment very difficult for mortal man to repay."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I will talk no more about it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What comes next was written in London:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Nov. 27, 1782</i>.&mdash;I have given my Piozzi some
+ hopes&mdash;dear, generous, prudent, noble-minded creature; he
+ will hardly permit himself to believe it ever can
+ be&mdash;<i>come quei promessi miracoli</i>, says he, <i>che non
+ vengono mai</i>. For rectitude of mind and native dignity of soul
+ I never saw his fellow."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Dec. 1, 1782</i>.&mdash;The guardians have met upon the
+ scheme of putting our girls in Chancery. I was frighted at the
+ project, not doubting but the Lord Chancellor would stop us from
+ leaving England, as he would certainly <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg192" id="pg192">192</a></span> see no joke
+ in three young heiresses, his wards, quitting the kingdom to
+ frisk away with their mother into Italy: besides that I believe
+ Mr. Crutchley proposed it merely for a stumbling-block to my
+ journey, as he cannot bear to have Hester out of his sight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nobody much applauded my resolution in going, but Johnson and
+ Cator said they would not concur in stopping me by violence, and
+ Crutchley was forced to content himself with intending to put the
+ ladies under legal protection as soon as we should be across the
+ sea. This measure I much applaud, for if I die or marry in Italy
+ their fortunes will be safer in Chancery than any how else.
+ Cator<span class="fnref">[1]</span> said <i>I</i> had a right to
+ say that going to Italy would benefit the children as much as
+ <i>they</i> had to say it would <i>not</i>; but I replied that as
+ I really did not mean anything but my own private gratification
+ by the voyage, nothing should make me say I meant <i>their</i>
+ good by it; and that it would be like saying I eat roast beef to
+ mend my daughters' complexions. The result of all is that we
+ certainly <i>do go</i>. I will pick up what knowledge and
+ pleasure I can here this winter to divert myself, and perhaps my
+ <i>compagno fidele</i> in distant climes and <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg193" id="pg193">193</a></span> future times,
+ with the recollection of England and its inhabitants, all which I
+ shall be happy and content to leave <i>for him</i>."
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] <i>Note by Mrs. T.:</i> "Cator said likewise that the
+ attorney's bill ought to be paid by the ladies as a bill of Mr.
+ Thrale's, but I replied that perhaps I might marry and give my
+ estate away, and if so it would be unjust that they should pay
+ the bill which related to that estate only. Besides, if I
+ should leave it to Hester, says I, ... why should Susan and
+ Sophy and Cecilia and Harriet pay the lawyer's bill for their
+ sister's land? He agreed to this plea, and I will live on bread
+ and water, but I will pay Norris myself. 'Tis but being a
+ better huswife in pins."
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Madame D'Arblay writes, Friday, December 27th, 1782:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I dined with Mrs. Thrale and Dr. Johnson, who was very comic and
+ good-humoured.... Mrs. Thrale, who was to have gone with me to
+ Mrs. Orde's, gave up her visit in order to stay with Dr. Johnson.
+ Miss Thrale, therefore, and I went together."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I return to "Thraliana":
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>January</i>, 1783.&mdash;A fit of jealousy seized me the
+ other day: some viper had stung me up to a notion that my Piozzi
+ was fond of a Miss Chanon. I call'd him gently to account, and
+ after contenting myself with slight excuses, told him that,
+ whenever we married, I should, however, desire to see as little
+ as possible of the lady <i>chez nous</i>."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is a large gap in "Thraliana" just in the most interesting
+ part of the story of her parting with Piozzi in 1783, and his
+ recall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>January 29, 1783</i>.&mdash;Adieu to all that's dear, to all
+ that's lovely; I am parted from my life, my soul, my Piozzi. If I
+ can get health and strength to write my story here, 'tis all I
+ wish for now&mdash;oh misery! [Here are four pages missing.] The
+ cold dislike of my eldest daughter I thought might wear away by
+ familiarity with his merit, and that we might live tolerably
+ together, or, at least, part friends&mdash;but no; her aversion
+ increased daily, and she communicated it to the others;
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg194" id="pg194">194</a></span>
+ they treated <i>me</i> insolently, and <i>him</i> very
+ strangely&mdash;running away whenever he came as if they saw a
+ serpent&mdash;and plotting with their governess&mdash;a cunning
+ Italian&mdash;how to invent lyes to make me hate him, and twenty
+ such narrow tricks. By these means the notion of my partiality
+ took air, and whether Miss Thrale sent him word slily or not I
+ cannot tell, but on the 25th January, 1783, Mr. Crutchley came
+ hither to conjure me not to go to Italy; he had heard such
+ things, he said, and by <i>means</i> next to <i>miraculous</i>.
+ The next day, Sunday, 26th, Fanny Burney came, said I must marry
+ him instantly or give him up; that my reputation would be lost
+ else.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I actually groaned with anguish, threw myself on the bed in an
+ agony which my fair daughter beheld with frigid indifference. She
+ had indeed never by one tender word endeavoured to dissuade me
+ from the match, but said, coldly, that if I <i>would</i> abandon
+ my children I <i>must</i>; that their father had not deserved
+ such treatment from me; that I should be punished by Piozzi's
+ neglect, for that she knew he hated me; and that I turned out my
+ offspring to chance for his sake, like puppies in a pond to swim
+ or drown according as Providence pleased; that for her part she
+ must look herself out a place like the other servants, for my
+ face would she never see more.' 'Nor write to me?' said I. 'I
+ shall not, madam,' replied she with a cold sneer, 'easily find
+ out your address; for you are going you know not whither, I
+ believe.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Susan and Sophy said nothing at all, but they taught
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg195" id="pg195">195</a></span>
+ the two young ones to cry 'Where are you going, mama? will you
+ leave us and die as our poor papa did?' There was no standing
+ <i>that</i>., so I wrote my lover word that my mind was all
+ distraction, and bid him come to me the next morning, 27th
+ January&mdash;my birthday&mdash;and spent the Sunday night in
+ torture not to be described. My falsehood to my Piozzi, my strong
+ affection for him, the incapacity I felt in myself to resign the
+ man I so adored, the hopes I had so cherished, inclined me
+ strongly to set them all at defiance, and go with him to church
+ to sanctify the promises I had so often made him; while the idea
+ of abandoning the children of my first husband, who left me so
+ nobly provided for, and who depended on my attachment to his
+ offspring, awakened the voice of conscience, and threw me on my
+ knees to pray for <i>His</i> direction who was hereafter to judge
+ my conduct. His grace illuminated me, His power strengthened me,
+ and I flew to my daughter's bed in the morning and told her my
+ resolution to resign my own, my dear, my favourite purpose, and
+ to prefer my children's interest to my love. She questioned my
+ ability to make the sacrifice; said one word from him would undo
+ all my&mdash;[Here two pages are missing].
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I told Dr. Johnson and Mr. Crutchley three days ago that I had
+ determined&mdash;seeing them so averse to it&mdash;that I would
+ not go abroad, but that, if I did not leave England, I
+ <i>would</i> leave London, where I had not been treated to my
+ mind, and where I had flung away much unnecessary money with
+ little satisfaction; that I was greatly in debt, and somewhat
+ like distress'd: that borrowing <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+ "pg196" id="pg196">196</a></span> was always bad, but of one's
+ children worst: that Mr. Crutchley's objection to their lending
+ me their money when I had a mortgage to offer as security, was
+ unkind and harsh: that I would go live in a little way at Bath
+ till I had paid all my debts and cleared my income: that I would
+ no more be tyrannized over by people who hated or people who
+ plundered me, in short that I would retire and save my money and
+ lead this uncomfortable life no longer. They made little or no
+ reply, and I am resolved to do as I declared. I will draw in my
+ expenses, lay by every shilling I can to pay off debts and
+ mortgages, and perhaps&mdash;who knows? I may in six or seven
+ years be freed from all incumbrances, and carry a clear income of
+ 2500<i>l.</i> a year and an estate of 500<i>l.</i> in land to the
+ man of my heart. May I but live to discharge my obligations to
+ those who <i>hate me</i>; it will be paradise to discharge them
+ to him who <i>loves me</i>."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>April, 1783</i>.&mdash;I will go to Bath: nor health, nor
+ strength, nor my children's affections, have I. My daughter does
+ not, I suppose, much delight in this scheme [viz, retrenchment of
+ expenses and removal to Bath], but why should I lead a life of
+ delighting her, who would not lose a shilling of interest or an
+ ounce of pleasure to save my life from perishing? When I was near
+ losing my existence from the contentions of my mind, and was
+ seized with a temporary delirium in Argyll Street, she and her
+ two eldest sisters laughed at my distress, and observed to dear
+ Fanny Burney, that it was <i>monstrous droll</i>. <i>She</i>
+ could hardly suppress her indignation. <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg197" id="pg197">197</a></span>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Piozzi was ill.... A sore throat, Pepys said it was, with four
+ ulcers in it: the people about me said it had been lanced, and I
+ mentioned it slightly before the girls.' Has he cut his own
+ throat?' says Miss Thrale in her quiet manner. This was less
+ inexcusable because she hated him, and the other was her sister;
+ though, had she exerted the good sense I thought her possessed
+ of, she would not have treated him so: had she adored, and
+ fondled, and respected him as he deserved from her hands, and
+ from the heroic conduct he shewed in January when he gave into
+ her hands, that dismal day, all my letters containing promises of
+ marriage, protestations of love, &amp;c., who knows but she might
+ have kept us separated? But never did she once caress or thank
+ me, never treat him with common civility, except on the very day
+ which gave her hopes of our final parting. Worth while to be sure
+ it was, to break one's heart for her! The other two are, however,
+ neither wiser nor kinder; all swear by her I believe, and follow
+ her footsteps exactly. Mr. Thrale had not much heart, but his
+ fair daughters have none at all."<span class="fnref">[1]</span>
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] This is the very accusation they brought against her.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Johnson was not called in to counsel on these matters of the
+ heart, but he was not cast off or neglected. Madame D'Arblay
+ lands him in Argyll Street on the 20th November, 1782. We hear of
+ him at Mrs. Thrale's house or in her company repeatedly from
+ Madame D'Arblay and Dr. Lort. "Johnson," writes Dr. Lort, January
+ 28th, 1783, "is much better. I <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+ "pg198" id="pg198">198</a></span> saw him the other evening at
+ Madame Thrale's in very good spirits." Boswell says:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "On Friday, March 21, (1783) having arrived in London the night
+ before, I was glad to find him at Mrs. Thrale's house, in Argyle
+ Street, appearances of friendship between them being still kept
+ up. I was shown into his room; and after the first salutation he
+ said, 'I am glad you are come; I am very ill'....
+ </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, <i>who had not been informed of any change,
+ imagined all to be as well as formerly</i>. 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>
+ This is quite decisive so far as Boswell is concerned, and
+ disposes at once of all his preceding insinuations to her
+ disadvantage. He had not seen her before since Thrale's death;
+ and now, finding them together and jealously scrutinising their
+ tone and manner towards each, he imagined all to be as well as
+ formerly.<span class="fnref">[1]</span> That <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg199" id="pg199">199</a></span> they were on
+ the point of living apart, and of keeping up their habitual
+ interchange of mind exclusively by letters, is no proof that
+ either was capriciously or irrecoverably estranged.
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] "Now on March 21, 1783, fifteen months before the marriage
+ in question, Boswell speaks of the severance of the old
+ friendship as effected: 'appearances of friendship,' he says,
+ 'were still maintained between them.' Boswell was at feud with
+ the lady when he wrote, as we all know. But his evidence is
+ surely sufficient as to the fact of the rupture, though not as
+ to its causes."&mdash;<i>(Edin. Rev.</i> p. 510.) Boswell's
+ concluding evidence, that to the best of his knowledge and
+ observation, there was no change or rupture, is suppressed!
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ The pleasures of intimacy in friendship depend far more on
+ external circumstances than people of a sentimental turn of mind
+ are willing to concede; and when constant companionship ceases to
+ suit the convenience of both parties, the chances are that it
+ will be dropped on the first favourable opportunity. Admiration,
+ esteem, or affection may continue to be felt for one whom, from
+ altered habits or new ties, we can no longer receive as an inmate
+ or an established member of the family. Johnson was now in his
+ seventy-fourth year, haunted by the fear of death, and fond of
+ dwelling nauseously on his ailments and proposed remedies. From
+ what passed at Brighton, it would seem that there were moods in
+ which he was positively unbearable, and could not be received in
+ a house without driving every one else out of it. In a roomy
+ mansion like Streatham he might be endured, because he could be
+ kept out of the way; but in an ordinary town-house or small
+ establishment, such a guest would resemble an elephant in a
+ private menagerie. <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg200" id=
+ "pg200">200</a></span>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is also a very great difference, when arrangements are to
+ be made for the domestication of a male visitor, between a family
+ with a male head, and one consisting exclusively of females. Let
+ any widow with daughters make the case her own, and imagine
+ herself domesticated in Argyll or Harley Street with the
+ lexicographer. The manly authority of Thrale was required to keep
+ Johnson in order quite as much as to steady the imputed
+ flightiness of the lady; and his idolaters must really remember
+ that she was a sentient being, with feelings and affections which
+ she was fully entitled to consult in arranging her scheme of
+ life. When Lord Macaulay and his school tacitly assume that these
+ are to weigh as dust in the balance against the claims of
+ learning, they argue like sundry upholders of the temporal
+ sovereignty of the Pope, who contend that his subjects should
+ complacently endure any amount of oppression rather than endanger
+ (what they deem) the vital interests of the Church. When it is
+ maintained that the discomfort was amply repaid by the glory he
+ conferred, we are reminded of what the Strasbourg goose undergoes
+ for fame: "Crammed with food, deprived of drink, and fixed near a
+ great fire, before which it is nailed with its feet upon a plank,
+ this goose passes, it must be owned, an uncomfortable life. The
+ torment would indeed be intolerable, if the idea of the lot which
+ awaits him did not serve as a consolation. But when he reflects
+ that his liver, bigger than himself, loaded with truffles, and
+ clothed in a scientific <i>patè</i>, will, <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg201" id="pg201">201</a></span> through the
+ instrumentality of M. Corcellet, diffuse all over Europe the
+ glory of his name, he resigns himself to his destiny, and suffers
+ not a tear to flow."<span class="fnref">[1]</span>
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] Almanach des Gourmands.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Her case for a separation <i>de corps</i> is thus stated in the
+ "Anecdotes ":
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "All these exactnesses in a man who was nothing less than exact
+ himself, made him extremely impracticable as an inmate, though
+ most instructive as a companion, and useful as a friend. Mr.
+ Thrale too could sometimes overrule his rigidity, by saying
+ coldly, 'There, there, now we have had enough for one lecture,
+ Dr. Johnson, we will not be upon education any more till after
+ dinner, if you please,'&mdash;or some such speech; but when there
+ was nobody to restrain his dislikes, it was extremely difficult
+ to find any body with whom he could converse, without living
+ always on the verge of a quarrel, or of something too like a
+ quarrel to be pleasing. I came into the room, for example, one
+ evening, where he and a gentleman, whose abilities we all
+ respected exceedingly, were sitting; a lady who had walked in two
+ minutes before me had blown 'em both into a flame, by whispering
+ something to Mr. S&mdash;&mdash;d, which he endeavoured to
+ explain away, so as not to affront the Doctor, whose suspicions
+ were all alive. 'And have a care, Sir,' said he, just as I came
+ in; 'the old lion will not bear to be tickled.'<span class=
+ "fnref">[1]</span> <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg202" id=
+ "pg202">202</a></span> The other was pale with rage, the lady
+ wept at the confusion she had caused, and I could only say with
+ Lady Macbeth,
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ 'So! you've displaced the mirth, broke the good meeting
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With most admir'd disorder.'
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ "Such accidents, however, occurred too often, and I was forced to
+ take advantage of my lost lawsuit, and plead inability of purse
+ to remain longer in London or its vicinage. I had been crossed in
+ my intentions of going abroad, and found it convenient, for every
+ reason of health, peace, and pecuniary circumstances, to retire
+ to Bath, where I knew Mr. Johnson would not follow me, and where
+ I could for that reason command some little portion of time for
+ my own use; a thing impossible while I remained at Streatham or
+ at London, as my hours, carriage, and servants, had long been at
+ his command, who would not rise in the morning till twelve
+ o'clock perhaps, and oblige me to make breakfast for him till the
+ bell rung for dinner, though much displeased if the toilet was
+ neglected, and though much of the time we passed together was
+ spent in blaming or deriding, very justly, my neglect of economy,
+ and waste of that money which might make many families happy. The
+ original reason of our connexion, his <i>particularly disordered
+ health and spirits</i><span class="fnref">[2]</span>, had been
+ long at an end, and he had no other ailments than old age and
+ general infirmity, which every professor of <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg203" id="pg203">203</a></span> medicine was
+ ardently zealous and generally attentive to palliate, and to
+ contribute all in their power for the prolongation of a life so
+ valuable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Veneration for his virtue, reverence for his talents, delight in
+ his conversation, and habitual endurance of a yoke my husband
+ first put upon me, and of which he contentedly bore his share for
+ sixteen or seventeen years, made me go on so long with Mr.
+ Johnson; but the perpetual confinement I will own to have been
+ terrifying in the first years of our friendship, and irksome in
+ the last, nor could I pretend to support it without help, when my
+ coadjutor was no more. To the assistance we gave him, the shelter
+ our house afforded to his uneasy fancies, and to the pains we
+ took to soothe or repress them, the world perhaps is indebted for
+ the three political pamphlets, the new edition and correction of
+ his Dictionary, and for the Poets' Lives, which he would scarce
+ have lived, I think, and kept his faculties entire, to have
+ written, had not incessant care been exerted at the time of his
+ first coming to be our constant guest in the country; and several
+ times after that, when he found himself particularly oppressed
+ with diseases incident to the most vivid and fervent
+ imaginations. I shall for ever consider it as the greatest honour
+ which could be conferred on any one, to have been the
+ confidential friend of Dr. Johnson's health; and to have in some
+ measure, with Mr. Thrale's assistance, saved from distress at
+ least, if not from worse, a mind great beyond the comprehension
+ of common mortals and <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg204" id=
+ "pg204">204</a></span> good beyond all hope of imitation from
+ perishable beings."
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] This must be the quarrel between Johnson and Seward at
+ which Miss Streatfield cried. <i>(Antè,</i> p. 116.)
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [2] These words are underlined in the manuscript.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ This was written in Italy in 1785, when, painfully alive to the
+ insults heaped upon her on Johnson's account, she may be excused
+ for dwelling on what she had endured for his sake. But if, as may
+ be inferred from her statement, some of the cordiality shewn him
+ during the palmy days of their intimacy was forced, this rather
+ enhances than lessens the merit of her services, which thus
+ become elevated into sacrifices. The question is not how she
+ uniformly felt, but how she uniformly behaved to him; and the
+ fact of her being obliged to retire to Bath to get out of his way
+ proves that there had been no rupture, no coolness, no serious
+ offence given or taken on either side, up to April, 1783; just
+ one year-and-a-half after the alleged expulsion from Streatham.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There were ample avowable reasons for her retirement, and no
+ suspicion could have crossed Johnson's mind that he was an
+ incumbrance, or he would not have been found at her house by
+ Boswell, as he was found on the 21st March, 1783, when she said
+ "she was going to Bath, and should have been sorry to leave Dr.
+ Johnson before I came." Considering the heart-rending struggle in
+ which she was engaged at this time, with the aggravated
+ infliction of an unsympathising and dogmatic friend, the wonder
+ is how she retained her outward placidity at all.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Sunday Morning, 6th April</i>, 1783.&mdash;I have been very
+ busy preparing to go to Bath and save my money; <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg205" id="pg205">205</a></span> the Welch
+ settlement has been examined and rewritten by Cator's desire in
+ such a manner that a will can revoke it or charge the estate, or
+ anything. I signed my settlement yesterday, and, before I slept,
+ wrote my will, charging the estate with pretty near <i>3000l</i>.
+ But what signifies it? My daughters deserve no thanks from my
+ tenderness and they want no pecuniary help from my
+ purse&mdash;let me provide in some measure, for my dear, my
+ absent Piozzi.&mdash;God give me strength to part with him
+ courageously.&mdash;I expect him every instant to breakfast with
+ me for the <i>last time</i>.&mdash;Gracious Heavens, what words
+ are these! Oh no, for mercy may we but meet again! and without
+ diminished kindness. Oh my love, my love!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We did meet and part courageously. I persuaded him to bring his
+ old friend Mecci, who goes abroad with him and has long been his
+ confidant, to keep the meeting from being too tender, the
+ separation from being too poignant&mdash;his presence was a
+ restraint on our conduct, and a witness of our vows, which we
+ renewed with fervour, and will keep sacred in absence, adversity,
+ and age. When all was over I flew to my dearest, loveliest
+ friend, my Fanny Burney, and poured all my sorrows into her
+ tender bosom."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Bath, April 14th, 1783.</i>&mdash;Here I am, settled in my
+ plan of economy, with three daughters, three maids and a man,"
+ &amp;c.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Piozzi left England the night of the 8th May, 1783.
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ "Come, friendly muse! some rhimes discover
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With which to meet my dear at Dover, <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg206" id="pg206">206</a></span>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fondly to bless my wandering lover
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And make him dote on dirty Dover.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Call each fair wind to waft him over,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nor let him linger long at Dover,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But there from past fatigues recover,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And write his love some lines from Dover.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Too well he knows his skill to move her,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To meet him two years hence at Dover,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When happy with her handsome rover
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She'll bless the day she din'd at Dover."
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Russell Street, Bath, Thursday, 8th May</i>, 1783.&mdash;I
+ sent him these verses to divert him on his passage. Dear angel!
+ <i>this day</i> he leaves a nation to which he was sent for my
+ felicity perhaps, I hope for his own. May I live but to make him
+ happy, and hear him say 'tis <i>me</i> that make him so!"&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In a note on the passage in which he states that Johnson
+ studiously avoided all mention of Streatham or the family after
+ Thrale's death, Hawkins says:&mdash;"It seems that between him
+ and the widow there was a formal taking of leave, for I find in
+ his Diary the following note: '1783, April 5th, I took leave of
+ Mrs. Thrale. I was much moved. I had some expostulations with
+ her. She said she was likewise affected. I commended the Thrales
+ with great good will to God; may my petitions have been heard.'"
+ This being the day before her parting interview with Piozzi, no
+ doubt she was much affected: and as the newspapers had already
+ taken up the topic of <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg207" id=
+ "pg207">207</a></span> her engagement, the expostulations
+ probably referred to it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Preceding commentators were not bound to know what is now learned
+ from "Thraliana"; but they were bound to know what might always
+ have been learned from Johnson's printed letters; and the tone of
+ these from the separation in April, 1783, to the marriage in
+ July, 1784, is identically the same as at any period of the
+ intimacy which can be specified. There are the same warm
+ expressions of regard, the same gratitude for acknowledged
+ kindness, the same alternations of hope and disappointment, the
+ same medical details, and the same reproaches for silence or
+ fancied coldness, in which he habitually indulged towards all his
+ female correspondents. Shew me a complaint or reproach, and I
+ will instantly match it with one from a period when the intimacy
+ was confessedly and notoriously at its height. If her occasional
+ explosions of irritability are to be counted, what inference is
+ to be drawn from Johnson's depreciatory remarks on her, and
+ indeed on everybody, so carefully treasured up by Hawkins and
+ Boswell?
+ </p>
+ <p class="break">
+ On June 13th, 1783, he writes to her:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Your last letter was very pleasing; it expressed kindness to me,
+ and some degree of placid acquiescence in your present mode of
+ life, <i>which is, I think, the best which is at present within
+ your reach</i>.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My powers and attention have for a long time been almost wholly
+ employed upon my health, I hope not wholly without success, but
+ solitude is very tedious." <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg208"
+ id="pg208">208</a></span>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She replies:
+ </p>
+ <p class="quotdate">
+ "Bath, June 15th, 1783.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I believe it is too true, my dear Sir, that you think on little
+ except yourself and your own health, but then they are subjects
+ on which every one else would think too&mdash;and that is a great
+ consolation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am willing enough to employ all my thoughts upon
+ <i>myself</i>, but there is nobody here who wishes to think with
+ or about me, so I am very sick and a little sullen, and disposed
+ now and then to say, like king David, 'My lovers and my friends
+ have been put away from me, and my acquaintance hid out of my
+ sight.' If the last letter I wrote showed some degree of placid
+ acquiescence in a situation, which, however displeasing, is the
+ best I can get at just now, I pray God to keep me in that
+ disposition, and to lay no more calamity upon me which may again
+ tempt me to murmur and complain. <i>In the meantime assure
+ yourself of my undiminished kindness and veneration: they have
+ been long out of accident's power either to lessen or
+ increase."</i>....
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That <i>you</i> should be solitary is a sad thing, and a strange
+ one too, when every body is willing to drop in, and for a quarter
+ of an hour at least, save you from a <i>tête-à-tête</i> with
+ yourself. I never could catch a moment when you were alone whilst
+ we were in London, and Miss Thrale says the same thing."
+ </p>
+ <p class="break">
+ A few days afterwards, June 19th, he writes:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am sitting down in no cheerful solitude to write a narrative
+ which would once have affected you with tenderness <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg209" id="pg209">209</a></span> 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."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two days before, he had suffered a paralytic stroke, and lost the
+ power of speech for a period. After minutely detailing his
+ ailments and their treatment by his medical advisers, he
+ proceeds:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "How this will be received by you I know not. I hope you will
+ sympathise with me; but perhaps
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ "My mistress gracious, mild, and good,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cries! Is he dumb? 'Tis time he should.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ "But can this be possible? I hope it cannot. I hope that what,
+ when I could speak, I spoke of you, and to you, will be in a
+ sober and serious hour remembered by you; and surely it cannot be
+ remembered but with some degree of kindness. I have loved you
+ 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. <i>You see, I yet turn
+ to you with my complaints as a settled and unalienable
+ friend</i>; do not, do not drive me from you, for I have not
+ deserved either neglect or hatred.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "O God! give me comfort and confidence in Thee; forgive my sins;
+ and if it be thy good pleasure, relieve my diseases for Jesus
+ Christ's sake. Amen. <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg210" id=
+ "pg210">210</a></span>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>"I am almost ashamed of this querulous letter, but now it is
+ written, let it go."</i>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Edinburgh reviewer quotes the first paragraph of this letter
+ to prove Johnson's consciousness of change on her side, and omits
+ all mention of the passages in which he turns to her as "a
+ settled and unalienable friend," and apologises for his
+ querulousness!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some time before (November 1782), she had written to him:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My health is growing very bad, to be sure. I will starve still
+ more rigidly for a while, and watch myself carefully; but more
+ than six months will I not bestow upon that subject; you shall
+ not have in me a valetudinary correspondent, <i>who is always
+ writing such letters, that to read the labels tied on bottles by
+ an apothecary's boy would be more eligible and amusing</i>; nor
+ will I live, like Flavia in 'Law's Serious Call,' who spends half
+ her time and money on herself, with sleeping draughts, and waking
+ draughts, and cordials and broths. My desire is always to
+ determine against my own gratification, so far as shall be
+ possible for my body to co-operate with my mind, and you will not
+ suspect me of wearing blisters, and living wholly upon vegetables
+ for sport. If that will do, the disorder may be removed; but if
+ health is gone, and gone for ever, we will act as Zachary Pearce
+ the famous bishop of Rochester did, when he lost the wife he
+ loved so&mdash;call for one glass to the health of her who is
+ departed, never more to return&mdash;and so go quietly back to
+ the usual duties of life, and forbear to mention her again from
+ that time till the last day of it." <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg211" id="pg211">211</a></span>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Instead of acting on the same principle, he perseveres in
+ addressing his "ideal Urania" as if she had been a consulting
+ physician:
+ </p>
+ <p class="quotdate">
+ "London, June 20th, 1783.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "DEAREST MADAM,&mdash;I think to send you for some time a regular
+ diary. You will forgive the gross images which disease must
+ necessarily present. Dr. Lawrence said that medical treatises
+ should be always in Latin. The two vesicatories did not perform
+ well," &amp;c. &amp;c.
+ </p>
+ <p class="quotdate">
+ "June 23, 1783.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Your offer, dear Madam, of coming to me, is charmingly
+ kind</i>; but I will lay it up for future use, and then let it
+ not be considered as obsolete; <i>a time of dereliction may come,
+ when I may have hardly any other friend</i>, but in the present
+ exigency I cannot name one who has been deficient in civility or
+ attention. What man can do for man has been done for me. Write to
+ me very often."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That the offer was serious and heartfelt, is clear from
+ "Thraliana":
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Bath, June 24th</i>, 1783.&mdash;A stroke of the palsy has
+ robbed Johnson of his speech, I hear. Dreadful event! and I at a
+ distance. Poor fellow! A letter from himself, <i>in his usual
+ style</i>, convinces me that none of his faculties have failed,
+ and his physicians say that all present danger is over."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He writes:
+ </p>
+ <p class="quotdate">
+ "June 24th, 1783.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Both Queeny's letter and yours gave me, to-day, <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg212" id="pg212">212</a></span> great
+ pleasure. Think as well and as kindly of me as you can, but do
+ not flatter me. Cool reciprocations of esteem are the great
+ comforts of life; hyberbolical praise only corrupts the tongue of
+ the one, and the ear of the other."
+ </p>
+ <p class="quotdate">
+ "June 28th, 1783.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Your letter is just such as I desire, and as from you I hope
+ always to deserve."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her own state of mind at this time may be collected from
+ "Thraliana":
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>June,</i> 1783.&mdash;Most sincerely do I regret the
+ sacrifice I have made of health, happiness, and the society of a
+ worthy and amiable companion, to the pride and prejudice of three
+ insensible girls, who would see nature perish without concern ...
+ were their gratification the cause.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The two youngest have, for ought I see, hearts as impenetrable
+ as their sister. They will all starve a favourite
+ animal&mdash;all see with unconcern the afflictions of a friend;
+ and when the anguish I suffered on their account last winter, in
+ Argyll Street, nearly took away my life and reason, the younger
+ ridiculed as a jest those agonies which the eldest despised as a
+ philosopher. When all is said, they are exceeding valuable
+ girls&mdash;beautiful in person, cultivated in understanding, and
+ well-principled in religion: high in their notions, lofty in
+ their carriage, and of intents equal to their expectations;
+ wishing to raise their own family by connections with some more
+ noble ... and superior to any feeling of tenderness which might
+ clog the wheels of <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg213" id=
+ "pg213">213</a></span> ambition. What, however, is my state? who
+ am condemned to live with girls of this disposition? to teach
+ without authority; to be heard without esteem; to be considered
+ by them as their superior in fortune, while I live by the money
+ borrowed from them; and in good sense, when they have seen me
+ submit my judgment to theirs at the hazard of my life and wits.
+ Oh, 'tis a pleasant situation! and whoever would wish, as the
+ Greek lady phrased it, to teize himself and repent of his sins,
+ let him borrow his children's money, be in love against their
+ interest and prejudice, forbear to marry by their advice, and
+ then shut himself up and live with them."<span class=
+ "fnref">[1]</span>
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] After Buckingham had been some time married to Fairfax's
+ daughter, he said it was like marrying the devil's daughter and
+ keeping house with your father-in-law.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Is it possible to misconstrue such a letter as the following from
+ Johnson to her, now that the querulous and desponding tone of the
+ writer is familiar to us?
+ </p>
+ <p class="quotdate">
+ "London, Nov. 13th, 1783.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "DEAR MADAM,&mdash;Since you have written to me with the
+ attention and tenderness of ancient time, your letters give me a
+ great part of the pleasure which a life of solitude admits. You
+ will never bestow any share of your good-will on one who deserves
+ better. Those that have loved longest, love best. A sudden blaze
+ of kindness may by a single blast of coldness be extinguished,
+ but that fondness which length of time has connected with many
+ circumstances and occasions, though it may <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg214" id="pg214">214</a></span> for a while
+ be suppressed by disgust or resentment, with or without a cause,
+ is hourly revived by accidental recollection.<span class=
+ "fnref">[1]</span> To those that have lived long together, every
+ thing heard and every thing seen recals some pleasure
+ communicated, or some benefit conferred, some petty quarrel, or
+ some slight endearment. Esteem of great powers, or amiable
+ qualities newly discovered, may embroider a day or a week, but a
+ friendship of twenty years is interwoven with the texture of
+ life. A friend may be often found and lost, but an <i>old
+ friend</i> never can be found, and Nature has provided that he
+ cannot easily be lost."
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1]
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ "Yet, oh yet thyself deceive not:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Love may sink by slow decay,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But by sudden wrench believe not
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hearts can thus be torn away."&mdash;BYRON.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ The date of the following scene, as described by Madame D'Arblay
+ in the "Memoirs," is towards the end of November, 1783:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nothing had yet publicly transpired, with certainty or
+ authority, relative to the projects of Mrs. Thrale, who had now
+ been nearly a year at Bath<span class="fnref">[1]</span>; though
+ nothing was left unreported, or unasserted, with respect to her
+ proceedings. Nevertheless, how far Dr. Johnson was himself
+ informed, or was ignorant on the subject, neither Dr. Burney nor
+ his daughter could tell; and each equally feared to learn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Scarcely an instant, however, was the latter left alone in Bolt
+ Court, ere she saw the justice of her long apprehensions;
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg215" id="pg215">215</a></span>
+ for while she planned speaking upon some topic that might have a
+ chance to catch the attention of the Doctor, a sudden change from
+ kind tranquillity to strong austerity took place in his altered
+ countenance; and, startled and affrighted, she held her peace....
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Thus passed a few minutes, in which she scarcely dared breathe;
+ while the respiration of the Doctor, on the contrary, was of
+ asthmatic force and loudness; then, suddenly turning to her, with
+ an air of mingled wrath and woe, he hoarsely ejaculated:
+ 'Piozzi!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He evidently meant to say more; but the effort with which he
+ articulated that name robbed him of any voice for amplification,
+ and his whole frame grew tremulously convulsed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "His guest, appalled, could not speak; but he soon discerned that
+ it was grief from coincidence, not distrust from opposition of
+ sentiment, that caused her taciturnity. This perception calmed
+ him, and he then exhibited a face 'in sorrow more than anger.'
+ His see-sawing abated of its velocity, and, again fixing his
+ looks upon the fire, he fell into pensive rumination.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "At length, and with great agitation, he broke forth with: 'She
+ cares for no one! You, only&mdash;You, she loves still!&mdash;but
+ no one&mdash;and nothing else!&mdash;You she still
+ loves&mdash;&mdash;'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "A half smile now, though of no very gay character, softened a
+ little the severity of his features, while he tried to resume
+ some cheerfulness in adding: 'As ... she loves her little
+ finger!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It was plain by this burlesque, or, perhaps, playfully
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg216" id="pg216">216</a></span>
+ literal comparison, that he meant now, and tried, to dissipate
+ the solemnity of his concern.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The hint was taken; his guest started another subject; and this
+ he resumed no more. He saw how distressing was the theme to a
+ hearer whom he ever wished to please, not distress; and he named
+ Mrs. Thrale no more! Common topics took place, till they were
+ rejoined by Dr. Burney, whom then, and indeed always, he likewise
+ spared upon this subject."
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] About six months.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ After quoting this description at length, Lord Brougham remarks:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Now Johnson was, perhaps unknown to himself, in love with Mrs.
+ Thrale, but for Miss Burney's thoughtless folly there can be no
+ excuse. And her father, a person of the very same rank and
+ profession with Mr. Piozzi, appears to have adopted the same
+ senseless cant, as if it were less lawful to marry an Italian
+ musician than an English. To be sure, Miss Burney says, that Mrs.
+ Thrale was lineally descended from Adam de Saltsburg, who came
+ over with the Conqueror. But assuredly that worthy, unable to
+ write his name, would have held Dr. Johnson himself in as much
+ contempt as his fortunate rival, and would have regarded his
+ alliance as equally disreputable with the Italian's, could his
+ consent have been asked."<span class="fnref">[1]</span>
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] Lives of Men of Letters, &amp;c, vol. ii.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ If the scene took place at all, it must have taken place within a
+ few days after the profession of satisfied and unaltered
+ friendship contained in Johnson's letter of November 13th. His
+ next letter is to Miss Thrale: <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+ "pg217" id="pg217">217</a></span>
+ </p>
+ <p class="quotdate">
+ "Nov. 18th, 1783.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Dear Miss,&mdash;Here is a whole week, and nothing heard from
+ your house. Baretti said what a wicked house it would be, and a
+ wicked house it is. Of you, however, I have no complaint to make,
+ for I owe you a letter. Still 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."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On February 24th, 1784, Dr. Lort writes to Bishop Percy:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Poor Dr. Johnson has had a very bad winter, attended by Heberden
+ and Brocklesby, who neither of them expected he would have
+ survived the frost: that being gone, he still remains, and I hope
+ will now continue, at least till the next severe one. It has
+ indeed carried off a great many old people."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Johnson to Mrs. Thrale:
+ </p>
+ <p class="quotdate">
+ "March 10th, 1784.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Your kind expressions gave me great pleasure; do not reject me
+ from your thoughts. Shall we ever exchange confidence by the
+ fireside again?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was so absorbed with his own complaints as to make no
+ allowance for hers. Yet her health was in a very precarious
+ state, and in the autumn of the same year, his complaints of
+ silence and neglect were suspended by the intelligence that her
+ daughter Sophia was lying at death's door. On March 27th, 1784,
+ she writes: <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg218" id=
+ "pg218">218</a></span>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You tell one of my daughters that you know not with distinctness
+ the cause of my complaints. I believe she who lives with me knows
+ them no better; one very dreadful one is however removed by dear
+ Sophia's recovery. It is kind in you to quarrel no more about
+ expressions which were not meant to offend; but unjust to
+ suppose, I have not lately thought myself dying. Let us, however,
+ take the Prince of Abyssinia's advice, <i>and not add to the
+ other evils of life the bitterness of controversy.</i> If courage
+ is a noble and generous quality, let us exert it <i>to</i> the
+ last, and <i>at</i> the last: if faith is a Christian virtue, let
+ us willingly receive and accept that support it will most surely
+ bestow&mdash;and do permit me to repeat those words with which I
+ know not why you were displeased: <i>Let us leave behind us the
+ best example that we can</i>.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "All this is not written by a person in high health and
+ happiness, but by a fellow-sufferer, who has more to endure than
+ she can tell, or you can guess; and now let us talk of the Severn
+ salmons, which will be coming in soon; I shall send you one of
+ the finest, and shall be glad to hear that your appetite is
+ good."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Johnson to Mrs. Thrale:
+ </p>
+ <p class="quotdate">
+ "April 21st, 1784.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Hooles, Miss Burney, and Mrs. Hull (Wesley's sister),
+ feasted yesterday with me very cheerfully on your noble salmon.
+ Mr. Allen could not come, and I sent him a piece, and a great
+ tail is still left." <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg219" id=
+ "pg219">219</a></span>
+ </p>
+ <p class="quotdate">
+ "April 26th, 1784.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Mrs. Davenant called to pay me a guinea, but I gave two for you.
+ Whatever reasons you have for frugality, it is not worth while to
+ save a guinea a year by withdrawing it from a public charity."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Whilst I am writing, the post has brought me your kind letter.
+ Do not think with dejection of your own condition: a little
+ patience will probably give you health: it will certainly give
+ you riches, and all the accommodations that riches can procure."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Up to this time she had put an almost killing restraint on her
+ inclinations, and had acted according to Johnson's advice in
+ everything but the final abandonment of Piozzi; yet Boswell
+ reports him as saying, May 16th: "Sir, she has done everything
+ wrong since Thrale's bridle was off her neck."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next extracts are from "Thraliana":
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Bath, Nov. 30th, 1783.</i>&mdash;Sophia will live and do
+ well; I have saved my daughter, perhaps obtained a friend. They
+ are weary of seeing me suffer so, and the eldest beg'd me
+ yesterday not to sacrifice my life to her convenience. She now
+ saw my love of Piozzi was incurable, she said. Absence had no
+ effect on it, and my health was going so fast she found that I
+ should soon be useless either to her or him. It was the hand of
+ God and irresistible, she added, and begged me not to endure any
+ longer such unnecessary misery.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "So now we may be happy if we will, and now I <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg220" id="pg220">220</a></span> trust
+ <i>some</i> [<i>(sic) query "no?</i>"] other cross accident will
+ start up to torment us; I wrote my lover word that he might come
+ and fetch me, but the Alps are covered with snow, and if his
+ prudence is not greater than his affection&mdash;my life will yet
+ be lost, for it depends on his safety. Should he come at my call,
+ and meet with any misfortune on the road ... death, with
+ accumulated agonies, would end me. May Heaven avert such
+ insupportable distress!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Dec.</i> 1783.&mdash;My dearest Piozzi's Miss Chanon is in
+ distress. I will send her 10<i>l</i>. Perhaps he loved her;
+ perhaps she loved <i>him</i>; perhaps both; yet I have and will
+ have confidence in his honour. I will not suffer love or jealousy
+ to narrow a heart devoted to <i>him</i>. He would assist her if
+ he were in England, and <i>she</i> shall not suffer for his
+ absence, tho' I <i>do</i>. She and her father have reported many
+ things to my prejudice; she will be ashamed of herself when she
+ sees me forgive and assist her. O Lord, give me grace so to
+ return good for evil as to obtain thy gracious favour who died to
+ procure the salvation of thy professed enemies. 'Tis a good Xmas
+ work!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Bath, Jan. 27th</i>, 1784.&mdash;On this day twelvemonths ...
+ oh dreadfullest of all days to me I did I send for my Piozzi and
+ tell him we must part. The sight of my countenance terrified Dr.
+ Pepys, to whom I went into the parlour for a moment, and the
+ sight of the agonies I endured in the week following would have
+ affected anything but interest, avarice, and pride personified,
+ ... with such, however, I had to deal, so my sorrows <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg221" id="pg221">221</a></span> were
+ unregarded. Seeing them continue for a whole year, indeed, has
+ mollified my strong-hearted companions, and they <i>now</i>
+ relent in earnest and wish me happy: I would now therefore be
+ <i>loath to dye</i>, yet how shall I recruit my constitution so
+ as to live? The pardon certainly did arrive the very instant of
+ execution&mdash;for I was ill beyond all power of description,
+ when my eldest daughter, bursting into tears, bid me call home
+ the man of my heart, and not expire by slow torture in the
+ presence of my children, who had my life in their power. 'You are
+ dying <i>now</i>,' said she. 'I know it,' replied I, 'and I
+ should die in peace had I but seen him <i>once again</i>.' 'Oh
+ send for him,' said she, 'send for him quickly!' 'He is at Milan,
+ child,' replied I, 'a thousand miles off!' 'Well, well,' returns
+ she, 'hurry him back, or I myself will send him an express.' At
+ these words I revived, and have been mending ever since. This was
+ the first time that any of us had named the name of Piozzi to
+ each other since we had put our feet into the coach to come to
+ Bath. I had always thought it a point of civility and prudence
+ never to mention what could give nothing but offence, and cause
+ nothing but disgust, while they desired nothing less than a
+ revival of old uneasiness; so we were all silent on the subject,
+ and Miss Thrale thought him dead."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ According to the Autobiography, the daughters did not
+ conclusively relent till the end of April or the beginning of
+ May, when a missive was dispatched for <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg222" id="pg222">222</a></span> Piozzi, and
+ Mrs. Thrale went to London to make the requisite preparations.
+ </p>
+ <p class="i6">
+ <i>Mrs. Thrale to Miss F. Burney</i>.
+ </p>
+ <p class="quotsig">
+ "Mortimer Street, Cavendish Square,
+ <br />
+ "Tuesday Night, May, 1784.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am come, dearest Burney. It is neither dream nor fiction;
+ though I love you dearly, or I would not have come. Absence and
+ distance do nothing towards wearing out real affection; so you
+ shall always find it in your true and tender H.L.T.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am somewhat shaken bodily, but 'tis the mental shocks that
+ have made me unable to bear the corporeal ones. 'Tis past ten
+ o'clock, however, and I must lay myself down with the sweet
+ expectation of seeing my charming friend in the morning to
+ breakfast. I love Dr. Burney too well to fear him, and he loves
+ me too well to say a word which should make me love him less."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Journal (Madame D'Arblay's) Resumed</i>.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "May 17.&mdash;Let me now, my Susy, acquaint you a little more
+ connectedly than I have done of late how I have gone on. The rest
+ of that week I devoted almost wholly to sweet Mrs. Thrale, whose
+ society was truly the most delightful of cordials to me, however,
+ at times mixed with bitters the least palatable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "One day I dined with Mrs. Grarrick to meet Dr. <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg223" id="pg223">223</a></span> Johnson, Mrs.
+ Carter, Miss Hamilton, and Dr. and Miss Cadogan; and one evening
+ I went to Mrs. Vesey, to meet almost everybody,&mdash;the Bishop
+ of St. Asaph, and all the Shipleys, Bishop Chester and Mrs.
+ Porteous, Mrs. and Miss Ord, Sir Joshua Reynolds and Miss Palmer,
+ Mrs. Buller, all the Burrows, Mr. Walpole, Mrs. Boscawen, Mrs.
+ Grarrick, and Miss More, and some others. But all the rest of my
+ time I gave wholly to dear Mrs. Thrale, who lodged in Mortimer
+ Street, and who saw nobody else. Were I not sensible of her
+ goodness, and full of incurable affection for her, should I not
+ be a monster?
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ "I parted most reluctantly with my dear Mrs. Thrale, whom, when
+ or how, I shall see again, Heaven only knows! but in sorrow we
+ parted&mdash;on <i>my</i> side in real affliction."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The excursion is thus mentioned in "Thraliana": "<i>28th May</i>,
+ 1784.&mdash;Here is the most sudden and beautiful spring ever
+ seen after a dismal winter: so may God grant me a renovation of
+ comfort after my many and sharp afflictions. I have been to
+ London for a week to visit Fanny Burney, and to talk over my
+ intended (and I hope approaching) nuptials, with Mr. Borghi: a
+ man, as far as I can judge in so short an acquaintance with him,
+ of good sense and real honour:&mdash;who loves my Piozzi,
+ <i>likes</i> my conversation, and wishes to serve us sincerely.
+ He has recommended Duane to take my power of attorney, and
+ Cator's loss will be the less felt. Duane's name is as high as
+ the <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg224" id=
+ "pg224">224</a></span> Monument, and his being known familiarly
+ to Borghi will perhaps quicken his attention to our concerns.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Dear Burney, who loves me <i>kindly</i> but the world
+ <i>reverentially</i>, was, I believe, equally pained as delighted
+ with my visit: ashamed to be seen in my company, much of her
+ fondness for me must of course be diminished; yet she had not
+ chatted freely so long with anybody but Mrs. Philips, that my
+ coming was a comfort to her. We have told all to her father, and
+ he behaved with the utmost propriety.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nobody likes my settling at Milan except myself and Piozzi; but
+ I think 'tis nobody's affair but our own: it seems to me quite
+ irrational to expose ourselves to unnecessary insults, and by
+ going straight to Italy all will be avoided."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The crisis is told in "Thraliana":
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>10th June</i>, 1784.&mdash;I sent these lines to meet Piozzi
+ on his return. They are better than those he liked so last year
+ at Dover:
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ "Over mountains, rivers, vallies,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ See my love returns to Calais,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After all their taunts and malice,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ent'ring safe the gates of Calais,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While delay'd by winds he dallies,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fretting to be kept at Calais,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Muse, prepare some sprightly sallies
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To divert my dear at Calais,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Say how every rogue who rallies
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Envies him who waits at Calais <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+ "pg225" id="pg225">225</a></span>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For her that would disdain a Palace
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Compar'd to Piozzi, Love, and Calais."
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ "<i>24th June</i>, 1784.&mdash;He is set out sure enough, here
+ are letters from Turin to say so.... Now the Misses <i>must</i>
+ move; they are very loath to stir: from affection perhaps, or
+ perhaps from art&mdash;'tis difficult to know.&mdash;Oh 'tis,
+ yes, it is from tenderness, they want me to go with them to see
+ Wilton, Stonehenge, &amp;c.&mdash;I <i>will</i> go with them to
+ be sure."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>27th June, Sunday</i>.&mdash;We went to Wilton, and also to
+ Fonthill; they make an admirable and curious contrast between
+ ancient magnificence and modern glare: Gothic and Grecian again,
+ however. A man of taste would rather possess Lord Pembroke's
+ seat, or indeed a single room in it; but one feels one should
+ live happier at Beckford's.&mdash;My daughters parted with me at
+ last prettily enough <i>considering</i> (as the phrase is). We
+ shall perhaps be still better friends apart than together.
+ Promises of correspondence and kindness were very sweetly
+ reciprocated, and the eldest wished for Piozzi's safe return very
+ obligingly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I fancy two days more will absolutely bring him to Bath. The
+ present moments are critical and dreadful, and would shake
+ stronger nerves than mine! Oh Lord, strengthen me to do Thy will
+ I pray."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>28th June</i>.&mdash;I am not <i>yet sure of</i> seeing him
+ again&mdash;not <i>sure</i> he lives, not <i>sure</i> he loves me
+ <i>yet</i>.... Should anything happen now!! Oh, I will not trust
+ myself with such a fancy: it will either kill me or drive me
+ distracted." <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg226" id=
+ "pg226">226</a></span>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Bath, 2nd July</i>, 1784.&mdash;The happiest day of my whole
+ life, I think&mdash;Yes, quite the happiest: my Piozzi came home
+ yesterday and dined with me; but my spirits were too much
+ agitated, my heart was too much dilated. I was too
+ <i>painfully</i> happy <i>then</i>; my sensations are more quiet
+ to-day, and my felicity less tumultuous."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Written in the margin of the last entry&mdash;"We shall go to
+ London about the affairs, and there be married in the Romish
+ Church."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>25th July</i>, 1784.&mdash;I am returned from church the
+ happy wife of my lovely faithful Piozzi ... subject of my
+ prayers, object of my wishes, my sighs, my reverence, my
+ esteem.&mdash;His nerves have been horribly shaken, yet he lives,
+ he loves me, and will be mine for ever. He has sworn, in the face
+ of God and the whole Christian Church; Catholics, Protestants,
+ all are witnesses."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In one of her memorandum books she has set down:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We were married according to the Romish Church in one of our
+ excursions to London, by Mr. Smith, Padre Smit as they called
+ him, chaplain to the Spanish Ambassador.... Mr. Morgan tacked us
+ together at St. James's, Bath, 25th July, 1784, and on the first
+ day I think of September, certainly the first week, we took leave
+ of England."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When her first engagement with Piozzi became known, the
+ newspapers took up the subject, and rang the changes on the
+ amorous disposition of the widow, and the adroit cupidity of the
+ fortune-hunter. On the announcement of the marriage, they
+ recommenced the <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg227" id=
+ "pg227">227</a></span> attack, and people of our day can hardly
+ form a notion of the storm of obloquy that broke upon her, except
+ from its traces, which have never been erased. To this hour, we
+ may see them in the confirmed prejudices of writers like Mr.
+ Croker and Lord Macaulay, who, agreeing in little else, agree in
+ denouncing "this miserable <i>més</i>alliance" with one who
+ figures in their pages sometimes as a music-master, sometimes as
+ a fiddler, never by any accident in his real character of a
+ professional singer and musician of established reputation,
+ pleasing manners, ample means, and unimpeachable integrity. The
+ repugnance of the daughters to the match was reasonable and
+ intelligible, but to appreciate the tone taken by her friends, we
+ must bear in mind the social position of Italian singers and
+ musical performers at the period. "Amusing vagabonds" are the
+ epithets by which Lord Byron designates Catalani and Naldi, in
+ 1809<span class="fnref">[1]</span>; and such is the light in
+ which they <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg228" id=
+ "pg228">228</a></span> were undoubtedly regarded in 1784. Mario
+ would have been treated with the same indiscriminating
+ illiberality as Piozzi.
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1]
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ "Well may the nobles of our present race
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Watch each distortion of a Naldi's face;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Well may they smile on Italy's buffoons,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And worship Catalani's pantaloons."
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ "Naldi and Catalani require little notice; for the visage of
+ the one and the salary of the other will enable us long to
+ recollect these amusing vagabonds."&mdash;<i>English Bards and
+ Scotch Reviewers</i>. Artists in general, and men of letters by
+ profession, did not rank much higher in the fine world. (See
+ Miss Berry's "England and France," vol. ii. p. 42.) A German
+ author, non-noble, had a <i>liaison</i> with a Prussian woman
+ of rank. On her husband's death he proposed marriage, and was
+ indignantly refused. The lady was conscious of no degradation
+ from being his mistress, but would have forfeited both caste
+ and self-respect by becoming his wife.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Did those who took the lead in censuring or repudiating Mrs.
+ Piozzi, ever attempt to enter into her feelings, or weigh her
+ conduct with reference to its tendency to promote her own
+ happiness? Could they have done so, had they tried? Rarely can
+ any one so identify himself or herself with another as to be sure
+ of the soundness of the counsel or the justice of the reproof.
+ She was neither impoverishing her children (who had all
+ independent fortunes) nor abandoning them. She was setting public
+ opinion at defiance, which is commonly a foolish thing to do; but
+ what is public opinion to a woman whose heart is breaking, and
+ who finds, after a desperate effort, that she is unequal to the
+ sacrifice demanded of her? She accepted Piozzi deliberately, with
+ full knowledge of his character; and she never repented of her
+ choice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Lady Cathcart, whose romantic story is mentioned in "Castle
+ Rackrent," was wont to say:&mdash;"I have been married three
+ times; the first for money, the second for rank, the third for
+ love; and the third was worst of all." Mrs. Piozzi's experience
+ would have led to an opposite conclusion. Her love match was a
+ singularly happy one; and the consciousness that she had
+ transgressed conventional observances or prejudices, not moral
+ rules, enabled her to outlive and bear down calumny.<span class=
+ "fnref">[1]</span>
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] The <i>pros</i> and <i>cons</i> of the main question at
+ issue are well stated in <i>Corinne</i>: "Ah, pour heureux,'
+ interrompit le Comte d'Erfeuil, 'je n'en crois rien: on n'est
+ heureux que par ce qui est convenable. La société a, quoi qu'on
+ fasse, beaucoup d'empire sur le bonheur; et ce qu'elle
+ n'approuve pas, il ne faut jamais le faire.' 'On vivrait done
+ toujours pour ce que la société dira de nous,' reprit Oswald;
+ 'et ce qu'on pense et, ce qu'on sent ne servirait jamais de
+ guide.' 'C'est très bien dit,' reprit le comte,
+ 'très-philosophiquement pensé; mais avec ces maximes là, l'on
+ se perd; et quand l'amour est passé, le blâme de l'opinion
+ reste. Moi qui vous paraîs léger, je ne ferai jamais rien qui
+ puisse m'attirer la désapprobation du monde. On peut se
+ permettre de petites libertés, d'aimables plaisanteries, qui
+ annoncent de l'indépendance dans la manière d'agir; car, quand
+ cela touche au sérieux.'&mdash;'Mais le sérieux, repondit Lord
+ Nelvil, 'c'est l'amour et le bonheur.'"&mdash;<i>Corinne</i>,
+ liv. ix. ch. 1. <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg229" id=
+ "pg229">229</a></span>
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ In reference to these passages, the Edinburgh reviewer remarks:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nothing can be more reasonable; and we should certainly live in
+ a more peaceful (if not more entertaining) world, if nobody in it
+ reproved another until he had so far identified himself with the
+ culprit as to be sure of the justice of the reproof; perhaps,
+ also, if a fiddler were rated higher in society than a duke
+ without accomplishments, and a carpenter far higher than either.
+ But neither reasoning nor gallantry will alter the case, nor
+ prevail over the world's prejudice against unequal marriages, any
+ more than its prejudices in favour of birth and fashion. It has
+ never been quite established to the satisfaction of the
+ philosophic mind, why the rule of society should be that 'as the
+ husband, so the wife is,' and why a lady who contracts a marriage
+ below her station is looked on with far severer eyes than a
+ gentleman <i>qui s'encanaille</i> to the same degree.
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg230" id="pg230">230</a></span>
+ But these things are so,&mdash;as the next dame of rank and
+ fortune, and widow of an M.P., who, rashly relying on Mr.
+ Hayward's assertion that the world has grown wiser, espouses a
+ foreign 'professional,' will assuredly find to her cost, although
+ she may escape the ungenerous public attacks which poor Mrs.
+ Piozzi earned by her connexion with literary men."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In 1784 they hanged for crimes which we should think adequately
+ punished by a short imprisonment; as they hooted and libelled for
+ transgressions or errors which, whatever their treatment by a
+ portion of our society, would certainly not provoke the thunders
+ of our press. I think (though I made no assertion of the kind)
+ that the world has grown wiser; and the reviewer admits as much
+ when he says that his supposititious widow "may escape the
+ ungenerous public attacks which poor Mrs. Piozzi earned by her
+ connexion with literary men." But where do I recommend unequal
+ marriages, or dispute the claims of birth and fashion, or
+ maintain that a fiddler should be rated higher than a duke
+ without accomplishments, and a carpenter <i>far</i> higher than
+ either? All this is utterly beside the purpose; and surely there
+ is nothing reprehensible in the suggestion that, before harshly
+ reproving another, we should do our best to test the justice of
+ the reproof by trying to make the case our own. Goethe proposed
+ to extend the self-same rule to criticism. One of his favourite
+ canons was that a critic should always endeavour to place himself
+ temporarily in the author's point of view. If the reviewer had
+ done so, he might <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg231" id=
+ "pg231">231</a></span> have avoided several material
+ misapprehensions and misstatements, which it is difficult to
+ reconcile with the friendly tone of the article or the known
+ ability of the writer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Envy at Piozzi's good fortune sharpened the animosity of
+ assailants like Baretti, and the loss of a pleasant house may
+ have had a good deal to do with the sorrowing indignation of her
+ set. Her meditated social extinction amongst them might have been
+ commemorated in the words of the French epitaph:
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ "Ci git une de qui la vertu
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Etait moins que la table encensée;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On ne plaint point la femme abattue,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mais bien la table renversée."
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Which may be freely rendered:
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ "Here lies one who adulation
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By dinners more than virtues earn'd;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whose friends mourned not her reputation&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But her table&mdash;overturned."
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Madame D'Arblay has recorded what took place between Mrs. Piozzi
+ and herself on the occasion:
+ </p>
+ <p class="ctr">
+ <i>Miss F. Burney to Mrs. Piozzi</i>.
+ </p>
+ <p class="quotdate">
+ "Norbury Park, Aug. 10, 1784.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "When my wondering eyes first looked over the letter I received
+ last night, my mind instantly dictated a high-spirited
+ vindication of the consistency, integrity, and faithfulness of
+ the friendship thus abruptly reproached <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg232" id="pg232">232</a></span> and cast
+ away. But a sleepless night gave me leisure to recollect that you
+ were ever as generous as precipitate, and that your own heart
+ would do justice to mine, in the cooler judgment of future
+ reflection. Committing myself, therefore, to that period, I
+ determined simply to assure you, that if my last letter hurt
+ either you or Mr. Piozzi, I am no less sorry than surprised; and
+ that if it offended you, I sincerely beg your pardon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not to that time, however, can I wait to acknowledge the pain an
+ accusation so unexpected has caused me, nor the heartfelt
+ satisfaction with which I shall receive, when you are able to
+ write it, a softer renewal of regard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "May Heaven direct and bless you!
+ </p>
+ <p class="citation">
+ "F.B.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "N.B. This is the sketch of the answer which F.B. most painfully
+ wrote to the unmerited reproach of not sending <i>cordial
+ congratulations</i> upon a marriage which she had uniformly,
+ openly, and with deep and avowed affliction, thought wrong."
+ </p>
+ <p class="ctr">
+ <i>Mrs. Piozzi to Miss Burney</i>.
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p class="i14">
+ "'Wellbeck Street, No. 33, Cavendish Square.
+ </p>
+ <p class="i14">
+ "'Friday, Aug. 13, 1784.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ "'Give yourself no serious concern, sweetest Burney, All is well,
+ and I am too happy myself to make a friend <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg233" id="pg233">233</a></span> otherwise;
+ quiet your kind heart immediately, and love my husband if you
+ love his and your
+ </p>
+ <p class="citation">
+ "'H.L. PIOZZI.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "N.B. To this kind note, F.B. wrote the warmest and most
+ affectionate and heartfelt reply; but never received another
+ word! And here and thus stopped a correspondence of six years of
+ almost unequalled partiality, and fondness on her side; and
+ affection, gratitude, admiration, and sincerity on that of F.B.,
+ who could only conjecture the cessation to be caused by the
+ resentment of Piozzi, when informed of her constant opposition to
+ the union."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If F.B. thought it wrong, she knew it to be inevitable, and in
+ the conviction that it was so, she and her father had connived at
+ the secret preparations for it in the preceding May.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A very distinguished friend, whose masterly works are the result
+ of a consummate study of the passions, after dwelling on the
+ "impertinence" of the hostility her marriage provoked, writes:
+ "She was evidently a very vain woman, but her vanity was
+ sensitive, and very much allied to that exactingness of heart
+ which gives charm and character to woman. I suspect it was this
+ sensitiveness which made her misunderstood by her children." The
+ justness of this theory of her conduct is demonstrated by the
+ self-communings in "Thraliana;" and she misunderstood them as
+ much as they misunderstood her. By her own <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg234" id="pg234">234</a></span> showing she
+ had little reason to complain of what they <i>did</i> in the
+ matter of the marriage; it was what they said, or rather did not
+ say, that irritated her. She yearned for sympathy, which was
+ sternly, chillingly, almost insultingly withheld.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In 1800, she wrote thus to Dr. Gray: "What a good example have
+ you set them (his children)! going to visit dear mama at
+ Twickenham&mdash;long may they keep their parents, pretty
+ creatures! and long may they have sense to know and feel that no
+ love is like parental affection,&mdash;the only good perhaps
+ which cannot be flung away."<span class="fnref">[1]</span>
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] "We may have many friends in life, but we can only have one
+ mother: a discovery, says Gray, which I never made till it was
+ too late."&mdash;ROGERS.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Madame D'Arblay states that her father was not disinclined to
+ admit Mrs. Piozzi's right to consult her own notions of happiness
+ in the choice of a second husband, had not the paramount duty of
+ watching over her unmarried daughters interfered. But they might
+ have accompanied her to Italy as was once contemplated; and had
+ they done so, they would have seen everything and everybody in it
+ under the most favourable auspices. The course chosen for them by
+ the eldest was the most perilous of the two submitted for their
+ choice. The lady, Miss Nicholson, whom their mother had so
+ carefully selected as their companion, soon left them; or
+ according to another version was summarily dismissed by Miss
+ Thrale (afterwards Viscountess Keith), who <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg235" id="pg235">235</a></span> fortunately
+ was endowed with high principle, firmness, and energy. She could
+ not take up her abode with either of her guardians, one a
+ bachelor under forty, the other the prototype of Briggs, the old
+ miser in "Cæcilia." She could not accept Johnson's hospitality in
+ Bolt Court, still tenanted by the survivors of his menagerie;
+ where, a few months later, she sate by his death-bed and received
+ his blessing. She therefore called to her aid an old nurse-maid,
+ named Tib, who had been much trusted by her father, and with this
+ homely but respectable duenna, she shut herself up in the house
+ at Brighton, limited her expenses to her allowance of
+ 200<i>l.</i> a-year, and resolutely set about the course of study
+ which seemed best adapted to absorb attention and prevent her
+ thoughts from wandering. Hebrew, Mathematics, Fortification, and
+ Perspective have been named to me by one of trusted friends as
+ specimens of her acquirements and her pursuits.
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ "There's a Divinity that shapes our ends,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Rough-hew them how we may."
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ In that solitary abode at Brighton, and in the companionship of
+ Tib, may have been laid the foundation of a character than which
+ few, through the changeful scenes of a long and prosperous life,
+ have exercised more beneficial influence or inspired more genuine
+ esteem. On coming of age, and being put into possession of her
+ fortune, she hired a house in London, <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg236" id="pg236">236</a></span> and took her
+ two eldest sisters to live with her. They had been at school
+ whilst she was living at Brighton. The fourth and youngest,
+ afterwards Mrs. Mostyn, had accompanied the mother. On the return
+ of Mr. and Mrs. Piozzi, Miss Thrale made a point of paying them
+ every becoming attention, and Piozzi was frequently dining with
+ her. Latterly, she used to speak of him as a very worthy sort of
+ man, who was not to blame for marrying a rich and distinguished
+ woman who took a fancy to him. The other sisters seem to have
+ adopted the same tone; and so far as I can learn, no one of them
+ is open to the imputation of filial unkindness, or has suffered
+ from maternal neglect in a manner to bear out Dr. Burney's
+ forebodings by the result. Occasional expressions of
+ querulousness are matters of course in family differences, and
+ are seldom totally suppressed by the utmost exertion of good
+ feeling and good sense.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Johnson's idolised wife was, at the lowest estimate, twenty-one
+ years older than himself when he married her; and her sons were
+ so disgusted by the connection, that they dropped the
+ acquaintance. Yet it never crossed his mind that "Hetty" had as
+ much right to please herself as "Tetty." Of the six letters that
+ passed between him and Mrs. Piozzi on the subject of the
+ marriage, only two (Nos. 1 and 5) have hitherto been made public;
+ and the incompleteness of the correspondence has caused the most
+ embarrassing confusion in the minds of biographers and editors,
+ too prone to act on the maxim that, wherever female reputation is
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg237" id="pg237">237</a></span>
+ concerned, we should hope for the best and believe the worst.
+ Hawkins, apparently ignorant that she had written to Johnson, to
+ announce her intention, says, "He was made uneasy by a report"
+ which induced him to write a strong letter of remonstrance, of
+ which what he calls an <i>adumbration</i> was published in the
+ "Gentleman's Magazine" for December 1784. Mr. Croker, avoiding a
+ similar error, says:&mdash;"In the lady's own (part) publication
+ of the correspondence, this letter (No. 1) is given as from Mrs.
+ Piozzi, and is signed with the initial of her name: Dr. Johnson's
+ answer is also addressed to Mrs. Piozzi, and both the letters
+ allude to the matter as <i>done</i>; yet it appears by the
+ periodical publications of the day, that the marriage did not
+ take place until the 25th July. The editor knew not how to
+ account for this but by supposing that Mrs. Piozzi, to avoid
+ Johnson's importunity, had stated that as done which was only
+ <i>settled to be done</i>."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The matter of fact is made plain by the circular (No. 2) which
+ states that "Piozzi is coming back from Italy." He arrived on
+ July 1st, after a fourteen months' absence, which proved both his
+ loyalty and the sincerity of the struggle in her own heart and
+ mind. Her letter (No. 1) as printed, is not signed with the
+ initial of her name; and both Dr. Johnson's autograph letters are
+ addressed to <i>Mrs. Thrale</i>. But she has occasioned the
+ mistake into which so many have fallen, by her mode of heading
+ these when she printed the two-volume edition of "Letters" in
+ 1788. By the kindness of Mr. Salusbury <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg238" id="pg238">238</a></span> I am now
+ enabled to print the whole correspondence, with the exception of
+ her last letter, which she describes.
+ </p>
+ <p class="ctr">
+ No. 1.
+ </p>
+ <p class="ctr">
+ <i>Mrs. Piozzi to Dr. Johnson</i>.
+ </p>
+ <p class="quotdate">
+ "Bath, June 30.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My Dear Sir,&mdash;The enclosed is a circular letter which I
+ have sent to all the guardians, but our friendship demands
+ somewhat more; it requires that I should beg your pardon for
+ concealing from you a connexion which you must have heard of by
+ many, but I suppose never believed. Indeed, my dear Sir, it was
+ concealed only to save us both needless pain; I could not have
+ borne to reject that counsel it would have killed me to take, and
+ I only tell it you now because all is irrevocably settled and out
+ of your power to prevent. I will say, however, that the dread of
+ your disapprobation has given me some anxious moments, and though
+ perhaps I am become by many privations the most independent woman
+ in the world, I feel as if acting without a parent's consent till
+ you write kindly to
+ </p>
+ <p class="citation">
+ "Your faithful servant."
+ </p>
+ <p class="ctr">
+ No. 2. <i>Circular</i>.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Sir,&mdash;As one of the executors of Mr. Thrale's will and
+ guardian to his daughters, I think it my duty to acquaint you
+ that the three eldest left Bath last Friday <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg239" id="pg239">239</a></span> (25th) for
+ their own house at Brighthelmstone in company with an amiable
+ friend, Miss Nicholson, who has sometimes resided with us here,
+ and in whose society they may, I think, find some advantages and
+ certainly no disgrace. I waited on them to Salisbury, Wilton,
+ &amp;c., and offered to attend them to the seaside myself, but
+ they preferred this lady's company to mine, having heard that Mr.
+ Piozzi is coming back from Italy, and judging perhaps by our past
+ friendship and continued correspondence that his return would be
+ succeeded by our marriage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have the honour to be, Sir, your obedient servant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Bath, June 30, 1784."
+ </p>
+ <p class="ctr">
+ No. 3.<span class="fnref">[1]</span>
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] What Johnson termed an "adumbration" of this letter
+ appeared in the "Gentleman's Magazine" for Dec. 1784:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "MADAM,&mdash;If you are already ignominiously married, you are
+ lost beyond all redemption;&mdash;if you are not, permit me one
+ hour's conversation, to convince you that such a marriage must
+ not take place. If, after a whole hour's reasoning, you should
+ not be convinced, you will still be at liberty to act as you
+ think proper. I have been extremely ill, and am still ill; but
+ if you grant me the audience I ask, I will instantly take a
+ post-chaise and attend you at Bath. Pray do not refuse this
+ favour to a man who hath so many years loved and honoured you."
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ "MADAM,&mdash;If I interpret your letter right, you are
+ ignominiously married: if it is yet undone, let us <i>once</i>
+ more <i>talk</i> together. If you have abandoned your children
+ and your religion, God forgive your wickedness; if you have
+ forfeited your fame and your country, may <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg240" id="pg240">240</a></span> your folly do
+ no further mischief. If the last act is yet to do, I who have
+ loved you, esteemed you, reverenced you, and <i>served
+ you</i><span class="fnref">[1]</span>, I who long thought you the
+ first of womankind, entreat that, before your fate is
+ irrevocable, I may once more see you. I was, I once was, Madam,
+ most truly yours,
+ </p>
+ <p class="citation">
+ "SAM. JOHNSON.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "July 2, 1784.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I will come down, if you permit it."
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] The four words which I have printed in italics are
+ indistinctly written, and cannot be satisfactorily made out.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p class="ctr">
+ No. 4.
+ </p>
+ <p class="quotdate">
+ "July 4, 1784.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "SIR,&mdash;I have this morning received from you so rough a
+ letter in reply to one which was both tenderly and respectfully
+ written, that I am forced to desire the conclusion of a
+ correspondence which I can bear to continue no longer. The birth
+ of my second husband is not meaner than that of my first; his
+ sentiments are not meaner; his profession is not meaner, and his
+ superiority in what he professes acknowledged by all mankind. It
+ is want of fortune, then, that is ignominious; the character of
+ the man I have chosen has no other claim to such an epithet. The
+ religion to which he has been always a zealous adherent will, I
+ hope, teach him to forgive insults he has not deserved; mine
+ will, I hope, enable me to bear them at once with dignity and
+ patience. To hear that I have forfeited my fame is indeed the
+ greatest insult I ever yet received. My fame <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg241" id="pg241">241</a></span> is as
+ unsullied as snow, or I should think it unworthy of him who must
+ henceforth protect it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I write by the coach the more speedily and effectually to
+ prevent your coming hither. Perhaps by my fame (and I hope it is
+ so) you mean only that celebrity which is a consideration of a
+ much lower kind. I care for that only as it may give pleasure to
+ my husband and his friends.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Farewell, dear Sir, and accept my best wishes. You have always
+ commanded my esteem, and long enjoyed the fruits of a friendship
+ <i>never infringed by one harsh expression on my part during
+ twenty years of familiar talk. Never did I oppose your will, or
+ control your wish; nor can your unmerited severity itself lessen
+ my regard</i>; but till you have changed your opinion of Mr.
+ Piozzi, let us converse no more. God bless you."
+ </p>
+ <p class="ctr">
+ No. 5.
+ </p>
+ <p class="ctr">
+ <i>To Mrs. Piozzi</i>.
+ </p>
+ <p class="quotdate">
+ "London, July 8, 1784.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "DEAR MADAM,&mdash;What you have done, however I may lament it, I
+ have no pretence to resent, as it has not been injurious to me: I
+ therefore breathe out one sigh more of tenderness, perhaps
+ useless, but at least sincere.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I wish that God may grant you every blessing, that you may be
+ happy in this world for its short continuance, and eternally
+ happy in a better state; and <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+ "pg242" id="pg242">242</a></span> whatever I can contribute to
+ your happiness I am very ready to repay, for that kindness which
+ soothed twenty years of a life radically wretched.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Do not think slightly of the advice which I now presume to
+ offer. Prevail upon Mr. Piozzi to settle in England: you may live
+ here with more dignity than in Italy, and with more security;
+ your rank will be higher, and your fortune more under your own
+ eye. I desire not to detail all my reasons, but every argument of
+ prudence and interest is for England, and only some phantoms of
+ imagination seduce you to Italy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am afraid, however, that my counsel is vain, yet I have eased
+ my heart by giving it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "When Queen Mary took the resolution of sheltering herself in
+ England, the Archbishop of St. Andrew's, attempting to dissuade
+ her, attended on her journey; and when they came to the
+ irremeable stream<span class="fnref">[1]</span> that separated
+ the two kingdoms, walked by her side into the water, in the
+ middle of which he seized her bridle, and with earnestness
+ proportioned to her danger and his <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+ "pg243" id="pg243">243</a></span> own affection pressed her to
+ return. The Queen went forward.&mdash;If the parallel reaches
+ thus far, may it go no farther.&mdash;The tears stand in my eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am going into Derbyshire, and hope to be followed by your good
+ wishes, for I am, with great affection,
+ </p>
+ <p class="citation">
+ "Your, &amp;c.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Any letters that come for me hither will be sent me."
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] Queen Mary left the Scottish for the English coast, on the
+ Firth of Solway, in a fishing-boat. The incident to which
+ Johnson alludes is introduced in "The Abbot;" where the scene
+ is laid on the sea-shore. The unusual though expressive term
+ "irremeable," is defined in his dictionary, "admitting no
+ return." His authority is Dryden's Virgil:
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ "The keeper dream'd, the chief without delay
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pass'd on, and took th' irremeable way."
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ The word is a Latin one anglicised:
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ "Evaditque celer ripam irremeabilis undæ."
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ In a memorandum on this letter, she says:&mdash;"I wrote him (No.
+ 6) a very kind and affectionate farewell."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before calling attention to the results of this correspondence, I
+ must notice a charge built upon it by the reviewer, with the
+ respectable aid of the foul-mouthed and malignant Baretti:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This letter is now printed for the first time by Mr. Hayward.
+ But he has omitted to notice the light which is thrown on it by
+ Baretti's account of the marriage. That account is given in the
+ 'European Magazine' for 1788. It is very circumstantial, and too
+ long to transcribe, but the upshot is this: He says that, in
+ order to meet her returning lover, she left Bath with her
+ daughters as for a journey to Brighton; quitted them on some
+ pretence at Salisbury, and posted off to town, <i>deceiving Dr.
+ Johnson, who continued to direct to her at Bath as
+ usual</i>.<span class="fnref">[1]</span> 'In London she kept
+ herself concealed for some days in my parish, and not very
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg244" id="pg244">244</a></span>
+ far distant from my own habitation, ... in Suffolk Street,
+ Middlesex Hospital.' 'In a <i>few weeks</i>,' he adds, 'she was
+ in a condition personally to resort to Mr. Greenland (her lawyer)
+ to settle preliminaries, then returned to Bath with Piozzi, and
+ there was married.' Now Baretti was a libeller, <i>and not to be
+ believed except upon compulsion</i>; but if he does speak the
+ truth, then the date, 'Bath, June 30,' of her circular letter, is
+ a mystification; so is the passage in her letter to Johnson of
+ July <i>4</i>, about 'sending it by the coach to prevent his
+ coming.' Of course she was mortally afraid of the Doctor's
+ coming, for if he had come he would have found her flown.
+ According to this supposition, she did not return to Bath at all,
+ but remained perdue in London, with her lover, during the whole
+ 'Correspondence.' Is it the true one?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We cannot but suspect that it is, and that the solution of the
+ whole of this little domestic mystery is to be found in a passage
+ in the 'Autobiographical Memoir,' vol. i. p. 277. There were
+ <i>two</i> marriages:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Miss Nicholson went with us to Stonehenge, Wilton, &amp;c.,
+ <i>whence I returned to Bath</i> to wait for Piozzi. He was here
+ on the eleventh day after he got Dobson's letter. In twenty-six
+ more we were married <i>in London</i> by the Spanish ambassador's
+ chaplain, and returned hither to be married by Mr. Morgan, of
+ Bath, at St. James's Church, July 25, 1784.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Now in order to make this account tally with Baretti's we must
+ allow for a slight exertion of that talent for 'white lies' on
+ the lady's part, of which her <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+ "pg245" id="pg245">245</a></span> friends, Johnson included, used
+ half playfully and half in earnest to accuse her. And we are
+ afraid Baretti's story does appear, on the face of it, the more
+ probable of the two. It does seem more likely, since they were to
+ be married in London (of which Baretti knew nothing), that she
+ met Piozzi secretly in London on his arrival, than that she
+ performed the awkward evolutions of returning from Salisbury to
+ Bath to wait for him there, then going to London in company with
+ him to be married, and then back to Bath to be married over
+ again. But if this be so, then the London marriage most likely
+ took place almost immediately on the meeting of the enamoured
+ couple, and while the 'Correspondence' was going on. In which
+ case the words in the 'Memoir' 'in twenty-six days,' &amp;c.,
+ were apparently intended, by a little bit of feminine adroitness,
+ to appear to apply to this first marriage,&mdash;of the
+ suddenness of which she may have been ashamed,&mdash;while they
+ really apply to the conclusion of the whole affair by the
+ <i>second</i>. Will any one have the Croker-like curiosity to
+ inquire whether any record remains of the dates of marriages
+ celebrated by the Spanish ambassador's chaplain?"<span class=
+ "fnref">[2]</span>
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] These words, italicised by the reviewer, contain the pith
+ of the charge, which has no reference to her visit to London
+ six weeks before.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [2] Edinb. Review, No. 230, p. 522.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Why Croker-like curiosity? Was there anything censurable in the
+ curiosity which led an editor to ascertain whether a novel like
+ "Evelina" was written by a girl of eighteen or a woman of
+ twenty-six? But Lord Macaulay sneered at the inquiry<span class=
+ "fnref">[1]</span>, and his worshippers <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg246" id="pg246">246</a></span> must go on
+ sneering like their model&mdash;<i>vitiis imitabile</i>. The
+ certificate of the London marriage (now before me) shews that it
+ was solemnised on the 23rd July, by a clergyman named Richard
+ Smith, in the presence of three attesting witnesses. This, and
+ the entries in "Thraliana," prove Baretti's whole story to be
+ false. "Now Baretti was a libeller, and not to be believed except
+ upon compulsion;" meaning, I suppose, without confirmatory
+ evidence strong enough to dispense with his testimony altogether.
+ He was notorious for his <i>black</i> lies. Yet he is believed
+ eagerly, willingly, upon no compulsion, and without any
+ confirmatory evidence at all.
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] The following passage is reprinted in the corrected edition
+ of Lord Macaulay's Essays:&mdash;"There was no want of low
+ minds and bad hearts in the generation which witnessed her
+ (Miss Burney's) first appearance. There was the envious Kenrick
+ and the savage Wolcot; the asp George Steevens and the polecat
+ John Williams. It did not, however, occur to them to search the
+ parish register of Lynn, in order that they might be able to
+ twit a lady with having concealed her age. That truly
+ chivalrous exploit was reserved for a bad writer of our own
+ time, whose spite she had provoked by not furnishing him with
+ materials for a worthless edition of Boswell's Life of Johnson,
+ some sheets of which our readers have doubtless seen round
+ parcels of better books." There is reason to believe that the
+ entry Mr. Croker copied was that of the baptism of an elder
+ sister of the same name who died before the birth of the famous
+ Fanny.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ The internal evidence of the improbability of the story has
+ disappeared in the reviewer's paraphrase. Baretti says that at
+ Salisbury "she suddenly declared that a letter she found of great
+ importance demanded her immediate presence <i>in London</i>....
+ But Johnson did not know the least tittle of this transaction,
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg247" id="pg247">247</a></span>
+ and he continued to direct his letters to Bath as usual,
+ expressing, no doubt, an immense wonder <i>at her pertinacious
+ silence</i>." So she told her daughters that she was going to
+ London, whilst she deceived Johnson, who was sure to learn the
+ truth from them; and he was wondering at her pertinacious silence
+ at the very time when he was receiving letters from her, dated
+ Bath! Why, having formally announced her determination to marry
+ Piozzi, she should not give him the meeting in London if she
+ chose, fairly passes my comprehension.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whilst the reviewer thinks he is strengthening one point, he is
+ palpably weakening another. She would not have been "mortally
+ afraid of the Doctor's coming," if she had already thrown him off
+ and finally broken with him? That she was afraid, and had reason
+ to be so, is quite consistent with my theory, quite inconsistent
+ with Lord Macaulay's and the critic's. Johnson's letter (No. 3)
+ is that of a coarse man who had always been permitted to lecture
+ and dictate with impunity. Her letter (No. 4) is that of a
+ sensitive woman, who, for the first time, resents with firmness
+ and retorts with dignity. The sentences I have printed in italics
+ speak volumes. "Never did I oppose your will, or control your
+ wish, nor can your unmitigated severity itself lessen my regard."
+ There is a shade of submissiveness in her reply, yet, on
+ receiving it, he felt as a falcon might feel if a partridge were
+ to shew fight. Nothing short of habitual deference on her part,
+ and unrepressed indulgence of temper on <i>his</i>, can account
+ for <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg248" id=
+ "pg248">248</a></span> or excuse his not writing before this
+ unexpected check as he wrote after it. If he had not been
+ systematically humoured and flattered, he would have seen at a
+ glance that he had "no pretence to resent," and have been ready
+ at once to make the best return in his power for "that kindness
+ which soothed twenty years of a life radically wretched." She
+ wrote him a kind and affectionate farewell; and there (so far as
+ we know) ended their correspondence. But in "Thraliana" she sets
+ down:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Milan, 27th Nov</i>. 1784.&mdash;I have got Dr. Johnson's
+ picture here, and expect Miss Thrale's with impatience. I do love
+ them dearly, as ill as they have used me, and always shall. Poor
+ Johnson did not <i>mean</i> to use me ill. He only grew upon
+ indulgence till patience could endure no further."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In a letter to Mr. S. Lysons from Milan, dated December 7th,
+ 1784, which proves that she was not frivolously employed, she
+ says:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My next letter shall talk of the libraries and botanical
+ gardens, and twenty other clever things here. I wish you a
+ comfortable Christmas, and a happy beginning of the year 1785. Do
+ not neglect Dr. Johnson: you will never see any other mortal so
+ wise or so good. I keep his picture in my chamber, and his works
+ on my chimney."
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ "Forgiveness to the injured doth belong,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But they ne'er pardon who have done the wrong."
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ What he said of her can only be learned from her <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg249" id="pg249">249</a></span> bitter
+ enemies or hollow friends, who have preserved nothing kindly or
+ creditable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hawkins states that a letter from Johnson to himself contained
+ these words:&mdash;"Poor Thrale! I thought that either her virtue
+ or her vice (meaning her love of her children or her pride) would
+ have saved 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."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Madame D'Arblay gives two accounts of the last interview she ever
+ had with Johnson,&mdash;on the 25th November, 1784. In the
+ "Diary" she sets down:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I had seen Miss T. the day before."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'So,' said he, 'did I.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I then said, 'Do you ever, Sir, hear, from her mother?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'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.<span class="fnref">[1]</span> I have burnt all I can
+ find. I never speak of her, and I desire never to hear of her
+ name. I drive her, as I said, wholly from my mind.'"
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] If this was true, it is strange that he did not destroy the
+ letter (No. 4) which gave him so sudden and mortifying a check.
+ Miss Hawkins says in her Memoirs: "It was I who discovered the
+ letter. I carried it to my father; he enclosed and sent it to
+ her, <i>there never having been any intercourse between
+ them</i>." Anything from Hawkins about Streatham and its
+ inmates must therefore have been invention or hearsay.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ In the "Memoirs," describing the same interview, she
+ says:&mdash;"We talked then of poor Mrs. Thrale, but only for a
+ moment, for I saw him greatly incensed, and with such severity of
+ displeasure, that I hastened to <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+ "pg250" id="pg250">250</a></span> start another subject, and he
+ solemnly enjoined me to mention that no more."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was only eighteen days before he died, and he might be
+ excused for being angry at the introduction of any agitating
+ topic. It would stain his memory, not hers, to prove that,
+ belying his recent professions of tenderness and gratitude, he
+ directly or indirectly encouraged her assailants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I was tempted to observe," says the author of "Piozziana," "that
+ I thought, as I still do, that Johnson's anger on the event of
+ her second marriage was excited by some feeling of
+ disappointment; and that I suspected he had formed some hope of
+ attaching her to himself. It would be disingenuous on my part to
+ attempt to repeat her answer. I forget it; but the impression on
+ my mind is that she did not contradict me." Sir James Fellowes'
+ marginal note on this passage is: "This was an absurd notion, and
+ I can undertake to say it was the last idea that ever entered her
+ head; for when I once alluded to the subject, she ridiculed the
+ idea: she told me she always felt for Johnson the same respect
+ and veneration as for a Pascal."<span class="fnref">[1]</span>
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] When Sheridan was accused of making love to Mrs. Siddons,
+ he said he should as soon think of making love to the
+ Archbishop of Canterbury.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ On the margin of the passage in which Boswell says, "Johnson
+ wishing to unite himself with this rich widow was much talked of,
+ but I believe without foundation,"&mdash;she has written, "I
+ believe so too!!" The report sufficed to bring into play the
+ light artillery <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg251" id=
+ "pg251">251</a></span> of the wits, one of whose best hits was an
+ "Ode to Mrs. Thrale, by Samuel Johnson, LL.D., on their
+ approaching Nuptials," beginning:
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ "If e'er my fingers touched the lyre,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ In satire fierce, in pleasure gay,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Shall not my Thralia's smiles inspire,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ Shall Sam refuse the sportive lay?
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ "My dearest lady, view your slave,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ Rehold him as your very <i>Scrub</i>:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ready to write as author grave,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ Or govern well the brewing tub.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ "To rich felicity thus raised,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ My bosom glows with amorous fire;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Porter no longer shall be praised,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ 'Tis I Myself am <i>Thrale's Entire</i>."
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ She has written opposite these lines, "Whose fun was this? It is
+ better than the other." The other was:
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ "Cervisial coctor's viduate dame,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Opinst thou this gigantick frame,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Procumbing at thy shrine,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Shall catinated by thy charms,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A captive in thy ambient arms
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Perennially be thine."
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ She writes opposite: "Whose silly fun was this? Soame Jenyn's?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The following paragraph is copied from the note-book of the late
+ Miss Williams Wynn<span class="fnref">[1]</span>, who had
+ recently <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg252" id=
+ "pg252">252</a></span> been reading a large collection of Mrs.
+ Piozzi's letters addressed to a Welsh neighbour:
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] Daughter of Sir Watkyn Wynn (the fourth baronet) and
+ granddaughter of George Grenville, the Minister. She was
+ distinguished by her literary taste and acquirements, as well
+ as highly esteemed for the uprightness of her character, the
+ excellence of her understanding, and the kindness of her heart.
+ Her journals and note-books, carefully kept during a long life
+ passed in the best society, are full of interesting anecdotes
+ and curious extracts from rare books and manuscripts. They are
+ now in the possession of her niece, the Honourable Mrs. Rowley.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ "<i>London, March</i>, 1825.&mdash;I have had an opportunity of
+ talking to old Sir William Pepys on the subject of his old
+ friend, Mrs. Piozzi, and from his conversation am more than ever
+ impressed with the idea that she was one of the most inconsistent
+ characters that ever existed. Sir William says he never met with
+ any human being who possessed the talent of conversation in such
+ a degree. I naturally felt anxious to know whether Piozzi could
+ in any degree add to this pleasure, and found, as I expected,
+ that he could not even understand her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Her infatuation for him seems perfectly unaccountable. Johnson
+ in his rough (I may here call it brutal) manner said to her, 'Why
+ Ma'am, he is not only a stupid, ugly dog, but he is an old dog
+ too.' Sir William says he really believes that she combated her
+ inclination for him as long as possible; so long, that her senses
+ would have failed her if she had attempted to resist any longer.
+ She was perfectly aware of her degradation. One day, speaking to
+ Sir William of some persons whom he had been in the habit of
+ meeting continually at Streatham during the lifetime of Mr.
+ Thrale, she said, not one of them has taken the smallest notice
+ of me ever since: they dropped me before I had <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg253" id="pg253">253</a></span> done anything
+ wrong. Piozzi was literally at her elbow when she said this."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The reviewer quotes the remark, "She was perfectly aware of her
+ degradation," as resting on the personal responsibility of Miss
+ Wynn, "who knew her in later life in Wales." The context shews
+ that Miss Wynn (who did not know her) was simply repeating the
+ impressions of Sir William Pepys, one of the bitterest opponents
+ of the marriage, to whom she certainly never said anything
+ derogatory to her second husband. The uniform tenor of her
+ letters and her conduct shew that she never regarded her second
+ marriage as discreditable, and always took a high and
+ independent, instead of a subdued or deprecating, tone with her
+ alienated friends. A bare statement of the treatment she received
+ from them is surely no proof of conscious degradation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In a letter to a Welsh neighbour, near the end of her life, some
+ time in 1818, she says:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Mrs. Mostyn (her youngest daughter) has written again on the
+ road back to Italy, where she likes the Piozzis above all people,
+ she says, <i>if they were not so proud of their family</i>. Would
+ not that make one laugh two hours before one's own death? But I
+ remember when Lady Egremont raised the whole nation's ill will
+ here, while the Saxons were wondering how Count Bruhle could
+ think of marrying a lady born Miss Carpenter. The Lombards
+ doubted in the meantime of my being a gentlewoman by birth,
+ because my first husband was a brewer. A pretty world, is it
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg254" id="pg254">254</a></span>
+ not? A Ship of Fooles, according to the old poem; and they will
+ upset the vessel by and by."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This is not the language of one who wished to apologise for a
+ misalliance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As to Piozzi's assumed want of youth and good looks, Johnson's
+ knowledge of womankind, to say nothing of his self-love, should
+ have prevented him from urging this as an insuperable objection.
+ He might have recollected the Roman matron in Juvenal, who
+ considers the world well lost for an old and disfigured
+ prize-fighter; or he might have quoted Spenser's description of
+ one&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ "Who rough and rude and filthy did appear,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Unseemly man to please fair lady's eye,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet he of ladies oft was loved dear,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When fairer faces were bid standen by:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Oh! who can tell the bent of woman's phantasy?"
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Madame Campan, speaking of Caroline of Naples, the sister of
+ Marie Antoinette, says, she had great reason to complain of the
+ insolence of a Spaniard named Las Casas, whom the king, her
+ father-in-law, had sent to persuade her to remove M.
+ Acton<span class="fnref">[1]</span> from the conduct of affairs
+ and from about her person. She had told him, to convince him of
+ the nature of her sentiments, that she would have Acton painted
+ and sculptured by the most celebrated artists of Italy, and send
+ his bust and his portrait to the King of Spain, to prove to him
+ that the desire of fixing a man of superior capacity <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg255" id="pg255">255</a></span> could alone
+ have induced her to confer the favour he enjoyed. Las Casas had
+ dared to reply, that she would be taking useless trouble; that a
+ man's ugliness did not always prevent him from pleasing, and that
+ the King of Spain had too much experience to be ignorant that the
+ caprices of a woman were inexplicable. Johnson may surely be
+ allowed credit for as much knowledge of the sex as the King of
+ Spain.
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] M. Acton, as Madame Campan calls him, was a member of the
+ ancient English family of that name. He succeeded to the
+ baronetcy in 1791, and was the grandfather of Sir John E.E.
+ Dalberg Acton, Bart., M.P., &amp;c.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Others were simultaneously accusing her of marrying a young man
+ to indulge a sensual inclination. The truth is, Piozzi was a few
+ months older than herself, and was neither ugly nor disagreeable.
+ Madame D'Arblay has been already quoted as to his personal
+ appearance, and Miss Seward (October, 1787) writes:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am become acquainted with Mr. and Mrs. Piozzi. Her
+ conversation is that bright wine of the intellects which has no
+ lees. Dr. Johnson told me truth when he said she had more
+ colloquial wit than most of our literary women; it is indeed a
+ fountain of perpetual flow. But he did not tell me truth when he
+ asserted that Piozzi was an ugly dog, without particular skill in
+ his profession. Mr. Piozzi is a handsome man, in middle life,
+ with gentle, pleasing, unaffected manners, and with very eminent
+ skill in his profession. Though he has not a powerful or
+ fine-toned voice, he sings with transcending grace and
+ expression. I am charmed with his perfect expression on his
+ instrument. Surely the finest sensibilities must vibrate through
+ his frame, since they breathe so sweetly through his song."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The concluding sentence contains what Partridge <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg256" id="pg256">256</a></span> would call a
+ <i>non sequitur</i>, for the finest musical sensibility may
+ coexist with the most commonplace qualities. But the lady's
+ evidence is clear on the essential point; and another passage
+ from her letters may assist us in determining the precise nature
+ of Johnson's feelings towards Mrs. Piozzi, and the extent to
+ which his later language and conduct regarding her were
+ influenced by pique:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Love is the great softener of savage dispositions. Johnson had
+ always a metaphysic passion for one princess or another: first,
+ the rustic Lucy Porter, before he married her nauseous mother;
+ next the handsome, but haughty, Molly Aston; next the sublimated,
+ methodistic Hill Boothby, who read her bible in Hebrew; and
+ lastly, the more charming Mrs. Thrale, with the beauty of the
+ first, the learning of the second, and with more worth than a
+ bushel of such sinners and such saints. It is ridiculously
+ diverting to see the old elephant forsaking his nature before
+ these princesses:
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ "'To make them mirth, use all his might, and writhe,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His mighty form disporting.'
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ "<i>This last and long-enduring passion for Mrs. Thrale was,
+ however, composed perhaps of cupboard love, Platonic love, and
+ vanity tickled and gratified, from morn to night, by incessant
+ homage</i>. The two first ingredients are certainly oddly
+ heterogeneous; but Johnson, in religion and politics, in love and
+ in hatred, was composed of such opposite and contradictory
+ materials, as never before met in the human mind. This
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg257" id="pg257">257</a></span>
+ is the reason why folk are never weary of talking, reading, and
+ writing about a man&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ "'So various that he seem'd to be,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not one, but all mankind's epitome.'"
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ After quoting the sentence printed in italics, the reviewer says:
+ "On this hint Mr. Hayward enlarges, nothing loth." I quoted the
+ entire letter without a word of comment, and what is given as my
+ "enlarging" is an <i>olla podrida</i> of sentences torn from the
+ context in three different and unconnected passages of this
+ Introduction. The only one of them which has any bearing on the
+ point shews, though garbled, that, in attributing motives, I
+ distinguished between Johnson and his set.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having thus laid the ground for fixing on me opinions I had
+ nowhere professed, the reviewer asks, "Had Mr. Hayward, when he
+ passed such slighting judgment on the motives of the venerable
+ sage who awes us still, no fear before his eyes of the anathema
+ aimed by Carlyle at Croker for similar disparagement? 'As
+ neediness, and greediness, and vain glory are the chief qualities
+ of most men, so no man, not even a Johnson, acts, or can think of
+ acting, on any other principle. Whatever, therefore, cannot be
+ referred to the two former categories, Need and Greed, is without
+ scruple ranged under the latter.'"<span class="fnref">[1]</span>
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] Edinb, Review, No. 230, p. 511.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ This style of criticism is as loose as it is unjust; for
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg258" id="pg258">258</a></span>
+ one main ingredient in Miss Seward's mixture is Platonic love,
+ which cannot be referred to either of the three categories. Her
+ error lay in not adding a fourth ingredient,&mdash;the admiration
+ which Johnson undoubtedly felt for the admitted good qualities of
+ Mrs. Thrale. But the lady was nearer the truth than the reviewer,
+ when he proceeds in this strain:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We take an entirely different view at once of the character and
+ the feelings of Johnson. Rude, uncouth, arrogant as he
+ was&mdash;spoilt as he was, which is far worse, by flattery and
+ toadying and the silly homage of inferior
+ worshippers&mdash;selfish as he was in his eagerness for small
+ enjoyments and disregard of small attentions&mdash;that which lay
+ at the very bottom of his character, that which constitutes the
+ great source of his power in life, and connects him after death
+ with the hearts of all of us, is his spirit of imaginative
+ romance. He was romantic in almost all things&mdash;in politics,
+ in religion, in his musings on the supernatural world, in
+ friendship for men, and in love for women."
