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mulation of literary honours after his death. A sermon upon that event was preached in St. Mary's Church,

Let me not be forgetful of the honour done to him by Colonel Myddleton, of Gwaynynog, near Denbigh; who, on the banks of a rivulet in his park, where Johnson delighted to stand and repeat verses, erected an urn with the following inscription :

:

"This spot was often dignified by the presence of
Samuel Johnson, LL.D.,

Whose moral writings, exactly conformable to the precepts of Christianity,
Gave ardour to Virtue and confidence to Truth."

As no inconsiderable circumstance of his fame, we must reckon the extraordinary zeal of the artists to extend and perpetuate his image. I can enumerate a bust by Mr. Nollekens, and the many casts which were made from it; several pictures by Sir Joshua Reynolds, from one of which, in the possession of the Duke of Dorset, Mr. Humphry executed a beautiful miniature in enamel; one by Mrs. Frances Reynolds, Sir Joshua's sister; one by Mr. Zoffany; and one by Mr. Opie; and the following engravings of his portrait:-1. By Cooke, from Sir Joshua, for the proprietor's edition of his folio Dictionary.-2. One from ditto, by ditto, for their quarto edition.-3. One from Opie, by Heath, for Harrison's edition of his Dictionary.-4. One from Nollekens' bust of him, by Bartolozzi, for Fielding's quarto edition of his Dictionary.— 5. One small from Sir Joshua, by Trotter, for his Beauties.-6. One small, from Sir Joshua, by Trotter, for his Lives of the Poets.-7. One small, from Sir Joshua, by Hall, for The Rambler.-8. One small, from an original drawing, in the possession of Mr. John Simco, etched by Trotter, for another edition of his Lives of the Poets.-9. One small, no painter's name, etched by Taylor, for his Johnsoniana.—10. One folio, whole length, with his oak stick, as described in Boswell's Tour, drawn and etched by Trotter.-11. One large Mezzotinto, from Sir Joshua, by Doughty.-12. One large Roman head, from Sir Joshua, by Marchi.-13. One octavo, holding a book to his eye, from Sir Joshua, by Hall, for his works.-14. One small, from a drawing from the life, and engraved by Trotter, for his life published by Kearsley. —15. One large, from Opie, by Mr. Townley, (brother of Mr. Townley of the Commons), an ingenious artist, who resided some time at Berlin, and has the honour of being engraver to His Majesty the King of Prussia. This is one of the finest mezzotintos that ever was executed; and what renders it of extraordinary value, the plate was destroyed after four or five impressions only were taken off. One of them is in the possession of Sir William Scott. Mr. Townley has lately been prevailed with to execute and publish another of the same, that it may be more generally circulated amongst the admirers of Dr. Johnson.-16. One large, from Sir Joshua's first picture of him, by Heath, for this work, in quarto.-17. One octavo, by Baker, for the octavo edition.18. And one for Lavater's Essays on Physiognomy, in which Johnson's

Oxford, before the University, by the Rev. Mr. Agutter, of Magdalen College.' The Lives, the Memoirs, the Essays, both in prose and verse, which have been published concerning him, would make many volumes. The numerous attacks too upon him I consider as part of his consequence, upon the principle which he himself so well knew and asserted. Many who trembled at his presence were forward in assault, when they no longer apprehended danger. When one of his little pragmatical foes was invidiously snarling at his fame at Sir Joshua Reynolds's table, the Reverend Dr. Parr exclaimed, with his usual bold animation, "Ay, now that the old lion is dead, every ass thinks he may kick at him."

A monument for him, in Westminster Abbey, was resolved upon soon after his death, and was supported by a most respectable contribution; but the Dean and Chapter of St. Paul's having come to a resolution of admitting monuments there upon a liberal and magnificent plan, that cathedral was afterwards fixed on, as a place in which a cenotaph should be erected to his memory: and in the cathedral of his native city of Lichfield a smaller one is to be erected. To compose his epitaph, could not

countenance is analysed upon the principles of that fanciful writer. There are also several seals with his head cut on them, particularly a very fine one by that eminent artist, Edward Burch, Esq., R. A., in the possession of the younger Dr. Charles Burney.*

Let me add, as a proof of the popularity of his character, that there are copper pieces struck at Birmingham, with his head impressed on them, which pass current as halfpence there, and in the neighbouring parts of the country.

