the Academy, was dissatisfied with the sum allowed
him. ’When Sir Joshua said that he knew
from experience that it was sufficient, Lowe pertly
answered “that it was possible for a man to
live on guts and garbage."’ He died at an obscure
lodging in Westminster, in 1793. There is, wrote
Miss Burney, ’a certain poor wretch of a villainous
painter, one Mr. Lowe, whom Dr. Johnson recommends
to all the people he thinks can afford to sit for their
picture. Among these he applied to Mr. Crutchley
[one of Mr. Thrale’s executors]. “But
now,” said Mr. Crutchley to me, “I have
not a notion of sitting for my picture—for
who wants it? I may as well give the man the
money without; but no, they all said that would not
do so well, and Dr. Johnson asked me to give
him
my picture.” “And I assure you, Sir,”
says he, “I shall put it in very good company,
for I have portraits of some very respectable people
in my dining-room.” After all I could say
I was obliged to go to the painter’s. And
I found him in such a condition! a room all dirt and
filth, brats squalling and wrangling... “Oh!”
says I, “Mr. Lowe, I beg your pardon for running
away, but I have just recollected another engagement;
so I poked three guineas in his hand, and told him
I would come again another time, and then ran out of
the house with all my might."’
Mme. D’Arblay’s
Diary, ii.41. A correspondent of the
Examiner
writing on May 28, 1873, said that he had met one
of Lowe’s daughters, ‘who recollected,’
she told him, ’when a child, sitting on Dr.
Johnson’s knee and his making her repeat the
Lord’s Prayer.’ She was Johnson’s
god-daughter. By a committee consisting of Milman,
Thackeray, Dickens, Carlyle and others, an annuity
fund for her and her sister was raised. Lord Palmerston
gave a large subscription.
[632] See post, May 15, 1783.
[633] See Boswell’s Hebrides, post,
v. 48.
[634] See ante, p. 171.
[635] Quoted by Boswell, ante, iii. 324.
[636] It is suggested to me by an anonymous Annotator
on my Work, that the reason why Dr. Johnson collected
the peels of squeezed oranges may be found in the
58th [358th] Letter in Mrs. Piozzi’s Collection,
where it appears that he recommended ‘dried
orange-peel, finely powdered,’ as a medicine.
BOSWELL. See ante, ii. 330.
[637] There are two mistakes in this calculation,
both perhaps due to Boswell. Eighty-four should
be eighty-eight, and square-yards should be
yards square. ’If a wall cost L1000
a mile, L100 would build 176 yards of wall, which
would form a square of 44 yards, and enclose an area
of 1936 square yards; and L200 would build 352 yards
of wall, which would form a square of 88 yards, and
inclose an area of 7744 square yards. The cost
of the wall in the latter case, as compared with the
space inclosed, would therefore be reduced to one half.’
Notes and Queries, 1st S. x. 471.