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ "Such was his fancied 'padrona,' his 'mistress,' his 'Thralia
+ dulcis,' a compound of the bright lady of fashion and the ideal
+ Urania who rapt his soul into spheres of perfection."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Imaginative romance in politics, in religion, and in musings on
+ the supernatural world, is here only another term for prejudice,
+ intolerance, bigotry, and credulity&mdash;for rabid Toryism, High
+ Church doctrines verging on Romanism, and a confirmed belief in
+ ghosts. Imaginative <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg259" id=
+ "pg259">259</a></span> romance in love and friendship is an
+ elevating, softening, and refining influence, which, especially
+ when it forms the basis of character, cannot co-exist with
+ habitual rudeness, uncouthness, arrogance, love of toadying,
+ selfishness, and disregard of what Johnson himself called the
+ minor morals. Equally heterogeneous is the "compound of the
+ bright lady of fashion and the ideal Urania." A goddess in
+ crinoline would be a semi-mundane creature at best; and the image
+ unluckily suggests that Johnson was unphilosophically, not to say
+ vulgarly, fond of rank, fashion, and their appendages.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His imagination, far from being of the richest or highest kind,
+ was insufficient for the attainment of dramatic excellence, was
+ insufficient even for the nobler parts of criticism. Nor had he
+ much to boast of in the way of delicacy of perception or
+ sensibility. His strength lay in his understanding; his most
+ powerful weapon was argument: his grandest quality was his good
+ sense.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thurlow, speaking of the choice of a successor to Lord Mansfield,
+ said, "I hesitated long between the intemperance of Kenyon, and
+ the corruption of Buller; not but what there was a
+ d&mdash;&mdash;d deal of corruption in Kenyon's intemperance, and
+ a d&mdash;&mdash;d deal of intemperance in Buller's corruption."
+ Just so, we may hesitate long between the romance and the
+ worldliness of Johnson, not but what there was a d&mdash;&mdash;d
+ deal of romance in his worldliness, and a d&mdash;&mdash;d deal
+ of worldliness in his romance. <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+ "pg260" id="pg260">260</a></span>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The late Lord Alvanley, whose heart was as inflammable as his wit
+ was bright, used to tell how a successful rival in the favour of
+ a married dame offered to retire from the field for <i>5001</i>.,
+ saying, "I am a younger son: her husband does not give dinners,
+ and they have no country house: no <i>liaison</i> suits me that
+ does not comprise both." At the risk of provoking Mr. Carlyle's
+ anathema, I now avow my belief that Johnson was, nay, boasted of
+ being, open to similar influences; and as for his "ideal
+ Uranias," no man past seventy idealises women with whom he has
+ been corresponding for years about his or their "natural
+ history," to whom he sends recipes for "lubricity of the bowels,"
+ with an assurance that it has had the best effect upon his
+ own.<span class="fnref">[1]</span>
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] Letters, vol. ii. p. 397. The letter containing the recipe
+ actually begins "My dear Angel." Had Johnson forgotten Swift's
+ lines on Celia? or the repudiation of the divine nature by
+ Ermodotus, which occurs twice in Plutarch? The late Lord
+ Melbourne complained that two ladies of quality, sisters, told
+ him too much of their "natural history."
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Rough language, too, although not incompatible with affectionate
+ esteem, can hardly be reconciled with imaginative romance&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ "Perhaps it was right to dissemble your love,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But why did you kick me down stairs?"
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ "His ugly old wife," says the reviewer, "was an angel." Yes, an
+ angel so far as exalted language could make her one; and he had
+ always half-a-dozen angels or goddesses on his list. "<i>Je
+ change d'objet, mais la passion reste</i>." For <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg261" id="pg261">261</a></span> this very
+ reason, I repeat, his affection for Mrs. Piozzi was not a deep,
+ devoted, or absorbing feeling at any time; and the gloom which
+ settled upon the evening of his days was owing to his infirmities
+ and his dread of death, not to the loosening of cherished ties,
+ nor to the compelled solitude of a confined dwelling in Bolt
+ Court. The plain matter of fact is that, during the last two
+ years of his life, he was seldom a month together at his own
+ house, unless when the state of his health prevented him from
+ enjoying the hospitality of his friends. When the fatal marriage
+ was announced, he was planning what Boswell calls a jaunt into
+ the country; and in a letter dated Lichfield, Oct. 4, 1784, he
+ says: "I passed the first part of the summer at Oxford (with Dr.
+ Adams); afterwards I went to Lichfield, then to Ashbourne (Dr.
+ Taylor's), and a week ago I returned to Lichfield."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the journal which he kept for Dr. Brocklesby, he writes, Oct.
+ 20: "The town is my element; 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
+ public life; and I hope still to keep my station, till God shall
+ bid me <i>Go in peace</i>." Boswell reports him saying about this
+ time, "Sir, I look upon every day to be lost when I do not make a
+ new acquaintance."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After another visit to Dr. Adams, at Pembroke College, he
+ returned on the 16th Nov. to London, where he died on the 13th
+ Dec. 1784. The proximate cause of his death was dropsy; and there
+ is not the smallest <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg262" id=
+ "pg262">262</a></span> sign of its having been accelerated or
+ embittered by unkindness or neglect.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whoever has accompanied me thus far will be fully qualified to
+ form an independent opinion of Lord Macaulay's dashing summary of
+ Mrs. Piozzi's imputed ill-treatment of Johnson:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Johnson was now in his seventy-second year. The infirmities of
+ age were coming fast upon him. That inevitable event of which he
+ never thought without horror was brought near to him; and his
+ whole life was darkened by the shadow of death. He had often to
+ pay the cruel price of longevity. Every year he lost what could
+ never be replaced. The strange dependants to whom he had given
+ shelter, and to whom, in spite of their faults, he was strongly
+ attached by habit, dropped off one by one; and, in the silence of
+ his home, he regretted even the noise of their scolding matches.
+ The kind and generous Thrale was no more; and it would have been
+ well if his wife had been laid beside him. But she survived to be
+ the laughing-stock of those who had envied her, and to draw from
+ the eyes of the old man who had loved her beyond any thing in the
+ world, tears far more bitter than he would have shed over her
+ grave.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "With some estimable, and many agreeable qualities, she was not
+ made to be independent. The control of a mind more steadfast than
+ her own was necessary to her respectability. While she was
+ restrained by her husband, a man of sense and firmness, indulgent
+ to her taste in trifles, but always the undisputed master
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg263" id="pg263">263</a></span>
+ of his house, her worst offences had been impertinent jokes,
+ white lies, and short fits of pettishness ending in sunny good
+ humour. But he was gone; and she was left an opulent widow of
+ forty, with strong sensibility, volatile fancy, and slender
+ judgment. She soon fell in love with a music-master from Brescia,
+ in whom nobody but herself could discover anything to admire. Her
+ pride, and perhaps some better feelings, struggled hard against
+ this degrading passion. But the struggle irritated her nerves,
+ soured her temper, and at length endangered her health. Conscious
+ that her choice was one which Johnson could not approve, she
+ became desirous to escape from his inspection. Her manner towards
+ him changed. She was sometimes cold and sometimes petulant. She
+ did not conceal her joy when he left Streatham: she never pressed
+ him to return; and, if he came unbidden, she received him in a
+ manner which convinced him that he was no longer a welcome guest.
+ He took the very intelligible hints which she gave. He read, for
+ the last time, a chapter of the Greek Testament in the library
+ which had been formed by himself. In a solemn and tender prayer
+ he commended the house and its inmates to the Divine protection,
+ and, with emotions which choked his voice and convulsed his
+ powerful frame, left for ever that beloved home for the gloomy
+ and desolate house behind Fleet Street, where the few and evil
+ days which still remained to him were to run out.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Here, in June 1783, he had a paralytic stroke, from which,
+ however, he recovered, and which does not appear <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg264" id="pg264">264</a></span> to have at
+ all impaired his intellectual faculties. But other maladies came
+ thick upon him. His asthma tormented him day and night. Dropsical
+ symptoms made their appearance. While sinking under a
+ complication of diseases, he heard that the woman whose
+ friendship had been the chief happiness of sixteen years of his
+ life, had married an Italian fiddler; that all London was crying
+ shame upon her; and that the newspapers and magazines were filled
+ with allusions to the Ephesian matron and the two pictures in
+ Hamlet. He vehemently said that he would try to forget her
+ existence. He never uttered her name. Every memorial of her which
+ met his eye he flung into the fire. She meanwhile fled from the
+ laughter and hisses of her countrymen and countrywomen to a land
+ where she was unknown, hastened across Mount Cenis, and learned,
+ while passing a merry Christmas of concerts and lemonade-parties
+ at Milan, that the great man with whose name hers is inseparably
+ associated, had ceased to exist."<span class="fnref">[1]</span>
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] "Encyclopædia Britannica," last edition. The Essay on
+ Johnson is reprinted in the first volume of Lord Macaulay's
+ "Miscellaneous Writings."
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ "Splendid recklessness," is the happy expression used by the
+ "Saturday Review" in characterising this account of the alleged
+ rupture with its consequences; and no reader will fail to admire
+ the rhetorical skill with which the expulsion from Streatham with
+ its library formed by himself, the chapter in the Greek
+ testament, the gloomy and desolate home, the music-master
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg265" id="pg265">265</a></span>
+ in whom nobody but herself could see anything to admire, the few
+ and evil days, the emotions that convulsed the frame, the painful
+ and melancholy death, and the merry Christmas of concerts and
+ lemonade parties, have been grouped together with the view of
+ giving picturesqueness, impressive unity, and damnatory vigour to
+ the sketch. "Action, action, action," says the orator; "effect,
+ effect, effect," says the historian. Give Archimedes a place to
+ stand on, and he would move the world. Give Fouché a line of a
+ man's handwriting, and he would engage to ruin him. Give Lord
+ Macaulay the semblance of an authority, an insulated fact or
+ phrase, a scrap of a journal, or the tag end of a song, and on
+ it, by the abused prerogative of genius, he would construct a
+ theory of national or personal character, which should confer
+ undying glory or inflict indelible disgrace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Johnson was never driven or expelled from Mrs. Piozzi's house or
+ family: if very intelligible hints were given, they certainly
+ were not taken; the library was not formed by him; the Testament
+ may or may not have been Greek; his powerful frame shook with no
+ convulsions but what may have been occasioned by the unripe
+ grapes and hard peaches; he did not leave Streatham for his
+ gloomy and desolate house behind Fleet Street; the few and evil
+ days (two years, nine weeks) did not run out in that house; the
+ music-master was generally admired and esteemed; and the merry
+ Christmas of concerts and lemonade-parties is simply another
+ sample of the brilliant historian's mode of <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg266" id="pg266">266</a></span> turning the
+ abstract into the concrete in such a manner as to degrade or
+ elevate at will. An Italian concert is not a merry meeting; and a
+ lemonade-party, I presume, is a party where (instead of
+ <i>eau-sucrée</i> as at Paris) the refreshment handed about is
+ lemonade: not an enlivening drink at Christmas. In a word, all
+ these graphic details are mere creations of the brain, and the
+ general impression intended to be conveyed by them is false,
+ substantially false; for Mrs. Piozzi never behaved otherwise than
+ kindly and considerately to Johnson at any time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her life in Italy has been sketched in her best manner by her own
+ lively pen in the "Autobiography" and what she calls the "Travel
+ Book," to be presently mentioned. Scattered notices of her
+ proceedings occur in her letters to Mr. Lysons, and in the
+ printed correspondence of her cotemporaries.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the 19th October, 1784, she writes to Mr. Lysons from Turin:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We are going to Alexandria, Genoa, and Pavia, and then to Milan
+ for the winter, as Mr. Piozzi finds friends everywhere to delay
+ us, and I hate hurry and fatigue; it takes away all one's
+ attention. Lyons was a delightful place to me, and we were so
+ feasted there by my husband's old acquaintances. The Duke and
+ Duchess of Cumberland too paid us a thousand caressing civilities
+ where we met with them, and we had no means of musical parties
+ neither. The Prince of Sisterna came yesterday to visit Mr.
+ Piozzi, and present me with the key of his box at the opera for
+ the time we stay at Turin. Here's <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+ "pg267" id="pg267">267</a></span> honour and glory for you! When
+ Miss Thrale hears of it, she will write perhaps; the other two
+ are very kind and affectionate."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In "Thraliana":
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>3rd November</i>, 1784.&mdash;Yesterday I received a letter
+ from Mr. Baretti, full of the most flagrant and bitter insults
+ concerning my late marriage with Mr. Piozzi, against whom,
+ however, he can bring no heavier charge than that he disputed on
+ the road with an innkeeper concerning the bill in his last
+ journey to Italy; while he accuses me of murder and fornication
+ in the grossest terms, such as I believe have scarcely ever been
+ used even to his old companions in Newgate, whence he was
+ released to scourge the families which cherished, and bite the
+ hands that have since relieved him. Could I recollect any
+ provocation I ever gave the man, I should be less amazed, but he
+ heard, perhaps, that Johnson had written me a rough letter, and
+ thought he would write me a brutal one: like the Jewish king,
+ who, trying to imitate Solomon without his understanding, said,
+ 'My father whipped you with whips, but I will whip you with
+ scorpions.'"
+ </p>
+ <p class="quotdate">
+ "Milan, Dec. 7.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I correspond constantly and copiously with such of my daughters
+ as are willing to answer my letters, and I have at last received
+ one cold scrap from the eldest, which I instantly and tenderly
+ replied to. Mrs. Lewis too, and Miss Nicholson, have had accounts
+ of my health, for I found <i>them</i> disinterested and attached
+ to me: those who led the stream, or watched which <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg268" id="pg268">268</a></span> way it ran,
+ that they might follow it, were not, I suppose, desirous of my
+ correspondence, and till they are so, shall not be troubled with
+ it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Miss Nicholson was the lady left with the daughters, and Mrs.
+ Piozzi could have heard no harm of her from them or others when
+ she wrote thus. The same inference must be drawn from the
+ allusions to this lady at subsequent periods. After stating that
+ she "dined at the minister's o' Tuesday, and he called all the
+ wise men about me with great politeness indeed"&mdash;"Once
+ more," she continues, "keep me out of the newspapers if you
+ possibly can: they have given me many a miserable hour, and my
+ enemies many a merry one: but I have not deserved public
+ persecution, and am very happy to live in a place where one is
+ free from unmerited insolence, such as London abounds with.
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ "'Illic credulitas, illic temerarius error.'
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ God bless you, and may you conquer the many-headed monster which
+ I could never charm to silence." In "Thraliana," she says:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>January</i>, 1785.&mdash;I see the English newspapers are
+ full of gross insolence to me: all burst out, as I guessed it
+ would, upon the death of Dr. Johnson. But Mr. Boswell (who I
+ plainly see is the author) should let the <i>dead</i> escape from
+ his malice at least. I feel more shocked at the insults offered
+ to Mr. Thrale's memory than at those cast on Mr. Piozzi's person.
+ My present husband, thank God! is well and happy, and able to
+ defend himself: but dear Mr. Thrale, that had fostered
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg269" id="pg269">269</a></span>
+ these cursed wits so long! to be stung by their malice even in
+ the grave, is too cruel:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ "'Nor church, nor churchyards, from such fops are
+ free.'"<span class="fnref">[1]</span>&mdash;POPE.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ [1] Probably misquoted for&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p class="i4">
+ "No place is sacred, not the church is free."
+ </p>
+ <p class="i8">
+ <i>Prologue to the Satires</i>.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ The license of our press is a frequent topic of complaint. But
+ here is a woman who had never placed herself before the public in
+ any way so as to give them a right to discuss her conduct or
+ affairs, not even as an author, made the butt of every
+ description of offensive personality for months, with the tacit
+ encouragement of the first moralist of the age.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ January 20th, 1785, she writes from Milan:&mdash;"The Minister,
+ Count Wilsick, has shown us many distinctions, and we are visited
+ by the first families in Milan. The Venetian Resident will,
+ however, be soon sent to the court of London, and give a faithful
+ account, as I am sure, to all their <i>obliging</i> inquiries."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In "Thraliana":
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>25th Jan</i>., 1785.&mdash;I have recovered myself
+ sufficiently to think what will be the consequence to me of
+ Johnson's death, but must wait the event, as all thoughts on the
+ future in this world are vain. Six people have already undertaken
+ to write his life, I hear, of which Sir John Hawkins, Mr.
+ Boswell, Tom Davies, and Dr. Kippis are four. Piozzi says he
+ would have me add to the number, and so I would, but that I think
+ my anecdotes too few, and am afraid of saucy answers if I send to
+ England for others. The saucy answers <i>I</i> should
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg270" id="pg270">270</a></span>
+ disregard, but my heart is made vulnerable by my late marriage,
+ and I am certain that, to spite me, they would insult my husband.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Poor Johnson! I see they will leave <i>nothing untold</i> that I
+ laboured so long to keep secret; and I was so very delicate <i>in
+ trying to conceal his [fancied]<span class="fnref">[1]</span>
+ insanity</i> that I retained no proofs of it, or hardly any, nor
+ even mentioned it in these books, lest by my dying first
+ <i>they</i> might be printed and the secret (for such I thought
+ it) discovered. I used to tell him in jest that his biographers
+ would be at a loss concerning some orange-peel he used to keep in
+ his pocket, and many a joke we had about the lives that would be
+ published. Rescue me out of their hands, my dear, and do it
+ yourself, said he; Taylor, Adams, and Hector will furnish you
+ with juvenile anecdotes, and Baretti will give you all the rest
+ that you have not already, for I think Baretti is a lyar only
+ when he speaks of himself. Oh, said I, Baretti told me yesterday
+ that you got by heart six pages of Machiavel's History once, and
+ repeated them thirty years afterwards word for word. Why this is
+ a <i>gross</i> lye, said Johnson, I never read the book at all.
+ Baretti too told me of you (said I) that you once kept sixteen
+ cats in your chamber, and yet they scratched your legs to such a
+ degree, you were forced to use mercurial plaisters for some time
+ after. Why this (replied Johnson) is an unprovoked lye indeed; I
+ thought the fellow would not have broken through divine and human
+ laws thus to make puss his heroine, but I see I was mistaken."
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] Sic in the MS. See <i>antè</i>, p. 202. <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg271" id="pg271">271</a></span>
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ On February 3rd, 1785, Horace Walpole writes from London to Sir
+ Horace Mann at Florence:&mdash;"I have lately been lent a volume
+ of poems composed and printed at Florence, in which another of
+ our exheroines, Mrs. Piozzi, has a considerable share; her
+ associates three of the English bards who assisted in the little
+ garland which Ramsay the painter sent me. The present is a plump
+ octavo; and if you have not sent me a copy by our nephew, I
+ should be glad if you could get one for me: not for the merit of
+ the verses, which are moderate enough and faint imitations of our
+ good poets; but for a short and sensible and genteel preface by
+ La Piozzi, from whom I have just seen a very clever letter to
+ Mrs. Montagu, to disavow a jackanapes who has lately made a noise
+ here, one Boswell, by Anecdotes of Dr. Johnson. In a day or two
+ we expect another collection by the same Signora."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her associates were Greathead, Merry, and Parsons. The volume in
+ question was "The Florence Miscellany." "A copy," says Mr.
+ Lowndes, "having fallen into the hands of W. Grifford, gave rise
+ to his admirable satire of the 'Baviad and Moeviad.'"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In his Journal of the Tour to the Hebrides, Boswell makes Johnson
+ say of Mrs. Montagu's "Essay on Shakespeare": "Reynolds is fond
+ of her book, and I wonder at it; for neither I, nor Beauclerc,
+ nor Mrs. Thrale could get through it." This is what Mrs. Piozzi
+ wrote to disavow, so far as she was personally concerned. In a
+ subsequent letter from Vienna, she says: "Mrs. Montagu has
+ written to me very sweetly." The other collection expected from
+ her was her "Anecdotes of the <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+ "pg272" id="pg272">272</a></span> late Samuel Johnson, during the
+ last Twenty Years of his Life. Printed for T. Cadell in the
+ Strand, 1786."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She opened the matter to Mr. Cadell in the following terms:
+ </p>
+ <p class="quotdate">
+ "Florence, 7th June, 1785.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Sir</i>.,&mdash;As you were at once the bookseller and friend
+ of Dr. Johnson, who always spoke of your character in the kindest
+ terms, I could wish you likewise to be the publisher of some
+ Anecdotes concerning the last twenty years of his life, collected
+ by me during the many days I had opportunity to spend in his
+ instructive company, and digested into method since I heard of
+ his death. As I have a large collection of his letters in
+ England, besides some verses, known only to myself, I wish to
+ delay printing till we can make two or three little volumes, not
+ unacceptable, perhaps, to the public; but I desire my intention
+ to be notified, for divers reasons, and, if you approve of the
+ scheme, should wish it to be immediately advertized. My return
+ cannot be in less than twelve months, and we may be detained
+ still longer, as our intention is to complete the tour of Italy;
+ but the book is in forwardness, and it has been seen by many
+ English and Italian friends."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On July 27th, 1785, she writes from Florence:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We celebrated our wedding anniversary two days ago with a
+ magnificent dinner and concert, at which the Prince Corsini and
+ his brother the Cardinal did us the honour of assisting, and
+ wished us joy in the tenderest and politest terms. Lord and Lady
+ Cowper, Lord Pembroke, and <i>all</i> the English indeed, doat on
+ my husband, and show us every possible attention." <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg273" id="pg273">273</a></span>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the 18th July, 1785, she writes again to Mr. Cadell:&mdash;"I
+ am favoured with your answer and pleased with the advertisement,
+ but it will be impossible to print the verses till my return to
+ England, as they are all locked up with other papers in the Bank,
+ nor should I choose to put the key (which is now at Milan) in any
+ one's hand except my own."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She therefore proposes that the "Anecdotes" shall be printed
+ first, and published separately. On the 20th October, 1785, she
+ writes from Sienna:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I finished my 'Anecdotes of Dr. Johnson' at Florence, and taking
+ them with me to Leghorn, got a clear transcript made there, such
+ as I hope will do for you to print from; though there may be some
+ errors, perhaps many, which have escaped me, as I am wholly
+ unused to the business of sending manuscripts to the press, and
+ must rely on you to get everything done properly when, it comes
+ into your hands."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such was the surviving ascendency of Johnson, or such the
+ placability of her disposition, that, but for Piozzi's
+ remonstrances, she would have softened down her "Anecdotes" to an
+ extent which would have destroyed much of their sterling value.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Lysons made the final bargain with Cadell, and had full power
+ to act for her. She writes thus to Cadell:
+ </p>
+ <p class="quotdate">
+ "Rome, 28th March, 1786.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "SIR,&mdash;I hasten to tell you that I am perfectly pleased and
+ contented with the alterations made by my worthy and amiable
+ friends in the 'Anecdotes of Johnson's <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg274" id="pg274">274</a></span> Life.'
+ Whatever is done by Sir Lucas Pepys is certainly well done, and I
+ am happy in the thoughts of his having interested himself about
+ it. Mr. Lysons was very judicious and very kind in going to the
+ Bishop of Peterboro', and him and Dr. Lort for advice. There is
+ no better to be had in the world, I believe; and it is my desire
+ that they should be always consulted about any future
+ transactions of the same sort relating to, Sir, your most
+ obedient servant,
+ </p>
+ <p class="citation">
+ "H. L. PIOZZI."<span class="fnref">[1]</span>
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] The letters to Mr. Cadell were published in the
+ "Gentleman's Magazine" for March and April, 1852.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ The early portions of "Thraliana" were evidently amongst the
+ papers locked up in the Bank, and she consequently wrote most of
+ the Anecdotes from memory, which may account for some minor
+ discrepancies, like that relating to the year in which she made
+ the acquaintance with Johnson.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The book attracted great attention; and whilst some affected to
+ discover in it the latent signs of wounded vanity and pique,
+ others vehemently impugned its accuracy. Foremost amongst her
+ assailants stood Boswell, who had an obvious motive for
+ depreciating her, and he attempts to destroy her authority,
+ first, by quoting Johnson's supposed imputations on her veracity;
+ and secondly, by individual instances of her alleged departure
+ from truth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus, Johnson is reported to have said:&mdash;"It is amazing,
+ Sir, what deviations there are from precise truth, <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg275" id="pg275">275</a></span> in the
+ account which is given of almost everything. I told Mrs. Thrale,
+ You have so little anxiety about truth that you never tax your
+ memory with the exact thing."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her proneness to exaggerated praise especially excited his
+ indignation, and he endeavours to make her responsible for his
+ rudeness on the strength of it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Mrs. Thrale gave high praise to Mr. Dudley Long (now North).
+ <i>Johnson</i>. '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. 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; you praised that man with such
+ disproportion, that I was incited to lessen him, perhaps more
+ than he deserves. <i>His blood is upon your head</i>. 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.'"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Opposite the words I have printed in italics she has written: "An
+ expression he would not have used; no, not for worlds."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In Boswell's note of a visit to Streatham in 1778, we
+ find:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Next morning, while we were at breakfast, Johnson gave a very
+ earnest recommendation of what he himself <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg276" id="pg276">276</a></span> practised
+ with the utmost conscientiousness: I mean a strict attention to
+ truth even in the most minute particulars. 'Accustom your
+ children,' said he, 'constantly to this: if a thing happened at
+ one window, and they, when relating it, say that it happened at
+ another, do not let it pass, but instantly check them: you do not
+ know where deviation from truth will end.' <i>Boswell</i>. 'It
+ may come to the door: and when once an account is at all varied
+ in one circumstance, it may by degrees be varied so as to be
+ totally different from what really happened.' Our lively hostess,
+ whose fancy was impatient of the rein, fidgeted at this, and
+ ventured to say 'Nay, this is too much. If Dr. Johnson should
+ forbid me to drink tea, I would comply, as I should feel the
+ restraint only twice a day: but little variations in narrative
+ must happen a thousand times a day, if one is not perpetually
+ watching.' <i>Johnson</i>. 'Well, Madam, and you <i>ought</i> to
+ be perpetually watching. It is more from carelessness about
+ truth, than from intentional lying, that there is so much
+ falsehood in the world.'"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now for the illustrative incident, which occurred during the same
+ visit:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I had before dinner repeated a ridiculous story told me by an
+ old man, who had been a passenger with me in the stage-coach
+ to-day. Mrs. Thrale, having taken occasion to allude to it in
+ talking to me, called it, 'The story told you by the old
+ <i>woman</i>.' 'Now, Madam,' said I, 'give me leave to catch you
+ in the fact: it was not an old <i>woman</i>, but an old
+ <i>man</i>, whom I mentioned <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+ "pg277" id="pg277">277</a></span> as having told me this.' I
+ presumed to take an opportunity, in the presence of Johnson, of
+ showing this lively lady how ready she was, unintentionally, to
+ deviate from exact authenticity of narration."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the margin: "Mrs. Thrale knew there was no such thing as an
+ Old Man: when a man gets superannuated, they call him an Old
+ Woman."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The remarks on the value of truth attributed to Johnson are just
+ and sound in the main, but when they are pointed against
+ character, they must be weighed in reference to the very high
+ standard he habitually insisted upon. He would not allow his
+ servant to say he was not at home when he was. "A servant's
+ strict regard for truth," he continued, "must be weakened by such
+ a practice. A philosopher may know that it is merely a form of
+ denial; but few servants are such nice distinguishers. If I
+ accustom a servant to tell a lie for me, have I not reason to
+ apprehend that he will tell many lies for himself?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One of his townspeople, Mr. Wickens, of Lichfield, was walking
+ with him in a small meandering shrubbery formed so as to hide the
+ termination, and observed that it might be taken for an extensive
+ labyrinth, but that it would prove a deception, though it was,
+ indeed, not an unpardonable one. "Sir," exclaimed Johnson, "don't
+ tell me of deception; a lie, Sir, is a lie, whether it be a lie
+ to the eye or a lie to the ear." Whilst he was in one of these
+ paradoxical humours, there was no pleasing him; and he has been
+ known to insult persons of respectability for repeating current
+ accounts of events, <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg278" id=
+ "pg278">278</a></span> sounding new and strange, which turned out
+ to be literally true; such as the red-hot shot at Gibraltar, or
+ the effects of the earthquake at Lisbon. Yet he could be lax when
+ it suited him, as speaking of epitaphs: "The writer of an epitaph
+ should not be considered as saying nothing but what is strictly
+ true. Allowance must be made for some degree of exaggerated
+ praise. In lapidary inscriptions a man is not upon oath." Is he
+ upon oath in narrating an anecdote? or could he do more than
+ swear to the best of his recollection and belief, if he was.
+ Boswell's notes of conversations are wonderful results of a
+ peculiar faculty, or combination of faculties, but the utmost
+ they can be supposed to convey is the substance of what took
+ place, in an exceedingly condensed shape, lighted up at intervals
+ by the <i>ipsissima verba</i>, of the speaker.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Whilst he went on talking triumphantly," says Boswell, "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.'" On his boasting of the
+ efficiency of his own system of short-hand to Johnson, he was put
+ to the test and failed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Piozzi at once admits and accounts for the inferiority of
+ her own collection of anecdotes, when she denounces "a trick
+ which I have seen played on common occasions, of sitting steadily
+ down at the other end of the room, to write at the moment what
+ should be said in company, either <i>by</i> Dr. Johnson or
+ <i>to</i> him, I never practised myself, nor approved of in
+ another. There <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg279" id=
+ "pg279">279</a></span> 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, and a conversation
+ assembly room would become tremendous as a court of justice."
+ This is a hit at Boswell, who (as regards Johnson himself) had
+ full licence to take notes the best way he could. Madame
+ D'Arblay's are much fuller, and bear a suspicious resemblance to
+ the dialogues in her novels.
+ </p>
+ <p class="break">
+ In a reply to Boswell, dated December 14th, 1793, Miss Seward
+ pointedly remarks:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Dr. Johnson's frequently-expressed contempt for Mrs. Thrale on
+ account of that want of veracity which he imputes to her, at
+ least as Mr. Boswell has recorded, either convicts him of
+ narrating what Johnson never said, or Johnson himself of that
+ insincerity of which there are too many instances, amidst all the
+ recorded proofs of his unprovoked personal rudeness, to those
+ with whom he conversed; for, this repeated contempt was coeval
+ with his published letters, which express such high and perfect
+ esteem for that lady, which declare that 'to hear her, was to
+ hear Wisdom, that to see her, was to see Virtue.'"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lord Macaulay and his advocate in the "Edinburgh Review," who
+ speak of Mrs. Piozzi's "white lies," have not convicted her of
+ one; and Mr. Croker bears strong testimony to her accuracy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Piozzi prefaces some instances of Johnson's rudeness and
+ harshness by the remark, that "he did not hate the persons he
+ treated with roughness, or <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg280"
+ id="pg280">280</a></span> despise them whom he drove from him by
+ apparent scorn. He really loved and respected many whom he would
+ not suffer to love him." Boswell echoes the remark, multiplies
+ the instances, and then accuses her of misrepresenting their
+ friend. After mentioning a discourteous reply to Robertson the
+ historian, which was subsequently confirmed by Boswell, she
+ proceeds to show that Johnson was no gentler to herself or those
+ for whom he had the greatest regard. "When I one day lamented the
+ loss of a first cousin, killed in America, 'Prithee, my dear
+ (said he), have done with canting: how would the world be worse
+ for it, I may ask, if all your relations were at once spitted
+ like larks and roasted for Presto's supper?'&mdash;Presto was the
+ dog that lay under the table." To this Boswell opposes the
+ version given by Baretti:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Mrs. Thrale, while supping very heartily upon larks, laid down
+ her knife and fork, and abruptly exclaimed, 'O, my dear 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 dressed for Presto's supper."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This version, assuming its truth, aggravates the personal
+ rudeness of the speech. But her marginal notes on the passage
+ are: "Boswell appealing to Baretti for a testimony of the truth
+ is comical enough! I never addressed <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg281" id="pg281">281</a></span> him (Johnson)
+ so familiarly in my life. I never did eat any supper, and there
+ were no larks to eat."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Upon mentioning this story to my friend Mr. Wilkes," adds
+ Boswell, "he pleasantly matched it with the following sentimental
+ anecdote. 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 200 louis d'ors. Mr. Wilkes
+ observed the behaviour of Mademoiselle, who sighed indeed very
+ piteously, and assumed every pathetic air of grief, but ate 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, "Excessive sorrow is
+ exceeding dry," but I never heard "Excessive sorrow is exceeding
+ hungry." Perhaps one hundred will do. The gentleman took the
+ hint." Mrs. Piozzi's marginal ebullition is: "Very like my hearty
+ supper of larks, who never eat supper at all, nor was ever a hot
+ dish seen on the table after dinner at Streatham Park."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two instances of inaccuracy, announced as particularly worthy of
+ notice, are supplied by "an eminent critic," understood to be
+ Malone, who begins by stating, "I have often been in his
+ (Johnson's) company, and never <i>once</i> heard him say a severe
+ thing to any one; and many others can attest the same." Malone
+ had lived very little with Johnson, and to appreciate his
+ evidence, we should know what he <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+ "pg282" id="pg282">282</a></span> and Boswell would agree to call
+ a severe thing. Once, on Johnson's observing that they had "good
+ talk" on the "preceding evening," "Yes, Sir," replied Boswell,
+ "you tossed and gored several persons." Do tossing and goring
+ come within the definition of severity? In another place he says,
+ "I have seen even Mrs. Thrale stunned;" and Miss Reynolds relates
+ that "One day at her own table he spoke so very roughly to her,
+ that every one present was surprised that she could bear it so
+ placidly; and on the ladies withdrawing, I expressed great
+ astonishment that Dr. Johnson should speak so harshly to her, but
+ to this she said no more than 'Oh, dear, good man.'"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One of the two instances of Mrs. Piozzi's inaccuracy is as
+ follows:&mdash;"He once bade a very celebrated lady (Hannah More)
+ 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 <i>him</i> with it."
+ </p>
+ <p class="break">
+ Now, exclaims Mr. Malone, let the genuine anecdote be contrasted
+ with this:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The person thus represented as being harshly treated, though a
+ very celebrated lady, 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, <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg283" id="pg283">283</a></span> she continued
+ still her eulogy. At length, provoked by this indelicate and
+ <i>vain</i> obtrusion of compliments, he exclaimed, 'Dearest
+ lady, consider with yourself what your flattery is worth, before
+ you bestow it so freely.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "How different does this story appear, when accompanied with all
+ those circumstances which really belong to it, but which Mrs.
+ Thrale either did not know, or has suppressed!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How do we know that these circumstances really belong to it? what
+ essential difference do they make? and how do they prove Mrs.
+ Thrale's inaccuracy, who expressly states the nature of the
+ probable, though certainly most inadequate, provocation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The other instance is a story which she tells on Mr. Thrale's
+ authority, of an argument between Johnson and a gentleman, which
+ the master of the house, a nobleman, tried to cut short by saying
+ loud enough for the doctor to hear, "Our friend has no meaning in
+ all this, except just to relate at the Club to-morrow how he
+ teased Johnson at dinner to-day; this is all to do himself
+ honour." "No, upon my word," replied the other, "I see no honour
+ in it, whatever you may do." "Well, Sir," returned Mr. Johnson
+ sternly, "if you do not see the honour, I am sure I feel the
+ disgrace." Malone, on the authority of a nameless friend, asserts
+ that it was not at the house of a nobleman, that the gentleman's
+ remark was uttered in a low tone, and that Johnson made no retort
+ at all. As Mrs. Piozzi could hardly have invented the story, the
+ sole question is, whether Mr. Thrale or Malone's friend was
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg284" id="pg284">284</a></span>
+ right. She has written in the margin: "It was the house of Thomas
+ Fitzmaurice, son to Lord Shelburne, and Pottinger the
+ hero."<span class="fnref">[1]</span>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Mrs. Piozzi," says Boswell, "has given a similar
+ misrepresentation of Johnson's treatment of Garrick in this
+ particular (as to the Club), as if he had used these contemptuous
+ expressions: 'If Garrick does apply, I'll blackball him. Surely
+ one ought to sit in a society like ours&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ "'Unelbow'd by a gamester, pimp, or player.'"
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ The lady retorts, "He did say so, and Mr. Thrale stood
+ astonished." Johnson was constantly depreciating the profession
+ of the stage.<span class="fnref">[2]</span>
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] "Being in company with Count Z&mdash;&mdash;, at Lord
+ &mdash;&mdash;'s table, the Count thinking the Doctor too
+ dogmatical, observed, he did not at all think himself honoured
+ by the conversation.' And what is to become of me, my lord, who
+ feel myself actually disgraced?"&mdash;<i>Johnsoniana</i>, p.
+ 143, first edition.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [2] "<i>Boswell</i>. There, Sir, you are always heretical, you
+ never will allow merit to a player. <i>Johnson</i>. Merit, Sir,
+ what merit? Do you respect a rope-dancer or a
+ ballad-singer?"&mdash;<i>Boswell's Life of Johnson</i>, p. 556.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Whilst finding fault with Mrs. Piozzi for inaccuracy in another
+ place, Boswell supplies an additional example of Johnson's
+ habitual disregard of the ordinary rules of good breeding in
+ society:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "A learned gentleman [Dr. Vansittart], who, in the course of
+ conversation, wished to inform us of this simple fact, that the
+ council upon the circuit of Shrewsbury were much bitten by fleas,
+ took, I suppose, seven or eight minutes in relating it
+ circumstantially. He in a <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg285"
+ id="pg285">285</a></span> plenitude of phrase told us, that large
+ bales of woollen cloth were lodged in the town-hall; that by
+ reason of this, fleas nestled there in prodigious numbers; that
+ the lodgings of the council were near the town-hall; and that
+ those little animals moved from place to place with wonderful
+ agility. Johnson sat in great impatience till the gentleman had
+ finished his tedious narrative, and then burst out (playfully
+ however), 'It is a pity, Sir, that you have not seen a lion; for
+ a flea has taken you such a time, that a lion must have served
+ you a twelve-month.'"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He complains in a note that Mrs. Piozzi, to whom he told the
+ anecdote, has related it "as if the gentleman had given the
+ natural history of the mouse." But, in a letter to Johnson she
+ tells <i>him</i> "I have seen the man that saw the mouse," and he
+ replies "Poor V&mdash;&mdash;, he is a good man, &amp;c.;" so
+ that her version of the story is the best authenticated. Opposite
+ Boswell's aggressive paragraph she has written: "I saw old
+ Mitchell of Brighthelmstone affront him (Johnson) terribly once
+ about fleas. Johnson, being tired of the subject, expressed his
+ impatience of it with coarseness. 'Why, Sir,' said the old man,
+ 'why should not Flea bite o'me be treated as Phlebotomy? It
+ empties the capillary vessels.'"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Boswell's Life of Johnson was not published till 1791; but the
+ controversy kindled by the Tour to the Hebrides and the
+ Anecdotes, raged fiercely enough to fix general attention and
+ afford ample scope for ridicule: "The Bozzi &amp;c. subjects,"
+ writes Hannah More <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg286" id=
+ "pg286">286</a></span> in April 1786, "are not exhausted, though
+ everybody seems heartily sick of them. Everybody, however,
+ conspires not to let them drop. <i>That</i>, the Cagliostro, and
+ the Cardinal's necklace, spoil all conversation, and destroyed a
+ very good evening at Mr. Pepys' last night." In one of Walpole's
+ letters about the same time we find:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "All conversation turns on a trio of culprits&mdash;Hastings,
+ Fitzgerald, and the Cardinal de Rohan.... So much for tragedy.
+ Our comic performers are Boswell and Dame Piozzi. The cock
+ biographer has fixed a direct lie on the hen, by an advertisement
+ in which he affirms that he communicated his manuscript to Madame
+ Thrale, and that she made no objection to what he says of her low
+ opinion of Mrs. Montagu's book. It is very possible that it might
+ not be her real opinion, but was uttered in compliment to
+ Johnson, or for fear he should spit in her face if she disagreed
+ with him; but how will she get over her not objecting to the
+ passage remaining? She must have known, by knowing Boswell, and
+ by having a similar intention herself, that his 'Anecdotes' would
+ certainly be published: in short, the ridiculous woman will be
+ strangely disappointed. As she must have heard that <i>the whole
+ first impression of her book was sold the first day</i>, no doubt
+ she expected on her landing, to be received like the governor of
+ Gibraltar, and to find the road strewed with branches of palm.
+ She, and Boswell, and their Hero, are the joke of the public. A
+ Dr. Walcot, <i>soi-disant</i> Peter Pindar, has published a
+ burlesque eclogue, in which Boswell and the Signora are the
+ interlocutors, and all <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg287" id=
+ "pg287">287</a></span> the absurdest passages in the works of
+ both are ridiculed. The print-shops teem with satiric prints in
+ them: one in which Boswell, as a monkey, is riding on Johnson,
+ the bear, has this witty inscription, 'My Friend
+ <i>delineavit</i>.' But enough of these mountebanks."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What Walpole calls the absurdest passages are precisely those
+ which possess most interest for posterity; namely, the minute
+ personal details, which bring Johnson home to the mind's eye.
+ Peter Pindar, however, was simply labouring in his vocation when
+ he made the best of them, as in the following lines. His satire
+ is in the form of a Town Eclogue, in which Bozzy and Madame
+ Piozzi contend in anecdotes, with Hawkins for umpire:
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <h4>
+ BOZZY.
+ </h4>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ "One Thursday morn did Doctor Johnson wake,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And call out 'Lanky, Lanky,' by mistake&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But recollecting&mdash;'Bozzy, Bozzy,' cry'd&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For in <i>contractions</i> Johnson took a pride!"
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <h4>
+ MADAME PIOZZI.
+ </h4>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ "I ask'd him if he knock'd Tom Osborn down;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As such a tale was current through the town,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Says I, 'Do tell me, Doctor, what befell.'&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Why, dearest lady, there is nought to <i>tell</i>;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I ponder'd on the <i>proper'st</i> mode to <i>treat</i>
+ him&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'The dog was impudent, and so I beat him!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Tom, like a fool, proclaim'd his fancied wrongs;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ '<i>Others</i>, that I belabour'd, held their tongues.'"
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ "Did any one, that he was <i>happy</i>, cry&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Johnson would tell him plumply, 'twas a lie.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A Lady told him she was really so;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On which he sternly answer'd, 'Madam, no! <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg288" id="pg288">288</a></span>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Sickly you are, and ugly&mdash;foolish, poor;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'And therefore can't he happy, I am sure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ''Twould make a fellow hang himself, whose ear
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Were, from such creatures, forc'd such stuff to hear.'"
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <h4>
+ BOZZY.
+ </h4>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ "Lo, when we landed on the Isle of Mull,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The megrims got into the Doctor's skull:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With such bad humours he began to fill,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I thought he would not go to Icolmkill:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But lo! those megrims (wonderful to utter!)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Were banish'd all by tea and bread and butter!"
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ At last they get angry, and tell each other a few home
+ truths:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <h4>
+ BOZZY.
+ </h4>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ "How could your folly tell, so void of truth,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That miserable story of the youth,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Who, in your book, of Doctor Johnson begs
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Most seriously to know if cats laid eggs!"
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <h4>
+ MADAME PIOZZI.
+ </h4>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ "<i>Who</i> told of Mistress Montagu the lie&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So palpable a falsehood?&mdash;Bozzy, fie!"
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <h4>
+ BOZZY.
+ </h4>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ "<i>Who</i>, madd'ning with an anecdotic itch,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Declar'd that Johnson call'd his mother <i>b-tch?</i>"
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <h4>
+ MADAME PIOZZI.
+ </h4>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ "<i>Who</i>, from M'Donald's rage to save his snout,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cut twenty lines of defamation out?"
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <h4>
+ BOZZY.
+ </h4>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ "<i>Who</i> would have said a word about Sam's wig,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Or told the story of the peas and pig?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Who would have told a tale so very flat,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of Frank the Black, and Hodge the mangy cat?"
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <h4>
+ MADAME PIOZZI.
+ </h4>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ "Good me! you're grown at once confounded <i>tender</i>;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of Doctor Johnson's fame a <i>fierce</i> defender:
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg289" id=
+ "pg289">289</a></span>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I'm sure you've mention'd many a pretty story
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not much redounding to the Doctor's glory.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Now</i> for a <i>saint</i> upon us you would palm
+ him&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ First <i>murder</i> the poor man, and then <i>embalm
+ him!</i>"
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <h4>
+ BOZZY.
+ </h4>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ "Well, Ma'am! since all that Johnson said or wrote,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ You hold so sacred, how have you forgot
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To grant the wonder-hunting world a reading
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of Sam's Epistle, just before your <i>wedding</i>:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Beginning thus, (in strains not form'd to flatter) 'Madam,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ '<i>If that most ignominious matter</i>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ '<i>Be not concluded</i>'&mdash;<span class="fnref">[1]</span>
+ </p>Farther shall I say?
+ <p>
+ No&mdash;we shall have it from <i>yourself</i> some day,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To justify your passion for the <i>Youth</i>,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With all the charms of eloquence and truth."
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <h4>
+ MADAME PIOZZI.
+ </h4>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ "What was my marriage, Sir, to <i>you</i> or <i>him?</i>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>He</i> tell me what to do!&mdash;a pretty whim!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>He</i>, to <i>propriety</i>, (the beast) <i>resort!</i>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As well might <i>elephants preside</i> at <i>court</i>.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lord! let the world to <i>damn</i> my match <i>agree;</i>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Good God! James Boswell, what's <i>that world</i> to
+ <i>me?</i>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The folks who paid respects to Mistress Thrale,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fed on her pork, poor souls! and swill'd her ale,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ May <i>sicken</i> at Piozzi, nine in ten&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Turn up the nose of scorn&mdash;good God! what then?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For <i>me</i>, the Dev'l may fetch their souls so
+ <i>great</i>;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>They</i> keep their homes, and <i>I</i>, thank God, my
+ meat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When they, poor owls! shall beat their cage, a jail,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I, unconfin'd, shall spread my peacock tail;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Free as the birds of air, enjoy my ease,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Choose my own food, and see what climes I please.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>I</i> suffer only&mdash;if I'm in the wrong:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So, now, you prating puppy, hold your tongue."
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] This evidently referred to the "adumbration" of Johnson's
+ letter (No. 4), <i>antè</i>, p. 239. <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg290" id="pg290">290</a></span>
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Walpole's opinion of the book itself had been expressed in a
+ preceding letter, dated March 28th, 1786:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Two days ago appeared Madame Piozzi's Anecdotes of Dr. Johnson.
+ I am lamentably disappointed&mdash;in her, I mean: not in him. I
+ had conceived a favourable opinion of her capacity. But this new
+ book is wretched; a high-varnished preface to a heap of rubbish
+ in a very vulgar style, and too void of method even for such a
+ farrago. . . The Signora talks of her doctor's <i>expanded</i>
+ mind and has contributed her mite to show that never mind was
+ narrower. In fact, the poor woman is to be pitied: he was mad,
+ and his disciples did not find it out<span class=
+ "fnref">[1]</span>, but have unveiled all his defects; nay, have
+ exhibited all his brutalities as wit, and his worst conundrums as
+ humour. Judge! The Piozzi relates that a young man asking him
+ where Palmyra was, he replied: 'In Ireland: it was a bog planted
+ with palm trees.'"
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] See <i>antè</i>, p. 202 and 270.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Walpole's statement, that the whole first impression was sold the
+ first day, is confirmed by one of her letters, and may be placed
+ alongside of a statement of Johnson's reported in the book.
+ Clarissa being mentioned as a perfect character, "on the contrary
+ (said he) you may observe that there is always something which
+ she prefers to truth. Fielding's Amelia was the most pleasing
+ heroine of all the romances; but that vile broken nose never
+ cured, ruined the sale of perhaps the only book, which, being
+ printed off betimes one morning, a new edition was called for
+ before night." <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg291" id=
+ "pg291">291</a></span>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the king sent for a copy of the "Anecdotes" on the evening
+ of the publication, there was none to be had.
+ </p>
+ <p class="break">
+ In April, 1786, Hannah More writes:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Mrs. Piozzi's book is much in fashion. It is indeed
+ entertaining, but there are two or three passages exceedingly
+ unkind to Garrick which filled me with indignation. If Johnson
+ had been envious enough to utter them, she might have been
+ prudent enough to suppress them."
+ </p>
+ <p class="break">
+ In a preceding letter she had said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Boswell tells me he is printing anecdotes of Dr. Johnson, not
+ his <i>life</i>, but, as he has the vanity to call it, his
+ <i>pyramid</i>, I besought his tenderness for our virtuous and
+ most revered departed friend, and begged he would mitigate some
+ of his asperities. He said roughly, he would not cut off his
+ claws, nor make a tiger a cat to please anybody." The retort will
+ serve for both Mrs. Piozzi and himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Piozzi writes from Venice, May 20th, 1786: "Cadell says he
+ never yet published a work the sale of which was so rapid, and
+ that rapidity of so long continuance. I suppose the fifth edition
+ will meet me at my return."
+ </p>
+ <p class="quotdate">
+ "Milan, July 6th, 1786.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If Cadell would send me some copies, I should be very much
+ obliged to him. <i>'Tis like living without a looking-glass never
+ to see one's own book so</i>."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The copy of the "Anecdotes" in my possession has two inscriptions
+ on the blank leaves before the title-page. The one is in Mrs.
+ Piozzi's handwriting: "This <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg292"
+ id="pg292">292</a></span> little dirty book is kindly accepted by
+ Sir James Fellowes from his obliged friend, H.L. Piozzi, 14th
+ February, 1816;" the other: "This copy of the 'Anecdotes' was
+ found at Bath, covered with dirt, the book having been long out
+ of print<span class="fnref">[1]</span>, and after being bound was
+ presented to me by my excellent friend, H.L.P. (signed) J.F."
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] The "Anecdotes" were reprinted by Messrs. Longman in 1856,
+ and form part of their "Traveller's Library."
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ It is enriched by marginal notes in her handwriting, which enable
+ us to fill up a few puzzling blanks, besides supplying some
+ information respecting men and books, which will be prized by all
+ lovers of literature.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One of the anecdotes runs thus: "I asked him once concerning the
+ conversation powers of a gentleman with whom I was myself
+ unacquainted. 'He talked to me at the Club one day (replies our
+ Doctor) concerning Catiline's conspiracy; so I withdrew my
+ attention, and thought about Tom Thumb.'"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the margin is written "Charles James Fox." Mr. Croker came to
+ the conclusion that the gentleman was Mr. Vesey. Boswell says
+ that Fox never talked with any freedom in the presence of
+ Johnson, who accounted for his reserve by suggesting that a man
+ who is used to the applause of the House of Commons, has no wish
+ for that of a private company. But the real cause was his
+ sensitiveness to rudeness, his own temper being singularly sweet.
+ By an odd coincidence he occupied the presidential chair at the
+ Club on the evening when Johnson emphatically declared patriotism
+ the last refuge of a scoundrel. <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+ "pg293" id="pg293">293</a></span>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Again: "On an occasion of less consequence, when he turned his
+ back on Lord Bolingbroke in the rooms of Brighthelmstone, he made
+ this excuse: 'I am not obliged, Sir,' said he to Mr. Thrale, who
+ stood fretting, 'to find reasons for respecting the rank of him
+ who will not condescend to declare it by his dress or some other
+ visible mark: what are stars and other signs of superiority made
+ for?' The next evening, however, he made us comical amends, by
+ sitting by the same nobleman, and haranguing very loudly about
+ the nature, and use, and abuse, of divorces. Many people gathered
+ round them to hear what was said, and when my husband called him
+ away, and told him to whom he had been talking, received an
+ answer which I will not write down."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The marginal note is: "He said: 'Why, Sir, I did not know the
+ man. If he will put on no other mark of distinction, let us make
+ him wear his horns.'" Lord Bolingbroke had divorced his wife,
+ afterwards Lady Diana Beauclerc, for infidelity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A marginal note naming the lady of quality (Lady Catherine Wynne)
+ mentioned in the following anecdote, verifies Mr. Croker's
+ conjectural statement concerning her:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "For a lady of quality, since dead, who received us at her
+ husband's seat in Wales, with less attention than he had long
+ been accustomed to, he had a rougher denunciation: 'That woman,'
+ cries Johnson, 'is like sour small beer, the beverage of her
+ table, and produce of the wretched country she lives in: like
+ that, she could <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg294" id=
+ "pg294">294</a></span> never have been a good thing, and even
+ that bad thing is spoiled.' It was in the same vein of asperity,
+ and I believe with something like the same provocation, that he
+ observed of a Scotch lady, 'that she resembled a dead nettle;
+ were she alive,' said he, 'she would sting.'"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From similar notes we learn that the "somebody" who declared
+ Johnson "a tremendous converser" was George Grarrick; and that it
+ was Dr. Delap, of Sussex, to whom, when lamenting the tender
+ state of his <i>inside</i>, he cried out: "Dear Doctor, do not be
+ like the spider, man, and spin conversation thus incessantly out
+ of thy own bowels."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the margin of the page in which Hawkins Browne is commended as
+ the most delightful of conversers, she has written: "Who wrote
+ the 'Imitation of all the Poets' in his own ludicrous verses,
+ praising the pipe of tobacco. Of Hawkins Browne, the pretty Mrs.
+ Cholmondeley said she was soon tired; because the first hour he
+ was so dull, there was no bearing him; the second he was so
+ witty, there was no bearing him; the third he was so drunk, there
+ was no bearing him." <span class="fnref">[1]</span>
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] Query, whether this is the gentleman immortalised by Peter
+ Plymley: "In the third year of his present Majesty (George
+ III.) and in the thirtieth of his own age, Mr. Isaac Hawkins
+ Brown, then upon his travels, danced one evening at the court
+ of Naples. His dress was a volcano silk, with lava buttons.
+ Whether (as the Neapolitan wits said) he had studied dancing
+ under Saint Vitus, or whether David, dancing in a linen vest,
+ was his model, is not known; but Mr. Brown danced with such
+ inconceivable alacrity and vigour, that he threw the Queen of
+ Naples into convulsions of laughter, which terminated in a
+ miscarriage, and changed the dynasty of the Neapolitan throne."
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg295" id="pg295">295</a></span>
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ In the "Anecdotes" she relates that one day in Wales she meant to
+ please Johnson with a dish of young peas. "Are they not
+ charming?" said I, while he was eating them. "Perhaps," said he,
+ "they would be so&mdash;to a pig;" meaning (according to the
+ marginal note), because they were too little boiled. Pennant, the
+ historian, used to tell this as having happened at Mrs. Cotton's,
+ who, according to him, called out, "Then do help yourself, Mr.
+ Johnson." But the well-known high breeding of the lady justifies
+ a belief that this is one of the many repartees which, if
+ conceived, were never uttered at the time.<span class=
+ "fnref">[1]</span>
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] I have heard on good authority that Pennant afterwards
+ owned it as his own invention.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ When a Lincolnshire lady, shewing Johnson a grotto, asked him:
+ "Would it not be a pretty cool habitation in summer?" he replied:
+ "I think it would, Madam, <i>for a toad</i>." Talking of Gray's
+ Odes, he said, "They are forced plants, raised in a hotbed; 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."
+ "Yes, Sir," said Johnson, "<i>for a hog</i>."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To return to the Anecdotes:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Of the various states and conditions of humanity, he despised
+ none more, I think, than the man who marries for maintenance: and
+ of a friend who made his alliance on no higher principles, he
+ said once, 'Now <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg296" id=
+ "pg296">296</a></span> has that fellow,' it was a nobleman of
+ whom we were speaking, 'at length obtained a certainty of three
+ meals a day, and for that certainty, like his brother dog in the
+ fable, he will get his neck galled for life with a collar.'" The
+ nobleman was Lord Sandys.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He recommended, on something like the same principle, that when
+ one person meant to serve another, he should not go about it
+ slily, or, as we say, underhand, out of a false idea of delicacy,
+ to surprise one's friend with an unexpected favour; 'which, ten
+ to one,' says he, 'fails to oblige your acquaintance, who had
+ some reasons against such a mode of obligation, which you might
+ have known but for that superfluous cunning which you think an
+ elegance. Oh! never be seduced by such silly pretences,'
+ continued he; 'if a wench wants a good gown, do not give her a
+ fine smelling-bottle, because that is more delicate: as I once
+ knew a lady lend the key of her library to a poor scribbling
+ dependant, as if she took the woman for an ostrich that could
+ digest iron.'" This lady was Mrs. Montagu.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I mentioned two friends who were particularly fond of looking at
+ themselves in a glass&mdash;'They do not surprise me at all by so
+ doing,' said Johnson: 'they see reflected in that glass, men who
+ have risen from almost the lowest situations in life; one to
+ enormous riches, the other to everything this world can
+ give&mdash;rank, fame, and fortune. They see, likewise, men who
+ have merited their advancement by the exertion and improvement of
+ those talents which God had given them; and I see not why they
+ should avoid the mirror.'" The one, she <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg297" id="pg297">297</a></span> writes, was
+ Mr. Cator, the other, Wedderburne. Another great lawyer and very
+ ugly man, Dunning, Lord Ashburton, was remarkable for the same
+ peculiarity, and had his walls covered with looking-glasses. His
+ personal vanity was excessive; and his boast that a celebrated
+ courtesan had died with one of his letters in her hand, provoked
+ one of Wilkes's happiest repartees.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Opposite a passage descriptive of Johnson's conversation she has
+ written: "We used to say to one another familiarly at Streatham
+ Park, 'Come, let us go into the library, and make Johnson speak
+ Ramblers.'"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dr. Lort writes to Bishop Percy:
+ </p>
+ <p class="quotdate">
+ "December 16th, 1786.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I had a letter lately from Mrs. Piozzi, dated Vienna, November
+ 4, in which she says that, after visiting Prague and Dresden, she
+ shall return home by Brussels, whither I have written to her; and
+ I imagine she will be in London early in the new year. Miss
+ Thrale is at her own house at Brighthelmstone, accompanied by a
+ very respectable companion, an officer's widow, recommended to
+ her as such.<span class="fnref">[1]</span> There is a new life of
+ Johnson published by a Dr. Towers, a Dissenting minister and Dr.
+ Kippis's associate in the Biographia Britannica, for which work I
+ take it for granted this life is to be hashed up again when the
+ letter 'J' takes its turn. There is nothing new in it; and the
+ author gives Johnson and his biographers all fair play, except
+ when he treats of <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg298" id=
+ "pg298">298</a></span> his political opinions and pamphlets. I
+ was glad to hear that Johnson confessed to Dr. Fordyce, a little
+ before his death, that he had offended both God and man by his
+ pride of understanding.<span class="fnref">[2]</span> Sir John
+ Hawkins' Life of him is also finished, and will be published with
+ the works in February next. From all these I suppose Boswell will
+ borrow largely to make up his quarto life;&mdash;and so our
+ modern authors proceed, preying on one another, and complaining
+ sorely of each other."
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] The Hon. Mrs. Murray, afterwards Mrs. Aust!
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [2] He used very different language to Langton.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p class="quotdate">
+ "March 8th, 1787.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I had a letter lately from Mrs. Piozzi from Brussels, intimating
+ that she should soon be in England, and I expect every day to
+ hear of her arrival. I do not believe that she purchased a
+ marquisate abroad; but it is said, with some probability, that
+ she will here get the King's license, or an act of Parliament, to
+ change her name to Salusbury, her maiden name. Sir John Hawkins,
+ I am told, bears hard upon her in his 'Life of Johnson.'"
+ </p>
+ <p class="quotdate">
+ "March 21st, 1787.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Mr. and Mrs. Piozzi are arrived at an hotel in Pall Mall, and
+ are about to take a house in Hanover Square; they were with me
+ last Saturday evening, when I asked some of her friends to meet
+ her; she looks very well, and seems in good spirits; told me she
+ had been that morning at the bank to get 'Johnson's
+ Correspondence' amongst other papers, which she means forthwith
+ to commit to the press. There is a bookseller has printed
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg299" id="pg299">299</a></span>
+ two supplementary volumes to Hawkins' eleven, consisting almost
+ wholly of the 'Lilliputian Speeches.' Hawkins has printed a
+ Review of the 'Sublime and Beautiful' as Johnson's, which Murphy
+ says was his."
+ </p>
+ <p class="quotdate">
+ "March 13th, 1787.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Mrs. Piozzi and her <i>caro sposo</i> seem very happy here at a
+ good house in Hanover Square, where I am invited to a rout next
+ week, the first I believe she has attempted, and then will be
+ seen who of her old acquaintance continue such. She is now
+ printing Johnson's Letters in 2 vols. octavo, with some of her
+ own; but if they are not ready before the recess they will not be
+ published till next winter. Poor Sir John Hawkins, I am told, is
+ pulled all to pieces in the Review." Sir John was treated
+ according to his deserts, and did not escape whipping. One of the
+ severest castigations was inflicted by Porson.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before mentioning her next publication, I will show from
+ "Thraliana" her state of mind when about to start for England,
+ and her impressions of things and people on her return:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "1786.&mdash;It has always been my maxim never to influence the
+ inclination of another: Mr. Thrale, in consequence, lived with me
+ seventeen and a half years, during which time I tried but twice
+ to persuade him to <i>do</i> anything, and but once, and that in
+ vain, to let anything alone. Even my daughters, as soon as they
+ could reason, were always allowed, and even encouraged, by me to
+ reason their own way, and not suffer their <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg300" id="pg300">300</a></span> respect or
+ affection for me to mislead their judgment. Let us keep the mind
+ clear if we can from prejudices, or truth will never be found at
+ all.<span class="fnref">[1]</span> The worst part of this
+ disinterested scheme is, that other people are not of my mind,
+ and if I resolve not to use my lawful influence to make my
+ children love me, the lookers-on will soon use their unlawful
+ influence to make them hate me: if I scrupulously avoid
+ persuading my husband to become a Lutheran or be of the English
+ church, the Romanists will be diligent to teach him all the
+ narrowness and bitterness of their own unfeeling sect, and soon
+ persuade him that it is not delicacy but weakness makes me desist
+ from the combat. Well! let me do right, and leave the
+ consequences in His hand who alone sees every action's motive and
+ the true cause of every effect: let me endeavour to please God,
+ and to have only my own faults and follies, not those of another,
+ to answer for."
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] "Clear your mind of <i>cant</i>."&mdash;JOHNSON.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ "1787, <i>May</i> 1<i>st</i>.&mdash;It was not wrong to come home
+ after all, but very right. The Italians would have said we were
+ afraid to face England, and the English would have said we were
+ confined abroad in prisons or convents or some stuff. I find Mr.
+ Smith (one of our daughter's guardians) told that poor baby
+ Cecilia a fine staring tale how my husband locked me up at Milan
+ and fed me on bread and water, to make the child hate Mr. Piozzi.
+ Good God! What infamous proceeding was this! My husband never saw
+ the fellow, so could not have provoked him." <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg301" id="pg301">301</a></span>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>May</i> 19<i>th</i>.&mdash;We bad a fine assembly last night
+ indeed: in my best days I never had finer: there were near a
+ hundred people in the rooms which were besides much admired."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "1788, <i>January</i> 1<i>st</i>.&mdash;How little I thought this
+ day four years that I should celebrate this 1st of January, 1788,
+ here at Bath, surrounded with friends and admirers? The public
+ partial to <i>me</i>, and almost every individual whose kindness
+ is worth wishing for, sincerely attached to my husband."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Mrs. Byron is converted by Piozzi's assiduity, she really likes
+ him now: and sweet Mrs. Lambert told everybody at Bath she was in
+ love with him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have passed a delightful winter in spite of them, caressed by
+ my friends, adored by my husband, amused with every entertainment
+ that is going forward: what need I think about three sullen
+ Misses? ... and yet!"&mdash;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>August</i> 1<i>st</i>&mdash;Baretti has been grossly abusive
+ in the 'European Magazine' to me: <i>that</i> hurts me but
+ little; what shocks me is that those treacherous Burneys should
+ abet and puff him. He is a most ungrateful because unprincipled
+ wretch; but I <i>am</i> sorry that anything belonging to Dr.
+ Burney should be so monstrously wicked."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "1789, <i>January</i> 17<i>th</i>.&mdash;Mrs. Siddons dined in a
+ coterie of my unprovoked enemies yesterday at Porteous's. She
+ mentioned our concerts, and the Erskines lamented their absence
+ from one we gave two days ago, at which Mrs. Garrick was present
+ and gave a good report to the <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+ "pg302" id="pg302">302</a></span> <i>Blues</i>. Charming Blues!
+ blue with venom I think; I suppose they begin to be ashamed of
+ their paltry behaviour. Mrs. Grarrick, more prudent than any of
+ them, left a loophole for returning friendship to fasten through,
+ and it <i>shall</i> fasten: that woman has lived a <i>very wise
+ life</i>, regular and steady in her conduct, attentive to every
+ word she speaks and every step she treads, decorous in her
+ manners and graceful in her person. My fancy forms the Queen just
+ like Mrs. Grarrick: they are countrywomen and have, as the phrase
+ is, had a hard card to play; yet never lurched by tricksters nor
+ subdued by superior powers, they will rise from the table unhurt
+ either by others or themselves ... having played a <i>saving
+ game. I</i> have run risques to be sure, that I have; yet&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ "'When after some distinguished leap
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She drops her pole and seems to slip,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Straight gath'ring all her active strength,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She rises higher half her length;'
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ and better than <i>now</i> I have never stood with the world in
+ general, I believe. May the books just sent to press confirm the
+ partiality of the Public!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "1789, <i>January</i>.&mdash;I have a great deal more prudence
+ than people suspect me for: they think I act by chance while I am
+ doing nothing in the world unintentionally, and have never, I
+ dare say, in these last fifteen years uttered a word to husband,
+ or child, or servant, or friend, without being very careful what
+ it should be. Often have I spoken what I have repented after, but
+ that was want of <i>judgment</i>, not of <i>meaning</i>. What I
+ said I <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg303" id=
+ "pg303">303</a></span> meant to say at the time, and thought it
+ best to say, ... I do not err from haste or a spirit of rattling,
+ as people think I do: when I err, 'tis because I make a false
+ conclusion, not because I make no conclusion at all; when I
+ rattle, I rattle on purpose."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "1789, <i>May</i> 1<i>st</i>.&mdash;Mrs. Montagu wants to make up
+ with me again. I dare say she does; but I will not be taken and
+ left even at the pleasure of those who are much nearer and dearer
+ to me than Mrs. Montagu. We want no flash, no flattery. I never
+ had more of either in my life, nor ever lived half so happily:
+ Mrs. Montagu wrote creeping letters when she wanted my help, or
+ foolishly <i>thought</i> she did, and then turned her back upon
+ me and set her adherents to do the same. I despise such conduct,
+ and Mr. Pepys, Mrs. Ord, &amp;c. now sneak about and look ashamed
+ of themselves&mdash;well they may!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "1790, <i>March</i> 18<i>th</i>.&mdash;I met Miss Burney at an
+ assembly last night&mdash;'tis six years since I had seen her:
+ she appeared most fondly rejoyced, in good time! and Mrs. Locke,
+ at whose house we stumbled on each other, pretended that she had
+ such a regard for me, &amp;c. I answered with ease and coldness,
+ but in exceeding good humour: and we talked of the King and
+ Queen, his Majesty's illness and recovery ... and all ended, as
+ it should do, with perfect indifference."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I saw <i>Master Pepys</i><span class="fnref">[1]</span> too and
+ Mrs. Ord; and only see how foolish and how mortified the people
+ do but look."
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] This is Sir W. Pepys mentioned <i>antè</i>, p. 252.
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg304" id="pg304">304</a></span>
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ "Barclay and Perkins live very genteelly. I dined with them at
+ our brewhouse one day last week. I felt so oddly in the old house
+ where I had lived so long."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Pepyses find out that they have used me very ill.... I hope
+ they find out too that I do not care, Seward too sues for
+ reconcilement underhand ... so they do all; and I sincerely
+ forgive them&mdash;but, like the linnet in 'Metastasio'&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ "'Cauto divien per prova
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nè più tradir si fà.'
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ "'When lim'd, the poor bird thus with eagerness strains,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nor regrets his torn wing while his freedom he gains:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The loss of his plumage small time will restore,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And once tried the false twig&mdash;it shall cheat him no
+ more.'"
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ "1790, <i>July</i> 28<i>th</i>.&mdash;We have kept our seventh
+ wedding day and celebrated our return to <i>this
+ house</i><span class="fnref">[1]</span> with prodigious splendour
+ and gaiety. Seventy people to dinner.... Never was a pleasanter
+ day seen, and at night the trees and front of the house were
+ illuminated with coloured lamps that called forth our neighbours
+ from all the adjacent villages to admire and enjoy the diversion.
+ Many friends swear that not less than a thousand men, women, and
+ children might have been counted in the house and grounds, where,
+ though all were admitted, nothing was stolen, lost, or broken, or
+ even damaged&mdash;a circumstance almost incredible; and which
+ gave Mr. Piozzi a high opinion of English gratitude and
+ respectful attachment."
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] Streatham. <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg305" id=
+ "pg305">305</a></span>
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ "1790, <i>December 1st</i>.&mdash;Dr. Parr and I are in
+ correspondence, and his letters are very flattering: I am proud
+ of his notice to be sure, and he seems pleased with my
+ acknowledgments of esteem: he is a prodigious scholar ... but in
+ the meantime I have lost Dr. Lort."<span class="fnref">[1]</span>
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] He died November 5th, 1790.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ In the Conway Notes, she thus sums up her life from March 1787 to
+ 1791:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "On first reaching London, we drove to the Royal Hotel in Pall
+ Mall, and, arriving early, I proposed going to the Play. There
+ was a small front box, in those days, which held only two; it
+ made the division, or connexion, with the side boxes, and, being
+ unoccupied, we sat in it, and saw Mrs. Siddons act Imogen, I well
+ remember, and Mrs. Jordan, Priscilla Tomboy. Mr. Piozzi was
+ amused, and the next day was spent in looking at houses, counting
+ the cards left by old acquaintances, &amp;c. The lady-daughters
+ came, behaved with cold civility, and asked what I thought of
+ <i>their</i> decision concerning Cecilia, then at school. No
+ reply was made, or a gentle one; but she was the first cause of
+ contention among us. The lawyers gave her into my care, and we
+ took her home to our new habitation in Hanover Square, which we
+ opened with music, cards, &amp;c., on, I think, the 22nd March.
+ Miss Thrales refused their company; so we managed as well as we
+ could. Our affairs were in good order, and money ready for
+ spending. The World, as <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg306" id=
+ "pg306">306</a></span> it is called, appeared good-humoured, and
+ we were soon followed, respected, and admired. The summer months
+ sent us about visiting and pleasuring, ... and after another gay
+ London season, Streatham Park, unoccupied by tenants, called us
+ as if <i>really home</i>. Mr. Piozzi, with more generosity than
+ prudence, spent two thousand pounds on repairing and furnishing
+ it in 1790;&mdash;and we had danced all night, I recollect, when
+ the news came of Louis Seize's escape from, and recapture by, his
+ rebel subjects.'"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The following are some of the names most frequently mentioned in
+ her Diary as visiting or corresponding with her after her return
+ from Italy: Lord Fife, Dr. Moore, the Kembles, Dr. Currie, Mrs.
+ Lewis (widow of the Dean of Ossory), Dr. Lort, Sir Lucas Pepys,
+ Mr. Selwin, Sammy Lysons (<i>sic</i>), Sir Philip Clerke, Hon.
+ Mrs. Byron, Mrs. Siddons, Arthur Murphy, Mr. and Mrs. Whalley,
+ the Greatheads, Mr. Parsons, Miss Seward, Miss Lee, Dr. Barnard
+ (Bishop of Killaloe, better known as Dean of Derry), Hinchcliffe
+ (Bishop of Peterborough), Mrs. Lambert, the Staffords, Lord
+ Huntingdon, Lady Betty Cobb and her daughter Mrs. Gould, Lord
+ Dudley, Lord Cowper, Lord Pembroke, Marquis Araciel, Count
+ Marteningo, Count Meltze, Mrs. Drummond Smith, Mr. Chappelow,
+ Mrs. Hobart, Miss Nicholson, Mrs. Locke, Lord Deerhurst.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Resentment for her imputed unkindness to Johnson might have been
+ expected to last longest at his birthplace. But Miss Seward
+ writes from Lichfield, October 6th, 1787: <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg307" id="pg307">307</a></span>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Mrs. Piozzi completely answers your description: her
+ conversation is indeed that bright wine of the intellects which
+ has no lees.... I shall always feel indebted to him (Mr. Perkins)
+ for eight or nine hours of Mr. and Mrs. Piozzi's society. They
+ passed one evening here, and I the next with them at their inn."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Again to Miss Helen Williams, Lichfield, December, 25th, 1787:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, it is very true, on the evening he (Colonel Barry)
+ mentioned to you, when Mrs. Piozzi honoured this roof, his
+ conversation greatly contributed to its Attic spirit. Till that
+ day I had never conversed with her. There has been no
+ exaggeration, there could be none, in the description given you
+ of Mrs. Piozzi's talents for conversation; at least in the powers
+ of classic allusion and brilliant wit."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Piozzi's next publication was "Letters To and From the late
+ Samuel Johnson, LL.D., &amp;c." In the Preface she speaks of the
+ "Anecdotes" having been received with a degree of approbation she
+ hardly dared to hope, and exclaims, "May these Letters in some
+ measure pay my debt of gratitude! they will not surely be the
+ <i>first</i>, the <i>only</i> thing written by Johnson, with
+ which our nation has not been pleased." ... "The good taste by
+ which our countrymen are distinguished, will lead them to prefer
+ the native thoughts and unstudied phrases scattered over these
+ pages to the more laboured elegance of his other works; as bees
+ have been observed to reject roses, and fix upon the wild
+ fragrance of a neighbouring heath." <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg308" id="pg308">308</a></span>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whenever Johnson took pen in hand, the chances were, that what he
+ produced would belong to the composite order; the unstudied
+ phrases were reserved for his "talk;" and he wished his Letters
+ to be preserved.<span class="fnref">[1]</span> The main value of
+ these consists in the additional illustrations they afford of his
+ conduct in private life, and of his opinions on the management of
+ domestic affairs. The lack of literary and public interest is
+ admitted and excused:
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] "Do you keep my letters? I am not of your opinion that I
+ shall not like to read them hereafter."&mdash;<i>Letters</i>,
+ vol. i. p. 295.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ "None but domestic and familiar events can be expected from a
+ private correspondence; no reflexions but such as they excite can
+ be found there; yet whoever turns away disgusted by the
+ insipidity with which this, and I suppose every correspondence
+ must naturally and almost necessarily begin&mdash;will here be
+ likely to lose some genuine pleasure, and some useful knowledge
+ of what our heroic Milton was himself contented to respect, as
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ "'That which before thee lies in daily life.'
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ "And should I be charged with obtruding trifles on the public, I
+ might reply, that the meanest animals preserved in amber become
+ of value to those who form collections of natural history; that
+ the fish found in Monte Bolca serve as proofs of sacred writ; and
+ that the cart-wheel stuck in the rock of Tivoli, is now found
+ useful in computing the rotation of the earth." <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg309" id="pg309">309</a></span>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In "Thraliana" she thus refers to the reception of the book:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Letters are out. They were published on Saturday, 8th of
+ March. Cadell printed 2,000 copies, and says 1,100 are already
+ sold. My letter to Jack Rice on his marriage (Vol. i. p. 96),
+ seems the universal favourite. The book is well spoken of on the
+ whole; yet Cadell murmurs. I cannot make out why."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This entry is not dated; the next is dated March 27th, 1788.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This collection," says Boswell, "as a proof of the high
+ estimation set on any thing that came from his pen, was sold by
+ that lady for the sum of 500<i>l</i>." She has written on the
+ margin: "How spiteful."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Boswell states that "Horace Walpole thought Johnson a more
+ amiable character after reading his Letters to Mrs. Thrale, but
+ never was one of the true admirers of that great man." Madame
+ D'Arblay came to an opposite conclusion; in her Diary, January
+ 9th, 1788, she writes:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "To-day Mrs. Schwellenberg did me a real favour, and with real
+ good nature, for she sent me the letters of my poor lost friends,
+ Dr. Johnson and Mrs. Thrale, which she knew me to be almost
+ pining to procure. The book belongs to the Bishop of Carlisle,
+ who lent it to Mr. Turbulent, from whom it was again lent to the
+ Queen, and so passed on to Mrs. S. It is still unpublished. With
+ what a sadness have I been reading! What scenes has it revived!
+ What regrets renewed! These letters have not been more improperly
+ published in the whole than they are injudiciously displayed in
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg310" id="pg310">310</a></span>
+ their several parts. She has given all, every word, and thinks
+ that perhaps a justice to Dr. Johnson, which, in fact, is the
+ greatest injury to his memory.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The few she has selected of her own do her, indeed, much credit;
+ she has discarded all that were trivial and merely local, and
+ given only such as contain something instructive, amusing, or
+ ingenious."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She admits only four of Johnson's letters to be worthy of his
+ exalted powers: one upon Death, in considering its approach, as
+ we are surrounded, or not, by mourners; another upon the sudden
+ death of Mrs. Thrale's only son. Her chief motive for "almost
+ pining" for the book, steeped as she was in egotism, may be
+ guessed:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Our name once occurred; how I started at its sight! 'Tis to
+ mention the party that planned the first visit to our house."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She says she had so many attacks upon "her (Mrs. Piozzi's)
+ subject," that at last she fairly begged quarter. Yet nothing she
+ could say could put a stop to, "How can you defend her in this?
+ how can you justify her in that? &amp;c. &amp;c." "Alas! that I
+ cannot defend her is precisely the reason I can so ill bear to
+ speak of her. How differently and how sweetly has the Queen
+ conducted herself upon this occasion. Eager to see the Letters,
+ she began reading them with the utmost avidity. A natural
+ curiosity arose to be informed of several names and several
+ particulars, which she knew I could satisfy; yet when she
+ perceived how tender a string she touched, she soon suppressed
+ her inquiries, or <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg311" id=
+ "pg311">311</a></span> only made them with so much gentleness
+ towards the parties mentioned, that I could not be distressed in
+ my answers; and even in a short time I found her questions made
+ in so favourable a disposition, that I began secretly to rejoice
+ in them, as the means by which I reaped opportunity of clearing
+ several points that had been darkened by calumny, and of
+ softening others that had been viewed wholly through false
+ lights. To lessen disapprobation of a person, and so precious to
+ me in the opinion of another, so respectable both in rank and
+ virtue, was to me a most soothing task, &amp;c."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This is precisely what many will take the liberty to doubt; or
+ why did she shrink from it, or why did she not afford to others
+ the explanations which proved so successful with the Queen?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The day following (Jan. 10th), her feelings were so worked upon
+ by the harsh aspersions on her friend, that she was forced, she
+ tells us, abruptly to quit the room; leaving not her own (like
+ Sir Peter Teazle) but her friend's character behind her:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I returned when I could, and the subject was over. When all were
+ gone, Mrs. Schwellenberg said, 'I have told it Mr. Fisher, that
+ he drove you out from the room, and he says he won't do it no
+ more.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "She told me next, that in the second volume I also, was
+ mentioned. Where she may have heard this I cannot gather, but it
+ has given me a sickness at heart, inexpressible. It is not that I
+ expect severity; for at the time of that correspondence, at all
+ times indeed previous to the marriage with Piozzi, if Mrs. Thrale
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg312" id="pg312">312</a></span>
+ loved not F. B., where shall we find faith in words, or give
+ credit to actions. But her present resentment, however unjustly
+ incurred, of my constant disapprobation of her conduct, may
+ prompt some note, or other mark, to point out her change of
+ sentiment. But let me try to avoid such painful expectations; at
+ least not to dwell upon them. O, little does she know how
+ tenderly at this moment I could run into her arms, so often
+ opened to receive me with a cordiality I believed inalienable.
+ And it was sincere then, I am satisfied; pride, resentment of
+ disapprobation, and consciousness if unjustifiable
+ proceedings&mdash;these have now changed her; but if we met, and
+ she saw and believed my faithful regard, how would she again feel
+ all her own return! Well, what a dream I am making!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The ingrained worldliness of the diarist is ill-concealed by the
+ mask of sensibility. The correspondence that passed between the
+ ladies during their temporary rupture (<i>antè</i>, p. 230) shews
+ that there was nothing to prevent her from flying into her
+ friend's arms, could she have made up her mind to be seen on open
+ terms of affectionate intimacy with one who was repudiated by the
+ Court. In a subsequent conversation with which the Queen honoured
+ her on the subject, she did her best to impress her Majesty with
+ the belief that Mrs. Piozzi's conduct had rendered it impossible
+ for her former friends to allude to her without regret, and she
+ ended by thanking her royal mistress for her forbearance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Indeed," cried she, with eyes strongly expressive of the
+ complacency with which she heard me, "I have <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg313" id="pg313">313</a></span> always spoken
+ as little as possible upon this affair. I remember but twice that
+ I have named it: once I said to the Bishop of Carlisle that I
+ thought most of these letters had better have been spared the
+ printing; and once to Mr. Langton, at the drawing-room I said,
+ 'Your friend Dr. Johnson, Sir, has had many friends busy to
+ publish his books, and his memoirs, and his meditations, and his
+ thoughts; but I think he wanted one friend more.' 'What for,
+ Ma'am?' cried he. 'A friend to suppress them,' I answered. And,
+ indeed, this is all I ever said about the business."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hannah More's opinion of the Letters is thus expressed in her
+ Memoirs:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "They are such as ought to have been written but ought not to
+ have been printed: a few of them are very good: sometimes he is
+ moral, and sometimes he is kind. The imprudence of editors and
+ executors is an additional reason why men of parts should be
+ afraid to die.<span class="fnref">[1]</span> Burke said to me the
+ other day, in allusion to the innumerable lives, anecdotes,
+ remains, &amp;c. of this great man, 'How many maggots have
+ crawled out of that great body!'"
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] In reference to the late Lord Campbell's "Lives of the Lord
+ Chancellors," it was remarked, that, as regards persons who had
+ attained the dignity, the threatened continuation of the work
+ had added a new pang to death. I am assured by the
+ Ex-Chancellor to whom I attributed this joke, that it was made
+ by Sir Charles Wetherell at a dinner at Lincoln's-Inn.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Miss Seward writes to Mrs. Knowles, April, 1788:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And now what say you to the last publication of your sister wit,
+ Mrs. Piozzi? It is well that she has <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg314" id="pg314">314</a></span> had the good
+ nature to extract almost all the corrosive particles from the old
+ growler's letters. By means of her benevolent chemistry, these
+ effusions of that expansive but gloomy spirit taste more oily and
+ sweet than one could have imagined possible."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The letters contained two or three passages relating to Baretti,
+ which exasperated him to the highest pitch. One was in a letter
+ from Johnson, dated July 15th, 1775:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The doctor says, that if Mr. Thrale comes so near as Derby
+ without seeing us, it will be a sorry trick. I wish, for my part,
+ that he may return soon, and rescue the fair captives from the
+ tyranny of B&mdash;&mdash;i. Poor B&mdash;&mdash;i! do not
+ quarrel with him; to neglect him a little will be sufficient. He
+ means only to be frank, and manly, and independent, and perhaps,
+ as you say, a little wise. To be frank, he thinks is to be
+ cynical, and to be independent, is to be rude. Forgive him,
+ dearest lady, the rather, because of his misbehaviour, I am
+ afraid he learned part of me. I hope to set him hereafter a
+ better example."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The most galling was in a letter of hers to Dr. Johnson:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "How does Dr. Taylor do? He was very kind I remember when my
+ thunder-storm came first on, so was Count Manucci, so was Mrs.
+ Montagu, so was everybody. The world is not guilty of much
+ general harshness, nor inclined I believe to increase pain which
+ they do not perceive to be deserved.&mdash;Baretti alone tried to
+ irritate a wound so very deeply inflicted, and he will find few
+ to approve his cruelty. Your friendship <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg315" id="pg315">315</a></span> is our best
+ cordial; continue it to us, dear Sir, and write very soon."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the margin of the printed copy is written, "Cruel, cruel
+ Baretti." He had twitted her, whilst mourning over a dead child,
+ with having killed it by administering a quack medicine instead
+ of attending to the physician's prescriptions; a charge which he
+ acknowledged and repeated in print. He published three successive
+ papers in "The European Magazine" for 1788, assailing her with
+ the coarsest ribaldry. "I have just read for the first time,"
+ writes Miss Seward in June, 1788, "the base, ungentleman-like,
+ unmanly abuse of Mrs. Piozzi by that Italian assassin, Baretti.
+ The whole literary world should unite in publicly reprobating
+ such venomed and foul-mouthed railing." He died soon afterwards,
+ May 5th, 1789, and the notice of him in the "Gentleman's
+ Magazine" begins: "Mrs. Piozzi has reason to rejoice in the death
+ of Mr. Baretti, for he had a very long memory and malice to
+ relate all he knew." And a good deal that he did not know, into
+ the bargain; as when he prints a pretended conversation between
+ Mr. and Mrs. Thrale about Piozzi, which he afterwards admits to
+ be a gratuitous invention and rhetorical figure of his own, for
+ conveying what is a foolish falsehood on the face of it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Baretti's death is thus noticed in "Thraliana," 8th May, 1789:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Baretti is dead. Poor Baretti! I am sincerely sorry for him, and
+ as Zanga says, 'If I lament thee, sure thy worth was great.' He
+ was a manly character, <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg316" id=
+ "pg316">316</a></span> at worst, and died, as he lived, less like
+ a Christian than a philosopher, refusing all spiritual or
+ corporeal assistance, both which he considered useless to him,
+ and perhaps they were so. He paid his debts, called in some
+ single acquaintance, told him he was dying, and drove away that
+ <i>Panada</i> conversation which friends think proper to
+ administer at sick-bedsides with becoming steadiness, bid him
+ write his brothers word that he was dead, and gently desired a
+ woman who waited to leave him quite alone. No interested
+ attendants watching for ill-deserved legacies, no harpy relatives
+ clung round the couch of Baretti. He died!
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ "'And art thou dead? so is my enmity:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I war not with the dead.'
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ "Baretti's papers&mdash;manuscripts I mean&mdash;have been all
+ burnt by his executors without examination, they tell me. So
+ great was his character as a mischief-maker, that Vincent and
+ Fendall saw no nearer way to safety than that hasty and
+ compendious one. Many people think 'tis a good thing for me, but
+ as I never trusted the man, I see little harm he could have done
+ me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the fury of his onslaught Baretti forgot that he was
+ strengthening her case against Johnson, of whom he says: "His
+ austere reprimand, and unrestrained upbraidings, when face to
+ face with her, always delighted Mr. Thrale and were approved even
+ by her children. 'Harry,' said his father to her son, 'are you
+ listening to what the doctor and mamma are talking about?' 'Yes,
+ papa.' And quoth Mr. Thrale, 'What <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+ "pg317" id="pg317">317</a></span> are they saying?' 'They are
+ disputing, and mamma has just such a chance with Dr. Johnson as
+ Presto (a little dog) would have were he to fight Dash (a big
+ one).'" He adds that she left the room in a huff to the amusement
+ of the party. If scenes like this were frequent, no wonder the
+ "yoke" became unendurable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Baretti was obliged to admit that, when Johnson died, they were
+ not on speaking terms. His explanation is that Johnson irritated
+ him by an allusion to his being beaten by Omai, the Sandwich
+ Islander, at chess. Mrs. Piozzi's marginal note on Omai is: "When
+ Omai played at chess and at backgammon with Baretti, everybody
+ admired at the savage's good breeding and at the European's
+ impatient spirit."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Amongst her papers was the following sketch of his character,
+ written for "The World" newspaper.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Mr. Conductor</i>.&mdash;Let not the death of Baretti pass
+ unnoticed by 'The World,' seeing that Baretti was a wit if not a
+ scholar: and had for five-and-thirty years at least lived in a
+ foreign country, whose language he so made himself completely
+ master of, that he could satirise its inhabitants in their own
+ tongue, better than they knew how to defend themselves; and often
+ pleased, without ever praising man or woman in book or
+ conversation. Long supported by the private bounty of friends, he
+ rather delighted to insult than flatter; he at length obtained
+ competence from a public he esteemed not: and died, refusing that
+ assistance he considered as useless&mdash;leaving no debts (but
+ those of gratitude) undischarged; <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+ "pg318" id="pg318">318</a></span> and expressing neither regret
+ of the past, nor fear of the future, I believe. Strong in his
+ prejudices, haughty and independent in his spirit, cruel in his
+ anger,&mdash;even when unprovoked; vindictive to excess, if he
+ through misconception supposed himself even slightly injured,
+ pertinacious in his attacks, invincible in his aversions: the
+ description of Menelaus in 'Homer's Iliad,' as rendered by Pope,
+ exactly suits the character of Baretti:
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ "'So burns the vengeful Hornet, soul all o'er,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Repuls'd in vain, and thirsty still for gore;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bold son of air and heat on angry wings,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Untamed, untired, he turns, attacks, and stings.'"
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ In reference to this article, she remarks in "Thraliana":
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There seems to be a language now appropriated to the newspapers,
+ and a very wretched and unmeaning language it is. Yet a certain
+ set of expressions are so necessary to please the diurnal
+ readers, that when Johnson and I drew up an advertisement for
+ charity once, I remember the people altered our expressions and
+ substituted their own, with good effect too. The other day I sent
+ a Character of Baretti to 'The World,' and read it two mornings
+ after more altered than improved in my mind: but no matter: they
+ will talk of <i>wielding</i> a language, and of <i>barbarous</i>
+ infamy,&mdash;sad stuff, to be sure, but such is the taste of the
+ times. They altered even my quotation from Pope; but that was too
+ impudent."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The comparison of Baretti to the hornet was truer <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg319" id="pg319">319</a></span> than she
+ anticipated: <i>animamque in vulnere ponit</i>. Internal evidence
+ leads almost irresistibly to the conclusion that he was the
+ author or prompter of "The <i>Sentimental</i> Mother: a Comedy in
+ Five Acts. The Legacy of an Old Friend, and his 'Last Moral
+ Lesson' to Mrs. Hester Lynch Thrale, now Mrs. Hester Lynch
+ Piozzi. London: Printed for James Ridgeway, York Street, St.
+ James's Square, 1789. Price three shillings." The principal
+ <i>dramatis personæ</i> are Mr. Timothy Tunskull (Thrale), Lady
+ Fantasma Tunskull, two Misses Tunskull, and Signor Squalici.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lady Fantasma is vain, affected, silly, and amorous to excess.
+ Not satisfied with Squalici as her established gallant, she makes
+ compromising advances to her daughter's lover on his way to a
+ <i>tête-à-téte</i> with the young lady, who takes her wonted
+ place on his knee with his arm round her waist. Squalici is also
+ a domestic spy, and in league with the mother to cheat the
+ daughters of their patrimony. Mr. Tunskull is a respectable and
+ complacent nonentity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The dialogue is seasoned with the same malicious insinuations
+ which mark Baretti's letters in the "European Magazine;" without
+ the saving clause with which shame or fear induced him to qualify
+ them, namely, that no breach of chastity was suspected or
+ believed. It is difficult to imagine who else would have thought
+ of reverting to Thrale's establishment eight years after it had
+ been broken up by death; and in one of his papers in the
+ "European Magazine," he holds out a threat that she might find
+ herself the subject <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg320" id=
+ "pg320">320</a></span> of a play: "Who knows but some one of our
+ modern dramatic geniusses may hereafter entertain the public with
+ a laughable comedy in five long acts, entitled, with singular
+ propriety, 'the <i>Scientific</i> Mother'?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Piozzi had some-how contracted a belief, to which she
+ alludes more than once with unfeigned alarm, that Mr. Samuel
+ Lysons had formed a collection of all the libels and caricatures
+ of which she was the subject on the occasion of her marriage. His
+ collections have been carefully examined, and the sole semblance
+ of warrant for her fears is an album or scrap-book containing
+ numerous extracts from the reviews and newspapers, relating to
+ her books. The only caricature preserved in it is the celebrated
+ one by Sayers entitled "Johnson's Ghost." The ghost, a flattering
+ likeness of the doctor, addresses a pretty woman seated at a
+ writing table:
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ "When Streatham spread its pleasant board,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I opened learning's valued hoard,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ And as I feasted, prosed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Good things I said, good things I eat,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I gave you knowledge for your meat,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ And thought th' account was closed.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ "If obligations still I owed,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ You sold each item to the crowd,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ I suffered by the tale.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For God's sake, Madam, let me rest,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No longer vex your <i>quondam</i> guest,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ I'll pay you for your ale."
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ When a prize was offered for the best address on the rebuilding
+ of Drury Lane, Sheridan proposed an additional <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg321" id="pg321">321</a></span> reward for
+ one without a phoenix. Equally acceptable for its rarity would be
+ a squib on Mrs. Piozzi without a reference to the brewery.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her manuscript notes on the two volumes of Letters are numerous
+ and important, comprising some curious fragments of
+ autobiography, written on separate sheets of paper and pasted
+ into the volumes opposite to the passages which they expand or
+ explain. They would create an inconvenient break in the narrative
+ if introduced here, and they are reserved for a separate section.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her next literary labour is thus mentioned in "Thraliana":
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "While Piozzi was gone to London I worked at my Travel Book, and
+ wrote it in two months complete&mdash;but 'tis all to correct and
+ copy over again. While my husband was away I wrote him these
+ lines: he staid just a fortnight:
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ "I think I've worked exceeding hard
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ To finish five score pages.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I write you this upon a card,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ In hopes you'll pay my wages.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The servants all get drunk or mad,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ This heat their blood enrages,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But your return will make me glad,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ That hope one pain assuages.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "To shew more kindness, we defy
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ All nations and all ages,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And quite prefer your company
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ To all the seven sages. <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg322"
+ id="pg322">322</a></span>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then hasten home, oh, haste away!
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ And lengthen not your stages;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We then will sing, and dance and play,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ And quit awhile our cages."
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ She had now taken rank as a popular writer, and thought herself
+ entitled to use corresponding language to her publisher:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "MR. CADELL,&mdash;Sir, this is a letter of business. I have
+ finished the book of observations and reflections made in the
+ course of my journey thro' France, Italy, and Germany, and if you
+ have a mind to purchase the MS. I make you the first offer of it.
+ Here, if complaints had any connection with business, I would
+ invent a thousand, and they should be very kind ones too; but it
+ is better to tell you the size and price of the book. My
+ calculations bring it to a thousand pages of letter-press like
+ Dr. Moore's; or you might print it in three small volumes, to go
+ with the 'Anecdotes.' Be that as it will, the price, at a word
+ (as the advertisers say of their horse), is 500 guineas and
+ twelve copies to give away, though I will not, like them, warrant
+ it free from blemishes. No creature has looked over the papers
+ but Lord Huntingdon, and he likes them exceedingly. Direct your
+ answer here, if you write immediately; if not, send the letter
+ under cover to Mrs. Lewis, London Street, Reading, Berks; and
+ believe me, dear Sir, your faithful humble servant,
+ </p>
+ <p class="citation">
+ "H. L. PIOZZI.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Bennet Street, Bath,
+ <br />
+ Friday, Nov. 14th, 1788." <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg323"
+ id="pg323">323</a></span>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whether these terms were accepted, does not appear; but in Dec.
+ 1789 she published (Cadell and Strahan) "Observations and
+ Reflections made in the course of a Journey through France,
+ Italy, and Germany," in two volumes octavo of about 400 pages
+ each. As happened to almost everything she did or wrote, this
+ book, which she calls the "Travel-book," was by turns assailed
+ with inveterate hostility and praised with animated zeal. It
+ would seem that sustained calumny had seasoned her against the
+ malevolence of criticism. On the passage in Johnson's letter to
+ T. Warton, "I am little afraid for myself," her comment is: "That
+ is just what I feel when insulted, not about literary though, but
+ social quarrels. The others are not worth a thought." In
+ "Thraliana," Dec. 30th, 1789, she writes: "I think my
+ Observations and Reflexions in Italy, &amp;c., have been, upon
+ the whole, exceedingly well liked, and much read."
+ </p>
+ <p class="break">
+ Walpole writes to Mrs. Carter, June 13th, 1789:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I do not mean to misemploy much of your time, which I know is
+ always passed in good works, and usefully. You have, therefore,
+ probably not looked into Piozzi's Travels. I, who have been
+ almost six weeks lying on a couch, have gone through them. It was
+ said that Addison might have written his without going out of
+ England. By the excessive vulgarisms so plentiful in these
+ volumes, one might suppose the writer had never stirred out of
+ the parish of St. Giles. Her Latin, French, and Italian, too, are
+ so miserably spelt, that she had better have studied her own
+ language before she floundered into other tongues. Her friends
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg324" id="pg324">324</a></span>
+ plead that she piques herself on writing as she talks: methinks,
+ then, she should talk as she would write. There are many
+ indiscretions too in her work of which she will perhaps be told
+ though Baretti is dead."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Miss Seward, much to her credit, repeated to Mrs. Piozzi both the
+ praise and the blame she had expressed to others. On December
+ 21st, 1789, she writes:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Suffer me now to speak to you of your highly ingenious,
+ instructive, and entertaining publication; yet shall it be with
+ the sincerity of friendship, rather than with the flourish of
+ compliment. No work of the sort I ever read possesses, in an
+ equal degree, the power of placing the reader in the scenes and
+ amongst the people it describes. Wit, knowledge, and imagination
+ illuminate its pages&mdash;but the infinite inequality of the
+ style!&mdash;Permit me to acknowledge to you what I have
+ acknowledged to others, that it excites my exhaustless wonder,
+ that Mrs. Piozzi, the child of genius, the pupil of Johnson,
+ should pollute, with the vulgarisms of unpolished conversation,
+ her animated pages!&mdash;that, while she frequently displays her
+ power of commanding the most chaste and beautiful style
+ imaginable, she should generally use those inelegant, those
+ strange <i>dids</i>, and <i>does</i>, and <i>thoughs</i>, and
+ <i>toos</i>, which produce jerking angles, and stop-short
+ abruptness, fatal at once to the grace and ease of the
+ sentence;&mdash;which are, in language, what the rusty black silk
+ handkerchief and the brass ring are upon the beautiful form of
+ the Italian countess she mentions, arrayed in embroidery, and
+ blazing in jewels." <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg325" id=
+ "pg325">325</a></span>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Piozzi's theory was that books should he written in the same
+ colloquial and idiomatic language which is employed by cultivated
+ persons in conversation, "Be thou familiar, but by no means
+ vulgar;" and vulgar she certainly was not, although she sometimes
+ indulged her fondness for familiarity too far. The period was
+ unluckily chosen for carrying such a theory into practice; for
+ Johnson's authority had discountenanced idiomatic writing, whilst
+ many phrases and forms of speech, which would not be endured now,
+ were tolerated in polite society.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The laws of spelling, too, were unfixed or vague, and those of
+ pronunciation, which more or less affect spelling, still more so.
