Lives Of The Poets, Vol. 1 (fiscle part-III), Samuel Johnson [good summer reads .TXT] 📗
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Whose Work He Had Then Never Read[160]. So Little, Sometimes, Is
Criticism The Effect Of Judgment. It Is Necessary To Inform The Reader,
That About This Time He Was Introduced by Congreve To Montague, Then
Chancellor Of The Exchequer[161]: Addison Was Then Learning the Trade Of
A Courtier, And Subjoined montague, As A Poetical Name To Those Of Cowley
And Dryden.
By The Influence Of Mr. Montague, Concurring, According to Tickell, With
His Natural Modesty, He Was Diverted from His Original Design Of Entering
Into Holy Orders. Montague Alleged the Corruption Of Men Who Engaged in
Civil Employments Without Liberal Education; And Declared, That, Though
He Was Represented as An Enemy To The Church, He Would Never Do It Any
Injury But By Withholding addison From It.
Soon After, In 1695, He Wrote A Poem To King william, With A Rhyming
Introduction, Addressed to Lord Somers[162]. King william Had No Regard
To Elegance Or Literature; His Study Was Only War; Yet By A Choice
Of Ministers, Whose Disposition Was Very Different From His Own, He
Procured, Without Intention, A Very Liberal Patronage To Poetry. Addison
Was Caressed both By Somers And Montague.
In 1697 Appeared his Latin Verses On The Peace Of Ryswick, Which He
Dedicated to Montague, And Which Was Afterwards Called, By Smith, "The
Best Latin Poem Since The Aeneid." Praise Must Not Be Too Rigorously
Examined; But The Performance Cannot Be Denied to Be Vigorous And
Elegant.
Having yet No Publick Employment, He Obtained, In 1699, A Pension Of
Three Hundred pounds A Year, That He Might Be Enabled to Travel. He Staid
A Year At Blois[163], Probably To Learn The French Language; And Then
Proceeded in his Journey To Italy, Which He Surveyed with The Eyes Of A
Poet.
While He Was Travelling at Leisure, He Was Far From Being idle; For He
Not Only Collected his Observations On The Country, But Found Time To
Write His Dialogues On Medals, And Four Acts Of Cato. Such, At Least, Is
The Relation Of Tickell. Perhaps He Only Collected his Materials, And
Formed his Plan.
Whatever Were His Other Employments In italy, He There Wrote The Letter
To Lord Halifax, Which Is Justly Considered as The Most Elegant, If Not
The Most Sublime, Of His Poetical Productions[164]. But In about Two
Years He Found It Necessary To Hasten Home; Being, As Swift Informs
Us, Distressed by Indigence, And Compelled to Become The Tutor Of A
Travelling squire, Because His Pension Was Not Remitted[165].
At His Return He Published his Travels, With A Dedication To Lord Somers.
As His Stay In foreign Countries Was Short[166], His Observations Are
Such As Might Be Supplied by A Hasty View, And Consist Chiefly In
Comparisons Of The Present Face Of The Country With The Descriptions Left
Us By The Roman Poets, From Whom He Made Preparatory Collections, Though
He Might Have Spared the Trouble, Had He Known That Such Collections Had
Been Made Twice Before By Italian Authors.
The Most Amusing passage Of His Book Is His Account Of The Minute
Republick Of San Marino: Of Many Parts It Is Not A Very Severe Censure To
Say, That They Might Have Been Written At Home. His Elegance Of Language,
And Variegation Of Prose And Verse, However, Gains Upon The Reader; And
The Book, Though Awhile Neglected, Became, In time, So Much The Favourite
Of The Publick, That Before It Was Reprinted it Rose To Five Times Its
Price.
When He Returned to England, In 1702, With A Meanness Of Appearance Which
Gave Testimony Of The Difficulties To Which He Had Been Reduced, He Found
His Old Patrons Out Of Power, And Was, Therefore, For A Time, At Full
Leisure For The Cultivation Of His Mind; And A Mind So Cultivated gives
Reason To Believe That Little Time Was Lost[167].
But He Remained not Long Neglected or Useless. The Victory At Blenheim,
1704, Spread Triumph And Confidence Over The Nation; And Lord Godolphin,
Lamenting to Lord Halifax, That It Had Not Been Celebrated in a Manner
Equal To The Subject, Desired him To Propose It To Some Better Poet.
