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.

[972] See ante, ii. 230, note 1.

[973] See ante, p. 318.

[974] See ante, iii. 54

[975] See ante, p. 356.

[976] See ante, iii. 241, note 2.

[977] As a remarkable instance of his negligence, I remember some years ago to have found lying loose in his study, and without the cover, which contained the address, a letter to him from Lord Thurlow, to whom he had made an application as Chancellor, in behalf of a poor literary friend.  It was expressed in such terms of respect for Dr. Johnson, that, in my zeal for his reputation, I remonstrated warmly with him on his strange inattention, and obtained his permission to take a copy of it; by which probably it has been preserved, as the original I have reason to suppose is lost.  BOSWELL.  See ante, iii. 441.

[978] ’The islets, which court the gazer at a distance, disgust him at his approach, when he finds, instead of soft lawns and shady thickets, nothing more than uncultivated ruggedness.’  Johnson’s Works, ix. 156.

[979] See ante, i. 200, and iv. 179.

[980] In these arguments he says:—­’Reason and truth will prevail at last.  The most learned of the Scottish doctors would now gladly admit a form of prayer, if the people would endure it.  The zeal or rage of congregations has its different degrees.  In some parishes the Lord’s Prayer is suffered:  in others it is still rejected as a form; and he that should make it part of his supplication would be suspected of heretical pravity.’  Johnson’s Works, ix. 102.  See ante, p. 121.

[981] ’A very little above the source of the Leven, on the lake, stands the house of Cameron, belonging to Mr. Smollett, so embosomed in an oak wood that we did not see it till we were within fifty yards of the door.’ Humphry Clinker, Letter of Aug. 28.

[982] Boswell himself was at times one of ‘those absurd visionaries.’ Ante, ii. 73.

[983] See ante, p. 117.

[984] Lord Kames wrote one, which is published in Chambers’s Traditions of Edinburgh, ed. 1825, i. 280.  In it he bids the traveller to ’indulge the hope of a Monumental Pillar.’

[985] See ante, iii. 85; and v. 154.

[986] This address does not offend against the rule that Johnson lays down in his Essay on Epitaphs (Works, v. 263), where he says:—­’It is improper to address the epitaph to the passenger.’  The impropriety consists in such an address in a church.  He however did break through his rule in his epitaph in Streatham Church on Mr. Thrale, where he says:—­’Abi viator.’ Ib. i. 154.

[987] In Humphry Clinker (Letter of Aug. 28), which was published a few months before Smollett’s death, is his Ode on Leven-Water.

[988] The epitaph which has been inscribed on the pillar erected on the banks of the Leven, in honour of Dr. Smollett, is as follows.  The part which was written by Dr. Johnson, it appears, has been altered; whether for the better, the reader will judge.  The alterations are distinguished by Italicks.

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