+ "When," said Johnson, "I published the plan of my dictionary,
+ Lord Chesterfield told me that the word <i>great</i> should be
+ pronounced so as to rhyme to <i>state</i>; and Sir William Yonge
+ sent me word that it should be pronounced so as to rhyme to
+ <i>seat</i>, and that none but an Irishman would pronounce it
+ <i>grait</i>. Now here were two men of the highest rank, one the
+ best speaker in the House of Lords, the other the best speaker in
+ the House of Commons, differing entirely." Mrs. Piozzi has
+ written on the margin:&mdash;"Sir William was in the right." Two
+ well-known couplets of Pope imply similar changes:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ "Dreading e'en fools, by flatterers besieged,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And so obliging that he ne'er obliged."
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <hr />
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ "Here thou, great Anna, whom three realms obey,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dost sometimes counsel take, and sometimes tea."
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg326" id="pg326">326</a></span>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Within living memory, elderly people of quality, both in writing
+ and conversation, stuck to Lunnun, Brummagem, and Cheyny (China).
+ Charles Fox would not give up "Bour<i>dux</i>." Johnson
+ pronounced "heard" <i>heerd</i>. In 1800 "flirtation" was deemed
+ a vulgar word.<span class="fnref">[1]</span> Lord Byron wrote
+ <i>redde</i> (for <i>read</i>, in the past tense), and Lord
+ Dudley declined being helped to apple <i>tart</i>. When,
+ therefore, we find Mrs. Piozzi using words or idioms rejected by
+ modern taste or fastidiousness, we must not be too ready to
+ accuse her of ignorance or vulgarity. I have commonly retained
+ her original syntax, and her spelling, which frequently varies
+ within a page.
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] "Those abstractions of different pairs from the rest of the
+ society, which I must call 'flirtation,' spite of the vulgarity
+ of the term."&mdash;<i>Journal kept during a Visit to
+ Germany</i> in 1799 and 1800. Edited by the Dean of Westminster
+ (not published), p. 38.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Two days afterwards, Walpole returns to the charge in a letter to
+ Miss Berry, which is alone sufficient to prove the worthlessness
+ of his literary judgments:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Read 'Sindbad the Sailor's Voyages,' and you will be sick of
+ Æneas's. What woful invention were the nasty poultry that dunged
+ on his dinner, and ships on fire turned into Nereids! A barn
+ metamorphosed into a cascade in a pantomime is full as sublime an
+ effort of genius.... I do not think the Sultaness's narratives
+ very natural or very probable, but there is a wildness in them
+ that captivates. However, if you could wade through two octavos
+ of Dame Piozzi's <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg327" id=
+ "pg327">327</a></span> <i>though's</i> and <i>so's</i> and <i>I
+ trows</i>, and cannot listen to seven volumes of Scheherezade's
+ narratives, I will sue for a divorce in foro Parnassi, and
+ Boccalini shall be my proctor."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A single couplet of Gifford's was more damaging than all
+ Walpole's petulance:
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ "See Thrale's grey widow with a satchel roam,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And bring in pomp laborious nothings home."<span class=
+ "fnref">[1]</span>
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] "She, one evening, asked me abruptly if I did not remember
+ the scurrilous lines in which she had been depicted by Gifford
+ in his 'Baviad and Moeviad.' And, not waiting for my answer,
+ for I was indeed too much embarrassed to give one quickly, she
+ recited the verses in question, and added, 'how do you think
+ "Thrale's grey widow" revenged herself? I contrived to get
+ myself invited to meet him at supper at a friend's house, (I
+ think she said in Pall Mall), soon after the publication of his
+ poem, sate opposite to him, saw that he was "perplexed in the
+ extreme;" and smiling, proposed a glass of wine as a libation
+ to our future good fellowship. Gifford was sufficiently a man
+ of the world to understand me, and nothing could be more
+ courteous and entertaining than he was while we remained
+ together.'"&mdash;<i>Piozziana</i>.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ This condemnatory verse is every way unjust. The nothings, or
+ somethings, which form the staple of the book, are not laboured;
+ and they are presented without the semblance of pomp or
+ pretension. The Preface commences thus:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I was made to observe at Rome some vestiges of an ancient custom
+ very proper in those days. It was the parading of the street by a
+ set of people called Preciæ, who went some minutes before the
+ Flamen Dialis, to bid the inhabitants leave work or play, and
+ attend wholly to the procession; but if ill-omens prevented
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg328" id="pg328">328</a></span>
+ the pageants from passing, or if the occasion of the show was
+ scarce deemed worthy its celebration, these Precise stood a
+ chance of being ill-treated by the spectators. A prefatory
+ introduction to a work like this can hope little better usage
+ from the public than they had. It proclaims the approach of what
+ has often passed by before; adorned most certainly with greater
+ splendour, perhaps conducted with greater regularity and skill.
+ Yet will I not despair of giving at least a momentary amusement
+ to my countrymen in general; while their entertainment shall
+ serve as a vehicle for conveying expressions of particular
+ kindness to those foreign individuals, whose tenderness softened
+ the sorrows of absence, and who eagerly endeavoured by unmerited
+ attentions to supply the loss of their company, on whom nature
+ and habit had given me stronger claims."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Preface concludes with the happy remark that&mdash;"the
+ labours of the press resemble those of the toilette: both should
+ be attended to and finished with care; but once completed, should
+ take up no more of our attention, unless we are disposed at
+ evening to destroy all effect of our morning's study."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It would be difficult to name a book of travels in which
+ anecdotes, observations, and reflections are more agreeably
+ mingled, or one from which a clearer bird's-eye view of the
+ external state of countries visited in rapid succession may be
+ caught. I can only spare room for a few short extracts:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The contradictions one meets with every moment at <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg329" id="pg329">329</a></span> Paris
+ likewise strike even a cursory observer,&mdash;a countess in a
+ morning, her hair dressed, with diamonds too perhaps, a dirty
+ black handkerchief about her neck, and a flat silver ring on her
+ finger, like our ale-wives; a <i>femme publique</i>, dressed
+ avowedly for the purposes of alluring the men, with a not very
+ small crucifix hanging at her bosom;&mdash;and the Virgin Mary's
+ sign at an ale-house door, with these words,
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ "'Je suis la mère de mon Dieu,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Et la gardienne de ce lieu.'"
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ "I have stolen a day to visit my old acquaintance the English
+ Austin Nuns at the Foffèe, and found the whole community alive
+ and cheerful; they are many of them agreeable women, and having
+ seen Dr. Johnson with me when I was last abroad, inquired much
+ for him: Mrs, Fermor, the Prioress, niece to Belinda in the Rape
+ of the Lock, taking occasion to tell me, comically enough, 'that
+ she believed there was but little comfort to be found in a house
+ that harboured <i>poets</i>; for that she remembered Mr. Pope's
+ praise made her aunt very troublesome and conceited, while his
+ numberless caprices would have employed ten servants to wait on
+ him; and he gave one,' (said she) 'no amends by his talk neither,
+ for he only sate dozing all day, when the sweet wine was out, and
+ made his verses chiefly in the night; during which season he kept
+ himself awake by drinking coffee, which it was one of the maids'
+ business to make for him, and they took it by turns.'"
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg330" id="pg330">330</a></span>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At Milan she institutes a delicate inquiry: "The women are not
+ behind-hand in openness of confidence and comical sincerity. We
+ have all heard much of Italian cicisbeism; I had a mind to know
+ how matters really stood; and took the nearest way to information
+ by asking a mighty beautiful and apparently artless young
+ creature, <i>not noble</i>, how that affair was managed, for
+ there is no harm done <i>I am sure</i>, said I: 'Why no,' replied
+ she, 'no great <i>harm</i> to be sure: except wearisome
+ attentions from a man one cares little about; for my own part,'
+ continued she, 'I detest the custom, as I happen to love my
+ husband excessively, and desire nobody's company in the world but
+ his. We are not <i>people of fashion</i> though you know, nor at
+ all rich; so how should we set fashions for our betters? They
+ would only say, see how jealous he is! if <i>Mr. Such-a-one</i>
+ sat much with me at home, or went with me to the Corso; and I
+ <i>must</i> go with some gentleman you know: and the men are such
+ ungenerous creatures, and have such ways with them: I want money
+ often, and this <i>cavaliere servente</i> pays the bills, and so
+ the connection draws closer&mdash;<i>that's all</i>.' And your
+ husband! said I&mdash;'Oh, why he likes to see me well dressed;
+ he is very good-natured, and very charming; I love him to my
+ heart.' And your confessor! cried I.&mdash;'Oh! why he is <i>used
+ to it</i>'&mdash;in the Milanese dialect&mdash;<i>è
+ assuefaà."</i>
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ "An English lady asked of an Italian
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ What were the actual and official duties
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of the strange thing, some women set a value on,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ Which hovers oft about some married beauties, <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg331" id="pg331">331</a></span>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Called 'cavalier servente,' a Pygmalion
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ Whose statues warm, I fear! too true 't is
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Beneath his art. The dame, press'd to disclose them,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Said, Lady, I beseech you to <i>suppose them</i>."<span class=
+ "fnref">[1]</span>
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] "Don Juan," Canto ix. See also "Beppo," verses 36, 37:
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ "But Heaven preserve Old England from such courses!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Or what becomes of damage and divorces?"
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ At Venice, the tone was somewhat different from what would be
+ employed now by the finest lady on the Grand Canal:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This firmly-fixed idea of subordination (which I once heard a
+ Venetian say, he believed must exist in heaven from one angel to
+ another), accounts immediately for a little conversation which I
+ am now going to relate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Here were two men taken up last week, one for murdering his
+ fellow-servant in cold blood, while the undefended creature had
+ the lemonade tray in his hand going in to serve company; the
+ other for breaking the new lamps lately set up with intention to
+ light this town in the manner of the streets at Paris. 'I hope,'
+ said I, 'that they will hang the murderer.' 'I rather hope,'
+ replied a very sensible lady who sate near me, 'that they will
+ hang the person who broke the lamps: for,' added she, 'the first
+ committed his crime only out of revenge, poor fellow!! because
+ the other had got his mistress from him by treachery; but this
+ creature has had the impudence to break our fine new lamps, all
+ for the sake of spiting <i>the Arch-duke!!</i>' The Arch-duke
+ meantime hangs nobody at all; but sets his prisoners <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg332" id="pg332">332</a></span> to work upon
+ the roads, public buildings, &amp;c., where they labour in their
+ chains; and where, strange to tell! they often insult passengers
+ who refuse them alms when asked as they go by; and, stranger
+ still, they are not punished for it when they do." ...
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The lover sacrificing his reputation, his liberty, or his life,
+ to save the fair fame of his mistress, is not an unusual event in
+ fiction, whatever it may be in real life. Balzac, Charles de
+ Bernard, and M. de Jarnac have each made a self-sacrifice of this
+ kind the basis of a romance. But neither of them has hit upon a
+ better plot than might be formed out of the following Venetian
+ story:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Some years ago then, perhaps a hundred, one of the many spies
+ who ply this town by night, ran to the state inquisitor, with
+ information that such a nobleman (naming him) had connections
+ with the French ambassador, and went privately to his house every
+ night at a certain hour. The <i>messergrando</i>, as they call
+ him, could not believe, nor would proceed, without better and
+ stronger proof, against a man for whom he had an intimate
+ personal friendship, and on whose virtue he counted with very
+ particular reliance. Another spy was therefore set, and brought
+ back the same intelligence, adding the description of his
+ disguise: on which the worthy magistrate put on his mask and
+ bauta, and went out himself; when his eyes confirming the report
+ of his informants, and the reflection on his duty stifling all
+ remorse, he sent publicly for <i>Foscarini</i> in the morning,
+ whom the populace attended all weeping to his door. <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg333" id="pg333">333</a></span>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nothing but resolute denial of the crime alleged could however
+ be forced from the firm-minded citizen, who, sensible of the
+ discovery, prepared for that punishment he knew to be inevitable,
+ and submitted to the fate his friend was obliged to inflict: no
+ less than a dungeon for life, that dungeon so horrible that I
+ have heard Mr. Howard was not permitted to see it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The people lamented, but their lamentations were vain. The
+ magistrate who condemned him never recovered the shock: but
+ Foscarini was heard of no more, till an old lady died forty years
+ after in Paris, whose last confession declared she was visited
+ with amorous intentions by a nobleman of Venice whose name she
+ never knew, while she resided there as companion to the
+ ambassadress. So was Foscarini lost! so died he a martyr to love,
+ and tenderness for female reputation!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Mendicanti was a Venetian institution which deserves to be
+ commemorated for its singularity:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Apropos to singing;&mdash;we were this evening carried to a
+ well-known conservatory called the Mendicanti, who performed an
+ oratorio in the church with great, and I dare say deserved
+ applause. It was difficult for me to persuade myself that all the
+ performers were women, till, watching carefully, our eyes
+ convinced us, as they were but slightly grated. The sight of
+ girls, however, handling the double bass, and blowing into the
+ bassoon, did not much please <i>me</i>; and the deep-toned voice
+ of her who sung the part of Saul seemed an odd unnatural thing
+ enough. <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg334" id=
+ "pg334">334</a></span>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well! these pretty sirens were delighted to seize upon us, and
+ pressed our visit to their parlour with a sweetness that I know
+ not who would have resisted. We had no such intent; and amply did
+ their performance repay my curiosity for visiting Venetian
+ beauties, so justly celebrated for their seducing manners and
+ soft address. They accompanied their voices with the forte-piano,
+ and sung a thousand buffo songs, with all that gay voluptuousness
+ for which their country is renowned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The school, however, is running to ruin apace; and perhaps the
+ conduct of the married women here may contribute to make such
+ <i>conservatorios</i> useless and neglected. When the Duchess of
+ Montespan asked the famous Louison D'Arquien, by way of insult,
+ as she pressed too near her, '<i>Comment alloit le metier</i>?'
+ '<i>Depuis que les dames s'en mèlent</i>,' (replied the courtesan
+ with no improper spirit,) '<i>il ne vaut plus rien</i>.'"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Describing Florence, she says:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Sir Horace Mann is sick and old; but there are conversations at
+ his house of a Saturday evening, and sometimes a dinner, to which
+ we have been almost always asked."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So much for Walpole's assertion that "she had broken with his
+ Horace, because he could not invite her husband with the Italian
+ nobility." She held her own, if she did not take the lead, in
+ whatever society she happened to be thrown, and no one could have
+ objected to Piozzi without breaking with her. In point of fact,
+ no one did object to him. <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg335"
+ id="pg335">335</a></span>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One of her notes on Naples is:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, well! if the Neapolitans do bury Christians like dogs,
+ they make some singular compensations we will confess, by nursing
+ dogs like Christians. A very veracious man informed me yester
+ morning, that his poor wife was half broken-hearted at hearing
+ such a Countess's dog was run over; 'for,' said he, 'having
+ suckled the pretty creature herself, she loved it like one of her
+ children.' I bid him repeat the circumstance, that no mistake
+ might be made: he did so; but seeing me look shocked, or ashamed,
+ or something he did not like,&mdash;'Why, Madam,' said the
+ fellow, 'it is a common thing enough for ordinary men's wives to
+ suckle the lap-dogs of ladies of quality:' adding, that they were
+ paid for their milk, and he saw no harm in gratifying one's
+ <i>superiors</i>. As I was disposed to see nothing <i>but</i>
+ harm in disputing with such a competitor, our conference finished
+ soon; but the fact is certain."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the margin she has written:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Mrs. Greathead could scarcely be made to credit so hideous a
+ fact, till I showed her the portrait (at a broker's shop) of a
+ woman <i>suckling a cat</i>."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cornelia Knight says: "Mr. and Mrs. Piozzi passed the winter at
+ Naples and gave little concerts. He played with great taste on
+ the pianoforte, and used to carry about a miniature one in his
+ carriage."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whilst discussing the propriety of complying with the customs of
+ the country, she relates:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Poor Dr. Goldsmith said once&mdash;'I would advise <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg336" id="pg336">336</a></span> every young
+ fellow setting out in life <i>to love gravy</i>:'&mdash;and
+ added, that he had formerly seen a glutton's eldest nephew
+ disinherited, because his uncle never could persuade him to say
+ he liked gravy."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Forster thinks that the concluding anecdote conveys a false
+ impression of one
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ "Who wrote like an angel, but talked like poor Poll."
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ "Mrs. Piozzi, in her travels, quite solemnly sets forth that poor
+ Dr. Goldsmith said once, 'I would advise every young fellow
+ setting forth in life to love gravy,' alleging for it the serious
+ reason that 'he had formerly seen a glutton's eldest nephew
+ disinherited because his uncle never could persuade him to say he
+ liked gravy.' Imagine the dullness that would convert a jocose
+ saying of this kind into an unconscious utterance of grave
+ absurdity."<span class="fnref">[1]</span> In his index may be
+ read: "Mrs. Piozzi's absurd instance of Goldsmith's absurdity."
+ Mrs. Piozzi does not quote the saying as an instance of
+ absurdity; nor set it forth solemnly. She repeats it, as an
+ illustration of her argument, in the same semi-serious spirit in
+ which it was originally hazarded. Sydney Smith took a different
+ view of this grave gravy question. On a young lady's declining
+ gravy, he exclaimed: "I have been looking all my life for a
+ person who, on principle, rejected gravy: let us vow eternal
+ friendship."
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] Life of Goldsmith, vol. ii. p. 205. Mr. Forster allows her
+ the credit of discovering the lurking irony in Goldsmith's
+ verses on Cumberland, vol. ii. p. 203. <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg337" id="pg337">337</a></span>
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ The "British Synonymy" appeared in 1794. It was thus assailed by
+ Gifford:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Though 'no one better knows his own house' than I the vanity of
+ this woman; yet the idea of her undertaking such a work had never
+ entered my head; and I was thunderstruck when I first saw it
+ announced. To execute it with any tolerable degree of success,
+ required a rare combination of talents, among the least of which
+ may be numbered neatness of style, acuteness of perception, and a
+ more than common accuracy of discrimination; and Mrs. Piozzi
+ brought to the task, a jargon long since become proverbial for
+ its vulgarity, an utter incapability of defining a single term in
+ the language, and just as much Latin from a child's Syntax, as
+ sufficed to expose the ignorance she so anxiously labours to
+ conceal. 'If such a one be fit to write on Synonimes, speak.'
+ Pignotti himself laughs in his sleeve; and his countrymen, long
+ since undeceived, prize the lady's talents at their true worth,
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ "Et centum Tales<span class="fnref">[1]</span> curto centusse
+ licentur."
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] Quere Thrales?&mdash;<i>Printer's Devil</i>."
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Other critics have been more lenient or more just. Enough
+ philosophical knowledge and acuteness were discovered in the work
+ to originate a rumour that she had retained some of the great
+ lexicographer's manuscripts, or derived a posthumous advantage,
+ in some shape, from her former intimacy with him. In "Thraliana,"
+ Denbigh, 2nd January, 1795, she writes:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My 'Synonimes' have been reviewed at last. The <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg338" id="pg338">338</a></span> critics are
+ all civil for aught I see, and nearly just, except when they say
+ that Johnson left some fragments of a work upon Synonymy: of
+ which God knows I never heard till now one syllable; never had he
+ and I, in all the time we lived together, any conversation upon
+ the subject."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Even Walpole admits that it has some marked and peculiar merits,
+ although its value consists rather in the illustrative matter,
+ than in the definitions and etymologies. Thus, in distinguishing
+ between <i>lavish</i>, <i>profuse</i> and <i>prodigal</i>, she
+ relates:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Two gentlemen were walking leisurely up the Hay-Market some time
+ in the year 1749, lamenting the fate of the famous Cuzzona, an
+ actress who some time before had been in high vogue, but was then
+ as they heard in a very pitiable situation. 'Let us go and visit
+ her,' said one of them, 'she lives but over the way.' The other
+ consented; and calling at the door, they were shown up stairs,
+ but found the faded beauty dull and spiritless, unable or
+ unwilling to converse on any subject. 'How's this?' cried one of
+ her consolers, 'are you ill? or is it but low spirits chains your
+ tongue so?'&mdash;'Neither,' replied she: ''tis hunger I suppose.
+ I ate nothing yesterday, and now 'tis past six o'clock, and not
+ one penny have I in the world to buy me any food.'&mdash;'Come
+ with us instantly to a tavern; we will treat you with the best
+ roast fowls and Port wine that London can produce.'&mdash;'But I
+ will have neither my dinner nor my place of eating it prescribed
+ to <i>me</i>,' answered Cuzzona, in a sharper tone, 'else I need
+ never have wanted.' 'Forgive <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+ "pg339" id="pg339">339</a></span> me,' cries the friend; 'do your
+ own way; but eat in the name of God, and restore fainting
+ nature.'&mdash;She thanked him then; and, calling to her a
+ friendly wretch who inhabited the same theatre of misery, gave
+ <i>him</i> the guinea the visitor accompanied his last words
+ with; 'and run with this money,' said she, 'to such a
+ wine-merchant,' (naming him); 'he is the only one keeps good
+ Tokay by him. 'Tis a guinea a bottle, mind you,' to the boy; 'and
+ bid the gentleman you buy it of give you a loaf into the
+ bargain,&mdash;he won't refuse.' In half an hour or less the lad
+ returned with the Tokay. 'But where,' cries Cuzzona, 'is the loaf
+ I spoke for?' 'The merchant would give me no loaf,' replies her
+ messenger; 'he drove me from the door, and asked if I took him
+ for a baker.' 'Blockhead!' exclaims she; 'why I must have bread
+ to my wine, you know, and I have not a penny to purchase any. Go
+ beg me a loaf directly.' The fellow returns once more with one in
+ his hand and a halfpenny, telling 'em the gentleman threw him
+ three, and laughed at his impudence. She gave her Mercury the
+ money, broke the bread into a wash-hand basin which stood near,
+ poured the Tokay over it, and devoured the whole with eagerness.
+ This was indeed a heroine in PROFUSION. Some active well-wishers
+ procured her a benefit after this; she gained about 350<i>l</i>.,
+ 'tis said, and laid out two hundred of the money instantly in a
+ <i>shell-cap</i>. They wore such things then."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Savage got a guinea, he commonly spent it in a tavern at a
+ sitting; and referring to the memorable <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg340" id="pg340">340</a></span> morning when
+ the "Vicar of Wakefield" was produced, Johnson says: "I sent him
+ (Goldsmith) a guinea, and promised to come to him directly. I
+ accordingly went as soon as I was dressed, and found that his
+ landlady had arrested him for his rent. I perceived that he had
+ already changed my guinea, and had got a bottle of Madeira and a
+ glass before him." Mrs. Piozzi continues:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But Doctor Johnson had always some story at hand to check
+ extravagant and wanton wastefulness. His improviso verses made on
+ a young heir's coming of age are highly capable of restraining
+ such folly, if it is to be restrained: they never yet were
+ printed, I believe.
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ "'Long expected one-and-twenty,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ Lingering year, at length is flown;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pride and pleasure, pomp and plenty,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ Great Sir John, are now your own.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ Loosen'd from the minor's tether,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ Free to mortgage or to sell,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Wild as wind, and light as feather,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ Bid the sons of thrift farewell.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ Call the Betseys, Kates, and Jennies,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ All the names that banish care;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ LAVISH of your grandsire's guineas,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ Show the spirit of an heir.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ All that prey on vice or folly
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ Joy to see their quarry fly; <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+ "pg341" id="pg341">341</a></span>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There the gamester light and jolly,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ There the lender grave and sly.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ Wealth, my lad, was made to wander,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ Let it wander as it will;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Call the jockey, call the pander,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ Bid them come and take their fill.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ When the bonny blade carouses,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ Pockets full, and spirits high&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What are acres? what are houses?
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ Only dirt or wet or dry.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ Should the guardian friend or mother
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ Tell the woes of wilful waste;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Scorn their counsel, scorn their pother&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ You can hang or drown at last.'"
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ These verses were addressed to Thrale's nephew, Sir John Lade, in
+ August, 1780. They bear a strong resemblance to some of Burns' in
+ his "Beggar's Sonata," written in 1785:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ "What is title, what is treasure,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ What is reputation's care;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If we lead a life of pleasure,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ Can it matter how or where?"
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Boswell's "Life of Johnson" was published in May, 1791. It is
+ thus mentioned in "Thraliana":&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>May</i>, 1791.&mdash;Mr. Boswell's book is coming out, and
+ the wits expect me to tremble: what will the fellow say? ... that
+ has not been said already." <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg342"
+ id="pg342">342</a></span>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No date, but previous to 25th May, 1791.&mdash;"I have been now
+ laughing and crying by turns, for two days, over Boswell's book.
+ That poor man should have a <i>Bon Bouillon</i> and be put to bed
+ ... he is quite light-headed, yet madmen, drunkards, and fools
+ tell truth, they say ... and if Johnson was to me the back friend
+ he has represented ... let it cure me of ever making friendship
+ more with any human being."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>25th May</i>, 1791.&mdash;The death of my son, so suddenly,
+ so horribly produced before my eyes now suffering from the tears
+ then shed ... so shockingly brought forward in Boswell's two
+ guinea book, made me very ill this week, very ill
+ indeed<span class="fnref">[1]</span>; it would make the modern
+ friends all buy the work I fancy, did they but know how sick the
+ <i>ancient</i> friends had it in their power to make me, but I
+ had more wit than tell any of 'em. And what is the folly among
+ all these fellows of wishing we may know one another in the next
+ world.... Comical enough! when we have only to expect deserved
+ reproaches for breach of confidence and cruel usage. Sure, sure I
+ hope, rancour and resentment will at least be put off in the last
+ moments: ... sure, surely, we shall meet no more, except on the
+ great day when each is to answer to other and before other....
+ After <i>that</i> I hope to keep better company than any of
+ them."
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] The death of her son is not unkindly mentioned by Boswell.
+ See p. 491, roy. oct. edit. But the imputations on her veracity
+ rest exclusively on his prejudiced testimony. <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg343" id="pg343">343</a></span>
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ In 1801, Mrs. Piozzi published "Retrospection; or a Review of the
+ Most Striking and Important Events, Characters, Situations, and
+ their Consequences, which the Last Eighteen Hundred Years have
+ presented to the View of Mankind." It is in two volumes quarto,
+ containing rather more than 1000 pages. A fitting motto for it
+ would have been <i>De omnibus rebus et quibusdam aliis.</i> The
+ subject, or range of subjects, was beyond her grasp; and the best
+ that can be said of the book is that a good general impression of
+ the stream of history, lighted up with some striking traits of
+ manners and character, may be obtained from it. It would have
+ required the united powers and acquirements of Raleigh, Burke,
+ Gibbon, and Voltaire to fill so vast a canvass with appropriate
+ groups and figures; and she is more open to blame for the
+ ambitious conception of the work than for her comparative failure
+ in the execution. In 1799 she writes to Dr. Gray: "The truth is,
+ my plans stretch too far for these times, or for my own age; but
+ the wish, though scarce hope, of my heart, is to finish the work
+ I am engaged in, get you to look it over for me, and print in
+ March 1801." She published it in January 1801, but it was not
+ looked over by her learned correspondent. Some slight misgiving
+ is betrayed in the Preface:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If I should have made improper choice of facts, and if I should
+ be found at length most to resemble Maister Fabyan of old, who
+ writing the life of Henry V. lays heaviest stress on a new
+ weathercock set-up on St. Paul's steeple during that eventful
+ reign, my book <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg344" id=
+ "pg344">344</a></span> must share the fate of his, and be like
+ that forgotten: reminding before its death perhaps a friend or
+ two of a poor man (Macbean) living in later times, that Doctor
+ Johnson used to tell us of; who being advised to take
+ subscriptions for a new Geographical Dictionary, hastened to Bolt
+ Court and begged advice. There having listened carefully for
+ half-an-hour, 'Ah, but dear Sir,' exclaimed the admiring
+ parasite, 'if I am to make all this eloquent ado about Athens and
+ Rome, where shall we find place, do you think, for Richmond, or
+ Aix La Chapelle?'"
+ </p>
+ <p class="break">
+ Writing from Bath, December 15th, 1802, she says:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The 'Gentleman's Magazine' for July 1801 contained my answer to
+ such critics as confined themselves to faults I could have helped
+ committing&mdash;had they been faults. Those who merely told
+ disagreeable truths concerning my person, or dress, or age, or
+ such stuff, expected, of course, no reply. There are innumerable
+ press errors in the book, from my being obliged to print on new
+ year's day&mdash;during an insurrection of the printers. These
+ the 'Critical Review' laid hold of with an acuteness sharpened by
+ malignity."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Moore, who was staying at Bowood, sets down in his diary for
+ April, 1823: "Lord L. in the evening, quoted a ridiculous passage
+ from the Preface to Mrs. Piozzi's 'Retrospections,' in which,
+ anticipating the ultimate perfection of the human race, she says
+ she does not despair of the time arriving when 'Vice will take
+ refuge in the arms of impossibility.' Mentioned also an ode of
+ hers to Posterity, beginning, 'Posterity, <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg345" id="pg345">345</a></span> gregarious
+ dame,' the only meaning of which must be, a lady <i>chez qui</i>
+ numbers assemble&mdash;a lady at <i>home</i>."<span class=
+ "fnref">[1]</span>
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] Memoirs, &amp;c., vol. iv. p. 38.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ There is no such passage in the Preface to "Retrospection," and
+ the ode is her "Ode to Society," who is not improperly addressed
+ as "gregarious."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I repeated," adds Moore, "what Jekyll told the other day of
+ Bearcroft saying to Mrs. Piozzi, when Thrale, after she had
+ repeatedly called him Mr. Beercraft: 'Beercraft is not my name,
+ Madam; it may be your trade, but it is not my name.'" It may
+ always be questioned whether this offensive description of
+ repartee was really uttered at the time. But Bearcroft was
+ capable of it. He began his cross-examination of Mr. Vansittart
+ by&mdash;"With your leave, Sir, I will call you Mr. Van for
+ shortness." "As you please, Sir, and I will call you Mr. Bear."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Towards the end of 1795, Mrs. Piozzi left Streatham for her seat
+ in North Wales, where (1800 or 1801) she was visited by a young
+ nobleman, now an eminent statesman, distinguished by his love of
+ literature and the fine arts, who has been good enough to recall
+ and write down his impressions of her for me:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I did certainly know Madame Piozzi, but had no habits of
+ acquaintance with her, and she never lived in London to my
+ knowledge. When in my youth I made a tour in Wales&mdash;times
+ when all inns were bad, and all houses hospitable&mdash;I put up
+ for a day at her house, I <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg346"
+ id="pg346">346</a></span> think in Denbighshire, the proper name
+ of which was Bryn, and to which, on the occasion of her marriage
+ I was told, she had recently added the name of Bella. I remember
+ her taking me into her bed-room to show me the floor covered with
+ folios, quartos, and octavos, for consultation, and indicating
+ the labour she had gone through in compiling an immense volume
+ she was then publishing, called 'Retrospection.' She was
+ certainly what was called, and is still called, blue, and that of
+ a deep tint, but good humoured and lively, though affected; her
+ husband, a quiet civil man, with his head full of nothing but
+ music.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I afterwards called on her at Bath, where she chiefly resided. I
+ remember it was at the time Madame de Staël's 'Delphine,' and
+ 'Corinne,' came out<span class="fnref">[1]</span>, and that we
+ agreed in preferring 'Delphine,' which nobody reads now, to
+ 'Corinne,' which most people read then, and a few do still. She
+ rather avoided talking of Johnson. These are trifles, not worth
+ recording, but I have put them down that you might not think me
+ neglectful of your wishes; but now <i>j'ai vuidé mon sac</i>."
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] "Delphine" appeared in 1804; "Corinne," in 1806.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Her mode of passing her time when she had ceased writing books,
+ with the topics which interested her, will be best learned from
+ her letters. Her vivacity never left her, and the elasticity of
+ her spirits bore up against every kind of depression. A lady who
+ met her on her way to Wynnstay in January, 1803, describes her as
+ "skipping about like a kid, quite <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+ "pg347" id="pg347">347</a></span> a figure of fun, in a tiger
+ skin shawl, lined with scarlet, and <i>only</i> five colours upon
+ her head-dress&mdash;on the top of a flaxen wig a bandeau of blue
+ velvet, a bit of tiger ribbon, a white beaver hat and plume of
+ black feathers&mdash;as gay as a lark."
+ </p>
+ <p class="break">
+ In a letter, dated Jan. 1799, to a Welsh neighbour, Mrs. Piozzi
+ says:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Mr. Piozzi has lost considerably in purse, by the cruel inroads
+ of the French in Italy, and of all his family driven from their
+ quiet homes, has at length with difficulty saved one little boy
+ who is now just turned of five years old. We have got him here
+ (Bath) since I wrote last, and his uncle will take him to school
+ next week; for as our John has nothing but his talents and
+ education to depend upon, he must be a scholar, and we will try
+ hard to make him a very good one.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My poor little boy from Lombardy said as I walked him across our
+ market, 'These are sheeps' heads, are they not, aunt? I saw a
+ basket of men's heads at Brescia.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "As he was by a lucky chance baptized, in compliment to me, John
+ Salusbury, five years ago, when happier days smiled on his
+ family, he will be known in England by no other, and it will be
+ forgotten he is a foreigner. A lucky circumstance for one who is
+ intended to work his way among our islanders by talent,
+ diligence, and education."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She thus mentions this event in "Thraliana," January 17th, 1798:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Italy is ruined and England threatened. I have sent for one
+ little boy from among my husband's <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+ "pg348" id="pg348">348</a></span> nephews. He was christened John
+ Salusbury: he shall be naturalised, and then we will see whether
+ he will be more grateful and natural and comfortable than Miss
+ Thrales have been to the mother they have at length driven to
+ desperation."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She could hardly have denied her husband the satisfaction of
+ rescuing a single member of his family from the wreck; and they
+ were bound to provide handsomely for the child of their adoption.
+ Whether she carried the sentiment too far in giving him the
+ entire estate (not a large one) is a very different question; on
+ which she enters fearlessly in one of the fragments of the
+ Autobiography. In a marginal note on one of the printed letters
+ in which Johnson writes: "Mrs. Davenant says you regain your
+ health,"&mdash;she remarks: "Mrs. Davenant neither knew nor
+ cared, as she wanted her brother Harry Cotton to marry Lady
+ Keith, and I offered my estate with her. Miss Thrale said she
+ wished to have nothing to do either with my family or my fortune.
+ They were all cruel and all insulting." Her fits of irritation
+ and despondency never lasted long.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her mode of bringing up her adopted nephew was more in accordance
+ with her ultimate liberality, than with her early intentions or
+ professions of teaching him to "work his way among our
+ islanders." Instead of suffering him to travel to and from the
+ University by coach, she insisted on his travelling post; and she
+ is said to have remarked to the mother of a Welsh baronet, who
+ was similarly anxious for the comfort and <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg349" id="pg349">349</a></span> dignity of
+ her heir, "Other people's children are baked in coarse common pie
+ dishes, ours in patty-pans."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She was misreported, or afterwards improved upon the thought;
+ for, in June 1810, she writes to Dr. Gray: "He is a boy of
+ excellent principle. Education at a private school has an effect
+ like baking loaves in a tin. The bread is more insipid, but it
+ comes out <i>clean</i>; and Mr. Gray laughed, when at breakfast
+ this morning, our undercrusts suggested the comparison."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the Conway Notes, she says:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Had we vexations enough? We had certainly many pleasures. The
+ house in Wales was beautiful, and the Boy was beautiful too. Mr.
+ Piozzi said I had spoiled my own children and was spoiling his.
+ My reply was, that I loved spoiling people, and hated any one I
+ could not spoil. Am I not now trying to spoil dear Mr. Conway?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When she talks of spoiling, she must not be understood literally.
+ In 1817 she writes from Bath to Dr. Gray:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Sir John and Lady Salusbury staid with me six or seven weeks,
+ and made themselves most beloved among us. They are very good
+ young creatures.... My children read your <i>Key</i> to each
+ other on Sunday noons: the <i>Connection</i> on Sunday nights.
+ You remember me hoping and proposing to make dear Salusbury a
+ gentleman, a Christian, and a scholar; and when one has succeeded
+ in the first two wishes, there is no need to fret if the third
+ does fail a <i>little</i>. Such is my situation concerning my
+ <i>adopted</i>, as you are accustomed to call him." <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg350" id="pg350">350</a></span>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before she died she had the satisfaction of seeing him sheriff of
+ his county; and on carrying up an address, he was knighted and
+ became Sir John Salusbury Piozzi Salusbury. Miss Williams Wynn
+ has preserved a somewhat apocryphal anecdote of his
+ disinterestedness:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "When I read her (Mrs. P.'s) lamentations over her poverty, I
+ could not help believing that Sir J. Salusbury had proved
+ ungrateful to his benefactress. For the honour of human nature I
+ rejoice to find this is not the case. When he made known to his
+ aunt his wish to marry, she promised to make over to him the
+ property of Brynbella. Even before the marriage was concluded she
+ had distressed herself by her lavish expenditure at Streatham. I
+ saw by the letters that Gillow's bill amounted to near
+ 2,400<i>l</i>., and Mr. (the late Sir John) Williams tells me she
+ had continually very large parties from London. Sir John
+ Salusbury then came to her, offered to relinquish all her
+ promised gifts and the dearest wish of his heart, saying he
+ should be most grateful to her if she would only give him a
+ commission in the army, and let him seek his fortune. At the same
+ time he added that he made this offer because all was still in
+ his power, but that from the moment he married, she must be aware
+ that it would be no longer so, that he should not feel himself
+ justified in bringing a wife into distress of circumstances, nor
+ in entailing poverty on children unborn.<span class=
+ "fnref">[1]</span> She refused; he married; and she went on in
+ her <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg351" id=
+ "pg351">351</a></span> course of extravagance. She had left
+ herself a life income only, and large as it was, no tradesman
+ would wait a reasonable time for payment; she was nearly eighty;
+ and they knew that at her death nothing would be left to pay her
+ debts, and so they seized the goods."
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] If the estate was settled in the usual manner, he would
+ have only a life estate; and I believe it was so settled.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ When Fielding, the novelist, rather boastingly avowed that he
+ never knew, and believed he never should know, the difference
+ between a shilling and sixpence, he was told: "Yes, the time will
+ come when you will know it&mdash;when you have only eighteen
+ pence left." If the author of "Tom Jones" could not be taught the
+ value of money, we must not be too hard on Mrs. Piozzi for not
+ learning it, after lesson upon lesson in the hard school of
+ "impecuniosity." Whilst Piozzi lived, her affairs were faithfully
+ and carefully administered. Although they built Brynbella, spent
+ a good deal of money on Streatham, and lived handsomely, they
+ never wanted money. He had a moderate fortune, the produce of his
+ professional labours, and left it, neither impaired nor
+ materially increased, to his family. With peculiar reference
+ probably to her habits of profuse expenditure, he used to say
+ that "white monies were good for ladies, yellow for gentlemen."
+ He took the guineas under his especial charge, leaving only the
+ silver to her. This was a matter of notoriety in the
+ neighbourhood, and the tenants, to please her or humour the joke,
+ sometimes brought bags of shillings and sixpences in part payment
+ of their rents.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the Conway Notes she says:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Our head-quarters were in Wales, where dear Piozzi <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg352" id="pg352">352</a></span> repaired my
+ church, built a new vault for my old ancestors, chose the place
+ in it where he and I are to repose together.... He lived some
+ twenty-five years with me, however, but so punished with gout
+ that we found Bath the best wintering-place for many, many
+ seasons.&mdash;Mrs. Siddons' last appearance there he witnessed,
+ when she played Calista to Dimond's Lothario, in which he looked
+ <i>so</i> like Garrick, it shocked us <i>all three</i>, I
+ believe; for Garrick adored Mr. Piozzi, and Siddons hated the
+ little great man to her heart. Poor Dimond! he was a well-bred,
+ pleasing, worthy creature, and did the honours of his own house
+ and table with peculiar grace indeed. No likeness in private life
+ or manner,&mdash;none at all; no wit, no fun, no frolic humour
+ had Mr. Dimond:&mdash;no grace, no dignity, no real unaffected
+ elegance of mien or behaviour had his predecessor,
+ David,&mdash;whose partiality to my fastidious husband was for
+ that reason never returned. Merriment, difficult for <i>him</i>
+ to comprehend, made no amends for the want of that which no one
+ understood better,&mdash;so he hated all the wits but Murphy."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is hardly a family of note or standing within visiting
+ distance of their place, that has not some tradition or
+ reminiscence to relate concerning them; and all agree in
+ describing him as a worthy good sort of man, obliging,
+ inoffensive, kind to the poor, principally remarkable for his
+ devotion to music, and utterly unable to his dying day to
+ familiarise himself with the English language or manners. It is
+ told of him that being required to pay a turnpike toll near the
+ house of a <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg353" id=
+ "pg353">353</a></span> country neighbour whom he was on his way
+ to visit, he took it for granted that the toll went into his
+ neighbour's pocket, and proposed setting up a gate near Brynbella
+ with the view of levying toll in his turn.
+ </p>
+ <p class="break">
+ In September, 1800, she wrote from Brynbella to Dr. Gray:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Dear Mr. Piozzi, who takes men out of misery so far as his power
+ extends in this neighbourhood, feels flattered and encouraged by
+ your very kind approbation. He has been getting rugs for the
+ cottagers' beds to keep them warm this winter, while we are away,
+ and they all take me into their sleeping rooms when I visit them
+ <i>now</i>, to show how comfortably they live. As for the old hut
+ you so justly abhorred, and so kindly noticed&mdash;it is knocked
+ down and its coarse name too, Potlicko: we call it
+ Cottage-o'-the-Park. Some recurrence to the original derivation
+ in soup season will not, however, be much amiss I suppose."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Amongst the company," says Moore, "was Mrs. John Kemble. She
+ mentioned an anecdote of Piozzi, who upon calling upon some old
+ lady of quality, was told by the servant, she was 'indifferent.'
+ 'Is she indeed?' answered Piozzi, huffishly, 'then pray tell her
+ I can be as indifferent as she;' and walked away."<span class=
+ "fnref">[1]</span>
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] Moore's Memoirs, vol. iv. p. 329.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Till he was disabled by the gout, his principal occupation was
+ his violin, and it was her delight to listen to him. She more
+ than once observed to the vicar, "Such music is quite heavenly."
+ "I am in despair," <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg354" id=
+ "pg354">354</a></span> cried out the village fiddler, "I may now
+ stick my fiddle in my thatched roof, for a greater performer is
+ come to reside in the parish." The existing superstition of the
+ country is that his spirit, playing on his favourite instrument,
+ still haunts one wing of Brynbella. If he designed the building,
+ his architectural taste does not merit the praises she lavishes
+ on it. The exterior is not prepossessing; but there is a look of
+ comfort about the house; the interior is well arranged: the
+ situation, which commands a fine and extensive view of the upper
+ part of the valley of the Clywd, is admirably chosen; the garden
+ and grounds are well laid out; and the walks through the woods on
+ either side, especially one called the Lovers' Walk, are
+ remarkably picturesque. Altogether, Brynbella may be fairly held
+ to merit the appellation of a "pretty villa." The name implies a
+ compliment to Piozzi's country as well as to his taste; for she
+ meant it to typify the union between Wales and Italy in his and
+ her own proper persons. She says in the Conway Notes:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Mr. Piozzi built the house for me, he said; my own old chateau,
+ Bachygraig by name, tho' very curious, was wholly uninhabitable;
+ and we called the Italian villa he set up as mine in the Vale of
+ Cluid, Brynbella, or the beautiful brow, making the name half
+ Welsh and half Italian, as <i>we</i> were."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dr. Burney, in a letter to his daughter, thus described the
+ position and feelings of the couple towards each other in 1808:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "During my invalidity at Bath I had an unexpected <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg355" id="pg355">355</a></span> visit from
+ your Streatham friend, of whom I had lost sight for more than ten
+ years. She still looks very well, but is graver, and candour
+ itself; though she still says good things, and writes admirable
+ notes and letters, I am told, to my granddaughters C. and M., of
+ whom she is very fond. We shook hands very cordially, and avoided
+ any allusion to our long separation and its cause. The <i>caro
+ sposo</i> still lives, but is such an object from the gout, that
+ the account of his sufferings made me pity him sincerely; he
+ wished, she told me, 'to see his old and worthy friend,' and
+ <i>un beau matin</i> I could not refuse compliance with his wish.
+ She nurses him with great affection and tenderness, never goes
+ out or has company when he is in pain."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the Conway Notes she says:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Piozzi's fine hand upon the organ and pianoforte deserted him.
+ Gout, such as I never knew, fastened on his fingers, distorting
+ them into every dreadful shape.... A little girl, shown to him as
+ a musical wonder of five years old, said, 'Pray, Sir, why are
+ your fingers wrapped up in black silk so?' 'My dear,' replied he,
+ 'they are in mourning for my voice.' 'Oh, me!' cries the child,
+ '<i>is she dead?</i>' He sung an easy song, and the baby
+ exclaimed, 'Ah, Sir! you are very naughty&mdash;you tell fibs!'
+ Poor dears! and both gone now!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "When life was gradually, but perceptibly, closing round him at
+ Bath, in 1808, I asked him if he would wish to converse with a
+ Romish priest,&mdash;we had full opportunity there. 'By no
+ means,' said he. 'Call <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg356" id=
+ "pg356">356</a></span> Mr. Leman of the Crescent.' We did
+ so,&mdash;poor Bessy ran and fetched him. Mr. Piozzi received the
+ blessed Sacrament at his hands; but recovered sufficiently to go
+ home and die in his own house."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He died of gout at Brynbella in March 1809, and was buried in a
+ vault constructed by her desire in Dymerchion Church. There is a
+ portrait of him (period and painter unknown) still preserved
+ amongst the family portraits at Brynbella. It is that of a
+ good-looking man of about forty, in a straight-cut brown coat
+ with metal buttons, lace frill and ruffles, and some leaves of
+ music in his hand. There are also two likenesses of Mrs. Piozzi:
+ one a three-quarter length (kit-kat), taken apparently when she
+ was about forty; the other a miniature of her at an advanced age.
+ Both confirm her description of herself as too strong-featured to
+ be pretty. The hands in the three-quarter length are gloved.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Brynbella continued her headquarters till 1814, when she gave it
+ up to Sir John Salusbury. From that period she resided
+ principally at Bath and Clifton, occasionally visiting Streatham
+ or making summer trips to the seaside.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That she and her eldest daughter should ever be again (if they
+ ever were) on a perfect footing of confidence and affection, was
+ a moral impossibility. Estrangements are commonly durable in
+ proportion to the closeness of the tie that has been severed; and
+ it is no more than natural that each party, yearning for a
+ reconciliation and not knowing that the wish is reciprocated,
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg357" id="pg357">357</a></span>
+ should persevere in casting the blame of the prolonged coldness
+ on the other. Occasional sarcasms no more prove disregard or
+ indifference, than Swift's "only a woman's hair" implies contempt
+ for the sex.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Miss Thrale's marriage with Lord Keith in 1808 is thus mentioned
+ in "Thraliana":
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The 'Thraliana' is coming to an end; so are the Thrales. The
+ eldest is married now. Admiral Lord Keith the man; a <i>good</i>
+ man for ought I hear: a <i>rich</i> man for ought I am told: a
+ <i>brave</i> man we have always heard: and a <i>wise</i> man I
+ trow by his choice. The name no new one, and excellent for a
+ charade, <i>e.g</i>.
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ "A Faery my first, who to fame makes pretence;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My second a Rock, dear Britannia's defence;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In my third when combined will too quickly be shown
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Faery and Rock in our brave Elphin-stone."
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Her way of life after Piozzi's death may be collected from the
+ Letters, with the exception of one strange episode towards the
+ end. When nearly eighty, she took a fancy for an actor named
+ Conway, who came out on the London boards in 1813, and had the
+ honour of acting Romeo and Jaffier to the Juliet and Belvidera of
+ Miss O'Neill (Lady Becher). He also acted with her in Dean
+ Milman's fine play, "Fazio." But it was his ill fate to reverse
+ Churchill's famous lines:
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>
+ "Before such merits all objections fly,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pritchard's genteel, and Garrick's six feet high."
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Conway was six feet high, and a very handsome man to boot; but
+ his advantages were purely physical; not <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg358" id="pg358">358</a></span> a spark of
+ genius animated his fine features and commanding figure, and he
+ was battling for a moderate share of provincial celebrity, when
+ Mrs. Piozzi fell in with him at Bath. It has been rumoured in
+ Flintshire that she wished to marry him, and offered Sir John
+ Salusbury a large sum in ready money (which she never possessed)
+ to give up Brynbella (which he could not give up), that she might
+ settle it on the new object of her affections. But none of the
+ letters or documents that have fallen in my way afford even
+ plausibility to the rumour, and some of the testamentary papers
+ in which his name occurs, go far towards discrediting the belief
+ that her attachment ever went beyond admiration and friendship
+ expressed in exaggerated terms.<span class="fnref">[1]</span>
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] Since the appearance of the first edition of this work, it
+ has been stated on the authority of a distinguished man of
+ letters that Conway shewed the late Charles Mathews a letter
+ from Mrs. Piozzi, offering marriage.&mdash;<i>New Monthly
+ Magazine</i> (edited by Mr. Harrison Ainsworth) for April,
+ 1861.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Conway threw himself overboard and was drowned in a voyage from
+ New York to Charleston in 1828. His effects were sold at New
+ York, and amongst them a copy of the folio edition of Young's
+ "Night Thoughts," in which he had made a note of its having been
+ presented to him by his "dearly attached friend, the celebrated
+ Mrs. Piozzi." In the preface to "Love Letters of Mrs. Piozzi,
+ Written when she was Eighty, to William Augustus Conway,"
+ published in London in 1842, it is stated that the originals,
+ seven in number, were purchased by an <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg359" id="pg359">359</a></span> American
+ "lady," who permitted a "gentleman" to take copies and use them
+ as he might think fit. What this "gentleman" thought fit, was to
+ publish them with a catchpenny title and an alleged extract by
+ way of motto to sanction it. The genuineness of the letters is
+ doubtful, and the interpolation of three or four sentences would
+ alter their entire tenor. But taken as they stand, their language
+ is not warmer than an old woman of vivid fancy and sensibility
+ might have deemed warranted by her age. "Tell Mr. Johnson I love
+ him exceedingly," is the mission given by the old Countess of
+ Eglinton to Boswell in 1778. <i>L'age n'a point de sexe</i>; and
+ no one thought the worse of Madame Du Deffand for the impassioned
+ tone in which she addressed Horace Walpole, whose dread of
+ ridicule induced him to make a most ungrateful return to her
+ fondness.<span class="fnref">[1]</span> Years before the
+ formation of this acquaintance, Mrs. Piozzi had acquired the
+ difficult art of growing old; <i>je sais vieillir</i>: she dwells
+ frequently but naturally on her age: she contemplates the
+ approach of death with firmness and without self-deception: and
+ her elasticity of spirit never for a moment suggests the image of
+ an antiquated coquette. Of the seven letters in question, the one
+ cited as most compromising is the sixth, in which Conway is
+ exhorted to bear patiently a rebuff he had just received from
+ some younger beauty:
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] "The old woman's fancy for Mr. Conway represents a relation
+ of warm friendship that is of every-day occurrence between
+ youth and age that is not crabbed."&mdash;<i>The Examiner</i>,
+ Feb. 16, 1861. <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg360" id=
+ "pg360">360</a></span>
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ "'Tis not a year and a quarter since, dear Conway, accepting of
+ my portrait sent to Birmingham, said to the bringer, 'Oh if
+ <i>your lady</i> but retains her friendship: oh if I can but keep
+ <i>her</i> patronage, I care not for the rest.' And now, when
+ that friendship follows you through sickness and through sorrow;
+ now that her patronage is daily rising in importance: upon a lock
+ of hair given or refused by une petite Traitresse, hangs all the
+ happiness of my once high-spirited and high-blooded friend. Let
+ it not be so. EXALT THY LOVE: DEJECTED HEART&mdash;and rise
+ superior to such narrow minds. Do not however fancy she will ever
+ be punished in the way you mention: no, no; she'll wither on the
+ thorny stem dropping the faded and ungathered leaves:&mdash;a
+ China rose, of no good scent or flavour&mdash;false in apparent
+ sweetness, deceitful when depended on&mdash;unlike the flower
+ produced in colder climates, which is sought for in old age,
+ preserved <i>even after death</i>, a lasting and an elegant
+ perfume,&mdash;a medicine, too, for those whose shattered nerves
+ require <i>astringent remedies</i>.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And now, dear Sir, let me request of you&mdash;to love
+ yourself&mdash;and to reflect on the necessity of not dwelling on
+ any <i>particular subject</i> too long, or too intensely. It is
+ really very dangerous to the health of body and soul. Besides
+ that our time here is but short; a mere preface to the great book
+ of eternity: and 'tis scarce worthy of a reasonable being not to
+ keep the end of human existence so far in view that we may tend
+ to it&mdash;either directly or obliquely in every step. This is
+ preaching&mdash;but remember how the sermon is written at three,
+ four, and <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg361" id=
+ "pg361">361</a></span> five o'clock by an octogenary pen&mdash;a
+ heart (as Mrs. Lee says) twenty-six years old: and as H.L.P.
+ feels it to be,&mdash;ALL YOUR OWN. Suffer your dear noble self
+ to be in some measure benefited by the talents which are left
+ <i>me</i>; your health to be restored by soothing consolations
+ while <i>I remain here</i>, and am able to bestow them. All is
+ not lost yet. You <i>have</i> a friend, and that friend is
+ PIOZZI."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Conway's "high blood" was as great a recommendation to Mrs.
+ Piozzi as his good looks, and he vindicated his claim to noble
+ descent by his conduct, which was disinterested and gentlemanlike
+ throughout.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Moore sets down in his Diary, April 28, 1819: "Breakfasted with
+ the Fitzgeralds. Took me to call on Mrs. Piozzi; a wonderful old
+ lady; faces of other times seemed to crowd over her as she
+ sat,&mdash;the Johnsons, Reynoldses, &amp;c. &amp;c.: though
+ turned eighty, she has all the quickness and intelligence of a
+ gay young woman."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nichol, the bookseller, had said that "Johnson was the link that
+ connected Shakespeare with the rest of mankind." On hearing this,
+ Mrs. Piozzi at eighty exclaimed, "Oh, the dear fellow, I must
+ give him a kiss for that idea." When Nichol told the story, he
+ added, "I never got it, and she went out of the world a kiss in
+ my debt."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One of the most characteristic feats or freaks of this
+ extraordinary woman was the celebration of her eightieth birthday
+ by a concert, ball, and supper, to between six and seven hundred
+ people, at the Kingston Rooms, Bath, on the 27th January, 1820.
+ At the conclusion <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg362" id=
+ "pg362">362</a></span> of the supper, her health was proposed by
+ Admiral Sir James Sausmarez, and drunk with three times three.
+ The dancing began at two, when she led off with her adopted son,
+ Sir John Salusbury, dancing (according to the author of
+ "Piozziana," an eye-witness) "with astonishing elasticity, and
+ with all the true air of dignity which might have been expected
+ of one of the best bred females in society." When fears were
+ expressed that she had done too much, she replied:&mdash;"No:
+ this sort of thing is greatly in the mind; and I am almost
+ tempted to say the same of growing old at all, especially as it
+ regards those of the usual concomitants of age, viz., laziness,
+ defective sight, and ill-temper."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "So far from feeling fatigued or exhausted on the following day
+ by her exertions," remarks Sir James Fellowes in a note on this
+ event, "she amused us by her sallies of wit, and her jokes on
+ 'Tully's Offices,' of which her guests had so eagerly availed
+ themselves.". Tully was the cook and confectioner, the Bath
+ Gunter, who provided the supper.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Piozzi died in May, 1821. Her death is circumstantially
+ communicated in a letter from Mrs. Pennington, the lady mentioned
+ in Miss Seward's correspondence as the beautiful and agreeable
+ Sophia Weston:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p class="quotdate">
+ "Hot Wells, May 5th, 1821.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Dear Miss Willoughby,&mdash;It is my painful task to communicate
+ to you, who have so lately been the kind associate of dearest
+ Mrs. Piozzi, the irreparable loss we <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg363" id="pg363">363</a></span> have all
+ sustained in that incomparable woman and beloved friend.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "She closed her various life about nine o'clock on Wednesday,
+ after an illness of ten days, with as little suffering as could
+ be imagined under these awful circumstances. Her bed-side was
+ surrounded by her weeping daughters: Lady Keith and Mrs. Hoare
+ arrived in time to be fully recognised<span class=
+ "fnref">[1]</span>; Miss Thrale, who was absent from town, only
+ just before she expired, but with the satisfaction of seeing her
+ breathe her last in peace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nothing could behave with more tenderness and propriety than
+ these ladies, whose conduct, I am convinced, has been much
+ misrepresented and calumniated by those who have only attended to
+ <i>one</i> side of the history: but may all that is past be now
+ buried in oblivion! Retrospection seldom improves our view of any
+ subject. Sir John Salusbury was too distant, the close of her
+ illness being so rapid, for us to entertain any expectation of
+ his arriving in time to see the dear deceased. He only reached
+ Clifton late <i>last</i> night. I have not yet seen him; my whole
+ time has been devoted to the afflicted ladies."
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] On hearing of their arrival she is reported to have said,
+ "Now, I shall die in state."
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Pennington told a friend that Mrs. Piozzi's last words were:
+ "I die in the trust and the fear of God." When she was attended
+ by Sir George Gibbes, being unable to articulate, she traced a
+ coffin in the air with her hands and lay calm. Her will, dated
+ the 29th March, <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg364" id=
+ "pg364">364</a></span> 1816, makes Sir John Salusbury Piozzi
+ Salusbury heir to all her real and personal property with the
+ exception of some small bequests, Sir James Fellowes and Sir John
+ Salusbury being appointed executors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A Memorandum signed by Sir James Fellowes runs thus:&mdash;"After
+ I had read the Will, Lady Keith and her two sisters present, said
+ they had long been prepared for the contents and for such a
+ disposition of the property, and they acknowledged the validity
+ of the Will."
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ In any endeavour to solve the difficult problem of Mrs. Piozzi's
+ conduct and character, it should be kept in view that the highest
+ testimony to her worth has been volunteered by those with whom
+ she passed the last years of her life in the closest intimacy.
+ She had become completely reconciled to Madame D'Arblay, with
+ whom she was actively corresponding when she died, and her mixed
+ qualities of head and heart are thus summed up in that lady's
+ Diary, May, 1821:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have lost now, just lost, my once most dear, intimate, and
+ admired friend, Mrs. Thrale Piozzi, who preserved her fine
+ faculties, her imagination, her intelligence, her powers of
+ allusion and citation, her extraordinary memory, and her almost
+ unexampled vivacity, to the last of her existence. She was in her
+ eighty-second year, and yet owed not her death to age nor to
+ natural decay, but to the effects of a fall in a journey from
+ Penzance to Clifton. On her eightieth birthday she gave a great
+ ball, concert, and supper, in the public <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg365" id="pg365">365</a></span> rooms at
+ Bath, to upwards of two hundred persons, and the ball she opened
+ herself. She was, in truth, a most wonderful character for
+ talents and eccentricity, for wit, genius, generosity, spirit,
+ and powers of entertainment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "She had a great deal both of good and not good, in common with
+ Madame de Staël Holstein. They had the same sort of highly
+ superior intellect, the same depth of learning, the same general
+ acquaintance with science, the same ardent love of literature,
+ the same thirst for universal knowledge, and the same buoyant
+ animal spirits, such as neither sickness, sorrow, nor even
+ terror, could subdue. Their conversation was equally luminous,
+ from the sources of their own fertile minds, and from their
+ splendid acquisitions from the works and acquirements of others.
+ Both were zealous to serve, liberal to bestow, and graceful to
+ oblige; and both were truly high-minded in prizing and praising
+ whatever was admirable that came in their way. Neither of them
+ was delicate nor polished, though each was flattering and
+ caressing; but both had a fund inexhaustible of good humour, and
+ of sportive gaiety, that made their intercourse with those they
+ wished to please attractive, instructive, and delightful; and
+ though not either of them had the smallest real malevolence in
+ their compositions, neither of them could ever withstand the
+ pleasure of uttering a repartee, let it wound whom it might, even
+ though each would serve the very person they goaded with all the
+ means in their power. Both were kind, charitable, and munificent,
+ and therefore <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg366" id=
+ "pg366">366</a></span> beloved; both were sarcastic, careless,
+ and daring, and therefore feared. The morality of Madame de Staël
+ was by far the most faulty, but so was the society to which she
+ belonged; so were the general manners of those by whom she was
+ encircled."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is one real point of similarity between Madame de Staël and
+ Mrs. Piozzi, which has been omitted in the parallel. Both were
+ treated much in the same manner by the amiable, sensitive, and
+ unsophisticated Fanny Burney. In Feb. 1793, she wrote to her
+ father, then at Paris, to announce her intimacy with a small
+ "colony" of distinguished emigrants settled at Richmond, the
+ cynosure of which was the far-famed daughter of Necker. He writes
+ to caution her on the strength of a suspicious <i>liaison</i>
+ with M. de Narbonne. She replies by declaring her belief that the
+ charge is a gross calumny. "Indeed, I think you could not spend a
+ day with them and not see that their commerce is that of pure,
+ but exalted and most elegant, friendship. I would, nevertheless,
+ give the world to avoid being a guest under their roof, now that
+ I have heard even the shadow of such a rumour."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If Mr. Croker was right, she was then in her forty-second year;
+ at all events, no tender, timid, delicate maiden, ready to start
+ at a hint or semblance of impropriety; and she waved her scruples
+ without hesitation when they stood in the way of her intercourse
+ with M. D'Arblay, whom she married in July 1793, he being then
+ employed in transcribing Madame de Staël's Essay on the Influence
+ of the Passions. <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg367" id=
+ "pg367">367</a></span>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As to the parallel, with all due deference to Madame D'Arblay's
+ proved sagacity aided by her personal knowledge of her two gifted
+ friends, it may be suggested that they present fewer points of
+ resemblance than any two women of at all corresponding
+ celebrity.<span class="fnref">[1]</span> The superiority in the
+ highest qualities of mind will be awarded without hesitation to
+ the French woman, although M. Thiers terms her writings the
+ perfection of mediocrity. She grappled successfully with some of
+ the weightiest and subtlest questions of social and political
+ science; in criticism she displayed powers which Schlegel might
+ have envied while he aided their fullest development in her
+ "Germany"; and her "Corinne" ranks amongst the best of those
+ works of fiction which excel in description, reflection, and
+ sentiment, rather than in pathos, fancy, stirring incident, or
+ artfully contrived plot. But her tone of mind was so essentially
+ and notoriously masculine, that when she asked Talleyrand whether
+ he had read her "Delphine," he answered, "Non, Madame, mais on
+ m'a dit que-nous y sommes tous les deux déguisés en
+ femmes."<span class="fnref">[2]</span> This was a material
+ drawback on her agreeability: in a moment of excited
+ consciousness, she exclaimed, that she would give all her fame
+ for the power of fascinating; <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+ "pg368" id="pg368">368</a></span> and there was no lack of
+ bitterness in her celebrated repartee to the man who, seated
+ between her and Madame Recamier, boasted of being between Wit and
+ Beauty, "Oui, et sans posséder ni l'un ni l'autre."<span class=
+ "fnref">[3]</span> The view from Richmond Park she called "calme
+ et animée, ce qu'on doit être, et que je ne suis pas."
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] Lady Morgan and Madame de Genlis have been suggested as
+ each presenting a better subject for a parallel.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [2] "To understand the point of this answer," says Mr.
+ Mackintosh, "it must be known that an old countess is
+ introduced in the novel full of cunning, finessing, and trick,
+ who was intended to represent Talleyrand, and Delphine was
+ intended for herself."&mdash;<i>Life of Sir James
+ Mackintosh</i>, vol. ii. p. 453.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [3] This <i>mot</i> is given to Talleyrand in Lady Holland's
+ Life of Sydney Smith. But it may be traced to one mentioned by
+ Hannah More in 1787, as then current in Paris. One of the
+ <i>notables</i> fresh from his province was teased by two
+ <i>petits maîtres</i> to tell them who he was. "Eh bien donc,
+ le voici: je suis ni sot ni fat, mais je suis entre les
+ deux."&mdash;<i>Memoirs of Hannah More</i>, vol. ii. p. 57.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ In London she was soon voted a bore by the wits and people of
+ fashion. She thought of convincing whilst they thought of dining.
+ Sheridan and Brummell delighted in mystifying her. Byron
+ complained that she was always talking of himself or
+ herself<span class="fnref">[1]</span>, and concludes his account
+ of a dinner-party by the remark:&mdash;"But we got up too soon
+ after the women; and Mrs. Corinne always lingers so long after
+ dinner, that we wish her&mdash;in the drawing-room." In another
+ place he says: "I saw Curran presented to Madame de Staël at
+ Mackintosh's; it was the grand confluence between the Rhone and
+ the Saône, and they were both so d&mdash;d ugly that I could not
+ help wondering how the best intellects of France and England
+ could have taken up respectively such residences." He afterwards
+ qualifies this opinion: "Her figure was not bad; her legs
+ tolerable; her arms good: altogether I can conceive her having
+ been a desirable <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg369" id=
+ "pg369">369</a></span> woman, allowing a little imagination for
+ her soul, and so forth. She would have made a great man."
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] Johnson told Boswell: "You have only two topics, yourself
+ and myself, and I am heartily sick of both."
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ This is just what Mrs. Piozzi never would have made. Her mind,
+ despite her masculine acquirements, was thoroughly feminine: she
+ had more tact than genius, more sensibility and quickness of
+ perception than depth, comprehensiveness, or continuity of
+ thought. But her very discursiveness prevented her from becoming
+ wearisome: her varied knowledge supplied an inexhaustible store
+ of topics and illustrations; her lively fancy placed them in
+ attractive lights; and her mind has been well likened to a
+ kaleidoscope which, whenever its glittering and heterogeneous
+ contents are moved or shaken, surprises by some new combination
+ of colour or of form. She professed to write as she talked; but
+ her conversation was doubtless better than her books: her main
+ advantages being a well-stored memory, fertility of images,
+ aptness of allusion, and <i>apropos</i>.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her colloquial excellence and her agreeability are established by
+ the unanimous testimony of her cotemporaries. Her fame in this
+ respect rests on the same basis as that of all great wits, all
+ great actors, and many great orators. To question it for want of
+ more tangible and durable proofs, would be as unreasonable as to
+ question Sydney Smith's humour, Hook's powers of improvisation,
+ Garrick's Richard, or Sheridan's Begum speech. But <i>ex pede
+ Herculem</i>. Marked indications of her quality will be found in
+ her letters and her books. "Both," remarks an acute and by no
+ means <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg370" id=
+ "pg370">370</a></span> partial critic<span class=
+ "fnref">[1]</span>, "are full of happy touches, and here and
+ there will be found in them those deep and piercing thoughts
+ which come intuitively to people of genius."
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] The Athenæum. Jan. 26th, 1861.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Surely these are happy touches:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I hate a general topic as a pretty woman hates a general
+ mourning when black does not become her complexion."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Life is a schoolroom, not a playground."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In allusion to the rage for scientific experiment in 1811: "Never
+ was poor Nature so put to the rack, and never, of course, was she
+ made to tell so many lies."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Science (i.e. learning), which acted as a sceptre in the hand of
+ Johnson, and was used as a club by Dr. Parr, became a lady's fan,
+ when played with by George Henry Glasse."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Hope is drawn with an anchor always, and Common Sense is never
+ strong enough to draw it up."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The poppy which Nature sows among the corn, to shew us that
+ sleep is as necessary as bread." <span class="fnref">[1]</span>
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] Or to shew us that the harvest diminishes with sloth, and
+ that what we gain in sleep we lose in bread. But <i>qui dort,
+ dine</i>.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ "The best writers are not the best friends; and the last
+ character is more to be valued than the first by cotemporaries:
+ after fifty years, indeed, the others carry away all the
+ applause."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This is the reason why posterity always takes part with the
+ famous author or man of genius against those who witnessed his
+ meanness or suffered from his selfishness; why fresh apologists
+ will constantly be found for <span class="pagenum"><a name=
+ "pg371" id="pg371">371</a></span> Bacon's want of principle and
+ Johnson's want of manners.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the course of his famous definition or description of wit,
+ Barrow says: "Sometimes it lieth in pat allusion to a known
+ story, or in seasonable application of a trivial saying:
+ sometimes it playeth in words and phrases, taking advantage from
+ the ambiguity of their sense or the affinity of their sound." If
+ this be so, she possessed it in abundance. In a letter, dated
+ Bath, 26th April, 1818,&mdash;about the time when Talleyrand said
+ of Lady F.S.'s robe: "<i>Elle commence trop tard et finit trop
+ tôt</i>,"&mdash;she writes:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "A genteel young clergyman, in our Upper Crescent, told his mamma
+ about ten days ago, that he had lost his heart to pretty Miss
+ Prideaux, and that he must absolutely marry her or die. <i>La
+ chère mère</i> of course replied gravely: 'My dear, you have not
+ been acquainted with the lady above a fortnight: let me recommend
+ you to see more of her.' 'More of her!' exclaimed the lad, 'why I
+ have seen down to the fifth rib on each side already.' This story
+ will serve to convince Captain T. Fellowes and yourself, that as
+ you have always acknowledged the British Belles to <i>exceed</i>
+ those of every other nation, you may now say with truth, that
+ they <i>outstrip</i> them."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the 1st July, 1818:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The heat has certainly exhausted my faculties, and I have but
+ just life enough left to laugh at the fourteen tailors who,
+ united under a flag with '<i>Liberty and Independence</i>'
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg372" id="pg372">372</a></span>
+ on it, went to vote for some of these gay fellows, I forget
+ which, but the motto is ill chosen, said I, they should have
+ written up, '<i>Measures not Men</i>'"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her verses are advantageously distinguished amongst those of her
+ blue-stocking contemporaries by happy turns of thought and
+ expression, natural playfulness, and an abundant flow of
+ idiomatic language. But her facility was a fatal gift, as it has
+ proved to most female aspirants to poetic fame, who rarely stoop
+ to the labour of the file. Although the first rule laid down by
+ Goldsmith's connoisseur<span class="fnref">[1]</span> is far from
+ universally applicable to productions of the pencil or the pen,
+ all fruitful writers would do well to act upon it, and what Mrs.
+ Piozzi could do when she took pains is decisively proved by her
+ "Streatham Portraits."
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] "Upon my asking him how he had acquired the art of a
+ conoscente so very suddenly, he assured me that nothing was
+ more easy. The whole secret consisted in an adherence to two
+ rules: the one always to observe that the picture might have
+ been better if the painter had taken more pains; and the other
+ to praise the works of Pietro Perugino."&mdash;<i>The Vicar of
+ Wakefield</i>, ch. xx.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ She was wanting in refinement, which very few of the eighteenth
+ century wits and authors possessed according to more modern
+ notions; and she abounded in vanity, which, if not necessarily a
+ baneful or unamiable quality, is a fruitful source of folly and
+ peculiarly calculated to provoke censure or ridicule. In her,
+ fortunately, its effects were a good deal modified by the
+ frankness of its avowal and display, by her habits of
+ self-examination, by her impulsive generosity of character, and
+ by her readiness to admit the claims and consult the feelings
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg373" id="pg373">373</a></span>
+ of others. To seek out and appreciate merit as she appreciated
+ it, is a high merit in itself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her piety was genuine; and old-fashioned politicians, whose
+ watchword is Church and King, will be delighted with her
+ politics. Literary men, considering how many curious inquiries
+ depend upon her accuracy, will be more anxious about her
+ truthfulness, and I have had ample opportunities of testing it;
+ having not only been led to compare her narratives with those of
+ others, but to collate her own statements of the same
+ transactions or circumstances at distant intervals or to
+ different persons. It is difficult to keep up a large
+ correspondence without frequent repetition. Sir Walter Scott used
+ to write precisely the same things to three or four fine-lady
+ friends, and Mrs. Piozzi could no more be expected to find a
+ fresh budget of news or gossip for each epistle than the author
+ of "Waverley." Thus, in 1815, she writes to a Welsh baronet from
+ Bath:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We have had a fine Dr. Holland here.<span class=
+ "fnref">[1]</span> He has seen and written about the Ionian
+ Islands; and means now to practise as a physician, exchanging the
+ Cyclades, say we wits and wags, for the Sick Ladies. We made
+ quite a lion of the man. I was invited to every house he visited
+ at for the last three days; so I got the <i>Queue du lion</i>
+ despairing of <i>le Coeur</i>."
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] Sir Henry Holland, Bart., who, with many other titles to
+ distinction, is one of the most active and enterprising of
+ modern travellers.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Two other letters written about the same time contain the same
+ piece of intelligence and the same joke. <span class=
+ "pagenum"><a name="pg374" id="pg374">374</a></span> She was very
+ fond of writing marginal notes; and after annotating one copy of
+ a book, would take up another and do the same. I have never
+ detected a substantial variation in her narratives, even in those
+ which were more or less dictated by pique; and as she generally
+ drew upon the "Thraliana" for her materials, this, having been
+ carefully and calmly compiled, affords an additional guarantee
+ for her accuracy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her taste for reading never left her or abated to the last. In
+ reference to a remark (in Boswell) on the irksomeness of books to
+ people of advanced age, she writes: "Not to me at eighty years
+ old: being grieved that year (1819) particularly, I was forced
+ upon study to relieve my mind, and it had the due effect. I wrote
+ this note in 1820."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She sometimes gives anecdotes of authors. Thus, in the letter
+ just quoted, she says: "Lord Byron protests his wife was a
+ fortune without money, a belle without beauty, and a
+ blue-stocking without either wit or learning." But her literary
+ information grew scanty as she grew old: "The literary world (she
+ writes in 1821) is to me terra incognita, far more deserving of
+ the name, now Parry and Ross are returned, than any part of the
+ polar regions:" and her opinions of the rising authors are
+ principally valuable as indications of the obstacles which
+ budding reputations must overcome. "Pindar's fine remark
+ respecting the different effects of music on different
+ characters, holds equally true of genius: so many as are not
+ delighted by it are disturbed, perplexed, irritated. The beholder
+ either recognises <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg375" id=
+ "pg375">375</a></span> it as a projected form of his own being,
+ that moves before him with a glory round its head, or recoils
+ from it as a spectre."<span class="fnref">[1]</span> The
+ octogenarian critic of the Johnsonian school recoils from
+ "Frankenstein" as from an incarnation of the Evil Spirit: she
+ does not know what to make of the "Tales of my Landlord"; and she
+ inquires of an Irish acquaintance whether she retained
+ recollection enough of her own country to be entertained with
+ "that strange caricature, Castle Rack Rent." Contemporary
+ judgments such as these (not more extravagant than Horace
+ Walpole's) are to the historian of literature what fossil remains
+ are to the geologist.
+ </p>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ [1] Coleridge, "Aids to Reflection."
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Although perhaps no biographical sketch was ever executed, as a
+ labour of love, without an occasional attack of what Lord
+ Macaulay calls the <i>Lues Boswelliana</i> or fever of
+ admiration, I hope it is unnecessary for me to say that I am not
+ setting up Mrs. Piozzi as a model letter-writer, or an eminent
+ author, or a pattern of the domestic virtues, or a fitting object
+ of hero or heroine worship in any capacity. All I venture to
+ maintain is, that her life and character, if only for the sake of
+ the "associate forms," deserve to be vindicated against unjust
+ reproach, and that she has written many things which are worth
+ snatching from oblivion or preserving from decay.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ END OF THE FIRST VOLUME. <span class="pagenum"><a name="pg376"
+ id="pg376">376</a></span>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ LONDON
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ PRINTED BY SPOTTISWOODE AND CO.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ NEW-STREET SQUARE
+ </p>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Autobiography, Letters and Literary
+Remains of Mrs. Piozzi (Thrale) (2nd ed.) (2 vols.), by Mrs. Hester Lynch Piozzi
+
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+</pre>
+
+ </body>
+</html>
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Autobiography, Letters and Literary Remains
+of Mrs. Piozzi (Thrale) (2nd ed.) (2 vols.), by Mrs. Hester Lynch Piozzi
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Autobiography, Letters and Literary Remains of Mrs. Piozzi (Thrale) (2nd ed.) (2 vols.)
+ Edited with notes and Introductory Account of her life and writings
+
+Author: Mrs. Hester Lynch Piozzi
+
+Release Date: February 14, 2005 [EBook #15045]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LITERARY REMAINS OF MRS. PIOZZI ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Jonathan Ingram, Leonard Johnson and the PG Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net.
+
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+AUTOBIOGRAPHY
+
+LETTERS AND LITERARY REMAINS
+
+OF
+
+MRS. PIOZZI (THRALE)
+
+
+EDITED WITH NOTES
+
+AND
+
+AN INTRODUCTORY ACCOUNT OF HER LIFE AND WRITINGS
+
+BY
+A. HAYWARD, ESQ. Q.C.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Welcome, Associate Forms, where'er we turn
+Fill, Streatham's Hebe, the Johnsonian urn--St. Stephen's
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In Two Volumes
+VOL. I.
+
+SECOND EDITION
+
+LONDON
+LONGMAN, GREEN, LONGMAN, AND ROBERTS
+1861
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE
+
+TO
+
+THE SECOND EDITION.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE first edition of a work of this kind is almost necessarily
+imperfect; since the editor is commonly dependent for a great deal of
+the required information upon sources the very existence of which is
+unknown to him till reminiscences are revived, and communications
+invited, by the announcement or publication of the book. Some
+valuable contributions reached me too late to be properly placed or
+effectively worked up; some, too late to be included at all. The
+arrangement in this edition will therefore, I trust, be found less
+faulty than in the first, whilst the additions are large and
+valuable. They principally consist of fresh extracts from Mrs.
+Piozzi's private diary ("Thraliana"), amounting to more than fifty
+pages; of additional marginal notes on books, and of copious extracts
+from letters hitherto unpublished.
+
+Amongst the effects of her friend Conway, the actor, after his
+untimely death by drowning in North America, were a copy of Mrs.
+Piozzi's "Travel Book" and a copy of Johnson's "Lives of the Poets,"
+each enriched by marginal notes in her handwriting. Such of those in
+the "Travel Book" as were thought worth printing appeared in "The
+Atlantic Monthly" for June last, from which I have taken the liberty
+of copying the best. The "Lives of the Poets" is now the property of
+Mr. William Alexander Smith, of New York, who was so kind as to open
+a communication with me on the subject, and to have the whole of the
+marginal notes transcribed for my use at his expense.
+
+Animated by the same liberal wish to promote a literary undertaking,
+Mr. J.E. Gray, son of the Rev. Dr. Robert Gray, late Bishop of
+Bristol, has placed at my disposal a series of letters from Mrs.
+Piozzi to his father, extending over nearly twenty-five years (from
+1797 to the year of her death) and exceeding a hundred in number.
+These have been of the greatest service in enabling me to complete
+and verify the summary of that period of her life.
+
+So much light is thrown by the new matter, especially by the extracts
+from "Thraliana," on the alleged rupture between Johnson and Mrs.
+Piozzi, that I have re-cast or re-written the part of the
+Introduction relating to it, thinking that no pains should be spared
+to get at the merits of a controversy which now involves, not only
+the moral and social qualities of the great lexicographer, but the
+degree of confidence to be placed in the most brilliant and popular
+of modern critics, biographers and historians. It is no impeachment
+of his integrity, no detraction from the durable elements of his
+fame, to offer proof that his splendid imagination ran away with him,
+or that reliance on his wonderful memory made him careless of
+verifying his original impressions before recording them in the most
+gorgeous and memorable language.
+
+No one likes to have foolish or erroneous notions imputed to him, and
+I have pointed out some of the misapprehensions into which an able
+writer in the "Edinburgh Review" (No. 231) has been hurried by his
+eagerness to vindicate Lord Macaulay. Moreover, this struck me to be
+as good a form as any for re-examining the subject in all its
+bearings; and now that it has become common to reprint articles in a
+collected shape, the comments of a first-rate review can no longer be
+regarded as transitory.
+
+I gladly seize the present opportunity to offer my best
+acknowledgments for kind and valuable aid in various shapes, to the
+Marquis of Lansdowne, His Excellency M. Sylvain Van de Weyer (the
+Belgian Minister), the Viscountess Combermere, Mr. and the Hon. Mrs.
+Monckton Milnes, the Hon. Mrs. Rowley, Miss Angharad Lloyd, and the
+Rev. W.H. Owen, Vicar of St. Asaph and Dymerchion.
+
+ 8, St. James's Street:
+ Oct. 18th, 1861.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+OF
+
+THE FIRST VOLUME
+
+
+Origin and Materials of the Work
+Object of the Introduction
+Origin, Education, and Character of Thrale
+Introduction of Johnson to the Thrales
+Johnson's Habits at the Period
+His Household
+His Social Position
+Society at Streatham
+Blue Stocking Parties
+Johnson's Fondness for Female Society
+Nature of his Intimacy with Mrs. Thrale
+His Verses to her
+Her Age
+Her Personal Appearance and Handwriting
+Portraits of her
+Boswell at Streatham
+Her Behaviour to Johnson
+Her Acquirements
+Johnson's Estimate of her
+Popular Estimate of her
+Manners of her Time
+Madame D'Arblay at Streatham
+Her Account of Conversations there
+Johnson's Politeness
+Mrs. Thrale's Domestic Trials
+Electioneering with Johnson
+Thrale's Embarrassments, and Johnson's Advice
+Johnson on Housekeeping and Dress
+His Opinions on Marriage
+Johnson in the Country
+Johnson fond of riding in a Carriage, but a bad Traveller
+His Want of Taste for Music or Painting
+Tour in Wales
+Tour in France
+Baretti
+Campbell's Diary
+Mrs. Thrale's Account of her Quarrel with Baretti
+His Account
+Alleged Slight to Johnson
+Miss Streatfield
+Thrale's Infidelity
+Madame D'Arblay as an Inmate
+Dr. Burney
+Mrs. Thrale canvassing Southwark
+Attack by Rioters on the Brewhouse
+Thrale's Illness and Winter in Grosvenor Square
+Proposed Tour
+Thrale's Death
+His Will
+Johnson as Executor
+Her Management of the Brewery
+Italian Translation
+A strange Incident
+Mrs. Montagu--Mr. Crutchley
+Sale of the Brewery
+Mrs. Thrale's Introduction to Piozzi
+Scene with him at Dr. Burney's
+Her early Impressions of him
+Melancholy Reflections
+Johnson's Regard for Thrale
+Mrs. Thrale's and Johnson's Feelings towards each other
+Johnson at Streatham after Thrale's Death
+Piozzi--Verses to him
+Johnson's Health
+Self-Communings
+Town Gossip
+Verses on Pacchierotti
+Fears for Johnson
+Reports of her marrying again
+Reasons for quitting Streatham
+Resolution to quit approved by Johnson
+Complaints of Johnson's Indifference
+Piozzi--to marry or not to marry
+Was Johnson driven out of Streatham
+His Farewell to Streatham
+His last Year there
+Johnson and Mrs. Thrale at Brighton
+Conflicting Feelings
+Gives up Piozzi
+Meditated Journey to Italy
+Parting with Piozzi
+Unkindness of Daughters
+Position as regards Johnson
+Objections to him as an Inmate
+Parting with Piozzi
+Verses to him on his Departure
+Her undiminished Regard for Johnson proved by
+their Correspondence
+Character of Daughters
+Madame D'Arblay, Scene with Johnson
+Lord Brougham's Commentary
+Correspondence with Johnson
+Recall of Piozzi
+Trip to London
+Verses to Piozzi on his Return
+Journey with Daughters
+Feelings on Piozzi's Return, and Marriage
+Objections to her Second Marriage discussed
+Correspondence with Madame D'Arblay on the Marriage
+Objections of Daughters--Lady Keith
+Correspondence with Johnson as to the Marriage
+Baretti's Story of her alleged Deceit
+Her uniform Kindness to Johnson
+Johnson's Feelings and Conduct
+Miss Wynn's Commonplace Book
+Johnson's unfounded Objections to the Marriage and erroneous
+ Impressions of Piozzi
+Miss Seward's Account of his Loves
+Misrepresentation and erroneous Theory of a Critic
+Last Days and Death of Johnson
+Lord Macaulay's Summary of Mrs. Piozzi's Treatment of Johnson
+Life in Italy
+Projected Work on Johnson
+The Florence Miscellany
+Correspondence with Cadell and Publication of the "Anecdotes"
+Her alleged Inaccuracy, with Instances
+H. Walpole
+Peter Pindar
+H. Walpole again
+Hannah More
+Marginal Notes on the "Anecdotes"
+Extracts from Dr. Lort's Letters
+Her Thoughts on her Return from Italy
+Her Reception
+Miss Seward's Impressions of her and Piozzi
+Publication of the "Letters"
+Opinions on them--Madame D'Arblay, Queen Charlotte, Hannah More, and
+ Miss Seward
+Baretti's libellous Attacks
+Her Character of him on his Death
+"The Sentimental Mother"
+"Johnson's Ghost"
+The Travel Book
+Offer to Cadell
+Publication of the Book and Criticisms--Walpole and Miss Seward
+Mrs. Piozzi's Theory of Style
+Attacked by Walpole and Gifford
+The Preface
+Extracts
+Anecdote of Goldsmith
+Publication of her "Synonyms"--Gifford's Attack
+Extract
+Remarks on the Appearance of Boswell's Life of Johnson
+"Retrospection"
+Moore's Anecdotes of her and Piozzi
+Lord Lansdowne's Visit and Impressions
+Adoption and Education of Piozzi's Nephew, afterwards Sir John Salusbury
+Life in Wales
+Character and Habits of Piozzi
+Brynbella
+Illness and Death of Piozzi
+Miss Thrale's Marriage
+The Conway Episode
+Anecdotes
+Celebration of her Eightieth Birthday
+Her Death and Will
+Madame D'Arblay's Parallel between Mrs. Piozzi and Madame de Stael
+Character of Mrs. Piozzi, Moral and Intellectual
+
+ * * * * *
+
+AUTOBIOGRAPHY &c. OF MRS. PIOZZI
+
+VOL. I
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+INTRODUCTION:
+
+LIFE AND WRITINGS OF MRS. PIOZZI.
+
+
+Dr. Johnson was hailed the colossus of Literature by a generation who
+measured him against men of no common mould--against Hume, Robertson,
+Gibbon, Warburton, the Wartons, Fielding, Richardson, Smollett, Gray,
+Goldsmith, and Burke. Any one of these may have surpassed the great
+lexicographer in some branch of learning or domain of genius; but as
+a man of letters, in the highest sense of the term, he towered
+pre-eminent, and his superiority to each of them (except Burke) in
+general acquirements, intellectual power, and force of expression,
+was hardly contested by his contemporaries. To be associated with his
+name has become a title of distinction in itself; and some members of
+his circle enjoy, and have fairly earned, a peculiar advantage in
+this respect. In their capacity of satellites revolving round the sun
+of their idolatry, they attracted and reflected his light and heat.
+As humble companions of their _Magnolia grandiflora_, they did more
+than live with it[1]; they gathered and preserved the choicest of its
+flowers. Thanks to them, his reputation is kept alive more by what
+has been saved of his conversation than by his books; and his
+colloquial exploits necessarily revive the memory of the friends (or
+victims) who elicited and recorded them.
+
+[Footnote 1: "Je ne suis pas la rose, mais j'ai vecu pres
+d'elle."--_Constant_.]
+
+If the two most conspicuous among these have hitherto gained
+notoriety rather than what is commonly understood by fame, a
+discriminating posterity is already beginning to make reparation for
+the wrong. Boswell's "Letters to Temple," edited by Mr. Francis, with
+"Boswelliana," printed for the Philobiblion Society by Mr. Milnes,
+led, in 1857, to a revisal of the harsh sentence passed on one whom
+the most formidable of his censors, Lord Macaulay, has declared to be
+not less decidedly the first of biographers, than Homer is the first
+of heroic poets, Shakspeare the first of dramatists, or Demosthenes
+the first of orators. The result was favourable to Boswell, although
+the vulnerable points of his character were still more glaringly
+displayed. The appeal about to be hazarded on behalf of Mrs. Piozzi,
+will involve little or no risk of this kind. Her ill-wishers made the
+most of the event which so injuriously affected her reputation at the
+time of its occurrence; and the marked tendency of every additional
+disclosure of the circumstances has been to elevate her. No candid
+person will read her Autobiography, or her Letters, without arriving
+at the conclusion that her long life was morally, if not
+conventionally, irreproachable; and that her talents were sufficient
+to confer on her writings a value and attraction of their own, apart
+from what they possess as illustrations of a period or a school. When
+the papers which form the basis of this work were laid before Lord
+Macaulay, he gave it as his opinion that they afforded materials for
+a "most interesting and durably popular volume."[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: His letter, dated August 22, 1859, was addressed to Mr.
+T. Longman. The editorship of the papers was not proposed to me till
+after his death, and I had never any personal communication with him
+on the subject; although in the Edinburgh Review for July 1857, I
+ventured, with the same freedom which I have used in vindicating Mrs.
+Piozzi, to dispute the paradoxical judgment he had passed on Boswell.
+The materials which reached me after I had undertaken the work, and
+of which he was not aware, would nearly fill a volume.]
+
+They comprise:--
+
+1. Autobiographical Memoirs.
+
+2. Letters, mostly addressed to the late Sir James Fellowes.
+
+3. Fugitive pieces of her composition, most of which have never
+appeared in print.
+
+4. Manuscript notes by her on Wraxall's Memoirs, and on her own
+published works, namely: "Anecdotes of the late Samuel Johnson,
+LL.D., during the last twenty years of his life," one volume, 1786:
+"Letters to and from the late Samuel Johnson, LL.D., &c.," in two
+volumes, 1788: "Observations and Reflections made in the course of a
+journey through France, Italy, and Germany," in two volumes, 1789:
+"Retrospection; or, Review of the most striking and important Events,
+Characters, Situations, and their Consequences which the last
+Eighteen Hundred Years have presented to the View of Mankind," in two
+volumes, quarto, 1801.
+
+The "Autobiographical Memoirs," and the annotated books, were given
+by her to the late Sir James Fellowes, of Adbury House, Hants, M.D.,
+F.R.S., to whom the letters were addressed. He and the late Sir John
+Piozzi Salusbury were her executors, and the present publication
+takes place in pursuance of an agreement with their personal
+representatives, the Rev. G.A. Salusbury, Rector of Westbury, Salop,
+and Captain J. Butler Fellowes.
+
+Large and valuable additions to the original stock of materials have
+reached me since the announcement of the work.
+
+The Rev. Dr. Wellesley, Principal of New Inn Hall, has kindly placed
+at my disposal his copy of Boswell's "Life of Johnson" (edition of
+1816), plentifully sprinkled with marginal notes by Mrs. Piozzi.
+
+The Rev. Samuel Lysons, of Hempsted Court, Gloucester, has liberally
+allowed me the free use of his valuable collection of books and
+manuscripts, including numerous letters from Mrs. Piozzi to his
+father and uncle, the Rev. Daniel Lysons and Mr. Samuel Lysons.
+
+From 1776 to 1809 Mrs. Piozzi kept a copious diary and note-book,
+called "Thraliana." Johnson thus alludes to it in a letter of
+September 6th, 1777: "As you have little to do, I suppose you are
+pretty diligent at the 'Thraliana;' and a very curious collection
+posterity will find it. Do not remit the practice of writing down
+occurrences as they arise, of whatever kind, and be very punctual in
+annexing the dates. Chronology, you know, is the eye of history. Do
+not omit painful casualties or unpleasing passages; they make the
+variegation of existence; and there are many passages of which I will
+not promise, with AEneas, _et haec olim meminisse juvabit_."
+"Thraliana," which at one time she thought of burning, is now 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 and much valuable information extracted
+from it.
+
+I shall have many minor obligations to acknowledge as I proceed.
+
+Unless Mrs. Piozzi's character and social position are freshly
+remembered, her reminiscences and literary remains will lose much of
+their interest and utility. It has therefore been thought advisable
+to recapitulate, by way of introduction, what has been ascertained
+from other sources concerning her; especially during her intimacy
+with Johnson, which lasted nearly twenty years, and exercised a
+marked influence on his tone of mind.
+
+"This year (1765)," says Boswell, "was distinguished by his (Johnson)
+being introduced into the family of Mr. Thrale, one of the most
+eminent brewers in England, and member of Parliament for the borough
+of Southwark.... Johnson used to give this account of the rise of Mr.
+Thrale's father: 'He worked at six shillings a week for twenty years
+in the great brewery, which afterwards was his own. The proprietor of
+it had an only daughter, who was married to a nobleman. It was not
+fit that a peer should continue the business. On the old man's death,
+therefore, the brewery was to be sold. To find a purchaser for so
+large a property was a difficult matter; and after some time, it was
+suggested that it would be advisable to treat with Thrale, a
+sensible, active, honest man, who had been employed in the house, and
+to transfer the whole to him for thirty thousand pounds, security
+being taken upon the property. This was accordingly settled. In
+eleven years Thrale paid the purchase money. He acquired a large
+fortune, and lived to be a member of Parliament for Southwark. But
+what was most remarkable was the liberality with which he used his
+riches. He gave his son and daughters the best education. The esteem
+which his good conduct procured him from the nobleman who had married
+his master's daughter made him be treated with much attention; and
+his son, both at school and at the University of Oxford, associated
+with young men of the first rank. His allowance from his father,
+after he left college, was splendid; not less than a thousand a year.
+This, in a man who had risen as old Thrale did, was a very
+extraordinary instance of generosity. He used to say, 'If this young
+dog does not find so much after I am gone as he expects, let him
+remember that he has had a great deal in my own time.'"
+
+What is here stated regarding Thrale's origin, on the alleged
+authority of Johnson, is incorrect. The elder Thrale was the nephew
+of Halsey, the proprietor of the brewery whose daughter was married
+to a nobleman (Lord Cobham), and he naturally nourished hopes of
+being his uncle's successor. In the Abbey Church of St. Albans, there
+is a monument to some members of the Thrale family who died between
+1676 and 1704, adorned with a shield of arms and a crest on a ducal
+coronet. Mrs. Thrale's marginal note on Boswell's account of her
+husband's family is curious and characteristic:
+
+"Edmund Halsey was son to a miller at St. Albans, with whom he
+quarrelled, like Ralph in the 'Maid of the Mill,' and ran away to
+London with a very few shillings in his pocket.[1] He was eminently
+handsome, and old Child of the Anchor Brewhouse, Southwark, took him
+in as what we call a broomstick clerk, to sweep the yard, &c. Edmund
+Halsey behaved so well he was soon preferred to be a house-clerk, and
+then, having free access to his master's table, married his only
+daughter, and succeeded to the business upon Child's demise. Being
+now rich and prosperous, he turned his eyes homewards, where he
+learned that sister Sukey had married a hardworking man at Offley in
+Hertfordshire, and had many children. He sent for one of them to
+London (my Mr. Thrale's father); said he would make a man of him, and
+did so: but made him work very hard, and treated him very roughly,
+Halsey being more proud than tender, and his only child, a daughter,
+married to Lord Cobham.
+
+"Old Thrale, however, as these fine writers call him,--then a young
+fellow, and, like his uncle, eminent for personal beauty,--made
+himself so useful to Mr. Halsey that the weight of the business fell
+entirely on him; and while Edmund was canvassing the borough and
+visiting the viscountess, Ralph Thrale was getting money both for
+himself and his principal: who, envious of his success with a wench
+they both liked but who preferred the young man to the old one, died,
+leaving him never a guinea, and he bought the brewhouse of Lord and
+Lady Cobham, making an excellent bargain, with the money he had
+saved."
+
+[Footnote 1: In "Thraliana" she says: "strolled to London with only
+4_s._ 6_d._ in his pocket."]
+
+When, in the next page but one, Boswell describes Thrale as
+presenting the character of a plain independent English squire, she
+writes: "No, no! Mr. Thrale's manners presented the character of a
+gay man of the town: like Millamant, in Congreve's comedy, he
+abhorred the country and everything in it."
+
+In "Thraliana" after a corresponding statement, she adds: "He (the
+elder Thrale) educated his son and three daughters quite in a high
+style. His son he wisely connected with the Cobhams and their
+relations, Grenvilles, Lyttletons, and Pitts, to whom he lent money,
+and they lent assistance of every other kind, so that my Mr. Thrale
+was bred up at Stowe, and Stoke and Oxford, and every genteel place;
+had been abroad with Lord Westcote, whose expenses old Thrale
+cheerfully paid, I suppose, who was thus a kind of tutor to the young
+man, who had not failed to profit by these advantages, and who was,
+when he came down to Offley to see his father's birthplace, a very
+handsome and well accomplished gentleman."
+
+After expatiating on the advantages of birth, and the presumption of
+new men in attempting to found a new system of gentility, Boswell
+proceeds: "Mr. Thrale had married Miss Hester Lynch Salusbury, of
+good Welsh extraction, a lady of lively talents, improved by
+education. That Johnson's introduction into Mr. Thrale's family,
+which contributed so much to the happiness of his life, was owing to
+her desire for his conversation, is a very probable and the general
+supposition; but it is not the truth. Mr. Murphy, who was intimate
+with Mr. Thrale, having spoken very highly of Dr. Johnson, he was
+requested to make them acquainted. This being mentioned to Johnson,
+he accepted of an invitation to dinner at Thrale's, and was so much
+pleased with his reception both by Mr. and Mrs. Thrale, and they so
+much pleased with him, that his invitations to their house were more
+and more frequent, till at last he became one of the family, and an
+apartment was appropriated to him, both in their house at Southwark
+and in their villa at Streatham."
