Life of Johnson, Volume 6 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 720 pages of information about Life of Johnson, Volume 6.

Life of Johnson, Volume 6 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 720 pages of information about Life of Johnson, Volume 6.
a narrow projecting slip of paper.  I found the same in the copy in the British Museum.  Mr. Horace Hart, the printer to the University, who has kindly examined my copy, informs me that the leaf was cancelled after the sheets had been stitched together.  It was cut out, but an edge was left to which the new one was attached by paste.  The leaf thus treated begins with the words ‘talked with very high respect’ (ante, v. 149) and ends ‘This day was little better than a blank’ (ante, v. 151).  This conclusion was perhaps meant to be significant to the observant reader.

Boswell’s conversation with the King about the title proper to be given to the Young Pretender.

(Vol. v, p. 185, n. 4.)

Dr. Lort wrote to Bishop Percy on Aug. 15, 1785:—­

’Boswell’s book [The Tour to the Hebrides], I suppose, will be out in the winter.  The King at his levee talked to him, as was natural, on this subject.  Boswell told his majesty that he had another work on the anvil—­a History of the Rebellion in 1745 (ante, iii. 162); but that he was at a loss how to style the principal person who figured in it.  “How would you style him, Mr. Boswell?” “I was thinking, Sire, of calling him the grandson of the unfortunate James the Second.”  “That I have no objection to; my title to the Crown stands on firmer ground —­on an Act of Parliament.”  This is said to be the substance of a conversation which passed at the levee.  I wish I was certain of the exact words.’  —­Nichols’s Literary History, vii. 472.

Shakespeare’s popularity.

(Vol. v, p. 244, n. 2.)

Gibbon, after describing how he used to attend Voltaire’s private theatre at Monrepos in 1757 and 1758, continues:—­

’The habits of pleasure fortified my taste for the French theatre, and that taste has perhaps abated my idolatry for the gigantic genius of Shakespeare, which is inculcated from our infancy as the first duty of an Englishman.’ —­Memoirs of Edward Gibbon, ed. 1837, i. 90.

Archibald Campbell.

(Vol. v, p. 357.)

Mr. C. E. Doble informs me that in the Bodleian Library ’there is a characteristic letter of Archibald Campbell in a Life of Francis Lee in Rawlinson, J., 4to. 2. 197; and also a skeleton life of him in Rawlinson, J., 4to. 5. 301.’

Cocoa Tree Club.

(Vol. v, p. 386, n. 1.)

Gibbon records in his Journal on November 24, 1762, a visit to the Cocoa Tree Club:—­

’That respectable body, of which I have the honour of being a member, affords every evening a sight truly English.  Twenty or thirty, perhaps, of the first men in the kingdom in point of fashion and fortune, supping at little tables covered with a napkin, in the middle of a coffee-room, upon a bit of cold meat or a sandwich, and drinking a glass of punch.  At present we are full of king’s counsellors and lords of the bed-chamber, who, having jumped into the ministry, make a very singular medley of their old principles and language with their modern ones.’ —­Memoirs of Edward Gibbon, ed. 1827, i. 131.

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Life of Johnson, Volume 6 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.