Boswell's Life of Johnson, 1732
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Edited, from the two-volume Oxford edition of 1904, by Jack Lynch.
Johnson was so far fortunate, that the respectable character of
his parents, and his own merit, had, from his earliest years,
secured him a kind reception in the best families at Lichfield.
Among these I can mention Mr. Howard, Dr. Swinfen, Mr. Simpson,
Mr. Levett, Captain Garrick, father of the great ornament of the
British stage; but above all, Mr. Gilbert Walmsley,1 Registrar of the Ecclesiastical Court of
Lichfield, whose character, long after his decease, Dr. Johnson
has, in his life of Edmund Smith, thus drawn in the glowing
colours of gratitude:
“Of Gilbert Walmsley, thus presented to my mind, let me indulge
myself in the remembrance. I knew him very early; he was one of
the first friends that literature procured me, and I hope, that
at least, my gratitude made me worthy of his notice.
“He was of an advanced age, and I was only not a boy, yet he
never received my notions with contempt. He was a whig, with all
the virulence and malevolence of his party; yet difference of
opinion did not keep us apart. I honoured him and he endured
me.
“He had mingled with the gay world without exemption from its
vices or its follies; but had never neglected the cultivation of
his mind. His belief of revelation was unshaken; his learning
preserved his principles; he grew first regular, and then
pious.
“His studies had been so various, that I am not able to name a
man of equal knowledge. His acquaintance with books was great,
and what he did not immediately know, he could, at least, tell
where to find. Such was his amplitude of learning, and such his
copiousness of communication, that it may be doubted whether a
day now passes, in which I have not some advantage from his
friendship.
“At this man's table I enjoyed many cheerful and instructive
hours, with companions, such as are not often found -- with one
who has lengthened, and one who has gladdened life; with Dr.
James, whose skill in physick will be long remembered; and with
David Garrick, whom I hoped to have gratified with this
character of our common friend. But what are the hopes of man! I
am disappointed by that stroke of death, which has eclipsed the
gaiety of nations, and impoverished the publick stock of
harmless pleasure.”
In these families he passed much time in his early years. In
most of them, he was in the company of ladies, particularly at
Mr. Walmsley's, whose wife and sisters-in-law, of the name of
Aston, and daughters of a Baronet, were remarkable for good
breeding; so that the notion which has been industriously
circulated and believed, that he never was in good company till
late in life, and consequently had been confirmed in coarse and
ferocious manners by long habits, is wholly without foundation.
Some of the ladies have assured me, they recollected him well
when a young man, as distinguished for his complaisance.
And that his politeness was not merely occasional and temporary,
or confined to the circles of Lichfield, is ascertained by the
testimony of a lady, who, in a paper with which I have been
favoured by a daughter of his intimate friend and physician,
Dr. Lawrence, thus describes Dr. Johnson some years
afterwards:
“As the particulars of the former part of Dr. Johnson's life do
not seem to be very accurately known, a lady hopes that the
following information may not be unacceptable.
“She remembers Dr. Johnson on a visit to Dr. Taylor, at
Ashbourn, some time between the end of the year 37, and the
middle of the year 40; she rather thinks it to have been after
he and his wife were removed to London. During his stay at
Ashbourn, he made frequent visits to Mr. Meynell, at Bradley,
where his company was much desired by the ladies of the family,
who were, perhaps, in point of elegance and accomplishments,
inferiour to few of those with whom he was afterwards
acquainted. Mr. Meynell's eldest daughter was afterwards married
to Mr. Fitzherbert, father to Mr. Alleyne Fitzherbert, lately
minister to the court of Russia. Of her, Dr. Johnson said, in
Dr. Lawrence's study, that she had the best understanding he
ever met with in any human being. At Mr. Meynell's he also
commenced that friendship with Mrs. Hill Boothby, sister to the
present Sir Brook Boothby, which continued till her death. The
young woman whom he used to call Molly Aston,2 was sister to Sir Thomas Aston, and daughter to
a Baronet; she was also sister to the wife of his friend, Mr.