Halifax Told Him, That There Was No Encouragement For Genius; That
Worthless Men Were Unprofitably Enriched with Publick Money, Without Any
Care To Find Or Employ Those Whose Appearance Might Do Honour To Their
Country. To This Godolphin Replied, That Such Abuses Should, In time, Be
Rectified; And That, If A Man Could Be Found Capable Of The Task Then
Proposed, He Should Not Want An Ample Recompense. Halifax Then Named
Addison; But Required that The Treasurer Should Apply To Him In his
Own Person. Godolphin Sent The Message By Mr. Boyle, Afterwards Lord
Carleton; And Addison, Having undertaken The Work, Communicated it To The
Treasurer, While It Was Yet Advanced no Farther Than The Simile Of The
Angel, And Was Immediately Rewarded by Succeeding mr. Locke In the Place
Of Commissioner Of Appeals.
In The Following year He Was At Hanover With Lord Halifax: And The Year
After Was Made Under-Secretary Of State, First To Sir Charles Hedges, And
In A Few Months More To The Earl Of Sunderland.
About This Time The Prevalent Taste For Italian Operas Inclined him To
Try What Would Be The Effect Of A Musical Drama In our Own Language. He,
Therefore, Wrote The Opera Of Rosamond, Which, When Exhibited on The
Stage, Was Either Hissed or Neglected[168]; But, Trusting that The
Readers Would Do Him More Justice, He Published it, With An Inscription
To The Dutchess Of Marlborough; A Woman Without Skill, Or Pretensions
To Skill, In poetry Or Literature. His Dedication Was, Therefore, An
Instance Of Servile Absurdity, To Be Exceeded only By Joshua Barnes'S
Dedication Of A Greek Anacreon To The Duke.
His Reputation Had Been Somewhat Advanced by The Tender Husband, A Comedy
Which Steele Dedicated to Him, With A Confession, That He Owed to Him
Several Of The Most Successful Scenes. To This Play Addison Supplied a
Prologue.
When The Marquis Of Wharton Was Appointed lord Lieutenant Of
Ireland[169], Addison Attended him As His Secretary; And Was Made Keeper
Of The Records In birmingham'S Tower, With A Salary Of Three Hundred
Pounds A Year. The Office Was Little More Than Nominal, And The Salary
Was Augmented for His Accommodation.
Interest And Faction Allow Little To The Operation Of Particular
Dispositions, Or Private Opinions. Two Men Of Personal Characters More
Opposite Than Those Of Wharton And Addison Could Not Easily Be Brought
Together. Wharton Was Impious, Profligate, And Shameless, Without Regard,
Or Appearance Of Regard, To Right And Wrong: Whatever Is Contrary To This
May Be Said Of Addison; But, As Agents Of A Party, They Were Connected,
And How They Adjusted their Other Sentiments We Cannot Know.
Addison, Must, However, Not Be Too Hastily Condemned. It Is Not Necessary
To Refuse Benefits From A Bad Man, When The Acceptance Implies No
Approbation Of His Crimes; Nor Has The Subordinate Officer Any Obligation
To Examine The Opinions Or Conduct Of Those Under Whom He Acts, Except
That He May Not Be Made The Instrument Of Wickedness. It Is Reasonable To
Suppose, That Addison Counteracted, As Far As He Was Able, The Malignant
And Blasting influence Of The Lieutenant; And That, At Least, By His
Intervention Some Good Was Done, And Some Mischief Prevented.
When He Was In office, He Made A Law To Himself, As Swift Has Recorded,
Never To Remit His Regular Fees In civility To His Friends: "For," Said
He, "I May Have A Hundred friends; And, If My Fee Be Two Guineas, I
Shall, By Relinquishing my Right, Lose Two Hundred guineas, And No Friend
Gain More Than Two; There Is, Therefore, No Proportion Between The Good
Imparted and The Evil Suffered." He Was In ireland When Steele, Without
Any Communication Of His Design, Began The Publication Of The Tatler; But
He Was Not Long Concealed: By Inserting a Remark On Virgil, Which Addison
Had Given Him, He Discovered himself. It Is, Indeed, Not Easy For Any Man
To Write Upon Literature, Or Common Life, So As Not To Make Himself Known
To Those With Whom He Familiarly Converses, And Who Are Acquainted with
His Track Of Study, His Favourite Topicks, His Peculiar Notions, And His
Habitual Phrases.
If Steele Desired to Write In secret, He Was Not Lucky; A Single Month
Detected him. His First Tatler Was Published april 12, 1709; And
Addison'S Contribution Appeared may 26. Tickell Observes, That The Tatler
Began, And Was Concluded without His Concurrence. This Is, Doubtless,
Literally True; But The Work Did Not Suffer Much By His Unconsciousness
Of Its Commencement, Or His Absence At Its Cessation; For He Continued
His Assistance To December 23, And The Paper Stopped on January 2,
1710-11. He Did Not Distinguish His Pieces By Any Signature; And I Know
Not Whether His Name Was Not Kept Secret Till The Papers Were Collected
Into Volumes.