It is not yet published. In a letter to me, Mr. Agutter says, "My sermon before the University was more engaged with Dr. Johnson's moral than his intellectual character. It particularly examined his fear of death, and suggested several reasons for the apprehensions of the good, and the indifference of the infidel, in their last hours; this was illustrated by contrasting the death of Dr. Johnson and Mr. Hume: the text was, Job xxi. 22-26."

2 This monument has been since erected. It consists of a medallion, with a tablet beneath, on which is this inscription :

For a further account of the portraits of Johnson, see the Appendix

to this volume.-Editor.

but excite the warmest competition of genius.' If laudari

"The friends of SAMUEL JOHNSON, LL.D.

A native of Lichfield,
Erected this Monument,
As a tribute of respect

To the Memory of a man of extensive learning,
A distinguished moral writer, and a sincere Christian.
He died Dec. 13, 1784, aged 75."—Malone.

1 The Rev. Dr. Parr, on being requested to undertake Johnson's epitaph, thus expressed himself in a letter to William Seward, Esq. :

"I leave this mighty task to some hardier and some abler writer. The variety and splendour of Johnson's attainments, the peculiarities of his character, his private virtues, and his literary publications, fill me with confusion and dismay, when I reflect upon the confined and difficult species of composition, in which alone they can be expressed with propriety, upon his monument."

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But I understand that this great scholar, and warm admirer of Johnson, has yielded to repeated solicitations, and executed the very difficult undertaking.

Dr. Johnson's monument, consisting of a colossal figure leaning against a column (but not very strongly resembling him), has since the death of Mr. Boswell been placed in St. Paul's Cathedral, having been first opened to public view, Feb. 23, 1796. The epitaph was written by the Rev. Dr. Parr, and is as follows:

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IOHNSON

GRAMMATICO ET CRITICO

SCRIPTORVM ANGLICORVM • LITTERATE · PERITO
POETAE LVMINIBVS SENTENTIARVM

ET PONDERIBVS VERBORVM · ADMIRABILI
MAGISTRO VIRTVTIS GRAVISSIMO

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HOMINI OPTIMO · ET · SINGVLARIS EXEMPLI.

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QVI VIXIT ANN LXXV MENS II. DIEB · xшI.
DECESSIT· IDIB· DECEMBR· ANN · CHRIST ·

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clɔ ɔcc LXXXIIIÏ ·

SEPVLT IN AED SANCT PETR WESTMONASTERIENS • XI · KAL · IANVAR. ANN CHRIST· clɔ · Iɔcc· LXXXV. AMICI ET SODALES LITTERARII

PECVNIA CONLATA

H M FACIVND CVRAVER.

On a scroll in his hand are the following words :

ΕΝΜΑΚΑΡΕΣΣΙ ΠΟΝΩΝ ΑΝΤΑΞΙΟΣΕΙ Η ΑΜΟΙΒΗ

On one side of the monument :

FACIEBAT JOHANNES BACON, SCVLPTOR ANn. Christ.

M.D. CC.LXXXV.

a laudato viro be praise which is highly estimable, I should not forgive myself were I to omit the following sepulchral

The subscription for this monument, which cost eleven hundred guineas, was begun by the Literary Club, and completed by the aid of Johnson's other friends and admirers.--Malone.

