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GENERAL APPENDIX.

No. I.

paternal affection (particularly for two of them,

RECOLLECTIONS of Dr. Johnson by Miss Miss Carter and Miss Mulso, now Mrs. Chapone),

Reynolds.

previous to their acquaintance with Richardson, and it was said that he thought himself neglected by them on his account.

"Dr. Johnson set a higher value upon female friendship than perhaps most men3, which may reasonably be supposed was not a little enhanced by his acquaintance with those ladies, if it was not originally derived from them. To their society, doubtless, Richardson owed that delicacy of sentiment, that feminine excellence, as I may say, that so peculiarly distinguishes his writings from those of his own sex in general, how high soever they may soar above the other in the more dignified paths of literature, in scientific investigations, and abstruse inquiries.

"Dr. Johnson used to repeat, with very apparent delight, some lines of a poem written by Miss Mulso:

MR. PALMER'S papers contain two manuscripts of Miss Reynolds's Recollections, both in her own handwriting, nearly the same in substance, but dif. fering a good deal as to the order, and something as to the handling, of the various topics. Miss Reynolds's best style was, as Dr. Johnson himself hinted to her, not a clear one, and in those rambling Recollections scattered over separate sheets of paper, there is a good deal of tautology and confusion, through which the Editor has had some difficulty in discovering any thing like order. He has, however, made an arrangement which, if not quite satisfactory, is at least intelligible. These Recollections tell little that is new, but they confirm and explain, and occasionally throw a useful light on some interesting points of Dr. Johnson's manners and character: and His infant beauties open'd on the day 4' although they have not the advantage of "Dr. Johnson had an uncommon retentive having been written while the matters memory for every thing that appeared to him were quite fresh in Miss Reynolds's worthy of observation. Whatever he met with mind, the long and cordial intimacy be-in reading, particularly poetry, I believe he seldom tween her and Dr. Johnson entitles them to as much confidence as can be placed in Recollections.-ED.

"THE first time I was in company with Dr. Johnson, which was at Miss Cotterel's, I well remember the flattering notice he took of a lady present, on her saying that she was inclined to estimate the morality of every person according as they liked or disliked Clarissa Harlowe. He was

a great admirer of Richardson's works in general, but of Clarissa he always spoke with the highest enthusiastic praise. He used to say that it was the first book in the world for the knowledge it displays of the human heart 2.

"Yet of the author I never heard him speak with any degree of cordiality, but rather as if impressed with some cause of resentment against him; and this has been imputed to something of jealousy, not to say envy, on account of Richardson's having engrossed the attentions and affectionate assiduities of several very ingenious literary ladies, whom he used to call his adopted daughters, and for whom Dr. Johnson had conceived a

1 [Mr. Gwatkin's copy of these Recollections seems to have been extracted and abridged from the originals by another hand.-ED.]

2 See ante, vol. i. p. 245.-ED.)

'Say, Stella, what is love, whose cruel power
Robs virtue of content, and youth of joy?
What nymph or goddess, in what fatal hour,
Produced to light the mischief-making boy?
Some say, by Idleness and Pleasure bred,

The smiling babe on beds of roses lay:
There with soft honey'd dews by Fancy fed,

required a revisal to be able to repeat verbatim. If not literally so, his deviations were generally improvements. This was the case, in some respects, in Shenstone's poem of the Inn,' which I learned from hearing Dr. Johnson repeat it; and I was surprised, on seeing it lately among the authour's works for the first time, to find it so difOne stanza he seems to have extempoferent.

rized himself:

'And once again I shape my way
Through rain, through shine, through thick and thin,

Secure to meet, at close of day,

A kind reception at an inn.'

"He always read amazingly quick, glancing

The defect

3 [In his conversation with ladies, he had such a fe of the female mind he conceived a higher opinion than licity as would put vulgar gallantry out of countenance. many men, and, though he was never suspected of a blamable intimacy with any individual of them (see ante, p. 432, had a great esteem for the sex. in his powers of sight rendered him totally insensible to the charms of beauty; but he knew that beauty was the attribute of the sex, and treated all women with such an equable complacency as flattered every one into a belief dowment. In his discourses with them his compliments had ever a neat and elegant turn: they were never direct, but always implied the merit they were intended to attest."-Hawkins's Life, p. 309.-ED.]

that she had her share of that or some more valuable en

4 [Johnson paid the first of those stanzas the great and undeserved compliment of quoting it in his Dictionary. under the word "QUATRAIN."-ED.]

an instant.

