Corpus of Modern Scottish Writing (CMSW) - www.scottishcorpus.ac.uk/cmsw/ Document : 51 Title: Letters Between the Honourable Andrew Erskine and James Boswell, Esq Author(s): Boswell, Mr James; Erskine, Mr Andrew 217 Letter Between the Hon. Andrew Erskine and James Boswell, post 8vo, cloth, 3s 6d, scarce 1763 A most amusing correspondence, not otherwise published LETTERS BETWEEN THE HONOURABLE ANDREW ERSKINE, AND JAMES BOSWELL, Eſq; LONDON: Printed by SAMUEL CHANDLER; For W. FLEXNEY, near Gray's-Inn-Gate, Holborn. MDCCLXIII. Advertiſement. CURIOSITY is the moſt prevalent of all our paſſions; and the curioſity for reading letters, is the moſt prevalent of all kinds of curioſity. Had any man in the three kingdoms found the following letters, directed, ſealed, and adorned with poſt-marks, — provided he could have done it honeſtly — he would have read every one of them; or, had they been uſhered into the world, from Mr. Flexney's ſhop, in that manner, they would have been bought up with the greateſt avidity. As they really once had all the advantages of concealment, we hope their preſent more conſpicuous form will not tend to diminiſh their merit. They have made ourſelves laugh; we hope they will have the ſame effect upon other people. LETTER I. Auchinleck, Aug. 25, 1761. Dear ERSKINE, NO ceremony I beſeech you. Give me your hand. How is my honeſt Captain Andrew? How goes it with the elegant gentle Lady A—? the lovely ſighing Lady J—? and how, O how does that glorious luminary Lady B— do? You ſee I retain my uſual volatility. The Boſwells, you know, came over from Normandy, with William the Conqueror, and ſome of us poſſeſs the ſpirit of our anceſtors the French. I do for one. A pleaſant ſpirit it is. Vive la Bagatelle, is the maxim. A light heart may bid defiance to fortune. And yet, Erſkine, I muſt tell you, that I have been a little penſive of late, amorouſly penſive, and diſpoſed to read Shenſtone's Paſtoral on Abſence, the tenderneſs and ſimplicity of which I greatly admire. A man who is in love is like a man who has got the tooth-ach, he feels moſt acute pain while nobody pitys him. In that ſituation am I at preſent: but well do I know that I will not be long ſo. So much for inconſtancy. As this is my firſt epiſtle to you, it cannot in decency be a long one. Pray write to me ſoon. Your letters, I prophecy, will entertain me not a little; and will beſides be extremely ſerviceable in many important reſpects. They will ſupply me with oil to my lamps, greaſe to my wheels, and blacking to my ſhoes. They will furniſh me with ſtrings to my fiddle, laſhes to my whip, lining to my breeches, and buttons to my coat. They will make charming ſpurs, excellent knee buckles, and inimitable watch-keys. In ſhort, while they laſt I ſhall neither want breakfaſt, dinner, nor ſupper. I ſhall keep a couple of horſes, and I ſhall ſleep upon a bed of down. I ſhall be in France this year, and in Spain the next; with many other particulars too tedious to mention. You may take me in a metaphorical ſenſe; but I would rather chuſe to be underſtood literally. I am Your moſt affectionate friend, JAMES BOSWELL. LETTER II. Kelly, Sept. 11, 1761. HAIL! mighty Boſwell! at thy awful name The fainting muſe relumes her ſinking flame. Behold how high the tow'ring blaze aſpires, While fancy's waving pinions fan my fires! Swells the full ſong? it ſwells alone from thee; Some ſpark of thy bright genius kindles me! 'But ſoftly, Sir,' I hear you cry, 'This wild bombaſt is rather dry: 'I hate your d—n'd inſipid ſong, 'That ſullen ſtalks in lines ſo long; 'Come, give us ſhort ones, like to Butler, 'Or, like our friend Auchinleck the cutler.' A Poet, Sir, whoſe fame is to ſupport, Muſt ne'er write verſes tripping pert and ſhort: Who ever ſaw a judge himſelf diſgrace, By trotting to the bench with haſty pace? I ſwear, dear Sir, you're really in the wrong; To make a line that's good, I ſay James, make it long. You ſee, Sir, I have quite the beſt of the argument; and indeed I was determined not to give it up, 'till you acknowledged yourſelſ vanquiſh'd; ſo to verſe I go again, tooth and nail. How well you talk of glory and the guards, Of fighting heroes, and their great rewards! Our eyes behold you glow with martial flame, Our ears attend the never-ceaſing theme. Faſt from your tongue the rouſing accents flow, And horror darkens on your fable brow! We hear the thunder of the rolling war, And ſee red vict'ry ſhouting from her car! You kindly took me up an aukward cub, And introduc'd me to the * Soaping-Club; Where ev'ry Tueſday eve our ears are bleſt With genuine humour, and with genuine jeſt: The voice of mirth aſcends the liſt'ning ſky, While, ſoap his own beard every man, you cry. Say, who could e'er indulge a yawn or nap, When * Barclay roars forth ſnip, and * Bainbridge ſnap? Tell me how I your favours may return; With thankfulneſs and gratitude I burn. * The Soaping-Club — a Club in Edinburgh, the motto of which was, Every Man ſoap his own Beard; or, Every Man 'indulge his own Humour.' Their game was that facetious one. Snip, Snap, Snorum. * Barclay and Bainbridge, two members of this Club. I've one advice, oh! take it I implore! Search out America's untrodden ſhore; There ſeek ſome vaſt Savannah rude and wild, Where Europe's ſons of ſlaughter never ſmil'd, With fiend-like arts inſidious to betray The ſooty natives as a lawful prey. At you th'aſtoniſh'd ſavages ſhall ſtare, And hail you as a God, and call you fair Your blooming beauty ſhall unrivall'd ſhine, * And Captain Andrew's whiteneſs yield to thine. In reality, I'm under vaſt obligations to you. It was you who ſirſt made me thoroughly ſenſible (indeed I very readily believ'd it) of the excellencies of my own Poetry; and about that time, I made two wonderful diſcoveries, to wit, that you was a ſenſible man, and that I was a good poet; diſcoveries which I dare ſay are yet doubted by ſome incredulous people. Boſwell, I ſhall not praiſe your Letter, becauſe I know you have an averſion at being thought a genius, or a wit. The reluctance with which you always repeat your Cub, and the gravity of countenance *'And Captain Andrew's whiteneſs, &c.'] The writers of theſe Letters inſtead of being rivals in wit, were rivals in complexion. which you always aſſume upon that occaſion, are convincing proofs of this aſſertion. You hate flattery too; but in ſpite of your teeth I muſt tell you, that you are the beſt Poet, and the moſt humourous letter-writer I know; and that you have a finer complexion, and dance better than any man of my acquaintance. For my part, I actually think you would make an excellent champion at the approaching coronation. What tho' malevolent critics may ſay you are too little, yet you are a Briareus in compariſon of Tydeus the hero of Statius's Thebais; and if he was not a warrior, then am I Andrew Erſkine, lieutenant in the 71ſt regiment, blind of one eye, humpback'd, and lame in both legs. We all tired ſo much of the Highlands, that we had not been there three weeks before we all came away again. Lady B— is gone a viſiting, and the reſt of us are come to Kelly. It was moſt unaccountable in me to leave New-Tarbat; for no where will you meet with ſuch fine ingredients for poetical deſcription. However, we are all going back again. when Mr. M— comes from London; ſo ſome time in October you may expect a moſt cordial invitation. This is all at preſent (according to the ſimple but eloquent expreſſion of the vulgar) from your ſincere friend, ANDREW ERSKINE. LETTER III. Auchinleck, Sept. 14, 1761. DEAR Captain Andrew! Poet of renown! Whether the chairmen of Edina's town You curious draw, and make 'em juſtly ſpeak, To uſe a vulgar phraſe, as clean's a leek; Or ſmart Epiſtles, Fables, Songs you write, All put together handſome trim and tight; Or when your ſweetly plaintive muſe does ſigh, And elegiac ſtrains you happy try; Or when in ode ſublime your genius ſoars, Which guineas brings to Donaldſon by ſcores; Accepts the thanks of ME, as quick as ſage, Accept ſincereſt thanks for ev'ry page, For ev'ry page? — for ev'ry ſingle line Of your rich letter aided by the Nine. Here pauſe, my friend, and while you pauſe admire; See how to write in clymax I aſpire: Of which in all good critics you may read Who have obtain'd eulogiums for their meed. Say, don't my riſing lines at leaft pretend, By ſteps of juſt proportion to aſcend? Have I not now your path of numbers trode, From homely eclogue up to lofty ode? You ſay, to write long lines I am not able, No more than Fairy Queen to work a cable; But wait with patience and I'll make you own With your own weapons I have knock'd you down. Knock down perhaps too clumſy may appear, And ſound but roughly in a ſoldier's ear; And why for this of weapons ſhould I vaunt, Which like the razor keeneſt ſharpneſs want; When to confound and ſtupify the ſkull, Sufficient weight will ſerve, tho' ne'er ſo dull? To this I anſwer, grumble as you may, To uſe the readieſt word was ſtill my way; And ſtill ſhall be while I can hold a pen, And to make lines like theſe, count fingers ten. Of Auchinleck the cutler much you talk, And think by that my vanity to baulk; But, Sir, remember we as ſurely know Erſkine, the copperſmith, in the weſt how. Compare the trades, thou mighty ſon of war! To point my couplet take the well-known Mar; From whoſe great flock the noble Kelly race, A— the moſt of all their lineage trace: Compare the trades of copperſmith and cutler, Does not the laſt excel as colonel, Sutler? He who a ſhaving inſtrument can make, Should ſomewhat of the ſoaper's praiſe partake; But low is he who faſhions ne'er ſo well, Kettles and cauldrons with a dinning knell; Had he a tinker been, why then ding dong As, clout the cauldron, runs the Scottiſh ſong; My cutling couſin had to him knock'd under, And fairly yielded to his rouſing thunder: But, as it is, indeed, I am afraid, As Preſbyterian prieſt to D——r ſaid, When he adventur'd 'gainſt the potent —— For * Edinburgh's liberty aloud to bawl, 'I am afraid; — e'en let it gall your pride, 'That of this argument you've the wrong ſide. Exult, O Boſwell! o'er the vanquiſh'd bard, Who ne'er again ſhall dare his lines to lard With greaſy, tho' perhaps diverting jokes, Upon thy ancient pedigree, which mocks All his endeavours, all his turns of wit, Which only ſerve to ſhow their author bit: For ſince you've ſerious taken up the cudgels, You prove more ſtout than twenty Euſtace Budgels; And to repel the captain's raſh attacks, You have return'd his honour double thwacks. * 'For Edinburgh's liberty, &c.'] During the election 1761, when an attempt was made by the Duke of Argyle to bring in Mr. F—— as member. Your laſt from Kelly greets your faithful friend; — 'Tis hard, affection from the mind to rend For the ſweet native ſpot, which Virgil ſays We are enamour'd of thro' all our days. Elſe why would you with haſte ſo ſudden quit The rude romantic Arrochur? where ſit On moſſy ſtones, or walk the airy hills, Or ſilent tread the banks of ſtoried rills; The Highland genii, who in ages old Inſpir'd ſuch bards as have in rapture told Fingal's atchievements, and the dire alarms That ſounded horrid from great Oſſian's arms! When dull October comes, if you return, As ſure as Roman aſhes ſought an urn, If I have no black orders from grim death, And Heaven preſerves my health as well as breath, So ſure ſhall I my truſty gelding take, And with ſwift pace the ſhire of Ayr forſake; So ſure ſhall far extending Lowmond boaſt Newmarket's cub on its exulting coaſt; So ſure ſhall Tarbat's hoſpitable roof Receive the man whoſe parts require no proof; Whoſe heart is good, and tho' he's vain 'tis ſaid, Yet is his perſon tolerably made. Then with the circle once again well met, To whom for hours of bliſs I'm drown'd in debt; I chearfully ſhall live away at eaſe, And ſoap my beard as freely as I pleaſe. In vain ſhall you endeavour to eraze From Boſwell's mind his beſt-beloved phraſe; To quit his bruſh and baſon to forſake, No bribes can ſooth him, and no threat'nings ſhake. In vain ſhall Andrew poliſh'd verſes bring, Or even attempt ſome tender tune to ſing; In vain ſhall Lady A— th' enchanting day, Italian airs, or Kelly's muſic play; In vain ſhall Lady J— murmur plaints, For poor knight-errants, love's dejected ſaints; In vain ſhall SHE, where all attractions meet, The eldeſt Grace! — tho' ſuppliant at her feet, I Boſwell proudly boaſt that I adore, And to her health make every man ſay more, In vain ſhall ſhe, or pleas'd or angry, hope, To make me yield my razors and my ſoap. This being ſo, — as pond'rous lawyers ſay, To draw the bench's nod the proper way, That we this warm contention may agree, If I won't come to you, come you to me. Now my Lieutenant, with the duſky face; For tho' you're cloath'd in ſcarlet and in lace, The gorgeous glare of which to art you owe, Yet Nature gave you not my ſnowy brow. Tell me in words, quite oppoſite to rude, Whether I may not ſafely now conclude. Tho' one, indeed, of penetration leſs, Might without much ado your meaning gueſs; One thing I'm ſure of, you whoſe taſte is ſize, Who length of line with ſo much ardour prize, Can never think this ſame epiſtle wrong, For ſure, my friend, 'tis moderately long. You are now ſo heartily tired, that it would be abſolutely barbarous to ſtun your ears any longer; only give me leave to tell you in one good round ſentence, that your proſe is admirable, and that I am juſt now (at three o'clock in the morning) ſitting over the poor pale remnant of a once glorious blazing fire, and feaſting upon it, till I am all in a Lather. I cannot ſtop yet. Allow me a few more words. I live here in a remote corner of an old ruinous houſe, where my anceſtors have been very jovial. What a ſolemn idea ruſhes on my mind! They are all gone; I muſt follow. Well, and then? Let me ſhift about to another ſubject. The beſt I can think of is a ſound ſleep. So good night, and believe me Yours, JAMES BOSWELL. LETTER IV. Auchinleck, Octob. 10, 1761. Dear ERSKINE, HAD Philip of Macedon been ſaddle-ſick, with riding up and down the country after his unruly ſon Alexander, and been waiting in extreme pain, till the ſurgeon of the next village brought him emollient relief, he could not have been more impatient than I am for a return to my laſt letter. I thought, indeed, that my firing ſo great a gun, would have produced a ſpeedy and a ſuitable echo, and I had no doubt of at leaſt being payed the intereſt of a Sum ſo very large. I now give you fair warning, that if ſomething is not ſpeedily done in this affair, I ſhall be obliged to take very diſagreeable methods. From this way of talking, I begin to fancy myſelf a Schoolmaſter; a character next to that of a giant, moſt terrible to tender minds. Don't think to eſcape the rod. Don't think your dignity as a poet will ſave you from it. I make no queſtion, but what that acrimonious pedagogue George Buchanan has often applied it to his pupil, and he you know was a poet and a king into the bargain. I have been reading the Roſciad. You ſee my very ſtudies have tended towards flagellation. Upon my word Churchill does ſcourge with a vengeance; I ſhould not like to come under his diſcipline. He is certainly a very able writer. He has great power of numbers. "In manly tides of verſe he rolls along." I deſire, Erſkine, once again, that you may write without delay, otherwiſe, I ſhall no longer be Your affectionate friend, JAMES BOSWELL. LETTER V. Kelly, Nov. 1, 1761. Dear BOSWELL, IF you could conceive the many twitches of conſcience I have felt upon your account, the agitations, the compunctions, the remorſes, you would certainly forgive me. However, I was beginning to turn callous againſt all ſuggeſtions of writing to you, when your laſt letter arrived, which like the day of judgment, made my tranſgreſſions ſtare me full in the face. Indolence and unwearied ſtupidity have been my conſtant companions this many a day; and that amiable couple, above all things in the world deteſt letter-- writing. Beſides, I heard you was juſt going to be married, and as a poet, I durſt not approach you, without an Epithalamium, and an Epithalamium was a thing, which at that time I could not compaſs. It was all in vain, that Cupid and Hymen, Juno and Luna, offered their aſſiſtance; I had no fort of employment for them. When you and I walked twice round the meadow upon the ſubject of matrimony, I little thought that my difference in opinion from you, would have brought on your marriage ſo ſoon; for I can attribute it to no other cauſe: From this I learn, that contradiction is of uſe in ſociety; and I ſhall take care to encourage that