+
+Long before this was written, Boswell had quarrelled with Mrs. Thrale
+(as it is most convenient to call her till her second marriage), and
+he takes every opportunity of depreciating her. He might at least,
+however, have stated that, instead of sanctioning the "general
+supposition" as to the introduction, she herself supplied the account
+of it which he adopts. In her "Anecdotes" she says:
+
+"The first time I ever saw this extraordinary man was in the year
+1764, when Mr. Murphy, who had long been the friend and confidential
+intimate of Mr. Thrale, persuaded him to wish for Johnson's
+conversation, extolling it in terms which that of no other person
+could have deserved, till we were only in doubt how to obtain his
+company, and find an excuse for the invitation. The celebrity of Mr.
+Woodhouse, a shoemaker, whose verses were at that time the subject of
+common discourse, soon afforded a pretence[1], and Mr. Murphy brought
+Johnson to meet him, giving me general caution not to be surprised at
+his figure, dress, or behaviour[1].... Mr. Johnson liked his new
+acquaintance so much, however, that from that time he dined with us
+every Thursday through the winter, and in the autumn of the next year
+he followed us to Brighthelmstone, whence we were gone before his
+arrival; so he was disappointed and enraged, and wrote us a letter
+expressive of anger, which we were very desirous to pacify, and to
+obtain his company again if possible. Mr. Murphy brought him back to
+us again very kindly, and from that time his visits grew more
+frequent, till in the year 1766 his health, which he had always
+complained of, grew so exceedingly bad, that he could not stir out of
+his room in the court he inhabited for many weeks together, I think
+months."
+
+[Footnote 1: "He (Johnson) spoke with much contempt of the notice
+taken of Woodhouse, the poetical shoemaker. He said that it was all
+vanity and childishness, and that such objects were to those who
+patronised them, mere mirrors of their own superiority. They had
+better, said he, furnish the man with good implements for his trade,
+than raise subscriptions for his poems. He may make an excellent
+shoemaker, but can never make a good poet. A schoolboy's exercise may
+be a pretty thing for a schoolboy, but it is no treat to a
+man."--_Maxwell's Collectanea_.]
+
+The "Anecdotes" were written in Italy, where she had no means of
+reference. The account given in "Thraliana" has a greater air of
+freshness, and proves Boswell right as to the year.
+
+"It was on the second Thursday of the month of January, 1765, that I
+first saw Mr. Johnson in a room. Murphy, whose intimacy with Mr.
+Thrale had been of many years' standing, was one day dining with us
+at our house in Southwark, and was zealous that we should be
+acquainted with Johnson, of whose moral and literary character he
+spoke in the most exalted terms; and so whetted our desire of seeing
+him soon that we were only disputing _how_ he should be invited,
+_when_ he should be invited, and what should be the pretence. At last
+it was resolved that one Woodhouse, a shoemaker, who had written some
+verses, and been asked to some tables, should likewise be asked to
+ours, and made a temptation to Mr. Johnson to meet him: accordingly
+he came, and Mr. Murphy at four o'clock brought Mr. Johnson to
+dinner. We liked each other so well that the next Thursday was
+appointed for the same company to meet, exclusive of the shoemaker,
+and since then Johnson has remained till this day our constant
+acquaintance, visitor, companion, and friend."
+
+In the "Anecdotes" she goes on to say that when she and her husband
+called on Johnson one morning in Johnson's Court, Fleet Street, he
+gave way to such an uncontrolled burst of despair regarding the world
+to come, that Mr. Thrale tried to stop his mouth by placing one hand
+before it, and desired her to prevail on him to quit his close
+habitation for a period and come with them to Streatham. He complied,
+and took up his abode with them from before Midsummer till after
+Michaelmas in that year. During the next sixteen years a room in each
+of their houses was set apart for him.
+
+The principal difficulty at first was to induce him to live peaceably
+with her mother, who took a strong dislike to him, and constantly led
+the conversation to topics which he detested, such as foreign news
+and politics. He revenged himself by writing to the newspapers
+accounts of events which never happened, for the sole purpose of
+mystifying her; and probably not a few of his mischievous fictions
+have passed current for history. They made up their differences
+before her death, and a Latin epitaph of the most eulogistic order
+from his pen is inscribed upon her tomb.
+
+It had been well for Mrs. Thrale and her guests if there had existed
+no more serious objection to Johnson as an inmate. At the
+commencement of the acquaintance, he was fifty-six; an age when
+habits are ordinarily fixed: and many of his were of a kind which it
+required no common temper and tact to tolerate or control. They had
+been formed at a period when he was frequently subjected to the worst
+extremities of humiliating poverty and want. He describes Savage,
+without money to pay for a night's lodging in a cellar, walking about
+the streets till he was weary, and sleeping in summer upon a bulk or
+in winter amongst the ashes of a glass-house. He was Savage's
+associate on several occasions of the sort. He told Sir Joshua
+Reynolds that, one night in particular, when Savage and he walked
+round St. James's Square for want of a lodging, they were not at all
+depressed; but in high spirits, and brimful of patriotism, traversed
+the square for several hours, inveighed against the minister, and
+"resolved they would stand by their country." Whilst at college he
+threw away the shoes left at his door to replace the worn-out pair in
+which he appeared daily. His clothes were in so tattered a state
+whilst he was writing for the "Gentleman's Magazine" that, instead of
+taking his seat at Cave's table, he sate behind a screen and had his
+victuals sent to him.
+
+Talking of the symptoms of Christopher Smart's madness, he said,
+"Another charge was that he did not love clean linen; and I have no
+passion for it."
+
+His deficiency in this respect seems to have made a lasting
+impression on his hostess. Referring to a couplet in "The Vanity of
+Human Wishes":--
+
+ "Through all his veins the fever of renown
+ _Spreads_ from the strong contagion of the gown,"
+
+"he had desired me (says Boswell) to change _spreads_ into _burns._ I
+thought this alteration not only cured the fault, but was more
+poetical, as it might carry an allusion to the shirt by which
+Hercules was inflamed." She has written in the margin: "Every fever
+burns I believe; but Bozzy could think only on Nessus' dirty shirt,
+or Dr. Johnson's." In another marginal note she disclaims that
+attention to the Doctor's costume for which Boswell gives her credit,
+when, after relating how he had been called into a shop by Johnson to
+assist in the choice of a pair of silver buckles, he adds: "Probably
+this alteration in dress had been suggested by Mrs. Thrale, by
+associating with whom his external appearance was much improved." She
+writes: "it was suggested by Mr. Thrale, not by his wife."
+
+In general his wigs were very shabby, and their foreparts were burned
+away by the near approach of the candle, which his short-sightedness
+rendered necessary in reading. At Streatham, Mr. Thrale's valet had
+always a better wig ready, with which he met Johnson at the parlour
+door when dinner was announced, and as he went up stairs to bed, the
+same man followed him with another.
+
+One of his applications to Cave for a trifling advance of money is
+signed _Impransus_ (Dinnerless); and he told Boswell that he could
+fast two days without inconvenience, and had never been hungry but
+once. What he meant by hungry is not easy to explain, for his every
+day manner of eating was that of a half-famished man. When at table,
+he was totally absorbed in the business of the moment; his looks were
+riveted to his plate, till he had satisfied his appetite; which was
+indulged with such in-* tenseness, that the veins of his forehead
+swelled, and generally a strong perspiration was visible. Until he
+left off drinking fermented liquors altogether, he acted on the maxim
+"claret for boys, port for men, brandy for heroes." He preferred the
+strongest because he said it did its work (_i.e._ intoxicate) the
+soonest. He used to pour capillaire into his port wine, and melted
+butter into his chocolate. His favourite dishes are accurately
+enumerated by Peter Pindar:
+
+MADAME PIOZZI _(loquitur)._
+
+ "Dear Doctor Johnson loved a leg of pork,
+ And hearty on it would his grinders work:
+ He lik'd to eat it so much over done,
+ That _one_ might shake the flesh from off the bone.
+ A veal pye too, with sugar crammed and plums,
+ Was wondrous grateful to the Doctor's gums.
+ Though us'd from morn to night on fruit to stuff,
+ He vow'd his belly never had enough."
+
+Mr. Thackeray relates in his "Irish Sketches" that on his asking for
+currant jelly for his venison at a public dinner, the waiter replied,
+"It's all gone, your honour, but there's some capital lobster sauce
+left." This would have suited Johnson equally well, or better: he was
+so fond of lobster sauce that he would call for the sauce-boat and
+pour the whole of its remaining contents over his plum pudding. A
+clergyman who once travelled with him relates, "The coach halted as
+usual for dinner, which seemed to be a deeply interesting business to
+Johnson, who vehemently attacked a dish of stewed carp, using his
+fingers only in feeding himself." At the dinner when he passed his
+celebrated sentence on the leg of mutton--"That it was as bad as bad
+could be: ill-fed, ill-killed, ill-kept, and ill-dressed"--the
+ladies, his fellow-passengers, observed his loss or equanimity with
+wonder.
+
+Two of Mrs. Thrale's marginal notes on Boswell refer to her
+illustrious friend's mode of eating. On his reported remark, that "a
+dog will take a small bit of meat as readily as a large, when both
+are before him," she adds, "which Johnson would never have done."
+When Boswell, describing the dinner with Wilkes at Davies', says, "No
+man eat more heartily than Johnson, or loved better what was nice and
+delicate," she strikes in with--"What was gustful rather: what was
+strong that he could taste it, what was tender that he could chew
+it."
+
+When Boswell describes him as occupied for a considerable time in
+reading the "Memoirs of Fontenelle," leaning and swinging upon the
+low gate into the court (at Streatham) without his hat, her note is:
+"I wonder how he liked the story of the asparagus,"--an obvious hint
+at his selfish habits of indulgence at table.
+
+With all this he affected great nicety of palate, and did not like
+being asked to a plain dinner. "It was a good dinner enough," he
+would remark, "but it was not a dinner to ask a man to." He was so
+displeased with the performances of a nobleman's French cook, that he
+exclaimed with vehemence, "I'd throw such a rascal into the river;"
+and in reference to one of his Edinburgh hosts he said, "As for
+Maclaurin's imitation of a made dish, it was a wretched attempt."
+
+His voice was loud, and his gesticulations, voluntary or involuntary,
+singularly uncouth. He had superstitious fancies about crossing
+thresholds or squares in the carpet with the right or left leg
+foremost, and when he did not appear at dinner might be found vainly
+endeavouring to pass a particular spot in the anteroom. He loved late
+hours, or more properly (say Mrs. Thrale) hated early ones. Nothing
+was more terrifying to him than the idea of going to bed, which he
+never would call going to rest, or suffer another to call it so. "I
+lie down that my acquaintance may sleep; but I lie down to endure
+oppressive misery, and soon rise again to pass the night in anxiety
+and pain." When people could be induced to sit up with him, they were
+often amply compensated by his rich flow of mind; but the resulting
+sacrifice of health and comfort in an establishment where this
+sitting up became habitual, was inevitably great.[1] Instead of being
+grateful, he always maintained that no one forbore his own
+gratification for the purpose of pleasing another, and "if one did
+sit up, it was probably to amuse oneself." Boswell excuses his wife
+for not coinciding in his enthusiasm, by admitting that his
+illustrious friend's irregular hours and uncouth habits, such as
+turning the candles with their ends downwards when they did not burn
+bright enough, and letting the wax drop upon the carpet, could not
+but be displeasing to a lady. He was generally last at breakfast, but
+one morning happened to be first and waited some time alone; when
+afterwards twitted by Mrs. Thrale with irregularity, he replied,
+"Madam, I do not like to come down to vacuity."
+
+[Footnote 1: Dr. Burney states that in 1765 "he very frequently met
+Johnson at Streatham, where they had many long conversations, after
+sitting up as long as the fire and candles lasted, and much longer
+than the patience of the servants subsisted."]
+
+He was subject to dreadful fits of depression, caused or accompanied
+by compunction for venial or fancied sins, by the fear of death or
+madness--(the only things he did fear), and by ingrained ineradicable
+disease. When Boswell speaks of his "striving against evil," "Ay,"
+she writes in the margin, "and against the King's evil."
+
+If his early familiarity with all the miseries of destitution,
+aggravated by disease, had increased his natural roughness and
+irritability, on the other hand it had helped largely to bring out
+his sterling virtues,--his discriminating charity, his genuine
+benevolence, his well-timed generosity, his large-hearted sympathy
+with real suffering. But he required it to be material and positive,
+and scoffed at mere mental or sentimental woes. "The sight of people
+who want food and raiment is so common in great cities, that a surly
+fellow like me has no compassion to spare for wounds given only to
+vanity or softness." He said it was enough to make a plain man sick
+to hear pity lavished on a family reduced by losses to exchange a
+fine house for a snug cottage; and when condolence was demanded for a
+lady of rank in mourning for a baby, he contrasted her with a
+washerwoman with half-a-dozen children dependent on her daily labour
+for their daily bread.[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: "It's weel wi' you gentles that can sit in the house wi'
+handkerchers at your een when ye lose a friend; but the like o' us
+maun to our wark again, if our hearts were beating as hard as any
+hammer."--_The Antiquary_. For this very reason the "gentles"
+commonly suffer most.]
+
+Lord Macaulay thus portrays the objects of Johnson's hospitality as
+soon as he had got a house to cover them. "It was the home of the
+most extraordinary assemblage of inmates that ever was brought
+together. At the head of the establishment he had placed an old lady
+named Williams, whose chief recommendations were her blindness and
+her poverty. But in spite of her murmurs and reproaches, he gave an
+asylum to another lady who was as poor as herself, Mrs. Desmoulins,
+whose family he had known many years before in Staffordshire. Room
+was found for the daughter of Mrs. Desmoulins, and for another
+destitute damsel, who was generally addressed as Mrs. Carmichael, but
+whom her generous host called Polly. An old quack doctor called
+Levet, who bled and dosed coalheavers and hackney coachmen, and
+received for fees crusts of bread, bits of bacon, glasses of gin, and
+sometimes a little copper, completed this menagerie."[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: Miscellaneous Writings, vol. i. p. 293.]
+
+Mrs. Williams was the daughter of a physician, and of a good Welsh
+family, who did not leave her dependent on Johnson. She is termed by
+Madame D'Arblay a very pretty poet, and was treated with uniform
+respect by him.[1] All the authorities for the account of Levet were
+collected by Hawkins[2]: from these it appears that his patients were
+"chiefly of the lowest class of tradesmen," and that, although he
+took all that was offered him by way of fee, including meat and
+drink, he demanded nothing from the poor, nor was known in any
+instance to have enforced the payment of even what was justly his
+due. Hawkins adds that he (Levet) had acted for many years in the
+capacity of surgeon and apothecary to Johnson under the direction of
+Dr. Lawrence.
+
+[Footnote 1: Miss Cornelia Knight, in her "Autobiography," warmly
+vindicates her respectability, and refers to a memoir, by Lady
+Knight, in the "European Magazine" for Oct. 1799.]
+
+[Footnote 2: Life of Johnson, p. 396-400.]
+
+ "When fainting Nature called for aid,
+ And hovering death prepared the blow,
+ His vigorous remedy display'd
+ The power of Art without the show;
+
+ No summons mocked by chill delay,
+ _No petty gains disdained by pride,_
+ The modest wants of every day
+ The toil of every day supplied."
+
+Johnson's verses, compared with Lord Macaulay's prose, strikingly
+shew how the same subject can be degraded or elevated by the mode of
+treatment; and how easily the historian or biographer, who expands
+his authorities by picturesque details, may brighten or darken
+characters at will.
+
+To complete the picture of Johnson's interior, it should be added
+that the inmates of his house were quarrelling from, morning to night
+with one another, with his negro servant, or with himself. In one of
+his letters to Mrs. Thrale, he says, "Williams hates everybody: Levet
+hates Desmoulins, and does not love Williams: Desmoulins hates them
+both: Poll (Miss Carmichael) loves none of them." In a conversation
+at Streatham, reported by Madame D'Arblay, the _menagerie_ was thus
+humorously described:--
+
+"_Mrs. Thrale_.--Mr. Levet, I suppose, Sir, has the office of keeping
+the hospital in health? for he is an apothecary.
+
+"_Dr. J_.--Levet, Madam, is a brutal fellow, but I have a good regard
+for him; for his brutality is in his manners, not his mind.
+
+"_Mr. Thrale_.--But how do you get your dinners drest?
+
+"_Dr. J_.--Why De Mullin has the chief management of the kitchen; but
+our roasting is not magnificent, for we have no jack.
+
+"_Mr. T_.--No jack? Why how do they manage without?
+
+"_Dr. J_.--Small joints, I believe, they manage with a string, and
+larger are done at the tavern. I have some thoughts (with a profound
+gravity) of buying a jack, because I think a jack is some credit to a
+house.
+
+"_Mr. T_.--Well, but you will have a spit, too?
+
+"_Dr. J_.--No, Sir, no; that would be superfluous; for we shall never
+use it; and if a jack is seen, a spit will be presumed!
+
+"_Mrs. T_.--But pray, Sir, who is the Poll you talk of? She that you
+used to abet in her quarrels with Mrs. Williams, and call out,' At
+her again, Poll! Never flinch, Poll!'
+
+"_Dr. J_.--Why I took to Poll very well at first, but she won't do
+upon a nearer examination.
+
+"_Mrs. T_.--How came she among you, Sir?
+
+"_Dr. J_.--Why I don't rightly remember, but we could spare her very
+well from us. Poll is a stupid slut; I had some hopes of her at
+first; but when I talked to her tightly and closely, I could make
+nothing of her; she was wiggle waggle, and I could never persuade her
+to be categorical."
+
+The effect of an unbroken residence with such inmates, on a man of
+irritable temper subject to morbid melancholy, may be guessed; and
+the merit of the Thrales in rescuing him from it, and in soothing
+down his asperities, can hardly be over-estimated. Lord Macaulay
+says, they were flattered by finding that a man so widely celebrated
+preferred their house to every other in London; and suggests that
+even the peculiarities which seem to unfit him for civilised society,
+including his gesticulations, his rollings, his puffings, his
+mutterings, and the ravenous eagerness with which he devoured his
+food, increased the interest which his new associates took in him.
+His hostess does not appear to have viewed them in that light, and
+she was able to command the best company of the intellectual order
+without the aid of a "lion," or a bear. If his conversation attracted
+many, it drove away many, and silenced more. He accounted for the
+little attention paid him by the great, by saying that "great lords
+and great ladies do not like to have their mouths stopped," as if
+this was peculiar to them as a class. "My leddie," remarks Cuddie in
+"Old Mortality," "canna weel bide to be contradicted, as I ken
+neabody likes, if they could help themselves."
+
+Johnson was in the zenith of his fame when literature, politics, and
+fashion began to blend together again by hardly perceptible shades,
+like the colours in shot-silk, as they had partially done in the
+Augustan age of Queen Anne. One marked sign was the formation of the
+Literary Club (The Club, as it still claims to be called), which
+brought together Fox, Burke, Gibbon, Johnson, Goldsmith, Garrick,
+Reynolds, and Beauclerc, besides blackballing a bishop (the Bishop of
+Chester), and a lord-chancellor (Camden).[1] Yet it is curious to
+observe within how narrow a circle of good houses the Doctor's
+engagements were restricted. Reynolds, Paoli, Beauclerc, Allan
+Ramsay, Hoole, Dilly, Strahan, Lord Lucan, Langton, Garrick, and the
+Club formed his main reliance as regards dinners; and we find Boswell
+recording with manifest symptoms of exultation in 1781: "I dined with
+him at a bishop's where were Sir Joshua Reynolds, Mr. Berenger, and
+some more company. He had dined the day before at another bishop's."
+His reverence for the episcopal bench well merited some return on
+their part. Mr. Seward saw him presented to the Archbishop of York,
+and described his bow to an Archbishop as such a studied elaboration
+of homage, such an extension of limb, such a flexion of body, as have
+seldom or ever been equalled. The lay nobility were not equally
+grateful, although his deference for the peerage was extreme. Except
+in Scotland or on his travels, he is seldom found dining with a
+nobleman.
+
+[Footnote 1: Canning was blackballed the first time he was proposed.
+He was elected in 1798, Mr. Windham being his proposer, and Dr.
+Burney his seconder.]
+
+It is therefore hardly an exaggeration to say that he owed more
+social enjoyment to the Thrales than to all the rest of his
+acquaintance put together. Holland House alone, and in its best days,
+would convey to persons living in our time an adequate conception of
+the Streatham circle, when it comprised Burke, Reynolds, Garrick,
+Goldsmith, Boswell, Murphy, Dr. Burney and his daughter, Mrs.
+Montagu, Mrs. Boscawen, Mrs. Crewe, Lord Loughborough, Dunning
+(afterwards Lord Ashburton), Lord Mulgrave, Lord Westcote, Sir Lucas
+and Mr. (afterwards Sir William) Pepys, Major Holroyd afterwards Lord
+Sheffield, the Bishop of London and Mrs. Porteous, the Bishop of
+Peterborough and Mrs. Hinchcliffe, Miss Gregory, Miss Streatfield,
+&c. As at Holland House, the chief scene of warm colloquial contest
+or quiet interchange of mind was the library, a large and handsome
+room, which the pencil of Reynolds gradually enriched with portraits
+of all the principal persons who had conversed or studied in it. To
+supply any deficiencies on the shelves, a hundred pounds, Madame
+D'Arblay states, was placed at Johnson's disposal to expend in books;
+and we may take it for granted that any new publication suggested by
+him was ordered at once. But a bookish couple, surrounded by a
+literary set, were surely not exclusively dependent on him for this
+description of help, nor laid under any extraordinary obligation by
+reason of it. Whilst the "Lives of the Poets" was in progress, Dr.
+Johnson "would frequently produce one of the proof sheets to
+embellish the breakfast table, which was always in the library, and
+was certainly the most sprightly and agreeable meeting of the day."
+... "These proof sheets Mrs. Thrale was permitted to read aloud, and
+the discussions to which they led were in the highest degree
+entertaining."[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: "Memoirs of Dr. Burney," &c., by his daughter, Madame
+D'Arblay. In three volumes, 1832. Vol. ii. p. 173-178.]
+
+It was mainly owing to his domestication with the Thrales that he
+began to frequent drawing-rooms at an age when the arm-chair at home
+or at the club has an irresistible charm for most men of sedentary
+pursuits. It must be admitted that the evening parties in which he
+was seen, afforded a chance of something better than the "unidead
+chatter of girls," with an undue fondness for which he reproached
+Langton; for the _Blue Stocking_ clubs had just come into
+fashion,--so called from a casual allusion to the blue stockings of
+an _habitue_, Mr. Stillingfleet.[1] Their founders were Mrs. Vesey
+and Mrs. Montagu; but according to Madame D'Arblay, "more bland and
+more gleeful than that of either of them, was the personal celebrity
+of Mrs. Thrale. Mrs. Vesey, indeed, gentle and diffident, dreamed not
+of any competition, but Mrs. Montagu and Mrs. Thrale had long been
+set up as rival candidates for colloquial eminence, and each of them
+thought the other alone worthy to be her peer. Openly therefore when
+they met, they combated for precedence of admiration, with placid
+though high-strained intellectual exertion on the one side, and an
+exuberant pleasantry or classical allusion or quotation on the other;
+without the smallest malice in either."
+
+[Footnote 1: The first of these was then (about 1768) in the meridian
+of its lustre, but had been instituted many years previously at Bath,
+It owed its name to an apology made by Mr. Stillingfleet in declining
+to accept an invitation to a literary meeting at Mrs. Vesey's, from
+not being, he said, in the habit of displaying a proper equipment for
+an evening assembly. "Pho, pho," said she, "don't mind dress. Come in
+your blue stockings." With which words, humorously repeating them as
+he entered the apartment of the chosen coterie, Mr. Stillingfleet
+claimed permission for entering according to order. And these words,
+ever after, were fixed, in playful stigma, upon Mrs. Vesey's
+associations. _(Madame D'Arblay.)_ Boswell also traces the term to
+Stillingfleet's blue stockings; and Hannah More's "Bas-Bleu" gave it
+a permanent place in literature.]
+
+A different account of the origin of Bluestocking parties was given
+by Lady Crewe to a lady who has allowed me to copy her note of the
+conversation, made at the time (1816):
+
+"Lady Crewe told me that her mother (Mrs. Greville), the Duchess of
+Portland, and Mrs. Montagu were the first who began the conversation
+parties in imitation of the noted ones, _temp._ Madame de Sevigne',
+at Rue St. Honore. Madame de Polignac, one of the first guests, came
+in blue silk stockings, then the newest fashion in Paris. Mrs.
+Greville and all the lady members of Mrs. Montagu's _club_, adopted
+the _mode_. A foreign gentleman, after spending an evening at Mrs.
+Montagu's _soiree_, wrote to tell a friend of the charming
+intellectual party, who had one rule; 'they wear blue stockings as a
+distinction.'"
+
+Wraxall, who makes the same comparison, remarks: "Mrs. Thrale always
+appeared to me to possess at least as much information, a mind as
+cultivated, and more brilliancy of intellect than Mrs. Montagu, but
+she did not descend among men from such an eminence, and she talked
+much more, as well as more unguardedly, on every subject. She was the
+provider and conductress of Johnson, who lived almost constantly
+under her roof, or more properly under that of Mr. Thrale, both in
+Town and at Streatham. He did not, however, spare her more than other
+women in his attacks if she courted and provoked his animadversions."
+
+Although he seldom appeared to greater advantage than when under the
+combined spell of feminine influence and rank, his demeanour varied
+with his mood. On Miss Monkton's (afterwards Countess of Cork)
+insisting, one evening, that Sterne's writings were very pathetic,
+Johnson bluntly denied it. "I am sure," she rejoined, "they have
+affected me." "Why," said Johnson, smiling and rolling himself about,
+"that is because, dearest, you're a dunce." 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."
+
+He did not come off so well on another occasion, when the presence of
+women he respected might be expected to operate as a cheek. Talking,
+at Mrs. Garrick's, of a very respectable author, he told us, says
+Boswell, "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 _bottom_ 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 slily 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 despotic power, glanced sternly
+around, and called out in a strong tone, 'Where's the merriment?'
+Then collecting himself, and looking awful, 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 _woman_ was
+_fundamentally_ sensible;' as if he had said, Hear this now, and
+laugh if you dare. We all sat composed as at a funeral."
+
+This resembles the influence exercised by the "great commoner" over
+the House of Commons. An instance being mentioned of his throwing an
+adversary into irretrievable confusion by an arrogant expression of
+contempt, the late Mr. Charles Butler asked the relator, an
+eye-witness, whether the House did not laugh at the ridiculous figure
+of the poor member. "No, Sir," was the reply, "we were too much awed
+to laugh."
+
+It was a marked feature in Johnson's character that he was fond of
+female society; so fond, indeed, that on coming to London he was
+obliged to be on his guard against the temptations to which it
+exposed him. He left off attending the Green Room, telling Grarrick,
+"I'll come no more behind your scenes, Davy; for the silk stockings
+and white bosoms of your actresses excite my amorous propensities."
+
+The proneness of his imagination to wander in this forbidden field is
+unwittingly betrayed by his remarking at Sky, in support of the
+doctrine that animal substances are less cleanly than vegetable: "I
+have _often_ thought that, if I kept a seraglio, the ladies should
+all wear linen gowns, or cotton, I mean stuffs made of vegetable
+substances. I would have no silks: you cannot tell when it is clean:
+it will be very nasty before it is perceived to be so; linen detects
+its own dirtiness." His virtue thawed instead of becoming more rigid
+in the North. "This evening," records Boswell of their visit to an
+Hebridean chief, "one of our married ladies, a lively pretty little
+woman, good-humouredly sat down upon Dr. Johnson's knee, and being
+encouraged by some of the company, put her hands round his neck and
+kissed him. 'Do it again,' said he, 'and let us see who will tire
+first.' He kept her on his knee some time whilst he and she drank
+tea."
+
+The Rev. Dr. Maxwell relates in his "Collectanea," that "Two young
+women from Staffordshire visited him when I was present, to consult
+him on the subject of Methodism, to which they were inclined. 'Come,'
+said he, 'you pretty fools, dine with Maxwell and me at the Mitre,
+and we will talk over that subject:' which they did, and after dinner
+he took one of them upon his knee, and fondled her for half an hour
+together." [1]
+
+[Footnote 1: "Amongst his singularities, his love of conversing with
+the prostitutes he met in the streets, was not the least. He has been
+known to carry some of these unfortunate creatures into a tavern, for
+the sake of striving to awaken in them a proper sense of their
+condition. I remember, he said, once asking one of them for what
+purpose she supposed her Maker had bestowed on her so much beauty.
+Her answer was, 'To please the gentlemen, to be sure; for what other
+purpose could it be given me?" _(Johnsoniana.)_ He once carried one,
+fainting from exhaustion, home on his back.]
+
+Women almost always like men who like women; or as the phenomenon is
+explained by Pope--
+
+ "Lust, through some certain strainers well refined, Is gentle love,
+ and charms all womankind."
+
+Johnson, despite of his unwieldy figure, scarred features and uncouth
+gestures, was a favourite with the fair, and talked of affairs of the
+heart as things of which he was entitled to speak from personal
+experience as confidently as of any other moral or social topics. He
+told Mrs. Thrale, without the smallest consciousness of presumption
+or what Mr. Square would term the unfitness of things, of his and
+Lord Lyttleton's having contended for Miss Boothby's preference with
+an emulation that occasioned hearty disgust and ended in lasting
+animosity. "You may see," he added, when the Lives of the Poets were
+printed, "that dear Boothby is at my heart still. She would delight
+in that fellow Lyttleton's company though, all that I could do, and I
+cannot forgive even his memory the preference given by a mind like
+hers." [1]
+
+[Footnote 1: In point of personal advantages the man of rank and
+fashion and the scholar were nearly on a par.
+
+ "But who is this astride the pony,
+ So long, so lean, so lank, so bony?
+ Dat be de great orator, Littletony."]
+
+Mr. Croker surmises that "Molly Aston," not "dear Boothby," must have
+been the object of this rivalry[1]; and the surmise is strengthened
+by Johnson's calling Molly the loveliest creature he ever saw; adding
+(to Mrs. Thrale), "My wife was a little jealous, and happening one
+day when walking in the country to meet a fortune-hunting gipsy, Mrs.
+Johnson made the wench look at my hand, but soon repented of her
+curiosity,'for,' says the gipsy, 'your heart is divided between a
+Betty and a Molly: Betty loves you best, but you take most delight in
+Molly's company.' When I turned about to laugh, I saw my wife was
+crying. Pretty charmer, she had no reason." This pretty charmer was
+in her forty-eighth year when he married her, he being then
+twenty-seven. He told Beauclerc that it was a love match on both
+sides; and Garrick used to draw ludicrous pictures of their mutual
+fondness, which he heightened by representing her as short, fat,
+tawdrily dressed, and highly rouged.
+
+[Footnote 1: See "Croker's Boswell," p. 672, and Malone's note in the
+prior edition.]
+
+On the question whether "Molly Aston" or "dear Boothby" was the cause
+of his dislike of Lyttleton, one of Mrs. Piozzi's marginal notes is
+decisive. "Mrs. Thrale (says Boswell) suggests that he was offended
+by Molly Aston's preference of his lordship to him." She retorts: "I
+never said so. I believe Lord Lyttleton and Molly Aston were not
+acquainted. No, no: it was Miss Boothby whose preference he professed
+to have been jealous of, and so I said in the 'Anecdotes.'"
+
+One of Rochefoucauld's maxims is: "Young women who do not wish to
+appear _coquette_, and men of advanced years who do not wish to
+appear ridiculous, should never speak of love as of a thing in which
+they might take part." Mrs. Thrale relates an amusing instance of
+Johnson's adroitness in escaping from the dilemma: "As we had been
+saying one day that no subject failed of receiving dignity from the
+manner in which Mr. Johnson treated it, a lady at my house said, she
+would make him talk about love; and took her measures accordingly,
+deriding the novels of the day because they treated about love. 'It
+is not,' replied our philosopher, 'because they treat, as you call
+it, about love, but because they treat of nothing, that they are
+despicable: we must not ridicule a passion which he who never felt,
+never was happy, and he who laughs at, never deserves to feel--a
+passion which has caused the change of empires, and the loss of
+worlds--a passion which has inspired heroism and subdued avarice.' He
+thought he had already said too much. 'A passion, in short,' added
+he, with an altered tone, 'that consumes me away for my pretty Fanny
+here, and she 'is very cruel,' speaking of another lady (Miss Burney)
+in the room."
+
+As the high-flown language which he occasionally employed in
+addressing or discussing women, has originated a theory that the
+basis or essence of his character was romance, it may be as well to
+contrast what he said in soberer moods on love. He remarked to Dr.
+Maxwell, that "its violence and ill-effects were much exaggerated;
+for who knows any real sufferings on that head, more than from the
+exorbitancy of any other passion?" On Boswell asking him whether he
+did not suppose that there are fifty women in the world with any of
+whom a man may be as happy as with any one woman in particular, he
+replied, "Ay, Sir, fifty thousand. I believe marriages would in
+general be as happy, and often more so, if they were all made by the
+lord-chancellor upon a due consideration of the characters and
+circumstances without the parties having any choice in the matter."
+On another occasion he observed that sensible men rarely married for
+love.
+
+These peculiarities throw light on more questions than one relating
+to Johnson's prolonged intimacy and alleged quarrel with Mrs. Thrale.
+His gallantry, and the flattering air of deferential tenderness which
+he threw into his commerce with his female favourites, may have had
+little less to do with his domestication at Streatham than his
+celebrity, his learning, or his wit. The most submissive wife will
+manage to dislodge an inmate who is displeasing to her, "Aye, a
+marriage, man," said Bucklaw to his led captain, "but wherefore
+droops thy mighty spirit? The board will have a corner, and the
+corner will have a trencher, and the trencher will have a glass
+beside it; and the board end shall be filled, and the trencher and
+the glass shall be replenished for thee, if all the petticoats in
+Lothian had sworn the contrary." "So says many an honest fellow,"
+said Craigenfelt, "and some of my special friends; but curse me if I
+know the reason, the women could never bear me, and always contrived
+to trundle me out before the honey-moon was over."[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: Bride of Lammermoor.]
+
+It was all very well for Johnson to tell Boswell, "I know no man who
+is more master of his wife and family than Thrale. If he holds up a
+finger, he is obeyed." The sage never acted on the theory, and
+instead of treating the wife as a cipher, lost no opportunity of
+paying court to her, though in a manner quite compatible with his own
+lofty spirit of independence and self-respect. Thus, attention having
+been called to some Italian verses by Baretti, he converted them into
+an elegant compliment to her by an improvised paraphrase:
+
+ "Viva! viva la padrona!
+ Tutta bella, e tutta buona,
+ La padrona e un angiolella
+ Tutta buona e tutta bella;
+ Tutta bella e tutta buona;
+ Viva! viva la padrona!"
+
+ "Long may live my lovely Hetty!
+ Always young and always pretty;
+ Always pretty, always young,
+ Live my lovely Hetty long!
+ Always young and always pretty;
+ Long may live my lovely Hetty!"
+
+Her marginal note in the copy of the "Anecdotes" presented by her to
+Sir James Fellowes in 1816 is:--"I heard these verses sung at Mr.
+Thomas's by three voices not three weeks ago."
+
+It was in the eighth year of their acquaintance that Johnson solaced
+his fatigue in the Hebrides by writing a Latin ode to her. "About
+fourteen years since," wrote Sir Walter Scott, in 1829, "I landed in
+Sky with a party of friends, and had the curiosity to ask what was
+the first idea on every one's mind at landing. All answered
+separately that it was this ode." Thinking Miss Cornelia Knight's
+version too diffuse, I asked Mr. Milnes for a translation or
+paraphrase, and he kindly complied by producing these spirited
+stanzas:
+
+ "Where constant mist enshrouds the rocks,
+ Shattered in earth's primeval shocks,
+ And niggard Nature ever mocks
+ The labourer's toil,
+
+ I roam through clans of savage men,
+ Untamed by arts, untaught by pen;
+ Or cower within some squalid den
+ O'er reeking soil.
+
+ Through paths that halt from stone to stone,
+ Amid the din of tongues unknown,
+ One image haunts my soul alone,
+ Thine, gentle Thrale!
+
+ Soothes she, I ask, her spouse's care?
+ Does mother-love its charge prepare?
+ Stores she her mind with knowledge rare,
+ Or lively tale?
+
+ Forget me not! thy faith I claim,
+ Holding a faith that cannot die,
+ That fills with thy benignant name
+ These shores of Sky."
+
+"On another occasion," says Mrs. Thrale, in the "Anecdotes," "I can
+boast verses from Dr. Johnson. As I went into his room the morning of
+my birthday once and said to him, 'Nobody sends me any verses now,
+because I am five-and-thirty years old; and Stella was fed with them
+till forty-six, I remember.' My being just recovered from illness and
+confinement will account for the manner in which he burst out
+suddenly, for so he did without the least previous hesitation
+whatsoever, and without having entertained the smallest intention
+towards it half a minute before:
+
+ "Oft in danger, yet alive,
+ We are come to thirty-five;
+ Long may better years arrive,
+ Better years than thirty-five.
+ Could philosophers contrive
+ Life to stop at thirty-five,
+ Time his hours should never drive
+ O'er the bounds of thirty-five.
+ High to soar, and deep to dive,
+ Nature gives at thirty-five.
+ Ladies, stock and tend your hive,
+ Trifle not at thirty-five;
+ For howe'er we boast and strive,
+ Life declines from thirty-five;
+ He that ever hopes to thrive
+ Must begin by thirty-five;
+ And all who wisely wish to wive
+ Must look on Thrale at thirty-five."
+
+"'And now,' said he, as I was writing them down, 'you may see what it
+is to come for poetry to a dictionary-maker; you may observe that the
+rhymes run in alphabetical order exactly.' And so they do."
+
+Byron's estimate of life at the same age, is somewhat different:
+
+ "Too old for youth--too young, at thirty-five
+ To herd with boys, or hoard with good threescore,
+ I wonder people should he left alive.
+ But since they are, that epoch is a bore."
+
+Lady Aldborough, whose best witticisms unluckily lie under the same
+merited ban as Rochester's best verses, resolved not to pass
+twenty-five, and had her passport made out accordingly till her death
+at eighty-five. She used to boast that, whenever a foreign official
+objected, she never failed to silence him by the remark, that he was
+the first gentleman of his country who ever told a lady she was older
+than she said she was. Actuated probably by a similar feeling, and in
+the hope of securing to herself the benefit of the doubt, Mrs. Thrale
+omitted in the "Anecdotes" the year when these verses were addressed
+to her, and a sharp controversy has been raised as to the respective
+ages of herself and Dr. Johnson at the time. It is thus summed up by
+one of the combatants:
+
+"In one place Mr. Croker says that at the commencement of the
+intimacy between Dr. Johnson and Mrs. Thrale, in 1765, the lady was
+twenty-five years old. In other places he says that Mrs. Thrale's
+thirty-fifth year coincided with Johnson's seventieth. Johnson was
+born in 1709. If, therefore, Mrs. Thrale's thirty-fifth year
+coincided with Johnson's seventieth, she could have been only
+twenty-one years old in 1765. This is not all. Mr. Croker, in another
+place, assigns the year 1777 as the date of the complimentary lines
+which Johnson made on Mrs. Thrale's thirty-fifth birthday. If this
+date be correct Mrs. Thrale must have been born in 1742, and could
+have been only twenty-three when her acquaintance commenced. Mr.
+Croker, therefore, gives us three different statements as to her age.
+Two of the three must be incorrect. We will not decide between
+them."[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: Macaulay's Essays.]
+
+Mr. Salusbury, referring to a china bowl in his possession, says:
+"The slip of paper now in it is in my father's handwriting, and
+copied, I have heard him say, from the original slip, which was worn
+out by age and fingering. The exact words are, 'In this bason was
+baptised Hester Lynch Salusbury, 16th Jan. 1740-41 old style, at
+Bodville in Carnarvonshire.'"
+
+The incident of the verses is thus narrated in "Thraliana": "And this
+year, 1777[1], when I told him that it was my birthday, and that I
+was then thirty-five years old, he repeated me these verses, which I
+wrote down from his mouth as he made them." If she was born in
+1740-41, she must have been thirty-six in 1777; and there is no
+perfectly satisfactory settlement of the controversy, which many will
+think derives its sole importance from the two chief
+controversialists.
+
+[Footnote 1: In one of her Memorandum books, 1776.]
+
+The highest authorities differ equally about her looks. "My readers,"
+says Boswell, "will naturally wish for some representation of the
+figures of this couple. Mr. Thrale was tall, well-proportioned, and
+stately. As for _Madam_, or _My Mistress_, by which epithets Johnson
+used to mention Mrs. Thrale, she was short, plump, and brisk." "He
+should have added," observes Mr. Croker, "that she was very pretty."
+This was not her own opinion, nor that of her cotemporaries, although
+her face was attractive from animation and expression, and her
+personal appearance pleasing on the whole. Sometimes, when visiting
+the author of "Piozziana,"[1] she used to look at her little self, as
+she called it, and spoke drolly of what she once was, as if speaking
+of some one else; and one day, turning to him, she exclaimed: "No, I
+never was handsome: I had always too many strong points in my face
+for beauty." On his expressing a doubt of this, and hinting that Dr.
+Johnson was certainly an admirer of her personal charms, she replied
+that his devotion was at least as warm towards the table and the
+table-cloth at Streatham.
+
+[Footnote 1: "Piozziana; or Recollections of the late Mrs. Piozzi,
+with Remarks. By a Friend." (The Rev. E. Mangin.) Moxon, 1833. These
+reminiscences, unluckily limited to the last eight or ten years of
+her life at Bath, contain much curious information, and leave a
+highly favourable impression of Mrs. Piozzi.]
+
+One day when he was ill, exceedingly low-spirited, and persuaded that
+death was not far distant, she appeared before him in a dark-coloured
+gown, which his bad sight, and worse apprehensions, made him mistake
+for an iron-grey. "'Why do you delight,' said he, 'thus to thicken
+the gloom of misery that surrounds me? is not here sufficient
+accumulation of horror without anticipated mourning?'--'This is not
+mourning, Sir!' said I, drawing the curtain, that the light might
+fall upon the silk, and show it was a purple mixed with
+green.--'Well, well!' replied he, changing his voice; 'you little
+creatures should never wear those sort of clothes, however; they are
+unsuitable in every way. What! have not all insects gay colours?'"
+
+According to the author of "Piozziana," who became acquainted with
+her late in life, "She was short, and though well-proportioned,
+broad, and deep-chested. Her hands were muscular and almost coarse,
+but her writing was, even in her eightieth year, exquisitely
+beautiful; and one day, while conversing with her on the subject of
+education, she observed that 'all Misses now-a-days, wrote so like
+each other, that it was provoking;' adding, 'I love to see
+individuality of character, and abhor sameness, especially in what is
+feeble and flimsy.' Then, spreading her hand, she said, 'I believe I
+owe what you are pleased to call my good writing, to the shape of
+this hand, for my uncle, Sir Robert Cotton, thought it was too manly
+to be employed in writing like a boarding-school girl; and so I came
+by my vigorous, black manuscript.'"
+
+It was fortunate that the hand-writing compensated for the hands; and
+as she attached great importance to blood and race, that she did not
+live to read Byron's "thoroughbred and tapering fingers," or to be
+shocked by his theory that "the hand is almost the only sign of blood
+which aristocracy can generate." Her Bath friend appeals to a
+miniature (engraved for this work) by Roche, of Bath, taken when she
+was in her seventy-seventh year. Like Cromwell, who told the painter
+that if he softened a harsh line or so much as omitted a wart, he
+should never be paid a sixpence,--she desired the artist to paint her
+face deeply rouged, which it always was[1], and to introduce a
+trivial deformity of the jaw, produced by a horse treading on her as
+she lay on the ground after a fall. In this respect she proved
+superior to Johnson; who, with all his love of truth, could not bear
+to be painted with his defects. He was displeased at being drawn
+holding a pen close to his eye; and on its being suggested that
+Reynolds had painted himself holding his ear in his hand to catch the
+sound, he replied: "He may paint himself as deaf as he pleases, but I
+will not be Blinking Sam."
+
+[Footnote 1: "One day I called early at her house, and as I entered
+her drawing-room, she passed me, saying, 'Dear Sir, I will be with
+you in a few minutes; but, while I think of it, I must go to my
+dressing-closet and paint my face, which I forgot to do this
+morning.' Accordingly she soon returned, wearing the requisite
+quantity of bloom; which, it must be noticed, was not in the least
+like that of youth and beauty. I then said that I was surprised she
+should so far sacrifice to fashion, as to take that trouble. Her
+answer was that, as I might conclude, her practice of painting did
+not proceed from any silly compliance with Bath fashion, or any
+fashion; still less, if possible, from the desire of appearing
+younger than she was, but from this circumstance, that in early life
+she had worn rouge, as other young persons did in her day, as a part
+of dress; and after continuing the habit for some years, discovered
+that it had introduced a dull yellow colour into her complexion,
+quite unlike that of her natural skin, and that she wished to conceal
+the deformity."--_Piozziana_.]
+
+Reynolds' portrait of Mrs. Thrale conveys a highly agreeable
+impression of her; and so does Hogarth's, when she sat to him for the
+principal figure in "The Lady's Last Stake." She was then only
+fourteen; and he probably idealised his model; but that he also
+produced a striking likeness, is obvious on comparing his picture
+with the professed portraits. The history of this picture (which has
+been engraved, at Lord Macaulay's suggestion, for this work) will be
+found in the Autobiography and the Letters.
+
+Boswell's account of his first visit to Streatham gives a tolerably
+fair notion of the footing on which Johnson stood there, and the
+manner in which the interchange of mind was carried on between him
+and the hostess. This visit took place in October, 1769, four years
+after Johnson's introduction to her; and Boswell's absence from
+London, in which he had no fixed residence during Johnson's life,
+will hardly account for the neglect of his illustrious friend in not
+procuring him a privilege which he must have highly coveted and would
+doubtless have turned to good account.
+
+"On the 6th of October I complied with this obliging invitation; and
+found, at an elegant villa, six miles from town, every circumstance
+that can make society pleasing. Johnson, though quite at home, was
+yet looked up to with an awe, tempered by affection, and seemed to be
+equally the care of his host and hostess. I rejoiced at seeing him so
+happy."
+
+"Mrs. Thrale disputed with him on the merit of Prior. He attacked him
+powerfully; said he wrote of love like a man who had never felt it;
+his love verses were college verses: and he repeated the song,
+'Alexis shunn'd his fellow swains,' &c. in so ludicrous a manner, as
+to make us all wonder how any one could have been pleased with such
+fantastical stuff. Mrs. Thrale stood to her guns with great courage,
+in defence of amorous ditties, which Johnson despised, till he at
+last silenced her by saving, 'My dear lady, talk no more of this.
+Nonsense can be defended but by nonsense.'
+
+"Mrs. Thrale then praised Garrick's talents for light gay poetry;
+and, as a specimen, repeated his song in 'Florizel and Perdita,' and
+dwelt with peculiar pleasure on this line:--
+
+ "'I'd smile with the simple, and feed with the poor.'
+
+"_Johnson._--'Nay, my dear lady, this will never do. Poor David!
+Smile with the simple!--what folly is that? And who would feed with
+the poor that can help it? No, no; let me smile with the wise, and
+feed with the rich.'" Boswell adds, that he repeated this sally to
+Glarrick, and wondered to find his sensibility as a writer not a
+little irritated by it; on which Mrs. Thrale remarks, "How odd to go
+and tell the man!"
+
+The independent tone she took when she deemed the Doctor
+unreasonable, is also proved by Boswell in his report of what took
+place at Streatham in reference to Lord Marchmont's offer to supply
+information for the Life of Pope:
+
+"Elated with the success of my spontaneous exertion to procure
+material and respectable aid to Johnson for his very favourite work,
+'the Lives of the Poets,' I hastened down to Mr. Thrale's, at
+Streatham, where he now was, that I might insure his being at home
+next day; and after dinner, when I thought he would receive the good
+news in the best humour, I announced it eagerly: 'I have been at work
+for you to-day, Sir. I have been with Lord Marchmont. He bade me tell
+you he has a great respect for you, and will call on you to-morrow at
+one o'clock, and communicate all he knows about Pope.' _Johnson._ 'I
+shall not be in town to-morrow. I don't care to know about Pope.'
+_Mrs. Thrale_ (surprised, as I was, and a little angry). 'I suppose,
+Sir, Mr. Boswell thought that as you are to write Pope's Life, you
+would wish to know about him.' _Johnson._ 'Wish! why yes. If it
+rained knowledge, I'd hold out my hand; but I would not give myself
+the trouble to go in quest of it.' There was no arguing with him at
+the moment. Sometime afterwards he said, 'Lord Marchmont will call
+upon me, and then I shall call on Lord Marchmont.' Mrs. Thrale was
+uneasy at this unaccountable caprice: and told me, that if I did not
+take care to bring about a meeting between Lord Marchmont and him, it
+would never take place, which would be a great pity."
+
+The ensuing conversation is a good sample of the freedom and variety
+of "talk" in which Johnson luxuriated, and shows how important a part
+Mrs. Thrale played in it:
+
+"Mrs. Thrale told us, that a curious clergyman of our acquaintance
+(Dr. Lort is named in the margin) had discovered a licentious stanza,
+which Pope had originally in his 'Universal Prayer,' before the
+stanza,--
+
+ "'What conscience dictates to be done,
+ Or warns us not to do,' &c.
+
+It was this:--
+
+ "'Can sins of moment claim the rod
+ Of everlasting fires?
+ And that offend great Nature's God
+ Which Nature's self inspires."
+
+and that Dr. Johnson observed, it had been borrowed from _Guarini_.
+There are, indeed, in _Pastor Fido_, many such flimsy superficial
+reasonings as that in the last two lines of this stanza.
+
+"_Boswell_. 'In that stanza of Pope's, "_rod of fires_" is certainly
+a bad metaphor.' _Mrs. Thrale_. 'And "sins of _moment_" is a faulty
+expression; for its true import is _momentous_, which cannot be
+intended.' _Johnson_. 'It must have been written "of _moments_." Of
+_moment_, is _momentous_; of _moments, momentary_. I warrant you,
+however, Pope wrote this stanza, and some friend struck it out.'
+
+"Talking of divorces, I asked if Othello's doctrine was not
+plausible:--
+
+ "'He that is robb'd, not wanting what is stolen,
+ Let him not know't, and he's not robb'd at all.'
+
+Dr. Johnson and Mrs. Thrale joined against this. _Johnson_. 'Ask any
+man if he'd wish not to know of such an injury.' _Boswell_. 'Would
+you tell your friend to make him unhappy?' _Johnson_. 'Perhaps, Sir,
+I should not: but that would be from prudence on my own account. A
+man would tell his father.' _Boswell_. 'Yes; because he would not
+have spurious children to get any share of the family inheritance.'
+_Mrs. Thrale_. 'Or he would tell his brother.' _Boswell_. 'Certainly
+his _elder_ brother.... Would you tell Mr. ----?' (naming a gentleman
+who assuredly was not in the least danger of so miserable a disgrace,
+though married to a fine woman). _Johnson_. 'No, Sir: because it
+would do no good; he is so sluggish, he'd never go to Parliament and
+get through a divorce.'" _Marginal Note_: "Langton."
+
+There is every reason to believe that her behaviour to Johnson was
+uniformly marked by good-breeding and delicacy. She treated him with
+a degree of consideration and respect which he did not always receive
+from other friends and admirers. A foolish rumour having got into the
+newspapers that he had been learning to dance of Vestris, it was
+agreed that Lord Charlemont should ask him if it was true, and his
+lordship with (it is shrewdly observed) the characteristic spirit of
+a general of Irish volunteers, actually put the question, which
+provoked a passing feeling of irritation. Opposite Boswell's account
+of this incident she has written, "Was he not right in hating to be
+so treated? and would he not have been right to have loved me better
+than any of them, because I never did make a Lyon of him?"
+
+One great charm of her companionship to cultivated men was her
+familiarity with the learned languages, as well as with French,
+Italian, and Spanish. The author of "Piozziana" says: "She not only
+read and wrote Hebrew, Greek, and Latin, but had for sixty years
+constantly and ardently studied the Scriptures and the works of
+commentators in the original languages." She did not know Greek, and
+he probably over-estimated her other acquirements, which Boswell
+certainly underestimates when he speaks slightingly of them on the
+strength of Johnson's having said: "It is a great mistake to suppose
+that she is above him (Thrale) in literary attainments. She is more
+flippant, but he has ten times her learning: he is a regular scholar;
+but her learning is that of a school-boy in one of the lower forms."
+If this were so, it is strange that Thrale should cut so poor a
+figure, should seem little better than a nonentity, whilst every
+imaginable topic was under animated discussion at his table; for
+Boswell was more ready to report the husband's sayings than the
+wife's. In a marginal note on one of the printed letters she says:
+"Mr. Thrale was a very merry talking man in 1760; but the distress of
+1772, which affected his health, his hopes, and his whole soul,
+affected his temper too. Perkins called it being planet struck, and I
+am not sure he was ever completely the same man again." The notes of
+his conversation during the antecedent period are equally meagre.[1]
+He is described by Madame D'Arblay as taking a singular amusement in
+hearing, instigating, and provoking a war of words, alternating
+triumph and overthrow, between clever and ambitious colloquial
+combatants.
+
+[Footnote 1: "Pray, Doctor, said a gentleman to Johnson, is Mr.
+Thrale a man of conversation, or is he only wise and silent?' 'Why,
+Sir, his conversation does not show the _minute_ hand; but he
+generally strikes the hour very correctly.'"--_Johnsoniana_.]
+
+No one would have expected to find her as much at home in Greek and
+Latin authors as a man of fair ability who had received and profited
+by an University education, but she could appreciate a classical
+allusion or quotation, and translate off-hand a Latin epigram.
+
+"Mary Aston," said Johnson, "was a beauty and a scholar, and a wit
+and a whig; and she talked all in praise of liberty; and so I made
+this epigram upon her. She was the loveliest creature I ever saw!
+
+ "'Liber ut esse velim, suasisti, pulchra Maria,
+ Ut maneam liber, pulchra Maria, vale!'
+
+"Will it do this way in English, Sir? (said Mrs. Thrale)--
+
+ "'Persuasions to freedom fall oddly from you,
+ If freedom we seek, fair Maria, adieu."
+
+Mr. Croker's version is:--
+
+ "'You wish me, fair Maria, to be free,
+ Then, fair Maria, I must fly from thee.'
+
+Boswell also has tried his hand at it; and a correspondent of the
+"Gentleman's Magazine" suggests that Johnson had in his mind an
+epigram on a young lady who appeared at a masquerade in Paris,
+habited as a Jesuit, during the height of the contention between the
+Jansenists and Molinists concerning free will:--
+
+ "On s'etonne ici que Calviniste
+ Eut pris l'habit de Moliniste,
+ Puisque que cette jeune beaute
+ Ote a chacun sa liberte,
+ N'est ce pas une Janseniste."[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: "Menagiana," vol. iii. p. 376. Edition of 1716. Equally
+happy were Lord Chesterfield's lines to a young lady who appeared at
+a Dublin ball, with an orange breastknot:--
+
+Mrs. Thrale took the lead even when her husband might be expected to
+strike in, as when Johnson was declaiming paradoxically against
+action in oratory: "Action can have no effect on reasonable minds. It
+may augment noise, but it never can enforce argument." _Mrs. Thrale_.
+"What then, Sir, becomes of Demosthenes' saying, Action, action,
+action?" _Johnson_. "Demosthenes, Madam, spoke to an assembly of
+brutes, to a barbarous people." "The polished Athenians!" is her
+marginal protest, and a conclusive one.
+
+In English literature she was rarely at fault. In
+
+ "Pretty Tory, where's the jest
+ To wear that riband on thy breast,
+ When that same breast betraying shows
+ The whiteness of the rebel rose?"
+
+White was adopted by the malcontent Irish as the French emblem.
+Johnson's epigram may have been suggested by Propertius:
+
+ "Nullus liber erit si quis amare volet."]
+
+reference to the flattery lavished on Garrick by Lord Mansfield and
+Lord Chatham, Johnson had said, "When he whom everybody else
+flatters, flatters me, then I am truly happy." _Mrs. Thrale_. "The
+sentiment is in Congreve, I think." _Johnson_. "Yes, Madam, in 'The
+Way of the World.'
+
+ "'If there's delight in love, 'tis when I see
+ The heart that others bleed for, bleed for me.'"
+
+When Johnson is reported saying, "Those who have a style of
+distinguished excellence can always be distinguished," she objects:
+"It seems not. The lines always quoted as Dryden's, beginning,
+
+ 'To die is landing on some silent shore,'
+
+are Garth's after all." Johnson would have been still less pleased at
+her discovery that a line in his epitaph on Phillips,
+
+ "Till angels wake thee with a note like thine,"
+
+was imitated from Pope's
+
+ "And saints embrace thee with a love like mine."
+
+In one of her letters to him (June, 1782) she writes: "Meantime let
+us be as _merry_ as reading Burton upon _Melancholy_ will make us.
+You bid me study that book in your absence, and now, what have I
+found? Why, I have found, or fancied, that he has been cruelly
+plundered: that Milton's first idea of 'L'Allegro' and 'Il Penseroso'
+were suggested by the verses at the beginning; that Savage's speech
+of Suicide in the 'Wanderer' grew up out of a passage you probably
+remember towards the 216th page; that Swift's tale of the woman that
+holds water in her mouth, to regain her husband's love by silence,
+had its source in the same farrago; and that there is an odd
+similitude between my Lord's trick upon Sly the Tinker, in
+Shakspeare's 'Taming of the Shrew,' and some stuff I have been
+reading in Burton."
+
+It would be easy to heap proof upon proof of the value and variety of
+Mrs. Thrale's contributions to the colloquial treasures accumulated
+by Boswell and other members of the set; and Johnson's deliberate
+testimony to her good qualities of head and heart will far more than
+counterbalance any passing expressions of disapproval or reproof with
+her mistimed vivacity, or alleged disregard of scrupulous accuracy in
+narrative, may have called forth. No two people ever lived much
+together for a series of years without many fretful, complaining,
+dissatisfied, uncongenial moments,--without letting drop captious or
+unkind expressions, utterly at variance with their habitual feelings
+and their matured judgments of each other. The hasty word, the
+passing sarcasm, the sly hit at an acknowledged foible, should count
+for nothing in the estimate, when contrasted with earnest and
+deliberate assurances, proceeding from one who was commonly too proud
+to flatter, and in no mood for idle compliment when he wrote.
+
+"Never (he writes in 1773) imagine that your letters are long; they
+are always too short for my curiosity. I do not know that I was ever
+content with a single perusal.... My nights are grown again very
+uneasy and troublesome. I know not that the country will mend them;
+but I hope your company will mend my days. Though I cannot now expect
+much attention, and would not wish for more than can be spared from
+the poor dear lady (her mother), yet I shall see you and hear you
+every now and then; and to see and hear you, is always to hear wit,
+and to see virtue."
+
+He would not suffer her to be lightly spoken of in his presence, nor
+permit his name to be coupled jocularly with hers. "I yesterday told
+him," says Boswell, when they were traversing the Highlands, "I was
+thinking of writing a poetical letter to him, on his return from
+Scotland, in the style of Swift's humorous epistle in the character
+of Mary Gulliver to her husband, Captain Lemuel Gulliver, on his
+return to England from the country of the Houyhnhnms:--
+
+ "'At early morn I to the market haste,
+ Studious in ev'ry thing to please thy taste.
+ A curious _fowl_ and _sparagrass_ I chose;
+ (For I remember you were fond of those:)
+ Three shillings cost the first, the last seven groats;
+ Sullen you turn from both, and call for OATS.'
+
+He laughed, and asked in whose name I would write it. I said in Mrs.
+Thrale's. He was angry. 'Sir, if you have any sense of decency or
+delicacy, you won't do that.' _Boswell_. 'Then let it be in Cole's,
+the landlord of the Mitre tavern, where we have so often sat
+together.' _Johnson_. 'Ay, that may do.'"
+
+Again, at Inverary, when Johnson called for a gill of whiskey that he
+might know what makes a Scotchman happy, and Boswell proposed Mrs.
+Thrale as their toast, he would not have _her_ drunk in whiskey.
+Peter Pindar has maliciously added to this reproof:--
+
+ "We supped most royally, were vastly frisky,
+ When Johnson ordered up a gill of whiskey.
+ Taking the glass, says I, 'Here's Mistress Thrale,'
+ 'Drink her in _whiskey_ not,' said he, 'but _ale_.'"
+
+So far from making light of her scholarship, he frequently accepted
+her as a partner in translations from the Latin. The translations
+from Boethius, printed in the second volume of the Letters, are their
+joint composition.
+
+After recapitulating Johnson's other contributions to literature in
+1766, Boswell says, "'The Fountains,' a beautiful little fairy tale
+in prose, written with exquisite simplicity, is one of Johnson's
+productions; and I cannot withhold from Mrs. Thrale the praise of
+being the author of that admirable poem 'The Three Warnings.'"
+_Marginal note_: "How sorry he is!" Both the tale and the poem were
+written for a collection of "Miscellanies," published by Mrs.
+Williams in that year. The character of Floretta in "The Fountains"
+was intended for Mrs. Thrale, and she thus gracefully alludes to it
+in a letter to Johnson in Feb. 1782:
+
+"The newspapers would spoil my few comforts that are left if they
+could; but you tell me that's only because I have the reputation,
+whether true or false, of being a _wit_ forsooth; and you remember
+_poor Floretta_, who was teased into wishing away her spirit, her
+beauty, her fortune, and at last even her life, never could bear the
+bitter water which was to have washed away her wit; which she
+resolved to keep with all its consequences."
+
+Her fugitive pieces, mostly in verse, thrown off from time to time at
+all periods of her life, are numerous; and the best of them that have
+been recovered will be included in these volumes. In a letter to the
+author of "Piozziana," she says:--"When Wilkes and Liberty were at
+their highest tide, I was bringing or losing children every year; and
+my studies were confined to my nursery; so, it came into my head one
+day to send an infant alphabet to the 'St. James Chronicle':--
+
+ "'A was an Alderman, factious and proud;
+ B was a Bellas that blustered aloud, &c.'
+
+"In a week's time Dr. Johnson asked me if I knew who wrote it? 'Why,
+who did write it, Sir?' said I. 'Steevens,' was the reply. Some time
+after that, years for aught I know, he mentioned to me Steevens's
+veracity! 'No, no;' answered H.L.P., anything but that;' and told my
+story; showing him by incontestable proofs that it was mine. Johnson
+did not utter a word, and we never talked about it any more. I durst
+not introduce the subject; but it served to hinder S. from visiting
+at the house: I suppose Johnson kept him away."
+
+It does not appear that Steevens claimed the Alphabet; which may have
+suggested the celebrated squib that appeared in the "New Whig Guide,"
+and was popularly attributed to Mr. Croker. It was headed "The
+Political Alphabet; or, the Young Member's A B C," and begins:
+
+ "A was an Althorpe, as dull as a hog:
+ B was black Brougham, a surly cur dog:
+ C was a Cochrane, all stripped of his lace."
+
+What widely different associations are now awakened by these names!
+The sting is in the tail:
+
+ "W was a Warre, 'twixt a wasp and a worm,
+ But X Y and Z are not found in this form,
+ Unless Moore, Martin, and Creevey be said
+ (As the last of mankind) to be X Y and Z."
+
+Amongst Miss Reynolds' "Recollections" will be found:--"On the
+praises of Mrs. Thrale, he (Johnson) used to dwell with a peculiar
+delight, a paternal fondness, expressive of conscious exultation in
+being so intimately acquainted with her. One day, in speaking of her
+to Mr. Harris, author of 'Hermes,' and expatiating on her various
+perfections,--the solidity of her virtues, the brilliancy of her wit,
+and the strength of her understanding, &c.--he quoted some lines (a
+stanza, I believe, but from what author I know not[1]), with which he
+concluded his most eloquent eulogium, and of these I retained but the
+two last lines:--
+
+ 'Virtues--of such a generous kind,
+ Pure in the last recesses of the mind.'"
+
+[Footnote 1: Dryden's Translation of Persius.]
+
+The place assigned to Mrs. Thrale by the popular voice amongst the
+most cultivated and accomplished women of the day, is fixed by some
+verses printed in the "Morning Herald" of March 12th, 1782, which
+attracted much attention. They were commonly attributed to Mr.
+(afterwards Sir W.W.) Pepys, and Madame d'Arblay, who alludes to them
+complacently, thought them his; but he subsequently repudiated the
+authorship, and the editor of her Memoirs believes that they were
+written by Dr. Burney. They were provoked by the proneness of the
+Herald to indulge in complimentary allusions to ladies of the demirep
+genus:
+
+ "Herald, wherefore thus proclaim
+ Nought of women but the _shame_?
+ Quit, oh, quit, at least awhile,
+ Perdita's too luscious smile;
+ Wanton Worsley, stilted Daly,
+ Heroines of each blackguard alley;
+ Better sure record in story
+ Such as shine their sex's glory!
+ Herald! haste, with me proclaim
+ Those of literary fame.
+ Hannah More's pathetic pen,
+ Painting high th' impassion'd scene;
+ Carter's piety and learning,
+ Little Burney's quick discerning;
+ Cowley's neatly pointed wit,
+ Healing those her satires hit;
+ Smiling Streatfield's iv'ry neck,
+ Nose, and notions--_a la Grecque!_
+ Let Chapone retain a place,
+ And the mother of her Grace[1],
+ Each art of conversation knowing,
+ High-bred, elegant Boscawen;
+ Thrale, in whose expressive eyes
+ Sits a soul above disguise,
+ Skill'd with-wit and sense t'impart
+ Feelings of a generous heart.
+ Lucan, Leveson, Greville, Crewe;
+ Fertile-minded Montagu,
+ Who makes each rising art her care,
+ 'And brings her knowledge from afar!'
+ Whilst her tuneful tongue defends
+ Authors dead, and absent friends;
+ Bright in genius, pure in fame:--
+ Herald, haste, and these proclaim!"
+
+[Footnote 1: Mrs. Boscawen was the mother of the Duchess of Beaufort
+and Mrs. Leveson Gower:
+
+ "All Leveson's sweetness, and all Beaufort's grace."]
+
+These lines merit attention for the sake of the comparison they
+invite. An outcry has recently been raised against the laxity of
+modern fashion, in permitting venal beauty to receive open homage in
+our parks and theatres, and to be made the subject of prurient gossip
+by maids and matrons who should ignore its existence. But we need not
+look far beneath the surface of social history to discover that the
+irregularity in question is only a partial revival of the practice of
+our grandfathers and grandmothers, much as a crinoline may be
+regarded as a modified reproduction of the hoop. Junius thus
+denounces the Duke of Grafton's indecorous devotion to Nancy Parsons:
+"It is not the private indulgence, but the public insult, of which I
+complain. The name of Miss Parsons would hardly have been known, if
+the First Lord of the Treasury had not led her in triumph through the
+Opera House, even in the presence of the Queen." Lord March
+(afterwards Duke of Queensberry) was a lord of the bedchamber in the
+decorous court of George the Third, when he wrote thus to Selwyn: "I
+was prevented from writing to you last Friday, by being at Newmarket
+with my little girl (Signora Zamperini, a noted dancer and singer). I
+had the whole family and Cocchi. The beauty went with me in my
+chaise, and the rest in the old landau."
+
+We have had Boswell's impression of his first visit to Streatham; and
+Madame D'Arblay's account of hers confirms the notion that My
+Mistress, not My Master, was the presiding genius of the place.
+
+"_London, August_ (1778).--I have now to write an account of the most
+consequential day I have spent since my birth: namely, my Streatham
+visit.
+
+"Our journey to Streatham was the least pleasant part of the day, for
+the roads were dreadfully dusty, and I was really in the fidgets from
+thinking what my reception might be, and from fearing they would
+expect a less awkward and backward kind of person than I was sure
+they would find.
+
+"Mr. Thrale's house is white, and very pleasantly situated, in a fine
+paddock. Mrs. Thrale was strolling about, and came to us as we got
+out of the chaise.
+
+"She then received me, taking both my hands, and with mixed
+politeness and cordiality welcomed me to Streatham. She led me into
+the house, and addressed herself almost wholly for a few minutes to
+my father, as if to give me an assurance she did not mean to regard
+me as a show, or to distress or frighten me by drawing me out.
+Afterwards she took me up stairs, and showed me the house, and said
+she had very much wished to see me at Streatham, and should always
+think herself much obliged to Dr. Burney for his goodness in bringing
+me, which she looked upon as a very great favour.
+
+"But though we were some time together, and though she was so very
+civil, she did not _hint_ at my book, and I love her much more than
+ever for her delicacy in avoiding a subject which she could not but
+see would have greatly embarrassed me.
+
+"When we returned to the music-room, we found Miss Thrale was with my
+father. Miss Thrale is a very fine girl, about fourteen years of age,
+but cold and reserved, though full of knowledge and intelligence.
+
+"Soon after, Mrs. Thrale took me to the library; she talked a little
+while upon common topics, and then, at last, she mentioned 'Evelina.'
+
+"I now prevailed upon Mrs. Thrale to let me amuse myself, and she
+went to dress. I then prowled about to choose some book, and I saw,
+upon the reading-table, 'Evelina.' I had just fixed upon a new
+translation of Cicero's 'Laelius,' when the library door was opened,
+and Mr. Seward entered. I instantly put away my book, because I
+dreaded being thought studious and affected. He offered his service
+to find anything for me, and then, in the same breath, ran on to
+speak of the book with which I had myself 'favoured the world!'
+
+"The exact words he began with I cannot recollect, for I was actually
+confounded by the attack; and his abrupt manner of letting me know he
+was _au fait_ equally astonished and provoked me. How different from
+the delicacy of Mr. and Mrs. Thrale!"
+
+A high French authority has laid down that good breeding consists in
+rendering to all what is socially their due. This definition is
+imperfect. Good breeding is best displayed by putting people at their
+ease; and Mrs. Thrale's manner of putting the young authoress at her
+ease was the perfection of delicacy and tact.
+
+If Johnson's entrance on the stage had been premeditated, it could
+hardly have been more dramatically ordered.
+
+"When we were summoned to dinner, Mrs. Thrale made my father and me
+sit on each side of her. I said that I hoped I did not take Dr.
+Johnson's place;--for he had not yet appeared.
+
+"'No,' answered Mrs. Thrale, 'he will sit by you, which I am sure
+will give him great pleasure.'
+
+"Soon after we were seated, this great man entered. I have so true a
+veneration for him, that the very sight of him inspires me with
+delight and reverence, notwithstanding the cruel infirmities to which
+he is subject; for he has almost perpetual convulsive movements,
+either of his hands, lips, feet, or knees, and sometimes of all
+together.
+
+"Mrs. Thrale introduced me to him, and he took his place. We had a
+noble dinner, and a most elegant dessert. Dr. Johnson, in the middle
+of dinner, asked Mrs. Thrale what was in some little pies that were
+near him.
+
+"'Mutton,' answered she, 'so I don't ask you to eat any, because I
+know you despise it.'
+
+"'No, Madam, no,' cried he: 'I despise nothing that is good of its
+sort; but I am too proud now to eat of it. Sitting by Miss Burney
+makes me very proud to-day!'
+
+"'Miss Burney,' said Mrs. Thrale, laughing, 'you must take great care
+of your heart if Dr. Johnson attacks it; for I assure you he is not
+often successless.'
+
+"'What's that you say, Madam?' cried he; 'are you making mischief
+between the young lady and me already?'
+
+"A little while after he drank Miss Thrale's health and mine, and
+then added:
+
+"'Tis a terrible thing that we cannot wish young ladies well, without
+wishing them to become old women.'"
+
+Madame D'Arblay's memoirs are sadly defaced by egotism, and gratified
+vanity may have had a good deal to do with her unqualified admiration
+of Mrs. Thrale; for "Evelina" (recently published) was the unceasing
+topic of exaggerated eulogy during the entire visit. Still so acute
+an observer could not be essentially wrong in an account of her
+reception, which is in the highest degree favourable to her newly
+acquired friend. Of her second visit she says:
+
+"Our journey was charming. The kind Mrs. Thrale would give courage to
+the most timid. She did not ask me questions, or catechise me upon
+what I knew, or use any means to draw me out, but made it her
+business to draw herself out--that is, to start subjects, to support
+them herself, and take all the weight of the conversation, as if it
+behoved her to find me entertainment. But I am so much in love with
+her, that I shall be obliged to run away from the subject, or shall
+write of nothing else.
+
+"When we arrived here, Mrs. Thrale showed me my room, which is an
+exceeding pleasant one, and then conducted me to the library, there
+to divert myself while she dressed.
+
+"Miss Thrale soon joined me: and I begin to like her. Mr. Thrale was
+neither well nor in spirits all day. Indeed, he seems not to be a
+happy man, though he has every means of happiness in his power. But I
+think I have rarely seen a very rich man with a light heart and light
+spirits."
+
+The concluding remark, coming from such a source, may supply an
+improving subject of meditation or inquiry; if found true, it may
+help to suppress envy and promote contentment. Thrale's state of
+health, however, accounts for his depression independently of his
+wealth, which rested on too precarious a foundation to allow of
+unbroken confidence and gaiety.
+
+"At tea (continues the diarist) we all met again, and Dr. Johnson was
+gaily sociable. He 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. But he could not have chosen a man who would have
+been less entertained by such means.'
+
+"'I believe not!' cried Mrs. Thrale: 'nothing is more ridiculous than
+parents cramming their children's nonsense down other people's
+throats. I keep mine as much out of the way as I can.'
+
+"'Yours, Madam,' answered he, 'are in nobody's way; no children can
+be better managed or less troublesome; but your fault is, a too great
+perverseness in not allowing anybody to give them anything. Why
+should they not have a cherry, or a gooseberry, as well as bigger
+children?'
+
+"Indeed, the freedom with which Dr. Johnson condemns whatever he
+disapproves, is astonishing; and the strength of words he uses would,
+to most people, be intolerable; but Mrs. Thrale seems to have a
+sweetness of disposition that equals all her other excellences, and
+far from making a point of vindicating herself, she generally
+receives his admonitions with the most respectful silence."
+
+But it must not be supposed that this was done without an effort.
+When Boswell speaks of Johnson's "accelerating her pulsation," she
+adds, "he checked it often enough, to be sure."
+
+Another of the conversations which occurred during this visit is
+characteristic of all parties:
+
+"We had been talking of colours, and of the fantastic names given to
+them, and why the palest lilac should be called a _soupir etouffe_.
+
+"'Why, Madam,' said he, with wonderful readiness, 'it is called a
+stifled sigh because it is checked in its progress, and only half a
+colour.'
+
+"I could not help expressing my amazement at his universal readiness
+upon all subjects, and Mrs. Thrale said to him,
+
+"'Sir, Miss Burney wonders at your patience with such stuff; but I
+tell her you are used to me, for I believe I torment you with more
+foolish questions than anybody else dares do.'
+
+"'No, Madam,' said he, 'you don't torment me;--you teaze me, indeed,
+sometimes.'
+
+"'Ay, so I do, Dr. Johnson, and I wonder 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.'
+
+"'And, for heaven's sake, how came you to know her?'
+
+"'Why, Madam, she figured in the literary world, too! Bet Flint wrote
+her own life, and called herself Cassandra, and it was in verse. So
+Bet brought me her verses to correct; but I gave her a half-a-crown,
+and she liked it as well.'
+
+"'And pray what became of her, Sir?'
+
+"'Why, Madam, she stole a quilt from the man of the house, and he had
+her taken up: but Bet Flint had a spirit not to be subdued; so when
+she found herself obliged to go to jail, she ordered a sedan chair,
+and bid her footboy walk before her. However, the boy proved
+refractory, for he was ashamed, though his mistress was not.'
+
+"'And did she ever get out of jail again, Sir?'
+
+"'Yes, Madam; when she came to her trial, the judge acquitted her.
+"So now," she said to me, "the quilt is my own, and now I'll make a
+petticoat of it."[1] Oh, I loved Bet Flint!'
+
+"Bless me, Sir!' cried Mrs. Thrale, 'how can all these vagabonds
+contrive to get at _you_, of all people?'
+
+"'Oh the dear creatures!' cried he, laughing heartily, 'I can't but
+be glad to see them!'"
+
+[Footnote 1: This story is told by Boswell, roy. 8vo, edit. p. 688.]
+
+Madame D'Arblay's notes (in her Diary) of the conversation and mode
+of life at Streatham are full and spirited, and exhibit Johnson in
+moods and situations in which he was seldom seen by Boswell. The
+adroitness with which he divided his attentions amongst the ladies,
+blending approval with instruction, and softening contradiction or
+reproof by gallantry, gives plausibility to his otherwise paradoxical
+claim to be considered a polite man.[1] He obviously knew how to set
+about it, and (theoretically at least) was no mean proficient in that
+art of pleasing which attracts
+
+ "Rather by deference than compliment,
+ And wins e'en by a delicate dissent."
+
+[Footnote 1: "When the company were retired, we happened to be
+talking of Dr. Barnard, the provost of Eton, who died about that
+time; and after a long and just eulogium on his wit, his learning,
+and goodness of heart--'He was the only man, too,' says Mr. Johnson,
+quite seriously, 'that did justice to my good breeding; and you may
+observe that I am well-bred to a degree of needless scrupulosity. No
+man,' continued he, not observing the amazement of his hearers, 'no
+man is so cautious not to interrupt another; no man thinks it so
+necessary to appear attentive when others are speaking; no man so
+steadily refuses preference to himself, or so willingly bestows it on
+another, as I do; nobody holds so strongly as I do the necessity of
+ceremony, and the ill effects which follow the breach of it: yet
+people think me rude; but Barnard did me justice.'"--_Anecdotes_. "I
+think myself a very polite man,"--_Boswell_. 1778.]
+
+Sir Henry Bulwer (in his "France") says that Louis the Fourteenth was
+entitled to be called a man of genius, if only from the delicate
+beauty of his compliments. Mrs. Thrale awards the palm of excellence
+in the same path to Johnson. "Your compliments, Sir, are made seldom,
+but when they are made, they have an elegance unequalled; but then,
+when you are angry, who dares make speeches so bitter and so cruel?"
+"I am sure," she adds, after a semblance of defence on his part, "I
+have had my share of scolding from you." _Johnson_. "It is true, you
+have, but you have borne it like an angel, and you have been the
+better for it." As the discussion proceeds, he accuses her of often
+provoking him to say severe things by unreasonable commendation; a
+common mode of acquiring a character for amiability at the expense of
+one's intimates, who are made to appear uncharitable by being thus
+constantly placed on the depreciating side.
+
+Some years prior to this period (1778) Mrs. Thrale's mind and
+character had undergone a succession of the most trying ordeals, and
+was tempered and improved, without being hardened, by them. In
+allusion to what she suffered in child-bearing, she said later in
+life that she had nine times undergone the sentence of a
+convict,--confinement with hard labour. Child after child died at the
+age when the bereavement is most affecting to a mother. Her husband's
+health kept her in a constant state of apprehension for his life, and
+his affairs became embarrassed to the very verge of bankruptcy. So
+long as they remained prosperous, he insisted on her not meddling
+with them in any way, and even required her to keep to her
+drawing-room and leave the conduct of their domestic establishment to
+the butler and housekeeper. But when (from circumstances detailed in
+the "Autobiography") his fortune was seriously endangered, he wisely
+and gladly availed himself of her prudence and energy, and was saved
+by so doing. I have now before me a collection of autograph letters
+from her to Mr. Perkins, then manager and afterwards one of the
+proprietors of the brewery, from which it appears that she paid the
+most minute attention to the business, besides undertaking the
+superintendence of her own hereditary estate in Wales. On September
+28, 1773, she writes to Mr. Perkins, who was on a commercial
+journey:--
+
+"Mr. Thrale is still upon his little tour; I opened a letter from you
+at the counting-house this morning, and am sorry to find you have so
+much trouble with Grant and his affairs. How glad I shall be to hear
+that matter is settled at all to your satisfaction. His letter and
+remittance came while I was there to-day.... Careless, of the 'Blue
+Posts,' has turned refractory, and applied to Hoare's people, who
+have sent him in their beer. I called on him to-day, however, and by
+dint of an unwearied solicitation, (for I kept him at the coach side
+a full half-hour) I got his order for six butts more as the final
+trial."
+
+Examples of fine ladies pressing tradesmen for their votes with
+compromising importunity are far from rare, but it would be difficult
+to find a parallel for Johnson's Hetty doing duty as a commercial
+traveller. She was simultaneously obliged to anticipate the
+electioneering exploits of the Duchess of Devonshire and Mrs. Crewe;
+and in after life, having occasion to pass through Southwark, she
+expresses her astonishment at no longer recognising a place, every
+hole and corner of which she had three times visited as a canvasser.
+
+After the death of Mr. Thrale, a friend of Mr. H. Thornton canvassed
+the borough on behalf of that gentleman. He waited on Mrs. Thrale,
+who promised her support. She concluded her obliging expressions by
+saying:--"I wish your friend success, and I think he will have it: he
+may probably come in for two parliaments, but if he tries for a
+third, were he an angel from heaven, the people of Southwark would
+cry, 'Not _this_ man, but Barabbas.'"[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: Miss Laetitia Matilda Hawkins vouches for this
+story.--"Memoir, &c." vol. i. p.66, note, where she adds:--"I have
+heard it said, that into whatever company she (Mrs. T.) fell, she
+could be the most agreeable person in it."]
+
+On one of her canvassing expeditions, Johnson accompanied her, and a
+rough fellow, a hatter by trade, seeing the moralist's hat in a state
+of decay, seized it suddenly with one hand, and clapping him on the
+back with the other, cried out, "Ah, Master Johnson, this is no time
+to be thinking about hats." "No, no, Sir," replied the Doctor, "hats
+are of no use now, as you say, except to throw up in the air and
+huzzah with;" accompanying his words with the true election halloo.
+
+Thrale had serious thoughts of repaying Johnson's electioneering aid
+in kind, by bringing him into Parliament. Sir John Hawkins says that
+Thrale had two meetings with the minister (Lord North), who at first
+seemed inclined to find Johnson a seat, but eventually
+discountenanced the project. Lord Stowell told Mr. Croker that Lord
+North did not feel quite sure that Johnson's support might not
+sometimes prove rather an incumbrance than a help. "His lordship
+perhaps thought, and not unreasonably, that, like the elephant in the
+battle, he was quite as likely to trample down his friends as his
+foes." Flood doubted whether Johnson, being long used to sententious
+brevity and the short flights of conversation, would have succeeded
+in the expanded kind of argument required in public speaking. Burke's
+opinion was, that if he had come early into Parliament, he would have
+been the greatest speaker ever known in it. Upon being told this by
+Reynolds, he exclaimed, "I should like to try my hand now." On
+Boswell's adding that he wished he _had_, Mrs. Thrale writes:
+"Boswell had leisure for curiosity: Ministers had not. Boswell would
+have been equally amused by his failure as by his success; but to
+Lord North there would have been no joke at all in the experiment
+ending untowardly."
+
+He was equally ready with advice and encouragement during the
+difficulties connected with the brewery. He was not of opinion with
+Aristotle and Parson Adams, that trade is below a philosopher[1]; and
+he eagerly buried himself in computing the cost of the malt and the
+possible profits on the ale. In October 1772, he writes from
+Lichfield:
+
+[Footnote 1: "Trade, answered Adams, is below a philosopher, as
+Aristotle proves in his first chapter of 'Politics,' and unnatural,
+as it is managed now."--_Joseph Andrews_.]
+
+"Do not suffer little things to disturb you. The brew-house must be
+the scene of action, and the subject of speculation. The first
+consequence of our late trouble ought to be, an endeavour to brew at
+a cheaper rate; an endeavour not violent and transient, but steady
+and continual, prosecuted with total contempt of censure or wonder,
+and animated by resolution not to stop while more can be done. Unless
+this can be done, nothing can help us; and if this be done, we shall
+not want help. Surely there is something to be saved; there is to be
+saved whatever is the difference between vigilance and neglect,
+between parsimony and profusion. The price of malt has risen again.
+It is now two pounds eight shillings the quarter. Ale is sold in the
+public-houses at sixpence a quart, a price which I never heard of
+before."
+
+In November of the same year, from Ashbourne:
+
+"DEAR MADAM,--So many days and never a letter!--_Fugere fides,
+pietasque pudorque_. This is Turkish usage. And I have been hoping
+and hoping. But you are so glad to have me out of your mind.[1]
+
+"I think you were quite right in your advice about the thousand
+pounds, for the payment could not have been delayed long; and a short
+delay would have lessened credit, without advancing interest. But in
+great matters you are hardly ever mistaken."
+
+[Footnote 1: This tone of playful reproach, when adopted by Johnson
+at a later period, has been cited as a proof of actual
+ill-treatment.]
+
+In May 17, 1773:
+
+"Why should Mr. T---- suppose, that what I took the liberty of
+suggesting was concerted with you? He does not know how much I
+revolve his affairs, and how honestly I desire his prosperity. I hope
+he has let the hint take some hold of his mind."
+
+In the copy of the printed letters presented by Mrs. Thrale to Sir
+James Fellowes, the blank is filled up with the name of Thrale, and
+the passage is thus annotated in her handwriting:
+
+"Concerning his (Thrale's) connection with quack chemists, quacks of
+all sorts; jumping up in the night to go to Marlbro' Street from
+Southwark, after some advertising mountebank, at hazard of his life,"
+In "Thraliana":
+
+"18_th July_, 1778.--Mr. Thrale overbrewed himself last winter and
+made an artificial scarcity of money in the family which has
+extremely lowered his spirits. Mr. Johnson endeavoured last night,
+and so did I, to make him promise that he would never more brew a
+larger quantity of beer in one winter than 80,000 barrels[1], but my
+Master, mad with the noble ambition of emulating Whitbread and
+Calvert, two fellows that he despises,--could scarcely be prevailed
+on to promise even _this_, that he will not brew more than four score
+thousand barrels a year for five years to come. He did promise that
+much, however; and so Johnson bade me write it down in the
+'Thraliana';--and so the wings of Speculation are clipped a
+little--very fain would I have pinioned her, but I had not strength
+to perform the operation."
+
+[Footnote 1: "If he got but 2_s._ 6_d._ by each barrel, 80,000 half
+crowns are L10,000; and what more would mortal man desire than an
+income of ten thousand a year--five to spend, and five to lay up?"]
+
+That Johnson's advice was neither thrown away nor undervalued, may be
+inferred from an incident related by Boswell. Mr. Perkins had hung up
+in the counting-house a fine proof of the mezzotinto of Dr. Johnson
+by Doughty; and when Mrs. Thrale asked him, somewhat flippantly, "Why
+do you put him up in the counting-house?" Mr. Perkins answered,
+"Because, Madam, I wish to have one wise man there." "Sir," said
+Johnson, "I thank you. It is a very handsome compliment, and I
+believe you speak sincerely."
+
+He was in the habit of paying the most minute attention to every
+branch of domestic economy, and his suggestions are invariably marked
+by shrewdness and good sense. Thus when Mrs. Thrale was giving
+evening parties, he told her that though few people might be hungry
+after a late dinner, she should always have a good supply of cakes
+and sweetmeats on a side table, and that some cold meat and a bottle
+of wine would often be found acceptable. Notwithstanding the
+imperfection of his eyesight, and his own slovenliness, he was a
+critical observer of dress and demeanour, and found fault without
+ceremony or compunction when any of his canons of taste or propriety
+were infringed. Several amusing examples are enumerated by Mrs.
+Thrale:
+
+"I commended a young lady for her beauty and pretty behaviour one
+day, however, to whom I thought no objections could have been made.
+'I saw her,' said Dr. Johnson, 'take a pair of scissors in her left
+hand though; and for all her father is now become a nobleman, and as
+you say excessively rich, I should, were I a youth of quality ten
+years hence, hesitate between a girl so neglected, and a _negro_.'
+
+"It was indeed astonishing how he _could_ remark such minuteness with
+a sight so miserably imperfect; but no accidental position of a
+riband escaped him, so nice was his observation, and so rigorous his
+demands of propriety. When I went with him to Litchfield, and came
+downstairs to breakfast at the inn, my dress did not please him, and
+he made me alter it entirely before he would stir a step with us
+about the town, saying most satirical things concerning the
+appearance I made in a riding-habit; and adding, ''Tis very strange
+that such eyes as yours cannot discern propriety of dress: if I had a
+sight only half as good, I think I should see to the centre.'
+
+"Another lady, whose accomplishments he never denied, came to our
+house one day covered with diamonds, feathers, &c., and he did not
+seem inclined to chat with her as usual. I asked him why? when the
+company was gone. 'Why, her head looked so like that of a woman who
+shows puppets,' said he, 'and her voice so confirmed the fancy, that
+I could not bear her to-day; when she wears a large cap, I can talk
+to her.'
+
+"When the ladies wore lace trimmings to their clothes, he expressed
+his contempt of the reigning fashion in these terms: 'A Brussels
+trimming is like bread-sauce,' said he, 'it takes away the glow of
+colour from the gown, and gives you nothing instead of it; but sauce
+was invented to heighten the flavour of our food, and trimming is an
+ornament to the manteau, or it is nothing. Learn,' said he, 'that
+there is propriety or impropriety in every thing how slight soever,
+and get at the general principles of dress and of behaviour; if you
+then transgress them, you will at least know that they are not
+observed.'"
+
+Madame D'Arblay confirms this account. He had just been finding fault
+with a bandeau worn by Lady Lade, a very large woman, standing six
+feet high without her shoes:
+
+"_Dr. J._--The truth is, women, take them in general, have no idea of
+grace. Fashion is all they think of. I don't mean Mrs. Thrale and
+Miss Burney, when I talk of women!--they are goddesses!--and
+therefore I except them.
+
+"_Mrs. Thrale._--Lady Lade never wore the bandeau, and said she never
+would, because it is unbecoming.
+
+"_Dr. J. (laughing.)_--Did not she? then is Lady Lade a charming
+woman, and I have yet hopes of entering into engagements with her!
+
+"_Mrs. T._--Well, as to that I can't say; but to be sure, the only
+similitude I have yet discovered in you, is in size: there you agree
+mighty well.
+
+"_Dr. J._--Why, if anybody could have worn the bandeau, it must have
+been Lady Lade; for there is enough of her to carry it off; but you
+are too little for anything ridiculous; that which seems nothing upon
+a Patagonian, will become very conspicuous upon a Lilliputian, and of
+you there is so little in all, that one single absurdity would
+swallow up half of you."
+
+Matrimony was one of his favourite subjects, and he was fond of
+laying down and refining on the duties of the married state, with the
+amount of happiness and comfort to be found in it. But once when he
+was musing over the fire in the drawing-room at Streatham, a young
+gentleman called to him suddenly, "Mr. Johnson, would you advise me
+to marry?" "I would advise no man to marry, Sir," replied the Doctor
+in a very angry tone, "who is not likely to propagate understanding;"
+and so left the room. "Our companion," adds Mrs. Thrale, in the
+"Anecdotes," "looked confounded, and I believe had scarce recovered
+the consciousness of his own existence, when Johnson came back, and,
+drawing his chair among us, with altered looks and a softened voice,
+joined in the general chat, insensibly led the conversation to the
+subject of marriage, where he laid himself out in a dissertation so
+useful, so elegant, so founded on the true knowledge of human life,
+and so adorned with beauty of sentiment, that no one ever recollected
+the offence, except to rejoice in its consequences."
+
+The young gentleman was Mr. Thrale's nephew, Sir John Lade; who was
+proposed, half in earnest, whilst still a minor, by the Doctor as a
+fitting mate for the author of "Evelina." 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 "Thraliana" she says:--"Lady Lade consulted him about her son, Sir
+John. 'Endeavour, Madam,' said he, 'to procure him knowledge; for
+really ignorance to a rich man is like fat to a sick sheep, it only
+serves to call the rooks about him.' On the same occasion it was that
+he observed how a mind unfurnished with subjects and materials for
+thinking can keep up no dignity at all in solitude. 'It is,' says he,
+'in the state of a mill without grist.'"
+
+The attractions of Streatham must have been very strong, to induce
+Johnson to pass so much of his time away from "the busy hum of men"
+in Fleet Street, and "the full tide of human existence" at Charing
+Cross. He often found fault with Mrs. Thrale for living so much in
+the country, "feeding the chickens till she starved her
+understanding." Walking in a wood when it rained, she tells us, "was
+the only rural image he pleased his fancy with; for he would say,
+after one has gathered the apples in an orchard, one wishes them well
+baked, and removed to a London eating-house for enjoyment." This is
+almost as bad as the foreigner, who complained that there was no ripe
+fruit in England but the roasted apples. Amongst other modes of
+passing time in the country, Johnson once or twice tried hunting and,
+mounted on an old horse of Mr. Thrale's, acquitted himself to the
+surprise of the "field," one of whom delighted him by exclaiming,
+"Why Johnson rides as well, for ought I see, as the most illiterate
+fellow in England." But a trial or two satisfied him--
+
+ "He thought at heart like courtly Chesterfield,
+ Who after a long chase o'er hills, dales, fields,
+ And what not, though he rode beyond all price,
+ Ask'd next day,'If men ever hunted twice?'"
+
+It is very strange, and very melancholy, was his reflection, that the
+paucity of human pleasures should persuade us ever to call hunting
+one of them. The mode of locomotion in which he delighted was the
+vehicular. As he was driving rapidly in a postchaise with Boswell, he
+exclaimed, "Life has not many things better than this." On their way
+from Dr. Taylor's to Derby in 1777, he said, "If I had no duties, and
+no reference to futurity, I would spend my life in driving briskly in
+a postchaise with a pretty woman, but she should be one who could
+understand me, and would add something to the conversation."
+
+Mr. Croker attributes his enjoyment to the novelty of the pleasure;
+his poverty having in early life prevented him from travelling post.
+But a better reason is given by Mrs. Thrale:
+
+"I asked him why he doated on a coach so? and received for answer,
+that in the first place, the company were shut in with him _there_;
+and could not escape, as out of a room; in the next place, he heard
+all that was said in a carriage, where it was my turn to be deaf; and
+very impatient was he at my occasional difficulty of hearing. On this
+account he wished to travel all over the world: for the very act of
+going forward was delightful to him, and he gave himself no concern
+about accidents, which he said never happened; nor did the
+running-away of the horses at the edge of a precipice between Vernon
+and St. Denys in France convince him to the contrary: 'for nothing
+came of it,' he said, 'except that Mr. Thrale leaped out of the
+carriage into a chalk-pit, and then came up again, looking as
+_white_!' When the truth was, all their lives were saved by the
+greatest providence ever exerted in favour of three human creatures:
+and the part Mr. Thrale took from desperation was the likeliest thing
+in the world to produce broken limbs and death."
+
+The drawbacks on his gratification and on that of his fellow
+travellers were his physical defects, and his utter insensibility to
+the beauty of nature, as well as to the fine arts, in so far as they
+were addressed to the senses of sight and hearing. "He delighted,"
+says Mrs. Thrale, "no more in music than painting; he was almost as
+deaf as he was blind; travelling with Dr. Johnson was, for these
+reasons, tiresome enough. Mr. Thrale loved prospects, and was
+mortified that his friend could not enjoy the sight of those
+different dispositions of wood and water, hill and valley, that
+travelling through England and France affords a man. But when he
+wished to point them out to his companion: 'Never heed such
+nonsense,' would be the reply: 'a blade of grass is always a blade of
+grass, whether in one country or another: let us, if we _do_ talk,
+talk about something; men and women are my subjects of inquiry; let
+us see how these differ from those we have left behind."
+
+It is no small deduction from our admiration of Johnson, and no
+trifling enhancement of his friends' kindness in tolerating his
+eccentricities, that he seldom made allowance for his own palpable
+and undeniable deficiencies. As well might a blind man deny the
+existence of colours, as a purblind man assert that there was no
+charm in a prospect, or in a Claude or Titian, because he could see
+none. Once, by way of pleasing Reynolds, he pretended to lament that
+the great painter's genius was not exerted on stuff more durable than
+canvas, and suggested copper. Sir Joshua urged the difficulty of
+procuring plates large enough for historical subjects. "What foppish
+obstacles are these!" exclaimed Johnson. "Here is Thrale has a
+thousand ton of copper: you may paint it all round if you will, I
+suppose; it will serve him to brew in afterwards. Will it not, Sir?"
+(to Thrale, who sate by.)
+
+He always "civilised" to Dr. Burney, who has supplied the following
+anecdote:
+
+"After having talked slightingly of music, he was observed to listen
+very attentively while Miss Thrale played on the harpsichord; and
+with eagerness he called to her, 'Why don't you dash away like
+Burney?' Dr. Burney upon this said to him, 'I believe, Sir, we shall
+make a musician of you at last.' Johnson with candid complacency
+replied, 'Sir, I shall be glad to have a new sense given to me.'"
+
+In 1774, the Thrales made a tour in Wales, mainly for the purpose of
+revisiting her birthplace and estates. They were accompanied by
+Johnson, who kept a diary of the expedition, beginning July 5th and
+ending September 24th. It was preserved by his negro servant, and
+Boswell had no suspicion of its existence, for he says, "I do not
+find that he kept any journal or notes of what he saw there." The
+diary was first published by Mr. Duppa in 1816; and some manuscript
+notes by Mrs. Thrale which reached that gentleman too late for
+insertion, have been added in Mr. Murray's recent edition of the
+Life. The first entry is:
+
+"_Tuesday, July 5_.--We left Streatham 11 A.M. Price of four horses
+two shillings a mile. Barnet 1.40 P.M. On the road I read 'Tully's
+Epistles.' At night at Dunstable." At Chester, he records:--"We
+walked round the walls, which are complete, and contain one mile,
+three quarters, and one hundred and one yards." Mrs. Thrale's comment
+is, "Of those ill-fated walls Dr. Johnson might have learned the
+extent from any one. He has since put me fairly out of countenance by
+saying, 'I have known _my mistress_ fifteen years, and never saw her
+fairly out of humour but on Chester wall.' It was because he would
+keep Miss Thrale beyond her hour of going to bed to walk on the wall,
+where from the want of light, I apprehended some accident to her,
+perhaps to him."
