Life of Johnson, Volume 5 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 730 pages of information about Life of Johnson, Volume 5.

Life of Johnson, Volume 5 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 730 pages of information about Life of Johnson, Volume 5.

[935] See ante, i. 148, and post, Nov. 21.

[936] I have suppressed my friend’s name from an apprehension of wounding his sensibility; but I would not withhold from my readers a passage which shews Mr. Garrick’s mode of writing as the Manager of a Theatre, and contains a pleasing trait of his domestick life.  His judgment of dramatick pieces, so far as concerns their exhibition on the stage, must be allowed to have considerable weight.  But from the effect which a perusal of the tragedy here condemned had upon myself, and from the opinions of some eminent criticks, I venture to pronounce that it has much poetical merit; and its authour has distinguished himself by several performances which shew that the epithet poetaster was, in the present instance, much misapplied.  BOSWELL.  Johnson mentioned this quarrel between Garrick and the poet on March 25, 1773 (Piozzi Letters, i. 80).  ’M——­ is preparing a whole pamphlet against G——­, and G——­ is, I suppose, collecting materials to confute M——.’  M——­ was Mickle, the translator of the Lusiad and author of the Ballad of Cumnor Hall (ante, ii. 182).  Had it not been for this ‘poetaster,’ Kenilworth might never have been written.  Scott, in the preface, tells how ’the first stanza of Cunmor Hall had a peculiar species of enchantment for his youthful ear, the force of which is not even now entirely spent.’  The play that was refused was the Siege of Marseilles.  Ever since the success of Hughes’s Siege of Damascus ’a siege had become a popular title’ (ante, iii. 259, note 1).

[937] She could only have been away for the day; for in 1776 Garrick wrote:—­’As I have not left Mrs. Garrick one day since we were married, near twenty-eight years, I cannot now leave her.’ Garrick Corres. ii. 150.

[938] Dr. Morell once entered the school-room at Winchester College, ’in which some junior boys were writing their exercises, one of whom, struck no less with his air and manner than with the questions he put to them, whispered to his school-fellows, “Is he not a fine old Grecian?” The Doctor, overhearing this, turned hastily round and exclaimed, “I am indeed an old Grecian, my little man.  Did you never see my head before my Thesaurus?"’ The Praepostors, learning the dignity of their visitor, in a most respectful manner showed him the College.  Wooll’s Life of Dr. Warton, p. 329.  Mason writing to Horace Walpole about some odes, says:—­’They are so lopped and mangled, that they are worse now than the productions of Handel’s poet, Dr. Morell.’  Walpole’s Letters, v. 420.  Morell compiled the words for Handel’s Oratorios.

[939] Ante, i. 148.

[940] I doubt whether any other instance can be found of love being sent to Johnson.

[941] The passage begins:—­’A servant or two from a revering distance cast many a wishful look, and condole their honoured master in the language of sighs.’  Hervey’s Meditations, ed. 1748, i. 40.

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Life of Johnson, Volume 5 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.