humour, or rather ſpirit, in myſelf. As this is the firſt marriage I ever made, I expect great congratulations, eſpecially from you. I have been buſy furbiſhing up ſome old pieces for Donaldſon's ſecond volume: I exceed in quantity, twenty Euſtace Budgels, according to your epiſtle. Pray what is become of the Cub? Is Dodſley to ſell you for a ſhilling, or not? I have written one or two new things, an Ode to Pity, and an Epiſtle to the great Donaldſon, which is to be printed: The ſubject was promiſing, but I made nothing of it. I muſt give over poetry, and copy epiſtles out of that elegant treatiſe the Compleat Letter-Writer. D— is gone to London, his parting advice to his ſiſter was, to keep the key of the coals herſelf: ſo I ſuppoſe he intends to keep up his fire, this winter, in parliament, and not to go over the coals with the miniſtry. Lady A— and I ſet out for New-Tarbat tomorrow. Could you come? Let nothing but wedlock detain you. Oh Boſwell the ſoporific effluvia of a hearty dinner cloud all my faculties. I'm as dull as the tolling in of the eighth-hour bell, or a neighbour in the country, that pays you an annual viſit. At this preſent moment, I'm aſtoniſhed how any body can be clever; and your letter in heroic verſe ſeems more amazing to me than if the King of Britain was to ſend an expreſs for me, to dance a hornpipe before him, or the King of Pruſſia was to declare in a manifeſto, that I was the occaſion of the preſent war. I deteſt the invention of writing; and nothing could reconcile me to it, but that I can aſſure you at this diſtance, that I am yours ſincerely, ANDREW ERSKINE. There's a genteel concluſion for you. When you come to Edinburgh, I'll ſettle an unintermitting correſpondence with you. LETTER VI. Edinburgh, Nov. 17, 1761. Dear ERSKINE, MUCH much concern does it give me, to find that you have been in ſuch bad ſpirits as your laſt moſt grievouſly indicates. I believe we great geniuſes are all a little ſubject to the ſorcery of that whimſical dæmon the ſpleen, which indeed we cannot complain of, conſidering what power of enchantment we ourſelves poſſeſs, by the ſweet magic of our flowing numbers. I would recommend to you to read Mr. Green's excellent poem upon that ſubject. He will diſpel the clouds and enliven you immediately. Or if that ſhould not do, you may have recourſe to Xenophon's method, which was, boiling potatoes, and pelting the cats with them, an infallible receipt to promote riſibility. So you too have liſtened to the report of my marriage, and muſt forſooth diſplay a pretty vein of jocularity upon the mournful occaſion. Did you really believe it? If you did, you will never be able to aſtoniſh me with any thing elſe that is wonderful in your creed, for I ſhall reckon your judgment at leaſt three ſtanzas worſe than formerly. In the name of every thing that is upſide down, what could the people mean by marrying me? If they had boiled me into portable ſoup, or hammered me into horſe-ſhoes, I ſhould not have been greatly ſurpriſed. A man who has ſo deeply pondered on the wonders daily preſented to our view, and who has experienced ſo many viciſſitudes of fortune, as I have done, can eaſily make allowance for ſtranger things than theſe. But I own their matrimonial ſyſtem exceeds my comprehenſion. Happy is it for the world that this affair did not take place. An event ſo prodigious muſt have been attended with very alarming conſequences. For my own part, I tremble when I think of it. Damocles, Nero, and Richard the Third, would have appeared amiable princes in compariſon of me. Where ever I went I ſhould have carried horror and devaſtation, ſparing neither ſex nor age. All, all ſhould have been ſacrificed to my relentleſs cruelty. Donaldſon is buſy printing his ſecond volume. I have muſtered up a few verſes for him, LETTER VII. New-Tarbat, Nov. 23, 1761. Dear BOSWELL, AS we never hear that Demoſthenes could broil beef-ſteaks, or Cicero poach eggs, we may ſafely conclude, that theſe gentlemen underſtood nothing of cookery. In like manner it may be concluded, that you, James Boſwell, and I Andrew Erſkine, cannot write ſerious epiſtles. This, as Mr. Triſtram ſays, I deny; for this letter of mine ſhall contain the quinteſſence of ſolidity; it ſhall be a piece of boiled, beef and cabbage, a roaſted gooſe, and a boiled leg of pork and greens: in one word, it ſhall contain advice; ſage and mature advice. Oh! James Boſwell! take care and don't break your neck; pray don't fracture your ſkull, and be very cautious in your manner of tumbling down precipices: beware of falling into coal-pits, and don't drown yourſelf in every pool you meet with. Having thus warned you of the moſt material dangers which your youth and inexperience will be ready to lead you into, I now proceed to others leſs momentary indeed, but very neceſſary to be ſtrictly obſerved. Go not near the Soaping-Club never mention Drury-lane Playhouſe; be attentive to thoſe Pinchbeck buckles which fortune has ſo graciouſly given you, of which I am afraid you're hardly fond enough; never waſh your face, but above all forſwear Poetry: from experience I can aſſure you, and this letter may ſerve as a proof, that a man may be as dull in proſe as in verſe; and as dullneſs is what we aim at, proſe is the eaſieſt of the two. Oh! my friend! profit by theſe my inſtructions; think that you ſee me ſtudying for your advantage, my reverend locks over-ſhadowing my paper, my hands trembling, and my tongue hanging out, a figure of eſteem, affection and veneration. By Heavens! Boſwell! I love you more — But this, I think, may be more conveniently expreſſed in rhime. More than a herd of ſwine a kennel muddy, More than a brilliant belle polemic ſtudy, More than fat Falſtaff lov'd a cup of ſack, More than a guilty criminal the rack, More than attorneys love by cheats to thrive, And more than witches to be burnt alive. I begin to be afraid that we ſhall not ſee you here this winter; which will be a great loſs to you. If ever you travel into foreign parts, as Machiavel uſed to ſay, every body abroad will require a deſcription of * New-Tarbat from you. That you may not appear totally ridiculous and abſurd, I ſhall ſend you ſome little account of it. Imagine then to yourſelf what Thomſon would call an interminable plain, interſperſed in a lovely manner with beautiful green hills. The Seaſons here are only ſhifted by Summer and Spring. Winter with his fur cap and his cat-ſkin gloves, was never ſeen in this charming retreat. The Caſtle is of Gothic ſtructure, awful and lofty: there are fifty bed-chambers in it, with halls, ſaloons, and galleries without number. Mr. M—'s father, who was a man of infinite humour, cauſed a magnificent lake to be made, juſt before the entry of the houſe. His diverſion was to peep out of his window, and ſee the people who came to viſit him, ſkipping through it; — for there was no other paſſage — then he uſed to put on ſuch huge fires to dry their cloaths, that there was no bearing them. He uſed to declare, that he never thought a man good company 'till he was half drown'd and half burnt; but if in * New-Tarbat, a wild ſeat in the weſtern Highlands of Scotland, ſarrounded with mountains. any part of his life he had narrowly eſcaped hanging (a thing not uncommon in the Highlands) he would perfectly doat upon him, and whenever the ſtory was told him, he was ready to choak himſelf. But to return. Every thing here is in the grand and ſublime ſtile. But, alas! ſome envious magician, with his d—d enchantments, has deſtroyed all theſe beauties. By his potent art, the houſe with ſo many bed-chambers in it, cannot conveniently lodge above a dozen people. The room which I am writing in, juſt now, is in reality a handſome parlour of twenty feet by ſixteen; though in my eyes, and to all outward appearance, it ſeems a garret of ſix feet by four. The magnificent lake is a dirty puddle; the lovely plain, a rude wild country cover'd with the moſt aſtoniſhing high black mountains: the inhabitants, the moſt amiable race under the ſun, appear now to be the uglieſt, and look as if they were over-run with the itch. Their delicate limbs, adorned with the fineſt ſilk ſtockings, are now bare, and very dirty; but to deſcribe all the transformations would take up more paper than Lady B— from whom I had this, would chuſe to give me. My own metamorphoſis indeed ſo extraordinary, that I muſt make you acquainted with it. You know I am really very thick and ſhort, prodigiouſly talkative, and wonderfully impudent. Now I am thin and tall, ſtrangely ſilent, and very baſhful. If theſe things continue, who is ſafe? Even you, Boſwell, may feel a change. Your fair and tranſparent complexion may turn black and oily; your perſon little and ſquat; and who knows but you may eternally rave about the King of Great Britain's guards; a ſpecies of madneſs, from which good Lord deliver us! I have often wondered, Boſwell, that a man of your taſte in muſic, cannot play upon the Jews harp; there are ſome of us here that touch it very melodiouſly, I can tell you. Corelli's ſolo of Maggie Lauder, and Pergoleſi's ſonata of The Carle he came o'er the Craft, are excellently adapted to that inſtrument; let me adviſe you to learn it. The firſt coſt is but three halfpence, and they laſt a long time. I have compoſed the following ode upon it, which exceeds Pindar as much as the Jews harp does the organ. ODE upon a JEW's HARP. I. SWEET inſtrument! which fix'd in yellow teeth, So clear ſo ſprightly and ſo gay is found, Whether you breathe along the ſhore of Leith, Or Lowmond's lofty cliffs thy ſtrains reſound; Struck by a taper finger's gentle tip, Ah ſoftly in our ears thy pleaſing murmurs ſlip! II. Where'er thy lively muſic's found, All are jumping, dancing round: Ev'n truſty William lifts a leg, And capers like ſixteen with Peg; Both old and young confeſs thy pow'rful ſway, They ſkip like madmen and they friſk away. III. Rous'd by the magic of the charming air, The yawning dogs forego their heavy ſlumbers; The ladies liſten on the narrow ſtair, And Captain Andrew ſtraight forgets his numbers. Cats and mice give o'er their batt'ling, Pewter plates on ſhelves are rattling; But falling down the noiſe my lady hears, Whole ſcolding drowns the trump more tuneful than the ſpheres! Having thus, Boſwell, written you a moſt entertaining letter, with which you are highly pleaſed; to your great grief I give over in theſe or the like words, your affectionate friend, ANDREW ERSKINE. LETTER VIII. Edinburgh, Dec. 2, 1761 Dear ERSKINE, Notwithſtanding of your affecting elegy or the death of two pigs, I am juſt now returned from eating a moſt excellent one with the moſt magnificent Donaldſon. I wiſh you would explain to me the reaſon of my being ſo very hard-hearted as to diſcover no manner of reluctance at that innocent animal's being brought to table well roaſted. I will confeſs to you, my friend, that I fed upon it with no ſmall alacrity — neither do I feel any pangs of remorſe for having ſo done. The reaſon perhaps lies ſo deep as to elude our keeneſt penetration; — at the ſame time give me leave to offer my conjecture, which you may have by a little tranſmutation of a vulgar adage, in ſuch manner as to obtain at one and the ſame time (ſo to ſpeak) not only a ſtrong reaſon for my alledged inhumanity, but alſo an apparent pun, and a ſeeming paradox; all which you have for the ſmall and eaſy charge of ſaying, The belly has no bowels. I do aſſure you the imperial ſovereign of Pope's head, Caledonian Dodſley, Scottiſh Baſkerville, and captain general of collective bards, entertained us moſt ſumptuouſly; I queſtion much if captain Erſkine himſelf ever fared better; although I was the only author in the company, which I own ſurpriſed me not a little. Donaldſon is undoubtedly a gentleman perfectly ſkilled in the art of inſinuation. His dinners are the moſt eloquent addreſſes imaginable. For my own part, I am never a ſharer in one of his copious repaſts, but I feel my heart warm to the landlord, and ſpontaneouſly conceive this expreſſive ſoliloquy, — Upon my word I muſt give him another hundred lines. Now, my dear Captain, tell me how is it with you, after reading this? With what feeling are you moſt ſtrongly poſſeſt? But as this depends a good deal upon the time of the day at which you receive my epiſtle, I ſhall make no farther enquiry. Thus, Sir, have I unboſomed the big exultation which poſſeſt me upon occaſion of what ſome of the fathers would call ſplendidum prandium; Engliſhed thus, a ſplendid dinner. Are not you all this time very much aſtoniſhed, nay, ſomewhat picqued, that I have as yet made no mention of your laſt, notwithſtanding of the wonderful enchantments which you relate, the ſagacious advices which you give, and the ode to a Jew's Harp, which you add. Forgive me, go Captain. Blame Donaldſon. Write to me whenever you have any thing that you wiſh to ſay, and believe me, Yours, JAMES BOSWELL. P. S. Are not you very proud of your Ode to Midnight? Lord K— calls it the beſt Poem in the Engliſh language. But it will not be long ſo. For in imitation of it I have written an Ode to Gluttony, of which take two ſtanzas. I. HAIL Gluttony! O let me eat Immenſely at thy awful board, On which to ſerve the ſtomach meet, What art and nature can afford. I'll furious cram, devoid of fear, Let but the roaſt and boil'd appear; Let me but ſee a ſmoaking diſh, I care not whether fowl or ſiſh; Then ruſh ye floods of ale adown my throat, And in my belly make the victuals float! II. And yet why truſt a greaſy cook? Or give to meat the time of play? While ev'ry trout gulps down a hook, And poor dumb beaſts harſh butchers ſlay? Why ſeek the dull, ſauce-ſmelling gloom, Of the beef-haunted dining room; Where D—r gives to ev'ry gueſt With lib'ral hand whate'er is beſt; While you in vain th' inſurance muſt invoke To give ſecurity you ſhall not choak? LETTER IX. New-Tarbat, Dec. 3, 1761. Dear BOSWELL, EV'N now intent upon thy Ode, I plunge my knife into the beef, Which, when a cow — as is the mode — Was lifted by a Highland thief. Ah! ſpare him, ſpare him, circuit Lords! Ah hang him not in hempen cords; Ah ſave him in his morn of youth From the damp-breathing, dark * tolbooth, Leſt when condemn'd and hung in clanking chains His body moulder down white-bleach'd with winter rains! But let not me inter-meddle with your province ; to parody the ode to midnight, could only be thought off and executed by the mirth-moving, humour-hunting, raillery-raiſing James Boſwell. You muſt ſend me the reſt of your Gluttony by the return of the poſt, even though it ſhould prove the night of the Beard-ſoaping Club. Did you ever ſuſpect me of believing your marriage? No, I always ſaid from the beginning, there was nothing in it; I can bring twenty witneſſes to * Tolbooth Priſon. prove it, who ſhall be nameleſs; indeed if you had been married, I don't know but the ſame gentlemen might have been prevailed upon to vouch for me that I frequently declared my firm perſuaſion of it; theſe kind of witneſſes have multiplied greatly of late years, to the eternal credit of many a perſon's ſurpriſing ſagacity; but if you want to ſee this ſubject purſued and treated with accuracy, peruſe Doctor Woodward's Treatiſe of Foſſils, particularly his remarks upon the touchſtone. I am glad to hear you are returned to town, and once more near that ſeat of learning and genius Mr. Alexander Donaldſon's ſhop. You tell me you are promoted to be his corrector of the preſs; I with you alſo had the office of correcting his children, which they very much want; the eldeſt ſon, when I was there, never failed to play at taw all the time, and my queue uſed frequently to be pulled about; you know, upon account of its length it is very liable to theſe ſort of attacks; I am thinking to cut it off, for I never yet met with a child that could keep his hands from it: and here I can't forbear telling you, that if ever you marry and have children, our acquaintance ceaſes from that moment, unleſs you breed them up after the manner of the great Scriblerus, and unleſs they be ſuckled with ſome verſe, and weaned with criticiſm. Write me when the volume will be publiſhed and what ſort of figure you think it will make, particularly how James Boſwell and Andrew Erſkine will appear; I know you will mix your opinion with a good deal of partial praiſe, as you are one of thoſe extraordinary authors that has a love for their own works, and alſo one of the ſtill more extraordinary ones that can flatter another. I find fault with one or two things in your letters; I could wiſh you wrote in a ſmaller hand, and that when you end a