1

his eye from the top to the bottom of the page in If he made any pause, it was a compliment to the work; and after seesawing over it a few minutes, generally repeated the passage, especially if it was poetry.

"One day, on taking up Pope's Essay on Man,' a particular passage seemed more than ordinary to engage his attention; so much so indeed that, contrary to his usual custom, after he had left the book and the seat in which he was sitting, he returned to revise it, turning over the pages with anxiety to find it, and then repeated,

'Passions, though selfish, if their means be fair,
List under Reason, and deserve her care:
Those that, imparted, court a nobler aim,
Exalt their kind, and take some virtue's name.'
EPIS. ii. v. 96.

its first coming out, to testify her admiration of it, exclaimed, 'I never more shall think Dr. Goldsmith ugly.' In having thought so, however, she was by no means singular; an instance of which I am rather inclined to mention, because it involves a remarkable one of Dr. Johnson's ready wit: for this lady, one evening being in a large party, was called upon after supper for her toast, and seeming embarrassed, she was desired to give the ugliest man she knew; and she immediately named Dr. Goldsmith, on which a lady on the other side of the table rose up and reached across to shake hands with her, expressing some desire of being better acquainted with her, it being the first time they had met; on which Dr. Johnson said,Thus the ancients, on the commencement of their friendships, used to sacrifice a beast be

His task, probably, was the whole paragraph, but twixt them.' these lines only were audible.

"He seemed much to delight in reciting verses, particularly from Pope. Among the many I have had the pleasure of hearing him recite, the conclusion of the Dunciad;' and his Epistle to Jervas, seemed to claim his highest admiration.

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"Some time after, he told the lady that these lines were inserted in the last edition of his Dictionary, under the word SPORT *.

"Of Goldsmith's Traveller he used to speak in terms of the highest commendation. A lady 5 I remember, who had the pleasure of hearing Dr. Johnson read it from the beginning to the end on

1 [A lady said pleasantly of Dr. Johnson's strange movement, or oscillation while reading, that "his head swung seconds."-Miss Hawkins's Memoirs, vol. ii. p. 216.-ED.]

2 Epistle to Jervas.-Miss REYNOLDS.

3 [By Dr. Madden. See ante, v. i. p. 137.-ED.] 4 They are so. We see in this case, and that of Miss Mulso (ante, p. 491), that Dr. Johnson's personal partialities induced him to quote in his Dictionary authours who "had no business there." See ante, v. i. p. 137, the motive of his gratitude to Madden.-ED.] 5 [Miss Reynolds herself.-ED.]

6

“Sir Joshua, I have often thought, never gave a more striking proof of his excellence in portraitpainting, than in giving dignity to Dr. Goldsmith's countenance, and yet preserving a strong likeness. But he drew after his mind, or rather his genius, if I may be allowed to make that distinction, assimilating the one with his conversation, the other with his works.

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Dr. Goldsmith's cast of countenance, and indeed his whole figure from head to foot, impressed every one at first sight with an idea of his being a low mechanic-particularly, I believe, a journeyman tailor. A little concurring instance of this I well remember. One day at Sir Joshua Reynolds's, in company with some gentlemen and ladies, he was relating with great indignation an insult he had just received from some gentleman he had accidentally met (I think at a coffeehouse). 'The fellow,' he said, 'took me for a tailor!' on which all the party either laughed aloud or showed they suppressed a laugh.

"Dr. Johnson seemed to have much more kindness for Goldsmith, than Goldsmith had for him. He always appeared to be overawed by Johnson, particularly when in company with people of any consequence, always as if impressed with some fear of disgrace, and indeed well he might. I have been witness to many mortifications he has suffered in Dr. Johnson's company: one day in particular, at Sir Joshua's table, a gentleman to whom he was talking his best stopped him, in the midst of his discourse, with Hush! hush! Dr. Johnson is going to say something.’

"At another time, a gentleman who was sitting between Dr. Johnson and Dr. Goldsmith, and with whom he had been disputing, remarked to another, loud enough for Goldsmith to hear him, That he had a fine time of it, between Ursa major and Ursa minor?!'