+
+He thus describes Mrs. Thrale's family mansion:
+
+"_Saturday, July 30._--We went to Bach y Graig, where we found an old
+house, built 1567, in an uncommon and incommodious form--My mistress
+chatted about tiring, but I prevailed on her to go to the top--The
+floors have been stolen: the windows are stopped--The house was less
+than I seemed to expect--The River Clwyd is a brook with a bridge of
+one arch, about one third of a mile--The woods have many trees,
+generally young; but some which seem to decay--They have been
+lopped--The house never had a garden--The addition of another story
+would make an useful house, but it cannot be great."
+
+On the 4th August, they visited Rhuddlan Castle and Bodryddan[1], of
+which he says:--
+
+[Footnote 1: Now the property of Mr. Shipley Conway, the
+great-grandson of Johnson's acquaintance, the Bishop of St. Asaph,
+and representative, through females, of Sir John Conway or Conwy, to
+whom Rhuddlan Castle, with its domain, was granted by Edward the
+First.]
+
+"Stapylton's house is pretty: there are pleasing shades about it,
+with a constant spring that supplies a cold bath. We then went out to
+see a cascade. I trudged unwillingly, and was not sorry to find it
+dry. The water was, however, turned on, and produced a very striking
+cataract."[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: Bowles, the poet, on the unexpected arrival of a party
+to see his grounds, was overheard giving a hurried order to set the
+fountain playing and carry the hermit his beard.]
+
+Mrs. Piozzi remarks on this passage: "He teased Mrs. Cotton about her
+dry cascade till she was ready to cry."
+
+Mrs. Cotton, _nee_ Stapylton, married the eldest son of Sir Lynch
+Cotton, and was the mother of Field-Marshal Viscount Combermere. She
+said that Johnson, despite of his rudeness, was at times delightful,
+having a manner peculiar to himself in relating anecdotes that could
+not fail to attract both old and young. Her impression was that Mrs.
+Thrale was very vexatious in wishing to engross all his attention,
+which annoyed him much. This, I fancy, is no uncommon impression,
+when we ourselves are anxious to attract notice.
+
+The range of hills bordering the valley or delta of the Clwyd, is
+very fine. On their being pointed out to him by his host, he
+exclaimed: "Hills, do you call them?--mere mole-hills to the Alps or
+to those in Scotland." On being told that Sir Richard Clough had
+formed a plan for making the river navigable to Rhyddlan, he broke
+out into a loud fit of laughter, and shouted--"why, Sir, I could
+clear any part of it by a leap." He probably had seen neither the
+hills nor the river, which might easily be made navigable.
+
+On two occasions, Johnson incidentally imputes a want of liberality
+to Mrs. Thrale, which the general tenor of her conduct belies:
+
+"_August 2._--We went to Dymerchion Church, where the old clerk
+acknowledged his mistress. It is the parish church of Bach y Graig; a
+mean fabric; Mr. Salusbury (Mrs. Thrale's father) was buried in
+it.... The old clerk had great appearance of joy, and foolishly said
+that he was now willing to die. He had only a crown given him by my
+mistress."
+
+"_August 4._--Mrs. Thrale lost her purse. She expressed so much
+uneasiness that I concluded the sum to be very great; but when I
+heard of only seven guineas, I was glad to find she had so much
+sensibility of money."
+
+Johnson might have remarked, that the annoyance we experience from a
+loss is seldom entirely regulated by the pecuniary value of the thing
+lost.
+
+On the way to Holywell he sets down: "Talk with mistress about
+flattery;" on which she notes: "He said I flattered the people to
+whose houses we went: I was saucy and said I was obliged to be civil
+for two, meaning himself and me.[1] He replied nobody would thank me
+for compliments they did not understand. At Gwanynog (Mr.
+Middleton's), however, _he_ was flattered, and was happy of course."
+
+[Footnote 1: Madame D'Arblay reports Mrs. Thrale saying to Johnson at
+Streatham, in September, 1778: "I remember, Sir, when we were
+travelling in Wales, how you called me to account for my civility to
+the people; 'Madam,' you said, 'let me have no more of this idle
+commendation of nothing. Why is it, that whatever you see, and
+whoever you see, you are to be so indiscriminately lavish of praise?'
+'Why I'll tell you, Sir,' said I, 'when I am with you, and Mr.
+Thrale, and Queeny, I am obliged to be civil for four!'"]
+
+The other entries referring to the Thrales are:
+
+"_August_ 22.--We went to visit Bodville, the place where Mrs. Thrale
+was born, and the churches called Tydweilliog and Llangwinodyl, which
+she holds by impropriation."
+
+"_August_ 24.--We went to see Bodville. Mrs. Thrale remembered the
+rooms, and wandered over them, with recollections of her childhood.
+This species of pleasure is always melancholy.... Mr. Thrale purposes
+to beautify the churches, and, if he prospers, will probably restore
+the tithes. Mrs. Thrale visited a house where she had been used to
+drink milk, which was left, with an estate of 200_l._ a year, by one
+Lloyd, to a married woman who lived with him."
+
+"_August_ 26.--_Note_. Queeny's goats, 149, I think."
+
+Without Mr. Duppa's aid this last entry would be a puzzle for
+commentators. His note is:
+
+"Mr. Thrale was near-sighted, and could not see the goats browsing on
+Snowdon, and he promised his daughter, who was a child of ten years
+old, a penny for every goat she would show him, and Dr. Johnson kept
+the account; so that it appears her father was in debt to her one
+hundred and forty-nine pence. _Queeny_ was an epithet, which had its
+origin in the nursery, by which (in allusion to _Queen_ Esther) Miss
+Thrale (whose name was Esther) was always distinguished by Johnson."
+She was named, after her mother, Hester, not Esther.
+
+On September 13, Johnson sets down: "We came, to Lord Sandys', at
+Ombersley, where we were treated with great civility." It was here,
+as he told Mrs. Thrale, that for the only time in his life he had as
+much wall fruit as he liked; yet she says that he was in the habit of
+eating six or seven peaches before breakfast during the fruit season
+at Streatham. Swift was also fond of fruit: "observing (says Scott)
+that a gentleman in whose garden he walked with some friends, seemed
+to have no intention to request them to eat any, the Dean remarked
+that it was a saying of his dear grandmother:
+
+ "'Always pull a peach
+ When it is within your reach;'
+
+and helping himself accordingly, his example was followed by the
+whole company." Thomson, the author of the "Castle of Indolence," was
+once seen lounging round Lord Burlington's garden, with his hands in
+his waistcoat pockets, biting off the sunny sides of the peaches.
+
+Johnson's dislike to the Lyttletons was not abated by his visit to
+Hagley, of which he says, "We made haste away from a place where all
+were offended." Mrs. Thrale's explanation is: "Mrs. Lyttelton,
+_ci-devant_ Caroline Bristow, forced me to play at whist against my
+liking, and her husband took away Johnson's candle that he wanted to
+read by at the other end of the room. Those, I trust, were the
+offences."
+
+He was not in much better humour at Combermere Abbey, the seat of her
+relative, Sir Lynch Cotton, which is beautifully situated on one of
+the finest lakes in England. He commends the place grudgingly, passes
+a harsh judgment on Lady Cotton, and is traditionally recorded to
+have made answer to the baronet who inquired what he thought of a
+neighbouring peer (Lord Kilmorey): "A dull, commonplace sort of man,
+just like you and your brother."
+
+In a letter to Levet, dated Lleweny, in Denbighshire, August 16,
+1774, printed by Boswell, is this sentence: "Wales, so far as I have
+yet seen of it, is a very beautiful and rich country, all enclosed
+and planted." Her marginal note is: "Yet to please Mr. Thrale, he
+feigned abhorrence of it."
+
+I am indebted to an intelligent and accurate in-formant for a curious
+incident of the Welsh tour:
+
+"Dr. Johnson was taken by Mr. and Mrs. Thrale to dine at Maesnynan,
+with my relation, Mr. Lloyd, who, with his pretty young daughter
+(motherless), received them at the door. All came out of the carriage
+except the great lexicographer, who was crouching in what my uncle
+jokingly called the Poets' Corner, deeply interested evidently with
+the book he was reading. A wink from Mrs. Thrale, and a touch of her
+hand, silenced the host. She bade the coachman not move, and desired
+the people in the house to let Mr. Johnson read on till dinner was on
+the table, when she would go and whistle him to it. She always had a
+whistle hung at her girdle, and this she used, when in Wales, to
+summon him and her daughters[1], when in or out of doors. Mr. Lloyd
+and all the visitors went to see the effect of the whistle, and found
+him reading intently with one foot on the step of the carriage, where
+he had been (a looker-on said) five minutes."
+
+[Footnote 1:
+
+ "He cast off his friends as a huntsman his pack,
+ For he knew when he pleas'd he could whistle them back."]
+
+"This scene is well told by Miss Burney, in her 'Camilla'[1] _ex
+relatione_ Mrs. Williams (Lady Cotton's sister, who was present) and
+Beata Lloyd, whose brother, Colonel Thomas Lloyd, of the Guards, was
+the Brummell of his day, celebrated for his manly beauty and
+accomplishments. I heard Lord Crewe say that Colonel Lloyd's horse,
+and his graceful manner of mounting him, used to attract members of
+both Houses (he among them) to _turn out_ to see him mount guard; and
+the Princesses were forbidden, when driving out, to go so often that
+way and at that time."
+
+[Footnote 1: Book viii. chap, iv., Dr. Orkborne is described standing
+on the staircase of an inn absorbed in the composition of a paragraph
+whilst the party are at dinner.]
+
+Their impressions of one another as travelling companions were
+sufficiently favourable to induce the party (with the addition of
+Baretti) to make a short tour in France in the autumn of the year
+following, 1775, during part of which Johnson kept a diary in the
+same laconic and elliptical style. The only allusion to either of his
+friends is:
+
+"We went to Sansterre, a brewer. He brews with about as much malt as
+Mr. Thrale, and sells his beer at the same price, though he pays no
+duty for malt, and little more than half as much for beer. Beer is
+sold retail at sixpence a bottle."
+
+In a letter to Levet, dated Paris, Oct. 22, 1775, he says:
+
+"We went to see the king and queen at dinner, and the queen was so
+impressed by Miss, that she sent one of the gentlemen to inquire who
+she was. I find all true that you have ever told me at Paris. Mr.
+Thrale is very liberal, and keeps us two coaches, and a very fine
+table; but I think our cookery very bad. Mrs. Thrale got into a
+convent of English nuns, and I talked with her through the grate, and
+I am very kindly used by the English Benedictine friars."
+
+A striking instance of Johnson's occasional impracticability occurred
+during this journey:
+
+"When we were at Rouen together," says Mrs. Thrale, "he took a great
+fancy to the Abbe Kofiette, with whom he conversed about the
+destruction of the order of Jesuits, and condemned it loudly, as a
+blow to the general power of the church, and likely to be followed
+with many and dangerous innovations, which might at length become
+fatal to religion itself, and shake even the foundation of
+Christianity. The gentleman seemed to wonder and delight in his
+conversation: the talk was all in Latin, which both spoke fluently,
+and Mr. Johnson pronounced a long eulogium upon Milton with so much
+ardour, eloquence, and ingenuity, that the abbe rose from his seat
+and embraced him. My husband seeing them apparently so charmed with
+the company of each other, politely invited the abbe to England,
+intending to oblige his friend; who, instead of thanking, reprimanded
+him severely before the man, for such a sudden burst of tenderness
+towards a person he could know nothing at all of; and thus put a
+sudden finish to all his own and Mr. Thrale's entertainment from the
+company of the Abbe Roffette."
+
+In a letter dated May 9, 1780, also, Mrs. Thrale alludes to more than
+one disagreement in France:
+
+"When did I ever plague you about contour, and grace, and expression?
+I have dreaded them all three since that hapless day at Compiegne,
+when you teased me so, and Mr. Thrale made what I hoped would have
+proved a lasting peace; but French ground is unfavourable to fidelity
+perhaps, and so now you begin again: after having taken five years'
+breath, you might have done more than this. Say another word, and I
+will bring up afresh the history of your exploits at St. Denys and
+how cross you were for nothing--but some how or other, our travels
+never make any part either of our conversation or correspondence."
+
+Joseph Baretti, who now formed one of the family, is so mixed up with
+their history that some account of him becomes indispensable. He was
+a Piedmontese, whose position in his native country was not of a kind
+to tempt him to remain in it, when Lord Charlemont, to whom he had
+been useful in Italy, proposed his coming to England. His own story
+was that he had lost at play the little property he had inherited
+from his father, an architect. The education given him by his parents
+was limited to Latin; he taught himself English, French, Spanish, and
+Portuguese. His talents, acquirements, and strength of mind must have
+been considerable, for they soon earned him the esteem and friendship
+of the most eminent members of the Johnsonian circle, in despite of
+his arrogance. He came to England in 1753; is kindly mentioned in one
+of Johnson's letters in 1754; and when he was in Italy in 1761, his
+illustrious friend's letters to him are marked by a tone of
+affectionate interest. Ceremony and tenderness are oddly blended in
+the conclusion of one of them:
+
+"May you, my Baretti, be very happy at Milan, or some other place
+nearer to, Sir, your most affectionate humble servant, SAMUEL
+JOHNSON."
+
+Johnson remarked of Baretti in 1768: "I know no man who carries his
+head higher in conversation than Baretti. There are strong powers in
+his mind. He has not indeed many hooks, but with what hooks he has,
+he grapples very forcibly." Cornelia Knight was "disgusted by his
+satirical madness of manner," although admitting him to be a man of
+great learning and information. Madame D'Arblay was more struck by
+his rudeness and violence than by his intellectual vigour.
+"Thraliana" confirms Johnson's estimate of Baretti's capacity:
+
+"Will. Burke was tart upon Mr. Baretti for being too dogmatical in
+his talk about politics. 'You have,' says he, 'no business to be
+investigating the characters of Lord Falkland or Mr. Hampden. You
+cannot judge of their merits, they are no countrymen of yours.'
+'True,' replied Baretti, 'and you should learn by the same rule to
+speak very cautiously about Brutus and Mark Antony; they are my
+countrymen, and I must have their characters tenderly treated by
+foreigners.'
+
+"Baretti could not endure to be called, or scarcely thought, a
+foreigner, and indeed it did not often occur to his company that he
+was one; for his accent was wonderfully proper, and his language
+always copious, always nervous, always full of various allusions,
+flowing too with a rapidity worthy of admiration, and far beyond the
+power of nineteen in twenty natives. He had also a knowledge of the
+solemn language and the gay, could be sublime with Johnson, or
+blackguard with the groom; could dispute, could rally, could quibble,
+in our language. Baretti has, besides, some skill in music, with a
+bass voice, very agreeable, besides a falsetto which he can manage so
+as to mimic any singer he hears. I would also trust his knowledge of
+painting a long way. These accomplishments, with his extensive power
+over every modern language, make him a most pleasing companion while
+he is in good humour; and his lofty consciousness of his own
+superiority, which made him tenacious of every position, and drew him
+into a thousand distresses, did not, I must own, ever disgust me,
+till he began to exercise it against myself, and resolve to reign in
+our house by fairly defying the mistress of it. Pride, however,
+though shocking enough, is never despicable, but vanity, which he
+possessed too, in an eminent degree, will sometimes make a man near
+sixty ridiculous.
+
+"France displayed all Mr. Baretti's useful powers--he bustled for us,
+he catered for us, he took care of the child, he secured an apartment
+for the maid, he provided for our safety, our amusement, our repose;
+without him the pleasure of that journey would never have balanced
+the pain. And great was his disgust, to be sure, when he caught us,
+as he often did, ridiculing French manners, French sentiments, &c. I
+think he half cryed to Mrs. Payne, the landlady at Dover, on our
+return, because we laughed at French cookery, and French
+accommodations. Oh, how he would court the maids at the inns abroad,
+abuse the men perhaps! and that with a facility not to be exceeded,
+as they all confessed, by any of the natives. But so he could in
+Spain, I find, and so 'tis plain he could here. I will give one
+instance of his skill in our low street language. Walking in a field
+near Chelsea, he met a fellow, who, suspecting him from dress and
+manner to be a foreigner, said sneeringly, 'Come, Sir, will you show
+me the way to France?' 'No, Sir,' says Baretti, instantly, 'but I
+will show you the way to Tyburn.' Such, however, was his ignorance in
+a certain line, that he once asked Johnson for information who it was
+composed the Pater Noster, and I heard him tell Evans[1] the story of
+Dives and Lazarus as the subject of a poem he once had composed in
+the Milanese dialect, expecting great credit for his powers of
+invention. Evans owned to me that he thought the man drunk, whereas
+poor Baretti was, both in eating and drinking, a model of temperance.
+Had he guessed Evans's thoughts, the parson's gown would scarcely
+have saved him a knouting from the ferocious Italian."
+
+[Footnote 1: Evans was a clergyman and rector of Southwark.]
+
+On Oct. 20, 1769, Baretti was tried at the Old Bailey on a charge of
+murder, for killing with a pocket knife one of three men who, with a
+woman of the town, hustled him in the Haymarket.[1] He was acquitted,
+and the event is principally memorable for the appearance of Johnson,
+Burke, Grarrick, and Beauclerc as witnesses to character. The
+substance of Johnson's evidence is thus given in the "Gentleman's
+Magazine":
+
+[Footnote 1: In his defence, he said:--"I hope it will be seen that
+my knife was neither a weapon of offence or defence. I wear it to
+carve fruit and sweetmeats, and not to kill my fellow creatures. It
+is a general custom in France not to put knives on the table, so that
+even ladies wear them in their pockets for general use."]
+
+"_Dr. J_.--I believe I began to be acquainted with Mr. Baretti about
+the year 1753 or 1754. I have been intimate with him. He is a man of
+literature, a very studious man, a man of great diligence. He gets
+his living by study. I have no reason to think he was ever disordered
+with liquor in his life. A man that I never knew to be otherwise than
+peaceable, and a man that I take to be rather timorous.--_Q_. Was he
+addicted to pick up women in the streets?--_Dr. J. I_ never knew that
+he was.--_Q_. How is he as to eyesight?--_Dr. J._ He does not see me
+now, nor do I see him. I do not believe he could be capable of
+assaulting any body in the street, without great provocation."
+
+It would seem that Johnson's sensibility, such as it was, was not
+very severely taxed.
+
+"_Boswell_.--But suppose now, Sir, that one of your intimate friends
+were apprehended for an offence for which he might be hanged?
+
+"_Johnson_.---I should do what I could to bail him; but if he were
+once fairly hanged, I should not suffer.
+
+"_Boswell_.--Would you eat your dinner that day, Sir?
+
+"_Johnson_.--Yes, Sir, and eat it as if he were eating it with me.
+Why, there's Baretti, who is to be tried for his life to-morrow.
+Friends have risen up for him on every side, yet if he should be
+hanged, none of them will eat a slice of plum-pudding the less. Sir,
+that sympathetic feeling goes a very little way in depressing the
+mind."
+
+Steevens relates that one evening previous to the trial a
+consultation of Baretti's friends was held at the house of Mr. Cox,
+the solicitor. Johnson and Burke were present, and differed as to
+some point of the defence. On Steevens observing to Johnson that the
+question had been agitated with rather too much warmth, "It may be
+so," replied the sage, "for Burke and I should have been of one
+opinion if we had had no audience." This is coming very near to--
+
+ "Would rather that the man should die
+ Than his prediction prove a lie."
+
+Two anecdotes of Baretti during his imprisonment are preserved in
+"Thraliana":
+
+"When Johnson and Burke went to see Baretti in Newgate, they had
+small comfort to give him, and bid him not hope too strongly. 'Why
+what can _he_ fear,' says Baretti, placing himself between 'em, 'that
+holds two such hands as I do?'
+
+"An Italian came one day to Baretti, when he was in Newgate for
+murder, to desire a letter of recommendation for the teaching of his
+scholars, when he (Baretti) should be hanged. 'You rascal,' replies
+Baretti, in a rage, 'if I were not _in my own apartment_, I would
+kick you down stairs directly,'"
+
+The year after his acquittal Baretti published "Travels through
+Spain, Portugal, and France;" thus mentioned by Johnson in a Letter
+to Mrs, Thrale, dated Lichfield, July 20, 1770:
+
+"That Baretti's book would please you all, I made no doubt. I know
+not whether the world has ever seen such travels before. Those whose
+lot it is to ramble can seldom write, and those who know how to write
+can seldom ramble." The rate of pay showed that the world was aware
+of the value of the acquisition. He gained _500l._ by this book. His
+"Frusta Letteraria," published some time before in Italy, had also
+attracted much attention, and, according to Johnson, he was the first
+who ever received money for copyright in Italy,
+
+In a biographical notice of Baretti which appeared in the
+"Gentleman's Magazine" for May, 1789, written by Dr. Vincent, Dean of
+Westminster, it is stated that it was not distress which compelled
+him to accept Mr. Thrale's hospitality, but that he was overpersuaded
+by Johnson, contrary to his own inclination, to undertake the
+instruction of the Misses Thrale in Italian. "He was either nine or
+eleven years almost entirely in that family," says the Dean, "though
+he still rented a lodging in town, during which period he expended
+his own _500l._, and received nothing in return for his instruction,
+but the participation of a good table, and _150l._ by way of
+presents. Instead of his letters to Mrs. Piozzi in the 'European
+Magazine,' had he told this plain unvarnished tale, he would have
+convicted that lady of avarice and ingratitude, without incurring the
+danger of a reply, or exposing his memory to be insulted by her
+advocates."
+
+He was less than three years in the family. As he had a pension of
+_80l._ a year, besides the interest of his _500l._, he did not want
+money. If he had been allowed to want it, the charge of avarice would
+lie at Mr., not Mrs., Thrale's door; and his memory was exposed to no
+insult beyond the stigma which (as we shall presently see) his
+conduct and language necessarily fixed upon it. All his literary
+friends did not entertain the same high opinion of him. An
+unpublished letter from Dr. Warton to his brother contains the
+following passage:
+
+"He (Huggins, the translator of Ariosto) abuses Baretti infernally,
+and says that he one day lent Baretti a gold watch, and could never
+get it afterwards; that after many excuses Baretti, skulked, and then
+got Johnson to write to Mr. Huggins a suppliant letter; that this
+letter stopped Huggins awhile, while Baretti got a protection from
+the Sardinian ambassador; and that, at last, with great difficulty,
+the watch was got from a pawnbroker to whom Baretti had sold it."
+
+This extract is copied from a valuable contribution to the literary
+annals of the eighteenth century, for which we are indebted to the
+colonial press.[1] It is the diary of an Irish clergyman, containing
+strong internal evidence of authenticity, although nothing more is
+known of it than that the manuscript was discovered behind an old
+press in one of the offices of the Supreme Court of New South Wales.
+That such a person saw a good deal of Johnson in 1775, is proved by
+Boswell, whose accuracy is frequently confirmed in return. In one
+marginal note Mrs. Thrale says: "He was a fine showy talking man.
+Johnson liked him of all things in a year or two." In another: "Dr.
+Campbell was a very tall handsome man, and, speaking of some other
+_High_-bernian, used this expression: 'Indeed now, and upon my honour,
+Sir, I am but a Twitter to him.'"[2]
+
+[Footnote 1: Diary of a Visit to England in 1775. By an Irishman (the
+Rev. Doctor Thomas Campbell, author of "A Philosophical Survey of the
+South of Ireland.") And other Papers by the same hand. With Notes by
+Samuel Raymond, M.A., Prothonotary of the Supreme Court of New South
+Wales. Sydney. Waugh and Cox. 1854.]
+
+[Footnote 2: He is similarly described in the "Letters," vol. i. p.
+329.]
+
+Several of his entries throw light on the Thrale establishment:
+
+"_14th._--This day I called at Mr. Thrale's, where I was received
+with all respect by Mr. and Mrs. Thrale. She is a very learned lady,
+and joins to the charms of her own sex, the manly understanding of
+ours. The immensity of the brewery astonished me."
+
+"_16th._--Dined with Mr. Thrale along with Dr. Johnson, and Baretti.
+Baretti is a plain sensible man, who seems to know the world well. He
+talked to me of the invitation given him by the College of Dublin,
+but said it (100_l._ a year and rooms) was not worth his acceptance;
+and if it had been, he said, in point of profit, still he would not
+have accepted it, for that now he could not live out of London. He
+had returned a few years ago to his own country, but he could not
+enjoy it; and he was obliged to return to London, to those connexions
+he had been making for near thirty years past. He told me he had
+several families with whom, both in town and country, he could go at
+any time and spend a month: he is at this time on these terms at Mr.
+Thrale's, and he knows how to keep his ground. Talking as we were at
+tea of the magnitude of the beer vessels, he said there was one thing
+in Mr. Thrale's house still more extraordinary;--meaning his wife.
+She gulped the pill very prettily,--so much for Baretti!
+
+"Johnson, you are the very man Lord Chesterfield describes: a
+Hottentot indeed, and though your abilities are respectable, you
+never can be respected yourself! He has the aspect of an idiot,
+without the faintest ray of sense gleaming from any one feature--with
+the most awkward garb, and unpowdered grey wig, on one side only of
+his head--he is for ever dancing the devil's jig, and sometimes he
+makes the most driveling effort to whistle some thought in his absent
+paroxysms."
+
+"_25th._--Dined at Mr. Thrale's where there were ten or more
+gentlemen, and but one lady besides Mrs. Thrale. The dinner was
+excellent: first course, soups at head and foot, removed by fish and
+a saddle of mutton; second course, a fowl they call galena at head,
+and a capon larger than some of our Irish turkeys, at foot; third
+course, four different sorts of ices, pine-apple, grape, raspberry,
+and a fourth; in each remove there were I think fourteen dishes. The
+two first courses were served in massy plate. I sat beside Baretti,
+which was to me the richest part of the entertainment. He and Mr. and
+Mrs. Thrale joined in expressing to me Dr. Johnson's concern that he
+could not give me the meeting that day, but desired that I should go
+and see him."
+
+"_April 1st._--Dined at Mr. Thrale's, whom in proof of the magnitude
+of London, I cannot help remarking, no coachman, and this is the
+third I have called, could find without inquiry. But of this by the
+way. There was Murphy, Boswell, and Baretti: the two last, as I
+learned just before I entered, are mortal foes, so much so that
+Murphy and Mrs. Thrale agreed that Boswell expressed a desire that
+Baretti should be hanged upon that unfortunate affair of his killing,
+&c. Upon this hint, I went, and without any sagacity, it was easily
+discernible, for upon Baretti's entering Boswell did not rise, and
+upon Baretti's descry of Boswell he grinned a perturbed glance.
+Politeness however smooths the most hostile brows, and theirs were
+smoothed. Johnson was the subject, both before and after dinner, for
+it was the boast of all but myself, that under that roof were the
+Doctor's fast friends. His _bon-mots_ were retailed in such plenty,
+that they, like a surfeit, could not lie upon my memory."
+
+"N.B. The 'Tour to the Western Isles' was written an twenty days, and
+the 'Patriot' in three; 'Taxation no Tyranny,' within a week: and not
+one of them would have yet seen the light, had it not been for Mrs.
+Thrale and Baretti, who stirred him up by laying wagers."
+
+"_April 8th._--Dined with Thrale, where Dr. Johnson was, and Boswell
+(and Baretti as usual). The Doctor was not in as good spirits as he
+was at Dilly's. He had supped the night before with Lady ----, Miss
+Jeffries, one of the maids of honour, Sir Joshua Reynolds, &c., at
+Mrs. Abington's. He said Sir C. Thompson, and some others who were
+there, spoke like people who had seen good company, and so did Mrs.
+Abington herself, who could not have seen good company."
+
+Boswell's note, alluding to the same topic, is:
+
+"On Saturday, April 8, I dined with him at Mr. Thrale's, where we met
+the Irish Dr. Campbell. Johnson had supped the night before at Mrs.
+Abington's with some fashionable people whom he named; and he seemed
+much pleased with having made one in so elegant a circle. Nor did he
+omit to pique his _mistress_ a little with jealousy of her
+housewifery; for he said, with a smile, 'Mrs. Abington's jelly, my
+dear lady, was better than yours.'"
+
+The next year is chiefly memorable for the separation from Baretti,
+thus mentioned in "Thraliana":
+
+"Baretti had a comical aversion to Mrs. Macaulay, and his aversions
+are numerous and strong. If I had not once written his character in
+verse,[1] I would now write it in prose, for few people know him
+better: he was--_Dieu me pardonne_, as the French say--my inmate for
+very near three years; and though I really liked the man once for his
+talents, and at last was weary of him for the use he made of them, I
+never altered my sentiments concerning him; for his character is
+easily seen, and his soul above disguise, haughty and insolent, and
+breathing defiance against all mankind; while his powers of mind
+exceed most people's, and his powers of purse are so slight that they
+leave him dependent on all. Baretti is for ever in the state of a
+stream dammed up: if he could once get loose, he would bear down all
+before him.
+
+"Every soul that visited at our house while he was master of it, went
+away abhorring it; and Mrs. Montagu, grieved to see my meekness so
+imposed upon, had thoughts of writing me on the subject an anonymous
+letter, advising me to break with him. Seward, who tried at last to
+reconcile us, confessed his wonder that we had lived together so
+long. Johnson used to oppose and battle him, but never with his own
+consent: the moment he was cool, he would always condemn himself for
+exerting his superiority over a man who was his friend, a foreigner,
+and poor: yet I have been told by Mrs. Montagu that he attributed his
+loss of our family to Johnson: ungrateful and ridiculous! if it had
+not been for his mediation, I would not so long have borne trampling
+on, as I did for the last two years of our acquaintance.
+
+"Not a servant, not a child, did he leave me any authority over; if I
+would attempt to correct or dismiss them, there was instant appeal to
+Mr. Baretti, who was sure always to be against me in every dispute.
+With Mr. Thrale I was ever cautious of contending, conscious that a
+misunderstanding there could never answer, as I have no friend or
+relation in the world to protect me from the rough treatment of a
+husband, should he chuse to exert his prerogatives; but when I saw
+Baretti openly urging Mr. Thrale to cut down some little fruit trees
+my mother had planted and I had begged might stand, I confess I did
+take an aversion to the creature, and secretly resolved his stay
+should not be prolonged by my intreaties whenever his greatness chose
+to take huff and be gone. As to my eldest daughter, his behaviour was
+most ungenerous; he was perpetually spurring her to independence,
+telling her she had more sense and would have a better fortune than
+her mother, whose admonitions she ought therefore to despise; that
+she ought to write and receive her own letters _now_, and not submit
+to an authority I could not keep up if she once had the spirit to
+challenge it; that, if I died in a lying-in which happened while he
+lived here, he hoped Mr. Thrale would marry Miss Whitbred, who would
+be a pretty companion for Hester, and not tyrannical and overbearing
+like me. Was I not fortunate to see myself once quit of a man like
+this? who thought his dignity was concerned to set me at defiance,
+and who was incessantly telling lies to my prejudice in the ears of
+my husband and children? When he walked out of the house on the 6th
+day of July, 1776, I wrote down what follows in my table book.
+
+"_6 July, 1776._--This day is made remarkable by the departure of Mr.
+Baretti, who has, since October, 1773, been our almost constant
+inmate, companion, and, I vainly hoped, our friend. On the 11th of
+November, 1773, Mr. Thrale let him have _50l._ and at our return from
+France _50l._ more, besides his clothes and pocket money: in return
+to all this, he instructed our eldest daughter--or thought he
+did--and puffed her about the town for a wit, a genius, a linguist,
+&c. At the beginning of the year 1776, we purposed visiting Italy
+under his conduct, but were prevented by an unforeseen and heavy
+calamity: that Baretti, however, might not be disappointed of money
+as well as of pleasure, Mr. Thrale presented him with 100 guineas,
+which at first calmed his wrath a little, but did not, perhaps, make
+amends for his vexation; this I am the more willing to believe, as
+Dr. Johnson not being angry too, seemed to grieve him no little,
+after all our preparations made.
+
+"Now Johnson's virtue was engaged; and he, I doubt not, made it a
+point of conscience not to increase the distresses of a family
+already oppressed with affliction. Baretti, however, from this time
+grew sullen and captious; he went on as usual notwithstanding, making
+Streatham his home, carrying on business there, when he thought he
+had any to do, and teaching his pupil at by-times when he chose so to
+employ himself; for he always took his choice of hours, and would
+often spitefully fix on such as were particularly disagreeable to me,
+whom he has now not liked a long while, if ever he did. He professed,
+however, a violent attachment to our eldest daughter; said if _she_
+had died instead of her poor brother, he should have destroyed
+himself, with many as wild expressions of fondness. Within these few
+days, when my back was turned, he would often be telling her that he
+would go away and stay a month, with other threats of the same
+nature; and she, not being of a caressing or obliging disposition,
+never, I suppose, soothed his anger or requested his stay.
+
+"Of all this, however, I can know nothing but from _her_, who is very
+reserved, and whose kindness I cannot so confide in as to be sure she
+would tell me all that passed between them; and her attachment is
+probably greater to him than me, whom he has always endeavoured to
+lessen as much as possible, both in her eyes and--what was worse--her
+father's, by telling him how my parts had been over-praised by
+Johnson, and over-rated by the world; that my daughter's skill in
+languages, even at the age of fourteen, would vastly exceed mine, and
+such other idle stuff; which Mr. Thrale had very little care about,
+but which Hetty doubtless thought of great importance. Be this as it
+may, no angry words ever passed between him and me, except perhaps
+now and then a little spar or so when company was by, in the way of
+raillery merely.
+
+"Yesterday, when Sir Joshua and Fitzmaurice dined here, I addressed
+myself to him with great particularity of attention, begging his
+company for Saturday, as I expected ladies, and said he must come and
+flirt with them, &c. My daughter in the meantime kept on telling me
+that Mr. Baretti was grown very old and very cross, would not look at
+her exercises, but said he would leave this house soon, for it was no
+better than Pandaemonium. Accordingly, the next day he packed up his
+cloke-bag, which he had not done for three years, and sent it to
+town; and while we were wondering what he would say about it at
+breakfast, he was walking to London himself, without taking leave of
+any one person, except it may be the girl, who owns they had much
+talk, in the course of which he expressed great aversion to me and
+even to her, who, he said, he once thought well of.
+
+"Now whether she had ever told the man things that I might have said
+of him in his absence, by way of provoking him to go, and so rid
+herself of his tuition; whether he was puffed up with the last 100
+guineas and longed to be spending it _all' Italiano;_ whether he
+thought Mr. Thrale would call him back, and he should be better
+established here than ever; or whether he really was idiot enough to
+be angry at my threatening to whip Susan and Sophy for going out of
+bounds, although _he_ had given them leave, for Hetty said that was
+the first offence he took huff at, I never now shall know, for he
+never expressed himself as an offended man to me, except one day when
+he was not shaved at the proper hour forsooth, and then I would not
+quarrel with him, because nobody was by, and I knew him be so vile a
+lyar that I durst not trust his tongue with a dispute. He is gone,
+however, loaded with little presents from me, and with a large share
+too of my good opinion, though I most sincerely rejoice in his
+departure, and hope we shall never meet more but by chance.
+
+"Since our quarrel I had occasion to talk of him with Tom Davies, who
+spoke with horror of his ferocious temper; 'and yet,' says I, 'there
+is great sensibility about Baretti: I have seen tears often stand in
+his eyes.' 'Indeed,' replies Davies, 'I should like to have seen that
+sight vastly, when--even butchers weep.'"
+
+[Footnote 1: In "The Streatham Portraits." (See Vol. II.)]
+
+His intractable character appears from his own account of the
+rupture:
+
+"When Madam took it into her head to give herself airs, and treat me
+with some coldness and superciliousness, I did not hesitate to set
+down at breakfast my dish of tea not half drank, go for my hat and
+stick that lay in the corner of the room, turn my back to the house
+_insalutato hospite_, and walk away to London without uttering a
+syllable, fully resolved never to see her again, as was the case
+during no less than four years; nor had she and I ever met again as
+friends if she and her husband had not chanced upon me after that
+lapse of time at the house of a gentleman near Beckenham, and coaxed
+me into a reconciliation, which, as almost all reconciliations prove,
+was not very sincere on her side or mine; so that there was a total
+end of it on Mr. Thrale's demise, which happened about three years
+after."[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: The European Magazine, 1788.]
+
+The monotony of a constant residence at Streatham was varied by trips
+to Bath or Brighton; and it was so much a matter of course for
+Johnson to make one of the party, that when (1776), not expecting him
+so soon back from a journey with Boswell, the Thrale family and
+Baretti started for Bath without him, Boswell is disposed to treat
+their departure without the lexicographer as a slight:
+
+"This was not showing the attention which might have been expected to
+the 'guide, philosopher, and friend;' the _Imlac_ who had hastened
+from the country to console a distressed mother, who he understood
+was very anxious for his return. They had, I found, without ceremony,
+proceeded on their journey. I was glad to understand from him that it
+was still resolved that his tour to Italy with Mr. and Mrs. Thrale
+should take place, of which he had entertained some doubt, on account
+of the loss which they had suffered; and his doubts afterwards
+appeared to be well founded. He observed, indeed, very justly, that
+'their loss was an additional reason for their going abroad; and if
+it had not been fixed that he should have been one of the party, he
+would force them out; but he would not advise them unless his advice
+was asked, lest they might suspect that he recommended what he wished
+on his own account.' I was not pleased that his intimacy with Mr.
+Thrale's family, though it no doubt contributed much to his comfort
+and enjoyment, was not without some degree of restraint[1]: not, as
+has been grossly suggested[2], that it was required of him as a task
+to talk for the entertainment of them and their company; but that he
+was not quite at his ease: which, however, might partly be owing to
+his own honest pride--that dignity of mind which is always jealous of
+appearing too compliant."
+
+[Footnote 1: (_Marginal note_). "What restraint can he mean? Johnson
+kept every one else under restraint."]
+
+[Footnote 2: (_Marginal note._) "I do not believe it ever was
+suggested."]
+
+In his first letter of condolence on Mr. Thrale's death, Johnson
+speaks of her having enjoyed happiness in marriage, "to a degree of
+which, without personal knowledge, I should have thought the
+description fabulous." The "Autobiography" and "Thraliana" tell a
+widely different tale. The mortification of not finding herself
+appreciated by her husband was poignantly increased, during the last
+years of his life, by finding another offensively preferred to her.
+He was so fascinated by one of her fair friends, as to lose sight
+altogether of what was due to appearances or to the feelings of his
+wife.
+
+A full account of the lady in question is given in the "Thraliana":
+
+"_Miss Streatfield_.--I have since heard that Dr. Collier picked up a
+more useful friend, a Mrs. Streatfield, a widow, high in fortune and
+rather eminent both for the beauties of person and mind; her
+children, I find, he has been educating; and her eldest daughter is
+just now coming out into the world with a great character for
+elegance and literature.--_20 November, 1776._"
+
+"_19 May, 1778._--The person who wrote the title of this book at the
+top of the page, on the other side--left hand--in the black letter,
+was the identical Miss Sophia Streatfield, mentioned in 'Thraliana,'
+as pupil to poor dear Doctor Collier, after he and I had parted. By
+the chance meeting of some of the currents which keep this ocean of
+human life from stagnating, this lady and myself were driven together
+nine months ago at Brighthelmstone: we soon grew intimate from having
+often heard of each other, and I have now the honour and happiness of
+calling her my friend. Her face is eminently pretty; her carriage
+elegant; her heart affectionate, and her mind cultivated. There is
+above all this an attractive sweetness in her manner, which claims
+and promises to repay one's confidence, and which drew from me the
+secret of my keeping a 'Thraliana,' &c. &c. &c."
+
+"_Jan. 1779._--Mr. Thrale is fallen in love, really and seriously,
+with Sophy Streatfield; but there is no wonder in that; she is very
+pretty, very gentle, soft, and insinuating; hangs about him, dances
+round him, cries when she parts from him, squeezes his hand slyly,
+and with her sweet eyes full of tears looks so fondly in his
+face[1]--and all for love of me as she pretends; that I can hardly,
+sometimes, help laughing in her face. A man must not be a _man_ but
+an _it_, to resist such artillery. Marriott said very well,
+
+ "'Man flatt'ring man, not always can prevail,
+ But woman flatt'ring man, can never fail.'
+
+"Murphy did not use, I think, to have a good opinion of me, but he
+seems to have changed his mind this Christmas, and to believe better
+of me. I am glad on't to be sure: the suffrage of such a man is well
+worth having: he sees Thrale's love of the fair S.S. I suppose:
+approves my silent and patient endurance of what I could not prevent
+by more rough and sincere behaviour."
+
+[Footnote 1:
+
+ "And Merlin look'd and half believed her true,
+ So tender was her voice, so fair her face,
+ So sweetly gleam'd her eyes behind her tears,
+ Like sunlight on the plain, behind a shower."
+ _Idylls of The King.--Vivien._]
+
+"20 _January_, 1780.--Sophy Streatfield is come to town: she is in
+the 'Morning Post' too, I see (to be in the 'Morning Post' is no good
+thing). She has won Wedderburne's heart from his wife, I believe, and
+few married women will bear _that_ patiently if I do; they will some
+of them wound her reputation, so that I question whether it can
+recover. Lady Erskine made many odd inquiries about her to me
+yesterday, and winked and looked wise at her sister. The dear S.S.
+must be a little on her guard; nothing is so spiteful as a woman
+robbed of a heart she thinks she has a claim upon. She will not lose
+_that_ with temper, which she has taken perhaps no pains at all to
+preserve: and I do not observe with any pleasure, I fear, that my
+husband prefers Miss Streatfield to me, though I must acknowledge her
+younger, handsomer, and a better scholar. Of her chastity, however, I
+never had a doubt: she was bred by Dr. Collier in the strictest
+principles of piety and virtue; she not only knows she will be always
+chaste, but she knows why she will be so.[1] Mr. Thrale is now by
+dint of disease quite out of the question, so I am a disinterested
+spectator; but her coquetry is very dangerous indeed, and I wish she
+were married that there might be an end on't. Mr. Thrale loves her,
+however, sick or well, better by a thousand degrees than he does me
+or any one else, and even now desires nothing on earth half so much
+as the sight of his Sophia.
+
+ "'E'en from the tomb the voice of nature cries!
+ E'en in our ashes live their wonted fires!'
+
+"The Saturday before Mr. Thrale was taken ill, Saturday, 19th
+February--he was struck Monday, 21st February--we had a large party
+to tea, cards, and supper; Miss Streatfield was one, and as Mr.
+Thrale sate by her, he pressed her hand to his heart (as she told me
+herself), and said 'Sophy, we shall not enjoy this long, and to-night
+I will not be cheated of my only comfort.' Poor soul! how shockingly
+tender! On the first Fryday that he spoke after his stupor, she came
+to see him, and as she sate by the bedside pitying him, 'Oh,' says
+he, 'who would not suffer even all that I have endured to be pitied
+by you!' This I heard myself."
+
+[Footnote 1:
+
+ "Besides, her inborn virtue fortify,
+ They are most firmly good, who best know why."]
+
+"Here is Sophy Streatfield again, handsomer than ever, and flushed
+with new conquests; the Bishop of Chester feels her power, I am sure;
+she showed me a letter from him that was as tender and had all the
+tokens upon it as strong as ever I remember to have seen 'em; I
+repeated to her out of Pope's Homer--'Very well, Sophy,' says I:
+
+ "'Range undisturb'd among the hostile crew,
+ But touch not Hinchliffe[1], Hinchliffe is my due.'
+
+Miss Streatfield (says my master) could have quoted these lines in
+the Greek; his saying so piqued me, and piqued me because it was
+true. I wish I understood Greek! Mr. Thrale's preference of her to me
+never vexed me so much as my consciousness--or fear at least--that he
+has reason for his preference. She has ten times my beauty, and five
+times my scholarship: wit and knowledge has she none."
+
+[Footnote 1: For Hector. Hinchliffe was Bishop of Peterborough.]
+
+"_May_, 1781.--Sophy Streatfield is an incomprehensible girl; here
+has she been telling me such tender passages of what passed between
+her and Mr. Thrale, that she half frights me somehow, at the same
+time declaring her attachment to Vyse yet her willingness to marry
+Lord Loughborough. Good God! what an uncommon girl! and handsome
+almost to perfection, I think: delicate in her manners, soft in her
+voice, and strict in her principles: I never saw such a character,
+she is wholly out of my reach; and I can only say that the man who
+runs mad for Sophy Streatfield has no reason to be ashamed of his
+passion; few people, however, seem disposed to take her for
+life--everybody's admiration, as Mrs. Byron says, and nobody's
+choice.
+
+"_Streatham, January 1st_, 1782.--Sophy Streatfield has begun the new
+year nicely with a new conquest. Poor dear Doctor Burney! _he_ is now
+the reigning favourite, and she spares neither pains nor caresses to
+turn that good man's head, much to the vexation of his family;
+particularly my Fanny, who is naturally provoked to see sport made of
+her father in his last stage of life by a young coquet, whose sole
+employment in this world seems to have been winning men's hearts on
+purpose to fling them away. How she contrives to keep bishops, and
+brewers, and doctors, and directors of the East India Company, all in
+chains so, and almost all at the same time, would amaze a wiser
+person than me; I can only say let us mark the end! Hester will
+perhaps see her out and pronounce, like Solon, on her wisdom and
+conduct."
+
+As this lady has excited great interest, and was much with the
+Thrales, I will add what I have been able to ascertain concerning
+her. She is frequently mentioned in Madame D'Arblay's Diary:
+
+"_Streatham, Sept_. 1778.--To be sure she (Mrs. Thrale) saw it was
+not totally disagreeable to me; though I was really astounded when
+she hinted at my becoming a rival to Miss Streatfield in the Doctor's
+good graces.
+
+"'I had a long letter,' she said, 'from Sophy Streatfield t'other
+day, and she sent Dr. Johnson her elegant edition of the 'Classics;'
+but when he had read the letter, he said 'she is a sweet creature,
+and I love her much; but my little Burney writes a better letter.'
+Now,' continued she, 'that is just what I wished him to say of you
+both.'"
+
+"_Streatham, Sept_. 1779.--Mr. Seward, you know, told me that she had
+tears at command, and I begin to think so too, for when Mrs. Thrale,
+who had previously told me I should see her cry, began coaxing her to
+stay, and saying, 'If you go, I shall know you don't love me so well
+as Lady Gresham,'--she did cry, not loud indeed, nor much, but the
+tears came into her eyes, and rolled down her fine cheeks.
+
+"'Come hither, Miss Burney,' cried Mrs. Thrale; 'come and see Miss
+Streatfield cry!'
+
+"I thought it a mere _badinage_. I went to them, but when I saw real
+tears, I was shocked, and saying, 'No, I won't look at her,' ran away
+frightened, lest she should think I laughed at her, which Mrs. Thrale
+did so openly, that, as I told her, had she served me so, I should
+have been affronted with her ever after.
+
+"Miss Streatfield, however, whether from a sweetness not to be
+ruffled, or from not perceiving there was any room for taking
+offence, gently wiped her eyes, and was perfectly composed!"
+
+"_Streatham, June_, 1779.--Seward, said Mrs. Thrale, had affronted
+Johnson, and then Johnson affronted Seward, and then the S.S. cried.
+
+"_Sir Philip_ (_Clerke_).--Well, I have heard so much of these tears,
+that I would give the universe to have a sight of them.
+
+"_Mrs. Thrale_.--Well, she shall cry again, if you like it.
+
+"_S.S._.--No, pray, Mrs. Thrale.
+
+"_Sir Philip_.--Oh, pray do! pray let me see a little of it.
+
+"_Mrs. Thrale_.--Yes, do cry a little Sophy [in a wheedling voice],
+pray do! Consider, now, you are going to-day, and it's very hard if
+you won't cry a little: indeed, S.S., you ought to cry.
+
+"Now for the wonder of wonders. When Mrs. Thrale, in a coaxing voice,
+suited to a nurse soothing a baby, had run on for some time,--while
+all the rest of us, in laughter, joined in the request,--two crystal
+tears came into the soft eyes of the S.S., and rolled gently down her
+cheeks! Such a sight I never saw before, nor could I have believed.
+She offered not to conceal or dissipate them: on the contrary, she
+really contrived to have them seen by everybody. She looked, indeed,
+uncommonly handsome; for her pretty face was not, like Chloe's,
+blubbered; it was smooth and elegant, and neither her features nor
+complexion were at all ruffled; nay, indeed, she was smiling all the
+time.
+
+"'Look, look!' cried Mrs. Thrale; 'see if the tears are not come
+already.'
+
+"Loud and rude bursts of laughter broke from us all at once. How,
+indeed, could they be restrained?"
+
+"_Streatham, Sunday, June_ 13, 1779.--After church we all strolled
+round the grounds, and the topic of our discourse was Miss
+Streatfield. Mrs. Thrale asserted that she had a power of captivation
+that was irresistible; that her beauty, joined to her softness, her
+caressing manners, her tearful eyes, and alluring looks, would
+insinuate her into the heart of any man she thought worth attacking.
+
+"Sir Philip declared himself of a totally different opinion, and
+quoted Dr. Johnson against her, who had told him that, taking away
+her Greek, she was as ignorant as a butterfly.
+
+"Mr. Seward declared her Greek was all against her with him, for
+that, instead of reading Pope, Swift, or the Spectator--books from
+which she might derive useful knowledge and improvement--it had led
+her to devote all her reading time to the first eight books of Homer.
+
+"'But,' said Mrs. Thrale, 'her Greek, you must own, has made all her
+celebrity;--you would have heard no more of her than of any other
+pretty girl, but for that.'
+
+"'What I object to,' said Sir Philip, 'is her avowed preference for
+this parson. Surely it is very indelicate in any lady to let all the
+world know with whom she is in love!"
+
+"'The parson,' said the severe Mr. Seward, 'I suppose, spoke
+first,--or she would as soon have been in love with you, or with me!'
+
+"You will easily believe I gave him no pleasant look."
+
+The parson was the Rev. Dr. Vyse, Rector of Lambeth. He had made an
+imprudent marriage early in life, and was separated from his wife, of
+whom he hoped to get rid either by divorce or by her death, as she
+was reported to be in bad health. Under these circumstances, he had
+entered into a conditional engagement with the fair S.S.; but
+eventually threw her over, either in despair at his wife's longevity
+or from caprice. On the mention of his name by Boswell, Mrs. Piozzi
+writes opposite: "whose connection with Sophia Streatfield was
+afterwards so much talked about, and I suppose never understood:
+certainly not at all by H.L.P." To return to the D'Arblay Diary:
+
+"_Streatham, June_ 14, 1781.--We had my dear father and Sophy
+Streatfield, who, as usual, was beautiful, caressing, amiable, sweet,
+and--fatiguing."
+
+"_Streatham, Aug_. 1781.--Some time after Sophy Streatfield was
+talked of,--Oh, with how much impertinence! as if she was at the
+service of any man who would make proposals to her! Yet Mr. Seward
+spoke of her with praise and tenderness all the time, as if, though
+firmly of this opinion, he was warmly her admirer. From such admirers
+and such admiration Heaven guard me! Mr. Crutchley said but little;
+but that little was bitter enough.
+
+"'However,' said Mr. Seward, 'after all that can be said, there is
+nobody whose manners are more engaging, nobody more amiable than the
+little Sophy; and she is certainly very pretty; I must own I have
+always been afraid to trust myself with her.'
+
+"Here Mr. Crutchley looked very sneeringly.
+
+"'Nay, 'squire,' cried Mr. Seward, 'she is very dangerous, I can tell
+you; and if she had you at a fair trial, she would make an impression
+that would soften-even your hard heart.'
+
+"'No need of any further trial,' said he, laughing, 'for she has done
+that already; and so soft was the impression that it absolutely all
+dissolved!--melted quite away, and not a trace of it left!'
+
+"Mr. Seward then proposed that she should marry Sir John Miller, who
+has just lost his wife; and very gravely said, he had a great mind to
+set out for Tunbridge, and carry her with him to Bath, and so make
+the match without delay!
+
+"'But surely,' said Mrs. Thrale, 'if you fail, you will think
+yourself bound in honour to marry her yourself?'
+
+"'Why, that's the thing,' said he; 'no, I can't take the little Sophy
+myself; I should have too many rivals; rivals; no, that won't do.'
+
+"How abominably conceited and _sure_ these pretty gentlemen are!
+However, Mr. Crutchley here made a speech that half won my heart.
+
+"'I wish,' said he, 'Miss Streatfield was here at this moment to cuff
+you, Seward!'
+
+"'Cuff me,' cried he. 'What, the little Sophy!--and why?'
+
+"'For disposing of her so freely. I think a man deserves to be cuffed
+for saying _any_ lady will marry him.'
+
+"I seconded this speech with much approbation."
+
+"_London, Jan._ 1783.--Before they went came Miss Streatfield,
+looking pale, but very elegant and pretty. She was in high spirits,
+and I hope has some reason. She made, at least, speeches that
+provoked such surmises. When the Jacksons went,--
+
+"'That,' said I, 'is the celebrated Jackson of Exeter; I dare say you
+would like him if you knew him.'
+
+"'I dare say I should,' cried she, simpering; 'for he has the two
+requisites for me,--he is tall and thin.'
+
+"To be sure, this did not at all call for raillery! Dr. Vyse has
+always been distinguished by these two epithets. I said, however,
+nothing, as my mother was present; but she would not let my looks
+pass unnoticed.
+
+"'Oh!' cried she, 'how wicked you look!--No need of seeing Mrs.
+Siddons for expression!--However, you know how much that is my
+taste,--tall and thin!--but you don't know how _apropos_ it is just
+now!'"
+
+Nine years after the last entry, we find:
+
+"_May_ 25, 1792.--We now met Mrs. Porteous; and who should be with
+her but the poor pretty S.S., whom so long I had not seen, and who
+has now lately been finally given up by her long-sought and very
+injurious lover, Dr. Vyse?
+
+"She is sadly faded, and looked disturbed and unhappy but still
+beautiful, though no longer blooming; and still affectionate, though
+absent and evidently absorbed. We had a little chat together about
+the Thrales. In mentioning our former intimacy with them, 'Ah,
+those,' she cried, 'were happy times!' and her eyes glistened. Poor
+thing! hers has been a lamentable story!--Imprudence and vanity have
+rarely been mixed with so much sweetness, and good-humour, and
+candour, and followed with more reproach and ill success. We agreed
+to renew acquaintance next winter; at present she will be little more
+in town."
+
+In a letter to Madame D'Arblay, Oct. 20, 1820, Mrs. Piozzi says:
+"Fell, the bookseller in Bond Street, told me a fortnight or three
+weeks ago, that Miss Streatfield lives where she did in his
+neighbourhood, Clifford Street, S.S. still." On the 18th January,
+1821: "'The once charming S.S. had inquired for me of Nornaville and
+Fell, the Old Bond Street book-sellers, so I thought she meditated
+writing, but was deceived."
+
+The story she told the author of "Piozziana," in proof of Johnson's
+want of firmness, clearly refers to this lady:
+
+"I had remarked to her that Johnson's readiness to condemn any moral
+deviation in others was, in a man so entirely before the public as he
+was, nearly a proof of his own spotless purity of conduct. She said,
+'Yes, Johnson was, on the whole, a rigid moralist; but he could be
+ductile, I may say, servile; and I will give you an instance. We had
+a large dinner-party at our house; Johnson sat on one side of me, and
+Burke on the other; and in the company there was a young female (Mrs.
+Piozzi named her), to whom I, in my peevishness, thought Mr. Thrale
+superfluously attentive, to the neglect of me and others; especially
+of myself, then near my confinement, and dismally low-spirited;
+notwithstanding which, Mr. T. very unceremoniously begged of me to
+change place with Sophy ----, who was threatened with a sore throat,
+and might be injured by sitting near the door. I had scarcely
+swallowed a spoonful of soup when this occurred, and was so overset
+by the coarseness of the proposal, that I burst into tears, said
+something petulant--that perhaps ere long, the lady might be at the
+head of Mr. T.'s table, without displacing the mistress of the house,
+&c., and so left the apartment. I retired to the drawing-room, and
+for an hour or two contended with my vexation, as I best could, when
+Johnson and Burke came up. On seeing them, I resolved to give a
+_jobation_ to both, but fixed on Johnson for my charge, and asked him
+if he had noticed what passed, what I had suffered, and whether
+allowing for the state of my nerves, I was much to blame? He
+answered, "Why, possibly not; your feelings were outraged." I said,
+"Yes, greatly so; and I cannot help remarking with what blandness and
+composure you _witnessed_ the outrage. Had this transaction been told
+of others, your anger would have known no bounds; but, towards a man
+who gives good dinners &c., you were meekness itself!" Johnson
+coloured, and Burke, I thought, looked foolish; but I had not a word
+of answer from either.'"
+
+The only excuse for Mr. Thrale is to be found in his mental and
+bodily condition at the time, which made it impossible for Johnson or
+Burke to interfere without a downright quarrel with him, nor without
+making matters worse. This, however, is not the only instance in
+which Johnson witnessed Thrale's laxity of morals without reproving
+it. Opposite the passage in which Boswell reports Johnson as
+palliating infidelity in a husband by the remark, that the man
+imposes no bastards on his wife, she writes: "Sometimes he does.
+Johnson knew a man who did, and the lady took very tender care of
+them."
+
+Madame D'Arblay was not uniformly such a source of comfort to her as
+that lady supposed. The entries in "Thraliana" relating to her show
+this:
+
+"_August,_ 1779.--Fanny Burney has been a long time from me; I was
+glad to see her again; yet she makes me miserable too in many
+respects, so restlessly and apparently anxious, lest I should give
+myself airs of patronage or load her with the shackles of dependance.
+I live with her always in a degree of pain that precludes
+friendship--dare not ask her to buy me a ribbon--dare not desire her
+to touch the bell, lest she should think herself injured--lest she
+should forsooth appear in the character of Miss Neville, and I in
+that of the widow Bromley. See Murphy's 'Know Your Own Mind.'"
+
+"Fanny Burney has kept her room here in my house seven days, with a
+fever or something that she called a fever; I gave her every medicine
+and every slop with my own hand; took away her dirty cups, spoons,
+&c.; moved her tables: in short, was doctor, and nurse and maid--for
+I did not like the servants should have additional trouble lest they
+should hate her for it. And now,--with the true gratitude of a wit,
+she tells me that the world thinks the better of me for my civilities
+to her. It does? does it?"
+
+"Miss Burney was much admired at Bath (1780); the puppy-men said,
+'She had such a drooping air and such a timid intelligence;' or, 'a
+timid air,' I think it was,' and a drooping intelligence;' never sure
+was such a collection of pedantry and affectation as rilled Bath when
+we were on that spot. How everything else and everybody set off my
+gallant bishop. 'Quantum lenta solent inter viburna Cupressi.' Of all
+the people I ever heard read verse in my whole life, the best, the
+most perfect reader, is the Bishop of Peterboro' (Hinchcliffe.)"[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: In a marginal note on Boswell, she says: "The people (in
+1783) did read shamefully. Yet Mr. Lee, the poet, many years before
+Johnson was born, read so gracefully, the players would not accept
+his tragedies till they had heard them from other lips: his own (they
+said) sweetened all which proceeded from them." Speaker Onslow
+equally was celebrated for his manner of reading.]
+
+"_July 1st_, 1780.--Mrs. Byron, who really loves me, was disgusted at
+Miss Burney's carriage to me, who have been such a friend and
+benefactress to her: not an article of dress, not a ticket for public
+places, not a thing in the world that she could not command from me:
+yet always insolent, always pining for home, always preferring the
+mode of life in St. Martin's Street to all I could do for her. She is
+a saucy-spirited little puss to be sure, but I love her dearly for
+all that; and I fancy she has a real regard for me, if she did not
+think it beneath the dignity of a wit, or of what she values
+more--the dignity of Dr. Burnett's daughter--to indulge it. Such
+dignity! the Lady Louisa of Leicester Square![1] In good time!"
+
+[Footnote 1: Alluding to a character in "Evelina."]
+
+"1781.--What a blockhead Dr. Burney is to be always sending for his
+daughter home so! what a monkey! is she not better and happier with
+me than she can be anywhere else? Johnson is enraged at the silliness
+of their family conduct, and Mrs. Byron disgusted; I confess myself
+provoked excessively, but I love the girl so dearly--and the Doctor,
+too, for that matter, only that he has such odd notions of
+superiority in his own house, and will have his children under his
+feet forsooth, rather than let 'em live in peace, plenty, and comfort
+anywhere from home. If I did not provide Fanny with every
+wearable--every wishable, indeed,--it would not vex me to be served
+so; but to see the impossibility of compensating for the pleasures of
+St. Martin's Street, makes one at once merry and mortified.
+
+"Dr. Burney did not like his daughter should learn Latin even of
+Johnson, who offered to teach her for friendship, because then she
+would have been as wise as himself forsooth, and Latin was too
+masculine for Misses. A narrow-souled goose-cap the man must be at
+last, agreeable and amiable all the while too, beyond almost any
+other human creature. Well, mortal man is but a paltry animal! the
+best of us have such drawbacks both upon virtue, wisdom, and
+knowledge."
+
+In what his daughter calls a doggrel list of his friends and his
+feats, Dr. Burney has thus mentioned the Thrales:
+
+ "1776.--This year's acquaintance began with the Thrales,
+ Where I met with great talents 'mongst females and males,
+ But the best thing it gave me from that time to this,
+ Was the freedom it gave me to sound the abyss,
+ At my ease and my leisure, of Johnson's great mind,
+ Where new treasures unnumber'd I constantly find."
+
+Highly to her credit, Mrs. Thrale did not omit any part of her own
+duties to her husband because he forgot his. In March, 1780, she
+writes to Johnson:
+
+"I am willing to show myself in Southwark, or in any place, for my
+master's pleasure or advantage; but have no present conviction that
+to be re-elected would be advantageous, so shattered a state as his
+nerves are in just now.--Do not you, however, fancy for a moment,
+that I shrink from fatigue--or desire to escape from doing my
+duty;--spiting one's antagonist is a reason that never ought to
+operate, and never does operate with me: I care nothing about a rival
+candidate's innuendos, I care only about my husband's health and
+fame; and if we find that he earnestly wishes to be once more member
+for the Borough--he _shall_ be member, if anything done or suffered
+by me will help make him so."
+
+In the May following she writes: "Meanwhile, Heaven send this
+Southwark election safe, for a disappointment would half kill my
+husband, and there is no comfort in tiring every friend to death in
+such a manner and losing the town at last."
+
+This was an agitating month. In "Thraliana ":
+
+"_20th May_, 1780.--I got back to Bath again and staid there till the
+riots[1] drove us all away the first week in June: we made a dawdling
+journey, cross country, to Brighthelmstone, where all was likely to
+be at peace: the letters we found there, however, shewed us how near
+we were to ruin here in the Borough: where nothing but the
+astonishing presence of mind shewed by Perkins in amusing the mob
+with meat and drink and huzzas, till Sir Philip Jennings Clerke could
+get the troops and pack up the counting-house bills, bonds, &c. and
+carry them, which he did, to Chelsea College for safety,--could have
+saved us from actual undoing. The villains _had_ broke in, and our
+brewhouse would have blazed in ten minutes, when a property of
+L150,000 would have been utterly lost, and its once flourishing
+possessors quite undone.
+
+"Let me stop here to give God thanks for so very undeserved, so
+apparent, an interposition of Providence in our favour.
+
+"I left Mr. Thrale at Brighthelmstone and came to town again to see
+what was left to be done: we have now got arms and mean to defend
+ourselves by force if further violence is intended. Sir Philip comes
+every day at some hour or another--good creature, how kind he is! and
+how much I ought to love him! God knows I am not in this case wanting
+to my duty. I have presented Perkins, with my Master's permission,
+with two hundred guineas, and a silver urn for his lady, with his own
+cypher on it and this motto--Mollis responsio, Iram avertit."
+
+[Footnote 1: The Lord George Gordon Riots.]
+
+In the spring of 1781, "I found," says Boswell, "on visiting 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." She has
+written opposite: "Spiteful again! He went by direction of his
+physicians where they could easiest attend to him."
+
+The removal to Grosvenor Square is thus mentioned in "Thraliana":
+
+"_Monday, January 29th_, 1781.--So now we are to spend this winter in
+Grosvenor Square; my master has taken a ready-furnished lodging-house
+there, and we go in to-morrow. He frighted me cruelly a while ago; he
+would have Lady Shelburne's house, one of the finest in London; he
+would buy, he would build, he would give twenty to thirty guineas a
+week for a house. Oh Lord, thought I, the people will sure enough
+throw stones at me now when they see a dying man go to such mad
+expenses, and all, as they will naturally think, to please a wife
+wild with the love of expense. This was the very thing I endeavoured
+to avoid by canvassing the borough for him, in hopes of being through
+that means tyed to the brewhouse where I always hated to live till
+now, that I conclude his constitution lost, and that the world will
+say _I_ tempt him in his weak state of body and mind to take a fine
+house for me at the flashy end of the town." "He however, dear
+creature, is as absolute, ay, and ten times more so, than ever, since
+he suspects his head to be suspected, and to Grosvenor Square we are
+going, and I cannot be sorry, for it will doubtless be comfortable
+enough to see one's friends commodiously, and I have long wished to
+quit _Harrow Corner_, to be sure; how could one help it? though I did
+
+ "'Call round my casks each object of desire'
+
+all last winter: but it was a heavy drag too, and what signifies
+resolving _never_ to be pleased? I will make myself comfortable in my
+new habitation, and be thankful to God and my husband."
+
+On February 7, 1781, she writes to Madame D'Arblay:
+
+"Yesterday I had a conversazione. Mrs. Montagu was brilliant in
+diamonds, solid in judgment, critical in talk. Sophy smiled, Piozzi
+sung, Pepys panted with admiration, Johnson was good humoured, Lord
+John Clinton attentive, Dr. Bowdler lame, and my master not asleep.
+Mrs. Ord looked elegant, Lady Rothes dainty, Mrs. Davenant dapper,
+and Sir Philip's curls were all blown about by the wind. Mrs. Byron
+rejoices that her Admiral and I agree so well; the way to his heart
+is connoisseurship it seems, and for a background and contorno, who
+comes up to Mrs. Thrale, you know."
+
+In "Thraliana":
+
+"_Sunday, March 18th_, 1781.--Well! Now I have experienced the
+delights of a London winter, spent in the bosom of flattery, gayety,
+and Grosvenor Square; 'tis a poor thing, however, and leaves a void
+in the mind, but I have had my compting-house duties to attend, my
+sick master to watch, my little children to look after, and how much
+good have I done in any way? Not a scrap as I can see; the pecuniary
+affairs have gone on perversely: how should they chuse [an omission
+here] when the sole proprietor is incapable of giving orders, yet not
+so far incapable as to be set aside! Distress, fraud, folly, meet me
+at every turn, and I am not able to fight against them all, though
+endued with an iron constitution, which shakes not by sleepless
+nights or days severely fretted.
+
+"Mr. Thrale talks now of going to Spa and Italy again; how shall we
+drag him thither? A man who cannot keep awake four hours at a stroke
+&c. Well! this will indeed be a tryal of one's patience; and who must
+go with us on this expedition? Mr. Johnson!--he will indeed be the
+only happy person of the party; he values nothing _under_ heaven but
+his own mind, which is a spark _from_ heaven, and that will be
+invigorated by the addition of new ideas. If Mr. Thrale dies on the
+road, Johnson will console himself by learning how it is to travel
+with a corpse: and, after all, such reasoning is the true
+philosophy--one's heart is a mere incumbrance--would I could leave
+mine behind. The children shall go to their sisters at Kensington,
+Mrs. Cumyns may take care of them all. God grant us a happy meeting
+some _where_ and some _time_!
+
+"Baretti should attend, I think; there is no man who has so much of
+every language, and can manage so well with Johnson, is so tidy on
+the road, so active top to obtain good accommodations. He is the man
+in the world, I think, whom I most abhor, and who _hates_ and
+_professes_ to _hate me_ the most; but what does that signifie? He
+will be careful of Mr. Thrale and Hester whom he _does_ love--and he
+won't strangle _me_, I suppose. Somebody we _must_ have. Croza would
+court our daughter, and Piozzi could not talk to Johnson, nor, I
+suppose, do one any good but sing to one,--and how should we _sing
+songs in a strange land_? Baretti must be the man, and I will beg it
+of him as a favour. Oh, the triumph he will have! and the lyes he
+will tell!" Thrale's death is thus described in "Thraliana":
+
+"On the Sunday, the 1st of April, I went to hear the Bishop of
+Peterborough preach at May Fair Chapel, and though the sermon had
+nothing in it particularly pathetic, I could not keep my tears within
+my eyes. I spent the evening, however, at Lady Rothes', and was
+cheerful. Found Sir John Lade, Johnson, and Boswell, with Mr. Thrale,
+at my return to the Square. On Monday morning Mr. Evans came to
+breakfast; Sir Philip and Dr. Johnson to dinner--so did Baretti. Mr.
+Thrale eat voraciously--so voraciously that, encouraged by Jebb and
+Pepys, who had charged me to do so, I checked him rather severely,
+and Mr. Johnson added these remarkable words: "Sir, after the
+denunciation of your physicians this morning, such eating is little
+better than suicide." He did not, however, desist, and Sir Philip
+said, he eat apparently in defiance of control, and that it was
+better for us to say nothing to him. Johnson observed that he thought
+so too; and that he spoke more from a sense of duty than a hope of
+success. Baretti and these two spent the evening with me, and I was
+enumerating the people who were to meet the Indian ambassadors on the
+Wednesday. I had been to Negri's and bespoke an elegant
+entertainment.
+
+"On the next day, Tuesday the 3rd, Mrs. Hinchliffe called on me in
+the morning to go see Webber's drawings of the South Sea rareties. We
+met the Smelts, the Ords, and numberless _blues_ there, and displayed
+our pedantry at our pleasure. Going and coming, however, I quite
+teazed Mrs. Hinchliffe with my low-spirited terrors about Mr. Thrale,
+who had not all this while one symptom worse than he had had for
+months; though the physicians this Tuesday morning agreed that a
+continuation of such dinners as he had lately made would soon
+dispatch a life so precarious and uncertain. When I came home to
+dress, Piozzi, who was in the next room teaching Hester to sing,
+began lamenting that he was engaged to Mrs. Locke on the following
+evening, when I had such a world of company to meet these fine
+Orientals; he had, however, engaged Roncaglia and Sacchini to begin
+with, and would make a point of coming himself at nine o'clock if
+possible. I gave him the money I had collected for his
+benefit--35_l_. I remember it was--a banker's note--and burst out o'
+crying, and said, I was sure I should not go to it. The man was
+shocked, and wondered what I meant. Nay, says I, 'tis mere lowness of
+spirits, for Mr. Thrale is very well now, and is gone out in his
+carriage to spit cards, as I call'd it--sputar le carte. Just then
+came a letter from Dr. Pepys, insisting to speak with me in the
+afternoon, and though there was nothing very particular in the letter
+considering our intimacy, I burst out o' crying again, and threw
+myself into an agony, saying, I was sure Mr. Thrale would dye.
+
+"Miss Owen came to dinner, and Mr. Thrale came home so well! and in
+such spirits! he had invited more people to my concert, or
+conversazione, or musical party, of the next day, and was delighted
+to think what a show we should make. He eat, however, more than
+enormously. Six things the day before, and eight on this day, with
+strong beer in such quantities! the very servants were frighted, and
+when Pepys came in the evening he said this could not last--either
+there must be _legal_[1] restraint or certain death. Dear Mrs. Byron
+spent the evening with me, and Mr. Crutchley came from Sunning-hill
+to be ready for the morrow's flash. Johnson was at the Bishop of
+Chester's. I went down in the course of the afternoon to see after my
+master as usual, and found him not asleep, but sitting with his legs
+up--_because_, as he express'd it. I kissed him, and said how good he
+was to be so careful of himself. He enquired who was above, but had
+no disposition to come up stairs. Miss Owen and Mrs. Byron now took
+their leave. The Dr. had been gone about twenty minutes when Hester
+went down to see her papa, and found him on the floor. What's the
+meaning of this? says she, in an agony. I chuse it, replies Mr.
+Thrale firmly; I lie so o' purpose. She ran, however, to call his
+valet, who was gone out--happy to leave him so particularly _well_,
+as he thought. When my servant went instead, Mr. Thrale bid him
+begone, in a firm tone, and added that he was very well and chose to
+lie so. By this time, however, Mr. Crutchley was run down at Hetty's
+intreaty, and had sent to fetch Pepys back. He was got but into Upper
+Brook Street, and found his friend in a most violent fit of the
+apoplexy, from which he only recovered to relapse into another, every
+one growing weaker as his strength grew less, till six o'clock on
+Wednesday morning, 4th April, 1781, when he died. Sir Richard Jebb,
+who was fetched at the beginning of the distress, seeing death
+certain, quitted the house without even prescribing. Pepys did all
+that could be done, and Johnson, who was sent for at eleven o'clock,
+never left him, for while breath remained he still hoped. I ventured
+in once, and saw them cutting his clothes off to bleed him, but I saw
+no more."
+
+[Footnote 1: (_Note_ by Mrs. T.). "I rejected all propositions of the
+sort, and said, as he had got the money, he had the best right to
+throw it away.... I should always prefer my husband, to my children:
+let him do his _own_ way."]
+
+We learn from Madame D'Arblay's Journal, that, towards the end of
+March, 1781, Mr. Thrale had resolved on going abroad with his wife,
+and that Johnson was to accompany them, but a subsequent entry states
+that the doctors condemned the plan; and "therefore," she adds, "it
+is settled that a great meeting of his friends is to take place
+before he actually prepares for the journey, and they are to encircle
+him in a body, and endeavour, by representations and entreaties, 'to
+prevail with him to give it up; and I have little doubt myself but,
+amongst us, we shall be able to succeed." This is one of the oddest
+schemes ever projected by a set of learned and accomplished gentlemen
+and ladies for the benefit of a hypochondriac patient. Its execution
+was prevented by his death. A hurried note from Mrs. Thrale
+announcing the event, beginning, "Write to me, pray for me," is
+endorsed by Madame D'Arblay: "Written a few hours after the death of
+Mr. Thrale, which happened by a sudden stroke of apoplexy, on the
+morning of a day on which half the fashion of London had been invited
+to an intended assembly at his house in Grosvenor Square." These
+invitations had been sent out by his own express desire: so little
+was he aware of his danger.
+
+Letters and messages of condolence poured in from all sides. Johnson
+(in a letter dated April 5th) said all that could be said in the way
+of counsel or consolation:
+
+"I do not exhort you to reason yourself into tranquillity. We must
+first pray, and then labour; first implore the blessing of God, and
+those means which He puts into our hands. Cultivated ground, has few
+weeds; a mind occupied by lawful business, has little room for
+useless regret.
+
+"We read the will to-day; but I will not fill my first letter with
+any other account than that, with all my zeal for your advantage, I
+am satisfied; and that the other executors, more used to consider
+property than I, commended it for wisdom and equity. Yet, why should
+I not tell you that you have five hundred pounds for your immediate
+expenses, and two thousand pounds a-year, with both the houses and
+all the goods?
+
+"Let us pray for one another, that the time, whether long or short,
+that shall yet be granted us, may be well spent; and that when this
+life, which at the longest is very short, shall come to an end, a
+better may begin which shall never end."
+
+On April 9th he writes:
+
+"DEAREST MADAM,--That you are gradually recovering your tranquillity,
+is the effect to be humbly expected from trust in God. Do not
+represent life as darker than it is. Your loss has been very great,
+but you retain more than almost any other can hope to possess. You
+are high in the opinion of mankind; you have children from whom much
+pleasure may be expected; and that you will find many friends, you
+have no reason to doubt. Of my friendship, be it worth more or less,
+I hope you think yourself certain, without much art or care. It will
+not be easy for me to repay the benefits that I have received; but I
+hope to be always ready at your call. 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. Let me have your prayers and those of my dear
+Queeny.
+
+"The prudence and resolution of your design to return so soon to your
+business and your duty deserves great praise; I shall communicate it
+on Wednesday to the other executors. Be pleased to let me know
+whether you would have me come to Streatham to receive you, or stay
+here till the next day."
+
+Johnson was one of the executors and took pride in discharging his
+share of the trust. Mrs. Thrale's account of the pleasure he took in
+signing the documents and cheques, is incidentally confirmed by
+Boswell:
+
+"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. Lord Lucan
+tells a very good story, which, if not precisely exact, is certainly
+characteristical; 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.'"
+
+The executors had legacies of 200_l._ each; Johnson, to the surprise
+of his friends, being placed on no better footing than the rest. He
+himself was certainly disappointed. Mrs. Thrale says that his
+complacency towards Thrale was not wholly devoid of interested
+motives; and she adds that his manner towards Reynolds and Dr. Taylor
+was also softened by the vague expectation of being named in their
+wills. One of her marginal notes is: "Johnson mentioned to Reynolds
+that he had been told by Taylor he was to be his heir. His fondness
+for Reynolds, ay, and for Thrale, had a dash of interest to keep it
+warm." Again, on his saying to Reynolds, "I did not mean to offend
+you,"--"He never would offend Reynolds: he had his reason."
+
+Many and heavy as were the reproaches subsequently heaped upon the
+widow, no one has accused her of having been found wanting in energy,
+propriety, or self-respect at this period. She took the necessary
+steps for promoting her own interests and those of her children with
+prudence and promptitude. Madame D'Arblay, who was carrying on a
+flirtation with one of the executors (Mr. Crutchley), and had
+personal motives for watching their proceedings, writes, April
+29th:--
+
+"Miss Thrale is steady and constant, and very sincerely grieved for
+her father.
+
+"The four executors, Mr. Cator, Mr. Crutchley, Mr. Henry Smith, and
+Dr. Johnson, have all behaved generously and honourably, and seem
+determined to give Mrs. Thrale all the comfort and assistance in
+their power. She is to carry on the business jointly with them. Poor
+soul! it is a dreadful toil and worry to her."
+
+In "Thraliana":
+
+"_Streatham, 1st May_, 1781.--I have now appointed three days a week
+to attend at the counting-house. If an angel from heaven had told me
+twenty years ago that the man I knew by the name of _Dictionary
+Johnson_ should one day become partner with me in a great trade, and
+that we should jointly or separately sign notes, drafts, &c., for
+three or four thousand pounds of a morning, how unlikely it would
+have seemed ever to happen! Unlikely is no word tho',--it would have
+seemed _incredible_, neither of us then being worth a groat, God
+knows, and both as immeasurably removed from commerce as birth,
+literature, and inclination could get us. Johnson, however, who
+desires above all other good the accumulation of new ideas, is but
+too happy with his present employment; and the influence I have over
+him, added to his own solid judgment and a regard for truth, will at
+last find it in a small degree difficult to win him from the dirty
+delight of seeing his name in a new character flaming away at the
+bottom of bonds and leases."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"Apropos to writing verses in a language one don't understand, there
+is always the allowance given, and that allowance (like our excise
+drawbacks) commonly larger than it ought to be. The following
+translation of the verses written with a knife, has been for this
+reason uncommonly commended, though they have no merit except being
+done quick. Piozzi asked me on Sunday morning if ever I had seen
+them, and could explain them to _him_, for that he heard they were
+written by his friend Mr. Locke. The book in which they were
+reposited was not ferreted out, however, till Monday night, and on
+Tuesday morning I sent him verses and translation: we used to think
+the original was Garrick's, I remember."
+
+Translation of the verses written with a knife.
+
+ "Taglia Amore un coltello,
+ Cara, l'hai sentita dire;
+ Per l'Amore alla Moda,
+ Esso poco puo soffrire.
+ Cuori che non mai fur giunti
+ Pronti stanno a separar,
+ Cari nodi come i nostri
+ Non son facili tagliar.
+ Questo dico, che se spezza
+ Tua tenera bellezza,
+ Molto ancor ci restera;
+ Della mia buona fede
+ Il Coltello non s'avvede,
+ Ne di tua gran bonta.
+ Che tagliare speranze
+ Ben tutto si puo,
+ Per piaceri goduti
+ Oh, questo poi no?
+ Dolci segni!
+ Cari pegni!
+ Di felecita passata,
+ Non temer la coltellata,
+ Resterete--Io loro:
+ Se del caro ben gradita,
+ Trovo questa donatura,
+ Via pur la tagliatura
+ Sol d'Amore sta ferita."
+
+"The power of emptying one's head of a great thing and filling it
+with little ones to amuse care, is no small power, and I am proud of
+being able to write Italian verses while I am bargaining 150,000_l_.,
+and settling an event of the highest consequence to my own and my
+children's welfare. David Barclay, the rich Quaker, will treat for
+our brewhouse, and the negotiation is already begun. My heart
+palpitates with hope and fear--my head is bursting with anxiety and
+calculation; yet I can listen to a singer and translate verses about
+a knife."
+
+"Mrs. Montagu has been here; she says I ought to have a statue
+erected to me for my diligent attendance on my compting-house duties.
+The _wits_ and the _blues_ (as it is the fashion to call them) will
+be happy enough, no doubt, to have me safe at the brewery--_out of
+their way_."
+
+"A very strange thing happened in the year 1776, and I never wrote it
+down,--I must write it down now. A woman came to London from a
+distant county to prosecute some business, and fell into distress;
+she was sullen and silent, and the people with whom her affairs
+connected her advised her to apply for assistance to some friend.
+What friends can I have in London? says the woman, nobody here knows
+anything of me. One can't tell _that_, was the reply. Where have you
+lived? I have wandered much, says she, but I am originally from
+Litchfield. Who did you know in Litchfield in your youth? Oh, nobody
+of any note, I'll warrant: I knew one _David Garrick_, indeed, but I
+once heard that he turned strolling player, and is probably dead long
+ago; I also knew an obscure man, _Samuel Johnson_, very good he was
+too; but who can know anything of poor Johnson? I was likewise
+acquainted with _Robert James_, a quack doctor. _He_ is, I suppose,
+no very reputable connection if I could find him. Thus did this woman
+name and discriminate the three best known characters in
+London--perhaps in Europe."
+
+"'Such,' says Mrs. Montagu, 'is the dignity of Mrs. Thrale's virtue,
+and such her superiority in all situations of life, that nothing now
+is wanting but an earthquake to show how she will behave on _that_
+occasion.' Oh, brave Mrs. Montagu! She is a monkey, though, to
+quarrel with Johnson so about Lyttleton's life: if he was a great
+character, nothing said of him in that book can hurt him; if he was
+not a great character, they are bustling about nothing."
+
+"Mr. Crutchley lives now a great deal with me; the business of
+executor to Mr. Thrale's will makes much of his attendance necessary,
+and it begins to have its full effect in seducing and attaching him
+to the house,--Miss Burney's being always about me is probably
+another reason for his close attendance, and I believe it is so. What
+better could befall Miss Burney, or indeed what better could befall
+_him_, than to obtain a woman of honour, and character, and
+reputation for superior understanding? I would be glad, however, that
+he fell honestly in love with her, and was not trick'd or trapp'd
+into marriage, poor fellow; he is no match for the arts of a
+novel-writer. A mighty particular character Mr. Crutchley is:
+strangely mixed up of meanness and magnificence; liberal and splendid
+in large sums and on serious occasions, narrow and confined in the
+common occurrences of life; warm and generous in some of his motives,
+frigid and suspicious, however, for eighteen hours at least out of
+the twenty-four; likely to be duped, though always expecting fraud,
+and easily disappointed in realities, though seldom flattered by
+fancy. He is supposed by those that knew his mother and her
+connections to be Mr. Thrale's natural son, and in many things he
+resembles him, but not in person: as he is both ugly and awkward. Mr.
+Thrale certainly believed he was his son, and once told me as much
+when Sophy Streatfield's affair was in question but nobody could
+persuade him to court the S.S. Oh! well does the Custom-house officer
+Green say,--
+
+ "'Coquets! leave off affected arts,
+ Gay fowlers at a flock of hearts;
+ Woodcocks, to shun your snares have skill,
+ You show so plain you strive to kill.'"
+
+"_3rd June_, 1781.--Well! here have I, with the grace of God and the
+assistance of good friends, completed--I really think very
+happily--the greatest event of my life. I have sold my brewhouse to
+Barclay, the rich Quaker, for 135,000_l_., to be in four years' time
+paid. I have by this bargain purchased peace and a stable fortune,
+restoration to my original rank in life, and a situation undisturbed
+by commercial jargon, unpolluted by commercial frauds, undisgraced by
+commercial connections. They who succeed me in the house have
+purchased the power of being rich beyond the wish of rapacity[1], and
+I have procured the improbability of being made poor by flights of
+the fairy, speculation. 'Tis thus that a woman and men of feminine
+minds always--I speak popularly--decide upon life, and chuse certain
+mediocrity before probable superiority; while, as Eton Graham says
+sublimely,--
+
+ "'Nobler souls,
+ Fir'd with the tedious and disrelish'd good,
+ Seek their employment in acknowledg'd ill,
+ Danger, and toil, and pain.'
+
+"On this principle partly, and partly on worse, was dear Mr. Johnson
+something unwilling--but not much at last--to give up a trade by
+which in some years 15,000_l._ or 16,000_l._ had undoubtedly been
+got, but by which, in some years, its possessor had suffered agonies
+of terror and tottered twice upon the verge of bankruptcy. Well! if
+thy own conscience acquit, who shall condemn thee? Not, I hope, the
+future husbands of our daughters, though I should think it likely
+enough; however, as Johnson says very judiciously, they must either
+think right or wrong: if they think right, let us now think with
+them; if wrong, let us never care what they think. So adieu to
+brewhouse, and borough wintering; adieu to trade, and tradesmen's
+frigid approbation; may virtue and wisdom sanctify our contract, and
+make buyer and seller happy in the bargain!"
+
+[Footnote 1: There is a curious similarity here to Johnson's phrase,
+"the potentiality of becoming rich beyond the dreams of avarice."]
+
+After mentioning some friends who disapproved of the sale, she adds:
+"Mrs. Montagu has sent me her approbation in a letter exceedingly
+affectionate and polite. 'Tis over now, tho', and I'll clear my head
+of it and all that belongs to it; I will go to church, give God
+thanks, receive the sacrament and forget the frauds, follies, and
+inconveniences of a commercial life this day."
+
+Madame D'Arblay was at Streatham on the day of the sale, and gives a
+dramatic colour to the ensuing scene:
+
+"_Streatham, Thursday_.--This was the great and most important day to
+all this house, upon which the sale of the brewery was to be decided.
+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
+pocket-handkerchief out of the coach window.
+
+"Four o'clock came and dinner was ready, and no Mrs. Thrale. Five
+o'clock followed, 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 pocket-handkerchief was
+waved from it. I ran to the door of it to meet her, and she jumped
+out of it, and gave me a thousand embraces while I gave my
+congratulations. We went instantly to her dressing-room, where she
+told me, in brief, how the matter had been transacted, and then we
+went down to dinner. Dr. Johnson and Mr. Crutchley had accompanied
+her home."
+
+The event is thus announced to Langton by Johnson, in a letter
+printed by Boswell, dated June 16, 1781: "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 135,000_l_. Is the nation ruined." _Marginal note_: "I
+suppose he was neither glad nor sorry."
+
+Thrale died on the 4th April, 1781, and Mrs. Thrale left Streatham on
+the 7th October, 1782. The intervening eighteen months have been made
+the subject of an almost unprecedented amount of misrepresentation.
+Hawkins, Boswell, Madame D'Arblay, and Lord Macaulay have vied with
+each other in founding uncharitable imputations on her conduct at
+this period of her widowhood; and it has consequently become
+necessary to recapitulate the authentic evidence relating to it. As
+Piozzi's name will occur occasionally, he must now be brought upon
+the scene.
+
+He is first mentioned in "Thraliana" thus:
+
+"_Brighton, July_, 1780.--I have picked up Piozzi here, the great
+Italian singer. He is amazingly like my father. He shall teach
+Hester."
+
+A detailed account of the commencement of the acquaintance is given
+in one of the autobiographical fragments. She says he was recommended
+to her by letter by Madame D'Arblay as "a man likely to lighten the
+burthen of life to her," and that both she and Mr. Thrale took to him
+at once. Madame D'Arblay is silent as to the introduction or
+recommendation; but gives an amusing account of one of their first
+meetings:
+
+"A few months after the Streathamite morning visit to St. Martin's
+Street, an evening party was arranged by Dr. Burney, for bringing
+thither again Dr. Johnson and Mrs. Thrale, at the desire of Mr. and
+Mrs. Greville and Mrs. Crewe; who wished, under the quiet roof of Dr.
+Burney, to make acquaintance with these celebrated personages." The
+conversation flagged, and recourse was had to music--
+
+"Piozzi, a first-rate singer, whose voice was deliciously sweet, and
+whose expression was perfect, sung in his very best manner, from his
+desire to do honour to _il Capo di Casa_; but _il Capo di Casa_ and
+his family alone did justice to his strains: neither the Grevilles
+nor the Thrales heeded music beyond what belonged to it as fashion:
+the expectations of the Grevilles were all occupied by Dr. Johnson;
+and those of the Thrales by the authoress of the Ode to Indifference.
+When Piozzi, therefore, arose, the party remained as little advanced
+in any method or pleasure for carrying on the evening, as upon its
+first entrance into the room....
+
+"Dr. Burney now began to feel considerably embarrassed; though still
+he cherished hopes of ultimate relief from some auspicious
+circumstance that, sooner or later, would operate, he hoped, in his
+favour, through the magnetism of congenial talents.
+
+"Vainly, however, he sought to elicit some observations that might
+lead to disserting discourse; all his attempts received only quiet,
+acquiescent replies, 'signifying nothing.' Every one was awaiting
+some spontaneous opening from Dr. Johnson.
+
+"Mrs. Thrale, of the whole coterie, was alone at her ease. She feared
+not Dr. Johnson; for fear made no part of her composition; and with
+Mrs. Greville, as a fair rival genius, she would have been glad, from
+curiosity, to have had the honour of a little tilt, in full
+carelessness of its event; for though triumphant when victorious, she
+had spirits so volatile, and such utter exemption from envy or
+spleen, that she was gaily free from mortification when vanquished.
+But she knew the meeting to have been fabricated for Dr. Johnson;
+and, therefore, though not without difficulty, constrained herself to
+be passive.
+
+"When, however, she observed the sardonic disposition of Mr. Greville
+to stare around him at the whole company in curious silence, she felt
+a defiance against his aristocracy beat in every pulse; for, however
+grandly he might look back to the long ancestry of the Brookes and
+the Grevilles, she had a glowing consciousness that her own blood,
+rapid and fluent, flowed in her veins from Adam of Saltsberg; and, at
+length, provoked by the dullness of a taciturnity that, in the midst
+of such renowned interlocutors, produced as narcotic a torpor as
+could have been caused by a dearth the most barren of human
+faculties; she grew tired of the music, and yet more tired of
+remaining, what as little suited her inclinations as her abilities, a
+mere cipher in the company; and, holding such a position, and all its
+concomitants, to be ridiculous, her spirits rose rebelliously above
+her control; and, in a fit of utter recklessness of what might be
+thought of her by her fine new acquaintance, she suddenly, but
+softly, arose, and stealing on tip-toe behind Signor Piozzi, who was
+accompanying himself on the piano-forte to an animated _arria
+parlante_, with his back to the company, and his face to the wall;
+she ludicrously began imitating him by squaring her elbows, elevating
+them with ecstatic shrugs of the shoulders, and casting up her eyes,
+while languishingly reclining her head; as if she were not less
+enthusiastically, though somewhat more suddenly, struck with the
+transports of harmony than himself.
+
+"This grotesque ebullition of ungovernable gaiety was not perceived
+by Dr. Johnson, who faced the fire, with his back to the performer
+and the instrument. But the amusement which such an unlooked for
+exhibition caused to the party, was momentary; for Dr. Burney,
+shocked lest the poor Signor should observe, and be hurt by this
+mimicry, glided gently round to Mrs. Thrale, and, with something
+between pleasantness and severity, 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?'
+
+"It was now that shone the brightest attribute of Mrs. Thrale,
+sweetness of temper. She took this rebuke with a candour, and a sense
+of its justice the most amiable: she nodded her approbation of the
+admonition; and, returning to her chair, quietly sat down, as she
+afterwards said, like a pretty little miss, for the remainder of one
+of the most humdrum evenings that she had ever passed.
+
+"Strange, indeed, strange and most strange, the event considered, was
+this opening intercourse between Mrs. Thrale and Signor Piozzi.
+Little could she imagine that the person she was thus called away
+from holding up to ridicule, would become, but a few years
+afterwards, the idol of her fancy and the lord of her destiny! And
+little did the company present imagine, that this burlesque scene was
+but the first of a drama the most extraordinary of real life, of
+which these two persons were to be the hero and heroine: though, when
+the catastrophe was known, this incident, witnessed by so many, was
+recollected and repeated from coterie to coterie throughout London,
+with comments and sarcasms of endless variety."[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: Memoirs of Dr. Burney, &c., vol. ii, pp. 105--111.]
+
+Madame D'Arblay mentioned the same circumstance in conversation to
+the Rev. W. Harness: yet it seems strange in connection with an entry
+in "Thraliana" from which it would appear that her friend was far
+from wanting in susceptibility to sweet sounds:
+
+"13 _August_, 1780.--Piozzi is become a prodigious favourite with me,
+he is so intelligent a creature, so discerning, one can't help
+wishing for his good opinion; his singing surpasses everybody's for
+taste, tenderness, and true elegance; his hand on the forte piano too
+is so soft, so sweet, so delicate, every tone goes to the heart, I
+think, and fills the mind with emotions one would not be without,
+though inconvenient enough sometimes. He wants nothing from us: he
+comes for his health he says: I see nothing ail the man but pride.
+The newspapers yesterday told what all the musical folks gained, and
+set Piozzi down 1200_l_. o' year."
+
+On the 24th August, 1780, Madame D'Arblay writes: "I have not seen
+Piozzi: he left me your letter, which indeed is a charming one,
+though its contents puzzled me much whether to make me sad or merry."
+Mrs. Thrale was still at Brighton; so that the scene at Dr. Burney's
+must have occurred subsequently; when she had already begun to find
+Piozzi what the Neapolitan ladies understand by _simpatico_. Madame
+D'Arblay's "Memoirs," as I shall have occasion to point out, are by
+no means so trustworthy a register of dates, facts, or impressions as
+her "Diary."
+
+Whilst Thrale lived, Mrs. Thrale's regard for Piozzi was certainly
+not of a nature to cause scandal or provoke censure, and as it
+ripened into love, it may be traced, step by step, from the frankest
+and fullest of all possible unveilings of the heart. Rare indeed are
+the instances in which such revelations as we find in "Thraliana"
+could be risked by either man or woman, without giving scope to
+malevolence; and they should not only be judged as a whole and by the
+context, but the most favourable construction should be put upon
+them. When, in this sort of self-communing, every passing emotion,
+every transitory inclination, is set down, it would be unfair and
+even foolish to infer that the emotion at once became a passion, or
+that the inclination was criminally indulged.
+
+The next notice of Piozzi occurs in Madame D'Arblay's "Diary" for
+July 10th, 1781:
+
+"You will believe I was not a little surprised to see Sacchini. He is
+going to the Continent with Piozzi, and Mrs. Thrale invited them both
+to spend the last day at Streatham, and from hence proceed to
+Margate.... The first song he sang, beginning 'En quel amabil volto,'
+you may perhaps know, but I did not; it is a charming mezza bravura.
+He and Piozzi then sung together the duet of the 'Amore Soldato;' and
+nothing could be much more delightful; Piozzi taking pains to sing
+his very best, and Sacchini, with his soft but delicious whisper,
+almost thrilling me by his exquisite and pathetic expression. They
+then went through that opera, great part of 'Creso,' some of
+'Erifile,' and much of 'Rinaldo.'"
+
+Piozzi's attentions had attracted Johnson's notice without troubling
+his peace. On November 24th, 1781, he wrote from Ashbourne: "Piozzi,
+I find, is coming in spite of Miss Harriet's prediction, or second
+sight, and when _he_ comes and _I_ come, you will have two about you
+that love you; and I question if either of us heartily care how few
+more you have. But how many soever they may be, I hope you keep your
+kindness for me, and I have a great mind to have Queeny's kindness
+too."
+
+Again, December 3rd, 1781: "You have got Piozzi again,
+notwithstanding pretty Harriet's dire denunciations. The Italian
+translation which he has brought, you will find no great accession to
+your library, for the writer seems to understand very little English.
+When we meet we can compare some passages. Pray contrive a multitude
+of good things for us to do when we meet. Something that may _hold
+all together_; though if any thing makes _me_ love you more, it is
+going from you."
+
+We learn from "Thraliana," that the entanglement with Piozzi was not
+the only one of which Streatham was contemporaneously the scene:
+
+"_August,_ 1781.--I begin to wish in good earnest that Miss Burney
+should make impression on Mr. Crutchley. I think she honestly loves
+the man, who in his turn appears to be in love with some one
+else--Hester, I fear, Oh! that would indeed be unlucky! People have
+said so a long while, but I never thought it till now; young men and
+women will always be serving one so, to be sure, if they live at all
+together, but I depended on Burney keeping him steady to herself.
+Queeny behaves like an angel about it. Mr. Johnson says the name of
+Crutchley comes from _croix lea_, the cross meadow; _lea_ is a
+meadow, I know, and _crutch_, a crutch stick, is so called from
+having the handle go _crosswise_."