ſentence in the beginning of a line, you would begin the next ſentence in the ſame line. Dear Boſwell, go to Donaldſon and tell him he is a moſt inhuman miſcreant, and deſerves, he is a Printer, to be preſs'd to death; then thunder in his ear that he has not ſent Captain Erſkine his Critical Review. Lady B— entreats that you would come here and ſpend the Chriſtmas holidays; ſhe has ſent for two Highland bards to entertain you, and will have a waſh-ball and a ſtick of pomatum musk at your ſervice we are all, thank God, in general pretty clear of the Itch juſt now, and moſt of us not near ſo louſy as we uſed to be, ſo I think you may venture. I received your letter ten days after the date, though it only came from Edinburgh; I had wrote you one ſome little time before, directed to the Parliament-Cloſe, have you got it? That you may never want Odes of mine to parody, I encloſe you one to Fear, nothing like it you will obſerve ſince the time of Pindar. And now, my dear dear Boſwell, I conclude, having, as I hope for mercy, not one word more to ſay, which I believe is often the caſe of many an enormous genius. Farewell. Yours, &c. ANDREW ERSKINE ODE to FEAR. I. LOST in the mournful wood at eve, While round the awful torrents roll, Why fiercely does thy boſom heave, Why weary ſinks thy ſad'ning ſoul; Or what along the dark'ning waſte, Impels thy ſteps with eager haſte; What voice ſeems ruſhing on the wind, Why ſtop? why dart a glance behind? Alas! thy looks ſo wild, thy thoughts ſo drear, Conſeſs th'alarming ſtrength, th'unbounded pow'r of fear. II. What direful ſcenes of woe, as fancy deems, Chill the bold heart, and ſtrike th'aſtoniſh'd eye; The viſionary ſpectre frequent gleams, And forms terrific float in horror by; The heavy clouds are ſettled in the air, Loud ſighs the gale, the lonely mountains o'er Deep caverns frowning gloom, and monſters glare, While ſtarting Fear exhauſts her frantic ſtore; By chains unſeen th'imagination guides, And with a magic force o'er ev'ry thought preſides. III. Away with all thy rueful train, Nor caſt thy cold pale glance at me, Leaſt reaſon quit my tortur'd brain, And each mad thought be full of thee Nor ever meet my ſtartl'd view, Array'd in robe of ſanguine hue; Nor near my ſilent couch be found, When night is wrapt in darkneſs round: Away, and haunt the murderer's care-fraught bed, And probe his guilty ſoul 'till ev'ry bliſs be fled. IV. In vain on him the genial god of ſleep Pours his ſweet ſlumbers once ſo ſoft and mild; In vain they on his fallen eye-lids creep, Still broke by viſions ſavage all, and wild: Unnerv'd, and all appall'd, he ſeems to tread With toilſome ſteps the dread funereal way, Where howling phantoms throng athwart the ſhade, While the wan moon ſcarce beams her joyleſs ray; Or high on hanging cliffs he ſeems to go, And views the deep black ſtream that ſleeps ſo ſtill below. V. Yet lead him on and let him feel The ſtings of conſcience and remorſe, Their penetrating points reveal, And wound him with their keeneſt force: No reſpite let the monſter find, With ev'ry fury rack his mind, And ſtill each ſad, each ling'ring night, Before him ſtalk a haggard ſight, 'Till wak'd to miſery he raves and mourns, While ev'ry flame of Hell within his boſom burns. VI. See at the regal banquet curſt Macbeth Secure of empire ſecretly rejoice; The fiend ſeems ſmiling at the work of death, And hears, with pleaſure hears, the murderer's voice: When lo! at once Fear's dreadful pow'r is felt, As injur'd Banquo points the livid wound, Cold chilling dews upon his forehead melt, Fades the gay ſcene of ſplendor all around, Drops from his nerveleſs hand the roſy bowl, While ſluggiſh thro' his veins life's purple torrents roll. VII. And mark where Richard near his tent, Taſtes the cool fragrance of the air, Remorſe within his boſom pent, And deadly hate, and black deſpair; Yet once again behold, he ſleeps, Hark! on his ear the low groan creeps; He ſhudd'ring ſtarts, convulſive ſhakes, He heaves, he turns, he leaps, he wakes, Each feature ſeems with wild amazement hung, The ſudden pray'r to Heav'n drops fault'ring from his tongue. VIII. Shakeſpeare alone thy ghaſtly charms enjoy'd, Thy ſavage haunts he travers'd undiſmay'd, In hearing thy awak'ning tales employ'd, Where the wood darkens to a deeper ſhade; And if I read the magic page aright, Loud thunders roll'd around th'enchanted ſpot, While fire-ey'd dæmons growl'd the long lone night, And ev'ry tree with flaſhing flame was ſmote; And cries uncouth, and ſounds of woe were heard, And tall gigantic ſhapes their horrid forms uprear'd. IX. But not alone to guilt confin'd, Thy furies dart their ſecret ſtings, They point them at the virtuous mind, Which each ideal fancy wrings; The penſive melancholy Dane Deep mourns his royal father ſlain; Th'unnatural murderer muſt bleed, The ghoſt appears, and prompts the deed; Ev'n valiant Brutus ſinking to repoſe, Thy awful preſence felt as his ſtern genius roſe. X. Ye Angels ſent as guardians of the good, Swift chace th' enthuſiaſtic pow'r away, Clear the low cloud, each grief-charg'd thought exclude, Drive hence the fiend that ſhuns the eye of day; Ah! calm and gentle ſink us down to reſt, Let chearfulneſs the lonely void adorn, Let her mild radiance gild the fear-ſtruck breaſt, While we with air-form'd terrors ceaſe to mourn; And in ſuch raptur'd dreams the fancy ſteep, As render more endear'd the deity of ſleep. LETTER X. Edinburgh, Dec. 8, 1761. Dear ERSKINE, IT is a very ſtrange thing, that I James Boſwell, Eſq; 'who am happily poſſeſt of a facility of manners,' — (to uſe the very words of Mr. Profeſſor Smith, which upon honour were addreſt to me. I can produce the Letter in which they are to be found) I ſay it is a very ſtrange thing that I ſhould ever be at a loſs how to expreſs myſelf; and yet at this moment of my exiſtence, that is really the caſe. May Lady B— ſay unto me, 'Boſwell, I deteſt thee,' if I am not in downright earneſt. Mankind are ſuch a perverſe race of beings, that they never fail to lay hold of every circumſtance tending to their own praiſe, while they let ſlip every circumſtance tending to their cenſure. To illuſtrate this by a recent example, you ſee I accurately remember Mr. Smith's beautiful, I ſhall even grant you juſt compliment, but have quite forgot his ſevere criticiſm on a ſentence ſo clumſily formed, as to require an I ſay to keep it together; which I myſelf candidly think much reſembles a pair of ill-mended breeches. Having a mind, Erſkine, to open a ſluice of happineſs upon you, I muſt inform you that I have lately got you an immenſity of applauſe from men of the greateſt taſte. You know I read rather better than any man in Britain; ſo that your works had a very uncommon advantage. I was pleaſed at the praiſe which you received. I was vain of having ſuch a correſpondent. I thought I did not envy you a bit, and yet, I don't know, I felt ſomehow, as if I could like to threſh you pretty heartily: however, I have one comfort, in thinking that all this praiſe would not have availed you a ſingle curl of Sir Cloudeſly Shovel's periwig, had not I generouſly reported it to you: ſo that in reality you are obliged to me for it. The ſecond volume of the Poems will not be publiſhed 'till January. Captain Erſkine will make a very good figure. Boſwell a decent one. Lady B— intreats me to come and paſs the Chriſtmas holidays with her: gueſs, O gueſs what tranſport I felt at reading that. I did not know how to contain my elevation of ſpirits. I thought myſelf one of the greateſt geniuſes in Europe. I thought I could write all ſorts of books, and work at all handicraft trades. I imagined that I had fourſcore millions of money out at intereſt, and that I ſhould actually be choſen Pope at the next election. I obteſt you, my friend, in the warmeſt ſpirit of love to return to her Ladyſhip my moſt ſincere thanks, and tell her that when the planets permit us to meet, ſhe herſelf ſhall judge how richly I can expreſs my gratitude. Altho' I am a good deal of a Don Quixote, yet I feel myſelf averſe to ſo long a journey. Believe me, I am as ſweetly indolent as any genius in all his Majeſty's dominions, ſo that for my own incitement I muſt propoſe the following ſcheme. You Captain Andrew ſhall, upon Monday the 28th day of this preſent month, ſet out from New-Tarbat in Mr. M—'s chaiſe, and meet me at Glaſgow, that evening. Next day ſhall we both in friendly guiſe get into the ſaid chaiſe, and drive with velocity to your preſent habitation, where I ſhall remain 'till the Monday ſen'night; on which day I ſhall be in like manner accompanied back to Glaſgow, from thence to make my way as well as I can, to the Scottiſh metropolis. I have told the ſtory of my ſcheme rather aukwardly; but it will have its advantages: I ſhall have a couple of days more of your claſſical company, and ſomewhat leſs pay, which to a Poet is no ſlender conſideration. I ſhall chaiſe it the whole way. Thanks to the man who firſt invented that comfortable method of journeying. Had it not been for that, I dare ſay both you and I would have circumſcribed our travels within a very few miles. For my own part, I think to dreſs myself in a great-coat and boots, and get aſtride a horſe's back, and be jolted through the mire, perhaps in wind and rain, is a puniſhment too ſevere for all the offences which I can charge myſelf with. Indeed I have a mortal antipathy at riding, and that was the true reaſon for my refuſing a regiment of dragoons which the King of Pruſſia offered me at the beginning of this war. I know indeed the Mariſchal Duke de Belleiſle in his Political Teſtament, has endeavoured to perſuade the world that it was owing to my having a private amour with a Lady of diſtincion in the Auſtrian court, but that miniſter was too deeply immerſed in ſtate-intrigues, to know much about thoſe of a more tender nature. The tumultuous hurry of buſineſs and ambition, left no room in his mind for the delicious delicacy of ſentiment and paſſion, ſo very eſſential to a man of gallantry. I think, Erſkine, in this ſcheme of mine, I am playing a very ſure game, for you muſt either indulge me in every article which I have mentioned, or entertain me with a plentiful diſh of well dreſt apologies. I beg it of you, however, don't put yourſelf to any inconvenience; indeed I might have ſaved myſelf the trouble of making this requeſt, for you are that kind of man that I believe you would not put yourſelf to an inconvenience to be made a Lieutenant-General. Pray ſhall we not ſee you here this winter at all? You ought to come and eat the fruit of your labours. I remain Your moſt affectionate friend, JAMES BOSWELL. I ſhall rouſe Donaldſon as you deſire. I ſhall rouſe him like a peal of thunder. I wonder what you will all think of this propoſal of mine for delivering myſelf in Folio. Ten days make a period, as I uſe to ſay. They bear ſome proportion to the whole of life. Write inſlantly. SEQUEL of the ODE TO GLUTTONY. III. Ev'n now upon his elbow chair A glutton ſurfeit-ſtruck reclines; See him look round with frightful ſtare, And beg for drink with eager ſigns. His gullet ſtuff the unchew'd bits, He groans and nods his head by fits; His high-ſwo'n cheeks that were ſo red, With egg-ſhell whiteneſs are o'er-ſpread; Ah! quickly thump his back, leſt for a boaſt Death from his liver rive his bouncing ghoſt. IV. Ev'n now on ven'ſon much intent, The great John Bull pleas'd with his fate, Gorges untill his ſides are rent, And glows voluptuous o'er his plate. He, while he eyes the godlike haunch! Rubs his rotundity of paunch; Which, when replete in ev'ry chink, His worſhip makes ſublimely think: Or, an inveterate enemy to chat, Delighted views a ſplendid ſtore of fat! V. Bread fills the mouths of hungry clowns, The blackſmith's clumſy grinders go, The kitchens ſweat thro' all the towns, The cock now fry'd no more ſhall crow. The baker tarts and cheeſe-cakes brings, The ruſty jack ear-grating ſings; Each footman with an angry voice Damns the confounded creaking noiſe : The ham ſuſpended, when the ſtrings are broke, Aſſaults Bob's powder'd pate with dreadful ſtroke. VI. And now perhaps the buxom wife Of Vintner * Thom conſults her ſpouſe, How thoſe who play the keeneſt knife, She beſt may feaſt within her houſe. She ſees before her mind's clear glaſs, All ſorts of freſh proviſions paſs; She makes pots, pans, and ſpits be ſcour'd, For dreſſing what ſhall be devour'd. Haſte! let me thither hie with purpoſe good, To ſwallow monſtrous quantities of food! *Thom — in whoſe houſe the Soaping-Club was always held. *LETTER XI. New-Tarbat, Dec. 13, 1761 Dear BOSWELL, AN Ode to Tragedy by a gentleman of Scotland, and dedicated to you! had there been only one ſpark of curioſity in my whole compoſition, this would have raiſed it to a flame equal to the general conflagration. May G—d d—n me, as Lord Peter ſays, if the edge of my appetite to know what it can be about, is not as keen as the beſt razor ever uſed by a member of the Soaping–Club. Go to Donaldſon, demand from him two of my franks, and ſend it me even before the firſt poſt: write me, O write me! what ſort of man this author is, where he was born, how he was brought up, and with what ſort of diet he has been principally fed; tell me his genealogy, like Mr. M—; how many miles he has travelled in poſt-chaiſes, like Colonel R—, tell me what he eats, like a cook; what he drinks, * This Letter was occaſioned by ſeeing an Ode to Tragedy, written by a Gentleman of Scotland, and dedicated to James Boſwell, Eſq; advertiſed in the Edinburgh News-papers. It afterwards appeared, that the Ode was written by Mr. Boſwell himself. like a wine-merchant; what ſhoes he wears, like a ſhoemaker; in what manner his mother was delivered of him, like a man-midwife; and how his room is furniſhed, like an upholſterer; but if you happen to find it difficult to utter all this in terms befitting Mr. M—, Colonel R—, a cook, a wine-merchant, a ſhoemaker, a man-- midwife, and an upholſterer, Oh! tell it me all in your own manner, and in your own incomparable ſtile. Your ſcheme, Boſwell, has met with — but the thoughts of this Ode-writing gentleman of Scotland again come acroſs me, — I muſt now aſk, like the Spectator, is he fat or lean, tall or ſhort, does he uſe ſpectacles? what is the length of his walking-ſtick? has he a landed eſtate? has he a good coal-work? — Lord! Lord! what a melancholy thing it is to live twenty miles from a poſt-town! why am I not in Edinburgh? why am I not chain'd to Donaldſon's ſhop? I received both your letters yeſterday, for we ſend to the Poſt-houſe but once a-week: I need not tell you how I liked them; were I to acquaint you with that, you would conſecrate the pen with which they were written, and deify the inkhorn: I think the outſide of one of them was adorned with the greateſt quantity of good ſealing-wax I ever ſaw, and my brother A— and Lady A—, both of whom have a notable comprehenſion of theſe ſort of things, agree with me in this my opinion. Your Ode to Gluttony is altogether excellent; the deſcriptions are ſo lively, that miſtaking the paper on which they were written, for a piece of bread and butter ſpread with marmalade, I fairly ſwallowed the whole compoſition, and I find my ſtomach encreaſed three-fold since that time; I declare it to be the moſt admirable whet in the world, ſuperior to a ſolan gooſe, or white wine and bitters; it ought to be hung up in ev'ry cook's ſhop in the three kingdoms, engraved on pillars in all market places, and paſted in all rooms in all taverns. You ſeem to doubt in your firſt letter, if ever Captain Erſkine was better entertained by the great Donaldſon, than you was lately; baniſh that opinion, tell it not in Gath; nor publiſh it in Aſkalon; repeat it not in John's Coffee-houſe, neither whiſper it in the Abbey of Holy-Rood-Houſe no, I ſhall never forget the fowls and oyſter ſauce which bedecked the board: fat were the fowls, and the oyſters of the true pandour or croat kind; then the apple-pie with raiſins, and the mutton with colliflower, can never be eraſed from my remembrance: I may forget my native country, my dear brothers and ſiſters, my poetry, my art of making love, and even you, O Boſwell! but theſe things I can never forget; the impreſſion is too deep, too well imprinted ever to be effaced; I may turn Turk or Hottentot, I may be hang'd for ſtealing a bag to adorn my hair, I may raviſh all ſorts of virgins, young and old, I may court the fatteſt Wapping landlady, but theſe things I can never forget; I may be ſick and in priſon, I may be deaf, dumb, and may loſe my memory, but theſe things I can