"Mr. Baretti used to remark (with a smile) that Dr. Johnson always talked his best to the ladies. But indeed that was his general practice to

6 Mrs. Cholmondely.-MISS REYNOLDS.

7 [The Editor has preserved this specimen, as a striking instance of the easy fabrication of what are called aneedotes, and of how little even the best authorities can be relied on in such matters. The real anecdote was of Doctor Major and Doctor Minor (see ante, vol. i. p. 353), by no means so happy as the fabrication, and the title of Ursa Major was applied to Johnson by old Lord Auchinlech (ante, p. 459). From these two facts the pleasant fallacy quoted by Miss Reynolds was no doubt compounded.-ED.]

all who would furnish him with a subject worthy of his discussion; for, what was very singular in him, he would rarely, if ever, begin any subject himself, but would sit silent till something was particularly addressed to him, and if that happened to lead to any scientific or moral inquiry, his benevolence, I believe, more immediately incited him to expatiate on it for the edification of the ignorant than for any other motive whatever.

attended, or rather constituted his mental malady, which, I have observed, might probably have incited him so often to pray; and I impute it to the same cause, that he so frequently, with great earnestness, desired his intimate acquaintance to pray for him, apparently on very slight occasions of corporeal disorder.

[Here followed an expression of surprise at his having desired a prayer from Dr. Dodd, and several particulars of that story, already amply told ante, pp. 104 et seq., and 118.]

"And another axiom of his, of the same tendency, was, that the pains and miseries incident to human life far outweighed its happiness and good. [Vol. i. p. 521 2.]

"But indeed much may be said in Dr. Johnson's justification, supposing this notion should not meet with universal approbation, having, it is probable, imbibed them in the early part of his life when under the pressure of adverse fortune, and in every period of it under the still heavier pressure and more adverse influence of Nature herself; for I have often heard him lament that he inherited from his father a morbid disposition both of body and of mind—an oppressive melancholy, which robbed him of the common en

"One day, on a lady's telling him that she had read Parnell's Hermit' with dissatisfaction, for she could not help thinking that thieves and murderers, who were such immediate ministers from heaven of good to man, did not deserve such punishments as our laws inflict, Dr. Johnson spoke such an eloquent oration, so deeply philosophical, as indeed afforded a most striking instance of the truth of Baretti's observation, but of which, to my great regret, I can give no corroborating proof, my memory furnishing me with nothing more than barely the general tendency of his arguments, which was to prove, that though it might be said that wicked men, as well as the good, were ministers of God, because in the moral sphere the good we enjoy and the evil we suffer are administered to us by man, yet, as infinite goodness could not inspire or influence man to act wicked-joyments of life 3. ly, but, on the contrary, it was his divine property to produce good out of evil, and as man was endowed with free-will to act, or to refrain from acting wickedly, with knowledge of good and evil, with conscience to admonish and to direct him to choose the one and to reject the other, he was, therefore, as criminal in the sight of God and of man, and as deserving punishment for his evil deeds, as if no good had resulted from them. "And yet, though, to the best of my remembrance, this was the substance of Dr. Johnson's discourse in answer to the lady's observation, I am rather apprehensive that in some respects it may be thought inconsistent with his general assertions, that man was by nature much more inclined to evil than to good. But it would ill become me to expatiate on such a subject.

"Yet what can be said to reconcile his opinion of the natural tendency of the human heart to evil with his own zealous virtuous propensions? Nothing perhaps, at least by me, but that this opinion, I believe, was founded upon religious principles relating to original sin; and I well remember that, when disputing with a person on this subject, who thought that nature, reason, and virtue were the constituent principles of humanity, he would say, Nay, nay, if man is by nature prompted to act virtuously, all the divine precepts of the gospel, all its denunciations, all the laws enacted by inan to restrain man from evil, had been needless.' "It is certain that he would scarcely allow any one to feel much for the distresses of others; or whatever he thought they might feel, he was very apt to impute to causes that did no honour to human nature. Indeed I thought him rather too fond of Rochefoucault maxims.

"The very strict watch he apparently kept over his mind seems to correspond with his thorough conviction of nature's evil propensions; but it might be as likely in consequence of his dread of those peculiar ones, whatever they were, which 1 [See ante, vol. i. p. 345.-ED.]

