to Mr. Croker (Croker’s
Boswell, p. 415)
’it was preserved by Johnson’s servant,
Barber. How it escaped Boswell’s research
is not known.’ A fragment of Johnson’s
Annals, also preserved by Barber, had in like
manner never been seen by Boswell;
ante, i.
35, note 1. The editor of these
Annals
says (Preface, p. v):—’Francis Barber,
unwilling that all the MSS. of his illustrious master
should be utterly lost, preserved these relicks from
the flames. By purchase from Barber’s widow
they came into the possession of the editor.’
It seems likely that Barber was afraid to own what
he had done; though as he was the residuary legatee
he was safe from all consequences, unless the executors
of the will who were to hold the residue of the estate
in trust for him had chosen to proceed against him.
Mr. Duppa in editing this Journal received assistance
from Mrs. Piozzi, ‘who,’ he says (Preface,
p. xi), ’explained many facts which could not
otherwise have been understood.’ A passage
in one of her letters dated Bath, Oct. 11, 1816, shows
how unfriendly were the relations between her and
her eldest daughter, Johnson’s Queeny, who had
married Admiral Lord Keith. ‘I am sadly
afraid,’ she writes, ’of Lady K.’s
being displeased, and fancying I promoted this publication.
Could I have caught her for a quarter-of-an-hour,
I should have proved my innocence, and might have
shown her Duppa’s letter; but she left neither
note, card, nor message, and when my servant ran to
all the inns in chase of her, he learned that she
had left the White Hart at twelve o’clock.
Vexatious! but it can’t be helped. I hope
the pretty little girl my people saw with her will
pay her more tender attention.’ Three days
later she wrote:—’Johnson’s
Diary is selling rapidly, though the contents
are
bien maigre, I must confess. Mr. Duppa
has politely suppressed some sarcastic expressions
about my family, the Cottons, whom we visited at Combermere,
and at Lleweney.’ Hayward’s
Piozzi,
ii. 176-9. Mr. Croker in 1835 was able to make
’a collation of the original MS., which has
supplied many corrections and some omissions in Mr.
Duppa’s text.’ Mr. Croker’s
text I have generally followed.
[1161] ’When I went with Johnson to Lichfield,
and came down 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."’ Piozzi’s
Anec. p. 288.
[1162] For Mrs. (Miss) Porter, Mrs. (Miss) Aston,
Mr. Green, Mrs. Cobb, Mr. (Peter) Garrick, Miss Seward,
and Dr. Taylor, see ante, ii. 462-473.
[1163] Dr. Erasmus Darwin, the physiologist and poet,
grandfather of Charles Darwin. Mrs. Piozzi when
at Florence wrote:—’I have no roses
equal to those at Lichfield, where on one tree I recollect
counting eighty-four within my own reach; it grew
against the house of Dr. Darwin.’ Piozzi’s
Journey, i. 278.