never forget. And now, Boſwell, I am to acquaint you, that your propoſal is received with the utmoſt joy and feſtivity, and the ſcheme, if I live 'till to-morrow fortnight, will be put in execution. The NewTarbat chaiſe will arrive at Glaſgow on Monday evening the 28th of December, drove by William. Captain Andrew's ſlim perſonage will ſlip out, he will enquire for James Boſwell, Eſq; he will be ſhewn into the room where he is ſitting before a. large fire, the evening being cold, raptures and poetry will enſue, and every man will ſoap his own beard; every other article of the propoſals will be executed as faithfully as this; but to ſpeak very ſeriouſly, you muſt be true to your appointment, and come with the utmoſt regularity upon the Monday; think of my emotions at Græme's, if you ſhould not come; view my melancholy poſture; hark! I rave like Lady Wiſhfort, no Boſwell yet, Boſwell's a loſt thing. I muſt receive a letter from you before I ſet out, telling me whether you keep true to your reſolution, and pray ſend me the Ode to Tragedy: I beg you'll bring me out in your pocket my Critical Review, which you may deſire Donaldſon to give you; but above all, employ Donaldſon to get me a copy of Fingal, which tell him I'll pay him for; I long to ſee it. There are ſome things lately publiſhed in London, which I would be glad to have, particularly a Spouſal Hymn on the Marriage of the King and Queen, and an Elegy on viewing a ruin'd Pile of Buildings; ſee what you can do for me; I know you will not take it ill to be buſied a little for that greteſt of all Poets Captain Andrew. The ſluice of happineſs you have let in upon me, has quite overflowed the ſhallows of my underſtanding; at this moment I am determined to write more and print more than any man in the kingdom, except the great Dr. Hill, who writes a Folio every month, a Quarto every fortnight, an Octavo every week, and a Duodecimo every day. Hogarth has humourouſly repreſented a brawny porter almoſt ſinking to the ground under a huge load of his works. I am too lazy juſt now to copy out an Ode to Indolence, which I have lately written; beſides, its fitting I reſerve ſomething for you to peruſe when we meet, for upon theſe occaſions an exchange of Poems ought to be as regular as an exchange of priſoners between two nations at war. Believe me, dear Boſwell, to be yours ſincerely, ANDREW ERSKINE. P.S. Pray write me before I ſet out for Glaſgow. — The Ode to Tragedy, by a Gentleman of Scotland, good now! wonderful! LETTER XII. Edinburgh, Saturday, Dec. 14, 1761 Dear ERSKINE, IF my ſcheme takes, you muſt alter it. Thurſday the 24th muſt be the day of our meeting, as I am obliged to return hither on Saturday the 2d of January. This is really a curious way of employing you; however, you will gain ſomething by it; you will acquire a particular exactneſs in knowing the days of the month, a ſcience too much neglected in theſe degenerate days, but a ſcience which was cultivated with a glorious ardour in Greece and Rome, and was no doubt the cauſe of their flouriſhing ſo much in every reſpect. Have not you ſometimes ſeen a man put his hand in his pocket, pull out a nonpareille, and ſay to his friend, 'Will you eat an apple, Sir? Juſt ſo do I now ſay to you, 'Will you have an Epigram? EPIGRAM. Your wife (cries James) I think 'tis queer, Brings a freſh bantling ev'ry year: James, let me tell you, I have wonder'd That yours produces not an hundred. I am Yours ſincerely, JAMES BOSWELL. LETTER XIII. Edinburgh, Dec. 17, 1761. Dear ERSKINE, HAD you but hinted a method of conveyance ſooner than by the firſt poſt, ſooner ſhould the Ode to Tragedy have ſaluted your longing eyes. At length it comes! it comes! Hark! with what lofty muſic do the ſpheres proclaim its triumphal entry into the majeſtic edifice at Tarbat! Behold the family gathered around it in a ſort of quadrangular figure! Heavens! what a picture of curioſity! what a groupe of eager expectants! They ſhow their teeth, they rub their hands, they kick the floor! But who is this the fire of whoſe look flames infinitely beyond the reſt? It is Captain Andrew! It is! it is! ye Gods! he ſeizes! he opens! he reads! Let us leave him. I can no more. It would ſtretch the ſtrings too far to proceed. You muſt know I purpoſely neglected to ſend the Ode myfelſ, and likewiſe prevented Donaldſon from ſending it immediately when it was publiſhed, in order to give full play to your impatience. I conſidered what amazing effects it muſt produce upon Captain Erſkine, to find in one advertiſement, An Ode to Tragedy — A Gentleman of Scotland — Alexander Donaldſon — and James Boſwell, Eſq; How far my conjecture was juſt, your laſt letter does moſt amply teſtify. The author of the Ode to Tragedy, is a moſt excellent man: he is of an ancient family in the weſt of Scotland, upon which he values himſelf not a little. At his nativity there appeared omens of his future greatneſs. His parts are bright, and his education has been good. He has travelled in poſt-chaiſes, miles without number. He is fond of ſeeing much of the world. He eats of every good diſh, eſpecially apple-pie. He drinks old hock. He has a very fine temper. He is ſomewhat of an humouriſt, and a little tinctured with pride. He has a good manly countenance, and he owns himſelf to be amorous. He has infinite vivacity, yet is obſerved at times to have a melancholy caſt. He is rather fat than lean, rather ſhort than tall, rather young than old. His ſhoes are neatly made, and he never wears ſpectacles. The length of his walking-ſtick is not as yet aſcertained; but we hope ſoon to favour the republic of letters with a ſolution of this difficulty, as ſeveral able mathematicians are employed in its inveſtigation, and for that purpoſe have poſted themſelves at different given points in the Cannongate, ſo that when the gentleman ſaunters down to the Abbey of Holyrood-houſe, in order to think on ancient days, on King James the Fifth, and on Queen Mary, they may compute its altitude above the ſtreet, according to the rules of geometry. I hope you have received a line from me fixing Thurſday the 24th, as the day of our meeting. I exult in the proſpect of felicity that is before us. Fingal and your Critical Review ſhall accompany me. I will not anticipate your pleaſure in reading the Highland bard; only take my word for it, he will make you feel that you have a ſoul. I ſhall remember your other commiſſions Continue to truſt me 'till you find me negligent. I beg it of you, for once, be a Frenchman and in the character of Boſwell, kneel ſupplicate worſhip Lady B—. I remain, Your affectionate Friend, JAMES BOSWELL. LETTER XIV, New-Tarbat, Dec. 16, 1761. Dear BOSWELL, SWIFT as pen can ſcratch, or ink can flow, as floods can ruſh, or winds can blow, which you'll obſerve is a very pretty rhime, I ſit down on a chair which has really a very bad bottom, being made of wood, and anſwer your epiſtle which I received this moment; it is dated on Saturday the 14th which was really the 12th, according to the computation of the beſt chronologiſts: this is a blunder which Sir Iſaac Newton would never have excuſed; but I a man no leſs great, forgive it from my ſoul; and I here declare, that I will never upbraid you with it in any company or converſation, even though that converſation ſhould turn upon the quickeſt and moſt pleaſant method of ſwallowing oyſters, when you know I might very naturally introduce it. I confeſs its ſingularly ſilly in me to turn the page in this manner, and that I ſhould have followed your example, or rather enſample, as ſome great judges of ſtile uſually write it. I ſee by the news-papers, that Fingal is to be publiſhed at Edinburgh in a few days, pray bring it with you. I will undoubtedly meet you at Glaſgow on the 24th day of the month, being exactly that day which precedes Chriſtmas, as was ingeniouſly obſerved by Mr. Sheridan in his fourth Lecture; and I hear he is going to publiſh a whole volume of diſcoveries all as notable as this, which I imagine will exceed his lectures greatly. Pray now be faithful to this appointment, and ſo I commit this letter to the guidance of Providence, hoping that it will not miſcarry, or fail of being duly delivered. Believe me yours ſincerely, ANDREW ERSKINE. LETTER XV. New-Tarbat, Jan. 10, 1762. Dear BOSWELL, CICERO in his book of Office-houſes, defines ingratitude to be * * * * * * * * * * which both Dean Swift and Triſtram Shandy take as a moſt exact definition. The ſtorms of night deſcended, the winds rolled along the clouds with all their ghoſts, around the rock the dark waves burſt, and ſhewed their flaming boſoms, loud ruſhed the blaſt through the leaf-leſs oaks, and the voice of the ſpirit of the mountains was heard in our halls; it was Saturday, when lo! at once the poſtman came, mighty was his ſtriding in the kitchen, and ſtrong was his voice for ale. In ſhort, I have as yet received no letter from you, and great is my wonder and aſtoniſhment, even Donaldſon has not ſent me my Critical Review; would to God he had one rap from Fingal's ſword of Luno. I feel myſelf at this preſent moment capable of writing a letter which would delight you, but I am determined not to do it, and this is the ſevere puniſhment of your neglect, I with-hold the treaſures of my wit and humour from you, a perfect Golconda mine of Diamonds. I have been enjoying ſince you left me, the moſt exquiſite entertainment, in the peruſal of the noble works of Oſſian, the greateſt poet, in my opinion, that ever compoſed, and who exceeds Homer, Virgil, and Milton. He tranſports us by the grandeur of his ſublime, or by ſome ſudden ſtart of tenderneſs he melts us into diſtreſs: Who can read, without the warmeſt emotions, the pathetic complaints of the venerable old bard when he laments his blindneſs, and the death of his friends? But how are we animated when the memory of former years comes ruſhing on his mind, and the light of the ſong riſes in his ſoul. It is quite impoſſible to expreſs my admiration of his Poems; at particular paſſages I felt my whole frame trembling with ecſtacy; but if I was to deſcribe all my thoughts, you would think me abſolutely mad. The beautiful wildneſs of his fancy is inexpreſſibly agreeable to the imagination; for inſtance, the mournful ſound from the untouched harp when a hero is going to fall, or the awful appearances of his ghoſts and ſpirits. Notwithſtanding all theſe beauties, we ſhall ſtill continue pedants, and Homer and Virgil will be read and quoted, when Oſſian ſhall be totally forgot; this, without the gift of prophecy, I can foreſee; much could I enlarge upon this ſubject, but this muſt not be a long letter. Believe me Yours ſincerely, ANDREW ERSKINE. LETTER XVI. Edinburgh, Jan. II, 1762. Dear ERSKINE, INSTEAD of endeavouring to excuſe myſelf for neglecting ſo long to write, I ſhall preſent you with ſome original conjectures of my own, upon the way and manner in which you have been affected upon this preſent occaſion. And here I muſt premiſe, that in ſo doing I ſhall not follow the formal and orderly method of Biſhop Latimer, in his Sermons before King Edward the Sixth; but, on the contrary, ſhall adopt the eaſy, deſultory ſtile of one whom at preſent I ſhall not venture to name, but leave that to ſome future ingenious commentator on the epiſtolary correſpondence of the Hon. Andrew Erſkine, a James Boſwell, Eſq; Either you have been ſunk into a frigid ſtate of liſtleſs indifference, and gone whiſtling up and down the room upon a fife, and murmuring at intervals, while you took breath; let him do as he likes, let him pleaſe himſelf; yes, yes, let him ſoap his own beard. Or you have felt the moſt delicate pangs of afflicted ſenſibility, and uttered tender tales of woe in ſoftly-plaintive numbers. The ſavage bard returns no humourous line, No Tragic Ode now ſooths my ſoul to reſt; In vain I fly to Lady B—'s wine, Nor can a hearty ſupper make me bleſt. Or you have burned, raged, and fried like the thrice-amorous ſwain in the renowned Engliſh tranſlation of Voi Amante, and perhaps thundered forth all the Anathemas which Triſtram Shandy has borrowed from the church of Rome, and tranfferred to poor Obadiah. By this time, the ſtorm is blown over. This merry letter has made you grin, and ſhow every expreſſion of laughter. You are now in very good humour, and are in all human probability ſaying to yourſelf, My good friend Boſwell, is a moſt excellent correſpondent. It is true he is indolent, and diſſipated, as the celebrated Parſon Brown of Carliſle ſays, and he frequently is a little negligent: but when he does write, ye Gods! how he does write! In ſhort, to ſing him his own inimitable ſong, 'There is no better fellow alive.' I remain Yours ſincerely, JAMES BOSWELL. LETTER XVII. New-Tarbat, Jan. 20, 1762. Dear BOSWELL, IT is a kind of maxim, or rule in life, never to begin a thing without having an eye towards the concluſion; certainly this rule was never better obſerved than in your laſt letter, in which indeed I am apt to think you kept the concluſion rather too much in view, or perhaps you forgot the beginning altogether, which is not unfrequently the caſe with you; but you do theſe things with ſo little compunction, that I ſhall very ſoon ceaſe to forgive you, and anſwer you in the ſame manner. It is to be feared, that the diſſolution of our correſpondence will immediately follow, or dwindle into half a page of your text hand, which I always look'd upon as a deteſtable invention: if all this that I dread happens, we ſhall then ceaſe to be reckoned men of LETTERS. I find it recorded in the hiſtory of the eaſtern Roman Empire, that it was the cuſtom, whenever the inhabitants of Conſtantinople mutinied for want of bread, to whip all the bakers through the city, which always appeaſed the populace; in like manner, Boſwell, I having dreamt a few nights ago, that I had whipt you ſeverely, find my wrath and reſentment very much mollified; not ſo much indeed I confeſs, as if I had really had the pleaſure of actually correcting you, but however I am pretty well ſatisfied. You was quite miſtaken as to the manner I bore your ſilence; I only thought it was a little droll. Donaldſon tells me, that he wants thirty or forty pages to compleat his volume; pray don't let him inſert any nonſenſe to fill it up, but try John Home and John R—, who I hear is a very good poet; you may also hint the thing to Mr. N—, and to my brother Lord K—, who has ſome excellent Poems by him. Since I ſaw you, I received a letter from Mr. D—; it is filled with encomiums upon you: he ſays there is a great deal of humility in your vanity, a great deal of tallneſs in your ſhortneſs, and a great deal of whiteneſs in your black complexion. He ſays there's a great deal of poetry in your proſe, and a great deal of proſe in your poetry. He ſays, that as to your late publication, there is a great deal of Ode in your dedication. and a great deal of dedication in your Ode; it would amaze you to ſee how D— keeps up this ſee-ſaw, which you'll remark has prodigious wit in it. He ſays, there is a great deal of coat in your waiſtcoat, and a great deal of waiſtcoat in your coat; that there is a great deal of livelineſs in your ſtupidity, and a great deal of ſtupidity in your livelineſs; but to write you all he ſays, would require rather more fire in my grate, than there is at preſent; and my fingers would undoubtedly be numb'd, for there is a great deal of ſnow in this froſt, and a great deal of froſt in this ſnow: in ſhort, upon this occaſion he writes like a Chriſtian and a Poet, and a Phyſician and an Orator, and a Jew. Pray, Boſwell, tell me particularly in your firſt letter, how Fingal has been received; that book will ſerve me as a criterion, to diſcover the taſte of the preſent age. Boſwell, imitate me in your writing; obſerve how cloſely the lines are joined, how near the words are written to one another, and how ſmall the letters are form'd; I am praiſeworthy in this particular. Adieu. Yours ſincerely, ANDREW ERSKINE. LETTER XVIII. Edinburgh, Jan. 22, 1762. Dear ERSKINE, I Would not for all the books in Donaldſon's ſhop that our correſpondence ſhould ceaſe. Rather, much rather would I trot a horſe in the hotteſt day in ſummer, between Fort George and Aberdeen; rather, much rather would I hold the office of him who every returning noon plays up on the muſic-bells of the good town of Edinburgh; and rather, much rather would I be condemned to paſs the next ſeven years of my life as a ſpiritleſs ſtudent at the college of Glaſgow. Let our wit, my friend, continue to ſhine in a ſucceſſion of brilliant ſparkles. Let there be no