"Indeed he seemed to struggle almost incessantly with some mental evil, and often by the expression of his countenance and the motion of his lips appeared to be offering up some ejaculation to Heaven to remove it. But in Lent, or near the approach of any great festival, he would generally retire from the company to a corner of the room, but most commonly behind a windowcurtain, to pray, and with such energy, and in so loud a whisper, that every word was heard distinctly, particularly the Lord's Prayer and the Apostles' Creed, with which he constantly concluded his devotions. Sometimes some words would emphatically escape him in his usual tone of voice.

"At these holy seasons he secluded himself more from society than at other times, at least from general and mixed society; and on a gentleman's sending him an invitation to dinner on Easter Eve he was highly offended, and expressed himself so in his answer.

"Probably his studious attention to the secret workings of his peculiar mental infirmity, together with his experience of divine assistance cooperating with his reasoning faculties, to repel its force, may have proved in the highest degree conducive to the exaltation of his piety, and the pre-eminence of his wisdom. And I think it equally probable, that all his natural defects were conducive to that end; for being so peculiarly debarred from the enjoyment of those amusements which the eye and the ear afford, doubtless he sought more assiduously for those gratifications which scientific pursuits or philosophic meditation bestow.

2 [Where passages from these "Recollections" have been introduced in the text of the preceding volume, these marks refer to the places where they are to be found.-ED.]

3 [This last paragraph was originally written, “terrifying melancholy, which he was sometimes apprehensive bordered on insanity." This Miss Reynolds softened into the remark as it stands above.-ED.]

4 [See ante, vol. i. p. 333.-Eo.}

"These defects sufficiently account for his insensibility of the charms of music and of painting, being utterly incapable of receiving any delight from the one or the other, particularly from painting, his sight being more deficient than his hearing.

"Of the superficies of the fine arts, or visible objects of taste, he could have had but an imperfect idea; but as to the invisible principles of a natural good taste, doubtless he was possessed of these in the most eminent degree, and I should have thought it a strange inconsistency indeed in his character, had he really wanted a taste for music; but as a proof that he did not, I think I had need only mention, that he was remarkably fond of Dr. Burney's History of Music', and that he said it showed that the authour understood the philosophy of music better than any man that ever wrote on that subject.

"It is certain that, when in the company of connoisseurs, whose conversation has turned chiefly upon the merits of the attractive charms of painting, perhaps of pictures that were immediately under their inspection, Dr. Johnson, I have thought, used to appear as if conscious of his unbecoming situation, or rather, I might say, suspicious that it was an unbecoming situation.

"But it was observable, that he rather avoided the discovery of it, for when asked his opinion of the likeness of any portrait of a friend, he has generally evaded the question, and if obliged to examine it, he has held the picture most ridiculously, quite close to his eye, just as he held his book. But he was so unwilling to expose that defect, that he was much displeased with Sir Joshua, I remember, for drawing him with his book held in that manner, which, I believe, was the cause of that picture being left unfinished 2.

"On every occasion that had the least tendency to depreciate religion or morality, he totally disregarded all forms or rules of good-breeding, as utterly unworthy of the slightest consideration.

"But it must be confessed that he sometimes suffered this noble principle to transgress its due bounds, and to extend even to those who were any ways connected with the person who had offended him.

3

"His treatment of Mr. Israel Wilkes [related ante, p. 72,] was mild in comparison of what a gentleman met with from him one day at Sir Joshua Reynolds's, a barrister-at-law and a man of fashion, who, on discoursing with Dr. (then Mr.) Johnson on the laws and government of different nations (I remember particularly those of Venice), and happening to speak of them in terms of high approbation: Yes, sir,' says Johnson, 'all republican rascals think as you do.' How the conversation ended I have forgot, it was so many years ago; but that he made no apology to the gentleman I am very sure, nor to any person present, for such an outrage against society.

1 [Miss Reynolds will hardly convince any one that Dr. Johnson was fond of music by proving that he was fond of his friend Dr. Burney's History of Music. The truth is, he held both painting and music in great contempt, because his organs afforded him no adequate perception of either.-ED.]

2 [This however, or a similar picture, was finished and engraved as the frontispiece of Murphy's edition of Dr. Johnson's works.-ED.].