+
+"_September,_ 1781.--My five fair daughters too! I have so good a
+pretence to wish for long life to see them settled. Like the old
+fellow in 'Lucian,' one is never at a loss for an excuse. They are
+five lovely creatures to be sure, but they love not me. Is it my
+fault or theirs?"
+
+"_12th October_, 1781.--Yesterday was my wedding-day; it was a
+melancholy thing to me to pass it without the husband of my youth.
+
+ "'Long tedious years may neither moan,
+ Sad, deserted, and alone;
+ May neither long condemned to stay
+ Wait the second bridal day!!!'[1]
+
+"Let me thank God for my children, however, my fortune, and my
+friends, and be contented if I cannot be happy."
+
+[Footnote 1: _Note by Mrs. T._: "Samuel Wesley's verses, making part
+of an epithalamium."]
+
+"_15th October_, 1781.--My maid Margaret Rice dreamed last night that
+my eldest daughter was going to be married to Mr. Crutchley, but that
+Mr. Thrale _himself_ prevented her. An odd thing to me, who think Mr.
+Crutchley is his son."
+
+Although the next day but one after Thrale's death Johnson carried
+Boswell to dine at the Queen's Arms' Club, his grief was deep and
+durable. Indeed, it is expressed so often and so earnestly as to
+rebut the presumption that "my mistress" was the sole or chief tie
+which bound him to Streatham. Amongst his Prayers and Meditations is
+the following:
+
+"_Good Friday, April 13th_, 1781.--On Wednesday, 11th, was buried my
+dear friend Thrale, who died on Wednesday, 4th; and with him were
+buried many of my hopes and pleasures. About five, I think, on
+Wednesday morning, he expired. 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 or benignity.
+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."
+
+On the same paper is a note: "My first knowledge of Thrale was in
+1765. I enjoyed his favours for almost a fourth part of my life."
+
+On the 20th March, 1782, he wrote thus to Langton:
+
+"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; 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."
+
+There is ample evidence that he neither felt nor suspected any
+diminution of kindness or regard, and continued, till their final
+departure from Streatham, to treat it as his home.
+
+In November she writes, "Do not forget Streatham and its inhabitants,
+who are all much yours;" and he replies:
+
+"Birmingham, Dec. 8th, 1781.
+
+"DEAR MADAM,--I am come to this place on my way to London and to
+Streatham. I hope to be in London on Tuesday or Wednesday, and
+Streatham on Thursday, by your kind conveyance. I shall have nothing
+to relate either wonderful or delightful. But remember that you sent
+me away, and turned me out into the world, and you must take the
+chance of finding me better or worse. This you may know at present,
+that my affection for you is not diminished, and my expectation from
+you is increased. Do not neglect me, nor relinquish me. Nobody will
+ever love you better or honour you more."
+
+"Feb. 16th, 1782.
+
+"DEAREST LADY,--I am better, but not yet well; but hope springs
+eternal. As soon as I can think myself not troublesome, you may be
+sure of seeing me, _for such a place to visit nobody ever had_.
+Dearest Madam, do not think me worse than I am; be sure, at least,
+that whatever happens to me, I am with all the regard that admiration
+of excellence and gratitude for kindness can excite, Madam, your" &c.
+
+In "Thraliana":
+
+"_23rd February, 1782 (Harley Street)_.--The truth is, Mr. Johnson
+has some occult disorder that I cannot understand; Jebb and Bromfield
+fancy it is water between the heart and pericardium--I do not think
+it is _that_, but I do not know what it is. He apprehends no danger
+himself, and he knows more of the matter than any of them all."
+
+On February 27th, 1782, he writes to Malone: "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."
+
+On March 20th, 1782, to Mrs. Grastrell and Mrs. Aston: "When Dr.
+Falconer saw me, I was at home only by accident, for I lived much
+with Mrs. Thrale, and had all the care from her that she could take
+or could be taken."
+
+April 26th, 1782, to Mrs. Thrale:
+
+"MADAM,--I have been very much out of order since you sent me away;
+but why should I tell you, who do not care, nor desire to know? I
+dined with Mr. Paradise on Monday, with the Bishop of St. Asaph
+yesterday, with the Bishop of Chester I dine to-day, and with the
+Academy on Saturday, with Mr. Hoole on Monday, and with Mrs. Garrick
+on Thursday, the 2nd of May, and then--what care you? _What then_?
+
+"The news run, that we have taken seventeen French transports; that
+Langton's lady is lying down with her eighth child, all alive; and
+Mrs. Carter's Miss Sharpe is going to marry a schoolmaster sixty-two
+years old.
+
+"Do not let Mr. Piozzi nor any body else put me quite out of your
+head, and do not think that any body will love you like your" &c.
+
+"April 30th, 1782.
+
+"Mrs. Sheridan refused to sing, at the Duchess of Devonshire's
+request, a song to the Prince of Wales. They pay for the Theatre
+neither principal nor interest; and poor Garrick's funeral expenses
+are yet unpaid, though the undertaker is broken. Could you have a
+better purveyor for a little scandal? But I wish I was at Streatham.
+I beg Miss to come early, and I may perhaps reward you with more
+mischief."
+
+She went to Streatham on the 18th April, 1782, and Johnson evidently
+with her. In "Thraliana" she writes:
+
+"_Saturday, 9th May, 1782._--To-day I bring home to Streatham my poor
+Dr. Johnson: he went to town a week ago by the way of amusing
+himself, and got so very ill that I thought I should never get him
+home alive,"--by _home_ meaning Streatham.
+
+Johnson to Mrs. Thrale:
+
+"June 4th, 1782.
+
+"This day I dined upon skate, pudding, goose, and your asparagus, and
+could have eaten more, but was prudent. Pray for me, dear Madam; I
+hope the tide has turned. The change that I feel is more than I durst
+have hoped, or than I thought possible; but there has not yet passed
+a whole day, and I may rejoice perhaps too soon. Come and see me, and
+when you think best, upon due consideration, take me away."
+
+From her to him:
+
+"Streatham, June 14th, 1782.
+
+"DEAR SIR,--I am glad you confess yourself peevish, for confession
+must precede amendment. Do not study to be more unhappy than you are,
+and if you can eat and sleep well, do not be frighted, for there can
+be no real danger. Are you acquainted with Dr. Lee, the master of
+Baliol College? And are you not delighted with his gaiety of manners
+and youthful vivacity now that he is eighty-six years old? I never
+heard a more perfect or excellent pun than his, when some one told
+him how, in a late dispute among the Privy Counsellors, the Lord
+Chancellor (Thurlow) struck the table with such violence that he
+split it. 'No, no,' replied the Master, drily, 'I can hardly persuade
+myself that he _split the table_, though I believe he _divided the
+Board_.' Will you send me anything better from Oxford than this? for
+there must be no more fastidiousness now; no more refusing to laugh
+at a good quibble, when you so loudly profess the want of amusement
+and the necessity of diversion."
+
+From him to her:
+
+"Oxford, June 17th, 1782.
+
+"Oxford has done, I think, what for the present it can do, and I am
+going slyly to take a place in the coach for Wednesday, and you or my
+sweet Queeny will fetch me on Thursday, and see what you can make of
+me."
+
+Hannah More met him during this visit to Oxford, and writes, June
+13th, 1782: "Who do you think is my principal cicerone at Oxford?
+only Dr. Johnson! and we do so gallant it about."
+
+Madame D'Arblay, then at Streatham, writes, June 26th, 1782: "Dr.
+Johnson, who had been in town some days, returned, and Mr. Crutchley
+came also, as well as my father." After describing some lively
+conversation, she adds: "I have _very often_, though I mention them
+not, long and melancholy discourses with Dr. Johnson, about our dear
+deceased master, whom, indeed, he regrets unceasingly; but I love not
+to dwell on subjects of sorrow when I can drive them away, especially
+to you (her sister), upon this account as you were so much a stranger
+to that excellent friend, whom you only lamented for the sake of
+those who survived him." He had only returned that very day, and she
+had been absent from Streatham, as she states elsewhere, till "the
+Cecilian business was arranged," _i.e._ till the end of May.
+
+On the 24th August, 1782 (this date is material) Johnson writes to
+Boswell:
+
+"DEAR SIR,--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."
+
+This was two days after Mrs. Thrale, with his full concurrence, had
+made up her mind to let Streatham. He treats it, notwithstanding, as
+at his disposal for a residence so long as she remains in it.
+
+The books and printed letters from which most of these extracts are
+taken, have been all along accessible to her assailants. Those from
+"Thraliana," which come next, are new:
+
+"_25th November_, 1781.--I have got my Piozzi[1] home at last; he
+looks thin and battered, but always kindly upon me, I think. He
+brought me an Italian sonnet written in his praise by Marco Capello,
+which I instantly translated of course; but he, prudent creature,
+insisted on my burning it, as he said it would inevitably get about
+the town how _he_ was praised, and how Mrs. Thrale translated and
+echoed the praises, so that, says he, I shall be torn in pieces, and
+you will have some _infamita_ said of you that will make you hate the
+sight of me. He was so earnest with me that I could not resist, so
+burnt my sonnet, which was actually very pretty; and now I repent I
+did not first write it into the Thraliana. Over leaf, however, shall
+go the translation, which happens to be done very closely, and the
+last stanza is particularly exact. I must put it down while I
+remember it:
+
+1.
+
+ "'Favoured of Britain's pensive sons,
+ Though still thy name be found,
+ Though royal Thames where'er he runs
+ Returns the flattering sound,
+
+2.
+
+ Though absent thou, on every joy
+ Her gloom privation flings,
+ And Pleasure, pining for employ,
+ Now droops her nerveless wings,
+
+3.
+
+ Yet since kind Fates thy voice restore
+ To charm our land again[2],--
+ Return not to their rocky shore,
+ Nor tempt the angry main.
+
+4.
+
+ Nor is their praise of so much worth,
+ Nor is it justly given,
+ That angels sing to them on earth
+ Who slight the road to heaven.'
+
+"He tells me--Piozzi does--that his own country manners greatly
+disgusted him, after having been used to ours; but Milan is a
+comfortable place, I find. If he does not fix himself for life here,
+he will settle to lay his bones at Milan. The Marquis D'Araciel, his
+friend and patron, who resides there, divides and disputes his heart
+with me: I shall be loth to resign it."
+
+[Footnote 1: This mode of expression did not imply then what it might
+now. See _ante_, p. 92, where Johnson writes to "my Baretti."]
+
+[Footnote 2: "Capello is a Venetian poet."]
+
+"_17th December, 1781._--Dear Mr. Johnson is at last returned; he has
+been a vast while away to see his country folks at Litchfield. My
+fear is lest he should grow paralytick,--there are really some
+symptoms already discoverable, I think, about the mouth particularly.
+He will drive the gout away so when it comes, and it must go
+_somewhere_. Queeny works hard with him at the classicks; I hope she
+will be _out_ of leading-strings at least before he gets _into_ them,
+as poor women say of their children."
+
+"_1st January, 1782._--Let me not, while censuring the behaviour of
+others, however, give cause of censure by my own. I am beginning a
+new year in a new character. May it be worn decently yet lightly! I
+wish not to be rigid and fright my daughters by too much severity. I
+will not be wild and give them reason to lament the levity of my
+life. Resolutions, however, are vain. To pray for God's grace is the
+sole way to obtain it--'Strengthen Thou, O Lord, my virtue and my
+understanding, preserve me from temptation, and acquaint me with
+myself; fill my heart with thy love, restrain it by thy fear, and
+keep my soul's desires fixed wholly on that place where only true
+joys are to be found, through Jesus Christ our Lord,--Amen.'"
+
+_January_, 1782.--(After stating her fear of illness and other ills.)
+"_If_ nothing of all these misfortunes, however, befall one; _if_ for
+my sins God should take from me my monitor, my friend, my inmate, my
+dear Doctor Johnson; _if_ neither I should marry, nor the brewhouse
+people break; _if_ the ruin of the nation should not change the
+situation of affairs so that one could not receive regular
+remittances from England: and _if_ Piozzi should not pick him up a
+wife and fix his abode in this country,--_if_, therefore, and _if_
+and _if_ and _if_ again all should conspire to keep my present
+resolution warm, I certainly would, at the close of the four years
+from the sale of the Southwark estate, set out for Italy, with my two
+or three eldest girls, and see what the world could show me."
+
+In a marginal note, she adds:
+
+"Travelling with Mr. Johnson _I_ cannot bear, and leaving him behind
+_he_ could not bear, so his life or death must determine the
+execution or laying aside my schemes. I wish it were within reason to
+_hope_ he could live four years."
+
+"_Streatham, 4th January_, 1782.--I have taken a house in Harley
+Street for these three months next ensuing, and hope to have some
+society,--not company tho': crowds are out of the question, but
+people will not come hither on short days, and 'tis too dull to live
+all alone so. The world will watch me at first, and think I come o'
+husband-hunting for myself or my fair daughters, but when I have
+behaved prettily for a while, they will change their mind."
+
+"_Harley Street, 14th January_, 1782.--The first seduction comes from
+Pepys. I had a letter to-day desiring me to dine in Wimpole Street,
+to meet Mrs. Montagu and a whole _army of blues_, to whom I trust my
+refusal will afford very pretty speculation ... and they may settle
+my character and future conduct at their leisure. Pepys is a
+worthless fellow at last; he and his brother run about the town,
+spying and enquiring what Mrs. Thrale is to do this winter, what
+friends she is to see, what men are in her confidence, how soon she
+will be _married_, &c.; the brother Dr.--the Medico, as we call
+him--lays wagers about me, I find; God forgive me, but they'll make
+me hate them both, and they are no better than two fools for their
+pains, for I was willing to have taken them to my heart."
+
+"They say Pacchierotti, the famous soprano singer, is ill, and _they
+say_ Lady Mary Duncan, his frightful old protectress, has made him so
+by her _caresses denaturees_. A little envy of the new woman,
+Allegrante, has probably not much mended his health, for
+Pacchierotti, dear creature, is envious enough. I was, however,
+turning over Horace yesterday, to look for the expression _tenui
+fronte_[1], in vindication of my assertion to Johnson that low
+foreheads were classical, when the 8th Ode of the First Book of
+Horace struck me so, I could not help imitating it while the scandal
+was warm in my mind:
+
+1.
+
+ "'He's sick indeed! and very sick,
+ For if it is not all a trick
+ You'd better look about ye.
+ Dear Lady Mary, prythee tell
+ Why thus by loving him too well
+ You kill your Pacchierotti?
+
+2.
+
+ Nor sun nor dust can he abide,
+ Nor careless in a snaffle ride,
+ The steed we saw him mount ill.
+ _You_ stript him of his manly force,
+ When tumbling headlong from his horse
+ He pressed the plains of Fonthill.[2]
+
+3.
+
+ Why the full opera should he shun?
+ Where crowds of critics smiling run,
+ To applaud their Allegrante.
+ Why is it worse than viper's sting,
+ To see them clap, or hear her sing?
+ Surely he's envious, ain't he?
+
+4.
+
+ Forbear his house, nor haunt his bed
+ With that strange wig and fearful head,
+ Then, though he now so ill is,
+ We o'er his voice again may doze,
+ When, cover'd warm with women's clothes,
+ He acts a young Achilles.'"
+
+[Footnote 1: Insignem tenui fronte Lycorida Cyri torret amor--
+
+But _tenuis_ is _small_ or _narrow_ rather than _low_. One of
+Fielding's beauties, Sophia Western, has a low forehead: another,
+Fanny, a high one.]
+
+[Footnote 2: _Note by Mrs. T.:_ "Fonthill, the seat of young
+Beckford. They set him o' horseback, and he tumbled off."]
+
+"_1st February, 1782._--Here is Mr. Johnson ill, very ill indeed,
+and--I do not see what ails him; 'tis repelled gout, I fear, fallen
+on the lungs and breath of course. What shall we do for him? If I
+lose _him_, I am more than undone; friend, father, guardian,
+confident!--God give me health and patience. What shall I do?"
+
+"_Harley Street, 13th April, 1782._--When I took off my mourning, the
+watchers watched me very exactly, 'but they whose hands were
+mightiest have found nothing:' so I shall leave the town, I hope, in
+a good disposition towards me, though I am sullen enough with the
+town for fancying me such an amorous idiot that I am dying to enjoy
+every filthy fellow. God knows how distant such dispositions are from
+the heart and constitution of H.L.T. Lord Loughboro', Sir Richard
+Jebb, Mr. Piozzi, Mr. Selwyn, Dr. Johnson, every man that comes to
+the house, is put in the papers for me to marry. In good time, I
+wrote to-day to beg the 'Morning Herald' would say no more about me,
+good or bad."
+
+"_Streatham, 17th April, 1782._--I am returned to Streatham, pretty
+well in health and very sound in heart, notwithstanding the watchers
+and the wager-layers, who think more of the charms of their sex by
+half than I who know them better. Love and friendship are distinct
+things, and I would go through fire to serve many a man whom nothing
+less than fire would force me to go to bed to. Somebody mentioned my
+going to be married t'other day, and Johnson was joking about it. I
+suppose, Sir, said I, they think they are doing me honour with these
+imaginary matches, when, perhaps the man does not exist who would do
+me honour by marrying me! This, indeed, was said in the wild and
+insolent spirit of Baretti, yet 'tis nearer the truth than one would
+think for. A woman of passable person, ancient family, respectable
+character, uncommon talents, and three thousand a year, has a right
+to think herself any man's equal, and has nothing to seek but return
+of affection from whatever partner she pitches on. To marry for love
+would therefore be rational in me, who want no advancement of birth
+or fortune, and _till I am in love_, I will not marry, nor perhaps
+then."
+
+"_22nd August, 1782._--An event of no small consequence to our little
+family must here be recorded in the 'Thraliana.' After having long
+intended to go to Italy for pleasure, we are now settling to go
+thither for convenience. The establishment of expense here at
+Streatham is more than my income will answer; my lawsuit with Lady
+Salusbury turns out worse in the event and infinitely more costly
+than I could have dreamed on; 8000_l._ is supposed necessary to the
+payment of it, and how am I to raise 8000_l_.? My trees will (after
+all my expectations from them) fetch but 4000_l_., the money lent
+Perkins on his bond 1600_l_., the Hertfordshire copyholds may perhaps
+be worth 1000_l_., and where is the rest to spring from? I must go
+abroad and save money. To show Italy to my girls, and be showed it by
+Piozzi, has long been my dearest wish, but to leave Mr. Johnson
+shocked me, and to take him appeared impossible. His recovery,
+however, from an illness we all thought dangerous, gave me courage to
+speak to him on the subject, and this day (after having been let
+blood) I mustered up resolution to tell him the necessity of changing
+a way of life I had long been displeased with. I added that I had
+mentioned the matter to my eldest daughter, whose prudence and solid
+judgment, unbiassed by passion, is unequalled, as far as my
+experience has reached; that she approved the scheme, and meant to
+partake it, though of an age when she might be supposed to form
+connections here in England--attachments of the tenderest nature;
+that she declared herself free and resolved to follow my fortunes,
+though perfectly aware temptations might arise to prevent me from
+ever returning--a circumstance she even mentioned herself.
+
+"Mr. Johnson thought well of the project, and wished me to put it
+early in execution: seemed less concerned at parting with me than I
+wished him: thought his pupil Miss Thrale quite right in forbearing
+to marry young, and seemed to entertain no doubt of living to see us
+return rich and happy in two or three years' time. He told Hester in
+my absence that he would not go with me if I asked him. See the
+importance of a person to himself. I fancied Mr. Johnson could not
+have existed without me, forsooth, as we have now lived together for
+above eighteen years. I have so fondled him in sickness and in
+health. Not a bit of it. He feels nothing in parting with me, nothing
+in the least; but thinks it a prudent scheme, and goes to his books
+as usual. This is philosophy and truth; he always said he hated a
+_feeler_....
+
+"The persecution I endure from men too who want to marry me--in good
+time--is another reason for my desiring to be gone. I wish to marry
+none of them, and Sir Philip's teazing me completed my mortification;
+to see that one can rely on _nobody!_ The expences of this house,
+however, which are quite past my power to check, is the true and
+rational cause of our departure. In Italy we shall live with twice
+the respect and at half the expence we do here; the language is
+familiar to me and I love the Italians; I take with me all I love in
+the world except my two baby daughters, who will be left safe at
+school; and since Mr. Johnson cares nothing for the loss of my
+personal friendship and company, there is no danger of any body else
+breaking their hearts. My sweet Burney and Mrs. Byron will perhaps
+think they are sorry, but my consciousness that no one _can_ have the
+cause of concern that Johnson has, and my conviction that he has _no
+concern at all_, shall cure me of lamenting friends left behind."
+
+In the margin of this entry she has written, "I begin to see (now
+everything shows it) that Johnson's connection with me is merely an
+interested one; he _loved_ Mr. Thrale, I believe, but only wished to
+find in me a careful nurse and humble friend for his sick and his
+lounging hours; yet I really thought he could not have _existed_
+without _my conversation_ forsooth! He cares more for my roast beef
+and plum pudden, which he now devours too dirtily for endurance; and
+since he is glad to get rid of me, I'm sure I have good cause to
+desire the getting rid of him."
+
+No great stress should be laid on this ebullition of mortified
+self-love; but it occurs oddly enough at the very time when,
+according to Lord Macaulay, she was labouring to produce the very
+feeling that irritated her.
+
+"_August 28th_, 1782.--He (Piozzi) thinks still more than he says,
+that I shall give him up; and if Queeney made herself more amiable to
+me, and took the proper methods--I suppose I should."
+
+"_20 September_ 1782, _Streatham_.--And now I am going to leave
+Streatham (I have let the house and grounds to Lord Shelburne, the
+expence of it eat me up) for three years, where I lived--never
+happily indeed, but always easily: the more so perhaps from the total
+absence of love and ambition--
+
+ "'Else these two passions by the way
+ Might chance to show us scurvy play.'"
+
+Ten days later (October 1st) she thus argues out the question of
+marriage:
+
+"Now! that dear little discerning creature, Fanny Burney, says I'm in
+love with Piozzi: very likely; he is so amiable, so honourable, so
+much above his situation by his abilities, that if
+
+ "'Fate had not fast bound her
+ With Styx nine times round her,
+ Sure musick and love were victorious.'
+
+But if he is ever so worthy, ever so lovely, he is _below me_
+forsooth! In what is he below me? In virtue? I would I were above
+him. In understanding? I would mine were from this instant under the
+guardianship of his. In birth? To be sure he is below me in birth,
+and so is almost every man I know or have a chance to know. But he is
+below me in fortune: is mine sufficient for us both?--more than amply
+so. Does he deserve it by his conduct, in which he has always united
+warm notions of honour with cool attention to oeconomy, the spirit of
+a gentleman with the talents of a professor? How shall any man
+deserve fortune, if he does not? But I am the guardian of five
+daughters by Mr. Thrale, and must not disgrace _their_ name and
+family. Was then the man my mother chose for me of higher extraction
+than him I have chosen for myself? No,--but his fortune was
+higher.... I wanted fortune then, perhaps: do I want it now?--Not at
+all; but I am not to think about myself; I married the first time to
+please my mother, I must marry the second time to please my daughter.
+I have always sacrificed my own choice to that of others, so I must
+sacrifice it again: but why? Oh, because I am a woman of superior
+understanding, and must not for the world degrade myself from my
+situation in life. But if I _have_ superior understanding, let me at
+least make use of it for once, and rise to the rank of a human being
+conscious of its own power to discern good from ill. The person who
+has uniformly acted by the will of others has hardly that dignity to
+boast.
+
+"But once again: I am guardian to five girls; agreed: will this
+connection prejudice their bodies, souls, or purse? My marriage may
+assist _my_ health, but I suppose it will not injure _theirs_. Will
+his company or companions corrupt their morals? God forbid; if I did
+not believe him one of the best of our fellow beings, I would reject
+him instantly. Can it injure their fortunes? Could he impoverish (if
+he would) five women, to whom their father left _20,000l._ each,
+independent almost of possibilities?--To what then am I guardian? to
+their pride and prejudice? and is anything else affected by the
+alliance? Now for more solid objections. Is not the man of whom I
+desire protection, a foreigner? unskilled in the laws and language of
+our country? Certainly. Is he not, as the French say, _Arbitre de mon
+sort?_ and from the hour he possesses my person and fortune, have I
+any power of decision how or where I may continue or end my life? Is
+not the man, upon the continuance of whose affection my whole
+happiness depends, _younger_ than myself[1], and is it wise to place
+one's happiness on the continuance of _any_ man's affection? Would it
+not be painful to owe his appearance of regard more to his honour
+than his love? and is not my person, already faded, likelier to fade
+sooner, than his? On the other hand, is his life a good one? and
+would it not be lunacy even to risque the wretchedness of losing all
+situation in the world for the sake of living with a man one loves,
+and then to lose both companion and consolation? When I lost Mr.
+Thrale, every one was officious to comfort and to soothe me; but
+which of my children or quondam friends would look with kindness upon
+Piozzi's widow? If I bring children by him, must they not be
+Catholics, and must not I live among people the _ritual_ part of
+whose religion I disapprove?
+
+"These are _my_ objections, these _my_ fears: not those of being
+censured by the world, as it is called, a composition of vice and
+folly, though 'tis surely no good joke to be talked of
+
+ "'By each affected she that tells my story,
+ And blesses her good stars that _she_ was prudent.'
+
+"These objections would increase in strength, too, if my present
+state was a happy one, but it really is not. I live a quiet life, but
+not a pleasant one. My children govern without loving me; my servants
+devour and despise me; my friends caress and censure me; my money
+wastes in expences I do not enjoy, and my time in trifles I do not
+approve. Every one is made insolent, and no one comfortable; my
+reputation unprotected, my heart unsatisfied, my health unsettled. I
+will, however, resolve on nothing. I will take a voyage to the
+Continent in spring, enlarge my knowledge and repose my purse. Change
+of place may turn the course of these ideas, and external objects
+supply the room of internal felicity. If he follow me, I may reject
+or receive at pleasure the addresses of a man who follows on _no
+explicit promise_, nor much probability of success, for I would
+really wish to marry no more without the consent of my children (such
+I mean as are qualified to give their opinions); and how should _Miss
+Thrales_ approve of my marrying _Mr. Piozzi_? Here then I rest, and
+will torment my mind no longer, but commit myself, as he advises, to
+the hand of Providence, and all will end _all' ottima perfezzione_.
+
+"Written at Streatham, 1st October, 1782."
+
+[Footnote 1: _Note by Mrs. Piozzi_: "He was half a year _older_ when
+our registers were both examined."]
+
+"_October, 1782._--There is no mercy for me in this island. I am more
+and more disposed to try the continent. One day the paper rings with
+my marriage to Johnson, one day to Crutchley, one day to Seward. I
+give no reason for such impertinence, but cannot deliver myself from
+it. Whitbred, the rich brewer, is in love with me too; oh, I would
+rather, as Ann Page says, be set breast deep in the earth[1] and
+bowled to death with turnips.
+
+"Mr. Crutchley bid me make a curtsey to my daughters for keeping me
+out of a goal (_sic_), and the newspapers insolent as he! How shall I
+get through? How shall I get through? I have not deserved it of any
+of them, as God knows.
+
+"Philip Thicknesse put it about Bath that I was a poor girl, a mantua
+maker, when Mr. Thrale married me. It is an odd thing, but Miss
+Thrales like, I see, to have it believed."
+
+[Footnote 1: Anne Page says, "quick in the earth."]
+
+The general result down to this point is that, whatever the
+disturbance in Mrs. Thrale's heart and mind, Johnson had no ground of
+complaint, nor ever thought he had, which is the essential point in
+controversy. In other words, he was not driven, hinted, or manoeuvred
+out of Streatham. Yet almost all his worshippers have insisted that
+he was. Hawkins, after mentioning the kind offices undertaken by
+Johnson (which constantly took him to Streatham) says:--"Nevertheless
+it was observed by myself, and other of Johnson's friends, that soon
+after the decease of Mr. Thrale, his visits to Streatham became less
+and less frequent, and that he studiously avoided the mention of the
+place or the family." This statement is preposterous, and is only to
+be partially accounted for by the fact that Hawkins, as his daughter
+informs us, had no personal acquaintance with Mrs. Thrale or
+Streatham. Boswell, who was in Scotland when Johnson and Mrs. Thrale
+left Streatham together, gratuitously infers that he left it alone,
+angry and mortified, in consequence of her altered manner:
+
+"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 6th of October this year we find him making a
+'parting use of the library' at Streatham, and pronouncing a prayer
+which he composed on leaving Mr. Thrale's family.
+
+"'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, O
+Lord! have mercy upon me! 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.'
+
+"One cannot read this prayer without some emotions not very
+favourable to the lady whose conduct occasioned it.
+
+"The next day, he made the following memorandum:
+
+"'_October 7._--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 Acts, and then read fortuitously in the Gospels,--which was my
+parting use of the library.'"
+
+Mr. Croker, whose protest against the groundless insinuations of
+Boswell should have put subsequent writers on their guard, states in
+a note:--"He seems to have taken leave of the kitchen as well as the
+church at Streatham in Latin." The note of his last dinner there,
+done into English, would run thus:
+
+"Oct. 6th, Sunday, 1782.
+
+"I dined at Streatham on boiled leg of lamb, with spinach, the
+stuffing of flour and raisins, round of beef, and turkey poult; and
+after the meat service, figs, grapes, not yet ripe in consequence of
+the bad season, with peaches, also hard. I took my place at table in
+no joyful mood, and partook of the food moderately, lest I should
+finish by intemperance. If I rightly remember, the banquet at the
+funeral of Hadon came into my mind.[1] When shall I revisit
+Streatham?"
+
+[Footnote 1: "Si recte memini in mentem venerunt epulae in exequiis
+Hadoni celebratae." I cannot explain this allusion.]
+
+The exclamation "When shall I revisit Streatham?" loses much of its
+pathos when connected with these culinary details.
+
+Madame D'Arblay's description of the last year at Streatham is too
+important to be much abridged:
+
+"Dr. Burney, _when the Cecilian business was arranged_[1], again
+conveyed the Memorialist to Streatham. No further reluctance on his
+part, nor exhortations on that of Mr. Crisp, sought to withdraw her
+from that spot, where, while it was in its glory, they had so
+recently, and with pride, seen her distinguished. And truly eager was
+her own haste, when mistress of her time, to try once more to soothe
+those sorrows and chagrins in which she had most largely
+participated, by answering to the call, which had never ceased
+tenderly to pursue her, of return.
+
+"With alacrity, therefore, though not with gaiety, they re-entered
+the Streatham gates--but they soon perceived that they found not what
+they had left!
+
+"Changed, indeed, was Streatham! Gone its chief, and changed his
+relict! unaccountably, incomprehensibly, indefinably changed! She was
+absent and agitated; not two minutes could she remain in a place; she
+scarcely seemed to know whom she saw; her speech was so hurried it
+was hardly intelligible; her eyes were assiduously averted from those
+who sought them; and her smiles were faint and forced."
+
+[Footnote 1: This may mean when the arrangements were made for the
+publication, or when the book was published. It was published about
+the beginning of June, 1782.]
+
+"The mystery, however, soon ceased; the solicitations of the most
+affectionate sympathy could not long be urged in vain;--the mystery
+passed away--not so the misery! That, when revealed, was but to both
+parties doubled, from the different feelings set in movement by its
+disclosure.
+
+"The astonishing history of the enigmatical attachment which impelled
+Mrs. Thrale to her second marriage, is now as well known as her name:
+but its details belong not to the history of Dr. Burney; though the
+fact too deeply interested him, and was too intimately felt in his
+social habits, to be passed over in silence in any memoirs of his
+life.
+
+"But while ignorant yet of its cause, more and more struck he became
+at every meeting, by a species of general alienation which pervaded
+all around at Streatham. His visits, which, heretofore, had seemed
+galas to Mrs. Thrale, were now begun and ended almost without notice:
+and all others,--Dr. Johnson not excepted,--were cast into the same
+gulph of general neglect, or forgetfulness;--all,--save singly this
+Memorialist!--to whom, the fatal secret once acknowledged, Mrs.
+Thrale clung for comfort; though she saw, and generously pardoned,
+how wide she was from meeting approbation.
+
+"In this retired, though far from tranquil manner, _passed many
+months; during which_, with the acquiescent consent of the Doctor,
+his daughter, wholly devoted to her unhappy friend, _remained
+uninterruptedly at sad and altered Streatham;_ sedulously avoiding,
+what at other times she most wished, a _tete-a-tete_ with her father.
+Bound by ties indissoluble of honour not to betray a trust that, in
+the ignorance of her pity, she had herself unwittingly sought, even
+to him she was as immutably silent, on this subject, as to all
+others--save, singly, to the eldest daughter of the house: whose
+conduct, through scenes of dreadful difficulty, notwithstanding her
+extreme youth, was even exemplary; and to whom the self-beguiled, yet
+generous mother, gave full and free permission to confide every
+thought and feeling to the Memorialist."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"Various incidental circumstances began, at length, to open the
+reluctant eyes of Dr. Burney to an impelled, though clouded
+foresight, of the portentous event which might latently be the cause
+of the alteration of all around at Streatham. He then naturally
+wished for some explanation with his daughter, though he never
+forced, or even claimed her confidence; well knowing, that
+voluntarily to give it him had been her earliest delight.
+
+"But in taking her home with him one morning, to pass a day in St.
+Martin's Street, he almost involuntarily, in driving from the
+paddock, turned back his head towards the house, and, in a tone the
+most impressive, sighed out: 'Adieu, Streatham!--Adieu!'"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"_A few weeks earlier_, the Memorialist had passed a nearly similar
+scene with Dr. Johnson. Not, however, she believes, from the same
+formidable species of surmise; but from the wounds inflicted upon his
+injured sensibility, through the palpably altered looks, tone, and
+deportment, of the bewildered lady of the mansion; who, cruelly aware
+what would be his wrath, and how overwhelming his reproaches against
+her projected union, wished to break up their residing under the same
+roof before it should be proclaimed.
+
+"This gave to her whole behaviour towards Dr. Johnson, a sort of
+restless petulancy, of which she was sometimes hardly conscious, at
+others, nearly reckless; but which hurt him far more than she
+purposed, _though short of the point at which she aimed_, of
+precipitating a change of dwelling that would elude its being cast,
+either by himself or the world, upon a passion that her understanding
+blushed to own, even while she was sacrificing to it all of inborn
+dignity that she had been bred to hold most sacred.
+
+"Dr. Johnson, while still uninformed of an entanglement it was
+impossible he should conjecture, attributed her varying humours to
+the effect of wayward health meeting a sort of sudden wayward power:
+and imagined that caprices, which he judged to be partly feminine,
+_and partly wealthy_, would soberise themselves away in being
+unnoticed."
+
+"But at length, as she became more and more dissatisfied with her own
+situation, and impatient for its relief, she grew less and less
+scrupulous with regard to her celebrated guest: she slighted his
+counsel; did not heed his remonstrances; avoided his society; was
+ready at a moment's hint to lend him her carriage when he wished to
+return to Bolt Court; but awaited a formal request to accord it for
+bringing him back.
+
+"The Doctor then began to be stung; his own aspect became altered;
+and depression, with indignant uneasiness, sat upon his venerable
+front.
+
+"It was at this moment that, finding the Memorialist was going one
+morning to St. Martin's Street, he desired a cast thither in the
+carriage, and then to be set down at Bolt Court.
+
+"Aware of his disturbance, and far too well aware how short it was of
+what it would become when the cause of all that passed should be
+detected, it was in trembling that the Memorialist accompanied him to
+the coach, filled with dread of offending him by any reserve, should
+he force upon her any inquiry; and yet impressed with the utter
+impossibility of betraying a trusted secret.
+
+"His look was stern, though dejected, as he followed her into the
+vehicle; but when his eye, which, however short-sighted, was quick to
+mental perception, saw how ill at ease appeared his companion, all
+sternness subsided into an undisguised expression of the strongest
+emotion, that seemed to claim her sympathy, though to revolt from her
+compassion; 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 exclaiming: 'That house ... is lost to
+_me_--for ever!'
+
+"During a moment he then fixed upon her an interrogative eye, that
+impetuously demanded: 'Do you not perceive the change I am
+experiencing?'
+
+"A sorrowing sigh was her only answer.
+
+"Pride and delicacy then united to make him leave her to her
+taciturnity.
+
+"He was too deeply, however, disturbed to start or to bear any other
+subject; and neither of them uttered a single word till the coach
+stopt in St. Martin's Street, and the house and the carriage door
+were opened for their separation! He then suddenly and expressively
+looked at her, abruptly grasped her hand, and, with an air of
+affection, though in a low, husky voice, murmured rather than said:
+'Good morning, dear lady!' but turned his head quickly away, to avoid
+any species of answer."
+
+"She was deeply touched by so gentle an acquiescence in her declining
+the confidential discourse upon which he had indubitably meant to
+open, relative to this mysterious alienation. But she had the comfort
+to be satisfied, that he saw and believed in her sincere
+participation in his feelings; while he allowed for the grateful
+attachment that bound her to a friend so loved; who, to her at least,
+still manifested a fervour of regard that resisted all change; alike
+from this new partiality, and from the undisguised, and even
+strenuous opposition of the Memorialist to its indulgence."
+
+The Memoirs of Dr. Burney, by his daughter, published in 1832,
+together with her Diary and Letters, supplied the materials of Lord
+Macaulay's celebrated article on Madame D'Arblay in the "Edinburgh
+Review" for January, 1843, since reprinted amongst his Essays. He
+describes the Memoirs as a book "which it is impossible to read
+without a sensation made up of mirth, shame, and loathing," and
+adds:--"The two works are lying side by side before us; and we never
+turn from the Memoirs to the Diary without a sense of relief. The
+difference is as great as the difference between the atmosphere of a
+perfumer's shop, scented with lavender water and jasmine soap, and
+the air of a heath on a fine morning in May."[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: Critical and Historical Essays (one volume edition),
+1851, p. 652. The Memoirs were composed between 1828 and 1832, more
+than forty years after the occurrence of the scenes I have quoted
+from them.]
+
+The passages I have quoted amply establish the justice of this
+comparison, for they are utterly irreconcileable with the unvarnished
+statements of the Diary; from which we learn that "Cecilia" was
+published about the beginning of June, when Johnson was absent from
+Streatham; that the Diarist had left Streatham prior to August 12th,
+and did not return to it again that year. How could she have passed
+many months there after she was entrusted with the great secret,
+which (as stated in "Thraliana") she only guessed in September or
+October?
+
+How again could Johnson have attributed Mrs. Thrale's conduct to
+caprices "partly wealthy," when he knew that one main source of her
+troubles was pecuniary; or how can his alleged sense of ill-treatment
+be reconciled with his own letters? That he groaned over the terrible
+disturbance of his habits involved in the abandonment of Streatham,
+is likely enough; but as the only words he uttered were, "That house
+is lost to _me_ for ever," and "Good morning, dear lady," the
+accompanying look is about as safe a foundation for a theory of
+conduct or feeling as Lord Burleigh's famous nod in "The Critic." The
+philosopher was at this very time an inmate of Streatham, and
+probably returned that same evening to register a sample of its
+hospitality. At all events, we know that, spite of hints and
+warnings, sighs and groans, he stuck to Streatham to the last; and
+finally left it with Mrs. Thrale, as a member of her family, to
+reside in her house at Brighton, as her guest, for six weeks.[1] To
+talk of conscious ill-treatment or wounded dignity, in the teeth of
+facts like these, is laughable.
+
+[Footnote 1: The Edinburgh reviewer says, "Johnson went in Oct. 1782
+from Streatham to Brighton, where he lived a kind of boarding-house
+life;" and adds, "he was not asked out into company with his
+fellow-lodgers." The Thrales had a handsome furnished house at
+Brighton, which is mentioned both in the Correspondence and
+Autobiography.
+
+It is amusing enough to watch these attempts to shade away the
+ruinous effect of the Brighton trip on Lord Macaulay's Streatham
+pathos.]
+
+Madame D'Arblay joined the party as Mrs. Thrale's guest on the 26th
+October, and on the 28th she writes:
+
+"At dinner, we had Dr. Delap and Mr. Selwyn, who accompanied us in
+the evening to a ball; as did also Dr. Johnson, 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,' he said, 'it cannot be worse than being alone.'
+Strange that he should think so! I am sure I am not of his mind."
+
+On the 29th, she records that Johnson behaved very rudely to Mr.
+Pepys, and fairly drove him from the house. The entry for November
+10th is remarkable:--"We spent this evening at Lady De Ferrars, where
+Dr. Johnson accompanied us, for the first time he has been invited of
+our parties since my arrival." On the 20th November, she tells us
+that Mrs. and the three Miss Thrales and herself got up early to
+bathe. "We then returned home, and dressed by candle-light, and, _as
+soon as we could get Dr. Johnson ready_, we set out upon our journey
+in a coach and a chaise, and arrived in Argyll Street at dinner time.
+Mrs. Thrale has there fixed her tent for this short winter, which
+will end with the beginning of April, when her foreign journey takes
+place."
+
+One incident of this Brighton trip is mentioned in the "Anecdotes":
+
+"We had got a little French print among us at Brighthelmstone, in
+November 1782, of some people skaiting, with these lines written
+under:
+
+ 'Sur un mince chrystal l'hyver conduit leurs pas,
+ Le precipice est sous la glace;
+ Telle est de nos plaisirs la legere surface,
+ Glissez, mortels; n'appuyez pas.'
+
+"And I begged translations from every body: Dr. Johnson gave me this:
+
+ 'O'er ice the rapid skater flies,
+ With sport above and death below;
+ Where mischief lurks in gay disguise,
+ Thus lightly touch and quickly go.'
+
+"He was, however, most exceedingly enraged when he knew that in the
+course of the season I had asked half a dozen acquaintance to do the
+same thing; and said, it was a piece of treachery, and done to make
+every body else look little when compared to my favourite friends the
+_Pepyses_, whose translations were unquestionably the best."[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: By Sir Lucas:
+
+ "O'er the ice, as o'er pleasure, you lightly should glide,
+ Both have gulphs which their flattering surfaces hide."
+
+By Sir William:
+
+ "Swift o'er the level how the skaiters slide,
+ And skim the glitt'ring surface as they go:
+ Thus o'er life's specious pleasures lightly glide,
+ But pause not, press not on the gulph below."]
+
+Madame D'Arblay's Diary describes the outward and visible state of
+things at Brighton. "Thraliana" lays bare the internal history, the
+struggles of the understanding and the heart:
+
+"At Brighthelmstone, whither I went when I left Streatham, 7th
+October 1782, I heard this comical epigram about the Irish
+Volunteers:
+
+ "'There's not one of us all, my brave boys, but would rather
+ Do ought than offend great King George our good father;
+ But our country, you know, my dear lads, is our _mother_,
+ And that is a much surer side than the other.'"
+
+"I had looked ill, or perhaps appeared to feel so much, that my
+eldest daughter would, out of tenderness perhaps, force me to an
+explanation. I could, however, have evaded it if I would; but my
+heart was bursting, and partly from instinctive desire of unloading
+it--partly, I hope, from principle, too--I called her into my room
+and fairly told her the truth; told her the strength of my passion
+for Piozzi, the impracticability of my living without him, the
+opinion I had of his merit, and the resolution I had taken to marry
+him. Of all this she could not have been ignorant before. I confessed
+my attachment to him and her together with many tears and agonies one
+day at Streatham; told them both that I wished I had two hearts for
+their sakes, but having only one I would break it between them, and
+give them each _ciascheduno la meta!_ After that conversation she
+consented to go abroad with me, and even appointed the place (Lyons),
+to which Piozzi meant to follow us. He and she talked long together
+on the subject; yet her never mentioning it again made me fear she
+was not fully apprized of my intent, and though her concurrence might
+have been more easily obtained when left only to my influence in a
+distant country, where she would have had no friend to support her
+different opinion--yet I scorned to take such mean advantage, and
+told her my story _now_, with the winter before her in which to take
+her measures--her guardians at hand--all displeased at the journey:
+and to console her private distress I called into the room to her my
+own bosom friend, my beloved Fanny Burney, whose interest as well as
+judgment goes all against my marriage; whose skill in life and
+manners is superior to that of any man or woman in this age or
+nation; whose knowledge of the world, ingenuity of expedient,
+delicacy of conduct, and zeal in the cause, will make her a
+counsellor invaluable, and leave me destitute of every comfort, of
+every hope, of every expectation.
+
+"Such are the hands to which I have cruelly committed thy cause--my
+honourable, ardent, artless Piozzi!! Yet I should not deserve the
+union I desire with the most disinterested of all human hearts, had I
+behaved with less generosity, or endeavoured to gain by cunning what
+is withheld by prejudice. Had I set my heart upon a scoundrel, I
+might have done virtuously to break it and get loose; but the man I
+love, I love for his honesty, for his tenderness of heart, his
+dignity of mind, his piety to God, his duty to his mother, and his
+delicacy to me. In being united to this man only can I be happy in
+this world, and short will be my stay in it, if it is not passed with
+him."
+
+"_Brighthelmstone, 16th November 1782_.--For him I have been
+contented to reverse the laws of nature, and request of my child that
+concurrence which, at my age and a widow, I am not required either by
+divine or human institutions to ask even of a parent. The life I gave
+her she may now more than repay, only by agreeing to what she will
+with difficulty prevent; and which, if she does prevent, will give
+her lasting remorse; for those who stab _me_ shall hear me groan:
+whereas if she will--but how can she?--gracefully or even
+compassionately consent; if she will go abroad with me upon the
+chance of his death or mine preventing our union, and live with me
+till she is of age-- ... perhaps there is no heart so callous by
+avarice, no soul so poisoned by prejudice, no head so feather'd by
+foppery, that will forbear to excuse her when she returns to the rich
+and the gay--for having saved the life of a mother thro' compliance,
+extorted by anguish, contrary to the received opinions of the world."
+
+"_Brighthelmstone, 19th November, 1782_.--What is above written,
+though intended only to unload my heart by writing it, I shewed in a
+transport of passion to Queeney and to Burney. Sweet Fanny Burney
+cried herself half blind over it; said there was no resisting such
+pathetic eloquence, and that, if she was the daughter instead of the
+friend, she should be tempted to attend me to the altar; but that,
+while she possessed her reason, nothing should seduce her to approve
+what reason itself would condemn: that children, religion, situation,
+country, and character--besides the diminution of fortune by the
+certain loss of 800_l._ a year, were too much to sacrifice for any
+_one man_. If, however, I were resolved to make the sacrifice, _a la
+bonne heure!_ it was an astonishing proof of an attachment very
+difficult for mortal man to repay."
+
+"I will talk no more about it."
+
+What comes next was written in London:
+
+"_Nov. 27, 1782_.--I have given my Piozzi some hopes--dear, generous,
+prudent, noble-minded creature; he will hardly permit himself to
+believe it ever can be--_come quei promessi miracoli_, says he, _che
+non vengono mai_. For rectitude of mind and native dignity of soul I
+never saw his fellow."
+
+"_Dec. 1, 1782_.--The guardians have met upon the scheme of putting
+our girls in Chancery. I was frighted at the project, not doubting
+but the Lord Chancellor would stop us from leaving England, as he
+would certainly see no joke in three young heiresses, his wards,
+quitting the kingdom to frisk away with their mother into Italy:
+besides that I believe Mr. Crutchley proposed it merely for a
+stumbling-block to my journey, as he cannot bear to have Hester out
+of his sight.
+
+"Nobody much applauded my resolution in going, but Johnson and Cator
+said they would not concur in stopping me by violence, and Crutchley
+was forced to content himself with intending to put the ladies under
+legal protection as soon as we should be across the sea. This measure
+I much applaud, for if I die or marry in Italy their fortunes will be
+safer in Chancery than any how else. Cator[1] said _I_ had a right to
+say that going to Italy would benefit the children as much as _they_
+had to say it would _not_; but I replied that as I really did not
+mean anything but my own private gratification by the voyage, nothing
+should make me say I meant _their_ good by it; and that it would be
+like saying I eat roast beef to mend my daughters' complexions. The
+result of all is that we certainly _do go_. I will pick up what
+knowledge and pleasure I can here this winter to divert myself, and
+perhaps my _compagno fidele_ in distant climes and future times, with
+the recollection of England and its inhabitants, all which I shall be
+happy and content to leave _for him_."
+
+[Footnote 1: _Note by Mrs. T.:_ "Cator said likewise that the
+attorney's bill ought to be paid by the ladies as a bill of Mr.
+Thrale's, but I replied that perhaps I might marry and give my estate
+away, and if so it would be unjust that they should pay the bill
+which related to that estate only. Besides, if I should leave it to
+Hester, says I, ... why should Susan and Sophy and Cecilia and
+Harriet pay the lawyer's bill for their sister's land? He agreed to
+this plea, and I will live on bread and water, but I will pay Norris
+myself. 'Tis but being a better huswife in pins."]
+
+Madame D'Arblay writes, Friday, December 27th, 1782:
+
+"I dined with Mrs. Thrale and Dr. Johnson, who was very comic and
+good-humoured.... Mrs. Thrale, who was to have gone with me to Mrs.
+Orde's, gave up her visit in order to stay with Dr. Johnson. Miss
+Thrale, therefore, and I went together."
+
+I return to "Thraliana":
+
+"_January_, 1783.--A fit of jealousy seized me the other day: some
+viper had stung me up to a notion that my Piozzi was fond of a Miss
+Chanon. I call'd him gently to account, and after contenting myself
+with slight excuses, told him that, whenever we married, I should,
+however, desire to see as little as possible of the lady _chez
+nous_."
+
+There is a large gap in "Thraliana" just in the most interesting part
+of the story of her parting with Piozzi in 1783, and his recall.
+
+"_January 29, 1783_.--Adieu to all that's dear, to all that's lovely;
+I am parted from my life, my soul, my Piozzi. If I can get health and
+strength to write my story here, 'tis all I wish for now--oh misery!
+[Here are four pages missing.] The cold dislike of my eldest daughter
+I thought might wear away by familiarity with his merit, and that we
+might live tolerably together, or, at least, part friends--but no;
+her aversion increased daily, and she communicated it to the others;
+they treated _me_ insolently, and _him_ very strangely--running away
+whenever he came as if they saw a serpent--and plotting with their
+governess--a cunning Italian--how to invent lyes to make me hate him,
+and twenty such narrow tricks. By these means the notion of my
+partiality took air, and whether Miss Thrale sent him word slily or
+not I cannot tell, but on the 25th January, 1783, Mr. Crutchley came
+hither to conjure me not to go to Italy; he had heard such things, he
+said, and by _means_ next to _miraculous_. The next day, Sunday,
+26th, Fanny Burney came, said I must marry him instantly or give him
+up; that my reputation would be lost else.
+
+"I actually groaned with anguish, threw myself on the bed in an agony
+which my fair daughter beheld with frigid indifference. She had
+indeed never by one tender word endeavoured to dissuade me from the
+match, but said, coldly, that if I _would_ abandon my children I
+_must_; that their father had not deserved such treatment from me;
+that I should be punished by Piozzi's neglect, for that she knew he
+hated me; and that I turned out my offspring to chance for his sake,
+like puppies in a pond to swim or drown according as Providence
+pleased; that for her part she must look herself out a place like the
+other servants, for my face would she never see more.' 'Nor write to
+me?' said I. 'I shall not, madam,' replied she with a cold sneer,
+'easily find out your address; for you are going you know not
+whither, I believe.'
+
+"Susan and Sophy said nothing at all, but they taught the two young
+ones to cry 'Where are you going, mama? will you leave us and die as
+our poor papa did?' There was no standing _that_., so I wrote my
+lover word that my mind was all distraction, and bid him come to me
+the next morning, 27th January--my birthday--and spent the Sunday
+night in torture not to be described. My falsehood to my Piozzi, my
+strong affection for him, the incapacity I felt in myself to resign
+the man I so adored, the hopes I had so cherished, inclined me
+strongly to set them all at defiance, and go with him to church to
+sanctify the promises I had so often made him; while the idea of
+abandoning the children of my first husband, who left me so nobly
+provided for, and who depended on my attachment to his offspring,
+awakened the voice of conscience, and threw me on my knees to pray
+for _His_ direction who was hereafter to judge my conduct. His grace
+illuminated me, His power strengthened me, and I flew to my
+daughter's bed in the morning and told her my resolution to resign my
+own, my dear, my favourite purpose, and to prefer my children's
+interest to my love. She questioned my ability to make the sacrifice;
+said one word from him would undo all my--[Here two pages are
+missing].
+
+"I told Dr. Johnson and Mr. Crutchley three days ago that I had
+determined--seeing them so averse to it--that I would not go abroad,
+but that, if I did not leave England, I _would_ leave London, where I
+had not been treated to my mind, and where I had flung away much
+unnecessary money with little satisfaction; that I was greatly in
+debt, and somewhat like distress'd: that borrowing was always bad,
+but of one's children worst: that Mr. Crutchley's objection to their
+lending me their money when I had a mortgage to offer as security,
+was unkind and harsh: that I would go live in a little way at Bath
+till I had paid all my debts and cleared my income: that I would no
+more be tyrannized over by people who hated or people who plundered
+me, in short that I would retire and save my money and lead this
+uncomfortable life no longer. They made little or no reply, and I am
+resolved to do as I declared. I will draw in my expenses, lay by
+every shilling I can to pay off debts and mortgages, and perhaps--who
+knows? I may in six or seven years be freed from all incumbrances,
+and carry a clear income of 2500_l._ a year and an estate of 500_l._
+in land to the man of my heart. May I but live to discharge my
+obligations to those who _hate me_; it will be paradise to discharge
+them to him who _loves me_."
+
+"_April, 1783_.--I will go to Bath: nor health, nor strength, nor my
+children's affections, have I. My daughter does not, I suppose, much
+delight in this scheme [viz, retrenchment of expenses and removal to
+Bath], but why should I lead a life of delighting her, who would not
+lose a shilling of interest or an ounce of pleasure to save my life
+from perishing? When I was near losing my existence from the
+contentions of my mind, and was seized with a temporary delirium in
+Argyll Street, she and her two eldest sisters laughed at my distress,
+and observed to dear Fanny Burney, that it was _monstrous droll_.
+_She_ could hardly suppress her indignation.
+
+"Piozzi was ill.... A sore throat, Pepys said it was, with four
+ulcers in it: the people about me said it had been lanced, and I
+mentioned it slightly before the girls.' Has he cut his own throat?'
+says Miss Thrale in her quiet manner. This was less inexcusable
+because she hated him, and the other was her sister; though, had she
+exerted the good sense I thought her possessed of, she would not have
+treated him so: had she adored, and fondled, and respected him as he
+deserved from her hands, and from the heroic conduct he shewed in
+January when he gave into her hands, that dismal day, all my letters
+containing promises of marriage, protestations of love, &c., who
+knows but she might have kept us separated? But never did she once
+caress or thank me, never treat him with common civility, except on
+the very day which gave her hopes of our final parting. Worth while
+to be sure it was, to break one's heart for her! The other two are,
+however, neither wiser nor kinder; all swear by her I believe, and
+follow her footsteps exactly. Mr. Thrale had not much heart, but his
+fair daughters have none at all."[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: This is the very accusation they brought against her.]
+
+Johnson was not called in to counsel on these matters of the heart,
+but he was not cast off or neglected. Madame D'Arblay lands him in
+Argyll Street on the 20th November, 1782. We hear of him at Mrs.
+Thrale's house or in her company repeatedly from Madame D'Arblay and
+Dr. Lort. "Johnson," writes Dr. Lort, January 28th, 1783, "is much
+better. I saw him the other evening at Madame Thrale's in very good
+spirits." Boswell says:
+
+"On Friday, March 21, (1783) having arrived in London the night
+before, I was glad to find him at Mrs. Thrale's house, in Argyle
+Street, appearances of friendship between them being still kept up. I
+was shown into his room; and after the first salutation he said, 'I
+am glad you are come; I am very ill'....
+
+"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."
+
+This is quite decisive so far as Boswell is concerned, and disposes
+at once of all his preceding insinuations to her disadvantage. He had
+not seen her before since Thrale's death; and now, finding them
+together and jealously scrutinising their tone and manner towards
+each, he imagined all to be as well as formerly.[1] That they were on
+the point of living apart, and of keeping up their habitual
+interchange of mind exclusively by letters, is no proof that either
+was capriciously or irrecoverably estranged.
+
+[Footnote 1: "Now on March 21, 1783, fifteen months before the
+marriage in question, Boswell speaks of the severance of the old
+friendship as effected: 'appearances of friendship,' he says, 'were
+still maintained between them.' Boswell was at feud with the lady
+when he wrote, as we all know. But his evidence is surely sufficient
+as to the fact of the rupture, though not as to its causes."--_(Edin.
+Rev._ p. 510.) Boswell's concluding evidence, that to the best of his
+knowledge and observation, there was no change or rupture, is
+suppressed!]
+
+The pleasures of intimacy in friendship depend far more on external
+circumstances than people of a sentimental turn of mind are willing
+to concede; and when constant companionship ceases to suit the
+convenience of both parties, the chances are that it will be dropped
+on the first favourable opportunity. Admiration, esteem, or affection
+may continue to be felt for one whom, from altered habits or new
+ties, we can no longer receive as an inmate or an established member
+of the family. Johnson was now in his seventy-fourth year, haunted by
+the fear of death, and fond of dwelling nauseously on his ailments
+and proposed remedies. From what passed at Brighton, it would seem
+that there were moods in which he was positively unbearable, and
+could not be received in a house without driving every one else out
+of it. In a roomy mansion like Streatham he might be endured, because
+he could be kept out of the way; but in an ordinary town-house or
+small establishment, such a guest would resemble an elephant in a
+private menagerie.
+
+There is also a very great difference, when arrangements are to be
+made for the domestication of a male visitor, between a family with a
+male head, and one consisting exclusively of females. Let any widow
+with daughters make the case her own, and imagine herself
+domesticated in Argyll or Harley Street with the lexicographer. The
+manly authority of Thrale was required to keep Johnson in order quite
+as much as to steady the imputed flightiness of the lady; and his
+idolaters must really remember that she was a sentient being, with
+feelings and affections which she was fully entitled to consult in
+arranging her scheme of life. When Lord Macaulay and his school
+tacitly assume that these are to weigh as dust in the balance against
+the claims of learning, they argue like sundry upholders of the
+temporal sovereignty of the Pope, who contend that his subjects
+should complacently endure any amount of oppression rather than
+endanger (what they deem) the vital interests of the Church. When it
+is maintained that the discomfort was amply repaid by the glory he
+conferred, we are reminded of what the Strasbourg goose undergoes for
+fame: "Crammed with food, deprived of drink, and fixed near a great
+fire, before which it is nailed with its feet upon a plank, this
+goose passes, it must be owned, an uncomfortable life. The torment
+would indeed be intolerable, if the idea of the lot which awaits him
+did not serve as a consolation. But when he reflects that his liver,
+bigger than himself, loaded with truffles, and clothed in a
+scientific _pate_, will, through the instrumentality of M. Corcellet,
+diffuse all over Europe the glory of his name, he resigns himself to
+his destiny, and suffers not a tear to flow."[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: Almanach des Gourmands.]
+
+Her case for a separation _de corps_ is thus stated in the "Anecdotes
+":
+
+"All these exactnesses in a man who was nothing less than exact
+himself, made him extremely impracticable as an inmate, though most
+instructive as a companion, and useful as a friend. Mr. Thrale too
+could sometimes overrule his rigidity, by saying coldly, 'There,
+there, now we have had enough for one lecture, Dr. Johnson, we will
+not be upon education any more till after dinner, if you please,'--or
+some such speech; but when there was nobody to restrain his dislikes,
+it was extremely difficult to find any body with whom he could
+converse, without living always on the verge of a quarrel, or of
+something too like a quarrel to be pleasing. I came into the room,
+for example, one evening, where he and a gentleman, whose abilities
+we all respected exceedingly, were sitting; a lady who had walked in
+two minutes before me had blown 'em both into a flame, by whispering
+something to Mr. S----d, which he endeavoured to explain away, so as
+not to affront the Doctor, whose suspicions were all alive. 'And have
+a care, Sir,' said he, just as I came in; 'the old lion will not bear
+to be tickled.'[1] The other was pale with rage, the lady wept at the
+confusion she had caused, and I could only say with Lady Macbeth,
+
+ 'So! you've displaced the mirth, broke the good meeting
+ With most admir'd disorder.'
+
+"Such accidents, however, occurred too often, and I was forced to
+take advantage of my lost lawsuit, and plead inability of purse to
+remain longer in London or its vicinage. I had been crossed in my
+intentions of going abroad, and found it convenient, for every reason
+of health, peace, and pecuniary circumstances, to retire to Bath,
+where I knew Mr. Johnson would not follow me, and where I could for
+that reason command some little portion of time for my own use; a
+thing impossible while I remained at Streatham or at London, as my
+hours, carriage, and servants, had long been at his command, who
+would not rise in the morning till twelve o'clock perhaps, and oblige
+me to make breakfast for him till the bell rung for dinner, though
+much displeased if the toilet was neglected, and though much of the
+time we passed together was spent in blaming or deriding, very
+justly, my neglect of economy, and waste of that money which might
+make many families happy. The original reason of our connexion, his
+_particularly disordered health and spirits_[2], had been long at an
+end, and he had no other ailments than old age and general infirmity,
+which every professor of medicine was ardently zealous and generally
+attentive to palliate, and to contribute all in their power for the
+prolongation of a life so valuable.
+
+"Veneration for his virtue, reverence for his talents, delight in his
+conversation, and habitual endurance of a yoke my husband first put
+upon me, and of which he contentedly bore his share for sixteen or
+seventeen years, made me go on so long with Mr. Johnson; but the
+perpetual confinement I will own to have been terrifying in the first
+years of our friendship, and irksome in the last, nor could I pretend
+to support it without help, when my coadjutor was no more. To the
+assistance we gave him, the shelter our house afforded to his uneasy
+fancies, and to the pains we took to soothe or repress them, the
+world perhaps is indebted for the three political pamphlets, the new
+edition and correction of his Dictionary, and for the Poets' Lives,
+which he would scarce have lived, I think, and kept his faculties
+entire, to have written, had not incessant care been exerted at the
+time of his first coming to be our constant guest in the country; and
+several times after that, when he found himself particularly
+oppressed with diseases incident to the most vivid and fervent
+imaginations. I shall for ever consider it as the greatest honour
+which could be conferred on any one, to have been the confidential
+friend of Dr. Johnson's health; and to have in some measure, with Mr.
+Thrale's assistance, saved from distress at least, if not from worse,
+a mind great beyond the comprehension of common mortals and good
+beyond all hope of imitation from perishable beings."
+
+[Footnote 1: This must be the quarrel between Johnson and Seward at
+which Miss Streatfield cried. _(Ante,_ p. 116.)]
+
+[Footnote 2: These words are underlined in the manuscript.]
+
+This was written in Italy in 1785, when, painfully alive to the
+insults heaped upon her on Johnson's account, she may be excused for
+dwelling on what she had endured for his sake. But if, as may be
+inferred from her statement, some of the cordiality shewn him during
+the palmy days of their intimacy was forced, this rather enhances
+than lessens the merit of her services, which thus become elevated
+into sacrifices. The question is not how she uniformly felt, but how
+she uniformly behaved to him; and the fact of her being obliged to
+retire to Bath to get out of his way proves that there had been no
+rupture, no coolness, no serious offence given or taken on either
+side, up to April, 1783; just one year-and-a-half after the alleged
+expulsion from Streatham.
+
+There were ample avowable reasons for her retirement, and no
+suspicion could have crossed Johnson's mind that he was an
+incumbrance, or he would not have been found at her house by Boswell,
+as he was found on the 21st March, 1783, when she said "she was going
+to Bath, and should have been sorry to leave Dr. Johnson before I
+came." Considering the heart-rending struggle in which she was
+engaged at this time, with the aggravated infliction of an
+unsympathising and dogmatic friend, the wonder is how she retained
+her outward placidity at all.
+
+"_Sunday Morning, 6th April_, 1783.--I have been very busy preparing
+to go to Bath and save my money; the Welch settlement has been
+examined and rewritten by Cator's desire in such a manner that a will
+can revoke it or charge the estate, or anything. I signed my
+settlement yesterday, and, before I slept, wrote my will, charging
+the estate with pretty near _3000l_. But what signifies it? My
+daughters deserve no thanks from my tenderness and they want no
+pecuniary help from my purse--let me provide in some measure, for my
+dear, my absent Piozzi.--God give me strength to part with him
+courageously.--I expect him every instant to breakfast with me for
+the _last time_.--Gracious Heavens, what words are these! Oh no, for
+mercy may we but meet again! and without diminished kindness. Oh my
+love, my love!
+
+"We did meet and part courageously. I persuaded him to bring his old
+friend Mecci, who goes abroad with him and has long been his
+confidant, to keep the meeting from being too tender, the separation
+from being too poignant--his presence was a restraint on our conduct,
+and a witness of our vows, which we renewed with fervour, and will
+keep sacred in absence, adversity, and age. When all was over I flew
+to my dearest, loveliest friend, my Fanny Burney, and poured all my
+sorrows into her tender bosom."
+
+"_Bath, April 14th, 1783._--Here I am, settled in my plan of economy,
+with three daughters, three maids and a man," &c.
+
+Piozzi left England the night of the 8th May, 1783.
+
+ "Come, friendly muse! some rhimes discover
+ With which to meet my dear at Dover,
+ Fondly to bless my wandering lover
+ And make him dote on dirty Dover.
+ Call each fair wind to waft him over,
+ Nor let him linger long at Dover,
+ But there from past fatigues recover,
+ And write his love some lines from Dover.
+ Too well he knows his skill to move her,
+ To meet him two years hence at Dover,
+ When happy with her handsome rover
+ She'll bless the day she din'd at Dover."
+
+"_Russell Street, Bath, Thursday, 8th May_, 1783.--I sent him these
+verses to divert him on his passage. Dear angel! _this day_ he leaves
+a nation to which he was sent for my felicity perhaps, I hope for his
+own. May I live but to make him happy, and hear him say 'tis _me_
+that make him so!"--
+
+In a note on the passage in which he states that Johnson studiously
+avoided all mention of Streatham or the family after Thrale's death,
+Hawkins says:--"It seems that between him and the widow there was a
+formal taking of leave, for I find in his Diary the following note:
+'1783, April 5th, I took leave of Mrs. Thrale. I was much moved. I
+had some expostulations with her. She said she was likewise affected.
+I commended the Thrales with great good will to God; may my petitions
+have been heard.'" This being the day before her parting interview
+with Piozzi, no doubt she was much affected: and as the newspapers
+had already taken up the topic of her engagement, the expostulations
+probably referred to it.
+
+Preceding commentators were not bound to know what is now learned
+from "Thraliana"; but they were bound to know what might always have
+been learned from Johnson's printed letters; and the tone of these
+from the separation in April, 1783, to the marriage in July, 1784, is
+identically the same as at any period of the intimacy which can be
+specified. There are the same warm expressions of regard, the same
+gratitude for acknowledged kindness, the same alternations of hope
+and disappointment, the same medical details, and the same reproaches
+for silence or fancied coldness, in which he habitually indulged
+towards all his female correspondents. Shew me a complaint or
+reproach, and I will instantly match it with one from a period when
+the intimacy was confessedly and notoriously at its height. If her
+occasional explosions of irritability are to be counted, what
+inference is to be drawn from Johnson's depreciatory remarks on her,
+and indeed on everybody, so carefully treasured up by Hawkins and
+Boswell?
+
+On June 13th, 1783, he writes to her:
+
+"Your last letter was very pleasing; it expressed kindness to me, and
+some degree of placid acquiescence in your present mode of life,
+_which is, I think, the best which is at present within your reach_.
+
+"My powers and attention have for a long time been almost wholly
+employed upon my health, I hope not wholly without success, but
+solitude is very tedious."
+
+She replies:
+
+"Bath, June 15th, 1783.
+
+"I believe it is too true, my dear Sir, that you think on little
+except yourself and your own health, but then they are subjects on
+which every one else would think too--and that is a great
+consolation.
+
+"I am willing enough to employ all my thoughts upon _myself_, but
+there is nobody here who wishes to think with or about me, so I am
+very sick and a little sullen, and disposed now and then to say, like
+king David, 'My lovers and my friends have been put away from me, and
+my acquaintance hid out of my sight.' If the last letter I wrote
+showed some degree of placid acquiescence in a situation, which,
+however displeasing, is the best I can get at just now, I pray God to
+keep me in that disposition, and to lay no more calamity upon me
+which may again tempt me to murmur and complain. _In the meantime
+assure yourself of my undiminished kindness and veneration: they have
+been long out of accident's power either to lessen or increase."_....
+
+"That _you_ should be solitary is a sad thing, and a strange one too,
+when every body is willing to drop in, and for a quarter of an hour
+at least, save you from a _tete-a-tete_ with yourself. I never could
+catch a moment when you were alone whilst we were in London, and Miss
+Thrale says the same thing."
+
+A few days afterwards, June 19th, he writes:
+
+"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."
+
+Two days before, he had suffered a paralytic stroke, and lost the
+power of speech for a period. After minutely detailing his ailments
+and their treatment by his medical advisers, he proceeds:
+
+"How this will be received by you I know not. I hope you will
+sympathise with me; but perhaps
+
+ "My mistress gracious, mild, and good,
+ Cries! Is he dumb? 'Tis time he should.
+
+"But can this be possible? I hope it cannot. I hope that what, when I
+could speak, I spoke of you, and to you, will be in a sober and
+serious hour remembered by you; and surely it cannot be remembered
+but with some degree of kindness. I have loved you 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.
+
+"O God! give me comfort and confidence in Thee; forgive my sins; and
+if it be thy good pleasure, relieve my diseases for Jesus Christ's
+sake. Amen.
+
+_"I am almost ashamed of this querulous letter, but now it is
+written, let it go."_
+
+The Edinburgh reviewer quotes the first paragraph of this letter to
+prove Johnson's consciousness of change on her side, and omits all
+mention of the passages in which he turns to her as "a settled and
+unalienable friend," and apologises for his querulousness!
+
+Some time before (November 1782), she had written to him:
+
+"My health is growing very bad, to be sure. I will starve still more
+rigidly for a while, and watch myself carefully; but more than six
+months will I not bestow upon that subject; you shall not have in me
+a valetudinary correspondent, _who is always writing such letters,
+that to read the labels tied on bottles by an apothecary's boy would
+be more eligible and amusing_; nor will I live, like Flavia in 'Law's
+Serious Call,' who spends half her time and money on herself, with
+sleeping draughts, and waking draughts, and cordials and broths. My
+desire is always to determine against my own gratification, so far as
+shall be possible for my body to co-operate with my mind, and you
+will not suspect me of wearing blisters, and living wholly upon
+vegetables for sport. If that will do, the disorder may be removed;
+but if health is gone, and gone for ever, we will act as Zachary
+Pearce the famous bishop of Rochester did, when he lost the wife he
+loved so--call for one glass to the health of her who is departed,
+never more to return--and so go quietly back to the usual duties of
+life, and forbear to mention her again from that time till the last
+day of it."
+
+Instead of acting on the same principle, he perseveres in addressing
+his "ideal Urania" as if she had been a consulting physician:
+
+"London, June 20th, 1783.
+
+"DEAREST MADAM,--I think to send you for some time a regular diary.
+You will forgive the gross images which disease must necessarily
+present. Dr. Lawrence said that medical treatises should be always in
+Latin. The two vesicatories did not perform well," &c. &c.
+
+"June 23, 1783.
+
+"_Your offer, dear Madam, of coming to me, is charmingly kind_; but I
+will lay it up for future use, and then let it not be considered as
+obsolete; _a time of dereliction may come, when I may have hardly any
+other friend_, but in the present exigency I cannot name one who has
+been deficient in civility or attention. What man can do for man has
+been done for me. Write to me very often."
+
+That the offer was serious and heartfelt, is clear from "Thraliana":
+
+"_Bath, June 24th_, 1783.--A stroke of the palsy has robbed Johnson
+of his speech, I hear. Dreadful event! and I at a distance. Poor
+fellow! A letter from himself, _in his usual style_, convinces me
+that none of his faculties have failed, and his physicians say that
+all present danger is over."
+
+He writes:
+
+"June 24th, 1783.
+
+"Both Queeny's letter and yours gave me, to-day, great pleasure.
+Think as well and as kindly of me as you can, but do not flatter me.
+Cool reciprocations of esteem are the great comforts of life;
+hyberbolical praise only corrupts the tongue of the one, and the ear
+of the other."
+
+"June 28th, 1783.
+
+"Your letter is just such as I desire, and as from you I hope always
+to deserve."
+
+Her own state of mind at this time may be collected from "Thraliana":
+
+"_June, _1783.--Most sincerely do I regret the sacrifice I have made
+of health, happiness, and the society of a worthy and amiable
+companion, to the pride and prejudice of three insensible girls, who
+would see nature perish without concern ... were their gratification
+the cause.
+
+"The two youngest have, for ought I see, hearts as impenetrable as
+their sister. They will all starve a favourite animal--all see with
+unconcern the afflictions of a friend; and when the anguish I
+suffered on their account last winter, in Argyll Street, nearly took
+away my life and reason, the younger ridiculed as a jest those
+agonies which the eldest despised as a philosopher. When all is said,
+they are exceeding valuable girls--beautiful in person, cultivated in
+understanding, and well-principled in religion: high in their
+notions, lofty in their carriage, and of intents equal to their
+expectations; wishing to raise their own family by connections with
+some more noble ... and superior to any feeling of tenderness which
+might clog the wheels of ambition. What, however, is my state? who am
+condemned to live with girls of this disposition? to teach without
+authority; to be heard without esteem; to be considered by them as
+their superior in fortune, while I live by the money borrowed from
+them; and in good sense, when they have seen me submit my judgment to
+theirs at the hazard of my life and wits. Oh, 'tis a pleasant
+situation! and whoever would wish, as the Greek lady phrased it, to
+teize himself and repent of his sins, let him borrow his children's
+money, be in love against their interest and prejudice, forbear to
+marry by their advice, and then shut himself up and live with
+them."[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: After Buckingham had been some time married to Fairfax's
+daughter, he said it was like marrying the devil's daughter and
+keeping house with your father-in-law.]
+
+Is it possible to misconstrue such a letter as the following from
+Johnson to her, now that the querulous and desponding tone of the
+writer is familiar to us?
+
+"London, Nov. 13th, 1783.
+
+"DEAR MADAM,--Since you have written to me with the attention and
+tenderness of ancient time, your letters give me a great part of the
+pleasure which a life of solitude admits. You will never bestow any
+share of your good-will on one who deserves better. Those that have
+loved longest, love best. A sudden blaze of kindness may by a single
+blast of coldness be extinguished, but that fondness which length of
+time has connected with many circumstances and occasions, though it
+may for a while be suppressed by disgust or resentment, with or
+without a cause, is hourly revived by accidental recollection.[1] To
+those that have lived long together, every thing heard and every
+thing seen recals some pleasure communicated, or some benefit
+conferred, some petty quarrel, or some slight endearment. Esteem of
+great powers, or amiable qualities newly discovered, may embroider a
+day or a week, but a friendship of twenty years is interwoven with
+the texture of life. A friend may be often found and lost, but an
+_old friend_ never can be found, and Nature has provided that he
+cannot easily be lost."
+
+[Footnote 1:
+
+ "Yet, oh yet thyself deceive not:
+ Love may sink by slow decay,
+ But by sudden wrench believe not
+ Hearts can thus be torn away."--BYRON.]
+
+The date of the following scene, as described by Madame D'Arblay in
+the "Memoirs," is towards the end of November, 1783:
+
+"Nothing had yet publicly transpired, with certainty or authority,
+relative to the projects of Mrs. Thrale, who had now been nearly a
+year at Bath[1]; though nothing was left unreported, or unasserted,
+with respect to her proceedings. Nevertheless, how far Dr. Johnson
+was himself informed, or was ignorant on the subject, neither Dr.
+Burney nor his daughter could tell; and each equally feared to learn.
+
+"Scarcely an instant, however, was the latter left alone in Bolt
+Court, ere she saw the justice of her long apprehensions; for while
+she planned speaking upon some topic that might have a chance to
+catch the attention of the Doctor, a sudden change from kind
+tranquillity to strong austerity took place in his altered
+countenance; and, startled and affrighted, she held her peace....
+
+"Thus passed a few minutes, in which she scarcely dared breathe;
+while the respiration of the Doctor, on the contrary, was of
+asthmatic force and loudness; then, suddenly turning to her, with an
+air of mingled wrath and woe, he hoarsely ejaculated: 'Piozzi!'
+
+"He evidently meant to say more; but the effort with which he
+articulated that name robbed him of any voice for amplification, and
+his whole frame grew tremulously convulsed.
+
+"His guest, appalled, could not speak; but he soon discerned that it
+was grief from coincidence, not distrust from opposition of
+sentiment, that caused her taciturnity. This perception calmed him,
+and he then exhibited a face 'in sorrow more than anger.' His
+see-sawing abated of its velocity, and, again fixing his looks upon
+the fire, he fell into pensive rumination.
+
+"At length, and with great agitation, he broke forth with: 'She cares
+for no one! You, only--You, she loves still!--but no one--and nothing
+else!--You she still loves----'
+
+"A half smile now, though of no very gay character, softened a little
+the severity of his features, while he tried to resume some
+cheerfulness in adding: 'As ... she loves her little finger!'
+
+"It was plain by this burlesque, or, perhaps, playfully literal
+comparison, that he meant now, and tried, to dissipate the solemnity
+of his concern.
+
+"The hint was taken; his guest started another subject; and this he
+resumed no more. He saw how distressing was the theme to a hearer
+whom he ever wished to please, not distress; and he named Mrs. Thrale
+no more! Common topics took place, till they were rejoined by Dr.
+Burney, whom then, and indeed always, he likewise spared upon this
+subject."
+
+[Footnote 1: About six months.]
+
+After quoting this description at length, Lord Brougham remarks:
+
+"Now Johnson was, perhaps unknown to himself, in love with Mrs.
+Thrale, but for Miss Burney's thoughtless folly there can be no
+excuse. And her father, a person of the very same rank and profession
+with Mr. Piozzi, appears to have adopted the same senseless cant, as
+if it were less lawful to marry an Italian musician than an English.
+To be sure, Miss Burney says, that Mrs. Thrale was lineally descended
+from Adam de Saltsburg, who came over with the Conqueror. But
+assuredly that worthy, unable to write his name, would have held Dr.
+Johnson himself in as much contempt as his fortunate rival, and would
+have regarded his alliance as equally disreputable with the
+Italian's, could his consent have been asked."[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: Lives of Men of Letters, &c, vol. ii.]
+
+If the scene took place at all, it must have taken place within a few
+days after the profession of satisfied and unaltered friendship
+contained in Johnson's letter of November 13th. His next letter is to
+Miss Thrale:
+
+"Nov. 18th, 1783.
+
+"Dear Miss,--Here is a whole week, and nothing heard from your house.
+Baretti said what a wicked house it would be, and a wicked house it
+is. Of you, however, I have no complaint to make, for I owe you a
+letter. Still 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."
+
+On February 24th, 1784, Dr. Lort writes to Bishop Percy:
+
+"Poor Dr. Johnson has had a very bad winter, attended by Heberden and
+Brocklesby, who neither of them expected he would have survived the
+frost: that being gone, he still remains, and I hope will now
+continue, at least till the next severe one. It has indeed carried
+off a great many old people."
+
+Johnson to Mrs. Thrale:
+
+"March 10th, 1784.
+
+"Your kind expressions gave me great pleasure; do not reject me from
+your thoughts. Shall we ever exchange confidence by the fireside
+again?"
+
+He was so absorbed with his own complaints as to make no allowance
+for hers. Yet her health was in a very precarious state, and in the
+autumn of the same year, his complaints of silence and neglect were
+suspended by the intelligence that her daughter Sophia was lying at
+death's door. On March 27th, 1784, she writes:
+
+"You tell one of my daughters that you know not with distinctness the
+cause of my complaints. I believe she who lives with me knows them no
+better; one very dreadful one is however removed by dear Sophia's
+recovery. It is kind in you to quarrel no more about expressions
+which were not meant to offend; but unjust to suppose, I have not
+lately thought myself dying. Let us, however, take the Prince of
+Abyssinia's advice, _and not add to the other evils of life the
+bitterness of controversy._ If courage is a noble and generous
+quality, let us exert it _to_ the last, and _at_ the last: if faith
+is a Christian virtue, let us willingly receive and accept that
+support it will most surely bestow--and do permit me to repeat those
+words with which I know not why you were displeased: _Let us leave
+behind us the best example that we can_.
+
+"All this is not written by a person in high health and happiness,
+but by a fellow-sufferer, who has more to endure than she can tell,
+or you can guess; and now let us talk of the Severn salmons, which
+will be coming in soon; I shall send you one of the finest, and shall
+be glad to hear that your appetite is good."
+
+Johnson to Mrs. Thrale:
+
+"April 21st, 1784.
+
+"The Hooles, Miss Burney, and Mrs. Hull (Wesley's sister), feasted
+yesterday with me very cheerfully on your noble salmon. Mr. Allen
+could not come, and I sent him a piece, and a great tail is still
+left."
+
+"April 26th, 1784.
+
+"Mrs. Davenant called to pay me a guinea, but I gave two for you.
+Whatever reasons you have for frugality, it is not worth while to
+save a guinea a year by withdrawing it from a public charity."
+
+"Whilst I am writing, the post has brought me your kind letter. Do
+not think with dejection of your own condition: a little patience
+will probably give you health: it will certainly give you riches, and
+all the accommodations that riches can procure."
+
+Up to this time she had put an almost killing restraint on her
+inclinations, and had acted according to Johnson's advice in
+everything but the final abandonment of Piozzi; yet Boswell reports
+him as saying, May 16th: "Sir, she has done everything wrong since
+Thrale's bridle was off her neck."
+
+The next extracts are from "Thraliana":
+
+"_Bath, Nov. 30th, 1783._--Sophia will live and do well; I have saved
+my daughter, perhaps obtained a friend. They are weary of seeing me
+suffer so, and the eldest beg'd me yesterday not to sacrifice my life
+to her convenience. She now saw my love of Piozzi was incurable, she
+said. Absence had no effect on it, and my health was going so fast
+she found that I should soon be useless either to her or him. It was
+the hand of God and irresistible, she added, and begged me not to
+endure any longer such unnecessary misery.
+
+"So now we may be happy if we will, and now I trust _some_ [_(sic)
+query "no?_"] other cross accident will start up to torment us; I
+wrote my lover word that he might come and fetch me, but the Alps are
+covered with snow, and if his prudence is not greater than his
+affection--my life will yet be lost, for it depends on his safety.
+Should he come at my call, and meet with any misfortune on the road
+... death, with accumulated agonies, would end me. May Heaven avert
+such insupportable distress!"
+
+"_Dec._ 1783.--My dearest Piozzi's Miss Chanon is in distress. I will
+send her 10_l_. Perhaps he loved her; perhaps she loved _him_;
+perhaps both; yet I have and will have confidence in his honour. I
+will not suffer love or jealousy to narrow a heart devoted to _him_.
+He would assist her if he were in England, and _she_ shall not suffer
+for his absence, tho' I _do_. She and her father have reported many
+things to my prejudice; she will be ashamed of herself when she sees
+me forgive and assist her. O Lord, give me grace so to return good
+for evil as to obtain thy gracious favour who died to procure the
+salvation of thy professed enemies. 'Tis a good Xmas work!"
+
+"_Bath, Jan. 27th_, 1784.--On this day twelvemonths ... oh
+dreadfullest of all days to me I did I send for my Piozzi and tell
+him we must part. The sight of my countenance terrified Dr. Pepys, to
+whom I went into the parlour for a moment, and the sight of the
+agonies I endured in the week following would have affected anything
+but interest, avarice, and pride personified, ... with such, however,
+I had to deal, so my sorrows were unregarded. Seeing them continue
+for a whole year, indeed, has mollified my strong-hearted companions,
+and they _now_ relent in earnest and wish me happy: I would now
+therefore be _loath to dye_, yet how shall I recruit my constitution
+so as to live? The pardon certainly did arrive the very instant of
+execution--for I was ill beyond all power of description, when my
+eldest daughter, bursting into tears, bid me call home the man of my
+heart, and not expire by slow torture in the presence of my children,
+who had my life in their power. 'You are dying _now_,' said she. 'I
+know it,' replied I, 'and I should die in peace had I but seen him
+_once again_.' 'Oh send for him,' said she, 'send for him quickly!'
+'He is at Milan, child,' replied I, 'a thousand miles off!' 'Well,
+well,' returns she, 'hurry him back, or I myself will send him an
+express.' At these words I revived, and have been mending ever since.
+This was the first time that any of us had named the name of Piozzi
+to each other since we had put our feet into the coach to come to
+Bath. I had always thought it a point of civility and prudence never
+to mention what could give nothing but offence, and cause nothing but
+disgust, while they desired nothing less than a revival of old
+uneasiness; so we were all silent on the subject, and Miss Thrale
+thought him dead."
+
+According to the Autobiography, the daughters did not conclusively
+relent till the end of April or the beginning of May, when a missive
+was dispatched for Piozzi, and Mrs. Thrale went to London to make the
+requisite preparations.
+
+ _Mrs. Thrale to Miss F. Burney_.
+
+ "Mortimer Street, Cavendish Square,
+ "Tuesday Night, May, 1784.
+
+"I am come, dearest Burney. It is neither dream nor fiction; though I
+love you dearly, or I would not have come. Absence and distance do
+nothing towards wearing out real affection; so you shall always find
+it in your true and tender H.L.T.
+
+"I am somewhat shaken bodily, but 'tis the mental shocks that have
+made me unable to bear the corporeal ones. 'Tis past ten o'clock,
+however, and I must lay myself down with the sweet expectation of
+seeing my charming friend in the morning to breakfast. I love Dr.
+Burney too well to fear him, and he loves me too well to say a word
+which should make me love him less."
+
+
+_Journal (Madame D'Arblay's) Resumed_.
+
+"May 17.--Let me now, my Susy, acquaint you a little more connectedly
+than I have done of late how I have gone on. The rest of that week I
+devoted almost wholly to sweet Mrs. Thrale, whose society was truly
+the most delightful of cordials to me, however, at times mixed with
+bitters the least palatable.
+
+"One day I dined with Mrs. Grarrick to meet Dr. Johnson, Mrs. Carter,
+Miss Hamilton, and Dr. and Miss Cadogan; and one evening I went to
+Mrs. Vesey, to meet almost everybody,--the Bishop of St. Asaph, and
+all the Shipleys, Bishop Chester and Mrs. Porteous, Mrs. and Miss
+Ord, Sir Joshua Reynolds and Miss Palmer, Mrs. Buller, all the
+Burrows, Mr. Walpole, Mrs. Boscawen, Mrs. Grarrick, and Miss More,
+and some others. But all the rest of my time I gave wholly to dear
+Mrs. Thrale, who lodged in Mortimer Street, and who saw nobody else.
+Were I not sensible of her goodness, and full of incurable affection
+for her, should I not be a monster?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"I parted most reluctantly with my dear Mrs. Thrale, whom, when or
+how, I shall see again, Heaven only knows! but in sorrow we
+parted--on _my_ side in real affliction."
+
+The excursion is thus mentioned in "Thraliana": "_28th May_,
+1784.--Here is the most sudden and beautiful spring ever seen after a
+dismal winter: so may God grant me a renovation of comfort after my
+many and sharp afflictions. I have been to London for a week to visit
+Fanny Burney, and to talk over my intended (and I hope approaching)
+nuptials, with Mr. Borghi: a man, as far as I can judge in so short
+an acquaintance with him, of good sense and real honour:--who loves
+my Piozzi, _likes_ my conversation, and wishes to serve us sincerely.
+He has recommended Duane to take my power of attorney, and Cator's
+loss will be the less felt. Duane's name is as high as the Monument,
+and his being known familiarly to Borghi will perhaps quicken his
+attention to our concerns.
+
+"Dear Burney, who loves me _kindly_ but the world _reverentially_,
+was, I believe, equally pained as delighted with my visit: ashamed to
+be seen in my company, much of her fondness for me must of course be
+diminished; yet she had not chatted freely so long with anybody but
+Mrs. Philips, that my coming was a comfort to her. We have told all
+to her father, and he behaved with the utmost propriety.
+
+"Nobody likes my settling at Milan except myself and Piozzi; but I
+think 'tis nobody's affair but our own: it seems to me quite
+irrational to expose ourselves to unnecessary insults, and by going
+straight to Italy all will be avoided."
+
+The crisis is told in "Thraliana":
+
+"_10th June_, 1784.--I sent these lines to meet Piozzi on his return.
+They are better than those he liked so last year at Dover:
+
+ "Over mountains, rivers, vallies,
+ See my love returns to Calais,
+ After all their taunts and malice,
+ Ent'ring safe the gates of Calais,
+ While delay'd by winds he dallies,
+ Fretting to be kept at Calais,
+ Muse, prepare some sprightly sallies
+ To divert my dear at Calais,
+ Say how every rogue who rallies
+ Envies him who waits at Calais
+ For her that would disdain a Palace
+ Compar'd to Piozzi, Love, and Calais."
+
+"_24th June_, 1784.--He is set out sure enough, here are letters from
+Turin to say so.... Now the Misses _must_ move; they are very loath
+to stir: from affection perhaps, or perhaps from art--'tis difficult
+to know.--Oh 'tis, yes, it is from tenderness, they want me to go
+with them to see Wilton, Stonehenge, &c.--I _will_ go with them to be
+sure."
+
+"_27th June, Sunday_.--We went to Wilton, and also to Fonthill; they
+make an admirable and curious contrast between ancient magnificence
+and modern glare: Gothic and Grecian again, however. A man of taste
+would rather possess Lord Pembroke's seat, or indeed a single room in
+it; but one feels one should live happier at Beckford's.--My
+daughters parted with me at last prettily enough _considering_ (as
+the phrase is). We shall perhaps be still better friends apart than
+together. Promises of correspondence and kindness were very sweetly
+reciprocated, and the eldest wished for Piozzi's safe return very
+obligingly.
+
+"I fancy two days more will absolutely bring him to Bath. The present
+moments are critical and dreadful, and would shake stronger nerves
+than mine! Oh Lord, strengthen me to do Thy will I pray."
+
+"_28th June_.--I am not _yet sure of_ seeing him again--not _sure_ he
+lives, not _sure_ he loves me _yet_.... Should anything happen now!!
+Oh, I will not trust myself with such a fancy: it will either kill me
+or drive me distracted."
+
+"_Bath, 2nd July_, 1784.--The happiest day of my whole life, I
+think--Yes, quite the happiest: my Piozzi came home yesterday and
+dined with me; but my spirits were too much agitated, my heart was
+too much dilated. I was too _painfully_ happy _then_; my sensations
+are more quiet to-day, and my felicity less tumultuous."
+
+Written in the margin of the last entry--"We shall go to London about
+the affairs, and there be married in the Romish Church."
+
+"_25th July_, 1784.--I am returned from church the happy wife of my
+lovely faithful Piozzi ... subject of my prayers, object of my
+wishes, my sighs, my reverence, my esteem.--His nerves have been
+horribly shaken, yet he lives, he loves me, and will be mine for
+ever. He has sworn, in the face of God and the whole Christian
+Church; Catholics, Protestants, all are witnesses."
+
+In one of her memorandum books she has set down:
+
+"We were married according to the Romish Church in one of our
+excursions to London, by Mr. Smith, Padre Smit as they called him,
+chaplain to the Spanish Ambassador.... Mr. Morgan tacked us together
+at St. James's, Bath, 25th July, 1784, and on the first day I think
+of September, certainly the first week, we took leave of England."
+
+When her first engagement with Piozzi became known, the newspapers
+took up the subject, and rang the changes on the amorous disposition
+of the widow, and the adroit cupidity of the fortune-hunter. On the
+announcement of the marriage, they recommenced the attack, and people
+of our day can hardly form a notion of the storm of obloquy that
+broke upon her, except from its traces, which have never been erased.
+To this hour, we may see them in the confirmed prejudices of writers
+like Mr. Croker and Lord Macaulay, who, agreeing in little else,
+agree in denouncing "this miserable _mes_alliance" with one who
+figures in their pages sometimes as a music-master, sometimes as a
+fiddler, never by any accident in his real character of a
+professional singer and musician of established reputation, pleasing
+manners, ample means, and unimpeachable integrity. The repugnance of
+the daughters to the match was reasonable and intelligible, but to
+appreciate the tone taken by her friends, we must bear in mind the
+social position of Italian singers and musical performers at the
+period. "Amusing vagabonds" are the epithets by which Lord Byron
+designates Catalani and Naldi, in 1809[1]; and such is the light in
+which they were undoubtedly regarded in 1784. Mario would have been
+treated with the same indiscriminating illiberality as Piozzi.
+
+[Footnote 1:
+
+ "Well may the nobles of our present race
+ Watch each distortion of a Naldi's face;
+ Well may they smile on Italy's buffoons,
+ And worship Catalani's pantaloons."
+
+"Naldi and Catalani require little notice; for the visage of the one
+and the salary of the other will enable us long to recollect these
+amusing vagabonds."--_English Bards and Scotch Reviewers_. Artists in
+general, and men of letters by profession, did not rank much higher
+in the fine world. (See Miss Berry's "England and France," vol. ii.
+p. 42.) A German author, non-noble, had a _liaison_ with a Prussian
+woman of rank. On her husband's death he proposed marriage, and was
+indignantly refused. The lady was conscious of no degradation from
+being his mistress, but would have forfeited both caste and
+self-respect by becoming his wife.]
+
+Did those who took the lead in censuring or repudiating Mrs. Piozzi,
+ever attempt to enter into her feelings, or weigh her conduct with
+reference to its tendency to promote her own happiness? Could they
+have done so, had they tried? Rarely can any one so identify himself
+or herself with another as to be sure of the soundness of the counsel
+or the justice of the reproof. She was neither impoverishing her
+children (who had all independent fortunes) nor abandoning them. She
+was setting public opinion at defiance, which is commonly a foolish
+thing to do; but what is public opinion to a woman whose heart is
+breaking, and who finds, after a desperate effort, that she is
+unequal to the sacrifice demanded of her? She accepted Piozzi
+deliberately, with full knowledge of his character; and she never
+repented of her choice.
+
+The Lady Cathcart, whose romantic story is mentioned in "Castle
+Rackrent," was wont to say:--"I have been married three times; the
+first for money, the second for rank, the third for love; and the
+third was worst of all." Mrs. Piozzi's experience would have led to
+an opposite conclusion. Her love match was a singularly happy one;
+and the consciousness that she had transgressed conventional
+observances or prejudices, not moral rules, enabled her to outlive
+and bear down calumny.[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: The _pros_ and _cons_ of the main question at issue are
+well stated in _Corinne_: "Ah, pour heureux,' interrompit le Comte
+d'Erfeuil, 'je n'en crois rien: on n'est heureux que par ce qui est
+convenable. La societe a, quoi qu'on fasse, beaucoup d'empire sur le
+bonheur; et ce qu'elle n'approuve pas, il ne faut jamais le faire.'
+'On vivrait done toujours pour ce que la societe dira de nous,'
+reprit Oswald; 'et ce qu'on pense et, ce qu'on sent ne servirait
+jamais de guide.' 'C'est tres bien dit,' reprit le comte,
+'tres-philosophiquement pense; mais avec ces maximes la, l'on se
+perd; et quand l'amour est passe, le blame de l'opinion reste. Moi
+qui vous parais leger, je ne ferai jamais rien qui puisse m'attirer
+la desapprobation du monde. On peut se permettre de petites libertes,
+d'aimables plaisanteries, qui annoncent de l'independance dans la
+maniere d'agir; car, quand cela touche au serieux.'--'Mais le
+serieux, repondit Lord Nelvil, 'c'est l'amour et le
+bonheur.'"--_Corinne_, liv. ix. ch. 1.]
+
+In reference to these passages, the Edinburgh reviewer remarks:
+
+"Nothing can be more reasonable; and we should certainly live in a
+more peaceful (if not more entertaining) world, if nobody in it
+reproved another until he had so far identified himself with the
+culprit as to be sure of the justice of the reproof; perhaps, also,
+if a fiddler were rated higher in society than a duke without
+accomplishments, and a carpenter far higher than either. But neither
+reasoning nor gallantry will alter the case, nor prevail over the
+world's prejudice against unequal marriages, any more than its
+prejudices in favour of birth and fashion. It has never been quite
+established to the satisfaction of the philosophic mind, why the rule
+of society should be that 'as the husband, so the wife is,' and why a
+lady who contracts a marriage below her station is looked on with far
+severer eyes than a gentleman _qui s'encanaille_ to the same degree.
+But these things are so,--as the next dame of rank and fortune, and
+widow of an M.P., who, rashly relying on Mr. Hayward's assertion that
+the world has grown wiser, espouses a foreign 'professional,' will
+assuredly find to her cost, although she may escape the ungenerous
+public attacks which poor Mrs. Piozzi earned by her connexion with
+literary men."
+
+In 1784 they hanged for crimes which we should think adequately
+punished by a short imprisonment; as they hooted and libelled for
+transgressions or errors which, whatever their treatment by a portion
+of our society, would certainly not provoke the thunders of our
+press. I think (though I made no assertion of the kind) that the
+world has grown wiser; and the reviewer admits as much when he says
+that his supposititious widow "may escape the ungenerous public
+attacks which poor Mrs. Piozzi earned by her connexion with literary
+men." But where do I recommend unequal marriages, or dispute the
+claims of birth and fashion, or maintain that a fiddler should be
+rated higher than a duke without accomplishments, and a carpenter
+_far_ higher than either? All this is utterly beside the purpose; and
+surely there is nothing reprehensible in the suggestion that, before
+harshly reproving another, we should do our best to test the justice
+of the reproof by trying to make the case our own. Goethe proposed to
+extend the self-same rule to criticism. One of his favourite canons
+was that a critic should always endeavour to place himself
+temporarily in the author's point of view. If the reviewer had done
+so, he might have avoided several material misapprehensions and
+misstatements, which it is difficult to reconcile with the friendly
+tone of the article or the known ability of the writer.