more diſtance between each flaſh of vivacity, but what is neceſſary for giving time to obſerve its ſplendid radiance. I hope I ſhall never again approach ſo near the clod of clay. I hope the fire of my genius ſhall never again be ſo long in kindling, or ſo much covered up with the droſs of ſtupidity. I have deſired Donaldſon to cauſe his correſpondent at London, to ſend a copy of the firſt volume of his collection to each of the Reviews, that is to ſay, to Hamilton and Griffiths, with whoſe names the ſlate-blue covers of theſe awful oracles of criticiſm are inſcribed. Donaldſon has yet about thirty-ſix pages of the ſecond Volume to print. I have given him two hundred lines more. He is a loadſtone of prodigious power, and attracts all my poetic needles. The Volume will be out next week; the different pieces of which it is compoſed are, to be ſure, not all of equal merit. But is not that the caſe in every miſcellaneous collection, even in that excellent one publiſhed by Mr. Dodſley? The truth is, that a Volume printed in a ſmall type exhauſts an infinite quantity of copy (to talk technically) ſo that we muſt not be over-nice in our choice, nor think every man in our ranks below ſize, who does not come up to the elevated ſtandard of Captain Andrew. D—'s encomiums have rendered my humility ſtill prouder; they are indeed ſuperb, and worthy of an oppoſer of the German war. I ſuppoſe they have not loſt a bit of beef by their long journey, and I ſhould imagine that the Highland air has agreed well with them, and that they have agreed well with the Highland air. They occaſioned much laughter in my heart, and much heart in my laughter. They have at laſt given over marrying me; ſo that I am going about like a horſe wanting a halter, ready to be bridled and ſaddled by the firſt perſon who is ſo very fortunate as to lay hold of me. A ſimile not to be found in any author ancient or modern. We had a ſplendid ball at the Abbey of Holyrood-houſe, on the Queen's birth-day, given by Colonel Græme. I exhibited my exiſtence in a minuet, and as I was dreſt in a full chocolate ſuit, and wore my moſt ſolemn countenance, I looked as you uſed to tell me, like the fifth act of a deep Tragedy. Lord K— danced with Miſs C—, by the fire of whoſe eyes, his melodious lordſhip's heart is at preſent in a ſtate of combuſtion. Such is the declaration which he makes in loud whiſpers many a time and oft. Our friend H— S— is in town this winter. He is a moſt ſurpriſing old fellow. I am told he is ſome years paſt ſixty; and yet he has all the vivacity and frolic, and whim of the ſprightlieſt youth. He continues to rank all mankind under the general denomination of Gilbert. He patroles the ſtreets at midnight as much as ever, and beats with as much vigour the town-guard drum; nor is his affection for the company of blind ſidlers, in the leaſt abated. Fingal has been very warmly received at London. A ſecond edition of it is juſt now come out. The public taſte you will allow is good at preſent: long may it laſt. Long may the voice of the venerable bard be heard with unaffected pleaſure. I ſee your regiment is ordered for England. I hope you will be allowed to recruit, or have leave of abſence, as it would be very ſevere upon you to be moved from your preſent situation. If you will number the lines in our pages, you will find I have twenty-three, whereas you have only eighteen. I incloſe you the ſorrowful lamentation of a ſtabler, called Hutchiſon, who, on Wedneſday laſt was whipt thro' this town, for forcing away a young man as a recruit, and beating him unmercifully. The ſaid lamentation you will find is in verſe; and altho' ſold for a ſingle penny, is a work of remarkable merit. The exordium is a paſſionate addreſs to Captains all; amongſt whom, who can more properly be reckoned than Captain Andrew? I remain your ſincere friend, JAMES BOSWELL. LETTER XIX. Morpeth, Feb. 7, 1762. Dear BOSWELL, AND lo I am at Morpeth, after meeting with every accident that could poſſibly happen to a man in a poſt-chaiſe, overturns, breaking of ſprings, dropping of wheels, and ſticking in roads, tho' with four horſes. We imagine we are to remain in this town ſome time. Upon looking over my poems, in the ſecond volume, I find ſeveral errors; I'm afraid you have not corrected the preſs ſo violently as you boaſted. Perhaps, Boſwell, this will be the worſt and the ſhorteſt letter I ever wrote to you; I'm writing in an inn, and half a dozen people in the room; but when I'm ſettled in lodgings of my own, expect epiſtles in the uſual ſtile. I think you two or three times have treated me as I treat you now, ſo I remain your moſt humble ſervant, And affectionate friend, ANDREW ERSKINE. P.S. Never was there ſuch a tame ſubjected performance as this. LETTER XX. Morpeth, Feb. 8, 1762. Dear BOSWELL, I BEG you will get a copy of the ſecond volume of the Poems, and ſend me it by the man who brings you this; let it be a neat one, well-- bound: pray tell me what people ſay of the book. Your currant-jelly is good, has a delicious flavour, and taſtes much of the fruit, as my aunts ſay. I did not make out all the names in your Race-- Ballad cleverly. I am ſtill in the way I was, when I wrote you laſt, in a public-houſe, and peſtered with noiſe: I have not above ſix ideas at preſent, and none of them fit for a letter. Dear Boſwell, farewell! pray for my recovery from this lethargy of ſpirits and ſenſe which has ſeiz'd me. Yours, &c. ANDREW ERSKINE. LETTER XXI. Edinburgh, Feb. 16, 1762. Dear ERSKINE, TO ſee your brother — at Morpeth, will, I dare ſay, ſurpriſe you as much as it did me, to find him here. In ſhort, nothing will ſerve him but a fight of the Britiſh capital, although he is already much better acquainted with it than either you or I. What has at preſent inſtigated him I own I am puzzled to diſcover: but I ſolemnly and merrily declare, that I never yet ſaw any body ſo exceſſively enamoured of London. The effects of this violent paſſion are deeply impreſt upon every feature in his countenance, his noſe not excepted, which is abſolutely moſt ſurpriſing. His body is toſſed and ſhaken, like one afflicted with the hot fit of an ague, or the ſevereſt paroxyſms of convulſion. Then as to his mind, it is altogether diſtempered. He is perpetually declaiming on the magnificence, the liberty, and the pleaſure, which reigns in the imperial Britiſh metropolis. He ſwears, that in that glorious place alone we can enioy life. He ſays, there is no breathing beyond St. James's; and he affirms, that the air of that delicious ſpot is celeſtial. He ſays, there is no wit except at the Bedford; no military genius but at George's; no wine but at the Star and Garter; no turbot except at the Tilt-Yard. He aſſerts, that there are no cloaths made beyond the liberties of Weſtminſter; and he firmly holds Cheapſide to be the ſole mart of ſtockings. It would fill up two-thirds of a quarto volume to enumerate the various extravagant exclamations into which he breaks out. He declares, that for his own part, he will never go to church except to St. Paul's, nor to a lady's private lodgings, except in the neighbourhood of Soho-- ſquare. I beg it of you, my friend, be very attentive to him; obſerve his appearance and behaviour with the greateſt accuracy, ſo that between us we may be able to have a pretty juſt notion of this wonderful affair, and may faithfully draw up his caſe to be read before the Royal Society, and tranſmitted to poſterity in theſe curious annals the Philoſophical Tranſactions I have ſent you the ſecond volume, which Donaldſon begs leave to preſent you with, in conſideration of your being one of thoſe who bear the brunt of the day. He has alſo done me the ſame honour. No plain ſhop copy; no, no, elegantly bound and gilt. Adieu, yours ſincerely, JAMES BOSWELL. LETTER XXII. Morpeth, March 2, 1762. OH Boſwell! if you found yourſelf in the middle of the Firth of Forth, and the ſea faſt up-ſpringing through every leak, after the ſkipper had remonſtrated, in the moſt warm manner, againſt proceeding to croſs the water; or if, like me, you found yourſelf in the midſt of a ſentence, without knowing how to end it, you could not feel more pain than I do at this inſtant: in ſhort, I have had a very excellent letter of yours in my left waiſtcoat-pocket this fortnight; is that letter anſwered? you ſay: Oh! let the reply to this queſtion be buried in the bottom of the Red Sea, where I hope no future army will ever diſturb it; or let it be inſerted in the third volume of Donaldſon's Collection, where it will never be found, as the book will never be opened. What would I not do to gain your pardon? I would even ſwear that black was white; that's to ſay, I would praiſe the fairneſs of your complexion. By that ſmile which irradiates your countenance, like a gleam of the moon, through the black clouds of the ſouth by the melting of that pomatum which gives your hair a gloſs, like the firſt beaming of a new ſuit of regimentals on an aſſembly night, when twenty fidlers ſweat; by the grandeur of your pinchbeck buckles; by the ſolemnity of your ſmall noſe; by the blue expended in waſhing your ſhirts; by the rotundity of your Bath great coat; by the well-poliſh'd key of your portmanteau; by the tag of your ſhoe; by the tongue of your buckle; by your taylor's bill; by the laſt kiſs of Miſs C———; by the firſt guinea you ever had in your poſſeſſion; and chiefly by all the nonſenſe you have juſt read, let the kneeling Captain (who is at preſent ſitting on his backſide) find favour in your eyes, and then, my Ode to Good-- nature ſhall be inſcribed to you, while your Ode to Ingratitude (which, I ſuppoſe, is finiſhed) ſhall be burnt. I was, as you imagine, very much ſurpriſed to ſee A— here; I noted him, according to your direction, with a critical eye; like a gentleman in a line which you may remember I made on the Caſtlehill, he ſeemed, to have taken the Tower of London for his bride; every feature, and every limb was changed wonderfully; his noſe reſembled Weſtminſter-Bridge; his cheeks were like Bloomsbury-Square; his high forehead like Conſtitution-Hill; his chin like China-Row; his tongue and his teeth looked like Almack's in Pall-- Mall; his lips like the Shakeſpeare's Head; his fiſts like Hockley-in-the-Hole; his ears like the Opera-Houſe; his eyes like a harlequin entertainment; his ſtomach was like Craven-ſtreet; his cheſt like the trunk-maker's in the corner of St Paul's Church-yard; the calf of his leg like Leadenhall-market; his pulſe like the Green-market in Covent-Garden; his neck like Tyburn; and his gait like Newgate; his navel like Fleet-ſtreet, and his lungs and his bladder were like Blowbladder-ſtreet: every thing about him ſeemed metamorphoſed; he had moulded his hat into the form of the Manſion-Houſe; ſome guineas which he had, looked like the 'Change; but it would be tedious to relate every particular; however, I muſt not let his converſation be forgot, tho' it was much of a piece with that you ſo humourouſly relate: he ſwore to me he never ſaw a rag fit for a gentleman to wear, but in Rag-fair; he ſaid there was no ſcolding but at Billingſgate; and he avow'd there were no bad poets but in Grub-ſtreet; I could not ſtand that, I bid him call to remembrance an acquaintance of his who lived in the Parliament-Cloſe, and alſo a relation of his who formerly reſided in Campbell's Land; he ſmiled, and confeſſed theſe were really very bad poets, but that he was not convinced for all that; upon this, to put the matter out of all diſpute, I offered to lend him the firſt and ſecond volumes of Donaldſon's Collection. At that very moment the hoſtler informed him the chaiſe was ready, and he ſtill remains ignorant where the worſt poets in the world are. Tell me how our ſecond volume is received; I was much pleaſed with N—'s lines; how did he get them inſerted? I intend writing a criticiſm upon the volume, and upon your writings in particular, ſo tremble. Dear Boſwell, farewel, Yours moſt affectionately, ANDREW ERSKINE. P.S. I hope you'll write to me ſoon. LETTER XXIII. Edinburgh, March 9, 1762. Dear ERSKINE, CAN a man walk up the Cowgate after a heavy rain without dirtying his ſhoes? I might have ſaid the ſoles of his ſhoes: — and, indeed, to put the matter beyond diſpute, I would yet have you to underſtand me ſo; for although nothing is ſo common as to uſe a part for the whole; yet if you ſhould be out of humour with a bad dinner, a bad lodging, an ill-dreſt ſhirt, or an ill-printed book, you might be diſpoſed to cavil, and object, that in critical preciſion of language, (ſuppoſing a man to walk ſlow) he could not be ſaid to have dirtied his ſhoes, no more than a boarding-ſchool girl, who has cut her finger in paring an apple, could be ſaid to have mangled her carcaſs. But to proceed; can a man make a pilgrimage to the Holy Land from the Iſland of Great Britain, without the aid of navigation? Can a man walk in the Mall at noon, carrying his breeches upon an enormous long pole, without being laughed at? Can a man of acknowledged ignorance and ſtupidity, write a tragedy ſuperior to Hamlet? or a genteel comedy, ſuperior to the Careleſs Husband? I need not wait for an anſwer. No word but no, will do: it is ſelf-evident. No more, my friend, can he who is loſt in diſſipation, write a letter. I am at preſent ſo circumſtanced; accept this ſhort line in anſwer to your laſt, and write very ſoon to Your affectionate Friend, JAMES BOSWELL. LETTER XXIV. New-Tarbat, April 15, 1762. Dear BOSWELL, THE ſun which roſe on Wedneſday laſt, with his firſt beams beheld you ſet out for Auchinleck, but he did not ſee me arrive in Edinburgh; however, he was good-natured enough to lend a little light to the moon, by the help of which, about twelve at night I landed at Peter Ramſay's: the thoughts of ſeeing you next day kept up my ſpririts, during a ſtage of ſeventeen miles. William he ſnored; I called upon you, after being refreſhed with ſoft ſlumbers, in which my guardian genius did not inform me of your abſence: but oh! when the maid told me you was gone, what were my emotions! ſhe beholding me affected in a moſt ſupreme degree, tried to adminiſter comfort to me, and plainly told me, that you would be very ſorry you had miſſed me, this delivered in an elegant manner, ſooth'd me prodigiouſly. I began writing this at Graham's in Glaſgow, but was interrupted by a jowl of Salmon; every thing there reminded me of you. I was in the ſame room you and I were in, you ſeemed placed before me, your face beamed a black ray upon me. I am now at New-Tarbat, once more returned to the ſcenes of calm retirement, and placid meditation, as Mr. Samuel Johnſon ſays in the Idler. We all wiſh to have you here, and we all agree in thinking, that there is nothing to hinder you to come. I muſt beg your pardon ſeriouſly for not writing to you, but I was really in ſuch bad ſpirits, and ſuch ill temper, at that curſed place Morpeth, that it was impoſſible; but I aſſure you, I will make up terribly. I am recruiting again; I believe our regiment won't go abroad this ſummer. I was glad to ſee by the London news-papers, that Mr. Robert Dodſley had at laſt publiſhed your Cub: Mr. H— ſhewed me a very ſevere Epigram that ſomebody in London had written upon it. You know it is natural to take a lick at a Cub. Pray come to us. I cannot all at once come into the way of letter-writing again, ſo I muſt conclude, Dear Boſwell, Your affectionate friend, ANDREW ERSKINE. LETTER XXV. Auchinleck, April 22, 1762. Dear ERSKINE, THIS is a ſtrange world that we live in. Things turn out in a very odd manner. Every day produces ſomething more wonderful than another. Earthquakes, murders, conflagrations, inundations, jubilees, operas, marriages, and peſtilence, unite to make mortal men gape and ſtare. But your laſt letter and mine being wrote on the ſame day, aſtoniſhes me ſtill more than all theſe things put together. This is the moſt unaccountable rhodomontade that I ever uttered. I am really dull at preſent, and my affectation to be clever, is exceedingly aukward. My manner reſembles that of a footman who has got an enſign's commiſſion, or a kept miſtreſs who is made a wife. I have not at any time been more inſipid, more muddy, and more ſtanding-water like than I am juſt now. The country is my averſion. It renders me quite torpid. Were you here juſt now, you would behold your vivacious friend a moſt ſtupid exhibition. It is very ſurpriſing that the country ſhould affect me ſo; whether it be that the ſcenes to be met with there, fall infinitely ſhort of my ideas of paſtoral ſimplicity; or that I have acquired ſo ſtrong a reliſh