as a tutor; but had no sooner accumulated L30 than
he quitted his employment and forthwith dissipated
his little savings. A long-suffering uncle named
Contarine, who had already more than once interposed
on his behalf, now provided means to send him to London
to study law. He, however, got no farther than
Dublin, where he was fleeced to his last guinea, and
returned to the house of his mother, now a widow with
a large family. After an interval spent in idleness,
a medical career was perceived to be the likeliest
opening, and in 1752 he steered for Edin., where he
remained on the usual happy-go-lucky terms until 1754,
when he proceeded to Leyden. After a year there
he started on a walking tour, which led him through
France, Germany, Switzerland, and Italy. How he
lived it is hard to say, for he left Leyden penniless.
It is said that he disputed at Univ., and played the
flute, and thus kept himself in existence. All
this time, however, he was gaining the experiences
and knowledge of foreign countries which he was afterwards
to turn to such excellent account. At one of
the Univ. visited at this time, he is believed to have
secured the medical degree, of which he subsequently
made use. Louvain and Padua have both been named
as the source of it. He reached London almost
literally penniless in 1756, and appears to have been
occupied successively as an apothecary’s journeyman,
a doctor of the poor, and an usher in a school at
Peckham. In 1757 he was writing for the Monthly
Review. The next year he applied unsuccessfully
for a medical appointment in India; and the year following,
1759, saw his first important literary venture, An
Enquiry into the State of Polite Learning in Europe.
It was pub. anonymously, but attracted some
attention, and brought him other work. At the
same time he became known to Bishop Percy, the collector
of the Reliques of Ancient Poetry, and he had
written The Bee, a collection of essays, and
was employed upon various periodicals. In 1761
began his friendship with Johnson, which led to that
of the other great men of that circle. His Chinese
Letters, afterwards republished as The Citizen
of the World, appeared in The Public Ledger
in 1762. The Traveller, the first of his longer
poems, came out in 1764, and was followed in 1766 by
The Vicar of Wakefield. In 1768 he essayed
the drama, with The Good-natured Man, which
had considerable success. The next few years saw
him busily occupied with work for the publishers, including
The History of Rome (1769), Lives of Parnell
the poet, and Lord Bolingbroke (1770), and in the
same year The Deserted Village appeared; The
History of England was pub. in 1771.
In 1773 he produced with great success his other drama,
She Stoops to Conquer. His last works were
The Retaliation, The History of Greece,
and Animated Nature, all pub. in 1774.
In that year, worn out with overwork and anxiety, he