+
+Envy at Piozzi's good fortune sharpened the animosity of assailants
+like Baretti, and the loss of a pleasant house may have had a good
+deal to do with the sorrowing indignation of her set. Her meditated
+social extinction amongst them might have been commemorated in the
+words of the French epitaph:
+
+ "Ci git une de qui la vertu
+ Etait moins que la table encensee;
+ On ne plaint point la femme abattue,
+ Mais bien la table renversee."
+
+Which may be freely rendered:
+
+ "Here lies one who adulation
+ By dinners more than virtues earn'd;
+ Whose friends mourned not her reputation--
+ But her table--overturned."
+
+Madame D'Arblay has recorded what took place between Mrs. Piozzi and
+herself on the occasion:
+
+_Miss F. Burney to Mrs. Piozzi_.
+
+"Norbury Park, Aug. 10, 1784.
+
+"When my wondering eyes first looked over the letter I received last
+night, my mind instantly dictated a high-spirited vindication of the
+consistency, integrity, and faithfulness of the friendship thus
+abruptly reproached and cast away. But a sleepless night gave me
+leisure to recollect that you were ever as generous as precipitate,
+and that your own heart would do justice to mine, in the cooler
+judgment of future reflection. Committing myself, therefore, to that
+period, I determined simply to assure you, that if my last letter
+hurt either you or Mr. Piozzi, I am no less sorry than surprised; and
+that if it offended you, I sincerely beg your pardon.
+
+"Not to that time, however, can I wait to acknowledge the pain an
+accusation so unexpected has caused me, nor the heartfelt
+satisfaction with which I shall receive, when you are able to write
+it, a softer renewal of regard.
+
+"May Heaven direct and bless you!
+
+"F.B.
+
+"N.B. This is the sketch of the answer which F.B. most painfully
+wrote to the unmerited reproach of not sending _cordial
+congratulations_ upon a marriage which she had uniformly, openly, and
+with deep and avowed affliction, thought wrong."
+
+_Mrs. Piozzi to Miss Burney_.
+
+ "'Wellbeck Street, No. 33, Cavendish Square.
+ "'Friday, Aug. 13, 1784.
+
+"'Give yourself no serious concern, sweetest Burney, All is well, and
+I am too happy myself to make a friend otherwise; quiet your kind
+heart immediately, and love my husband if you love his and your
+
+"'H.L. PIOZZI.'
+
+"N.B. To this kind note, F.B. wrote the warmest and most affectionate
+and heartfelt reply; but never received another word! And here and
+thus stopped a correspondence of six years of almost unequalled
+partiality, and fondness on her side; and affection, gratitude,
+admiration, and sincerity on that of F.B., who could only conjecture
+the cessation to be caused by the resentment of Piozzi, when informed
+of her constant opposition to the union."
+
+If F.B. thought it wrong, she knew it to be inevitable, and in the
+conviction that it was so, she and her father had connived at the
+secret preparations for it in the preceding May.
+
+A very distinguished friend, whose masterly works are the result of a
+consummate study of the passions, after dwelling on the
+"impertinence" of the hostility her marriage provoked, writes: "She
+was evidently a very vain woman, but her vanity was sensitive, and
+very much allied to that exactingness of heart which gives charm and
+character to woman. I suspect it was this sensitiveness which made
+her misunderstood by her children." The justness of this theory of
+her conduct is demonstrated by the self-communings in "Thraliana;"
+and she misunderstood them as much as they misunderstood her. By her
+own showing she had little reason to complain of what they _did_ in
+the matter of the marriage; it was what they said, or rather did not
+say, that irritated her. She yearned for sympathy, which was sternly,
+chillingly, almost insultingly withheld.
+
+In 1800, she wrote thus to Dr. Gray: "What a good example have you
+set them (his children)! going to visit dear mama at Twickenham--long
+may they keep their parents, pretty creatures! and long may they have
+sense to know and feel that no love is like parental affection,--the
+only good perhaps which cannot be flung away."[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: "We may have many friends in life, but we can only have
+one mother: a discovery, says Gray, which I never made till it was
+too late."--ROGERS.]
+
+Madame D'Arblay states that her father was not disinclined to admit
+Mrs. Piozzi's right to consult her own notions of happiness in the
+choice of a second husband, had not the paramount duty of watching
+over her unmarried daughters interfered. But they might have
+accompanied her to Italy as was once contemplated; and had they done
+so, they would have seen everything and everybody in it under the
+most favourable auspices. The course chosen for them by the eldest
+was the most perilous of the two submitted for their choice. The
+lady, Miss Nicholson, whom their mother had so carefully selected as
+their companion, soon left them; or according to another version was
+summarily dismissed by Miss Thrale (afterwards Viscountess Keith),
+who fortunately was endowed with high principle, firmness, and
+energy. She could not take up her abode with either of her guardians,
+one a bachelor under forty, the other the prototype of Briggs, the
+old miser in "Caecilia." She could not accept Johnson's hospitality in
+Bolt Court, still tenanted by the survivors of his menagerie; where,
+a few months later, she sate by his death-bed and received his
+blessing. She therefore called to her aid an old nurse-maid, named
+Tib, who had been much trusted by her father, and with this homely
+but respectable duenna, she shut herself up in the house at Brighton,
+limited her expenses to her allowance of 200_l._ a-year, and
+resolutely set about the course of study which seemed best adapted to
+absorb attention and prevent her thoughts from wandering. Hebrew,
+Mathematics, Fortification, and Perspective have been named to me by
+one of trusted friends as specimens of her acquirements and her
+pursuits.
+
+ "There's a Divinity that shapes our ends,
+ Rough-hew them how we may."
+
+In that solitary abode at Brighton, and in the companionship of Tib,
+may have been laid the foundation of a character than which few,
+through the changeful scenes of a long and prosperous life, have
+exercised more beneficial influence or inspired more genuine esteem.
+On coming of age, and being put into possession of her fortune, she
+hired a house in London, and took her two eldest sisters to live with
+her. They had been at school whilst she was living at Brighton. The
+fourth and youngest, afterwards Mrs. Mostyn, had accompanied the
+mother. On the return of Mr. and Mrs. Piozzi, Miss Thrale made a
+point of paying them every becoming attention, and Piozzi was
+frequently dining with her. Latterly, she used to speak of him as a
+very worthy sort of man, who was not to blame for marrying a rich and
+distinguished woman who took a fancy to him. The other sisters seem
+to have adopted the same tone; and so far as I can learn, no one of
+them is open to the imputation of filial unkindness, or has suffered
+from maternal neglect in a manner to bear out Dr. Burney's
+forebodings by the result. Occasional expressions of querulousness
+are matters of course in family differences, and are seldom totally
+suppressed by the utmost exertion of good feeling and good sense.
+
+Johnson's idolised wife was, at the lowest estimate, twenty-one years
+older than himself when he married her; and her sons were so
+disgusted by the connection, that they dropped the acquaintance. Yet
+it never crossed his mind that "Hetty" had as much right to please
+herself as "Tetty." Of the six letters that passed between him and
+Mrs. Piozzi on the subject of the marriage, only two (Nos. 1 and 5)
+have hitherto been made public; and the incompleteness of the
+correspondence has caused the most embarrassing confusion in the
+minds of biographers and editors, too prone to act on the maxim that,
+wherever female reputation is concerned, we should hope for the best
+and believe the worst. Hawkins, apparently ignorant that she had
+written to Johnson, to announce her intention, says, "He was made
+uneasy by a report" which induced him to write a strong letter of
+remonstrance, of which what he calls an _adumbration_ was published
+in the "Gentleman's Magazine" for December 1784. Mr. Croker, avoiding
+a similar error, says:--"In the lady's own (part) publication of the
+correspondence, this letter (No. 1) is given as from Mrs. Piozzi, and
+is signed with the initial of her name: Dr. Johnson's answer is also
+addressed to Mrs. Piozzi, and both the letters allude to the matter
+as _done_; yet it appears by the periodical publications of the day,
+that the marriage did not take place until the 25th July. The editor
+knew not how to account for this but by supposing that Mrs. Piozzi,
+to avoid Johnson's importunity, had stated that as done which was
+only _settled to be done_."
+
+The matter of fact is made plain by the circular (No. 2) which states
+that "Piozzi is coming back from Italy." He arrived on July 1st,
+after a fourteen months' absence, which proved both his loyalty and
+the sincerity of the struggle in her own heart and mind. Her letter
+(No. 1) as printed, is not signed with the initial of her name; and
+both Dr. Johnson's autograph letters are addressed to _Mrs. Thrale_.
+But she has occasioned the mistake into which so many have fallen, by
+her mode of heading these when she printed the two-volume edition of
+"Letters" in 1788. By the kindness of Mr. Salusbury I am now enabled
+to print the whole correspondence, with the exception of her last
+letter, which she describes.
+
+
+No. 1.
+
+_Mrs. Piozzi to Dr. Johnson_.
+
+"Bath, June 30.
+
+"My Dear Sir,--The enclosed is a circular letter which I have sent to
+all the guardians, but our friendship demands somewhat more; it
+requires that I should beg your pardon for concealing from you a
+connexion which you must have heard of by many, but I suppose never
+believed. Indeed, my dear Sir, it was concealed only to save us both
+needless pain; I could not have borne to reject that counsel it would
+have killed me to take, and I only tell it you now because all is
+irrevocably settled and out of your power to prevent. I will say,
+however, that the dread of your disapprobation has given me some
+anxious moments, and though perhaps I am become by many privations
+the most independent woman in the world, I feel as if acting without
+a parent's consent till you write kindly to
+
+"Your faithful servant."
+
+
+No. 2. _Circular_.
+
+"Sir,--As one of the executors of Mr. Thrale's will and guardian to
+his daughters, I think it my duty to acquaint you that the three
+eldest left Bath last Friday (25th) for their own house at
+Brighthelmstone in company with an amiable friend, Miss Nicholson,
+who has sometimes resided with us here, and in whose society they
+may, I think, find some advantages and certainly no disgrace. I
+waited on them to Salisbury, Wilton, &c., and offered to attend them
+to the seaside myself, but they preferred this lady's company to
+mine, having heard that Mr. Piozzi is coming back from Italy, and
+judging perhaps by our past friendship and continued correspondence
+that his return would be succeeded by our marriage.
+
+"I have the honour to be, Sir, your obedient servant.
+
+"Bath, June 30, 1784."
+
+
+No. 3.[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: What Johnson termed an "adumbration" of this letter
+appeared in the "Gentleman's Magazine" for Dec. 1784:
+
+"MADAM,--If you are already ignominiously married, you are lost
+beyond all redemption;--if you are not, permit me one hour's
+conversation, to convince you that such a marriage must not take
+place. If, after a whole hour's reasoning, you should not be
+convinced, you will still be at liberty to act as you think proper. I
+have been extremely ill, and am still ill; but if you grant me the
+audience I ask, I will instantly take a post-chaise and attend you at
+Bath. Pray do not refuse this favour to a man who hath so many years
+loved and honoured you."]
+
+"MADAM,--If I interpret your letter right, you are ignominiously
+married: if it is yet undone, let us _once_ more _talk_ together. If
+you have abandoned your children and your religion, God forgive your
+wickedness; if you have forfeited your fame and your country, may
+your folly do no further mischief. If the last act is yet to do, I
+who have loved you, esteemed you, reverenced you, and _served
+you_[1], I who long thought you the first of womankind, entreat that,
+before your fate is irrevocable, I may once more see you. I was, I
+once was, Madam, most truly yours,
+
+"SAM. JOHNSON.
+
+"July 2, 1784.
+
+"I will come down, if you permit it."
+
+[Footnote 1: The four words which I have printed in italics are
+indistinctly written, and cannot be satisfactorily made out.]
+
+
+No. 4.
+
+"July 4, 1784.
+
+"SIR,--I have this morning received from you so rough a letter in
+reply to one which was both tenderly and respectfully written, that I
+am forced to desire the conclusion of a correspondence which I can
+bear to continue no longer. The birth of my second husband is not
+meaner than that of my first; his sentiments are not meaner; his
+profession is not meaner, and his superiority in what he professes
+acknowledged by all mankind. It is want of fortune, then, that is
+ignominious; the character of the man I have chosen has no other
+claim to such an epithet. The religion to which he has been always a
+zealous adherent will, I hope, teach him to forgive insults he has
+not deserved; mine will, I hope, enable me to bear them at once with
+dignity and patience. To hear that I have forfeited my fame is indeed
+the greatest insult I ever yet received. My fame is as unsullied as
+snow, or I should think it unworthy of him who must henceforth
+protect it.
+
+"I write by the coach the more speedily and effectually to prevent
+your coming hither. Perhaps by my fame (and I hope it is so) you mean
+only that celebrity which is a consideration of a much lower kind. I
+care for that only as it may give pleasure to my husband and his
+friends.
+
+"Farewell, dear Sir, and accept my best wishes. You have always
+commanded my esteem, and long enjoyed the fruits of a friendship
+_never infringed by one harsh expression on my part during twenty
+years of familiar talk. Never did I oppose your will, or control your
+wish; nor can your unmerited severity itself lessen my regard_; but
+till you have changed your opinion of Mr. Piozzi, let us converse no
+more. God bless you."
+
+
+No. 5.
+
+_To Mrs. Piozzi_.
+
+"London, July 8, 1784.
+
+"DEAR MADAM,--What you have done, however I may lament it, I have no
+pretence to resent, as it has not been injurious to me: I therefore
+breathe out one sigh more of tenderness, perhaps useless, but at
+least sincere.
+
+"I wish that God may grant you every blessing, that you may be happy
+in this world for its short continuance, and eternally happy in a
+better state; and whatever I can contribute to your happiness I am
+very ready to repay, for that kindness which soothed twenty years of
+a life radically wretched.
+
+"Do not think slightly of the advice which I now presume to offer.
+Prevail upon Mr. Piozzi to settle in England: you may live here with
+more dignity than in Italy, and with more security; your rank will be
+higher, and your fortune more under your own eye. I desire not to
+detail all my reasons, but every argument of prudence and interest is
+for England, and only some phantoms of imagination seduce you to
+Italy.
+
+"I am afraid, however, that my counsel is vain, yet I have eased my
+heart by giving it.
+
+"When Queen Mary took the resolution of sheltering herself in
+England, the Archbishop of St. Andrew's, attempting to dissuade her,
+attended on her journey; and when they came to the irremeable
+stream[1] that separated the two kingdoms, walked by her side into
+the water, in the middle of which he seized her bridle, and with
+earnestness proportioned to her danger and his own affection pressed
+her to return. The Queen went forward.--If the parallel reaches thus
+far, may it go no farther.--The tears stand in my eyes.
+
+"I am going into Derbyshire, and hope to be followed by your good
+wishes, for I am, with great affection,
+
+"Your, &c.
+
+"Any letters that come for me hither will be sent me."
+
+[Footnote 1: Queen Mary left the Scottish for the English coast, on
+the Firth of Solway, in a fishing-boat. The incident to which Johnson
+alludes is introduced in "The Abbot;" where the scene is laid on the
+sea-shore. The unusual though expressive term "irremeable," is
+defined in his dictionary, "admitting no return." His authority is
+Dryden's Virgil:
+
+ "The keeper dream'd, the chief without delay
+ Pass'd on, and took th' irremeable way."
+
+The word is a Latin one anglicised:
+
+ "Evaditque celer ripam irremeabilis undae."]
+
+In a memorandum on this letter, she says:--"I wrote him (No. 6) a
+very kind and affectionate farewell."
+
+Before calling attention to the results of this correspondence, I
+must notice a charge built upon it by the reviewer, with the
+respectable aid of the foul-mouthed and malignant Baretti:
+
+"This letter is now printed for the first time by Mr. Hayward. But he
+has omitted to notice the light which is thrown on it by Baretti's
+account of the marriage. That account is given in the 'European
+Magazine' for 1788. It is very circumstantial, and too long to
+transcribe, but the upshot is this: He says that, in order to meet
+her returning lover, she left Bath with her daughters as for a
+journey to Brighton; quitted them on some pretence at Salisbury, and
+posted off to town, _deceiving Dr. Johnson, who continued to direct
+to her at Bath as usual_.[1] 'In London she kept herself concealed
+for some days in my parish, and not very far distant from my own
+habitation, ... in Suffolk Street, Middlesex Hospital.' 'In a _few
+weeks_,' he adds, 'she was in a condition personally to resort to Mr.
+Greenland (her lawyer) to settle preliminaries, then returned to Bath
+with Piozzi, and there was married.' Now Baretti was a libeller, _and
+not to be believed except upon compulsion_; but if he does speak the
+truth, then the date, 'Bath, June 30,' of her circular letter, is a
+mystification; so is the passage in her letter to Johnson of July
+_4_, about 'sending it by the coach to prevent his coming.' Of course
+she was mortally afraid of the Doctor's coming, for if he had come he
+would have found her flown. According to this supposition, she did
+not return to Bath at all, but remained perdue in London, with her
+lover, during the whole 'Correspondence.' Is it the true one?
+
+"We cannot but suspect that it is, and that the solution of the whole
+of this little domestic mystery is to be found in a passage in the
+'Autobiographical Memoir,' vol. i. p. 277. There were _two_
+marriages:--
+
+"'Miss Nicholson went with us to Stonehenge, Wilton, &c., _whence I
+returned to Bath_ to wait for Piozzi. He was here on the eleventh day
+after he got Dobson's letter. In twenty-six more we were married _in
+London_ by the Spanish ambassador's chaplain, and returned hither to
+be married by Mr. Morgan, of Bath, at St. James's Church, July 25,
+1784.'
+
+"Now in order to make this account tally with Baretti's we must allow
+for a slight exertion of that talent for 'white lies' on the lady's
+part, of which her friends, Johnson included, used half playfully and
+half in earnest to accuse her. And we are afraid Baretti's story does
+appear, on the face of it, the more probable of the two. It does seem
+more likely, since they were to be married in London (of which
+Baretti knew nothing), that she met Piozzi secretly in London on his
+arrival, than that she performed the awkward evolutions of returning
+from Salisbury to Bath to wait for him there, then going to London in
+company with him to be married, and then back to Bath to be married
+over again. But if this be so, then the London marriage most likely
+took place almost immediately on the meeting of the enamoured couple,
+and while the 'Correspondence' was going on. In which case the words
+in the 'Memoir' 'in twenty-six days,' &c., were apparently intended,
+by a little bit of feminine adroitness, to appear to apply to this
+first marriage,--of the suddenness of which she may have been
+ashamed,--while they really apply to the conclusion of the whole
+affair by the _second_. Will any one have the Croker-like curiosity
+to inquire whether any record remains of the dates of marriages
+celebrated by the Spanish ambassador's chaplain?"[2]
+
+[Footnote 1: These words, italicised by the reviewer, contain the
+pith of the charge, which has no reference to her visit to London six
+weeks before.]
+
+[Footnote 2: Edinb. Review, No. 230, p. 522.]
+
+Why Croker-like curiosity? Was there anything censurable in the
+curiosity which led an editor to ascertain whether a novel like
+"Evelina" was written by a girl of eighteen or a woman of twenty-six?
+But Lord Macaulay sneered at the inquiry[1], and his worshippers must
+go on sneering like their model--_vitiis imitabile_. The certificate
+of the London marriage (now before me) shews that it was solemnised
+on the 23rd July, by a clergyman named Richard Smith, in the presence
+of three attesting witnesses. This, and the entries in "Thraliana,"
+prove Baretti's whole story to be false. "Now Baretti was a libeller,
+and not to be believed except upon compulsion;" meaning, I suppose,
+without confirmatory evidence strong enough to dispense with his
+testimony altogether. He was notorious for his _black_ lies. Yet he
+is believed eagerly, willingly, upon no compulsion, and without any
+confirmatory evidence at all.
+
+[Footnote 1: The following passage is reprinted in the corrected
+edition of Lord Macaulay's Essays:--"There was no want of low minds
+and bad hearts in the generation which witnessed her (Miss Burney's)
+first appearance. There was the envious Kenrick and the savage
+Wolcot; the asp George Steevens and the polecat John Williams. It did
+not, however, occur to them to search the parish register of Lynn, in
+order that they might be able to twit a lady with having concealed
+her age. That truly chivalrous exploit was reserved for a bad writer
+of our own time, whose spite she had provoked by not furnishing him
+with materials for a worthless edition of Boswell's Life of Johnson,
+some sheets of which our readers have doubtless seen round parcels of
+better books." There is reason to believe that the entry Mr. Croker
+copied was that of the baptism of an elder sister of the same name
+who died before the birth of the famous Fanny.]
+
+The internal evidence of the improbability of the story has
+disappeared in the reviewer's paraphrase. Baretti says that at
+Salisbury "she suddenly declared that a letter she found of great
+importance demanded her immediate presence _in London_.... But
+Johnson did not know the least tittle of this transaction, and he
+continued to direct his letters to Bath as usual, expressing, no
+doubt, an immense wonder _at her pertinacious silence_." So she told
+her daughters that she was going to London, whilst she deceived
+Johnson, who was sure to learn the truth from them; and he was
+wondering at her pertinacious silence at the very time when he was
+receiving letters from her, dated Bath! Why, having formally
+announced her determination to marry Piozzi, she should not give him
+the meeting in London if she chose, fairly passes my comprehension.
+
+Whilst the reviewer thinks he is strengthening one point, he is
+palpably weakening another. She would not have been "mortally afraid
+of the Doctor's coming," if she had already thrown him off and
+finally broken with him? That she was afraid, and had reason to be
+so, is quite consistent with my theory, quite inconsistent with Lord
+Macaulay's and the critic's. Johnson's letter (No. 3) is that of a
+coarse man who had always been permitted to lecture and dictate with
+impunity. Her letter (No. 4) is that of a sensitive woman, who, for
+the first time, resents with firmness and retorts with dignity. The
+sentences I have printed in italics speak volumes. "Never did I
+oppose your will, or control your wish, nor can your unmitigated
+severity itself lessen my regard." There is a shade of submissiveness
+in her reply, yet, on receiving it, he felt as a falcon might feel if
+a partridge were to shew fight. Nothing short of habitual deference
+on her part, and unrepressed indulgence of temper on _his_, can
+account for or excuse his not writing before this unexpected check as
+he wrote after it. If he had not been systematically humoured and
+flattered, he would have seen at a glance that he had "no pretence to
+resent," and have been ready at once to make the best return in his
+power for "that kindness which soothed twenty years of a life
+radically wretched." She wrote him a kind and affectionate farewell;
+and there (so far as we know) ended their correspondence. But in
+"Thraliana" she sets down:
+
+"_Milan, 27th Nov_. 1784.--I have got Dr. Johnson's picture here, and
+expect Miss Thrale's with impatience. I do love them dearly, as ill
+as they have used me, and always shall. Poor Johnson did not _mean_
+to use me ill. He only grew upon indulgence till patience could
+endure no further."
+
+In a letter to Mr. S. Lysons from Milan, dated December 7th, 1784,
+which proves that she was not frivolously employed, she says:
+
+"My next letter shall talk of the libraries and botanical gardens,
+and twenty other clever things here. I wish you a comfortable
+Christmas, and a happy beginning of the year 1785. Do not neglect Dr.
+Johnson: you will never see any other mortal so wise or so good. I
+keep his picture in my chamber, and his works on my chimney."
+
+ "Forgiveness to the injured doth belong,
+ But they ne'er pardon who have done the wrong."
+
+What he said of her can only be learned from her bitter enemies or
+hollow friends, who have preserved nothing kindly or creditable.
+
+Hawkins states that a letter from Johnson to himself contained these
+words:--"Poor Thrale! I thought that either her virtue or her vice
+(meaning her love of her children or her pride) would have saved 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."
+
+Madame D'Arblay gives two accounts of the last interview she ever had
+with Johnson,--on the 25th November, 1784. In the "Diary" she sets
+down:
+
+"I had seen Miss T. the day before."
+
+"'So,' said he, 'did I.'
+
+"I then said, 'Do you ever, Sir, hear, from her 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.[1] I have
+burnt all I can find. I never speak of her, and I desire never to
+hear of her name. I drive her, as I said, wholly from my mind.'"
+
+[Footnote 1: If this was true, it is strange that he did not destroy
+the letter (No. 4) which gave him so sudden and mortifying a check.
+Miss Hawkins says in her Memoirs: "It was I who discovered the
+letter. I carried it to my father; he enclosed and sent it to her,
+_there never having been any intercourse between them_." Anything
+from Hawkins about Streatham and its inmates must therefore have been
+invention or hearsay.]
+
+In the "Memoirs," describing the same interview, she says:--"We
+talked then of poor Mrs. Thrale, but only for a moment, for I saw him
+greatly incensed, and with such severity of displeasure, that I
+hastened to start another subject, and he solemnly enjoined me to
+mention that no more."
+
+This was only eighteen days before he died, and he might be excused
+for being angry at the introduction of any agitating topic. It would
+stain his memory, not hers, to prove that, belying his recent
+professions of tenderness and gratitude, he directly or indirectly
+encouraged her assailants.
+
+"I was tempted to observe," says the author of "Piozziana," "that I
+thought, as I still do, that Johnson's anger on the event of her
+second marriage was excited by some feeling of disappointment; and
+that I suspected he had formed some hope of attaching her to himself.
+It would be disingenuous on my part to attempt to repeat her answer.
+I forget it; but the impression on my mind is that she did not
+contradict me." Sir James Fellowes' marginal note on this passage is:
+"This was an absurd notion, and I can undertake to say it was the
+last idea that ever entered her head; for when I once alluded to the
+subject, she ridiculed the idea: she told me she always felt for
+Johnson the same respect and veneration as for a Pascal."[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: When Sheridan was accused of making love to Mrs.
+Siddons, he said he should as soon think of making love to the
+Archbishop of Canterbury.]
+
+On the margin of the passage in which Boswell says, "Johnson wishing
+to unite himself with this rich widow was much talked of, but I
+believe without foundation,"--she has written, "I believe so too!!"
+The report sufficed to bring into play the light artillery of the
+wits, one of whose best hits was an "Ode to Mrs. Thrale, by Samuel
+Johnson, LL.D., on their approaching Nuptials," beginning:
+
+ "If e'er my fingers touched 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,
+ Rehold him as your very _Scrub_:
+ Ready to write as author 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 _Thrale's Entire_."
+
+She has written opposite these lines, "Whose fun was this? It is
+better than the other." The other was:
+
+ "Cervisial coctor's viduate dame,
+ Opinst thou this gigantick frame,
+ Procumbing at thy shrine,
+ Shall catinated by thy charms,
+ A captive in thy ambient arms
+ Perennially be thine."
+
+She writes opposite: "Whose silly fun was this? Soame Jenyn's?"
+
+The following paragraph is copied from the note-book of the late Miss
+Williams Wynn[1], who had recently been reading a large collection of
+Mrs. Piozzi's letters addressed to a Welsh neighbour:
+
+[Footnote 1: Daughter of Sir Watkyn Wynn (the fourth baronet) and
+granddaughter of George Grenville, the Minister. She was
+distinguished by her literary taste and acquirements, as well as
+highly esteemed for the uprightness of her character, the excellence
+of her understanding, and the kindness of her heart. Her journals and
+note-books, carefully kept during a long life passed in the best
+society, are full of interesting anecdotes and curious extracts from
+rare books and manuscripts. They are now in the possession of her
+niece, the Honourable Mrs. Rowley.]
+
+"_London, March_, 1825.--I have had an opportunity of talking to old
+Sir William Pepys on the subject of his old friend, Mrs. Piozzi, and
+from his conversation am more than ever impressed with the idea that
+she was one of the most inconsistent characters that ever existed.
+Sir William says he never met with any human being who possessed the
+talent of conversation in such a degree. I naturally felt anxious to
+know whether Piozzi could in any degree add to this pleasure, and
+found, as I expected, that he could not even understand her.
+
+"Her infatuation for him seems perfectly unaccountable. Johnson in
+his rough (I may here call it brutal) manner said to her, 'Why Ma'am,
+he is not only a stupid, ugly dog, but he is an old dog too.' Sir
+William says he really believes that she combated her inclination for
+him as long as possible; so long, that her senses would have failed
+her if she had attempted to resist any longer. She was perfectly
+aware of her degradation. One day, speaking to Sir William of some
+persons whom he had been in the habit of meeting continually at
+Streatham during the lifetime of Mr. Thrale, she said, not one of
+them has taken the smallest notice of me ever since: they dropped me
+before I had done anything wrong. Piozzi was literally at her elbow
+when she said this."
+
+The reviewer quotes the remark, "She was perfectly aware of her
+degradation," as resting on the personal responsibility of Miss Wynn,
+"who knew her in later life in Wales." The context shews that Miss
+Wynn (who did not know her) was simply repeating the impressions of
+Sir William Pepys, one of the bitterest opponents of the marriage, to
+whom she certainly never said anything derogatory to her second
+husband. The uniform tenor of her letters and her conduct shew that
+she never regarded her second marriage as discreditable, and always
+took a high and independent, instead of a subdued or deprecating,
+tone with her alienated friends. A bare statement of the treatment
+she received from them is surely no proof of conscious degradation.
+
+In a letter to a Welsh neighbour, near the end of her life, some time
+in 1818, she says:
+
+"Mrs. Mostyn (her youngest daughter) has written again on the road
+back to Italy, where she likes the Piozzis above all people, she
+says, _if they were not so proud of their family_. Would not that
+make one laugh two hours before one's own death? But I remember when
+Lady Egremont raised the whole nation's ill will here, while the
+Saxons were wondering how Count Bruhle could think of marrying a lady
+born Miss Carpenter. The Lombards doubted in the meantime of my being
+a gentlewoman by birth, because my first husband was a brewer. A
+pretty world, is it not? A Ship of Fooles, according to the old poem;
+and they will upset the vessel by and by."
+
+This is not the language of one who wished to apologise for a
+misalliance.
+
+As to Piozzi's assumed want of youth and good looks, Johnson's
+knowledge of womankind, to say nothing of his self-love, should have
+prevented him from urging this as an insuperable objection. He might
+have recollected the Roman matron in Juvenal, who considers the world
+well lost for an old and disfigured prize-fighter; or he might have
+quoted Spenser's description of one--
+
+ "Who rough and rude and filthy did appear,
+ Unseemly man to please fair lady's eye,
+ Yet he of ladies oft was loved dear,
+ When fairer faces were bid standen by:
+ Oh! who can tell the bent of woman's phantasy?"
+
+Madame Campan, speaking of Caroline of Naples, the sister of Marie
+Antoinette, says, she had great reason to complain of the insolence
+of a Spaniard named Las Casas, whom the king, her father-in-law, had
+sent to persuade her to remove M. Acton[1] from the conduct of
+affairs and from about her person. She had told him, to convince him
+of the nature of her sentiments, that she would have Acton painted
+and sculptured by the most celebrated artists of Italy, and send his
+bust and his portrait to the King of Spain, to prove to him that the
+desire of fixing a man of superior capacity could alone have induced
+her to confer the favour he enjoyed. Las Casas had dared to reply,
+that she would be taking useless trouble; that a man's ugliness did
+not always prevent him from pleasing, and that the King of Spain had
+too much experience to be ignorant that the caprices of a woman were
+inexplicable. Johnson may surely be allowed credit for as much
+knowledge of the sex as the King of Spain.
+
+[Footnote 1: M. Acton, as Madame Campan calls him, was a member of
+the ancient English family of that name. He succeeded to the
+baronetcy in 1791, and was the grandfather of Sir John E.E. Dalberg
+Acton, Bart., M.P., &c.]
+
+Others were simultaneously accusing her of marrying a young man to
+indulge a sensual inclination. The truth is, Piozzi was a few months
+older than herself, and was neither ugly nor disagreeable. Madame
+D'Arblay has been already quoted as to his personal appearance, and
+Miss Seward (October, 1787) writes:
+
+"I am become acquainted with Mr. and Mrs. Piozzi. Her conversation is
+that bright wine of the intellects which has no lees. Dr. Johnson
+told me truth when he said she had more colloquial wit than most of
+our literary women; it is indeed a fountain of perpetual flow. But he
+did not tell me truth when he asserted that Piozzi was an ugly dog,
+without particular skill in his profession. Mr. Piozzi is a handsome
+man, in middle life, with gentle, pleasing, unaffected manners, and
+with very eminent skill in his profession. Though he has not a
+powerful or fine-toned voice, he sings with transcending grace and
+expression. I am charmed with his perfect expression on his
+instrument. Surely the finest sensibilities must vibrate through his
+frame, since they breathe so sweetly through his song."
+
+The concluding sentence contains what Partridge would call a _non
+sequitur_, for the finest musical sensibility may coexist with the
+most commonplace qualities. But the lady's evidence is clear on the
+essential point; and another passage from her letters may assist us
+in determining the precise nature of Johnson's feelings towards Mrs.
+Piozzi, and the extent to which his later language and conduct
+regarding her were influenced by pique:
+
+"Love is the great softener of savage dispositions. Johnson had
+always a metaphysic passion for one princess or another: first, the
+rustic Lucy Porter, before he married her nauseous mother; next the
+handsome, but haughty, Molly Aston; next the sublimated, methodistic
+Hill Boothby, who read her bible in Hebrew; and lastly, the more
+charming Mrs. Thrale, with the beauty of the first, the learning of
+the second, and with more worth than a bushel of such sinners and
+such saints. It is ridiculously diverting to see the old elephant
+forsaking his nature before these princesses:
+
+ "'To make them mirth, use all his might, and writhe,
+ His mighty form disporting.'
+
+"_This last and long-enduring passion for Mrs. Thrale was, however,
+composed perhaps of cupboard love, Platonic love, and vanity tickled
+and gratified, from morn to night, by incessant homage_. The two
+first ingredients are certainly oddly heterogeneous; but Johnson, in
+religion and politics, in love and in hatred, was composed of such
+opposite and contradictory materials, as never before met in the
+human mind. This is the reason why folk are never weary of talking,
+reading, and writing about a man--
+
+ "'So various that he seem'd to be,
+ Not one, but all mankind's epitome.'"
+
+After quoting the sentence printed in italics, the reviewer says: "On
+this hint Mr. Hayward enlarges, nothing loth." I quoted the entire
+letter without a word of comment, and what is given as my "enlarging"
+is an _olla podrida_ of sentences torn from the context in three
+different and unconnected passages of this Introduction. The only one
+of them which has any bearing on the point shews, though garbled,
+that, in attributing motives, I distinguished between Johnson and his
+set.
+
+Having thus laid the ground for fixing on me opinions I had nowhere
+professed, the reviewer asks, "Had Mr. Hayward, when he passed such
+slighting judgment on the motives of the venerable sage who awes us
+still, no fear before his eyes of the anathema aimed by Carlyle at
+Croker for similar disparagement? 'As neediness, and greediness, and
+vain glory are the chief qualities of most men, so no man, not even a
+Johnson, acts, or can think of acting, on any other principle.
+Whatever, therefore, cannot be referred to the two former categories,
+Need and Greed, is without scruple ranged under the latter.'"[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: Edinb, Review, No. 230, p. 511.]
+
+This style of criticism is as loose as it is unjust; for one main
+ingredient in Miss Seward's mixture is Platonic love, which cannot be
+referred to either of the three categories. Her error lay in not
+adding a fourth ingredient,--the admiration which Johnson undoubtedly
+felt for the admitted good qualities of Mrs. Thrale. But the lady was
+nearer the truth than the reviewer, when he proceeds in this strain:
+
+"We take an entirely different view at once of the character and the
+feelings of Johnson. Rude, uncouth, arrogant as he was--spoilt as he
+was, which is far worse, by flattery and toadying and the silly
+homage of inferior worshippers--selfish as he was in his eagerness
+for small enjoyments and disregard of small attentions--that which
+lay at the very bottom of his character, that which constitutes the
+great source of his power in life, and connects him after death with
+the hearts of all of us, is his spirit of imaginative romance. He was
+romantic in almost all things--in politics, in religion, in his
+musings on the supernatural world, in friendship for men, and in love
+for women."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"Such was his fancied 'padrona,' his 'mistress,' his 'Thralia
+dulcis,' a compound of the bright lady of fashion and the ideal
+Urania who rapt his soul into spheres of perfection."
+
+Imaginative romance in politics, in religion, and in musings on the
+supernatural world, is here only another term for prejudice,
+intolerance, bigotry, and credulity--for rabid Toryism, High Church
+doctrines verging on Romanism, and a confirmed belief in ghosts.
+Imaginative romance in love and friendship is an elevating,
+softening, and refining influence, which, especially when it forms
+the basis of character, cannot co-exist with habitual rudeness,
+uncouthness, arrogance, love of toadying, selfishness, and disregard
+of what Johnson himself called the minor morals. Equally
+heterogeneous is the "compound of the bright lady of fashion and the
+ideal Urania." A goddess in crinoline would be a semi-mundane
+creature at best; and the image unluckily suggests that Johnson was
+unphilosophically, not to say vulgarly, fond of rank, fashion, and
+their appendages.
+
+His imagination, far from being of the richest or highest kind, was
+insufficient for the attainment of dramatic excellence, was
+insufficient even for the nobler parts of criticism. Nor had he much
+to boast of in the way of delicacy of perception or sensibility. His
+strength lay in his understanding; his most powerful weapon was
+argument: his grandest quality was his good sense.
+
+Thurlow, speaking of the choice of a successor to Lord Mansfield,
+said, "I hesitated long between the intemperance of Kenyon, and the
+corruption of Buller; not but what there was a d----d deal of
+corruption in Kenyon's intemperance, and a d----d deal of
+intemperance in Buller's corruption." Just so, we may hesitate long
+between the romance and the worldliness of Johnson, not but what
+there was a d----d deal of romance in his worldliness, and a d----d
+deal of worldliness in his romance.
+
+The late Lord Alvanley, whose heart was as inflammable as his wit was
+bright, used to tell how a successful rival in the favour of a
+married dame offered to retire from the field for _5001_., saying, "I
+am a younger son: her husband does not give dinners, and they have no
+country house: no _liaison_ suits me that does not comprise both." At
+the risk of provoking Mr. Carlyle's anathema, I now avow my belief
+that Johnson was, nay, boasted of being, open to similar influences;
+and as for his "ideal Uranias," no man past seventy idealises women
+with whom he has been corresponding for years about his or their
+"natural history," to whom he sends recipes for "lubricity of the
+bowels," with an assurance that it has had the best effect upon his
+own.[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: Letters, vol. ii. p. 397. The letter containing the
+recipe actually begins "My dear Angel." Had Johnson forgotten Swift's
+lines on Celia? or the repudiation of the divine nature by Ermodotus,
+which occurs twice in Plutarch? The late Lord Melbourne complained
+that two ladies of quality, sisters, told him too much of their
+"natural history."]
+
+Rough language, too, although not incompatible with affectionate
+esteem, can hardly be reconciled with imaginative romance--
+
+ "Perhaps it was right to dissemble your love,
+ But why did you kick me down stairs?"
+
+"His ugly old wife," says the reviewer, "was an angel." Yes, an angel
+so far as exalted language could make her one; and he had always
+half-a-dozen angels or goddesses on his list. "_Je change d'objet,
+mais la passion reste_." For this very reason, I repeat, his
+affection for Mrs. Piozzi was not a deep, devoted, or absorbing
+feeling at any time; and the gloom which settled upon the evening of
+his days was owing to his infirmities and his dread of death, not to
+the loosening of cherished ties, nor to the compelled solitude of a
+confined dwelling in Bolt Court. The plain matter of fact is that,
+during the last two years of his life, he was seldom a month together
+at his own house, unless when the state of his health prevented him
+from enjoying the hospitality of his friends. When the fatal marriage
+was announced, he was planning what Boswell calls a jaunt into the
+country; and in a letter dated Lichfield, Oct. 4, 1784, he says: "I
+passed the first part of the summer at Oxford (with Dr. Adams);
+afterwards I went to Lichfield, then to Ashbourne (Dr. Taylor's), and
+a week ago I returned to Lichfield."
+
+In the journal which he kept for Dr. Brocklesby, he writes, Oct. 20:
+"The town is my element; 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 public life; and I
+hope still to keep my station, till God shall bid me _Go in peace_."
+Boswell reports him saying about this time, "Sir, I look upon every
+day to be lost when I do not make a new acquaintance."
+
+After another visit to Dr. Adams, at Pembroke College, he returned on
+the 16th Nov. to London, where he died on the 13th Dec. 1784. The
+proximate cause of his death was dropsy; and there is not the
+smallest sign of its having been accelerated or embittered by
+unkindness or neglect.
+
+Whoever has accompanied me thus far will be fully qualified to form
+an independent opinion of Lord Macaulay's dashing summary of Mrs.
+Piozzi's imputed ill-treatment of Johnson:
+
+"Johnson was now in his seventy-second year. The infirmities of age
+were coming fast upon him. That inevitable event of which he never
+thought without horror was brought near to him; and his whole life
+was darkened by the shadow of death. He had often to pay the cruel
+price of longevity. Every year he lost what could never be replaced.
+The strange dependants to whom he had given shelter, and to whom, in
+spite of their faults, he was strongly attached by habit, dropped off
+one by one; and, in the silence of his home, he regretted even the
+noise of their scolding matches. The kind and generous Thrale was no
+more; and it would have been well if his wife had been laid beside
+him. But she survived to be the laughing-stock of those who had
+envied her, and to draw from the eyes of the old man who had loved
+her beyond any thing in the world, tears far more bitter than he
+would have shed over her grave.
+
+"With some estimable, and many agreeable qualities, she was not made
+to be independent. The control of a mind more steadfast than her own
+was necessary to her respectability. While she was restrained by her
+husband, a man of sense and firmness, indulgent to her taste in
+trifles, but always the undisputed master of his house, her worst
+offences had been impertinent jokes, white lies, and short fits of
+pettishness ending in sunny good humour. But he was gone; and she was
+left an opulent widow of forty, with strong sensibility, volatile
+fancy, and slender judgment. She soon fell in love with a
+music-master from Brescia, in whom nobody but herself could discover
+anything to admire. Her pride, and perhaps some better feelings,
+struggled hard against this degrading passion. But the struggle
+irritated her nerves, soured her temper, and at length endangered her
+health. Conscious that her choice was one which Johnson could not
+approve, she became desirous to escape from his inspection. Her
+manner towards him changed. She was sometimes cold and sometimes
+petulant. She did not conceal her joy when he left Streatham: she
+never pressed him to return; and, if he came unbidden, she received
+him in a manner which convinced him that he was no longer a welcome
+guest. He took the very intelligible hints which she gave. He read,
+for the last time, a chapter of the Greek Testament in the library
+which had been formed by himself. In a solemn and tender prayer he
+commended the house and its inmates to the Divine protection, and,
+with emotions which choked his voice and convulsed his powerful
+frame, left for ever that beloved home for the gloomy and desolate
+house behind Fleet Street, where the few and evil days which still
+remained to him were to run out.
+
+"Here, in June 1783, he had a paralytic stroke, from which, however,
+he recovered, and which does not appear to have at all impaired his
+intellectual faculties. But other maladies came thick upon him. His
+asthma tormented him day and night. Dropsical symptoms made their
+appearance. While sinking under a complication of diseases, he heard
+that the woman whose friendship had been the chief happiness of
+sixteen years of his life, had married an Italian fiddler; that all
+London was crying shame upon her; and that the newspapers and
+magazines were filled with allusions to the Ephesian matron and the
+two pictures in Hamlet. He vehemently said that he would try to
+forget her existence. He never uttered her name. Every memorial of
+her which met his eye he flung into the fire. She meanwhile fled from
+the laughter and hisses of her countrymen and countrywomen to a land
+where she was unknown, hastened across Mount Cenis, and learned,
+while passing a merry Christmas of concerts and lemonade-parties at
+Milan, that the great man with whose name hers is inseparably
+associated, had ceased to exist."[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: "Encyclopaedia Britannica," last edition. The Essay on
+Johnson is reprinted in the first volume of Lord Macaulay's
+"Miscellaneous Writings."]
+
+"Splendid recklessness," is the happy expression used by the
+"Saturday Review" in characterising this account of the alleged
+rupture with its consequences; and no reader will fail to admire the
+rhetorical skill with which the expulsion from Streatham with its
+library formed by himself, the chapter in the Greek testament, the
+gloomy and desolate home, the music-master in whom nobody but herself
+could see anything to admire, the few and evil days, the emotions
+that convulsed the frame, the painful and melancholy death, and the
+merry Christmas of concerts and lemonade parties, have been grouped
+together with the view of giving picturesqueness, impressive unity,
+and damnatory vigour to the sketch. "Action, action, action," says
+the orator; "effect, effect, effect," says the historian. Give
+Archimedes a place to stand on, and he would move the world. Give
+Fouche a line of a man's handwriting, and he would engage to ruin
+him. Give Lord Macaulay the semblance of an authority, an insulated
+fact or phrase, a scrap of a journal, or the tag end of a song, and
+on it, by the abused prerogative of genius, he would construct a
+theory of national or personal character, which should confer undying
+glory or inflict indelible disgrace.
+
+Johnson was never driven or expelled from Mrs. Piozzi's house or
+family: if very intelligible hints were given, they certainly were
+not taken; the library was not formed by him; the Testament may or
+may not have been Greek; his powerful frame shook with no convulsions
+but what may have been occasioned by the unripe grapes and hard
+peaches; he did not leave Streatham for his gloomy and desolate house
+behind Fleet Street; the few and evil days (two years, nine weeks)
+did not run out in that house; the music-master was generally admired
+and esteemed; and the merry Christmas of concerts and
+lemonade-parties is simply another sample of the brilliant
+historian's mode of turning the abstract into the concrete in such a
+manner as to degrade or elevate at will. An Italian concert is not a
+merry meeting; and a lemonade-party, I presume, is a party where
+(instead of _eau-sucree_ as at Paris) the refreshment handed about is
+lemonade: not an enlivening drink at Christmas. In a word, all these
+graphic details are mere creations of the brain, and the general
+impression intended to be conveyed by them is false, substantially
+false; for Mrs. Piozzi never behaved otherwise than kindly and
+considerately to Johnson at any time.
+
+Her life in Italy has been sketched in her best manner by her own
+lively pen in the "Autobiography" and what she calls the "Travel
+Book," to be presently mentioned. Scattered notices of her
+proceedings occur in her letters to Mr. Lysons, and in the printed
+correspondence of her cotemporaries.
+
+On the 19th October, 1784, she writes to Mr. Lysons from Turin:
+
+"We are going to Alexandria, Genoa, and Pavia, and then to Milan for
+the winter, as Mr. Piozzi finds friends everywhere to delay us, and I
+hate hurry and fatigue; it takes away all one's attention. Lyons was
+a delightful place to me, and we were so feasted there by my
+husband's old acquaintances. The Duke and Duchess of Cumberland too
+paid us a thousand caressing civilities where we met with them, and
+we had no means of musical parties neither. The Prince of Sisterna
+came yesterday to visit Mr. Piozzi, and present me with the key of
+his box at the opera for the time we stay at Turin. Here's honour and
+glory for you! When Miss Thrale hears of it, she will write perhaps;
+the other two are very kind and affectionate."
+
+In "Thraliana":
+
+"_3rd November_, 1784.--Yesterday I received a letter from Mr.
+Baretti, full of the most flagrant and bitter insults concerning my
+late marriage with Mr. Piozzi, against whom, however, he can bring no
+heavier charge than that he disputed on the road with an innkeeper
+concerning the bill in his last journey to Italy; while he accuses me
+of murder and fornication in the grossest terms, such as I believe
+have scarcely ever been used even to his old companions in Newgate,
+whence he was released to scourge the families which cherished, and
+bite the hands that have since relieved him. Could I recollect any
+provocation I ever gave the man, I should be less amazed, but he
+heard, perhaps, that Johnson had written me a rough letter, and
+thought he would write me a brutal one: like the Jewish king, who,
+trying to imitate Solomon without his understanding, said, 'My father
+whipped you with whips, but I will whip you with scorpions.'"
+
+"Milan, Dec. 7.
+
+"I correspond constantly and copiously with such of my daughters as
+are willing to answer my letters, and I have at last received one
+cold scrap from the eldest, which I instantly and tenderly replied
+to. Mrs. Lewis too, and Miss Nicholson, have had accounts of my
+health, for I found _them_ disinterested and attached to me: those
+who led the stream, or watched which way it ran, that they might
+follow it, were not, I suppose, desirous of my correspondence, and
+till they are so, shall not be troubled with it."
+
+Miss Nicholson was the lady left with the daughters, and Mrs. Piozzi
+could have heard no harm of her from them or others when she wrote
+thus. The same inference must be drawn from the allusions to this
+lady at subsequent periods. After stating that she "dined at the
+minister's o' Tuesday, and he called all the wise men about me with
+great politeness indeed"--"Once more," she continues, "keep me out of
+the newspapers if you possibly can: they have given me many a
+miserable hour, and my enemies many a merry one: but I have not
+deserved public persecution, and am very happy to live in a place
+where one is free from unmerited insolence, such as London abounds
+with.
+
+ "'Illic credulitas, illic temerarius error.'
+
+God bless you, and may you conquer the many-headed monster which I
+could never charm to silence." In "Thraliana," she says:
+
+"_January_, 1785.--I see the English newspapers are full of gross
+insolence to me: all burst out, as I guessed it would, upon the death
+of Dr. Johnson. But Mr. Boswell (who I plainly see is the author)
+should let the _dead_ escape from his malice at least. I feel more
+shocked at the insults offered to Mr. Thrale's memory than at those
+cast on Mr. Piozzi's person. My present husband, thank God! is well
+and happy, and able to defend himself: but dear Mr. Thrale, that had
+fostered these cursed wits so long! to be stung by their malice even
+in the grave, is too cruel:--
+
+ "'Nor church, nor churchyards, from such fops are free.'"[1]--POPE.
+
+[Footnote 1: Probably misquoted for--
+
+ "No place is sacred, not the church is free."
+
+_Prologue to the Satires_.]
+
+The license of our press is a frequent topic of complaint. But here
+is a woman who had never placed herself before the public in any way
+so as to give them a right to discuss her conduct or affairs, not
+even as an author, made the butt of every description of offensive
+personality for months, with the tacit encouragement of the first
+moralist of the age.
+
+January 20th, 1785, she writes from Milan:--"The Minister, Count
+Wilsick, has shown us many distinctions, and we are visited by the
+first families in Milan. The Venetian Resident will, however, be soon
+sent to the court of London, and give a faithful account, as I am
+sure, to all their _obliging_ inquiries."
+
+In "Thraliana":
+
+"_25th Jan_., 1785.--I have recovered myself sufficiently to think
+what will be the consequence to me of Johnson's death, but must wait
+the event, as all thoughts on the future in this world are vain. Six
+people have already undertaken to write his life, I hear, of which
+Sir John Hawkins, Mr. Boswell, Tom Davies, and Dr. Kippis are four.
+Piozzi says he would have me add to the number, and so I would, but
+that I think my anecdotes too few, and am afraid of saucy answers if
+I send to England for others. The saucy answers _I_ should disregard,
+but my heart is made vulnerable by my late marriage, and I am certain
+that, to spite me, they would insult my husband.
+
+"Poor Johnson! I see they will leave _nothing untold_ that I laboured
+so long to keep secret; and I was so very delicate _in trying to
+conceal his [fancied][1] insanity_ that I retained no proofs of it,
+or hardly any, nor even mentioned it in these books, lest by my dying
+first _they_ might be printed and the secret (for such I thought it)
+discovered. I used to tell him in jest that his biographers would be
+at a loss concerning some orange-peel he used to keep in his pocket,
+and many a joke we had about the lives that would be published.
+Rescue me out of their hands, my dear, and do it yourself, said he;
+Taylor, Adams, and Hector will furnish you with juvenile anecdotes,
+and Baretti will give you all the rest that you have not already, for
+I think Baretti is a lyar only when he speaks of himself. Oh, said I,
+Baretti told me yesterday that you got by heart six pages of
+Machiavel's History once, and repeated them thirty years afterwards
+word for word. Why this is a _gross_ lye, said Johnson, I never read
+the book at all. Baretti too told me of you (said I) that you once
+kept sixteen cats in your chamber, and yet they scratched your legs
+to such a degree, you were forced to use mercurial plaisters for some
+time after. Why this (replied Johnson) is an unprovoked lye indeed; I
+thought the fellow would not have broken through divine and human
+laws thus to make puss his heroine, but I see I was mistaken."
+
+[Footnote 1: Sic in the MS. See _ante_, p. 202.]
+
+On February 3rd, 1785, Horace Walpole writes from London to Sir
+Horace Mann at Florence:--"I have lately been lent a volume of poems
+composed and printed at Florence, in which another of our exheroines,
+Mrs. Piozzi, has a considerable share; her associates three of the
+English bards who assisted in the little garland which Ramsay the
+painter sent me. The present is a plump octavo; and if you have not
+sent me a copy by our nephew, I should be glad if you could get one
+for me: not for the merit of the verses, which are moderate enough
+and faint imitations of our good poets; but for a short and sensible
+and genteel preface by La Piozzi, from whom I have just seen a very
+clever letter to Mrs. Montagu, to disavow a jackanapes who has lately
+made a noise here, one Boswell, by Anecdotes of Dr. Johnson. In a day
+or two we expect another collection by the same Signora."
+
+Her associates were Greathead, Merry, and Parsons. The volume in
+question was "The Florence Miscellany." "A copy," says Mr. Lowndes,
+"having fallen into the hands of W. Grifford, gave rise to his
+admirable satire of the 'Baviad and Moeviad.'"
+
+In his Journal of the Tour to the Hebrides, Boswell makes Johnson say
+of Mrs. Montagu's "Essay on Shakespeare": "Reynolds is fond of her
+book, and I wonder at it; for neither I, nor Beauclerc, nor Mrs.
+Thrale could get through it." This is what Mrs. Piozzi wrote to
+disavow, so far as she was personally concerned. In a subsequent
+letter from Vienna, she says: "Mrs. Montagu has written to me very
+sweetly." The other collection expected from her was her "Anecdotes
+of the late Samuel Johnson, during the last Twenty Years of his Life.
+Printed for T. Cadell in the Strand, 1786."
+
+She opened the matter to Mr. Cadell in the following terms:
+
+"Florence, 7th June, 1785.
+
+"_Sir_.,--As you were at once the bookseller and friend of Dr.
+Johnson, who always spoke of your character in the kindest terms, I
+could wish you likewise to be the publisher of some Anecdotes
+concerning the last twenty years of his life, collected by me during
+the many days I had opportunity to spend in his instructive company,
+and digested into method since I heard of his death. As I have a
+large collection of his letters in England, besides some verses,
+known only to myself, I wish to delay printing till we can make two
+or three little volumes, not unacceptable, perhaps, to the public;
+but I desire my intention to be notified, for divers reasons, and, if
+you approve of the scheme, should wish it to be immediately
+advertized. My return cannot be in less than twelve months, and we
+may be detained still longer, as our intention is to complete the
+tour of Italy; but the book is in forwardness, and it has been seen
+by many English and Italian friends."
+
+On July 27th, 1785, she writes from Florence:
+
+"We celebrated our wedding anniversary two days ago with a
+magnificent dinner and concert, at which the Prince Corsini and his
+brother the Cardinal did us the honour of assisting, and wished us
+joy in the tenderest and politest terms. Lord and Lady Cowper, Lord
+Pembroke, and _all_ the English indeed, doat on my husband, and show
+us every possible attention."
+
+On the 18th July, 1785, she writes again to Mr. Cadell:--"I am
+favoured with your answer and pleased with the advertisement, but it
+will be impossible to print the verses till my return to England, as
+they are all locked up with other papers in the Bank, nor should I
+choose to put the key (which is now at Milan) in any one's hand
+except my own."
+
+She therefore proposes that the "Anecdotes" shall be printed first,
+and published separately. On the 20th October, 1785, she writes from
+Sienna:
+
+"I finished my 'Anecdotes of Dr. Johnson' at Florence, and taking
+them with me to Leghorn, got a clear transcript made there, such as I
+hope will do for you to print from; though there may be some errors,
+perhaps many, which have escaped me, as I am wholly unused to the
+business of sending manuscripts to the press, and must rely on you to
+get everything done properly when, it comes into your hands."
+
+Such was the surviving ascendency of Johnson, or such the placability
+of her disposition, that, but for Piozzi's remonstrances, she would
+have softened down her "Anecdotes" to an extent which would have
+destroyed much of their sterling value.
+
+Mr. Lysons made the final bargain with Cadell, and had full power to
+act for her. She writes thus to Cadell:
+
+"Rome, 28th March, 1786.
+
+"SIR,--I hasten to tell you that I am perfectly pleased and contented
+with the alterations made by my worthy and amiable friends in the
+'Anecdotes of Johnson's Life.' Whatever is done by Sir Lucas Pepys is
+certainly well done, and I am happy in the thoughts of his having
+interested himself about it. Mr. Lysons was very judicious and very
+kind in going to the Bishop of Peterboro', and him and Dr. Lort for
+advice. There is no better to be had in the world, I believe; and it
+is my desire that they should be always consulted about any future
+transactions of the same sort relating to, Sir, your most obedient
+servant,
+
+"H. L. PIOZZI."[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: The letters to Mr. Cadell were published in the
+"Gentleman's Magazine" for March and April, 1852.]
+
+The early portions of "Thraliana" were evidently amongst the papers
+locked up in the Bank, and she consequently wrote most of the
+Anecdotes from memory, which may account for some minor
+discrepancies, like that relating to the year in which she made the
+acquaintance with Johnson.
+
+The book attracted great attention; and whilst some affected to
+discover in it the latent signs of wounded vanity and pique, others
+vehemently impugned its accuracy. Foremost amongst her assailants
+stood Boswell, who had an obvious motive for depreciating her, and he
+attempts to destroy her authority, first, by quoting Johnson's
+supposed imputations on her veracity; and secondly, by individual
+instances of her alleged departure from truth.
+
+Thus, Johnson is reported to have said:--"It is amazing, Sir, what
+deviations there are from precise truth, in the account which is
+given of almost everything. I told Mrs. Thrale, You have so little
+anxiety about truth that you never tax your memory with the exact
+thing."
+
+Her proneness to exaggerated praise especially excited his
+indignation, and he endeavours to make her responsible for his
+rudeness on the strength of it.
+
+"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 _short_. It is nothing. He fills a chair. He is a man of genteel
+appearance, and that is all. 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; you praised that man with such disproportion, that I was
+incited to lessen him, perhaps more than he deserves. _His blood is
+upon your head_. 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;--she would be the only woman,
+could she but command that little whirligig.'"
+
+Opposite the words I have printed in italics she has written: "An
+expression he would not have used; no, not for worlds."
+
+In Boswell's note of a visit to Streatham in 1778, we find:--
+
+"Next morning, while we were at breakfast, Johnson gave a very
+earnest recommendation of what he himself practised with the utmost
+conscientiousness: I mean a strict attention to truth even in the
+most minute particulars. 'Accustom your children,' said he,
+'constantly to this: if a thing happened at one window, and they,
+when relating it, say that it happened at another, do not let it
+pass, but instantly check them: you do not know where deviation from
+truth will end.' _Boswell_. 'It may come to the door: and when once
+an account is at all varied in one circumstance, it may by degrees be
+varied so as to be totally different from what really happened.' Our
+lively hostess, whose fancy was impatient of the rein, fidgeted at
+this, and ventured to say 'Nay, this is too much. If Dr. Johnson
+should forbid me to drink tea, I would comply, as I should feel the
+restraint only twice a day: but little variations in narrative must
+happen a thousand times a day, if one is not perpetually watching.'
+_Johnson_. 'Well, Madam, and you _ought_ to be perpetually watching.
+It is more from carelessness about truth, than from intentional
+lying, that there is so much falsehood in the world.'"
+
+Now for the illustrative incident, which occurred during the same
+visit:--
+
+"I had before dinner repeated a ridiculous story told me by an old
+man, who had been a passenger with me in the stage-coach to-day. Mrs.
+Thrale, having taken occasion to allude to it in talking to me,
+called it, 'The story told you by the old _woman_.' 'Now, Madam,'
+said I, 'give me leave to catch you in the fact: it was not an old
+_woman_, but an old _man_, whom I mentioned as having told me this.'
+I presumed to take an opportunity, in the presence of Johnson, of
+showing this lively lady how ready she was, unintentionally, to
+deviate from exact authenticity of narration."
+
+In the margin: "Mrs. Thrale knew there was no such thing as an Old
+Man: when a man gets superannuated, they call him an Old Woman."
+
+The remarks on the value of truth attributed to Johnson are just and
+sound in the main, but when they are pointed against character, they
+must be weighed in reference to the very high standard he habitually
+insisted upon. He would not allow his servant to say he was not at
+home when he was. "A servant's strict regard for truth," he
+continued, "must be weakened by such a practice. A philosopher may
+know that it is merely a form of denial; but few servants are such
+nice distinguishers. If I accustom a servant to tell a lie for me,
+have I not reason to apprehend that he will tell many lies for
+himself?"
+
+One of his townspeople, Mr. Wickens, of Lichfield, was walking with
+him in a small meandering shrubbery formed so as to hide the
+termination, and observed that it might be taken for an extensive
+labyrinth, but that it would prove a deception, though it was,
+indeed, not an unpardonable one. "Sir," exclaimed Johnson, "don't
+tell me of deception; a lie, Sir, is a lie, whether it be a lie to
+the eye or a lie to the ear." Whilst he was in one of these
+paradoxical humours, there was no pleasing him; and he has been known
+to insult persons of respectability for repeating current accounts of
+events, sounding new and strange, which turned out to be literally
+true; such as the red-hot shot at Gibraltar, or the effects of the
+earthquake at Lisbon. Yet he could be lax when it suited him, as
+speaking of epitaphs: "The writer of an epitaph should not be
+considered as saying nothing but what is strictly true. Allowance
+must be made for some degree of exaggerated praise. In lapidary
+inscriptions a man is not upon oath." Is he upon oath in narrating an
+anecdote? or could he do more than swear to the best of his
+recollection and belief, if he was. Boswell's notes of conversations
+are wonderful results of a peculiar faculty, or combination of
+faculties, but the utmost they can be supposed to convey is the
+substance of what took place, in an exceedingly condensed shape,
+lighted up at intervals by the _ipsissima verba_, of the speaker.
+
+"Whilst he went on talking triumphantly," says Boswell, "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.'" On his boasting of the efficiency of
+his own system of short-hand to Johnson, he was put to the test and
+failed.
+
+Mrs. Piozzi at once admits and accounts for the inferiority of her
+own collection of anecdotes, when she denounces "a trick which I have
+seen played on common occasions, of sitting steadily 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, and a
+conversation assembly room would become tremendous as a court of
+justice." This is a hit at Boswell, who (as regards Johnson himself)
+had full licence to take notes the best way he could. Madame
+D'Arblay's are much fuller, and bear a suspicious resemblance to the
+dialogues in her novels.
+
+In a reply to Boswell, dated December 14th, 1793, Miss Seward
+pointedly remarks:
+
+"Dr. Johnson's frequently-expressed contempt for Mrs. Thrale on
+account of that want of veracity which he imputes to her, at least as
+Mr. Boswell has recorded, either convicts him of narrating what
+Johnson never said, or Johnson himself of that insincerity of which
+there are too many instances, amidst all the recorded proofs of his
+unprovoked personal rudeness, to those with whom he conversed; for,
+this repeated contempt was coeval with his published letters, which
+express such high and perfect esteem for that lady, which declare
+that 'to hear her, was to hear Wisdom, that to see her, was to see
+Virtue.'"
+
+Lord Macaulay and his advocate in the "Edinburgh Review," who speak
+of Mrs. Piozzi's "white lies," have not convicted her of one; and Mr.
+Croker bears strong testimony to her accuracy.
+
+Mrs. Piozzi prefaces some instances of Johnson's rudeness and
+harshness by the remark, that "he did not hate the persons he treated
+with roughness, or despise them whom he drove from him by apparent
+scorn. He really loved and respected many whom he would not suffer to
+love him." Boswell echoes the remark, multiplies the instances, and
+then accuses her of misrepresenting their friend. After mentioning a
+discourteous reply to Robertson the historian, which was subsequently
+confirmed by Boswell, she proceeds to show that Johnson was no
+gentler to herself or those for whom he had the greatest regard.
+"When I one day lamented the loss of a first cousin, killed in
+America, 'Prithee, my dear (said he), have done with canting: how
+would the world be worse for it, I may ask, if all your relations
+were at once spitted like larks and roasted for Presto's
+supper?'--Presto was the dog that lay under the table." To this
+Boswell opposes the version given by Baretti:
+
+"Mrs. Thrale, while supping very heartily upon larks, laid down her
+knife and fork, and abruptly exclaimed, 'O, my dear 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
+_you_ very little concern if all your relations were spitted like
+those larks, and dressed for Presto's supper."
+
+This version, assuming its truth, aggravates the personal rudeness of
+the speech. But her marginal notes on the passage are: "Boswell
+appealing to Baretti for a testimony of the truth is comical enough!
+I never addressed him (Johnson) so familiarly in my life. I never did
+eat any supper, and there were no larks to eat."
+
+"Upon mentioning this story to my friend Mr. Wilkes," adds Boswell,
+"he pleasantly matched it with the following sentimental anecdote. 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 200 louis d'ors. Mr. Wilkes observed the behaviour of
+Mademoiselle, who sighed indeed very piteously, and assumed every
+pathetic air of grief, but ate 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, "Excessive
+sorrow is exceeding dry," but I never heard "Excessive sorrow is
+exceeding hungry." Perhaps one hundred will do. The gentleman took
+the hint." Mrs. Piozzi's marginal ebullition is: "Very like my hearty
+supper of larks, who never eat supper at all, nor was ever a hot dish
+seen on the table after dinner at Streatham Park."
+
+Two instances of inaccuracy, announced as particularly worthy of
+notice, are supplied by "an eminent critic," understood to be Malone,
+who begins by stating, "I have often been in his (Johnson's) company,
+and never _once_ heard him say a severe thing to any one; and many
+others can attest the same." Malone had lived very little with
+Johnson, and to appreciate his evidence, we should know what he and
+Boswell would agree to call a severe thing. Once, on Johnson's
+observing that they had "good talk" on the "preceding evening," "Yes,
+Sir," replied Boswell, "you tossed and gored several persons." Do
+tossing and goring come within the definition of severity? In another
+place he says, "I have seen even Mrs. Thrale stunned;" and Miss
+Reynolds relates that "One day at her own table he spoke so very
+roughly to her, that every one present was surprised that she could
+bear it so placidly; and on the ladies withdrawing, I expressed great
+astonishment that Dr. Johnson should speak so harshly to her, but to
+this she said no more than 'Oh, dear, good man.'"
+
+One of the two instances of Mrs. Piozzi's inaccuracy is as
+follows:--"He once bade a very celebrated lady (Hannah More) 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."
+
+Now, exclaims Mr. Malone, let the genuine anecdote be contrasted with
+this:
+
+"The person thus represented as being harshly treated, though a very
+celebrated lady, was _then_ 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 _laid it on_. '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 compliments, he exclaimed, 'Dearest lady,
+consider with yourself what your flattery is worth, before you bestow
+it so freely.'
+
+"How different does this story appear, when accompanied with all
+those circumstances which really belong to it, but which Mrs. Thrale
+either did not know, or has suppressed!"
+
+How do we know that these circumstances really belong to it? what
+essential difference do they make? and how do they prove Mrs.
+Thrale's inaccuracy, who expressly states the nature of the probable,
+though certainly most inadequate, provocation.
+
+The other instance is a story which she tells on Mr. Thrale's
+authority, of an argument between Johnson and a gentleman, which the
+master of the house, a nobleman, tried to cut short by saying loud
+enough for the doctor to hear, "Our friend has no meaning in all
+this, except just to relate at the Club to-morrow how he teased
+Johnson at dinner to-day; this is all to do himself honour." "No,
+upon my word," replied the other, "I see no honour in it, whatever
+you may do." "Well, Sir," returned Mr. Johnson sternly, "if you do
+not see the honour, I am sure I feel the disgrace." Malone, on the
+authority of a nameless friend, asserts that it was not at the house
+of a nobleman, that the gentleman's remark was uttered in a low tone,
+and that Johnson made no retort at all. As Mrs. Piozzi could hardly
+have invented the story, the sole question is, whether Mr. Thrale or
+Malone's friend was right. She has written in the margin: "It was the
+house of Thomas Fitzmaurice, son to Lord Shelburne, and Pottinger the
+hero."[1]
+
+"Mrs. Piozzi," says Boswell, "has given a similar misrepresentation
+of Johnson's treatment of Garrick in this particular (as to the
+Club), as if he had used these contemptuous expressions: 'If Garrick
+does apply, I'll blackball him. Surely one ought to sit in a society
+like ours--
+
+ "'Unelbow'd by a gamester, pimp, or player.'"
+
+The lady retorts, "He did say so, and Mr. Thrale stood astonished."
+Johnson was constantly depreciating the profession of the stage.[2]
+
+[Footnote 1: "Being in company with Count Z----, at Lord ----'s
+table, the Count thinking the Doctor too dogmatical, observed, he did
+not at all think himself honoured by the conversation.' And what is
+to become of me, my lord, who feel myself actually
+disgraced?"--_Johnsoniana_, p. 143, first edition.]
+
+[Footnote 2: "_Boswell_. There, Sir, you are always heretical, you
+never will allow merit to a player. _Johnson_. Merit, Sir, what
+merit? Do you respect a rope-dancer or a
+ballad-singer?"--_Boswell's Life of Johnson_, p. 556.]
+
+Whilst finding fault with Mrs. Piozzi for inaccuracy in another
+place, Boswell supplies an additional example of Johnson's habitual
+disregard of the ordinary rules of good breeding in society:--
+
+"A learned gentleman [Dr. Vansittart], who, in the course of
+conversation, wished to inform us of this simple fact, that the
+council upon the circuit of Shrewsbury were much bitten by fleas,
+took, I suppose, seven or eight minutes in relating it
+circumstantially. He in a plenitude of phrase told us, that large
+bales of woollen cloth were lodged in the town-hall; that by reason
+of this, fleas nestled there in prodigious numbers; that the lodgings
+of the council were near the town-hall; and that those little animals
+moved from place to place with wonderful agility. Johnson sat in
+great impatience till the gentleman had finished his tedious
+narrative, and then burst out (playfully however), 'It is a pity,
+Sir, that you have not seen a lion; for a flea has taken you such a
+time, that a lion must have served you a twelve-month.'"
+
+He complains in a note that Mrs. Piozzi, to whom he told the
+anecdote, has related it "as if the gentleman had given the natural
+history of the mouse." But, in a letter to Johnson she tells _him_ "I
+have seen the man that saw the mouse," and he replies "Poor V----, he
+is a good man, &c.;" so that her version of the story is the best
+authenticated. Opposite Boswell's aggressive paragraph she has
+written: "I saw old Mitchell of Brighthelmstone affront him (Johnson)
+terribly once about fleas. Johnson, being tired of the subject,
+expressed his impatience of it with coarseness. 'Why, Sir,' said the
+old man, 'why should not Flea bite o'me be treated as Phlebotomy? It
+empties the capillary vessels.'"
+
+Boswell's Life of Johnson was not published till 1791; but the
+controversy kindled by the Tour to the Hebrides and the Anecdotes,
+raged fiercely enough to fix general attention and afford ample scope
+for ridicule: "The Bozzi &c. subjects," writes Hannah More in April
+1786, "are not exhausted, though everybody seems heartily sick of
+them. Everybody, however, conspires not to let them drop. _That_, the
+Cagliostro, and the Cardinal's necklace, spoil all conversation, and
+destroyed a very good evening at Mr. Pepys' last night." In one of
+Walpole's letters about the same time we find:
+
+"All conversation turns on a trio of culprits--Hastings, Fitzgerald,
+and the Cardinal de Rohan.... So much for tragedy. Our comic
+performers are Boswell and Dame Piozzi. The cock biographer has fixed
+a direct lie on the hen, by an advertisement in which he affirms that
+he communicated his manuscript to Madame Thrale, and that she made no
+objection to what he says of her low opinion of Mrs. Montagu's book.
+It is very possible that it might not be her real opinion, but was
+uttered in compliment to Johnson, or for fear he should spit in her
+face if she disagreed with him; but how will she get over her not
+objecting to the passage remaining? She must have known, by knowing
+Boswell, and by having a similar intention herself, that his
+'Anecdotes' would certainly be published: in short, the ridiculous
+woman will be strangely disappointed. As she must have heard that
+_the whole first impression of her book was sold the first day_, no
+doubt she expected on her landing, to be received like the governor
+of Gibraltar, and to find the road strewed with branches of palm.
+She, and Boswell, and their Hero, are the joke of the public. A Dr.
+Walcot, _soi-disant_ Peter Pindar, has published a burlesque eclogue,
+in which Boswell and the Signora are the interlocutors, and all the
+absurdest passages in the works of both are ridiculed. The
+print-shops teem with satiric prints in them: one in which Boswell,
+as a monkey, is riding on Johnson, the bear, has this witty
+inscription, 'My Friend _delineavit_.' But enough of these
+mountebanks."
+
+What Walpole calls the absurdest passages are precisely those which
+possess most interest for posterity; namely, the minute personal
+details, which bring Johnson home to the mind's eye. Peter Pindar,
+however, was simply labouring in his vocation when he made the best
+of them, as in the following lines. His satire is in the form of a
+Town Eclogue, in which Bozzy and Madame Piozzi contend in anecdotes,
+with Hawkins for umpire:
+
+BOZZY.
+
+ "One Thursday morn did Doctor Johnson wake,
+ And call out 'Lanky, Lanky,' by mistake--
+ But recollecting--'Bozzy, Bozzy,' cry'd--
+ For in _contractions_ Johnson took a pride!"
+
+MADAME PIOZZI.
+
+ "I ask'd him if he knock'd Tom Osborn down;
+ As such a tale was current through the town,--
+ Says I, 'Do tell me, Doctor, what befell.'--
+ 'Why, dearest lady, there is nought to _tell_;
+ 'I ponder'd on the _proper'st_ mode to _treat_ him--
+ 'The dog was impudent, and so I beat him!
+ 'Tom, like a fool, proclaim'd his fancied wrongs;
+ '_Others_, that I belabour'd, held their tongues.'"
+
+ "Did any one, that he was _happy_, cry--
+ Johnson would tell him plumply, 'twas a lie.
+ A Lady told him she was really so;
+ On which he sternly answer'd, 'Madam, no!
+ 'Sickly you are, and ugly--foolish, poor;
+ 'And therefore can't he happy, I am sure.
+ ''Twould make a fellow hang himself, whose ear
+ 'Were, from such creatures, forc'd such stuff to hear.'"
+
+BOZZY.
+
+ "Lo, when we landed on the Isle of Mull,
+ The megrims got into the Doctor's skull:
+ With such bad humours he began to fill,
+ I thought he would not go to Icolmkill:
+ But lo! those megrims (wonderful to utter!)
+ Were banish'd all by tea and bread and butter!"
+
+At last they get angry, and tell each other a few
+home truths:--
+
+BOZZY.
+
+ "How could your folly tell, so void of truth,
+ That miserable story of the youth,
+ Who, in your book, of Doctor Johnson begs
+ Most seriously to know if cats laid eggs!"
+
+MADAME PIOZZI.
+
+ "_Who_ told of Mistress Montagu the lie--
+ So palpable a falsehood?--Bozzy, fie!"
+
+BOZZY.
+
+ "_Who_, madd'ning with an anecdotic itch,
+ Declar'd that Johnson call'd his mother _b-tch?_"
+
+MADAME PIOZZI.
+
+ "_Who_, from M'Donald's rage to save his snout,
+ Cut twenty lines of defamation out?"
+
+BOZZY.
+
+ "_Who_ would have said a word about Sam's wig,
+ Or told the story of the peas and pig?
+ Who would have told a tale so very flat,
+ Of Frank the Black, and Hodge the mangy cat?"
+
+MADAME PIOZZI.
+
+ "Good me! you're grown at once confounded _tender_;
+ Of Doctor Johnson's fame a _fierce_ defender:
+ I'm sure you've mention'd many a pretty story
+ Not much redounding to the Doctor's glory.
+ _Now_ for a _saint_ upon us you would palm him--
+ First _murder_ the poor man, and then _embalm him!_"
+
+BOZZY.
+
+ "Well, Ma'am! since all that Johnson said or wrote,
+ You hold so sacred, how have you forgot
+ To grant the wonder-hunting world a reading
+ Of Sam's Epistle, just before your _wedding_:
+ Beginning thus, (in strains not form'd to flatter)
+ 'Madam,
+ '_If that most ignominious matter
+ 'Be not concluded_'--[1]
+ Farther shall I say?
+ No--we shall have it from _yourself_ some day,
+ To justify your passion for the _Youth_,
+ With all the charms of eloquence and truth."
+
+MADAME PIOZZI.
+
+ "What was my marriage, Sir, to _you_ or _him?_
+ _He_ tell me what to do!--a pretty whim!
+ _He_, to _propriety_, (the beast) _resort!_
+ As well might _elephants preside_ at _court_.
+ Lord! let the world to _damn_ my match _agree;_
+ Good God! James Boswell, what's _that world_ to _me?_
+ The folks who paid respects to Mistress Thrale,
+ Fed on her pork, poor souls! and swill'd her ale,
+ May _sicken_ at Piozzi, nine in ten--
+ Turn up the nose of scorn--good God! what then?
+ For _me_, the Dev'l may fetch their souls so _great_;
+ _They_ keep their homes, and _I_, thank God, my meat.
+ When they, poor owls! shall beat their cage, a jail,
+ I, unconfin'd, shall spread my peacock tail;
+ Free as the birds of air, enjoy my ease,
+ Choose my own food, and see what climes I please.
+ _I_ suffer only--if I'm in the wrong:
+ So, now, you prating puppy, hold your tongue."
+
+[Footnote 1: This evidently referred to the "adumbration" of
+Johnson's letter (No. 4), _ante_, p. 239.]
+
+Walpole's opinion of the book itself had been expressed in a
+preceding letter, dated March 28th, 1786:
+
+"Two days ago appeared Madame Piozzi's Anecdotes of Dr. Johnson. I am
+lamentably disappointed--in her, I mean: not in him. I had conceived
+a favourable opinion of her capacity. But this new book is wretched;
+a high-varnished preface to a heap of rubbish in a very vulgar style,
+and too void of method even for such a farrago. . . The Signora talks
+of her doctor's _expanded_ mind and has contributed her mite to show
+that never mind was narrower. In fact, the poor woman is to be
+pitied: he was mad, and his disciples did not find it out[1], but
+have unveiled all his defects; nay, have exhibited all his
+brutalities as wit, and his worst conundrums as humour. Judge! The
+Piozzi relates that a young man asking him where Palmyra was, he
+replied: 'In Ireland: it was a bog planted with palm trees.'"
+
+[Footnote 1: See _ante_, p. 202 and 270.]
+
+Walpole's statement, that the whole first impression was sold the
+first day, is confirmed by one of her letters, and may be placed
+alongside of a statement of Johnson's reported in the book. Clarissa
+being mentioned as a perfect character, "on the contrary (said he)
+you may observe that there is always something which she prefers to
+truth. Fielding's Amelia was the most pleasing heroine of all the
+romances; but that vile broken nose never cured, ruined the sale of
+perhaps the only book, which, being printed off betimes one morning,
+a new edition was called for before night."
+
+When the king sent for a copy of the "Anecdotes" on the evening of
+the publication, there was none to be had.
+
+In April, 1786, Hannah More writes:
+
+"Mrs. Piozzi's book is much in fashion. It is indeed entertaining,
+but there are two or three passages exceedingly unkind to Garrick
+which filled me with indignation. If Johnson had been envious enough
+to utter them, she might have been prudent enough to suppress them."
+
+In a preceding letter she had said:
+
+"Boswell tells me he is printing anecdotes of Dr. Johnson, not his
+_life_, but, as he has the vanity to call it, his _pyramid_, I
+besought his tenderness for our virtuous and most revered departed
+friend, and begged he would mitigate some of his asperities. He said
+roughly, he would not cut off his claws, nor make a tiger a cat to
+please anybody." The retort will serve for both Mrs. Piozzi and
+himself.
+
+Mrs. Piozzi writes from Venice, May 20th, 1786: "Cadell says he never
+yet published a work the sale of which was so rapid, and that
+rapidity of so long continuance. I suppose the fifth edition will
+meet me at my return."
+
+"Milan, July 6th, 1786.
+
+"If Cadell would send me some copies, I should be very much obliged
+to him. _'Tis like living without a looking-glass never to see one's
+own book so_."
+
+The copy of the "Anecdotes" in my possession has two inscriptions on
+the blank leaves before the title-page. The one is in Mrs. Piozzi's
+handwriting: "This little dirty book is kindly accepted by Sir James
+Fellowes from his obliged friend, H.L. Piozzi, 14th February, 1816;"
+the other: "This copy of the 'Anecdotes' was found at Bath, covered
+with dirt, the book having been long out of print[1], and after being
+bound was presented to me by my excellent friend, H.L.P. (signed)
+J.F."
+
+[Footnote 1: The "Anecdotes" were reprinted by Messrs. Longman in
+1856, and form part of their "Traveller's Library."]
+
+It is enriched by marginal notes in her handwriting, which enable us
+to fill up a few puzzling blanks, besides supplying some information
+respecting men and books, which will be prized by all lovers of
+literature.
+
+One of the anecdotes runs thus: "I asked him once concerning the
+conversation powers of a gentleman with whom I was myself
+unacquainted. 'He talked to me at the Club one day (replies our
+Doctor) concerning Catiline's conspiracy; so I withdrew my attention,
+and thought about Tom Thumb.'"
+
+In the margin is written "Charles James Fox." Mr. Croker came to the
+conclusion that the gentleman was Mr. Vesey. Boswell says that Fox
+never talked with any freedom in the presence of Johnson, who
+accounted for his reserve by suggesting that a man who is used to the
+applause of the House of Commons, has no wish for that of a private
+company. But the real cause was his sensitiveness to rudeness, his
+own temper being singularly sweet. By an odd coincidence he occupied
+the presidential chair at the Club on the evening when Johnson
+emphatically declared patriotism the last refuge of a scoundrel.
+
+Again: "On an occasion of less consequence, when he turned his back
+on Lord Bolingbroke in the rooms of Brighthelmstone, he made this
+excuse: 'I am not obliged, Sir,' said he to Mr. Thrale, who stood
+fretting, 'to find reasons for respecting the rank of him who will
+not condescend to declare it by his dress or some other visible mark:
+what are stars and other signs of superiority made for?' The next
+evening, however, he made us comical amends, by sitting by the same
+nobleman, and haranguing very loudly about the nature, and use, and
+abuse, of divorces. Many people gathered round them to hear what was
+said, and when my husband called him away, and told him to whom he
+had been talking, received an answer which I will not write down."
+
+The marginal note is: "He said: 'Why, Sir, I did not know the man. If
+he will put on no other mark of distinction, let us make him wear his
+horns.'" Lord Bolingbroke had divorced his wife, afterwards Lady
+Diana Beauclerc, for infidelity.
+
+A marginal note naming the lady of quality (Lady Catherine Wynne)
+mentioned in the following anecdote, verifies Mr. Croker's
+conjectural statement concerning her:
+
+"For a lady of quality, since dead, who received us at her husband's
+seat in Wales, with less attention than he had long been accustomed
+to, he had a rougher denunciation: 'That woman,' cries Johnson, 'is
+like sour small beer, the beverage of her table, and produce of the
+wretched country she lives in: like that, she could never have been a
+good thing, and even that bad thing is spoiled.' It was in the same
+vein of asperity, and I believe with something like the same
+provocation, that he observed of a Scotch lady, 'that she resembled a
+dead nettle; were she alive,' said he, 'she would sting.'"
+
+From similar notes we learn that the "somebody" who declared Johnson
+"a tremendous converser" was George Grarrick; and that it was Dr.
+Delap, of Sussex, to whom, when lamenting the tender state of his
+_inside_, he cried out: "Dear Doctor, do not be like the spider, man,
+and spin conversation thus incessantly out of thy own bowels."
+
+On the margin of the page in which Hawkins Browne is commended as the
+most delightful of conversers, she has written: "Who wrote the
+'Imitation of all the Poets' in his own ludicrous verses, praising
+the pipe of tobacco. Of Hawkins Browne, the pretty Mrs. Cholmondeley
+said she was soon tired; because the first hour he was so dull, there
+was no bearing him; the second he was so witty, there was no bearing
+him; the third he was so drunk, there was no bearing him." [1]
+
+[Footnote 1: Query, whether this is the gentleman immortalised by
+Peter Plymley: "In the third year of his present Majesty (George
+III.) and in the thirtieth of his own age, Mr. Isaac Hawkins Brown,
+then upon his travels, danced one evening at the court of Naples. His
+dress was a volcano silk, with lava buttons. Whether (as the
+Neapolitan wits said) he had studied dancing under Saint Vitus, or
+whether David, dancing in a linen vest, was his model, is not known;
+but Mr. Brown danced with such inconceivable alacrity and vigour,
+that he threw the Queen of Naples into convulsions of laughter, which
+terminated in a miscarriage, and changed the dynasty of the
+Neapolitan throne."]
+
+In the "Anecdotes" she relates that one day in Wales she meant to
+please Johnson with a dish of young peas. "Are they not charming?"
+said I, while he was eating them. "Perhaps," said he, "they would be
+so--to a pig;" meaning (according to the marginal note), because they
+were too little boiled. Pennant, the historian, used to tell this as
+having happened at Mrs. Cotton's, who, according to him, called out,
+"Then do help yourself, Mr. Johnson." But the well-known high
+breeding of the lady justifies a belief that this is one of the many
+repartees which, if conceived, were never uttered at the time.[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: I have heard on good authority that Pennant afterwards
+owned it as his own invention.]
+
+When a Lincolnshire lady, shewing Johnson a grotto, asked him: "Would
+it not be a pretty cool habitation in summer?" he replied: "I think
+it would, Madam, _for a toad_." Talking of Gray's Odes, he said,
+"They are forced plants, raised in a hotbed; 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." "Yes, Sir," said Johnson, "_for a
+hog_."
+
+To return to the Anecdotes:
+
+"Of the various states and conditions of humanity, he despised none
+more, I think, than the man who marries for maintenance: and of a
+friend who made his alliance on no higher principles, he said once,
+'Now has that fellow,' it was a nobleman of whom we were speaking,
+'at length obtained a certainty of three meals a day, and for that
+certainty, like his brother dog in the fable, he will get his neck
+galled for life with a collar.'" The nobleman was Lord Sandys.
+
+"He recommended, on something like the same principle, that when one
+person meant to serve another, he should not go about it slily, or,
+as we say, underhand, out of a false idea of delicacy, to surprise
+one's friend with an unexpected favour; 'which, ten to one,' says he,
+'fails to oblige your acquaintance, who had some reasons against such
+a mode of obligation, which you might have known but for that
+superfluous cunning which you think an elegance. Oh! never be seduced
+by such silly pretences,' continued he; 'if a wench wants a good
+gown, do not give her a fine smelling-bottle, because that is more
+delicate: as I once knew a lady lend the key of her library to a poor
+scribbling dependant, as if she took the woman for an ostrich that
+could digest iron.'" This lady was Mrs. Montagu.
+
+"I mentioned two friends who were particularly fond of looking at
+themselves in a glass--'They do not surprise me at all by so doing,'
+said Johnson: 'they see reflected in that glass, men who have risen
+from almost the lowest situations in life; one to enormous riches,
+the other to everything this world can give--rank, fame, and fortune.
+They see, likewise, men who have merited their advancement by the
+exertion and improvement of those talents which God had given them;
+and I see not why they should avoid the mirror.'" The one, she
+writes, was Mr. Cator, the other, Wedderburne. Another great lawyer
+and very ugly man, Dunning, Lord Ashburton, was remarkable for the
+same peculiarity, and had his walls covered with looking-glasses. His
+personal vanity was excessive; and his boast that a celebrated
+courtesan had died with one of his letters in her hand, provoked one
+of Wilkes's happiest repartees.
+
+Opposite a passage descriptive of Johnson's conversation she has
+written: "We used to say to one another familiarly at Streatham Park,
+'Come, let us go into the library, and make Johnson speak Ramblers.'"
+
+Dr. Lort writes to Bishop Percy:
+
+"December 16th, 1786.
+
+"I had a letter lately from Mrs. Piozzi, dated Vienna, November 4, in
+which she says that, after visiting Prague and Dresden, she shall
+return home by Brussels, whither I have written to her; and I imagine
+she will be in London early in the new year. Miss Thrale is at her
+own house at Brighthelmstone, accompanied by a very respectable
+companion, an officer's widow, recommended to her as such.[1] There
+is a new life of Johnson published by a Dr. Towers, a Dissenting
+minister and Dr. Kippis's associate in the Biographia Britannica, for
+which work I take it for granted this life is to be hashed up again
+when the letter 'J' takes its turn. There is nothing new in it; and
+the author gives Johnson and his biographers all fair play, except
+when he treats of his political opinions and pamphlets. I was glad to
+hear that Johnson confessed to Dr. Fordyce, a little before his
+death, that he had offended both God and man by his pride of
+understanding.[2] Sir John Hawkins' Life of him is also finished, and
+will be published with the works in February next. From all these I
+suppose Boswell will borrow largely to make up his quarto life;--and
+so our modern authors proceed, preying on one another, and
+complaining sorely of each other."
+
+[Footnote 1: The Hon. Mrs. Murray, afterwards Mrs. Aust!]
+
+[Footnote 2: He used very different language to Langton.]
+
+"March 8th, 1787.
+
+"I had a letter lately from Mrs. Piozzi from Brussels, intimating
+that she should soon be in England, and I expect every day to hear of
+her arrival. I do not believe that she purchased a marquisate abroad;
+but it is said, with some probability, that she will here get the
+King's license, or an act of Parliament, to change her name to
+Salusbury, her maiden name. Sir John Hawkins, I am told, bears hard
+upon her in his 'Life of Johnson.'"
+
+"March 21st, 1787.
+
+"Mr. and Mrs. Piozzi are arrived at an hotel in Pall Mall, and are
+about to take a house in Hanover Square; they were with me last
+Saturday evening, when I asked some of her friends to meet her; she
+looks very well, and seems in good spirits; told me she had been that
+morning at the bank to get 'Johnson's Correspondence' amongst other
+papers, which she means forthwith to commit to the press. There is a
+bookseller has printed two supplementary volumes to Hawkins' eleven,
+consisting almost wholly of the 'Lilliputian Speeches.' Hawkins has
+printed a Review of the 'Sublime and Beautiful' as Johnson's, which
+Murphy says was his."
+
+"March 13th, 1787.
+
+"Mrs. Piozzi and her _caro sposo_ seem very happy here at a good
+house in Hanover Square, where I am invited to a rout next week, the
+first I believe she has attempted, and then will be seen who of her
+old acquaintance continue such. She is now printing Johnson's Letters
+in 2 vols. octavo, with some of her own; but if they are not ready
+before the recess they will not be published till next winter. Poor
+Sir John Hawkins, I am told, is pulled all to pieces in the Review."
+Sir John was treated according to his deserts, and did not escape
+whipping. One of the severest castigations was inflicted by Porson.
+
+Before mentioning her next publication, I will show from "Thraliana"
+her state of mind when about to start for England, and her
+impressions of things and people on her return:
+
+"1786.--It has always been my maxim never to influence the
+inclination of another: Mr. Thrale, in consequence, lived with me
+seventeen and a half years, during which time I tried but twice to
+persuade him to _do_ anything, and but once, and that in vain, to let
+anything alone. Even my daughters, as soon as they could reason, were
+always allowed, and even encouraged, by me to reason their own way,
+and not suffer their respect or affection for me to mislead their
+judgment. Let us keep the mind clear if we can from prejudices, or
+truth will never be found at all.[1] The worst part of this
+disinterested scheme is, that other people are not of my mind, and if
+I resolve not to use my lawful influence to make my children love me,
+the lookers-on will soon use their unlawful influence to make them
+hate me: if I scrupulously avoid persuading my husband to become a
+Lutheran or be of the English church, the Romanists will be diligent
+to teach him all the narrowness and bitterness of their own unfeeling
+sect, and soon persuade him that it is not delicacy but weakness
+makes me desist from the combat. Well! let me do right, and leave the
+consequences in His hand who alone sees every action's motive and the
+true cause of every effect: let me endeavour to please God, and to
+have only my own faults and follies, not those of another, to answer
+for."
+
+[Footnote 1: "Clear your mind of _cant_."--JOHNSON.]
+
+"1787, _May_ 1_st_.--It was not wrong to come home after all, but
+very right. The Italians would have said we were afraid to face
+England, and the English would have said we were confined abroad in
+prisons or convents or some stuff. I find Mr. Smith (one of our
+daughter's guardians) told that poor baby Cecilia a fine staring tale
+how my husband locked me up at Milan and fed me on bread and water,
+to make the child hate Mr. Piozzi. Good God! What infamous
+proceeding was this! My husband never saw the fellow, so could not
+have provoked him."
+
+"_May_ 19_th_.--We bad a fine assembly last night indeed: in my best
+days I never had finer: there were near a hundred people in the rooms
+which were besides much admired."
+
+"1788, _January_ 1_st_.--How little I thought this day four years
+that I should celebrate this 1st of January, 1788, here at Bath,
+surrounded with friends and admirers? The public partial to _me_, and
+almost every individual whose kindness is worth wishing for,
+sincerely attached to my husband."
+
+"Mrs. Byron is converted by Piozzi's assiduity, she really likes him
+now: and sweet Mrs. Lambert told everybody at Bath she was in love
+with him."
+
+"I have passed a delightful winter in spite of them, caressed by my
+friends, adored by my husband, amused with every entertainment that
+is going forward: what need I think about three sullen Misses? ...
+and yet!"----
+
+"_August_ 1_st_--Baretti has been grossly abusive in the 'European
+Magazine' to me: _that_ hurts me but little; what shocks me is that
+those treacherous Burneys should abet and puff him. He is a most
+ungrateful because unprincipled wretch; but I _am_ sorry that
+anything belonging to Dr. Burney should be so monstrously wicked."
+
+"1789, _January_ 17_th_.--Mrs. Siddons dined in a coterie of my
+unprovoked enemies yesterday at Porteous's. She mentioned our
+concerts, and the Erskines lamented their absence from one we gave
+two days ago, at which Mrs. Garrick was present and gave a good
+report to the _Blues_. Charming Blues! blue with venom I think; I
+suppose they begin to be ashamed of their paltry behaviour. Mrs.
+Grarrick, more prudent than any of them, left a loophole for
+returning friendship to fasten through, and it _shall_ fasten: that
+woman has lived a _very wise life_, regular and steady in her
+conduct, attentive to every word she speaks and every step she
+treads, decorous in her manners and graceful in her person. My fancy
+forms the Queen just like Mrs. Grarrick: they are countrywomen and
+have, as the phrase is, had a hard card to play; yet never lurched by
+tricksters nor subdued by superior powers, they will rise from the
+table unhurt either by others or themselves ... having played a
+_saving game. I_ have run risques to be sure, that I have; yet--
+
+ "'When after some distinguished leap
+ She drops her pole and seems to slip,
+ Straight gath'ring all her active strength,
+ She rises higher half her length;'
+
+and better than _now_ I have never stood with the world in general, I
+believe. May the books just sent to press confirm the partiality of
+the Public!"
+
+"1789, _January_.--I have a great deal more prudence than people
+suspect me for: they think I act by chance while I am doing nothing
+in the world unintentionally, and have never, I dare say, in these
+last fifteen years uttered a word to husband, or child, or servant,
+or friend, without being very careful what it should be. Often have I
+spoken what I have repented after, but that was want of _judgment_,
+not of _meaning_. What I said I meant to say at the time, and thought
+it best to say, ... I do not err from haste or a spirit of rattling,
+as people think I do: when I err, 'tis because I make a false
+conclusion, not because I make no conclusion at all; when I rattle, I
+rattle on purpose."
+
+"1789, _May_ 1_st_.--Mrs. Montagu wants to make up with me again. I
+dare say she does; but I will not be taken and left even at the
+pleasure of those who are much nearer and dearer to me than Mrs.
+Montagu. We want no flash, no flattery. I never had more of either in
+my life, nor ever lived half so happily: Mrs. Montagu wrote creeping
+letters when she wanted my help, or foolishly _thought_ she did, and
+then turned her back upon me and set her adherents to do the same. I
+despise such conduct, and Mr. Pepys, Mrs. Ord, &c. now sneak about
+and look ashamed of themselves--well they may!"
+
+"1790, _March_ 18_th_.--I met Miss Burney at an assembly last
+night--'tis six years since I had seen her: she appeared most fondly
+rejoyced, in good time! and Mrs. Locke, at whose house we stumbled on
+each other, pretended that she had such a regard for me, &c. I
+answered with ease and coldness, but in exceeding good humour: and we
+talked of the King and Queen, his Majesty's illness and recovery ...
+and all ended, as it should do, with perfect indifference."
+
+"I saw _Master Pepys_[1] too and Mrs. Ord; and only see how foolish
+and how mortified the people do but look."
+
+[Footnote 1: This is Sir W. Pepys mentioned _ante_, p. 252.]
+
+"Barclay and Perkins live very genteelly. I dined with them at our
+brewhouse one day last week. I felt so oddly in the old house where I
+had lived so long."