for the variety and hurry of a town life, as to languiſh in the ſtillneſs of retirement; or that the atmoſphere is too moiſt and heavy, I ſhall not determine. I have now pretty good hopes of getting ſoon into the guards, that gay ſcene of life of which I have been ſo long and ſo violently enamoured, Surely this will cauſe you to rejoice. I have lately had the pleaſure and the pride of receiving a moſt brilliant epiſtle from Lady B—. It excells Captain Andrew's letters by many degrees. I have picked as many diamonds out of it, as to make me a compleat ſet of buckles; I have turned ſo much of it into brocade waiſtcoats, and ſo much into a very rich ſuit of embroidered horſe-furniture. I know how unequal I am to the taſk of anſwering it; nevertheleſs preſent her Ladyſhip with the incloſed. It may amuſe her a little. It is better to have two ſhillings in the pound, than nothing at all. I was really ſhocked at the lethargy of our correſpondence. Let it now be renovated with increaſe of ſpirit, ſo that I may not only ſubſcribe myſelf your ſincere friend, but your witty companion, JAMES BOSWELL. LETTER XXVI. New-Tarbat, May 1, 1762. WELL then, my friend, you leave the bar, Reſolv'd on drums, on dreſs, and war, While fancy paints in livelieſt hues, Swords, ſaſhes, ſhoulder-knots, reviews, You quit the ſtudy of the laws, And ſhew a blade in Britain's cauſe, Of length to throw into a trance, The frighten'd kings of Spain and France! A hat of fierceſt cock is ſought, And your cockade's already bought, While on your coat there beams a lace, That might a captain-general grace! For me, who never ſhow admir'd, Or very long ago was tir'd, I can with face unmov'd behold, A ſcarlet ſuit with glittering gold; And tho' a ſon of war and ſtrife, Deteſt the liſtleſs languid life; Then coolly, Sir, I ſay repent, And in deriſion hold a tent; Leave not the ſweet poetic band, To ſcold recruits, and pore on Bland, Our military books won't charm ye, Not even th' enchanting liſt o'th' army. Truſt me, 'twill be a fooliſh ſight, To ſee you facing to the right; And then, of all your ſenſe bereft, Returning back unto the left; Alas! what tranſport can you feel, In turning round on either heel? Much ſooner would I chuſe indeed, To ſee you ſtanding on your head; Or with your breeches off to rub, Foul cloaths, and dance within a tub, Like Scottiſh laſſes on the green, When every naked limb is ſeen, And all without a bluſh reveal'd, By modeſt maids with care conceal'd. Beſides, my dear Boſwell, we find in all hiſtory ancient and modern, lawyers are very apt to run away. Demoſthenes the Greek, writer to the ſignet, who managed the great ſuit againſt Philip of Macedon, fairly ſcoured off, I think, at the battle of Cheronea; and Cicero the Roman advocate is univerſally accuſed of cowardice. I am not indeed ignorant that ſome of your anceſtors behaved well at Flowden; but as they loſt the day, I think the omen but bad, and as they were killed, I think that makes the omen ſtill worſe; however, perhaps you don't think ſo, and I allow that argument to be very convincing, and rather more concluſive, than if you had ſaid, "I don't "know that." You complain much of the country, and you aſſign various reaſons for diſliking it among others, you imagine the atmoſphere too moiſt and heavy; I agree with you in that opinion, all the black clouds in the ſky are continually preſſing upon you, for as the proverb ſays, Like draws to like. Believe me, I have ſometimes taken you at a diſtance, for the pillar of ſmoke which uſed to accompany the Iſraelites out of Egypt; it would be impoſſible to tell how many things I have taken you for at different times; ſometimes I have taken you for the witches cauldron in Macbeth; this reſemblance was in ſome degree warranted by your figure and ſhape; ſometimes for an enormous ink-- bottle; ſometimes for a funeral proceſſion; now and then for a chimney ſweeper, and not unfrequently for a black-pudding. For my part, Boſwell, I muſt confeſs I am fond of the country to a degree; things there are not ſo artificially diſguiſed as in towns, real ſentiments are diſcovered, and the paſſions play naturally and without reſtraint. As for example, it was only in the country, I could have found out Lady J—'s particular attachment, to the tune of Appie Mac-- Nab; in the town, no doubt, ſhe would have pretended a great liking for Voi Amante; in the town, I never would have ſeen Lady B— go out armed for fear of the Turkey-cock, which is her daily practice here, and leaves room for numberleſs reflections; ſhe cannot eat Turkeys when roaſted or boiled; and ſhe dreads them when alive ſo much, that ſhe diſplays every forenoon a cudgel to them, fitted by its ſize to ſtrike terror into a bull, or a butting cow. What can her keeping of Turkeys be owing to? Aſſuredly to vanity, which is of ſuch an inſinuating nature, that we are apt very often to meet it where we leaſt expect it; I have ſeen it in an old ſhoe, in a dirty ſhirt, in a long noſe, a crooked leg, a red face, and you will ſcarcely credit me when I tell you, that I once met with it in a chamber-pot made of the coarſeſt delft. So much it ſeemed good for me to ſay upon the ſubject of vanity, ſupporting by the moſt irrefragable arguments, the doctrine of Solomon. We had a viſit from Mr. C— of S— here this morning; he came in a chaiſe drawn by four bay horſes; I am certain of the number, you may draw what inference you pleaſe from this intelligence, I give you only a ſimple narration of the fact. I am ſurpriſed you ſay nothing of my propoſal of your coming here, and ſtill more, that you ſay nothing of your Cub. Why don't you ſend me a copy? We were all ſo much entertained with your letter to Lady B—, that I was really ſeized with a qualm of envy; we regard it as one of thoſe efforts of genius, which are only produced by a fine flow of ſpirits, a beautiful day, and a good pen. I pray you, Boſwell, note well this ſheet of paper, its ſize is magnificent: If Lady B— was poſſeſſed of ſuch an extent of plain ground, ſhe would undoubtedly throw it into a lawn, and plant it with clumps of trees, ſhe would vary it with fiſh-ponds, and render it rural with flocks; here, where I am writing, might a cow feed; here might be an arbour; here, perhaps, might you recline at full length; by the edge of this ſtream might the Captain walk, and in this corner, might Lady B— give orders to her ſhepherds. I am drawn in the moſt irreſiſtible manner to conclude, by the external impulſe of the cloth's being laid, and by the internal impulſe of being hungry. Believe me, Boſwell, to be in the moſt unconſcionable manner, your affectionate friend, ANDREW ERSKINE. P.S. I ſend you franks, which return filled with the utmoſt wit and humour. LETTER XXVII. Auchinleck, May 4, 1762. O Captain! wherefore art thou captain? Why rather not the clerk of Knapton, Who on the hill of Ludgate dwells, And books in every language ſells? That placid bus'neſs would agree With ſuch a quiet man as thee, And ſuit your genius better far, Than prancing as a ſon of war: Methinks I ſee you in the ſhop, Quite a new man from tail to top; Your ſcarlet cloaths are chang'd to grey, On which no lace outſhines the day; No bold lapel now bids defiance To men of military ſcience; No ſword hangs dangling on your thigh, To check the giver of a lie; Alas! I now no more can view Your thund'ring longitude of queue, A vile obdurate bob appears, And hides great Andrews lofty ears! Mark how aſtoniſhing the change! Was ever any thing ſo ſtrange? Is this, ye gods! the potent blade, Once dignify'd with a cockade? Is this the heroe who has been Admir'd as far as Aberdeen? Who in the North, the other year, Beſide the fort at Arderſier, In Boſwell's penetrating ſight, Has wheel'd about from left to right, When blithe Bob M—'s rouſing roar Startled the Petitonian corps? Indeed, my friend, I'm of opinion, You are not Mars's favourite minion; For cutting throats I'm ſure you hate, With all the toils on camps that wait. The King of Pruſſia, if he chuſes, May court Bellona with the muſes; But I could bet a cod in Lent, With the nine girls you are content, And with your knitted brows declare, You think Bellona a ſhe-bear, That will with horrid jaws devour Poor wretched mortals by the hour. I think too, honeſt Captain Andrew, — Sure as Sir Godfrey a good hand drew, That you are not a perfect ſlave To the amuſements of the brave; I mean our modern Britiſh Hectors, Of dreſs and faſhion the directors; I never ſaw you live ſo gay, As to exceed three times your pay; I never ſaw your cloaths ſo fine, As to prevent your drinking wine; No tradeſman rowls his gloomy eye, And heaves for bills unpaid, a ſigh; No female labourer in the tub E'er damns you for a foppiſh ſcrub. Altho' you are of ſtature tall, I never ſaw you grace a ball: For you, Edina's ladies might Ne'er have a dear aſſembly night; Or, as in dancing-ſchools they do, Be doom'd to trip it two and two; And bite their lips, and pinch their ſtays, And look at once five different ways. Thus, taking you in every light, Pray is not my conjecture right? Pray, Erſkine, do you ever find The warlike fury ſtir your mind? I'm ſure, that your external air, Has nothing in it militaire. O what a different man am I! Who hold my head prodigious high, Who move about with haughty ſtride, And Port beſeeming martial pride; Whoſe viſage looks like dire Macbeth, Portending horror, wounds, and death! Weſt Digges, fair Scotland's Roſcius deem'd, Ev'n by your critic ſelf eſteem'd, Ne'er ſhow'd a more intrepid face, Ev'n when he fill'd fierce Pierre's place! For military operation I have a wondrous inclination; Ev'n when a boy, with chearful glee, The red-coats march I uſed to ſee; With joy beheld the corporals drill, The men upon the the Caſtle-hill; And at the ſound of drum and fife, Felt an unuſual flow of life. Beſides, my honeſt friend, you know I am a little of a beau. I'm ſure, my friend need not be told, That Boſwell's hat was edg'd with gold; And that a ſhining bit of lace, My browniſh-colour'd ſuit did grace; And that mankind my hair might ſee, Powder'd at leaſt two days in three. My pinchbeck buckles are admir'd By all who are with taſte inſpir'd. Trophies of Gallic pride appear, The crown to every Frenchman dear, And the enchanting fleur de lys, The flower of flowers you muſt agree; While for variety's ſweet ſake, And witty Charles's tale to wake, The curious artiſt interweaves A twiſted bunch of oaken leaves. Tell me, dear Erſkine, ſhould not I My favourite path of fortune try? Our life, my friend, is very ſhort, A little while is all we've for't; And he is bleſt who can beguile, With what he likes, that little while. My fondneſs for the guards muſt appear very ſtrange to you, who have a rooted antipathy at the glare of ſcarlet. But I muſt inform you, that there is a city called London, for which I have as violent an affection, as the moſt romantic lover ever had for his miſtreſs. There a man may indeed ſoap his own beard, and enjoy whatever is to be had in this tranſitory ſtate of things. Every agreeable whim may be freely indulged without cenſure. I hope, however, you will not impute my living in England, to the ſame cauſe for which Hamlet was adviſed to go there; becauſe the people were all as mad as himſelf. I long much for another of our long converſations on a fine forenoon, after breakfaſt, while the ſun ſheds light and gladneſs around us. Believe me, Yours ſincerely, JAMES BOSWELL. LETTER XXVIII. Auchinleck, May 8, 1762. Dear ERSKINE, I SHOULD have wondered very much, had I been told of Lady J—'s particular attachment to the tune of Appie Mac-nab, two months ago: but I muſt inform you, that a few days before I left Edinburgh, having occaſion to look into the advocates library, I there chanced to turn up an old Roman ſong-book, and, to my great ſurprize, met with the individual air of Appie Mac-nab, which I diſcovered to be part of an original Patrician cantata on the daughter of the famous Appius, ſet for the Tibiæ ſiniſtræ. In a manuſcript marginal note, it is ſaid to have been compoſed by Tigellius the famous muſician, whoſe death and character Horace takes occaſion to entertain and inſtruct us with, in the ſecond ſatire of his firſt Book. You ſee, therefore, that lady J—'s taſte for Italian muſic, cannot be called in queſtion; and indeed, I think her liking Appie Mac-nab, is a very ſtrong proof of it, as ſhe certainly could not know its original. The Roman ſong-book, a very great curioſity, was brought from Rome ſome hundred years ago, by father Macdonald, an old popiſh prieſt, who left it as a legacy to the Duke of Gordon. It is probable, that ſome muſician in the North of Scotland, has tranſcribed the Appian cantata from it, and giving its principal air a Scottiſh turn, and adapting proper words to it, has produced the vulgar ballad of Appie Mac-nab. Lady B—'s terror for the Turkey-cock, diverts me extremely. Did they but come to an engagement, how noble muſt it be! The idea makes a ſtrong impreſſion on my fancy. I ſhall certainly write ſomething aſtoniſhing upon it. This charming weather has reconciled me to the country. It enlivens me exceedingly. I am chearful and happy. I have been wandering by myſelf, all this forenoon, through the ſweeteſt place in the world. The ſhun-ſhine is mild, the breeze is gentle, my mind is peaceful. I am indulging the moſt agreeable reveries imaginable. I am thinking of the brilliant ſcenes of happineſs, which I ſhall enjoy as an officer of the guards. How I ſhall be acquainted with all the grandeur of a court, and all the elegance of dreſs and diverſions; become a favourite of miniſters of ſtate, and the adoration of ladies of quality, beauty, and fortune! How many parties of pleaſure ſhall I have in town! How many fine jaunts to the noble ſeats of dukes, lords, and members of parliament in the country! I am thinking of the perfect knowledge which I ſhall acquire of men and manners, of the intimacies which I ſhall have the honour to form with the learned and ingenious in every ſcience, and of the many amuſing literary anecdotes which I ſhall pick up. I am thinking of making the tour of Europe, and feaſting on the delicious proſpects of Italy and France; of feeling all the tranſports of a bard at Rome, and writing noble poems on the banks of the Tiber. I am thinking of the diſtinguiſhed honours which I ſhall receive at every foreign court, and of what infinite ſervice I ſhall be to all my countrymen upon their travels. I am thinking of returning to England, of getting into the houſe of commons, of ſpeaking ſtill better than Mr. Pitt, and of being made principal ſecretary of ſtate. I am thinking of having a regiment of guards, and of making a glorious ſtand againſt an invaſion by the Spaniards. I am thinking how I ſhall marry a lady of the higheſt diſtinction, with a fortune of a hundred thouſand pounds. I am thinking of my flouriſhing family of children; how my ſons ſhall be men of ſenſe and ſpirit, and my daughters women of beauty, and every amiable perfection. I am thinking of the prodigious reſpect which I ſhall receive, of the ſplendid books which will be dedicated to me, and the ſtatues which will be erected to my immortal honour. I am thinking that my mind is too delicate, and my feelings too fine for the rough buſtle of life; I am therefore thinking that I ſhall ſteal ſilently and unperceived through the world; that I ſhall paſs the winter in London, much in the ſame way that the Spectator deſcribes himſelf to have done; and in ſummer, ſhall live ſometimes here at home; ſometimes in ſuch a pleaſing retirement as Mrs. Row beautifully paints in her letters moral and entertaining. I like that book much. I read it when I was very young, and I am perſuaded, that it contributed to improve my tender imagination. I am thinking that I ſhall feel my frame too delicate for the Britiſh Climate. I am thinking that I ſhall go and live in one of the moſt pleaſant provincial towns in the South of France, where I ſhall be bleſt with conſtant felicity. This is a ſcheme to which I could give vaſt praiſe, were I near the beginning of my letter; but as that is very far from being the caſe, I muſt reſerve it for a future epiſtle. I am glad to find you are ſo anxious to hear about the Cub at Newmarket. Love me, love my Cub. However, I can tell you nothing about him. Dodſley has not yet ſent me a copy. Derrick, a London author, whom you have heard me mention, has ſent me his verſifications of the battle of Lora, and ſome of the Erſe fragments. If you want to ſee them, let me have ſome franks. I ſhall be at Dumfries ſoon, where I hope to ſee my