Gilbert Walmsley.3 Besides his intimacy with
the above-mentioned persons, who were surely people of rank and
education, while he was yet at Lichfield he used to be
frequently at the house of Dr. Swinfen, a gentleman of very
ancient family in Staffordshire, from which, after the death of
his elder brother, he inherited a good estate. He was, besides,
a physician of very extensive practice; but for want of due
attention to the management of his domestick concerns, left a
very large family in indigence. One of his daughters, Mrs.
Desmoulins, afterwards found an asylum in the house of her old
friend, whose doors were always open to the unfortunate, and who
well observed the precept of the Gospel, for he 'was kind to the
unthankful and to the evil.'”
In the forlorn state of his circumstances, he accepted of an
offer to be employed as usher in the school of Market-Bosworth,
in Leicestershire, to which it appears from one of his little
fragments of a diary, that he went on foot, on the 16th of
July. -- "Julii 16. Bosvortiam pedes petii.” But it is
not true, as has been erroneously related, that he was assistant
to the famous Anthony Blackwall, whose merit has been honoured
by the testimony of Bishop Hurd,4 who was his
scholar; for Mr. Blackwall died on the 8th of April, 1730,5 more than a year before Johnson left the
University.
This employment was very irksome to him in every respect, and he
complained grievously of it in his letters to his friend, Mr.
Hector, who was now settled as a surgeon at Birmingham. The
letters are lost; but Mr. Hector recollects his writing “that
the poet had described the dull sameness of his existence in
these words, 'Vitam continet una dies' (one day contains
the whole of my life); that it was unvaried as the note of the
cuckow; and that he did not know whether it was more
disagreeable for him to teach, or the boys to learn, the grammar
rules.” His general aversion to this painful drudgery was
greatly enhanced by a disagreement between him and Sir Wolstan
Dixie, the patron of the school, in whose house, I have been
told, he officiated as a kind of domestick chaplain, so far, at
least, as to say grace at table, but was treated with what he
represented as intolerable harshness; and, after suffering for a
few months such complicated misery,6 he
relinquished a situation which all his life afterwards he
recollected with the strongest aversion, and even a degree of
horror. But it is probable that at this period, whatever
uneasiness he may have endured, he laid the foundation of much
future eminence by application to his studies.
Notes
1. Mr. Warton informs me, “that this early
friend of Johnson was entered a Commoner of Trinity College,
Oxford, aged 17, in 1698; and is the authour of many Latin verse
translations in the Gentleman's Magazine. One of them is a
translation of
“My time, O ye Muses, was happily spent,” &c.
He died August 3, 1751, and a monument to his memory has been
erected in the cathedral of Lichfield, with an inscription
written by Mr. Seward, one of the Prebendaries.
[His translation of “My time, O ye Muses,” &c. may be found in
the Gentleman's Magazine for 1745, vol. XV. p. 102. It is there
subscribed with his name. -- M.]
2. The words of Sir John Hawkins, p. 316.
3. [Sir Thomas Aston, Bart., who died in
January 1724-5, left one son, named Thomas also, and eight
daughters. Of the daughters, Catharine married Johnson's friend,
the Hon. Henry Hervey; Margaret, Gilbert Walmsley. Another of
these ladies married the Rev. Mr. Gastrell. Mary, or
Molly Aston, as she was usually called, became the wife
of Captain Brodie of the Navy. Another sister, who was
unmarried, was living at Lichfield in 1776. -- M.]
4. [There is here (as Mr. James Boswell
observes to me) a slight inaccuracy. Bishop Hurd, in the Epistle
Dedicatory prefixed to his commentary on Horace's Art of Poetry,
&c. does not praise Blackwall, but the Rev. Mr. Budworth,
head-master of the grammar school at Brewood in Staffordshire,
who had himself been bred under Blackwall. From the information
of Mr. John Nichols, Johnson is said to have applied in 1763 to
Mr. Budworth, to be received by him as an assistant in his
school in Staffordshire. -- M.]
5. See Gent. Mag. Dec. 1784, p. 957.
6. [It appears from a letter of Johnson's to a
friend, which I have read, dated Lichfield, July 27, 1732, that
he had left Sir Wolstan Dixie's house, recently before that
letter was written. He then had hopes of succeeding either as
master or usher, in the school of Ashbourne. -- M.]