It is to be regretted that the committee for erecting this monument did not adhere to the principles of the Round Robin, on the subject of Goldsmith's epitaph, and insist on having the epitaph to Johnson written in the language to which he had been so great and so very peculiar a benefactor. The committee of subscribers, called curators, were Lord Stowell, Mr. Burke, Mr. Windham, Sir Joseph Banks, Mr. Metcalf, Mr. Boswell, and Mr. Malone; of whom Mr. Metcalfe, Mr. Burke, and Sir Joseph had signed the Round Robin; but it may be presumed that Dr. Johnson's preference of a Latin epitaph, so positively pronounced on that occasion, operated on their minds as an expression of what his wishes would have been as to his own. It seems, however, to me, the height of bad taste and absurdity to exhibit Dr. Johnson in St. Paul's cathedral in the masquerade of a half-naked Roman, with such pedantic, and, to the passing public, unintelligible inscriptions as the above of which the following is a close translation :

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TO SAMUEL JOHNSON,

A grammarian and critic
Of great skill in English literature;
A poet admirable for the light of his sentences
And the weight of his words;

A most effective teacher of virtue ;
An excellent man, and of singular example,
Who lived 75 years, 2 months, 14 days.

He died in the ides of December, in the year of Christ,

MDCCLXXXIV.

Was buried in the church of St. Peter's, Westminster,
The 13th of the kalends of January, in the year of Christ

MDCCLXXXV.

His literary friends and companions,

By a collection of money,

Caused this monument to be made.

The reader will not of course attribute to the original all the awkwardness of this nearly literal version; but he will not fail to observe the tedious and confused mode of marking the numerals, the unnecessary repetition of them, and the introduction of nones and ides, all of which are, even on the principles of the Lapidarian scholars themselves, clumsy, and on the principles of common sense, contemptible. Thirty-four letters and numerals (nearly a tenth part of the whole inscription) are, for instance, expended in letting posterity know that Dr. Johnson was buried in about a week after his death.

verses on the author of THE ENGLISH DICTIONARY, written by the Right Honourable Henry Flood: '

"No need of Latin or of Greek to grace

Our JOHNSON's memory, or inscribe his grave;
His native language claims this mournful space,
To pay the immortality he gave."

The character of SAMUEL JOHNSON has, I trust, been so developed in the course of this work, that they who have honoured it with a perusal may be considered as well

The Greek words, so pedantically jumbled together on the scroll, are an alteration by Dr. Parr of the concluding line of Dionysius, the geographer, with which Johnson had closed the Rambler. It seems, that in deference to some apprehensions that the Dean and Chapter of St. Paul's might think the Αὐτῶν ἐκ μακάρων ἀντάξιος εἴη ἀμοιβή—from the blessed [gods] may he receive his merited reward-somewhat heathenish, Dr. Parr was persuaded to convert the line into 'Ev μakáρεσσ ovv ἀντάξιος εἴη ἀμοιβή—may he receive amongst the blessed the merited reward of his labours. The reader who is curious about the pompous inanities of literature will find at the end of the fourth volume of Dr. Parr's works, ed. 1828, a long correspondence between Parr, Sir Joshua Reynolds, Malone, and other friends of Dr. Johnson, on the subject of this epitaph. He will be amused at the burlesque importance which Parr attaches to epitaph-writing, the tenacity with which he endeavoured to describe Dr. Johnson, with reference to his poetical character, as poeta probabilis, and his candid avowal, that in the composition he was thinking more of his own character than Dr. Johnson's.-Croker.

1 To prevent any misconception on this subject, Mr. Malone, by whom these lines were obligingly communicated, requests me to add the following remark :—

"In justice to the late Mr. Flood, now himself wanting, and highly meriting, an epitaph from his country, to which his transcendent talents did the highest honour, as well as the most important service, it should be observed, that these lines were by no means intended as a regular monumental inscription for Dr. Johnson. Had he undertaken to write an appropriate and discriminative epitaph for that excellent and extraordinary man, those who knew Mr. Flood's vigour of mind will have no doubt that he would have produced one worthy of his illustrious subject. But the fact was merely this: In December, 1789, after a large subscription had been made for Dr. Johnson's monument, to which Mr. Flood liberally contributed, Mr. Malone happened to call on him at his house in Berners Street, and the conversation turning on the proposed monument, Mr. Malone maintained that the epitaph, by whomsoever it should be written, ought to be in Latin. Mr. Flood thought differently. The next morning, in a postscript to a note on another subject, he men tioned that he continued of the same opinion as on the preceding day, and subjoined the lines above given."

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