3 Mr. Elliott.-MISS REYNOLDS.

"Of latter years he grew much more companionable, and I have heard him say, that he knew himself to be so. In my younger days,' he would say, it is true I was much inclined to treat mankind with asperity and contempt; but I found it answered no good end. I thought it wiser and better to take the world as it goes. Besides, as I have advanced in life I have had more reason to be satisfied with it. Mankind have treated me with more kindness, and of course I have more kindness for them.'

"In the latter part of his life, indeed, his circumstances were very different from what they were in the beginning. Before he had the pension, he literally dressed like a beggar; and from what I have been told, he as literally lived as such; at least as to common conveniences in his apartments, wanting even a chair to sit on, particularly in his study, where a gentleman who frequently visited him whilst writing his Idlers constantly found him at his desk, sitting on one with three legs; and on rising from it, he remarked that Dr. Johnson never forgot its defect, but would either hold it in his hand or place it with great composure against some support, taking no notice of its imperfection to his visitor. Whether the visitor sat on chair, or on a pile of folios, or how he sat, I never remember to have been told.

"It was remarkable in Dr. Johnson, that no external circumstances ever prompted him to make any apology, or to seem even sensible of their existence. Whether this was the effect of philosophick pride, or of some partial notion of his respecting high breeding, is doubtful. Strange as it may appear, he scrupled not to boast, that'no man knew the rules of true politeness better than himself;' and, stranger still, that no man more attentively practised them.'

66

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He particularly piqued himself upon his nice observance of ceremonious punctilios towards ladies.

A remarkable instance of this was his never suffering any lady to walk from his house to her carriage, through Bolt-court, unattended by himself to hand her into it (at least I have reason to suppose it to be his general custom, from his constant performance of it to those with whom he was the most intimately acquainted); and if any obstacle prevented it from driving off, there he would stand by the door of it, and gather a mob around him; indeed, they would begin to gather the moment he appeared handing the lady down the steps into Fleet-street. But to describe his appearance- his important air-that indeed cannot be described; and his morning habiliments would excite the utmost astonishment in my read

4 [See post, in Miss Hawkins's Anecdotes, how different his appearance was after the pension.-ED.]

5 ["He had a large but not a splendid library, nea 5000 volumes. Many authours, not in hostility with him, presented him with their works. But his study did not contain half his books. He possessed the chair that belonged to the Ciceronian Dr. King of Oxford, which was given him by his friend Vansittart. It answers the purposes of reading and writing, by night or by day; and is as valuable in all respects as the chair of Ariosto, as delineated in the preface to Hoole's liberal translation of that poet. Since the rounding of this period, intelligence is brought that this literary chair is purchased by Mr. Hoole. Relicks are venerable things, and are only not to be worshipped. On the reading-chair of Mr. Speaker Onslow, a part of this historical sketch was written."TYERS. ED.]

er,

that a man in his senses could think of stepping outside his door in them, or even to be seen at home! Sometimes he exhibited himself at the distance of eight or ten doors from Bolt-court, to get at the carriage, to the no small diversion of the populace. And I am certain that, to those who love laughing, a description of his dress from head to foot would be highly acceptable, and in general I believe be thought the most curious part of my book; but I forbear, out of respect to his memory, to give more than this slight intimation of it; for, having written a minute description of his figure, from his wig to his slippers, a thought occurred that it might probably excite some person to delineate it, and I might have the mortification to see it hung up at a printshop as the greatest curiosity ever exhibited.

mean,

offence he has given, particularly if it seemed to involve the slightest disrespect to the church or to its ministers.

[Ante, pp. 299, 40, 131, 252.]

"It is with much regret that I reflect on my stupid negligence to write down some of his discourses, his observations, precepts, &c. The following few short sentences only did I ever take any account of in writing; and these, which I Iately found in an old memorandum pocket-book, of ancient date, were made soon after the commencement of my acquaintance with him. A few others, indeed, relating to the character of the French (ante, p. 19), were taken vivâ voce, the day after his arrival from France, Nov. 14, 1775, intending them for the subject of a letter to a friend in the country.