friend Johnſton. We will talk much of old Scotch hiſtory, and the memory of former years will warm our hearts. We will alſo talk of Captain Andrew, with whom we have paſt many a pleaſant hour. Johnſton is a very worthy fellow: I may ſafely ſay ſo; for I have lived in intimacy with him, more years than the Egyptian famine laſted. And now, O moſt renowned of Captains! having fairly written myſelf out of pen, ink, and paper, I conclude with my uſual epithet, of Your affectionate friend, JAMES BOSWELL. LETTER XXIX. New-Tarbat, May 13, 1762, Dear BOSWELL, YOUR firſt Epiſtle being of a length which modern letters ſeldom attain to, ſurpriſed me very much; but at the ſight of your ſecond, conſiſting of ſuch an exuberant number of ſheets, I was no leſs amazed than if I had wakened at three o'clock in the morning, and found myſelf faſt claſped in the arms of the empreſs Queen; or if I had found myſelf at the mouth of the river Nile, half eaten by a crocodile; or if I had found myſelf aſcending the fatal ladder in the Graſs-market at Edinburgh, and Mr. Alexander Donaldſon the hangman. To confeſs a truth, I imagine your funds for letter-writing are quite inexhauſtible; and that the fire of your fancy, like the coal at Newcaſtle, will never be burnt out; indeed, I look upon you in the light of an old ſtocking, in which we have no ſooner mended one hole, than out ſtarts another; or I think you are like a fertile woman, who is hardly delivered of one child, before ſlap ſhe is five months gone with a ſecond. I need not tell you your letters are entertaining; I might as well acquaint King George the Third, that he is ſovereign of Great Britain, or gravely diſcloſe to my ſervant, that his name is William. It is ſuperfluous to inform people of what it is impoſſible they ſhould not know. You think you have a knack of ſtory-telling, but there you muſt yield to me, if you hearken attentively to what I am about to diſcloſe, you will be convinced; it is a tale, my dear Boſwell, which whether we conſider the turnings and windings of fortune, or the ſadneſs of the cataſtrophe, is delightful and improving. — You demand of me, Sir, a faithful recital of the events which have diſtinguiſhed my life. Though the remembrance of every misfortune which can depreſs human nature, muſt be painful; yet the commands of ſuch a revered friend as James Boſwell muſt be obeyed; and Oh, Sir! if you find any of my actions blameable, impute them to deſtiny, and if you find any of them commendable, impute them to my good ſenſe. I am about fifty years of age, grief makes me look as if I was fourſcore; thirty years ago I was a great deal younger; and about twenty years before that, I was juſt born; as I find nothing remarkable in my life, before before that event, I ſhall date my hiſtory from that period; ſome omens happened at my birth: Mr. Oman at Leith was married at that time; this was thought very portentous; the very day my mother was brought to bed of me, the cat was delivered of three kittens; but the world was ſoon bereaved of them by death, and I had not the pleaſure of paſſing my infancy with ſuch amiable companions; this was my firſt misfortune, and no ſubſequent one ever touched me more nearly; delightful innocents! methinks, I ſtill ſee them playing with their tails, and galloping after corks; with what a becoming gravity did they waſh their faces! how melodious was their purring! from them I derived any little taſte I have for muſic; I compoſeded an Ode upon their death; as it was my firſt attempt in poetry, I write it for your peruſal; you will perceive the marks of genius in the firſt production of MY TENDER IMAGINATION; and you will ſhed a tear of applauſe and ſorrow, on the remains of thoſe animals, ſo dear to the premature years of your mourning and lamenting friend. ODE ON THE DEATH OF THREE KITTENS. STROPHE. ATTEND, ye watchful cats, Attend the ever lamentable ſtrain; For cruel death, moſt kind to rats, Has kill'd the ſweeteſt of the kitten-train. ANSTROPHE. How pleas'd did I ſurvey, Your beauteous whiſkers as they daily grew, I mark'd your eyes that beam'd ſo grey, But little thought that nine lives were too few. EPODE. It was delight to ſee My lovely kittens three, When after corks through all the room they flew, When oft in gameſome guiſe they did their tails purſue. When thro' the houſe, You hardly, hardly, heard a mouſe; And every rat lay ſnug and ſtill, And quiet as a thief in mill; But curſed death has with a blow, Laid all my hopes low, low, low, low: Had that foul fiend the leaſt compaſſion known; ſhould not now lament my beauteous kittens gone. You have often wondered what made me ſuch a miſerable ſpectacle; grief for the death of my kittens, has wrought the moſt wonderful effects upon me; grief has drawn my teeth, pulled out my hair, hollowed my eyes, bent my back, crooked my legs, and marked my face with the ſmall-pox; but I give over this ſubject, ſeeing it will have too great a hold of your tender imagination: I find myſelf too much agitated with melancholy, to proceed any longer in my life to-day; the weather alſo is extremely bad, and a thouſand mournful ideas ruſh into my mind; I am totally overpowered with them; I will now diſburthen myſelf to you, and ſet down each ſad thought as it occurs. I am thinking how I will never get a clean ſhirt to my back; how my coat will always be out at the elbows; and how I never will get my breeches to ſtay up. I am thinking how I will be married to a ſhrew of a wife, who will beat me every evening and morning, and ſometimes in the middle of the day, and who will throw a chamber-pot at my head. I am thinking what a damn'd whore ſhe will be, and how my children will be moſt of them hanged, and whipt through towns, and burnt in the hand. I am thinking of what execrable poems I will write; and how I will be thrown into priſon for debt; and how I will never get out again; and how nobody will pity me. I am thinking how hungry I will be; and how little I will get to eat; and how I'll long for a piece of roaſt-beef; and how they'll bring me a rotten turnip. And I am thinking how I will take a conſumption, and waſte away inch by inch; and how I'll grow very fat and unwieldy, and won't be able to ſtir out of my chair. And I am thinking how I'll be roaſted by the Portugueſe inquiſition; and how I'll be impaled by the Turks; and how I'll be eaten by Cannibals; and how I'll be drowned on a voyage to the Eaſt-Indies; and how I'll be robbed and murdered by a highwayman; and how I'll loſe my ſenſes; and how very mad I'll be; and how my body will be thrown out to dogs to devour; and how I'll be hanged, drawn, and quartered; and how my friend Boſwell will neglect me; and how I'll be deſpiſed by the whole world; and how I will meet with ten thouſand misfortunes worſe than the loſs of my kittens. Thus have I, in a brief manner, related a few of the calamities which, in the preſent diſpoſition of my mind, appear ſo dreadful; I could have enlarged the catalogue, but your heart is too ſuſceptible of pity, and I will not ſhock you altogether. You will doubtleſs remark the great inequality of our fortunes. In your laſt letter, you was the happieſt man I was ever acquainted with; I wiſh it may laſt, and that your children may have as much merit as you imagine; I only hope you won't plan a marriage with any of mine, their diſpoſitions will be ſo unlike, that it muſt prove unhappy. Pray ſend me Derrick's verſifications, which though they are undoubtedly very bad, I ſhall be glad to ſee, as ſometimes people take a pleaſure in beholding a man hanged. And now, Boſwell, I am going to end my letter, which being very ſhort, I know will pleaſe you, as you will think you have gained a compleat victory over the captain, ſeeing that you are ſeveral ſheets a-head of me; but times may alter, and when I reſume my adventures, you will find yourſelf ſorely defeated; believe me, Yours ſincerely, ANDREW ERSKINE. LETTER XXX. New-Tarbat, May 25, 1762. Dear BOSWELL, IT has been ſaid, that few people ſucceed both in poetry and proſe. Homer's proſe eſſay on the gun-powder-plot, is reckoned by all critics inferior to the Iliad; and Warburton's rhyming ſatire on the methodiſts, is allowed by all to be ſuperior to his proſaical notes on Pope's works. Let it be mine to unite the excellencies both of proſe and verſe in my inimitable epiſtles. From this day, my proſe ſhall have a ſmack of verſe, and my verſe have a ſmack of proſe. I'll give you a ſpecimen of both — My ſervant addreſſes me in theſe words, very often — The roll is butter'd, and the kettle boil'd, Your honour's neweſt coat with greaſe is ſoil'd; In your beſt breeches glares a mighty hole, Your waſh-ball and pomatum, Sir, are ſtole. Your taylor, Sir, muſt payment have, that's plain, He call'd to day, and ſaid he'd call again. There's proſaick poetry; now for poetick proſe — Univerſal genius is a wide and diffuſed ſtream that waters the country and makes it agreeable; 'tis true, it cannot receive ſhips of any burthen, therefore it is of no ſolid advantage, yet is it very amuſing. Gondolas and painted barges float upon its ſurface, the country gentleman forms it into ponds, and it is ſpouted out of the mouths of various ſtatues; it ſtrays through the fineſt fields, and its banks nouriſh the moſt blooming flowers. Let me ſport with this ſtream of ſcience, wind along the vale, and glide through the trees, foam down the mountain, and ſparkle in the ſunny ray; but let me avoid the deep, nor loſe myſelf in the vaſt profound, and grant that I may never be pent in the bottom of a dreary cave, or be ſo unfortunate as to ſtagnate in ſome unwholſome marſh. Limited genius is a pump-well, very uſeful in all the common occurrences of life, the water drawn from it is of ſervice to the maids in waſhing their aprons; it boils beef, and it ſcours the ſtairs; it is poured into the tea-kettles of the ladies, and into the punch-bowls of the gentlemen. Having thus given you, in the moſt clear and diſtinct manner, my ſentiments of genius, I proceed to give you my opinion of the ancient and modern writers; a ſubject, you muſt confeſs, very aptly and naturally introduced. I am going to be very ſerious, you will trace a reſemblance between me and Sir William Temple, or perhaps David Hume, Eſq; A modern writer muſt content himſelf with gleaning a few thoughts here and there, and binding them together without order or regularity, that the variety may pleaſe; the ancients have reaped the full of the harveſt, and killed the nobleſt of the game: in vain do we beat about the once plenteous fields, the dews are exhaled, no ſcent remains. How glorious was the fate of the early writers! born in the infancy of letters; their taſk was to reject thoughts more than to ſeek after them, and to ſelect out of a number, the moſt ſhining, the moſt ſtriking, and the moſt ſuſceptible of ornament. The poet ſaw in his walks every pleaſing object of nature undeſcribed; his heart danced with the gale, and his ſpirits ſhone with the invigorating ſun, his works breathed nothing but rapture and enthuſiaſm. Love then ſpoke with its genuine voice, the breaſt was melted down with woe, the whole ſoul was diſſolved into pity with its tender complaints; free from the conceits and quibbles which, ſince that time, have rendered the very name of it ridiculous; real paſſion heaved the ſigh; real paſſion uttered the moſt prevailing language. Muſic too reigned in its full force; that ſoft deluding art, whoſe pathetick ſtrains ſo gently ſteal into our very ſouls, and involve us in the ſweeteſt confuſion; or whoſe animating ſtrains fire us even to madneſs: how has the ſhore of Greece echoed with the wildeſt ſounds; the delicious warblings of the Lyre charmed and aſtoniſhed every ear. The blaze of rhetorick then burſt forth; the ancients ſought not by falſe thoughts, and glittering diction, to captivate the ear, but by manly and energetic modes of expreſſion, to rule the heart and ſway the paſſions. There, Boſwell, there are periods for you. Did not you imagine that you was reading the Rambler of Mr. Samuel Johnſon; or that Mr. Thomas Sheridan himſelf was reſounding the praiſes of the ancients, and his own art? I ſhall now finiſh this letter without the leaſt blaze of rhetoric, and with no very manly or energetic mode of expreſſion, aſſure you, that I am, Yours ſincerely, ANDREW ERSKINE. LETTER XXXI. Auchinleck, June 1, 1762. AT length, O Erſkine! Lady B— and the Turkey-cock are ſung in ſtrains ſublime. I have finiſhed an ode. Receive it with reverence. It is one of the greateſt productions of the human mind. Juſt that ſort of compoſition which we form an awful and raviſhing conception of, in thoſe divine moments, when the ſoul (to uſe a bold metaphor) is in full blow, and ſoaring fancy reaches its utmoſt heights. Could it but be really perſonified — it would be like Saul of old, taller than any of the people, and were it to be guilty of a capital crime, it could not enjoy one of the greateſt privileges of a Britiſh ſubject, to be tried by its Peers. I am ſure that my ode is great. Mr. James Bruce the gardener, my faithful counſellor and very excellent companion, declares it is quite to his mind. He ſtood by me while I took my portrait of the cock, from a large one which ſtruts upon the green. I ſhall be in Edinburgh in a few days; for which reaſon, I remain your affectionate friend, JAMES BOSWELL. ODE ON AN ENGAGEMENT BETWEEN THE RIGHT HONOURABLE LADY B****, AND A TURKEY-COCK. I. SWELL, ſwell, the mighty ſong, Let ſtrains exalted rend the trembling air; The great atchievments of the fair Deſerve poetic fire! Such as ſublimely blaz'd around, When at the elevating ſound Of lofty Pindar's lyre, Aſtoniſh'd ſtood th' attentive Grecian throng. II. Th' Olympic games of old Ne'er ſaw ſuch reſolution bold. The Amazonian train, Could they recall'd to life, but ſee, O dame! the valiant deeds of thee, Would own their proweſs vain; In vain were they as ſoon as horn, Doom'd by their mothers fell, to mourn The female comelineſs of breaſt, By the knife's cruel edge oppreſt; When Lady B— can deride, Their feeble far inferior power, In horrid conflicts trying hour, And yet retain her boſom's ſnowy pride. III. See the imperious Turkey-Cock, Of ſize like Ardven's rock! See him in rage advance, Like Mariſchal Turénne, the warlike boaſt of France! See! how he proudly treads the ground, Looking with fierce diſdain; His varied feathers ruffling all around, While ſcarlet ire his head and neck does ſtain. His wings extended wide the pavement bruſh, As on he comes with hideous ruſh; His cheſt ſends forth a ſounding hum: As from the hollow womb of unbrac'd drum: Or, like the twang of ſmoaking cord Fix'd to the bow of yew, Which ancient Caledonian Lord, Or chieftain much renown'd in bloody battle drew. IV But lo! with grand majeſtic mein, Her handſome Ladyſhip is ſeen, In rich blue ſattin robe array'd, The colour that can never fade: Not lovelier could Malvina ſeem, When in her hunting veſtment cloath'd with grace, By Lora's ſweetly-murmuring- ſtream, She wander'd eager for the ſportive chace: In her ſmooth alabaſter hand She graſps an oaken wand; And now approach thou furious vaunting bird! Thro' all the circling air is loudly heard. V. The youthful family in haſte To all the window's fly; While Andrew bleſt with genius and with taſte, Shoots glances wild from either eye. Juſt ſo, in Rome's Auguſtan age, (If truth reſides in the hiſtoric page) At the Circenſian games, The glittering crowds of knights and peerleſs dames The gladiators ſaw The direful terror-gleaming blade Againſt Hyrcanian tygers draw, Nor of the foreſt's ſovereign ought afraid. VI. Behold the admirable ſight! See now they cloſe in fight. A while the boiſt'rous bully tries With his tremendous ſpurs, As oft he ſo has ſerv'd the herdſman's curs, The Lady to annoy: But ſhe endued with Hector's heart of ſteel, Warm'd glory's fulleſt power to feel, With her uplifted rod To the indignant foaming foe, Hard as the thunder of mount Ida's god, Deals a reſiſtleſs blow, And like a puny ſniveling boy, The lumpiſh monſter ſnaking ſcreaming flies. VII. Let ſongs of triumph ring, And on the weſtern breeze's fluttering wing, Let the exulting ſhouts be borne Far as the hills of Lorn! The ſacred trump of fame, Whoſe ſound the ſons of men adore, Shall ever and anon proclaim To ev'ry diſtant ſhore, While the great globe does laſt, My Lady B—'s ſtrength and enterprizes vaſt! VIII. Upon her natal day, Let amorous Boſwell tune the feſtive lay; Let him be plac'd beſide her at the board, Round which the generous ſons of Kelly ſit, Who with the daughters fair, afford Senſe, beauty, muſic, wit! And while he drinks the ſparkling wine, Brought from the fruitful banks of Rhine, Apollo bleſs him with ideas bright, His fancy, O ye muſes! ſweet employ, That all reſign'd to elegant delight, His honeſt ſoul may taſte celeſtial joy! LETTER XXXII. New-Tarbat, June 5, 1762. Dear BOSWELL, THE ſirſt idea of our correſpondence was not yours; for, many months before you addreſſed me, I wrote you the following letter at Fort George, where you may remember our acquaintance commenced. You'll obſerve that ſome of the ſtanzas are parodies on Gray's Elegy in a Church-yard, I uſe the liberty to mark them. I ſtood too much in awe of you, to ſend it when it was written, and I am too much at my eaſe now, to be with-held any longer from preſenting you with it. I am, Sir, With the greateſt reſpect and eſteem, Your moſt obedient, and moſt humble ſervant, ANDREW ERSKINE. AN EPISTLE, To JAMES BOSWELL, Eſq; Fort-George, May 28, 1761. AH! what a dreary ſpot of earth is this! How ſlowly ſad each ling'ring moment flies; Here fancy never forms a ſcene of bliſs, But ſunk in ſudden night each proſpect dies! I've ſeen a pun juſt burſting from the mouth, Abaſh'd return within the head again; And oft I've ſeen give place to heavy truth, The warm lie ſtarting from the fertile brain. Oft as we ſullen walk the long parade, We're all immers'd in ſilence moſt profound; All ſeem involv'd in dulneſs gloomy ſhade, Save where th' indecent tale goes laughing round. Are theſe the youths that in Edina's town, From tavern ſtill to tavern reſtleſs rov'd, All day employ'd in gulping claret down, Or toying with the harlot that they lov'd? 