+
+"The Pepyses find out that they have used me very ill.... I hope they
+find out too that I do not care, Seward too sues for reconcilement
+underhand ... so they do all; and I sincerely forgive them--but, like
+the linnet in 'Metastasio'--
+
+ "'Cauto divien per prova
+ Ne piu tradir si fa.'
+
+ "'When lim'd, the poor bird thus with eagerness strains,
+ Nor regrets his torn wing while his freedom he gains:
+ The loss of his plumage small time will restore,
+ And once tried the false twig--it shall cheat him no more.'"
+
+"1790, _July_ 28_th_.--We have kept our seventh wedding day and
+celebrated our return to _this house_[1] with prodigious splendour
+and gaiety. Seventy people to dinner.... Never was a pleasanter day
+seen, and at night the trees and front of the house were illuminated
+with coloured lamps that called forth our neighbours from all the
+adjacent villages to admire and enjoy the diversion. Many friends
+swear that not less than a thousand men, women, and children might
+have been counted in the house and grounds, where, though all were
+admitted, nothing was stolen, lost, or broken, or even damaged--a
+circumstance almost incredible; and which gave Mr. Piozzi a high
+opinion of English gratitude and respectful attachment."
+
+[Footnote 1: Streatham.]
+
+"1790, _December 1st_.--Dr. Parr and I are in correspondence, and his
+letters are very flattering: I am proud of his notice to be sure, and
+he seems pleased with my acknowledgments of esteem: he is a
+prodigious scholar ... but in the meantime I have lost Dr. Lort."[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: He died November 5th, 1790.]
+
+In the Conway Notes, she thus sums up her life from March 1787 to
+1791:
+
+"On first reaching London, we drove to the Royal Hotel in Pall Mall,
+and, arriving early, I proposed going to the Play. There was a small
+front box, in those days, which held only two; it made the division,
+or connexion, with the side boxes, and, being unoccupied, we sat in
+it, and saw Mrs. Siddons act Imogen, I well remember, and Mrs.
+Jordan, Priscilla Tomboy. Mr. Piozzi was amused, and the next day was
+spent in looking at houses, counting the cards left by old
+acquaintances, &c. The lady-daughters came, behaved with cold
+civility, and asked what I thought of _their_ decision concerning
+Cecilia, then at school. No reply was made, or a gentle one; but she
+was the first cause of contention among us. The lawyers gave her into
+my care, and we took her home to our new habitation in Hanover
+Square, which we opened with music, cards, &c., on, I think, the 22nd
+March. Miss Thrales refused their company; so we managed as well as
+we could. Our affairs were in good order, and money ready for
+spending. The World, as it is called, appeared good-humoured, and we
+were soon followed, respected, and admired. The summer months sent us
+about visiting and pleasuring, ... and after another gay London
+season, Streatham Park, unoccupied by tenants, called us as if
+_really home_. Mr. Piozzi, with more generosity than prudence, spent
+two thousand pounds on repairing and furnishing it in 1790;--and we
+had danced all night, I recollect, when the news came of Louis
+Seize's escape from, and recapture by, his rebel subjects.'"
+
+The following are some of the names most frequently mentioned in her
+Diary as visiting or corresponding with her after her return from
+Italy: Lord Fife, Dr. Moore, the Kembles, Dr. Currie, Mrs. Lewis
+(widow of the Dean of Ossory), Dr. Lort, Sir Lucas Pepys, Mr. Selwin,
+Sammy Lysons (_sic_), Sir Philip Clerke, Hon. Mrs. Byron, Mrs.
+Siddons, Arthur Murphy, Mr. and Mrs. Whalley, the Greatheads, Mr.
+Parsons, Miss Seward, Miss Lee, Dr. Barnard (Bishop of Killaloe,
+better known as Dean of Derry), Hinchcliffe (Bishop of Peterborough),
+Mrs. Lambert, the Staffords, Lord Huntingdon, Lady Betty Cobb and her
+daughter Mrs. Gould, Lord Dudley, Lord Cowper, Lord Pembroke, Marquis
+Araciel, Count Marteningo, Count Meltze, Mrs. Drummond Smith, Mr.
+Chappelow, Mrs. Hobart, Miss Nicholson, Mrs. Locke, Lord Deerhurst.
+
+Resentment for her imputed unkindness to Johnson might have been
+expected to last longest at his birthplace. But Miss Seward writes
+from Lichfield, October 6th, 1787:
+
+"Mrs. Piozzi completely answers your description: her conversation is
+indeed that bright wine of the intellects which has no lees.... I
+shall always feel indebted to him (Mr. Perkins) for eight or nine
+hours of Mr. and Mrs. Piozzi's society. They passed one evening here,
+and I the next with them at their inn."
+
+Again to Miss Helen Williams, Lichfield, December, 25th, 1787:
+
+"Yes, it is very true, on the evening he (Colonel Barry) mentioned to
+you, when Mrs. Piozzi honoured this roof, his conversation greatly
+contributed to its Attic spirit. Till that day I had never conversed
+with her. There has been no exaggeration, there could be none, in the
+description given you of Mrs. Piozzi's talents for conversation; at
+least in the powers of classic allusion and brilliant wit."
+
+Mrs. Piozzi's next publication was "Letters To and From the late
+Samuel Johnson, LL.D., &c." In the Preface she speaks of the
+"Anecdotes" having been received with a degree of approbation she
+hardly dared to hope, and exclaims, "May these Letters in some
+measure pay my debt of gratitude! they will not surely be the
+_first_, the _only_ thing written by Johnson, with which our nation
+has not been pleased." ... "The good taste by which our countrymen
+are distinguished, will lead them to prefer the native thoughts and
+unstudied phrases scattered over these pages to the more laboured
+elegance of his other works; as bees have been observed to reject
+roses, and fix upon the wild fragrance of a neighbouring heath."
+
+Whenever Johnson took pen in hand, the chances were, that what he
+produced would belong to the composite order; the unstudied phrases
+were reserved for his "talk;" and he wished his Letters to be
+preserved.[1] The main value of these consists in the additional
+illustrations they afford of his conduct in private life, and of his
+opinions on the management of domestic affairs. The lack of literary
+and public interest is admitted and excused:
+
+[Footnote 1: "Do you keep my letters? I am not of your opinion that I
+shall not like to read them hereafter."--_Letters_, vol. i. p. 295.]
+
+"None but domestic and familiar events can be expected from a private
+correspondence; no reflexions but such as they excite can be found
+there; yet whoever turns away disgusted by the insipidity with which
+this, and I suppose every correspondence must naturally and almost
+necessarily begin--will here be likely to lose some genuine pleasure,
+and some useful knowledge of what our heroic Milton was himself
+contented to respect, as
+
+ "'That which before thee lies in daily life.'
+
+"And should I be charged with obtruding trifles on the public, I
+might reply, that the meanest animals preserved in amber become of
+value to those who form collections of natural history; that the fish
+found in Monte Bolca serve as proofs of sacred writ; and that the
+cart-wheel stuck in the rock of Tivoli, is now found useful in
+computing the rotation of the earth."
+
+In "Thraliana" she thus refers to the reception of the book:
+
+"The Letters are out. They were published on Saturday, 8th of March.
+Cadell printed 2,000 copies, and says 1,100 are already sold. My
+letter to Jack Rice on his marriage (Vol. i. p. 96), seems the
+universal favourite. The book is well spoken of on the whole; yet
+Cadell murmurs. I cannot make out why."
+
+This entry is not dated; the next is dated March 27th, 1788.
+
+"This collection," says Boswell, "as a proof of the high estimation
+set on any thing that came from his pen, was sold by that lady for
+the sum of 500_l_." She has written on the margin: "How spiteful."
+
+Boswell states that "Horace Walpole thought Johnson a more amiable
+character after reading his Letters to Mrs. Thrale, but never was one
+of the true admirers of that great man." Madame D'Arblay came to an
+opposite conclusion; in her Diary, January 9th, 1788, she writes:
+
+"To-day Mrs. Schwellenberg did me a real favour, and with real good
+nature, for she sent me the letters of my poor lost friends, Dr.
+Johnson and Mrs. Thrale, which she knew me to be almost pining to
+procure. The book belongs to the Bishop of Carlisle, who lent it to
+Mr. Turbulent, from whom it was again lent to the Queen, and so
+passed on to Mrs. S. It is still unpublished. With what a sadness
+have I been reading! What scenes has it revived! What regrets
+renewed! These letters have not been more improperly published in the
+whole than they are injudiciously displayed in their several parts.
+She has given all, every word, and thinks that perhaps a justice to
+Dr. Johnson, which, in fact, is the greatest injury to his memory.
+
+"The few she has selected of her own do her, indeed, much credit; she
+has discarded all that were trivial and merely local, and given only
+such as contain something instructive, amusing, or ingenious."
+
+She admits only four of Johnson's letters to be worthy of his exalted
+powers: one upon Death, in considering its approach, as we are
+surrounded, or not, by mourners; another upon the sudden death of
+Mrs. Thrale's only son. Her chief motive for "almost pining" for the
+book, steeped as she was in egotism, may be guessed:
+
+"Our name once occurred; how I started at its sight! 'Tis to mention
+the party that planned the first visit to our house."
+
+She says she had so many attacks upon "her (Mrs. Piozzi's) subject,"
+that at last she fairly begged quarter. Yet nothing she could say
+could put a stop to, "How can you defend her in this? how can you
+justify her in that? &c. &c." "Alas! that I cannot defend her is
+precisely the reason I can so ill bear to speak of her. How
+differently and how sweetly has the Queen conducted herself upon this
+occasion. Eager to see the Letters, she began reading them with the
+utmost avidity. A natural curiosity arose to be informed of several
+names and several particulars, which she knew I could satisfy; yet
+when she perceived how tender a string she touched, she soon
+suppressed her inquiries, or only made them with so much gentleness
+towards the parties mentioned, that I could not be distressed in my
+answers; and even in a short time I found her questions made in so
+favourable a disposition, that I began secretly to rejoice in them,
+as the means by which I reaped opportunity of clearing several points
+that had been darkened by calumny, and of softening others that had
+been viewed wholly through false lights. To lessen disapprobation of
+a person, and so precious to me in the opinion of another, so
+respectable both in rank and virtue, was to me a most soothing task,
+&c."
+
+This is precisely what many will take the liberty to doubt; or why
+did she shrink from it, or why did she not afford to others the
+explanations which proved so successful with the Queen?
+
+The day following (Jan. 10th), her feelings were so worked upon by
+the harsh aspersions on her friend, that she was forced, she tells
+us, abruptly to quit the room; leaving not her own (like Sir Peter
+Teazle) but her friend's character behind her:
+
+"I returned when I could, and the subject was over. When all were
+gone, Mrs. Schwellenberg said, 'I have told it Mr. Fisher, that he
+drove you out from the room, and he says he won't do it no more.'
+
+"She told me next, that in the second volume I also, was mentioned.
+Where she may have heard this I cannot gather, but it has given me a
+sickness at heart, inexpressible. It is not that I expect severity;
+for at the time of that correspondence, at all times indeed previous
+to the marriage with Piozzi, if Mrs. Thrale loved not F. B., where
+shall we find faith in words, or give credit to actions. But her
+present resentment, however unjustly incurred, of my constant
+disapprobation of her conduct, may prompt some note, or other mark,
+to point out her change of sentiment. But let me try to avoid such
+painful expectations; at least not to dwell upon them. O, little does
+she know how tenderly at this moment I could run into her arms, so
+often opened to receive me with a cordiality I believed inalienable.
+And it was sincere then, I am satisfied; pride, resentment of
+disapprobation, and consciousness if unjustifiable proceedings--these
+have now changed her; but if we met, and she saw and believed my
+faithful regard, how would she again feel all her own return! Well,
+what a dream I am making!"
+
+The ingrained worldliness of the diarist is ill-concealed by the mask
+of sensibility. The correspondence that passed between the ladies
+during their temporary rupture (_ante_, p. 230) shews that there was
+nothing to prevent her from flying into her friend's arms, could she
+have made up her mind to be seen on open terms of affectionate
+intimacy with one who was repudiated by the Court. In a subsequent
+conversation with which the Queen honoured her on the subject, she
+did her best to impress her Majesty with the belief that Mrs.
+Piozzi's conduct had rendered it impossible for her former friends to
+allude to her without regret, and she ended by thanking her royal
+mistress for her forbearance.
+
+"Indeed," cried she, with eyes strongly expressive of the complacency
+with which she heard me, "I have always spoken as little as possible
+upon this affair. I remember but twice that I have named it: once I
+said to the Bishop of Carlisle that I thought most of these letters
+had better have been spared the printing; and once to Mr. Langton, at
+the drawing-room I said, 'Your friend Dr. Johnson, Sir, has had many
+friends busy to publish his books, and his memoirs, and his
+meditations, and his thoughts; but I think he wanted one friend
+more.' 'What for, Ma'am?' cried he. 'A friend to suppress them,' I
+answered. And, indeed, this is all I ever said about the business."
+
+Hannah More's opinion of the Letters is thus expressed in her
+Memoirs:
+
+"They are such as ought to have been written but ought not to have
+been printed: a few of them are very good: sometimes he is moral, and
+sometimes he is kind. The imprudence of editors and executors is an
+additional reason why men of parts should be afraid to die.[1] Burke
+said to me the other day, in allusion to the innumerable lives,
+anecdotes, remains, &c. of this great man, 'How many maggots have
+crawled out of that great body!'"
+
+[Footnote 1: In reference to the late Lord Campbell's "Lives of the
+Lord Chancellors," it was remarked, that, as regards persons who had
+attained the dignity, the threatened continuation of the work had
+added a new pang to death. I am assured by the Ex-Chancellor to whom
+I attributed this joke, that it was made by Sir Charles Wetherell at
+a dinner at Lincoln's-Inn.]
+
+Miss Seward writes to Mrs. Knowles, April, 1788:
+
+"And now what say you to the last publication of your sister wit,
+Mrs. Piozzi? It is well that she has had the good nature to extract
+almost all the corrosive particles from the old growler's letters. By
+means of her benevolent chemistry, these effusions of that expansive
+but gloomy spirit taste more oily and sweet than one could have
+imagined possible."
+
+The letters contained two or three passages relating to Baretti,
+which exasperated him to the highest pitch. One was in a letter from
+Johnson, dated July 15th, 1775:
+
+"The doctor says, that if Mr. Thrale comes so near as Derby without
+seeing us, it will be a sorry trick. I wish, for my part, that he may
+return soon, and rescue the fair captives from the tyranny of B----i.
+Poor B----i! do not quarrel with him; to neglect him a little will be
+sufficient. He means only to be frank, and manly, and independent,
+and perhaps, as you say, a little wise. To be frank, he thinks is to
+be cynical, and to be independent, is to be rude. Forgive him,
+dearest lady, the rather, because of his misbehaviour, I am afraid he
+learned part of me. I hope to set him hereafter a better example."
+
+The most galling was in a letter of hers to Dr. Johnson:
+
+"How does Dr. Taylor do? He was very kind I remember when my
+thunder-storm came first on, so was Count Manucci, so was Mrs.
+Montagu, so was everybody. The world is not guilty of much general
+harshness, nor inclined I believe to increase pain which they do not
+perceive to be deserved.--Baretti alone tried to irritate a wound so
+very deeply inflicted, and he will find few to approve his cruelty.
+Your friendship is our best cordial; continue it to us, dear Sir, and
+write very soon."
+
+In the margin of the printed copy is written, "Cruel, cruel Baretti."
+He had twitted her, whilst mourning over a dead child, with having
+killed it by administering a quack medicine instead of attending to
+the physician's prescriptions; a charge which he acknowledged and
+repeated in print. He published three successive papers in "The
+European Magazine" for 1788, assailing her with the coarsest
+ribaldry. "I have just read for the first time," writes Miss Seward
+in June, 1788, "the base, ungentleman-like, unmanly abuse of Mrs.
+Piozzi by that Italian assassin, Baretti. The whole literary world
+should unite in publicly reprobating such venomed and foul-mouthed
+railing." He died soon afterwards, May 5th, 1789, and the notice of
+him in the "Gentleman's Magazine" begins: "Mrs. Piozzi has reason to
+rejoice in the death of Mr. Baretti, for he had a very long memory
+and malice to relate all he knew." And a good deal that he did not
+know, into the bargain; as when he prints a pretended conversation
+between Mr. and Mrs. Thrale about Piozzi, which he afterwards admits
+to be a gratuitous invention and rhetorical figure of his own, for
+conveying what is a foolish falsehood on the face of it.
+
+Baretti's death is thus noticed in "Thraliana," 8th May, 1789:
+
+"Baretti is dead. Poor Baretti! I am sincerely sorry for him, and as
+Zanga says, 'If I lament thee, sure thy worth was great.' He was a
+manly character, at worst, and died, as he lived, less like a
+Christian than a philosopher, refusing all spiritual or corporeal
+assistance, both which he considered useless to him, and perhaps they
+were so. He paid his debts, called in some single acquaintance, told
+him he was dying, and drove away that _Panada_ conversation which
+friends think proper to administer at sick-bedsides with becoming
+steadiness, bid him write his brothers word that he was dead, and
+gently desired a woman who waited to leave him quite alone. No
+interested attendants watching for ill-deserved legacies, no harpy
+relatives clung round the couch of Baretti. He died!
+
+ "'And art thou dead? so is my enmity:
+ I war not with the dead.'
+
+"Baretti's papers--manuscripts I mean--have been all burnt by his
+executors without examination, they tell me. So great was his
+character as a mischief-maker, that Vincent and Fendall saw no nearer
+way to safety than that hasty and compendious one. Many people think
+'tis a good thing for me, but as I never trusted the man, I see
+little harm he could have done me."
+
+In the fury of his onslaught Baretti forgot that he was strengthening
+her case against Johnson, of whom he says: "His austere reprimand,
+and unrestrained upbraidings, when face to face with her, always
+delighted Mr. Thrale and were approved even by her children. 'Harry,'
+said his father to her son, 'are you listening to what the doctor and
+mamma are talking about?' 'Yes, papa.' And quoth Mr. Thrale, 'What
+are they saying?' 'They are disputing, and mamma has just such a
+chance with Dr. Johnson as Presto (a little dog) would have were he
+to fight Dash (a big one).'" He adds that she left the room in a huff
+to the amusement of the party. If scenes like this were frequent, no
+wonder the "yoke" became unendurable.
+
+Baretti was obliged to admit that, when Johnson died, they were not
+on speaking terms. His explanation is that Johnson irritated him by
+an allusion to his being beaten by Omai, the Sandwich Islander, at
+chess. Mrs. Piozzi's marginal note on Omai is: "When Omai played at
+chess and at backgammon with Baretti, everybody admired at the
+savage's good breeding and at the European's impatient spirit."
+
+Amongst her papers was the following sketch of his character, written
+for "The World" newspaper.
+
+"_Mr. Conductor_.--Let not the death of Baretti pass unnoticed by
+'The World,' seeing that Baretti was a wit if not a scholar: and had
+for five-and-thirty years at least lived in a foreign country, whose
+language he so made himself completely master of, that he could
+satirise its inhabitants in their own tongue, better than they knew
+how to defend themselves; and often pleased, without ever praising
+man or woman in book or conversation. Long supported by the private
+bounty of friends, he rather delighted to insult than flatter; he at
+length obtained competence from a public he esteemed not: and died,
+refusing that assistance he considered as useless--leaving no debts
+(but those of gratitude) undischarged; and expressing neither regret
+of the past, nor fear of the future, I believe. Strong in his
+prejudices, haughty and independent in his spirit, cruel in his
+anger,--even when unprovoked; vindictive to excess, if he through
+misconception supposed himself even slightly injured, pertinacious in
+his attacks, invincible in his aversions: the description of Menelaus
+in 'Homer's Iliad,' as rendered by Pope, exactly suits the character
+of Baretti:
+
+ "'So burns the vengeful Hornet, soul all o'er,
+ Repuls'd in vain, and thirsty still for gore;
+ Bold son of air and heat on angry wings,
+ Untamed, untired, he turns, attacks, and stings.'"
+
+In reference to this article, she remarks in "Thraliana":
+
+"There seems to be a language now appropriated to the newspapers, and
+a very wretched and unmeaning language it is. Yet a certain set of
+expressions are so necessary to please the diurnal readers, that when
+Johnson and I drew up an advertisement for charity once, I remember
+the people altered our expressions and substituted their own, with
+good effect too. The other day I sent a Character of Baretti to 'The
+World,' and read it two mornings after more altered than improved in
+my mind: but no matter: they will talk of _wielding_ a language, and
+of _barbarous_ infamy,--sad stuff, to be sure, but such is the taste
+of the times. They altered even my quotation from Pope; but that was
+too impudent."
+
+The comparison of Baretti to the hornet was truer than she
+anticipated: _animamque in vulnere ponit_. Internal evidence leads
+almost irresistibly to the conclusion that he was the author or
+prompter of "The _Sentimental_ Mother: a Comedy in Five Acts. The
+Legacy of an Old Friend, and his 'Last Moral Lesson' to Mrs. Hester
+Lynch Thrale, now Mrs. Hester Lynch Piozzi. London: Printed for James
+Ridgeway, York Street, St. James's Square, 1789. Price three
+shillings." The principal _dramatis personae_ are Mr. Timothy Tunskull
+(Thrale), Lady Fantasma Tunskull, two Misses Tunskull, and Signor
+Squalici.
+
+Lady Fantasma is vain, affected, silly, and amorous to excess. Not
+satisfied with Squalici as her established gallant, she makes
+compromising advances to her daughter's lover on his way to a
+_tete-a-tete_ with the young lady, who takes her wonted place on his
+knee with his arm round her waist. Squalici is also a domestic spy,
+and in league with the mother to cheat the daughters of their
+patrimony. Mr. Tunskull is a respectable and complacent nonentity.
+
+The dialogue is seasoned with the same malicious insinuations which
+mark Baretti's letters in the "European Magazine;" without the saving
+clause with which shame or fear induced him to qualify them, namely,
+that no breach of chastity was suspected or believed. It is difficult
+to imagine who else would have thought of reverting to Thrale's
+establishment eight years after it had been broken up by death; and
+in one of his papers in the "European Magazine," he holds out a
+threat that she might find herself the subject of a play: "Who knows
+but some one of our modern dramatic geniusses may hereafter entertain
+the public with a laughable comedy in five long acts, entitled, with
+singular propriety, 'the _Scientific_ Mother'?"
+
+Mrs. Piozzi had some-how contracted a belief, to which she alludes
+more than once with unfeigned alarm, that Mr. Samuel Lysons had
+formed a collection of all the libels and caricatures of which she
+was the subject on the occasion of her marriage. His collections have
+been carefully examined, and the sole semblance of warrant for her
+fears is an album or scrap-book containing numerous extracts from the
+reviews and newspapers, relating to her books. The only caricature
+preserved in it is the celebrated one by Sayers entitled "Johnson's
+Ghost." The ghost, a flattering likeness of the doctor, addresses a
+pretty woman seated at a writing table:
+
+ "When Streatham spread its pleasant board,
+ I opened learning's valued hoard,
+ And as I feasted, prosed.
+ Good things I said, good things I eat,
+ I gave you knowledge for your meat,
+ And thought th' account was closed.
+
+ "If obligations still I owed,
+ You sold each item to the crowd,
+ I suffered by the tale.
+ For God's sake, Madam, let me rest,
+ No longer vex your _quondam_ guest,
+ I'll pay you for your ale."
+
+When a prize was offered for the best address on the rebuilding of
+Drury Lane, Sheridan proposed an additional reward for one without a
+phoenix. Equally acceptable for its rarity would be a squib on Mrs.
+Piozzi without a reference to the brewery.
+
+Her manuscript notes on the two volumes of Letters are numerous and
+important, comprising some curious fragments of autobiography,
+written on separate sheets of paper and pasted into the volumes
+opposite to the passages which they expand or explain. They would
+create an inconvenient break in the narrative if introduced here, and
+they are reserved for a separate section.
+
+Her next literary labour is thus mentioned in "Thraliana":
+
+"While Piozzi was gone to London I worked at my Travel Book, and
+wrote it in two months complete--but 'tis all to correct and copy
+over again. While my husband was away I wrote him these lines: he
+staid just a fortnight:
+
+ "I think I've worked exceeding hard
+ To finish five score pages.
+ I write you this upon a card,
+ In hopes you'll pay my wages.
+ The servants all get drunk or mad,
+ This heat their blood enrages,
+ But your return will make me glad,--
+ That hope one pain assuages.
+
+ "To shew more kindness, we defy
+ All nations and all ages,
+ And quite prefer your company
+ To all the seven sages.
+ Then hasten home, oh, haste away!
+ And lengthen not your stages;
+ We then will sing, and dance and play,
+ And quit awhile our cages."
+
+She had now taken rank as a popular writer, and thought herself
+entitled to use corresponding language to her publisher:
+
+"MR. CADELL,--Sir, this is a letter of business. I have finished the
+book of observations and reflections made in the course of my journey
+thro' France, Italy, and Germany, and if you have a mind to purchase
+the MS. I make you the first offer of it. Here, if complaints had any
+connection with business, I would invent a thousand, and they should
+be very kind ones too; but it is better to tell you the size and
+price of the book. My calculations bring it to a thousand pages of
+letter-press like Dr. Moore's; or you might print it in three small
+volumes, to go with the 'Anecdotes.' Be that as it will, the price,
+at a word (as the advertisers say of their horse), is 500 guineas and
+twelve copies to give away, though I will not, like them, warrant it
+free from blemishes. No creature has looked over the papers but Lord
+Huntingdon, and he likes them exceedingly. Direct your answer here,
+if you write immediately; if not, send the letter under cover to Mrs.
+Lewis, London Street, Reading, Berks; and believe me, dear Sir, your
+faithful humble servant,
+
+ "H. L. PIOZZI.
+
+ "Bennet Street, Bath,
+ Friday, Nov. 14th, 1788."
+
+Whether these terms were accepted, does not appear; but in Dec. 1789
+she published (Cadell and Strahan) "Observations and Reflections made
+in the course of a Journey through France, Italy, and Germany," in
+two volumes octavo of about 400 pages each. As happened to almost
+everything she did or wrote, this book, which she calls the
+"Travel-book," was by turns assailed with inveterate hostility and
+praised with animated zeal. It would seem that sustained calumny had
+seasoned her against the malevolence of criticism. On the passage in
+Johnson's letter to T. Warton, "I am little afraid for myself," her
+comment is: "That is just what I feel when insulted, not about
+literary though, but social quarrels. The others are not worth a
+thought." In "Thraliana," Dec. 30th, 1789, she writes: "I think my
+Observations and Reflexions in Italy, &c., have been, upon the whole,
+exceedingly well liked, and much read."
+
+Walpole writes to Mrs. Carter, June 13th, 1789:
+
+"I do not mean to misemploy much of your time, which I know is always
+passed in good works, and usefully. You have, therefore, probably not
+looked into Piozzi's Travels. I, who have been almost six weeks lying
+on a couch, have gone through them. It was said that Addison might
+have written his without going out of England. By the excessive
+vulgarisms so plentiful in these volumes, one might suppose the
+writer had never stirred out of the parish of St. Giles. Her Latin,
+French, and Italian, too, are so miserably spelt, that she had better
+have studied her own language before she floundered into other
+tongues. Her friends plead that she piques herself on writing as she
+talks: methinks, then, she should talk as she would write. There are
+many indiscretions too in her work of which she will perhaps be told
+though Baretti is dead."
+
+Miss Seward, much to her credit, repeated to Mrs. Piozzi both the
+praise and the blame she had expressed to others. On December 21st,
+1789, she writes:
+
+"Suffer me now to speak to you of your highly ingenious, instructive,
+and entertaining publication; yet shall it be with the sincerity of
+friendship, rather than with the flourish of compliment. No work of
+the sort I ever read possesses, in an equal degree, the power of
+placing the reader in the scenes and amongst the people it describes.
+Wit, knowledge, and imagination illuminate its pages--but the
+infinite inequality of the style!--Permit me to acknowledge to you
+what I have acknowledged to others, that it excites my exhaustless
+wonder, that Mrs. Piozzi, the child of genius, the pupil of Johnson,
+should pollute, with the vulgarisms of unpolished conversation, her
+animated pages!--that, while she frequently displays her power of
+commanding the most chaste and beautiful style imaginable, she should
+generally use those inelegant, those strange _dids_, and _does_, and
+_thoughs_, and _toos_, which produce jerking angles, and stop-short
+abruptness, fatal at once to the grace and ease of the
+sentence;--which are, in language, what the rusty black silk
+handkerchief and the brass ring are upon the beautiful form of the
+Italian countess she mentions, arrayed in embroidery, and blazing in
+jewels."
+
+Mrs. Piozzi's theory was that books should he written in the same
+colloquial and idiomatic language which is employed by cultivated
+persons in conversation, "Be thou familiar, but by no means vulgar;"
+and vulgar she certainly was not, although she sometimes indulged her
+fondness for familiarity too far. The period was unluckily chosen for
+carrying such a theory into practice; for Johnson's authority had
+discountenanced idiomatic writing, whilst many phrases and forms of
+speech, which would not be endured now, were tolerated in polite
+society.
+
+The laws of spelling, too, were unfixed or vague, and those of
+pronunciation, which more or less affect spelling, still more so.
+"When," said Johnson, "I published the plan of my dictionary, Lord
+Chesterfield told me that the word _great_ should be pronounced so as
+to rhyme to _state_; and Sir William Yonge sent me word that it
+should be pronounced so as to rhyme to _seat_, and that none but an
+Irishman would pronounce it _grait_. Now here were two men of the
+highest rank, one the best speaker in the House of Lords, the other
+the best speaker in the House of Commons, differing entirely." Mrs.
+Piozzi has written on the margin:--"Sir William was in the right."
+Two well-known couplets of Pope imply similar changes:--
+
+ "Dreading e'en fools, by flatterers besieged,
+ And so obliging that he ne'er obliged."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "Here thou, great Anna, whom three realms obey,
+ Dost sometimes counsel take, and sometimes tea."
+
+Within living memory, elderly people of quality, both in writing and
+conversation, stuck to Lunnun, Brummagem, and Cheyny (China). Charles
+Fox would not give up "Bour_dux_." Johnson pronounced "heard"
+_heerd_. In 1800 "flirtation" was deemed a vulgar word.[1] Lord Byron
+wrote _redde_ (for _read_, in the past tense), and Lord Dudley
+declined being helped to apple _tart_. When, therefore, we find Mrs.
+Piozzi using words or idioms rejected by modern taste or
+fastidiousness, we must not be too ready to accuse her of ignorance
+or vulgarity. I have commonly retained her original syntax, and her
+spelling, which frequently varies within a page.
+
+[Footnote 1: "Those abstractions of different pairs from the rest of
+the society, which I must call 'flirtation,' spite of the vulgarity
+of the term."--_Journal kept during a Visit to Germany_ in 1799 and
+1800. Edited by the Dean of Westminster (not published), p. 38.]
+
+Two days afterwards, Walpole returns to the charge in a letter to
+Miss Berry, which is alone sufficient to prove the worthlessness of
+his literary judgments:--
+
+"Read 'Sindbad the Sailor's Voyages,' and you will be sick of
+AEneas's. What woful invention were the nasty poultry that dunged on
+his dinner, and ships on fire turned into Nereids! A barn
+metamorphosed into a cascade in a pantomime is full as sublime an
+effort of genius.... I do not think the Sultaness's narratives very
+natural or very probable, but there is a wildness in them that
+captivates. However, if you could wade through two octavos of Dame
+Piozzi's _though's_ and _so's_ and _I trows_, and cannot listen to
+seven volumes of Scheherezade's narratives, I will sue for a divorce
+in foro Parnassi, and Boccalini shall be my proctor."
+
+A single couplet of Gifford's was more damaging than all Walpole's
+petulance:
+
+ "See Thrale's grey widow with a satchel roam,
+ And bring in pomp laborious nothings home."[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: "She, one evening, asked me abruptly if I did not
+remember the scurrilous lines in which she had been depicted by
+Gifford in his 'Baviad and Moeviad.' And, not waiting for my answer,
+for I was indeed too much embarrassed to give one quickly, she
+recited the verses in question, and added, 'how do you think
+"Thrale's grey widow" revenged herself? I contrived to get myself
+invited to meet him at supper at a friend's house, (I think she said
+in Pall Mall), soon after the publication of his poem, sate opposite
+to him, saw that he was "perplexed in the extreme;" and smiling,
+proposed a glass of wine as a libation to our future good fellowship.
+Gifford was sufficiently a man of the world to understand me, and
+nothing could be more courteous and entertaining than he was while we
+remained together.'"--_Piozziana_.]
+
+This condemnatory verse is every way unjust. The nothings, or
+somethings, which form the staple of the book, are not laboured; and
+they are presented without the semblance of pomp or pretension. The
+Preface commences thus:
+
+"I was made to observe at Rome some vestiges of an ancient custom
+very proper in those days. It was the parading of the street by a set
+of people called Preciae, who went some minutes before the Flamen
+Dialis, to bid the inhabitants leave work or play, and attend wholly
+to the procession; but if ill-omens prevented the pageants from
+passing, or if the occasion of the show was scarce deemed worthy its
+celebration, these Precise stood a chance of being ill-treated by the
+spectators. A prefatory introduction to a work like this can hope
+little better usage from the public than they had. It proclaims the
+approach of what has often passed by before; adorned most certainly
+with greater splendour, perhaps conducted with greater regularity and
+skill. Yet will I not despair of giving at least a momentary
+amusement to my countrymen in general; while their entertainment
+shall serve as a vehicle for conveying expressions of particular
+kindness to those foreign individuals, whose tenderness softened the
+sorrows of absence, and who eagerly endeavoured by unmerited
+attentions to supply the loss of their company, on whom nature and
+habit had given me stronger claims."
+
+The Preface concludes with the happy remark that--"the labours of the
+press resemble those of the toilette: both should be attended to and
+finished with care; but once completed, should take up no more of our
+attention, unless we are disposed at evening to destroy all effect of
+our morning's study."
+
+It would be difficult to name a book of travels in which anecdotes,
+observations, and reflections are more agreeably mingled, or one from
+which a clearer bird's-eye view of the external state of countries
+visited in rapid succession may be caught. I can only spare room for
+a few short extracts:
+
+"The contradictions one meets with every moment at Paris likewise
+strike even a cursory observer,--a countess in a morning, her hair
+dressed, with diamonds too perhaps, a dirty black handkerchief about
+her neck, and a flat silver ring on her finger, like our ale-wives; a
+_femme publique_, dressed avowedly for the purposes of alluring the
+men, with a not very small crucifix hanging at her bosom;--and the
+Virgin Mary's sign at an ale-house door, with these words,
+
+ "'Je suis la mere de mon Dieu,
+ Et la gardienne de ce lieu.'"
+
+"I have stolen a day to visit my old acquaintance the English Austin
+Nuns at the Foffee, and found the whole community alive and cheerful;
+they are many of them agreeable women, and having seen Dr. Johnson
+with me when I was last abroad, inquired much for him: Mrs, Fermor,
+the Prioress, niece to Belinda in the Rape of the Lock, taking
+occasion to tell me, comically enough, 'that she believed there was
+but little comfort to be found in a house that harboured _poets_; for
+that she remembered Mr. Pope's praise made her aunt very troublesome
+and conceited, while his numberless caprices would have employed ten
+servants to wait on him; and he gave one,' (said she) 'no amends by
+his talk neither, for he only sate dozing all day, when the sweet
+wine was out, and made his verses chiefly in the night; during which
+season he kept himself awake by drinking coffee, which it was one of
+the maids' business to make for him, and they took it by turns.'"
+
+At Milan she institutes a delicate inquiry: "The women are not
+behind-hand in openness of confidence and comical sincerity. We have
+all heard much of Italian cicisbeism; I had a mind to know how
+matters really stood; and took the nearest way to information by
+asking a mighty beautiful and apparently artless young creature, _not
+noble_, how that affair was managed, for there is no harm done _I am
+sure_, said I: 'Why no,' replied she, 'no great _harm_ to be sure:
+except wearisome attentions from a man one cares little about; for my
+own part,' continued she, 'I detest the custom, as I happen to love
+my husband excessively, and desire nobody's company in the world but
+his. We are not _people of fashion_ though you know, nor at all rich;
+so how should we set fashions for our betters? They would only say,
+see how jealous he is! if _Mr. Such-a-one_ sat much with me at home,
+or went with me to the Corso; and I _must_ go with some gentleman you
+know: and the men are such ungenerous creatures, and have such ways
+with them: I want money often, and this _cavaliere servente_ pays the
+bills, and so the connection draws closer--_that's all_.' And your
+husband! said I--'Oh, why he likes to see me well dressed; he is very
+good-natured, and very charming; I love him to my heart.' And your
+confessor! cried I.--'Oh! why he is _used to it_'--in the Milanese
+dialect--_e assuefaa."_
+
+ "An English lady asked of an Italian
+ What were the actual and official duties
+ Of the strange thing, some women set a value on,
+ Which hovers oft about some married beauties,
+ Called 'cavalier servente,' a Pygmalion
+ Whose statues warm, I fear! too true 't is
+ Beneath his art. The dame, press'd to disclose them,
+ Said, Lady, I beseech you to _suppose them_."[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: "Don Juan," Canto ix. See also "Beppo," verses 36, 37:
+
+ "But Heaven preserve Old England from such courses!
+ Or what becomes of damage and divorces?"]
+
+At Venice, the tone was somewhat different from what would be
+employed now by the finest lady on the Grand Canal:
+
+"This firmly-fixed idea of subordination (which I once heard a
+Venetian say, he believed must exist in heaven from one angel to
+another), accounts immediately for a little conversation which I am
+now going to relate.
+
+"Here were two men taken up last week, one for murdering his
+fellow-servant in cold blood, while the undefended creature had the
+lemonade tray in his hand going in to serve company; the other for
+breaking the new lamps lately set up with intention to light this
+town in the manner of the streets at Paris. 'I hope,' said I, 'that
+they will hang the murderer.' 'I rather hope,' replied a very
+sensible lady who sate near me, 'that they will hang the person who
+broke the lamps: for,' added she, 'the first committed his crime only
+out of revenge, poor fellow!! because the other had got his mistress
+from him by treachery; but this creature has had the impudence to
+break our fine new lamps, all for the sake of spiting _the
+Arch-duke!!_' The Arch-duke meantime hangs nobody at all; but sets
+his prisoners to work upon the roads, public buildings, &c., where
+they labour in their chains; and where, strange to tell! they often
+insult passengers who refuse them alms when asked as they go by; and,
+stranger still, they are not punished for it when they do." ...
+
+The lover sacrificing his reputation, his liberty, or his life, to
+save the fair fame of his mistress, is not an unusual event in
+fiction, whatever it may be in real life. Balzac, Charles de Bernard,
+and M. de Jarnac have each made a self-sacrifice of this kind the
+basis of a romance. But neither of them has hit upon a better plot
+than might be formed out of the following Venetian story:
+
+"Some years ago then, perhaps a hundred, one of the many spies who
+ply this town by night, ran to the state inquisitor, with information
+that such a nobleman (naming him) had connections with the French
+ambassador, and went privately to his house every night at a certain
+hour. The _messergrando_, as they call him, could not believe, nor
+would proceed, without better and stronger proof, against a man for
+whom he had an intimate personal friendship, and on whose virtue he
+counted with very particular reliance. Another spy was therefore set,
+and brought back the same intelligence, adding the description of his
+disguise: on which the worthy magistrate put on his mask and bauta,
+and went out himself; when his eyes confirming the report of his
+informants, and the reflection on his duty stifling all remorse, he
+sent publicly for _Foscarini_ in the morning, whom the populace
+attended all weeping to his door.
+
+"Nothing but resolute denial of the crime alleged could however be
+forced from the firm-minded citizen, who, sensible of the discovery,
+prepared for that punishment he knew to be inevitable, and submitted
+to the fate his friend was obliged to inflict: no less than a dungeon
+for life, that dungeon so horrible that I have heard Mr. Howard was
+not permitted to see it.
+
+"The people lamented, but their lamentations were vain. The
+magistrate who condemned him never recovered the shock: but Foscarini
+was heard of no more, till an old lady died forty years after in
+Paris, whose last confession declared she was visited with amorous
+intentions by a nobleman of Venice whose name she never knew, while
+she resided there as companion to the ambassadress. So was Foscarini
+lost! so died he a martyr to love, and tenderness for female
+reputation!"
+
+The Mendicanti was a Venetian institution which deserves to be
+commemorated for its singularity:
+
+"Apropos to singing;--we were this evening carried to a well-known
+conservatory called the Mendicanti, who performed an oratorio in the
+church with great, and I dare say deserved applause. It was difficult
+for me to persuade myself that all the performers were women, till,
+watching carefully, our eyes convinced us, as they were but slightly
+grated. The sight of girls, however, handling the double bass, and
+blowing into the bassoon, did not much please _me_; and the
+deep-toned voice of her who sung the part of Saul seemed an odd
+unnatural thing enough.
+
+"Well! these pretty sirens were delighted to seize upon us, and
+pressed our visit to their parlour with a sweetness that I know not
+who would have resisted. We had no such intent; and amply did their
+performance repay my curiosity for visiting Venetian beauties, so
+justly celebrated for their seducing manners and soft address. They
+accompanied their voices with the forte-piano, and sung a thousand
+buffo songs, with all that gay voluptuousness for which their country
+is renowned.
+
+"The school, however, is running to ruin apace; and perhaps the
+conduct of the married women here may contribute to make such
+_conservatorios_ useless and neglected. When the Duchess of Montespan
+asked the famous Louison D'Arquien, by way of insult, as she pressed
+too near her, '_Comment alloit le metier_?' '_Depuis que les dames
+s'en melent_,' (replied the courtesan with no improper spirit,) '_il
+ne vaut plus rien_.'"
+
+Describing Florence, she says:--
+
+"Sir Horace Mann is sick and old; but there are conversations at his
+house of a Saturday evening, and sometimes a dinner, to which we have
+been almost always asked."
+
+So much for Walpole's assertion that "she had broken with his Horace,
+because he could not invite her husband with the Italian nobility."
+She held her own, if she did not take the lead, in whatever society
+she happened to be thrown, and no one could have objected to Piozzi
+without breaking with her. In point of fact, no one did object to
+him.
+
+One of her notes on Naples is:
+
+"Well, well! if the Neapolitans do bury Christians like dogs, they
+make some singular compensations we will confess, by nursing dogs
+like Christians. A very veracious man informed me yester morning,
+that his poor wife was half broken-hearted at hearing such a
+Countess's dog was run over; 'for,' said he, 'having suckled the
+pretty creature herself, she loved it like one of her children.' I
+bid him repeat the circumstance, that no mistake might be made: he
+did so; but seeing me look shocked, or ashamed, or something he did
+not like,--'Why, Madam,' said the fellow, 'it is a common thing
+enough for ordinary men's wives to suckle the lap-dogs of ladies of
+quality:' adding, that they were paid for their milk, and he saw no
+harm in gratifying one's _superiors_. As I was disposed to see
+nothing _but_ harm in disputing with such a competitor, our
+conference finished soon; but the fact is certain."
+
+On the margin she has written:
+
+"Mrs. Greathead could scarcely be made to credit so hideous a fact,
+till I showed her the portrait (at a broker's shop) of a woman
+_suckling a cat_."
+
+Cornelia Knight says: "Mr. and Mrs. Piozzi passed the winter at
+Naples and gave little concerts. He played with great taste on the
+pianoforte, and used to carry about a miniature one in his carriage."
+
+Whilst discussing the propriety of complying with the customs of the
+country, she relates:
+
+"Poor Dr. Goldsmith said once--'I would advise every young fellow
+setting out in life _to love gravy_:'--and added, that he had
+formerly seen a glutton's eldest nephew disinherited, because his
+uncle never could persuade him to say he liked gravy."
+
+Mr. Forster thinks that the concluding anecdote conveys a false
+impression of one
+
+ "Who wrote like an angel, but talked like poor Poll."
+
+"Mrs. Piozzi, in her travels, quite solemnly sets forth that poor Dr.
+Goldsmith said once, 'I would advise every young fellow setting forth
+in life to love gravy,' alleging for it the serious reason that 'he
+had formerly seen a glutton's eldest nephew disinherited because his
+uncle never could persuade him to say he liked gravy.' Imagine the
+dullness that would convert a jocose saying of this kind into an
+unconscious utterance of grave absurdity."[1] In his index may be
+read: "Mrs. Piozzi's absurd instance of Goldsmith's absurdity." Mrs.
+Piozzi does not quote the saying as an instance of absurdity; nor set
+it forth solemnly. She repeats it, as an illustration of her
+argument, in the same semi-serious spirit in which it was originally
+hazarded. Sydney Smith took a different view of this grave gravy
+question. On a young lady's declining gravy, he exclaimed: "I have
+been looking all my life for a person who, on principle, rejected
+gravy: let us vow eternal friendship."
+
+[Footnote 1: Life of Goldsmith, vol. ii. p. 205. Mr. Forster allows
+her the credit of discovering the lurking irony in Goldsmith's verses
+on Cumberland, vol. ii. p. 203.]
+
+The "British Synonymy" appeared in 1794. It was thus assailed by
+Gifford:
+
+"Though 'no one better knows his own house' than I the vanity of this
+woman; yet the idea of her undertaking such a work had never entered
+my head; and I was thunderstruck when I first saw it announced. To
+execute it with any tolerable degree of success, required a rare
+combination of talents, among the least of which may be numbered
+neatness of style, acuteness of perception, and a more than common
+accuracy of discrimination; and Mrs. Piozzi brought to the task, a
+jargon long since become proverbial for its vulgarity, an utter
+incapability of defining a single term in the language, and just as
+much Latin from a child's Syntax, as sufficed to expose the ignorance
+she so anxiously labours to conceal. 'If such a one be fit to write
+on Synonimes, speak.' Pignotti himself laughs in his sleeve; and his
+countrymen, long since undeceived, prize the lady's talents at their
+true worth,
+
+ "Et centum Tales[1] curto centusse licentur."
+
+[Footnote 1: Quere Thrales?--_Printer's Devil_."]
+
+Other critics have been more lenient or more just. Enough
+philosophical knowledge and acuteness were discovered in the work to
+originate a rumour that she had retained some of the great
+lexicographer's manuscripts, or derived a posthumous advantage, in
+some shape, from her former intimacy with him. In "Thraliana,"
+Denbigh, 2nd January, 1795, she writes:
+
+"My 'Synonimes' have been reviewed at last. The critics are all civil
+for aught I see, and nearly just, except when they say that Johnson
+left some fragments of a work upon Synonymy: of which God knows I
+never heard till now one syllable; never had he and I, in all the
+time we lived together, any conversation upon the subject."
+
+Even Walpole admits that it has some marked and peculiar merits,
+although its value consists rather in the illustrative matter, than
+in the definitions and etymologies. Thus, in distinguishing between
+_lavish_, _profuse_ and _prodigal_, she relates:
+
+"Two gentlemen were walking leisurely up the Hay-Market some time in
+the year 1749, lamenting the fate of the famous Cuzzona, an actress
+who some time before had been in high vogue, but was then as they
+heard in a very pitiable situation. 'Let us go and visit her,' said
+one of them, 'she lives but over the way.' The other consented; and
+calling at the door, they were shown up stairs, but found the faded
+beauty dull and spiritless, unable or unwilling to converse on any
+subject. 'How's this?' cried one of her consolers, 'are you ill? or
+is it but low spirits chains your tongue so?'--'Neither,' replied
+she: ''tis hunger I suppose. I ate nothing yesterday, and now 'tis
+past six o'clock, and not one penny have I in the world to buy me any
+food.'--'Come with us instantly to a tavern; we will treat you with
+the best roast fowls and Port wine that London can produce.'--'But I
+will have neither my dinner nor my place of eating it prescribed to
+_me_,' answered Cuzzona, in a sharper tone, 'else I need never have
+wanted.' 'Forgive me,' cries the friend; 'do your own way; but eat in
+the name of God, and restore fainting nature.'--She thanked him then;
+and, calling to her a friendly wretch who inhabited the same theatre
+of misery, gave _him_ the guinea the visitor accompanied his last
+words with; 'and run with this money,' said she, 'to such a
+wine-merchant,' (naming him); 'he is the only one keeps good Tokay by
+him. 'Tis a guinea a bottle, mind you,' to the boy; 'and bid the
+gentleman you buy it of give you a loaf into the bargain,--he won't
+refuse.' In half an hour or less the lad returned with the Tokay.
+'But where,' cries Cuzzona, 'is the loaf I spoke for?' 'The merchant
+would give me no loaf,' replies her messenger; 'he drove me from the
+door, and asked if I took him for a baker.' 'Blockhead!' exclaims
+she; 'why I must have bread to my wine, you know, and I have not a
+penny to purchase any. Go beg me a loaf directly.' The fellow returns
+once more with one in his hand and a halfpenny, telling 'em the
+gentleman threw him three, and laughed at his impudence. She gave her
+Mercury the money, broke the bread into a wash-hand basin which stood
+near, poured the Tokay over it, and devoured the whole with
+eagerness. This was indeed a heroine in PROFUSION. Some active
+well-wishers procured her a benefit after this; she gained about
+350_l_., 'tis said, and laid out two hundred of the money instantly
+in a _shell-cap_. They wore such things then."
+
+When Savage got a guinea, he commonly spent it in a tavern at a
+sitting; and referring to the memorable morning when the "Vicar of
+Wakefield" was produced, Johnson says: "I sent him (Goldsmith) a
+guinea, and promised to come to him directly. I accordingly went as
+soon as I was dressed, and found that his landlady had arrested him
+for his rent. I perceived that he had already changed my guinea, and
+had got a bottle of Madeira and a glass before him." Mrs. Piozzi
+continues:
+
+"But Doctor Johnson had always some story at hand to check
+extravagant and wanton wastefulness. His improviso verses made on a
+young heir's coming of age are highly capable of restraining such
+folly, if it is to be restrained: they never yet were printed, I
+believe.
+
+ "'Long expected one-and-twenty,
+ Lingering year, at length is flown;
+ Pride and pleasure, pomp and plenty,
+ Great Sir John, 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,
+ Show 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--
+ 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--
+ You can hang or drown at last.'"
+
+These verses were addressed to Thrale's nephew, Sir John Lade, in
+August, 1780. They bear a strong resemblance to some of Burns' in his
+"Beggar's Sonata," written in 1785:--
+
+ "What is title, what is treasure,
+ What is reputation's care;
+ If we lead a life of pleasure,
+ Can it matter how or where?"
+
+Boswell's "Life of Johnson" was published in May, 1791. It is thus
+mentioned in "Thraliana":--
+
+"_May_, 1791.--Mr. Boswell's book is coming out, and the wits expect
+me to tremble: what will the fellow say? ... that has not been said
+already."
+
+No date, but previous to 25th May, 1791.--"I have been now laughing
+and crying by turns, for two days, over Boswell's book. That poor man
+should have a _Bon Bouillon_ and be put to bed ... he is quite
+light-headed, yet madmen, drunkards, and fools tell truth, they say
+... and if Johnson was to me the back friend he has represented ...
+let it cure me of ever making friendship more with any human being."
+
+"_25th May_, 1791.--The death of my son, so suddenly, so horribly
+produced before my eyes now suffering from the tears then shed ... so
+shockingly brought forward in Boswell's two guinea book, made me very
+ill this week, very ill indeed[1]; it would make the modern friends
+all buy the work I fancy, did they but know how sick the _ancient_
+friends had it in their power to make me, but I had more wit than
+tell any of 'em. And what is the folly among all these fellows of
+wishing we may know one another in the next world.... Comical enough!
+when we have only to expect deserved reproaches for breach of
+confidence and cruel usage. Sure, sure I hope, rancour and resentment
+will at least be put off in the last moments: ... sure, surely, we
+shall meet no more, except on the great day when each is to answer to
+other and before other.... After _that_ I hope to keep better company
+than any of them."
+
+[Footnote 1: The death of her son is not unkindly mentioned by
+Boswell. See p. 491, roy. oct. edit. But the imputations on her
+veracity rest exclusively on his prejudiced testimony.]
+
+In 1801, Mrs. Piozzi published "Retrospection; or a Review of the
+Most Striking and Important Events, Characters, Situations, and their
+Consequences, which the Last Eighteen Hundred Years have presented to
+the View of Mankind." It is in two volumes quarto, containing rather
+more than 1000 pages. A fitting motto for it would have been _De
+omnibus rebus et quibusdam aliis._ The subject, or range of subjects,
+was beyond her grasp; and the best that can be said of the book is
+that a good general impression of the stream of history, lighted up
+with some striking traits of manners and character, may be obtained
+from it. It would have required the united powers and acquirements of
+Raleigh, Burke, Gibbon, and Voltaire to fill so vast a canvass with
+appropriate groups and figures; and she is more open to blame for the
+ambitious conception of the work than for her comparative failure in
+the execution. In 1799 she writes to Dr. Gray: "The truth is, my
+plans stretch too far for these times, or for my own age; but the
+wish, though scarce hope, of my heart, is to finish the work I am
+engaged in, get you to look it over for me, and print in March 1801."
+She published it in January 1801, but it was not looked over by her
+learned correspondent. Some slight misgiving is betrayed in the
+Preface:
+
+"If I should have made improper choice of facts, and if I should be
+found at length most to resemble Maister Fabyan of old, who writing
+the life of Henry V. lays heaviest stress on a new weathercock set-up
+on St. Paul's steeple during that eventful reign, my book must share
+the fate of his, and be like that forgotten: reminding before its
+death perhaps a friend or two of a poor man (Macbean) living in later
+times, that Doctor Johnson used to tell us of; who being advised to
+take subscriptions for a new Geographical Dictionary, hastened to
+Bolt Court and begged advice. There having listened carefully for
+half-an-hour, 'Ah, but dear Sir,' exclaimed the admiring parasite,
+'if I am to make all this eloquent ado about Athens and Rome, where
+shall we find place, do you think, for Richmond, or Aix La
+Chapelle?'"
+
+Writing from Bath, December 15th, 1802, she says:
+
+"The 'Gentleman's Magazine' for July 1801 contained my answer to such
+critics as confined themselves to faults I could have helped
+committing--had they been faults. Those who merely told disagreeable
+truths concerning my person, or dress, or age, or such stuff,
+expected, of course, no reply. There are innumerable press errors in
+the book, from my being obliged to print on new year's day--during an
+insurrection of the printers. These the 'Critical Review' laid hold
+of with an acuteness sharpened by malignity."
+
+Moore, who was staying at Bowood, sets down in his diary for April,
+1823: "Lord L. in the evening, quoted a ridiculous passage from the
+Preface to Mrs. Piozzi's 'Retrospections,' in which, anticipating the
+ultimate perfection of the human race, she says she does not despair
+of the time arriving when 'Vice will take refuge in the arms of
+impossibility.' Mentioned also an ode of hers to Posterity,
+beginning, 'Posterity, gregarious dame,' the only meaning of which
+must be, a lady _chez qui_ numbers assemble--a lady at _home_."[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: Memoirs, &c., vol. iv. p. 38.]
+
+There is no such passage in the Preface to "Retrospection," and the
+ode is her "Ode to Society," who is not improperly addressed as
+"gregarious."
+
+"I repeated," adds Moore, "what Jekyll told the other day of
+Bearcroft saying to Mrs. Piozzi, when Thrale, after she had
+repeatedly called him Mr. Beercraft: 'Beercraft is not my name,
+Madam; it may be your trade, but it is not my name.'" It may always
+be questioned whether this offensive description of repartee was
+really uttered at the time. But Bearcroft was capable of it. He began
+his cross-examination of Mr. Vansittart by--"With your leave, Sir, I
+will call you Mr. Van for shortness." "As you please, Sir, and I will
+call you Mr. Bear."
+
+Towards the end of 1795, Mrs. Piozzi left Streatham for her seat in
+North Wales, where (1800 or 1801) she was visited by a young
+nobleman, now an eminent statesman, distinguished by his love of
+literature and the fine arts, who has been good enough to recall and
+write down his impressions of her for me:
+
+"I did certainly know Madame Piozzi, but had no habits of
+acquaintance with her, and she never lived in London to my knowledge.
+When in my youth I made a tour in Wales--times when all inns were
+bad, and all houses hospitable--I put up for a day at her house, I
+think in Denbighshire, the proper name of which was Bryn, and to
+which, on the occasion of her marriage I was told, she had recently
+added the name of Bella. I remember her taking me into her bed-room
+to show me the floor covered with folios, quartos, and octavos, for
+consultation, and indicating the labour she had gone through in
+compiling an immense volume she was then publishing, called
+'Retrospection.' She was certainly what was called, and is still
+called, blue, and that of a deep tint, but good humoured and lively,
+though affected; her husband, a quiet civil man, with his head full
+of nothing but music.
+
+"I afterwards called on her at Bath, where she chiefly resided. I
+remember it was at the time Madame de Stael's 'Delphine,' and
+'Corinne,' came out[1], and that we agreed in preferring 'Delphine,'
+which nobody reads now, to 'Corinne,' which most people read then,
+and a few do still. She rather avoided talking of Johnson. These are
+trifles, not worth recording, but I have put them down that you might
+not think me neglectful of your wishes; but now _j'ai vuide mon
+sac_."
+
+[Footnote 1: "Delphine" appeared in 1804; "Corinne," in 1806.]
+
+Her mode of passing her time when she had ceased writing books, with
+the topics which interested her, will be best learned from her
+letters. Her vivacity never left her, and the elasticity of her
+spirits bore up against every kind of depression. A lady who met her
+on her way to Wynnstay in January, 1803, describes her as "skipping
+about like a kid, quite a figure of fun, in a tiger skin shawl, lined
+with scarlet, and _only_ five colours upon her head-dress--on the top
+of a flaxen wig a bandeau of blue velvet, a bit of tiger ribbon, a
+white beaver hat and plume of black feathers--as gay as a lark."
+
+In a letter, dated Jan. 1799, to a Welsh neighbour, Mrs. Piozzi says:
+
+"Mr. Piozzi has lost considerably in purse, by the cruel inroads of
+the French in Italy, and of all his family driven from their quiet
+homes, has at length with difficulty saved one little boy who is now
+just turned of five years old. We have got him here (Bath) since I
+wrote last, and his uncle will take him to school next week; for as
+our John has nothing but his talents and education to depend upon, he
+must be a scholar, and we will try hard to make him a very good one.
+
+"My poor little boy from Lombardy said as I walked him across our
+market, 'These are sheeps' heads, are they not, aunt? I saw a basket
+of men's heads at Brescia.'
+
+"As he was by a lucky chance baptized, in compliment to me, John
+Salusbury, five years ago, when happier days smiled on his family, he
+will be known in England by no other, and it will be forgotten he is
+a foreigner. A lucky circumstance for one who is intended to work his
+way among our islanders by talent, diligence, and education."
+
+She thus mentions this event in "Thraliana," January 17th, 1798:
+
+"Italy is ruined and England threatened. I have sent for one little
+boy from among my husband's nephews. He was christened John
+Salusbury: he shall be naturalised, and then we will see whether he
+will be more grateful and natural and comfortable than Miss Thrales
+have been to the mother they have at length driven to desperation."
+
+She could hardly have denied her husband the satisfaction of rescuing
+a single member of his family from the wreck; and they were bound to
+provide handsomely for the child of their adoption. Whether she
+carried the sentiment too far in giving him the entire estate (not a
+large one) is a very different question; on which she enters
+fearlessly in one of the fragments of the Autobiography. In a
+marginal note on one of the printed letters in which Johnson writes:
+"Mrs. Davenant says you regain your health,"--she remarks: "Mrs.
+Davenant neither knew nor cared, as she wanted her brother Harry
+Cotton to marry Lady Keith, and I offered my estate with her. Miss
+Thrale said she wished to have nothing to do either with my family or
+my fortune. They were all cruel and all insulting." Her fits of
+irritation and despondency never lasted long.
+
+Her mode of bringing up her adopted nephew was more in accordance
+with her ultimate liberality, than with her early intentions or
+professions of teaching him to "work his way among our islanders."
+Instead of suffering him to travel to and from the University by
+coach, she insisted on his travelling post; and she is said to have
+remarked to the mother of a Welsh baronet, who was similarly anxious
+for the comfort and dignity of her heir, "Other people's children are
+baked in coarse common pie dishes, ours in patty-pans."
+
+She was misreported, or afterwards improved upon the thought; for, in
+June 1810, she writes to Dr. Gray: "He is a boy of excellent
+principle. Education at a private school has an effect like baking
+loaves in a tin. The bread is more insipid, but it comes out _clean_;
+and Mr. Gray laughed, when at breakfast this morning, our undercrusts
+suggested the comparison."
+
+In the Conway Notes, she says:
+
+"Had we vexations enough? We had certainly many pleasures. The house
+in Wales was beautiful, and the Boy was beautiful too. Mr. Piozzi
+said I had spoiled my own children and was spoiling his. My reply
+was, that I loved spoiling people, and hated any one I could not
+spoil. Am I not now trying to spoil dear Mr. Conway?"
+
+When she talks of spoiling, she must not be understood literally. In
+1817 she writes from Bath to Dr. Gray:
+
+"Sir John and Lady Salusbury staid with me six or seven weeks, and
+made themselves most beloved among us. They are very good young
+creatures.... My children read your _Key_ to each other on Sunday
+noons: the _Connection_ on Sunday nights. You remember me hoping and
+proposing to make dear Salusbury a gentleman, a Christian, and a
+scholar; and when one has succeeded in the first two wishes, there is
+no need to fret if the third does fail a _little_. Such is my
+situation concerning my _adopted_, as you are accustomed to call
+him."
+
+Before she died she had the satisfaction of seeing him sheriff of his
+county; and on carrying up an address, he was knighted and became Sir
+John Salusbury Piozzi Salusbury. Miss Williams Wynn has preserved a
+somewhat apocryphal anecdote of his disinterestedness:
+
+"When I read her (Mrs. P.'s) lamentations over her poverty, I could
+not help believing that Sir J. Salusbury had proved ungrateful to his
+benefactress. For the honour of human nature I rejoice to find this
+is not the case. When he made known to his aunt his wish to marry,
+she promised to make over to him the property of Brynbella. Even
+before the marriage was concluded she had distressed herself by her
+lavish expenditure at Streatham. I saw by the letters that Gillow's
+bill amounted to near 2,400_l_., and Mr. (the late Sir John) Williams
+tells me she had continually very large parties from London. Sir John
+Salusbury then came to her, offered to relinquish all her promised
+gifts and the dearest wish of his heart, saying he should be most
+grateful to her if she would only give him a commission in the army,
+and let him seek his fortune. At the same time he added that he made
+this offer because all was still in his power, but that from the
+moment he married, she must be aware that it would be no longer so,
+that he should not feel himself justified in bringing a wife into
+distress of circumstances, nor in entailing poverty on children
+unborn.[1] She refused; he married; and she went on in her course of
+extravagance. She had left herself a life income only, and large as
+it was, no tradesman would wait a reasonable time for payment; she
+was nearly eighty; and they knew that at her death nothing would be
+left to pay her debts, and so they seized the goods."
+
+[Footnote 1: If the estate was settled in the usual manner, he would
+have only a life estate; and I believe it was so settled.]
+
+When Fielding, the novelist, rather boastingly avowed that he never
+knew, and believed he never should know, the difference between a
+shilling and sixpence, he was told: "Yes, the time will come when you
+will know it--when you have only eighteen pence left." If the author
+of "Tom Jones" could not be taught the value of money, we must not be
+too hard on Mrs. Piozzi for not learning it, after lesson upon lesson
+in the hard school of "impecuniosity." Whilst Piozzi lived, her
+affairs were faithfully and carefully administered. Although they
+built Brynbella, spent a good deal of money on Streatham, and lived
+handsomely, they never wanted money. He had a moderate fortune, the
+produce of his professional labours, and left it, neither impaired
+nor materially increased, to his family. With peculiar reference
+probably to her habits of profuse expenditure, he used to say that
+"white monies were good for ladies, yellow for gentlemen." He took
+the guineas under his especial charge, leaving only the silver to
+her. This was a matter of notoriety in the neighbourhood, and the
+tenants, to please her or humour the joke, sometimes brought bags of
+shillings and sixpences in part payment of their rents.
+
+In the Conway Notes she says:
+
+"Our head-quarters were in Wales, where dear Piozzi repaired my
+church, built a new vault for my old ancestors, chose the place in it
+where he and I are to repose together.... He lived some twenty-five
+years with me, however, but so punished with gout that we found Bath
+the best wintering-place for many, many seasons.--Mrs. Siddons' last
+appearance there he witnessed, when she played Calista to Dimond's
+Lothario, in which he looked _so_ like Garrick, it shocked us _all
+three_, I believe; for Garrick adored Mr. Piozzi, and Siddons hated
+the little great man to her heart. Poor Dimond! he was a well-bred,
+pleasing, worthy creature, and did the honours of his own house and
+table with peculiar grace indeed. No likeness in private life or
+manner,--none at all; no wit, no fun, no frolic humour had Mr.
+Dimond:--no grace, no dignity, no real unaffected elegance of mien or
+behaviour had his predecessor, David,--whose partiality to my
+fastidious husband was for that reason never returned. Merriment,
+difficult for _him_ to comprehend, made no amends for the want of
+that which no one understood better,--so he hated all the wits but
+Murphy."
+
+There is hardly a family of note or standing within visiting distance
+of their place, that has not some tradition or reminiscence to relate
+concerning them; and all agree in describing him as a worthy good
+sort of man, obliging, inoffensive, kind to the poor, principally
+remarkable for his devotion to music, and utterly unable to his dying
+day to familiarise himself with the English language or manners. It
+is told of him that being required to pay a turnpike toll near the
+house of a country neighbour whom he was on his way to visit, he took
+it for granted that the toll went into his neighbour's pocket, and
+proposed setting up a gate near Brynbella with the view of levying
+toll in his turn.
+
+In September, 1800, she wrote from Brynbella to Dr. Gray:
+
+"Dear Mr. Piozzi, who takes men out of misery so far as his power
+extends in this neighbourhood, feels flattered and encouraged by your
+very kind approbation. He has been getting rugs for the cottagers'
+beds to keep them warm this winter, while we are away, and they all
+take me into their sleeping rooms when I visit them _now_, to show
+how comfortably they live. As for the old hut you so justly abhorred,
+and so kindly noticed--it is knocked down and its coarse name too,
+Potlicko: we call it Cottage-o'-the-Park. Some recurrence to the
+original derivation in soup season will not, however, be much amiss I
+suppose."
+
+"Amongst the company," says Moore, "was Mrs. John Kemble. She
+mentioned an anecdote of Piozzi, who upon calling upon some old lady
+of quality, was told by the servant, she was 'indifferent.' 'Is she
+indeed?' answered Piozzi, huffishly, 'then pray tell her I can be as
+indifferent as she;' and walked away."[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: Moore's Memoirs, vol. iv. p. 329.]
+
+Till he was disabled by the gout, his principal occupation was his
+violin, and it was her delight to listen to him. She more than once
+observed to the vicar, "Such music is quite heavenly." "I am in
+despair," cried out the village fiddler, "I may now stick my fiddle
+in my thatched roof, for a greater performer is come to reside in the
+parish." The existing superstition of the country is that his spirit,
+playing on his favourite instrument, still haunts one wing of
+Brynbella. If he designed the building, his architectural taste does
+not merit the praises she lavishes on it. The exterior is not
+prepossessing; but there is a look of comfort about the house; the
+interior is well arranged: the situation, which commands a fine and
+extensive view of the upper part of the valley of the Clywd, is
+admirably chosen; the garden and grounds are well laid out; and the
+walks through the woods on either side, especially one called the
+Lovers' Walk, are remarkably picturesque. Altogether, Brynbella may
+be fairly held to merit the appellation of a "pretty villa." The name
+implies a compliment to Piozzi's country as well as to his taste; for
+she meant it to typify the union between Wales and Italy in his and
+her own proper persons. She says in the Conway Notes:
+
+"Mr. Piozzi built the house for me, he said; my own old chateau,
+Bachygraig by name, tho' very curious, was wholly uninhabitable; and
+we called the Italian villa he set up as mine in the Vale of Cluid,
+Brynbella, or the beautiful brow, making the name half Welsh and half
+Italian, as _we_ were."
+
+Dr. Burney, in a letter to his daughter, thus described the position
+and feelings of the couple towards each other in 1808:
+
+"During my invalidity at Bath I had an unexpected visit from your
+Streatham friend, of whom I had lost sight for more than ten years.
+She still looks very well, but is graver, and candour itself; though
+she still says good things, and writes admirable notes and letters, I
+am told, to my granddaughters C. and M., of whom she is very fond. We
+shook hands very cordially, and avoided any allusion to our long
+separation and its cause. The _caro sposo_ still lives, but is such
+an object from the gout, that the account of his sufferings made me
+pity him sincerely; he wished, she told me, 'to see his old and
+worthy friend,' and _un beau matin_ I could not refuse compliance
+with his wish. She nurses him with great affection and tenderness,
+never goes out or has company when he is in pain."
+
+In the Conway Notes she says:
+
+"Piozzi's fine hand upon the organ and pianoforte deserted him. Gout,
+such as I never knew, fastened on his fingers, distorting them into
+every dreadful shape.... A little girl, shown to him as a musical
+wonder of five years old, said, 'Pray, Sir, why are your fingers
+wrapped up in black silk so?' 'My dear,' replied he, 'they are in
+mourning for my voice.' 'Oh, me!' cries the child, '_is she dead?_'
+He sung an easy song, and the baby exclaimed, 'Ah, Sir! you are very
+naughty--you tell fibs!' Poor dears! and both gone now!"
+
+"When life was gradually, but perceptibly, closing round him at Bath,
+in 1808, I asked him if he would wish to converse with a Romish
+priest,--we had full opportunity there. 'By no means,' said he. 'Call
+Mr. Leman of the Crescent.' We did so,--poor Bessy ran and fetched
+him. Mr. Piozzi received the blessed Sacrament at his hands; but
+recovered sufficiently to go home and die in his own house."
+
+He died of gout at Brynbella in March 1809, and was buried in a vault
+constructed by her desire in Dymerchion Church. There is a portrait
+of him (period and painter unknown) still preserved amongst the
+family portraits at Brynbella. It is that of a good-looking man of
+about forty, in a straight-cut brown coat with metal buttons, lace
+frill and ruffles, and some leaves of music in his hand. There are
+also two likenesses of Mrs. Piozzi: one a three-quarter length
+(kit-kat), taken apparently when she was about forty; the other a
+miniature of her at an advanced age. Both confirm her description of
+herself as too strong-featured to be pretty. The hands in the
+three-quarter length are gloved.
+
+Brynbella continued her headquarters till 1814, when she gave it up
+to Sir John Salusbury. From that period she resided principally at
+Bath and Clifton, occasionally visiting Streatham or making summer
+trips to the seaside.
+
+That she and her eldest daughter should ever be again (if they ever
+were) on a perfect footing of confidence and affection, was a moral
+impossibility. Estrangements are commonly durable in proportion to
+the closeness of the tie that has been severed; and it is no more
+than natural that each party, yearning for a reconciliation and not
+knowing that the wish is reciprocated, should persevere in casting
+the blame of the prolonged coldness on the other. Occasional sarcasms
+no more prove disregard or indifference, than Swift's "only a woman's
+hair" implies contempt for the sex.
+
+Miss Thrale's marriage with Lord Keith in 1808 is thus mentioned in
+"Thraliana":
+
+"The 'Thraliana' is coming to an end; so are the Thrales. The eldest
+is married now. Admiral Lord Keith the man; a _good_ man for ought I
+hear: a _rich_ man for ought I am told: a _brave_ man we have always
+heard: and a _wise_ man I trow by his choice. The name no new one,
+and excellent for a charade, _e.g_.
+
+ "A Faery my first, who to fame makes pretence;
+ My second a Rock, dear Britannia's defence;
+ In my third when combined will too quickly be shown
+ The Faery and Rock in our brave Elphin-stone."
+
+Her way of life after Piozzi's death may be collected from the
+Letters, with the exception of one strange episode towards the end.
+When nearly eighty, she took a fancy for an actor named Conway, who
+came out on the London boards in 1813, and had the honour of acting
+Romeo and Jaffier to the Juliet and Belvidera of Miss O'Neill (Lady
+Becher). He also acted with her in Dean Milman's fine play, "Fazio."
+But it was his ill fate to reverse Churchill's famous lines:
+
+ "Before such merits all objections fly,
+ Pritchard's genteel, and Garrick's six feet high."
+
+Conway was six feet high, and a very handsome man to boot; but his
+advantages were purely physical; not a spark of genius animated his
+fine features and commanding figure, and he was battling for a
+moderate share of provincial celebrity, when Mrs. Piozzi fell in with
+him at Bath. It has been rumoured in Flintshire that she wished to
+marry him, and offered Sir John Salusbury a large sum in ready money
+(which she never possessed) to give up Brynbella (which he could not
+give up), that she might settle it on the new object of her
+affections. But none of the letters or documents that have fallen in
+my way afford even plausibility to the rumour, and some of the
+testamentary papers in which his name occurs, go far towards
+discrediting the belief that her attachment ever went beyond
+admiration and friendship expressed in exaggerated terms.[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: Since the appearance of the first edition of this work,
+it has been stated on the authority of a distinguished man of letters
+that Conway shewed the late Charles Mathews a letter from Mrs.
+Piozzi, offering marriage.--_New Monthly Magazine_ (edited by Mr.
+Harrison Ainsworth) for April, 1861.]
+
+Conway threw himself overboard and was drowned in a voyage from New
+York to Charleston in 1828. His effects were sold at New York, and
+amongst them a copy of the folio edition of Young's "Night Thoughts,"
+in which he had made a note of its having been presented to him by
+his "dearly attached friend, the celebrated Mrs. Piozzi." In the
+preface to "Love Letters of Mrs. Piozzi, Written when she was Eighty,
+to William Augustus Conway," published in London in 1842, it is
+stated that the originals, seven in number, were purchased by an
+American "lady," who permitted a "gentleman" to take copies and use
+them as he might think fit. What this "gentleman" thought fit, was to
+publish them with a catchpenny title and an alleged extract by way of
+motto to sanction it. The genuineness of the letters is doubtful, and
+the interpolation of three or four sentences would alter their entire
+tenor. But taken as they stand, their language is not warmer than an
+old woman of vivid fancy and sensibility might have deemed warranted
+by her age. "Tell Mr. Johnson I love him exceedingly," is the mission
+given by the old Countess of Eglinton to Boswell in 1778. _L'age n'a
+point de sexe_; and no one thought the worse of Madame Du Deffand for
+the impassioned tone in which she addressed Horace Walpole, whose
+dread of ridicule induced him to make a most ungrateful return to her
+fondness.[1] Years before the formation of this acquaintance, Mrs.
+Piozzi had acquired the difficult art of growing old; _je sais
+vieillir_: she dwells frequently but naturally on her age: she
+contemplates the approach of death with firmness and without
+self-deception: and her elasticity of spirit never for a moment
+suggests the image of an antiquated coquette. Of the seven letters in
+question, the one cited as most compromising is the sixth, in which
+Conway is exhorted to bear patiently a rebuff he had just received
+from some younger beauty:
+
+[Footnote 1: "The old woman's fancy for Mr. Conway represents a
+relation of warm friendship that is of every-day occurrence between
+youth and age that is not crabbed."--_The Examiner_, Feb. 16, 1861.]
+
+"'Tis not a year and a quarter since, dear Conway, accepting of my
+portrait sent to Birmingham, said to the bringer, 'Oh if _your lady_
+but retains her friendship: oh if I can but keep _her_ patronage, I
+care not for the rest.' And now, when that friendship follows you
+through sickness and through sorrow; now that her patronage is daily
+rising in importance: upon a lock of hair given or refused by une
+petite Traitresse, hangs all the happiness of my once high-spirited
+and high-blooded friend. Let it not be so. EXALT THY LOVE: DEJECTED
+HEART--and rise superior to such narrow minds. Do not however fancy
+she will ever be punished in the way you mention: no, no; she'll
+wither on the thorny stem dropping the faded and ungathered
+leaves:--a China rose, of no good scent or flavour--false in apparent
+sweetness, deceitful when depended on--unlike the flower produced in
+colder climates, which is sought for in old age, preserved _even
+after death_, a lasting and an elegant perfume,--a medicine, too, for
+those whose shattered nerves require _astringent remedies_.
+
+"And now, dear Sir, let me request of you--to love yourself--and to
+reflect on the necessity of not dwelling on any _particular subject_
+too long, or too intensely. It is really very dangerous to the health
+of body and soul. Besides that our time here is but short; a mere
+preface to the great book of eternity: and 'tis scarce worthy of a
+reasonable being not to keep the end of human existence so far in
+view that we may tend to it--either directly or obliquely in every
+step. This is preaching--but remember how the sermon is written at
+three, four, and five o'clock by an octogenary pen--a heart (as Mrs.
+Lee says) twenty-six years old: and as H.L.P. feels it to be,--ALL
+YOUR OWN. Suffer your dear noble self to be in some measure benefited
+by the talents which are left _me_; your health to be restored by
+soothing consolations while _I remain here_, and am able to bestow
+them. All is not lost yet. You _have_ a friend, and that friend is
+PIOZZI."
+
+Conway's "high blood" was as great a recommendation to Mrs. Piozzi as
+his good looks, and he vindicated his claim to noble descent by his
+conduct, which was disinterested and gentlemanlike throughout.
+
+Moore sets down in his Diary, April 28, 1819: "Breakfasted with the
+Fitzgeralds. Took me to call on Mrs. Piozzi; a wonderful old lady;
+faces of other times seemed to crowd over her as she sat,--the
+Johnsons, Reynoldses, &c. &c.: though turned eighty, she has all the
+quickness and intelligence of a gay young woman."
+
+Nichol, the bookseller, had said that "Johnson was the link that
+connected Shakespeare with the rest of mankind." On hearing this,
+Mrs. Piozzi at eighty exclaimed, "Oh, the dear fellow, I must give
+him a kiss for that idea." When Nichol told the story, he added, "I
+never got it, and she went out of the world a kiss in my debt."
+
+One of the most characteristic feats or freaks of this extraordinary
+woman was the celebration of her eightieth birthday by a concert,
+ball, and supper, to between six and seven hundred people, at the
+Kingston Rooms, Bath, on the 27th January, 1820. At the conclusion of
+the supper, her health was proposed by Admiral Sir James Sausmarez,
+and drunk with three times three. The dancing began at two, when she
+led off with her adopted son, Sir John Salusbury, dancing (according
+to the author of "Piozziana," an eye-witness) "with astonishing
+elasticity, and with all the true air of dignity which might have
+been expected of one of the best bred females in society." When fears
+were expressed that she had done too much, she replied:--"No: this
+sort of thing is greatly in the mind; and I am almost tempted to say
+the same of growing old at all, especially as it regards those of the
+usual concomitants of age, viz., laziness, defective sight, and
+ill-temper."
+
+"So far from feeling fatigued or exhausted on the following day by
+her exertions," remarks Sir James Fellowes in a note on this event,
+"she amused us by her sallies of wit, and her jokes on 'Tully's
+Offices,' of which her guests had so eagerly availed themselves.".
+Tully was the cook and confectioner, the Bath Gunter, who provided
+the supper.
+
+Mrs. Piozzi died in May, 1821. Her death is circumstantially
+communicated in a letter from Mrs. Pennington, the lady mentioned in
+Miss Seward's correspondence as the beautiful and agreeable Sophia
+Weston:--
+
+
+"Hot Wells, May 5th, 1821.
+
+"Dear Miss Willoughby,--It is my painful task to communicate to you,
+who have so lately been the kind associate of dearest Mrs. Piozzi,
+the irreparable loss we have all sustained in that incomparable woman
+and beloved friend.
+
+"She closed her various life about nine o'clock on Wednesday, after
+an illness of ten days, with as little suffering as could be imagined
+under these awful circumstances. Her bed-side was surrounded by her
+weeping daughters: Lady Keith and Mrs. Hoare arrived in time to be
+fully recognised[1]; Miss Thrale, who was absent from town, only just
+before she expired, but with the satisfaction of seeing her breathe
+her last in peace.
+
+"Nothing could behave with more tenderness and propriety than these
+ladies, whose conduct, I am convinced, has been much misrepresented
+and calumniated by those who have only attended to _one_ side of the
+history: but may all that is past be now buried in oblivion!
+Retrospection seldom improves our view of any subject. Sir John
+Salusbury was too distant, the close of her illness being so rapid,
+for us to entertain any expectation of his arriving in time to see
+the dear deceased. He only reached Clifton late _last_ night. I have
+not yet seen him; my whole time has been devoted to the afflicted
+ladies."
+
+[Footnote 1: On hearing of their arrival she is reported to have
+said, "Now, I shall die in state."]
+
+Mrs. Pennington told a friend that Mrs. Piozzi's last words were: "I
+die in the trust and the fear of God." When she was attended by Sir
+George Gibbes, being unable to articulate, she traced a coffin in the
+air with her hands and lay calm. Her will, dated the 29th March,
+1816, makes Sir John Salusbury Piozzi Salusbury heir to all her real
+and personal property with the exception of some small bequests, Sir
+James Fellowes and Sir John Salusbury being appointed executors.
+
+A Memorandum signed by Sir James Fellowes runs thus:--"After I had
+read the Will, Lady Keith and her two sisters present, said they had
+long been prepared for the contents and for such a disposition of the
+property, and they acknowledged the validity of the Will."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In any endeavour to solve the difficult problem of Mrs. Piozzi's
+conduct and character, it should be kept in view that the highest
+testimony to her worth has been volunteered by those with whom she
+passed the last years of her life in the closest intimacy. She had
+become completely reconciled to Madame D'Arblay, with whom she was
+actively corresponding when she died, and her mixed qualities of head
+and heart are thus summed up in that lady's Diary, May, 1821:
+
+"I have lost now, just lost, my once most dear, intimate, and admired
+friend, Mrs. Thrale Piozzi, who preserved her fine faculties, her
+imagination, her intelligence, her powers of allusion and citation,
+her extraordinary memory, and her almost unexampled vivacity, to the
+last of her existence. She was in her eighty-second year, and yet
+owed not her death to age nor to natural decay, but to the effects of
+a fall in a journey from Penzance to Clifton. On her eightieth
+birthday she gave a great ball, concert, and supper, in the public
+rooms at Bath, to upwards of two hundred persons, and the ball she
+opened herself. She was, in truth, a most wonderful character for
+talents and eccentricity, for wit, genius, generosity, spirit, and
+powers of entertainment.
+
+"She had a great deal both of good and not good, in common with
+Madame de Stael Holstein. They had the same sort of highly superior
+intellect, the same depth of learning, the same general acquaintance
+with science, the same ardent love of literature, the same thirst for
+universal knowledge, and the same buoyant animal spirits, such as
+neither sickness, sorrow, nor even terror, could subdue. Their
+conversation was equally luminous, from the sources of their own
+fertile minds, and from their splendid acquisitions from the works
+and acquirements of others. Both were zealous to serve, liberal to
+bestow, and graceful to oblige; and both were truly high-minded in
+prizing and praising whatever was admirable that came in their way.
+Neither of them was delicate nor polished, though each was flattering
+and caressing; but both had a fund inexhaustible of good humour, and
+of sportive gaiety, that made their intercourse with those they
+wished to please attractive, instructive, and delightful; and though
+not either of them had the smallest real malevolence in their
+compositions, neither of them could ever withstand the pleasure of
+uttering a repartee, let it wound whom it might, even though each
+would serve the very person they goaded with all the means in their
+power. Both were kind, charitable, and munificent, and therefore
+beloved; both were sarcastic, careless, and daring, and therefore
+feared. The morality of Madame de Stael was by far the most faulty,
+but so was the society to which she belonged; so were the general
+manners of those by whom she was encircled."
+
+There is one real point of similarity between Madame de Stael and
+Mrs. Piozzi, which has been omitted in the parallel. Both were
+treated much in the same manner by the amiable, sensitive, and
+unsophisticated Fanny Burney. In Feb. 1793, she wrote to her father,
+then at Paris, to announce her intimacy with a small "colony" of
+distinguished emigrants settled at Richmond, the cynosure of which
+was the far-famed daughter of Necker. He writes to caution her on the
+strength of a suspicious _liaison_ with M. de Narbonne. She replies
+by declaring her belief that the charge is a gross calumny. "Indeed,
+I think you could not spend a day with them and not see that their
+commerce is that of pure, but exalted and most elegant, friendship. I
+would, nevertheless, give the world to avoid being a guest under
+their roof, now that I have heard even the shadow of such a rumour."
+
+If Mr. Croker was right, she was then in her forty-second year; at
+all events, no tender, timid, delicate maiden, ready to start at a
+hint or semblance of impropriety; and she waved her scruples without
+hesitation when they stood in the way of her intercourse with M.
+D'Arblay, whom she married in July 1793, he being then employed in
+transcribing Madame de Stael's Essay on the Influence of the
+Passions.
+
+As to the parallel, with all due deference to Madame D'Arblay's
+proved sagacity aided by her personal knowledge of her two gifted
+friends, it may be suggested that they present fewer points of
+resemblance than any two women of at all corresponding celebrity.[1]
+The superiority in the highest qualities of mind will be awarded
+without hesitation to the French woman, although M. Thiers terms her
+writings the perfection of mediocrity. She grappled successfully with
+some of the weightiest and subtlest questions of social and political
+science; in criticism she displayed powers which Schlegel might have
+envied while he aided their fullest development in her "Germany"; and
+her "Corinne" ranks amongst the best of those works of fiction which
+excel in description, reflection, and sentiment, rather than in
+pathos, fancy, stirring incident, or artfully contrived plot. But her
+tone of mind was so essentially and notoriously masculine, that when
+she asked Talleyrand whether he had read her "Delphine," he answered,
+"Non, Madame, mais on m'a dit que-nous y sommes tous les deux
+deguises en femmes."[2] This was a material drawback on her
+agreeability: in a moment of excited consciousness, she exclaimed,
+that she would give all her fame for the power of fascinating; and
+there was no lack of bitterness in her celebrated repartee to the man
+who, seated between her and Madame Recamier, boasted of being between
+Wit and Beauty, "Oui, et sans posseder ni l'un ni l'autre."[3] The
+view from Richmond Park she called "calme et animee, ce qu'on doit
+etre, et que je ne suis pas."
+
+[Footnote 1: Lady Morgan and Madame de Genlis have been suggested as
+each presenting a better subject for a parallel.]
+
+[Footnote 2: "To understand the point of this answer," says Mr.
+Mackintosh, "it must be known that an old countess is introduced in
+the novel full of cunning, finessing, and trick, who was intended to
+represent Talleyrand, and Delphine was intended for herself."--_Life
+of Sir James Mackintosh_, vol. ii. p. 453.]
+
+[Footnote 3: This _mot_ is given to Talleyrand in Lady Holland's Life
+of Sydney Smith. But it may be traced to one mentioned by Hannah More
+in 1787, as then current in Paris. One of the _notables_ fresh from
+his province was teased by two _petits maitres_ to tell them who he
+was. "Eh bien donc, le voici: je suis ni sot ni fat, mais je suis
+entre les deux."--_Memoirs of Hannah More_, vol. ii. p. 57.]
+
+In London she was soon voted a bore by the wits and people of
+fashion. She thought of convincing whilst they thought of dining.
+Sheridan and Brummell delighted in mystifying her. Byron complained
+that she was always talking of himself or herself[1], and concludes
+his account of a dinner-party by the remark:--"But we got up too soon
+after the women; and Mrs. Corinne always lingers so long after
+dinner, that we wish her--in the drawing-room." In another place he
+says: "I saw Curran presented to Madame de Stael at Mackintosh's; it
+was the grand confluence between the Rhone and the Saone, and they
+were both so d--d ugly that I could not help wondering how the best
+intellects of France and England could have taken up respectively
+such residences." He afterwards qualifies this opinion: "Her figure
+was not bad; her legs tolerable; her arms good: altogether I can
+conceive her having been a desirable woman, allowing a little
+imagination for her soul, and so forth. She would have made a great
+man."
+
+[Footnote 1: Johnson told Boswell: "You have only two topics,
+yourself and myself, and I am heartily sick of both."]
+
+This is just what Mrs. Piozzi never would have made. Her mind,
+despite her masculine acquirements, was thoroughly feminine: she had
+more tact than genius, more sensibility and quickness of perception
+than depth, comprehensiveness, or continuity of thought. But her very
+discursiveness prevented her from becoming wearisome: her varied
+knowledge supplied an inexhaustible store of topics and
+illustrations; her lively fancy placed them in attractive lights; and
+her mind has been well likened to a kaleidoscope which, whenever its
+glittering and heterogeneous contents are moved or shaken, surprises
+by some new combination of colour or of form. She professed to write
+as she talked; but her conversation was doubtless better than her
+books: her main advantages being a well-stored memory, fertility of
+images, aptness of allusion, and _apropos_.
+
+Her colloquial excellence and her agreeability are established by the
+unanimous testimony of her cotemporaries. Her fame in this respect
+rests on the same basis as that of all great wits, all great actors,
+and many great orators. To question it for want of more tangible and
+durable proofs, would be as unreasonable as to question Sydney
+Smith's humour, Hook's powers of improvisation, Garrick's Richard, or
+Sheridan's Begum speech. But _ex pede Herculem_. Marked indications
+of her quality will be found in her letters and her books. "Both,"
+remarks an acute and by no means partial critic[1], "are full of
+happy touches, and here and there will be found in them those deep
+and piercing thoughts which come intuitively to people of genius."
+
+[Footnote 1: The Athenaeum. Jan. 26th, 1861.]
+
+Surely these are happy touches:
+
+"I hate a general topic as a pretty woman hates a general mourning
+when black does not become her complexion."
+
+"Life is a schoolroom, not a playground."
+
+In allusion to the rage for scientific experiment in 1811: "Never was
+poor Nature so put to the rack, and never, of course, was she made to
+tell so many lies."
+
+"Science (i.e. learning), which acted as a sceptre in the hand of
+Johnson, and was used as a club by Dr. Parr, became a lady's fan,
+when played with by George Henry Glasse."
+
+"Hope is drawn with an anchor always, and Common Sense is never
+strong enough to draw it up."
+
+"The poppy which Nature sows among the corn, to shew us that sleep is
+as necessary as bread." [1]
+
+[Footnote 1: Or to shew us that the harvest diminishes with sloth,
+and that what we gain in sleep we lose in bread. But _qui dort,
+dine_.]
+
+"The best writers are not the best friends; and the last character is
+more to be valued than the first by cotemporaries: after fifty years,
+indeed, the others carry away all the applause."
+
+This is the reason why posterity always takes part with the famous
+author or man of genius against those who witnessed his meanness or
+suffered from his selfishness; why fresh apologists will constantly
+be found for Bacon's want of principle and Johnson's want of manners.
+
+In the course of his famous definition or description of wit, Barrow
+says: "Sometimes it lieth in pat allusion to a known story, or in
+seasonable application of a trivial saying: sometimes it playeth in
+words and phrases, taking advantage from the ambiguity of their sense
+or the affinity of their sound." If this be so, she possessed it in
+abundance. In a letter, dated Bath, 26th April, 1818,--about the time
+when Talleyrand said of Lady F.S.'s robe: "_Elle commence trop tard
+et finit trop tot_,"--she writes:
+
+"A genteel young clergyman, in our Upper Crescent, told his mamma
+about ten days ago, that he had lost his heart to pretty Miss
+Prideaux, and that he must absolutely marry her or die. _La chere
+mere_ of course replied gravely: 'My dear, you have not been
+acquainted with the lady above a fortnight: let me recommend you to
+see more of her.' 'More of her!' exclaimed the lad, 'why I have seen
+down to the fifth rib on each side already.' This story will serve to
+convince Captain T. Fellowes and yourself, that as you have always
+acknowledged the British Belles to _exceed_ those of every other
+nation, you may now say with truth, that they _outstrip_ them."
+
+On the 1st July, 1818:
+
+"The heat has certainly exhausted my faculties, and I have but just
+life enough left to laugh at the fourteen tailors who, united under a
+flag with '_Liberty and Independence_' on it, went to vote for some
+of these gay fellows, I forget which, but the motto is ill chosen,
+said I, they should have written up, '_Measures not Men_'"
+
+Her verses are advantageously distinguished amongst those of her
+blue-stocking contemporaries by happy turns of thought and
+expression, natural playfulness, and an abundant flow of idiomatic
+language. But her facility was a fatal gift, as it has proved to most
+female aspirants to poetic fame, who rarely stoop to the labour of
+the file. Although the first rule laid down by Goldsmith's
+connoisseur[1] is far from universally applicable to productions of
+the pencil or the pen, all fruitful writers would do well to act upon
+it, and what Mrs. Piozzi could do when she took pains is decisively
+proved by her "Streatham Portraits."
+
+[Footnote 1: "Upon my asking him how he had acquired the art of a
+conoscente so very suddenly, he assured me that nothing was more
+easy. The whole secret consisted in an adherence to two rules: the
+one always to observe that the picture might have been better if the
+painter had taken more pains; and the other to praise the works of
+Pietro Perugino."--_The Vicar of Wakefield_, ch. xx.]
+
+She was wanting in refinement, which very few of the eighteenth
+century wits and authors possessed according to more modern notions;
+and she abounded in vanity, which, if not necessarily a baneful or
+unamiable quality, is a fruitful source of folly and peculiarly
+calculated to provoke censure or ridicule. In her, fortunately, its
+effects were a good deal modified by the frankness of its avowal and
+display, by her habits of self-examination, by her impulsive
+generosity of character, and by her readiness to admit the claims and
+consult the feelings of others. To seek out and appreciate merit as
+she appreciated it, is a high merit in itself.
+
+Her piety was genuine; and old-fashioned politicians, whose watchword
+is Church and King, will be delighted with her politics. Literary
+men, considering how many curious inquiries depend upon her accuracy,
+will be more anxious about her truthfulness, and I have had ample
+opportunities of testing it; having not only been led to compare her
+narratives with those of others, but to collate her own statements of
+the same transactions or circumstances at distant intervals or to
+different persons. It is difficult to keep up a large correspondence
+without frequent repetition. Sir Walter Scott used to write precisely
+the same things to three or four fine-lady friends, and Mrs. Piozzi
+could no more be expected to find a fresh budget of news or gossip
+for each epistle than the author of "Waverley." Thus, in 1815, she
+writes to a Welsh baronet from Bath:
+
+"We have had a fine Dr. Holland here.[1] He has seen and written
+about the Ionian Islands; and means now to practise as a physician,
+exchanging the Cyclades, say we wits and wags, for the Sick Ladies.
+We made quite a lion of the man. I was invited to every house he
+visited at for the last three days; so I got the _Queue du lion_
+despairing of _le Coeur_."
+
+[Footnote 1: Sir Henry Holland, Bart., who, with many other titles to
+distinction, is one of the most active and enterprising of modern
+travellers.]
+
+Two other letters written about the same time contain the same piece
+of intelligence and the same joke. She was very fond of writing
+marginal notes; and after annotating one copy of a book, would take
+up another and do the same. I have never detected a substantial
+variation in her narratives, even in those which were more or less
+dictated by pique; and as she generally drew upon the "Thraliana" for
+her materials, this, having been carefully and calmly compiled,
+affords an additional guarantee for her accuracy.
+
+Her taste for reading never left her or abated to the last. In
+reference to a remark (in Boswell) on the irksomeness of books to
+people of advanced age, she writes: "Not to me at eighty years old:
+being grieved that year (1819) particularly, I was forced upon study
+to relieve my mind, and it had the due effect. I wrote this note in
+1820."
+
+She sometimes gives anecdotes of authors. Thus, in the letter just
+quoted, she says: "Lord Byron protests his wife was a fortune without
+money, a belle without beauty, and a blue-stocking without either wit
+or learning." But her literary information grew scanty as she grew
+old: "The literary world (she writes in 1821) is to me terra
+incognita, far more deserving of the name, now Parry and Ross are
+returned, than any part of the polar regions:" and her opinions of
+the rising authors are principally valuable as indications of the
+obstacles which budding reputations must overcome. "Pindar's fine
+remark respecting the different effects of music on different
+characters, holds equally true of genius: so many as are not
+delighted by it are disturbed, perplexed, irritated. The beholder
+either recognises it as a projected form of his own being, that moves
+before him with a glory round its head, or recoils from it as a
+spectre."[1] The octogenarian critic of the Johnsonian school recoils
+from "Frankenstein" as from an incarnation of the Evil Spirit: she
+does not know what to make of the "Tales of my Landlord"; and she
+inquires of an Irish acquaintance whether she retained recollection
+enough of her own country to be entertained with "that strange
+caricature, Castle Rack Rent." Contemporary judgments such as these
+(not more extravagant than Horace Walpole's) are to the historian of
+literature what fossil remains are to the geologist.
+
+[Footnote 1: Coleridge, "Aids to Reflection."]
+
+Although perhaps no biographical sketch was ever executed, as a
+labour of love, without an occasional attack of what Lord Macaulay
+calls the _Lues Boswelliana_ or fever of admiration, I hope it is
+unnecessary for me to say that I am not setting up Mrs. Piozzi as a
+model letter-writer, or an eminent author, or a pattern of the
+domestic virtues, or a fitting object of hero or heroine worship in
+any capacity. All I venture to maintain is, that her life and
+character, if only for the sake of the "associate forms," deserve to
+be vindicated against unjust reproach, and that she has written many
+things which are worth snatching from oblivion or preserving from
+decay.
+
+
+END OF THE FIRST VOLUME.
+
+
+
+
+LONDON
+
+PRINTED BY SPOTTISWOODE AND CO.
+
+NEW-STREET SQUARE
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Autobiography, Letters and Literary
+Remains of Mrs. Piozzi (Thrale) (2nd ed.) (2 vols.), by Mrs. Hester Lynch Piozzi
+
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