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fon, he said, and rather below than above the common fize. So excellent was her character, and fo blameless her life, that when an oppressive neighbour once endeavoured to take from her a little field she possessed, he could perfuade no attorney to undertake the cause against a woman so beloved in her narrow circle: and it is this incident he alludes to in the line of his Vanity of Human Wishes, calling her

The general favourite as the general friend,

Nor could any one pay more willing homage to fuch a character, though the had not been related to him, than did Dr. Johnfon on every occasion that offered: his disquisition on Pope's epitaph placed over Mrs. Corbet, is a proof of that preference always given by him to a noiseless life over a bustling one; but however taste begins, we almost always see that it ends in simplicity; the glutton

finishes by losing his relish for any thing highly sauced, and calls for his boiled chicken at the close of many years spent in the search of dainties; the connoifseurs are foon weary of Rubens, and the critics of Lucan; and the refinements of every kind heaped upon civil life, always ficken their possessors before the close of it.

At the age of two years Mr. Johnfon was brought up to London by his mother, to be touched by Queen Anne for the scrophulous evil, which terribly afflicted his childhood, and left such marks as greatly disfigured a countenance naturally harsh and rugged, beside doing irreparable damage to the auricular organs, which never could perform their functions since I knew him; and it was owing to that horrible disorder, too, that one eye was perfectly useless to him; that defect, however, was not observable, the eyes looked both alike. As Mr. Johnson had an astonishing memory, I asked him, if he could remember Queen Anne at all? "He had, he said, a confused, but fomehow

a

fort of folemn recollection of a lady in diamonds, and a long black hood."

The chriftening of his brother he remembered with all its circumstances, and faid, his mother taught him to spell and pronounce the words little Natty, syllable by fyllable, making him say it over in the evening to her husband and his guests. The trick which most parents play with their children, that of shewing off their newly-acquired accomplishments, disgusted Mr. Johnson beyond expression; he had been treated so himself, he faid, till he absolutely loathed his father's caresses, because he knew they were fure to precede some unpleafing display of his early abilities; and he used, when neighbours came o'visiting, to run up a tree that he might not be found and exhibited, fuch, as no doubt he was, a prodigy of early understanding. His epitaph upon the duck he killed by treading on it at five years old,

Here lies poor duck

That Samuel Johnson trod on;
If it had liv'd it had been good luck,
For it would have been an odd one;

is a striking example of early expanfion of mind, and knowledge of language; yet he always feemed more mortified at the recollection of the bustle his parents made with his wit, than pleased with the thoughts of possessing it. "That (faid he to me one day) is the great misery of late marriages; the unhappy produce of them becomes the plaything of dotage: an old man's child, continued he, leads much such a life, I think, as a little boy's dog, teized with awkward fond

ness, and forced, perhaps, to fit up and beg, as we call it, to divert a company, who at last go away complaining of their disagreeable entertainment." In confequence of these maxims, and full of indignation against such parents as delight to produce their young ones early into the talking world, I have known Mr. Johnson give a good deal of pain by refusing to hear the verses the children could recite, or the songs they could sing; particularly one friend who told him that his two fons should repeat Gray's Elegy to him alternately, that he might judge who had the happiest cadence. "No, pray Sir," said he, " let the dears both speak it at once; more noise will by that means be made, and the noise will be sooner over." He told me the story himself, but I have forgot who the father was.

Mr. Johnson's mother was daughter to a gentleman in the country, such as

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