[1122] George Selwyn wrote:—‘Topham Beauclerk is arrived. I hear he lost £10,000 to a thief at Venice, which thief, in the course of the year, will be at Cashiobury.’ (The reference to this quotation I have mislaid.)
[1123] Two years later he repeated this thought in the lines that he added to Goldsmith’s Traveller . Post , under Feb. 1766.
[1124] We may compare with this what ‘old Bentley’ said:—‘Depend upon it, no man was ever written down but by himself.’ Boswell’s Hebrides , Oct. 1, 1773.
[1125] The preliminaries of peace between England and France had been signed on Nov. 3 of this year. Ann Reg . v. 246.
[1126] Of Baretti’s Travels through Spain, &c ., Johnson wrote to Mrs. Thrale:—‘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 very seldom ramble.’ Piozzi Letters, i. 32.
[1127] See ante , p. 370.
[1128] See ante , p. 242, note 1.
[1129] Huggins had quarrelled with Johnson and Baretti (Croker’s Boswell , 129, note). See also post , 1780, in Mr. Langton’s Collection .
[1130] See ante , p. 370.
[1131] Cowper, writing in 1784 about Collins, says:—‘Of whom I did not know that he existed till I found him there’—in the Lives of the Poets , that is to say. Southey’s Cowper , v. II.
[1132] To this passage Johnson, nearly twenty years later, added the following ( Works , viii. 403):—‘Such was the fate of Collins, with whom I once delighted to converse, and whom I yet remember with tenderness.’
[1133] ‘MADAM. To approach the high and the illustrious has been in all ages the privilege of Poets; and though translators cannot justly claim the same honour, yet they naturally follow their authours as attendants; and I hope that in return for having enabled TASSO to diffuse his fame through the British dominions, I may be introduced by him to the presence of YOUR MAJESTY.
TASSO has a peculiar claim to YOUR MAJESTY’S favour, as follower and panegyrist of the House of Este , which has one common ancestor with the House of HANOVER; and in reviewing his life it is not easy to forbear a wish that he had lived in a happier time, when he might, among the descendants of that illustrious family, have found a more liberal and potent patronage.
I cannot but observe, MADAM, how unequally reward is proportioned to merit, when I reflect that the happiness which was withheld from TASSO is reserved for me; and that the poem which once hardly procured to its authour the countenance of the Princess of Ferrara, has attracted to its translator the favourable notice of a BRITISH QUEEN.
Had this been the fate of TASSO, he would have been able to have celebrated the condescension of YOUR MAJESTY in nobler language, but could not have felt it with more ardent gratitude, than MADAM, Your MAJESTY’S Most faithful and devoted servant.’—BOSWELL.
[1134] Young though Boswell was, he had already tried his hand at more than one kind of writing. In 1761 he had published anonymously an Elegy on the Death of an Amiable Young Lady , with an Epistle from Menalcas to Lycidas . (Edinburgh, Donaldson.) The Elegy is full of such errors as ‘Thou liv’d,’ ‘Thou led,’ but is recommended by a puffing preface and three letters—one of which is signed J—B. About the same time he brought out a piece that was even more impudent. It was An Ode to Tragedy . By a gentleman of Scotland. (Edinburgh, Donaldson, 1761. Price sixpence.) In the ‘Dedication to James Boswell, Esq.,’ he says:—‘I have no intention to pay you compliments—To entertain agreeable notions of one’s own character is a great incentive to act with propriety and spirit. But I should be sorry to contribute in any degree to your acquiring an excess of self-sufficiency … I own indeed that when … to display my extensive erudition, I have quoted Greek, Latin and French sentences one after another with astonishing celerity; or have got into my Old-hock humour and fallen a-raving about princes and lords, knights and geniuses, ladies of quality and harpsichords; you, with a peculiar comic smile, have gently reminded me of the importance of a man to himself , and slily left the room with the witty Dean lying open at—P.P. clerk of this parish . [Swift’s Works , ed. 1803, xxiii. 142.] I, Sir, who enjoy the pleasure of your intimate acquaintance, know that many of your hours of retirement are devoted to thought.’ The Ode is serious. He describes himself as having
‘A soul by nature formed to feel Grief sharper than the tyrant’s steel, And bosom big with swelling thought From ancient lore’s remembrance brought.’
In the winter of 1761-2 he had helped as a contributor and part-editor in bringing out a Collection of Original Poems . ( Boswell and Erskine’s Letters , p. 27.) His next publication, also anonymous, was The Club at Newmarket , written, as the Preface says, ‘in the Newmarket Coffee Room, in which the author, being elected a member of the Jockey Club, had the happiness of passing several sprightly good-humoured evenings.’ It is very poor stuff. In the winter of 1762-3 he joined in writing the Critical Strictures , mentioned post , June 25, 1763. Just about the time that he first met Johnson he and his friend the Hon. Andrew Erskine had published in their own names a very impudent little volume of the correspondence that had passed between them. Of this I published an edition with notes in 1879, together with Boswell’s Journal of a Tour to Corsica . (Messrs. Thos. De La Rue & Co.).
[1135] Boswell, in 1768, in the preface to the third edition of his Corsica described ‘the warmth of affection and the dignity of veneration’ with which he never ceased to think of Mr. Johnson.
[1136] In the Garrick Carres , (ii. 83) there is a confused letter from this unfortunate man, asking Garrick for the loan of five guineas. He had a scheme for delivering dramatic lectures at Eton and Oxford; ‘but,’ he added, ‘my externals have so unfavourable an appearance that I cannot produce myself with any comfort or hope of success.’ Garrick sent him five guineas. He had been a Major in the army, an actor, and dramatic author. ‘For the last seven years of his life he struggled under sickness and want to a degree of uncommon misery.’ Gent. Mag . for 1784, p. 959.
[1137] As great men of antiquity such as Scipio Africanus had an epithet added to their names, in consequence of some celebrated action, so my illustrious friend was often called DICTIONARY JOHNSON , from that wonderful atchievement of genius and labour, his Dictionary of the English Language ; the merit of which I contemplate with more and more admiration. BOSWELL. In like manner we have ‘Hermes Harris,’ ‘Pliny Melmoth,’ ‘Demosthenes Taylor,’ ‘Persian Jones,’ ‘Abyssinian Bruce,’ ‘Microscope Baker,’ ‘Leonidas Glover,’ ‘Hesiod Cooke,’ and ‘Corsica Boswell.’
[1138] See ante , p. 124. He introduced Boswell to Davies, who was ‘the immediate introducer.’ Post , under June 18, 1783, note.
[1139] On March 2, 1754 (not 1753), the audience called for a repetition of some lines which they applied against the government. ‘Diggs, the actor, refused by order of Sheridan, the manager, to repeat them; Sheridan would not even appear on the stage to justify the prohibition. In an instant the audience demolished the inside of the house, and reduced it to a shell.’ Walpole’s Reign of George II , i. 389, and Gent. Mag . xxiv. 141. Sheridan’s friend, Mr. S. Whyte, says (_Miscellanea Nova, p. 16):—‘In the year 1762 Sheridan’s scheme for an English Dictionary was published. That memorable year he was nominated for a pension.’ He quotes (p. 111) a letter from Mrs. Sheridan, dated Nov. 29, 1762, in which she says:—‘I suppose you must have heard that the King has granted him a pension of 200£. a year, merely as an encouragement to his undertaking.’
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