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Talking on the subject of scepticism:"JOHNSON. C The eyes of the mind are like the eyes of the body; they can see only at such a distance: but because we cannot see beyond this point, is there nothing beyond it?' Talking of the want of memory:— "JOHNSON. No, sir, it is not true; in gen

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eral every person has an equal capacity for reminiscence, and for one thing as well as another, otherwise it would be like a person complaining that he could hold silver in his hand, but could not hold copper.'

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"His best dress was, in his early times, so very that one afternoon, as he was following some ladies up stairs, on a visit to a lady of fashion (Miss Cotterel 2), the servant, not knowing him, suddenly seized him by the shoulder, and exclaimed, Where are you going?' striving at the same time to drag him back; but a gentleman who was a few steps behind prevented her from doing or saying more, and Mr. Johnson growled all the way up stairs, as well he might. He seemed much chagrined and discomposed, Unluckily, whilst in this humour, a lady of high rank happening to call upon Miss Cotterel, he "A GENTLEMAN. I think when a person was most violently offended with her for not in- laughs alone he supposes himself for the moment troducing him to her ladyship, and still more so with company.' JOHNSON. Yes, if it be for her seeming to show more attention to her true that laughter is a comparison of self-superiorthan to him. After sitting some time silent, med-ity, you must suppose some person with you.' itating how to down Miss Cotterel, he addressed himself to Mr. Reynolds, who sat next him, and, after a few introductory words, with a loud voice said, 'I wonder which of us two could get most money at his trade in one week, were we to work hard at it from morning till night.' I don't remember the answer; but I know that the lady, rising soon after, went away without knowing what trade they were of. She might probably suspect Mr. Johnson to be a poor authour by his dress; and because the trade of neither a blacksmith, a porter, or a chairman, which she probably would have taken him for in the street, was not quite so suitable to the place she saw him in.

"This incident he used to mention with great glee-how he had downed Miss Cotterel, though at the same time he professed a great friendship and esteem for that lady.

"It is certain, for such kind of mortifications, he never expressed any concern; but on other occasions he has shown an amiable sorrow for the

1 [See ante, vol. i. p. 189.-ED.]

[His acquaintance with this lady and her sister, who married Dean Lewis, continued to the last days of his life.

"No, sir,' he once said, people are not born with a particular genius for particular employments or studies, for it would be like saying that a man could see a great way east, but could not west. It is good sense applied with diligence to what was at first a mere accident, and which, by great application, grew to be called, by the generality of mankind, a particular genius.'

"Some person advanced, that a lively imagination disqualified the mind from fixing steadily upon objects which required serious and minute investition. JOHNSON. It is true, sir, a vivacious quick imagination does sometimes give a confused idea of things, and which do not fix deep; though, at the same time, he has a capacity to fix them in his memory if he would endeavour at it. It being like a man that, when he is running, does not make observations on what he meets with, and consequently is not impressed by them; but he has, nevertheless, the power of stopping and informing himself.'

"A gentleman was mentioning it as a remark of an acquaintance of his, that he never knew but one person that was completely wicked.' JOHN'Sir, I don't know what you mean by a person completely wicked.' GENTLEMAN. Why, any one that has entirely got rid of all shame.' JOHNSON. How is he, then, completely wicked? He must get rid too of all conscience.' GENTLEMAN. I think conscience and shame the same thing.' JOHNSON. I am

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SON. He says in one of his letters to Mrs. Thrale, "I know not whether I told you that my old friend Mrs. Cotterel, now no longer Miss, has called to see me. Mrs. Lewis is not well.-26th April, 1784." It is gratifying to observe how many of Johnson's earliest friends continued so to the last.-ED.]

3 [Sir Joshua (then Mr.) Reynolds.-ED.]

4 Lady Fitzroy.-MISS REYNOLDS. [See ante, v. i. p. 104, where this story is told of the Duchess of Argyll and another lady of high rank: that other lady was no doubt the person erroneously designated by Miss Reynolds as Lady Fitzroy. She probably was Elizabeth Cosby, wife of Lord Augustus Fitzroy, and grandmother of the present Duke of Grafton.-ED.]

5 ["He repented just as certainly however, if he had

been led to praise any person or thing by accident more than he thought it deserved; and was on such occasions comically earnest to destroy the praise or pleasure he had unintentionally given."-Piozzi's Anecdotes, p. 75.ED.]

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