To The Tatler, In about Two Months, Succeeded the Spectator[170]; A
Series Of Essays Of The Same Kind, But Written With Less Levity, Upon A
More Regular Plan, And Published daily. Such An Undertaking showed the
Writers Not To Distrust Their Own Copiousness Of Materials Or Facility
Of Composition, And Their Performance Justified their Confidence. They
Found, However, In their Progress, Many Auxiliaries. To Attempt A Single
Paper Was No Terrifying labour; Many Pieces Were Offered, And Many Were
Received.
Addison Had Enough Of The Zeal Of Party; But Steele Had, At That Time,
Almost Nothing else. The Spectator, In one Of The First Papers, Showed
The Political Tenets Of Its Authors; But A Resolution Was Soon Taken, Of
Courting general Approbation By General Topicks, And Subjects On Which
Faction Had Produced no Diversity Of Sentiments; Such As Literature,
Morality, And Familiar Life. To This Practice They Adhered with Few
Deviations. The Ardour Of Steele Once Broke Out In praise Of Marlborough;
And When Dr. Fleetwood Prefixed to Some Sermons A Preface, Overflowing
With Whiggish Opinions, That It Might Be Read By The Queen[171], It Was
Reprinted in the Spectator.
To Teach The Minuter Decencies And Inferiour Duties, To Regulate The
Practice Of Daily Conversation, To Correct Those Depravities Which Are
Rather Ridiculous Than Criminal, And Remove Those Grievances Which, If
They Produce No Lasting calamities, Impress Hourly Vexation, Was First
Attempted by Casa In his Book Of Manners, And Castiglione In his
Courtier; Two Books Yet Celebrated in italy For Purity And Elegance, And
Which, If They Are Now Less Read, Are Neglected only Because They Have
Effected that Reformation Which Their Authors Intended, And Their
Precepts Now Are No Longer Wanted. Their Usefulness To The Age In which
They Were Written Is Sufficiently Attested by The Translations Which
Almost All The Nations Of Europe Were In haste To Obtain.
This Species Of Instruction Was Continued, And Perhaps Advanced, By The
French; Among Whom La Bruyere'S Manners Of The Age, Though, As Boileau
Remarked, It Is Written Without Connexion, Certainly Deserves Great
Praise, For Liveliness Of Description, And Justness Of Observation.
Before The Tatler And Spectator, If The Writers For The Theatre Are
Excepted, England Had No Masters Of Common Life. No Writers Had
Yet Undertaken To Reform Either The Savageness Of Neglect, Or The
Impertinence Of Civility; To Show When To Speak, Or To Be Silent; How
To Refuse, Or How To Comply. We Had Many Books To Teach Us Our More
Important Duties, And To Settle Opinions In philosophy Or Politicks;
But An Arbiter Elegantiarum, A Judge Of Propriety, Was Yet Wanting, Who
Should Survey The Track Of Daily Conversation, And Free It From Thorns
And Prickles, Which Tease The Passer, Though They Do Not Wound Him.
For This Purpose Nothing is So Proper As The Frequent Publication Of
Short Papers, Which We Read Not As Study But Amusement. If The Subject Be
Slight, The Treatise, Likewise, Is Short. The Busy May Find Time, And The
Idle May Find Patience.
This Mode Of Conveying cheap And Easy Knowledge Began Among Us In the
Civil War[172], When It Was Much The Interest Of Either Party To Raise
And Fix The Prejudices Of The People. At That Time Appeared mercurius
Aulicus, Mercurius Rusticus, And Mercurius Civicus. It Is Said, That When
Any Title Grew Popular, It Was Stolen By The Antagonist, Who, By This
Stratagem, Conveyed his Notions To Those Who Would Not Have Received him,
Had He Not Worn The Appearance Of A Friend. The Tumult Of Those
Unhappy Days Left Scarcely Any Man Leisure To Treasure Up Occasional
Compositions; And So Much Were They Neglected, That A Complete Collection
Is Nowhere To Be Found.
These Mercuries Were Succeeded by L'Estrange'S Observator; And That By
Lesley'S Rehearsal, And, Perhaps, By Others; But Hitherto Nothing had
Been Conveyed to The People, In this Commodious Manner, But Controversy
Relating to The Church Or State; Of Which They Taught Many To Talk, Whom
They Could Not Teach To Judge.
It Has Been Suggested that The Royal Society Was Instituted soon After
The Restoration, To Divert The Attention Of The People From Publick
Discontent. The Tatler And Spectator Had The Same Tendency; They Were
Published at A Time When Two Parties, Loud, Restless,
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