'For them no more the tavern-bells ſhall ring, 'Or buſy waiters ply their evening care; For them no courtezans ſhall ſweetly ſing, 'Or climb their knees the raptur'd kiſs to ſhare! 'Perhaps within this uſeleſs fort reſides 'Some hero blazing wild with martial fire: 'Perhaps each day around theſe ramparts rides, 'He who might make the fear-ſtruck Gaul retire. 'Some glorious Fred'rick that with glowing breaſt 'Would have Germania's mighty force withſtood! 'Some gallant Wolfe may here ſupinely reſt, 'Some Murray guiltleſs ſtill of Indian blood. 'Th' applauſe of ſhouting armies to command, 'The threats of pain and famine to deſpiſe, 'To ſcatter ruin o'er a ſmiling land 'Their lot forbids, in peace our warriors riſe. 'Haply of me ſome martinet may ſay, 'Oft have I ſeen him at the peep of morn, 'Bruſhing from ſoldiers coats the duſt away, 'And ſmiling on the raw recruits in ſcorn. 'Then near the edge of yonder thund'ring beach, 'Whence darts the wild fantaſtic ſpray ſo high, 'His mighty voice at noon-tide would he ſtretch, 'You're worſe than the militia would he cry. His piercing eye each modern fault explor'd, Much of the ancient phalanx would he ſpeak, Of heroes nobly falling by the ſword, Long tales he told, all borrow'd from the Greek. 'Tis May, the poet's month, yet all around The ſavage climate wears a face of woe; No verdure runs along the ſtubborn ground, The diſtant hills ſtill glitt'ring all with ſnow. Ah! where is fled the genial balmy breeze That tepid warms th' enchanting ſummer ſcenes! For lo! no wanton leaves have green'd the trees; Still ſwells the winter flood along the glens. Yet oft the weſt wind wakes the purple morn With breathing ſoftneſs; — ſoon the ſkies o'ercaſt; While thro' the air all darken'd and forlorn, Howls the damn'd fiend that rides the eaſtern blaſt. Dæmon accurſt, that never knows to blow The flow'rs which bluſh along the vales of ſpring, That never knows th' enliv'ning ſolar glow, Which lures the nations forth, that float on waving wing. Away! thy influence damps each riſing thought, And heavy head-achs on thy ſteps attend; To ſeek relief from thee theſe lines I've wrote, Tell me when thy oppreſſive power will end! How am I chang'd! of late the wanton chuſe, Was wont to riot in poetic mirth; While now I yawning ſleep upon the news, Or give to ſullen elegies a birth. But hark! methinks the drum for Dinner beats, To ſtomach keenly-edg'd a welcome ſign; For none on earth our well-bred table waits, Brief let me be, or elſe I do not dine. 'Now fades the mighty roaſt upon the ſight, 'Thro' all the room a humdrum ſtillneſs reigns; 'Yet ſome lament the pudding's ſpeedy flight, 'And one that all the ſoup is done complains. Farewel, my friend, for lo! I ſwiftly run Where Highland beef invites, and ſauces ſteam. Ah! much I fear that ev'ry diſh is done! Yet ſtill methinks I'll get ſome tart and cream. ANDREW ERSKINE. LETTER XXXIII. Auchinleck, June 9, 1762. Dear ERSKINE, AT this delightful ſeaſon of the year, when every thing is chearful and gay, when the groves are all rich with leaves, the gardens with flowers, and the orchards with bloſſoms, one would think it almoſt impoſſible to be unhappy; yet ſuch is my hard fate at preſent, that inſtead of reliſhing the beautiful appearance of nature, inſtead of participating the univerſal joy, I rather look upon it with averſion, as it exhibits a ſtrong contraſt to the cloudy darkneſs of my mind, and ſo gives me a more diſmal view of my own ſituation. Fancy, capricious fancy will allow me to ſee nothing but ſhade. How ſtrange is it to think, that I who lately abounded in bliſs, ſhould now be the ſlave of black melancholy! How unaccountable does it appear to the reaſoning mind, that this change ſhould be produced without any viſible cauſe. However, ſince I have been ſeized with the pale caſt of thought, I know not how, I comfort myſelf, that I ſhall get free of it as whimſically. You muſt excuſe this piece of ſerious ſententiouſneſs; for it has relieved me; and you may look upon it as much the ſame with coughing before one begins to ſing, or deliver any thing in public, in order that the voice may be as clear as poſſible. The death of your kittens, my dear Erſkine! affected me very much. I could wiſh that you would form it into a tragedy, as the ſtory is extremely pathetic, and could not fail greatly to intereſt the tender paſſions. If you have any doubts as to the propriety of their being three in number, I beg it of you to reflect, that the immortal Shakeſpeare has introduced three daughters into his tragedy of King Lear, which has often drawn tears from the eyes of multitudes. The ſame author has likewiſe begun his tragedy of Macbeth with three witches; and Mr. Alexander Donaldſon has reſolved, that his collection of original poems by Scotch gentlemen, ſhall conſiſt of three volumes, and no more. I don't know, indeed, but your affecting tale might better ſuit the intention of an opera, eſpecially when we conſider the muſical genius of the feline race: were a ſufficient number of theſe animals put under the tuition of proper maſters, no body can tell what an aſtoniſhing chorus might be produced. If this propoſal ſhall be embraced, I make no doubt of its being the wonder of all Europe, and I remain, Yours, as uſual, JAMES BOSWELL. LETTER XXXIV. New-Tarbat, June 14, 1762. AND are YOU gloomy! oh James Boſwell! has your flow of ſpirits evaporated, and left nothing but the black dregs of melancholy behind? has the ſmile of chearfulneſs left your countenance? and is the laugh of gaiety no more? oh woeful condition! oh wretched friend! but in this ſituation you are dear to me; for lately my diſpoſition was exactly ſimilar to yours. No converſation pleaſed me; no books could fix my attention; I could write no letters, and I deſpiſed my own poems. Tell me how you was affected; could you ſpeak any? could you fix your thoughts upon any thing but the dreary way you was in? and would not the ſight of me have made you very miſerable? I have lately had the epidemical diſtemper; I don't mean poverty, but that cold which they call the influenza, and which made its firſt appearance in London; whether it came to Scotland in the waggon, or travelled with a companion in a poſt-chaiſe, is quite uncertain. Derrick's verſifications are infamouſly bad; what think you of the Reviewers commending ſuch an execrable performance? I have a fancy to write an ironical criticiſm upon it, and praiſe all the worſt lines, which you ſhall ſend to Derrick, as the real ſentiments of a gentleman of your acquaintance on reading his work. For want of ſomething elſe to entertain you, I begin my criticiſm immediately. — To verſify poetical proſe has been found a very difficult taſk. Dr. Young and Mr. Langhorne, in their paraphraſes upon the Bible, (which Lord Bolingbroke tells us, is an excellent book) have ſucceeded but indifferently: I therefore took up Mr. Samuel Derrick's verſifications from Fingal, with little expectation of being entertained; but let no man judge of a book till at leaſt he reads the title page; for lo! Mr. Samuel Derrick has adorned his with a very apt and uncommon quotation, from a good old poet called Virgil. I am much pleaſed with the candour, ſo conſpicuous in the ſhort advertiſement to the public, in which Mr. Derrick ſeems very willing to run ſnacks in reputation with Mr. MacPherſon, which will greatly rejoice that gentleman, who can't juſtly boaſt of ſo extenſive a fame as Mr. Samuel Derrick. The dedication is very elegant, though, I am apt to think, the author has neither praiſed Lord Pomfret nor himſelf enough; two worthy people, who, in my opinion, deſerve it. But at laſt, we come to the poems themſelves; and here I might indulge myſelf in warm and indiſcriminate applauſe; but let it be my ambition to trace Mr. Derrick ſtep by ſtep through his wonderful work; let me pry both into the kitchen and dining-room of his genius, to uſe the compariſon of the great Mr. Boyle. The firſt lines, or the exordium of the battle of Lora, are calmly ſublime, and refined with ſimplicity. In the eighth line, our author gives the epithet of poſting to the wind, which is very beautiful: however, to make it natural, it ought to be applied, in poetical juſtice, to that wind which wafts a packet-boat. I had almoſt forgot, the ſixth line ſays, the voice of ſongs, a tuneful voice I hear. Now, I ſhould be glad to know, whether theſe ſame ſongs be a man or a woman. Lines 23 and 34. In ſecret round they glanc'd their kindled eyes, Their indignation ſpoke in burſting ſighs. It ſeems to me improbable, that a pair of kindled eyes could glance in ſecret; and I cannot think that ſighs are the language of indignation. Lines 57, 58, 59. So on the ſettled ſea blue miſts ariſe, In vapory volumes darkening to the ſkies, They glitter in the ſun. Theſe miſts that glitter, and are dark at the ſame time, are very extraordinary, and the contraſt is lovely and new. Line 67th begins — His poſt is terror. — This is a poſt, that, I believe, none of our members of parliament would accept. Lines 175, 176, An hundred ſteeds he gives that own the rein, Never a ſwifter race devour'd the plain. Devoured the plain! if this is not ſublime, then am I no critic; however, its lucky for the landed intereſt, that the breed of thoſe horſes is loſt; they might do very well, I confeſs, in the Highlands of Scotland; but a dozen of them turned looſe near Saliſbury, would be inconceiveably hurtful. I'm tired of this ſtuff; if you think it worth the while you may end it, and ſend it to Derrick; but let your part be better than mine, or it won't do. Grief, for thy loſs, drank all my vitals dry — I laughed heartily at that line. In this letter I have beſtowed my dulneſs freely upon you; you have had my wit, and you muſt take my ſtupidity into the bargain; as when we go to the market, we purchaſe bones as well as beef; and when we marry an heireſs, we are obliged to take the woman as well as the money; and when we buy Donaldſon's collection, we pay as dear for the poems of Mr. Lauchlan MacPherſon, as we do for thoſe written by the incomparable Captain Andrew. You are in Edinburgh, I imagine, by this time, if the information of Mr. Alexander Donaldſon may be depended upon. I ſhall be in town one night ſoon on my way to Kelly, for the H—s of D— threaten an invaſion upon this peaceful abode, Farewell, Yours ſincerely, ANDREW ERSKINE. LETTER XXXV. Edinburgh, June 19, 1762. Dear ERSKINE, YOU have upon many occaſions made rather too free with my perſon, upon which I have often told you that I principally value myſelf. I feel a ſtrong inclination to retaliate. I have great opportunity, and I will not reſiſt it. Your figure, Erſkine, is amazingly uncouth. The length of your body bears no manner of proportion to its breadth, and far leſs does its breadth bear to its length. If we conſider you one way, you are the talleſt, and if we conſider you another way, you are the thickeſt man alive. The crookedneſs of your back is terrible; but it is nothing in compariſon of the frightful diſtortions of your countenance. What monſters have you been the cauſe of bringing into the world! not only the wives of ſerjeants and corporals of the 71ſt regiment, but the unhappy women in every town where you was quartered, by looking at you, have conceived in horror. Natural defects ſhould be ſpared; but I muſt not omit the large holes in your ears, and the deep marks of the iron on your hands. I hope you will allow theſe to be artificial. Nature nails no man's ears to the pillory. Nature burns no man in the hand. As I have a very ſincere friendſhip for you, I cannot help giving you my beſt advice with regard to your future ſchemes of life. I would beſeech you to lay aſide all your chimerical projects, which have made you ſo abſurd. You know very well, when you went upon the ſtage at Kingſton in Jamaica, how ſhamefully you expoſed yourſelf, and what diſgrace and vexation you brought upon all your friends. You muſt remember what ſort of treatment you met with, when you went and offered yourſelf to be one of the fathers of the inquiſition at Macerata, in the room of Mr. Archibald Bower; a project which could enter into the head of no man who was not utterly deſtitute of common ſenſe. You tell me, that your intention at preſent is, to take orders in the church of England; and you hope I will approve of your plan: but I muſt tell you honeſtly, that this is a moſt ridiculous hairbrained conceit. Before you can be qualified for the ſmalleſt living, you muſt ſtudy nine years at Oxford; you muſt eat at a moderate computation, threeſcore of fat beeves, and upwards of two hundred ſheep; you muſt conſume a thouſand ſtone of bread, and ſwallow ninety hogſheads of porter. You flatter yourſelf with being highly promoted, becauſe you are an Earl's brother, and a man of genius. But, my dear friend, I beg it of you to conſider, how little theſe advantages have already availed you. The army was as good a ſcene for you to riſe in as the church can be; and yet you are only a lieutenant in a very young regiment. I ſeriouſly think, that your moſt rational ſcheme ſhould be, to turn inn-keeper upon ſome of the great roads: you might have an elegant ſign painted of Apollo and the Muſes, and entertainment for men and horſes, by THE HONOURABLE ANDREW ERSKINE, would be ſomething very unuſual, and could not fail to bring numbers of people to your houſe. You would by this means have a life of moſt pleaſing indolence, and would never want a variety of company, as you would conſtantly dine and ſup with your gueſts. Men of faſhion would be glad to receive you as their equal; and men of no faſhion would be proud to ſit at table with one who had any pretenſions to nobility. I hope the honeſt concern which I ſhew for your real welfare, will convince you how much I am, My dear Sir, Your moſt affectionate friend, JAMES BOSWELL. LETTER XXXVI. Kelly, July 5, 1762. Dear BOSWELL, VANITY has, in all former ages, been reckoned the characteriſtic of poets; in our time, I think they are more particularly diſtinguiſhed by modeſty: I have carefully peruſed their works, and I have never once found them throwing out either thought, ſentiment, or reflection of their own; convincing proof of their humility: they ſeem all to allow that the ancients, and ſome few of the earlier moderns, were much better writers than themſelves; therefore they beg, borrow, and ſteal from them, without the ſmalleſt mercy or heſitation. In ſome things, however, they are quite original; their margins and prices are larger than any ever known before; and they advertiſe their pieces much oftener in the news-papers than any of their predeceſſors. You compliment me highly on my elegies, and tell me that I have even dared to be original now and then; and you aſk me very ſeriouſly, how I come to be ſo well acquainted with the tender paſſion of love. — Ah, Sir, how deceitful are appearances! under a forbidding aſpect and uncouth form, I conceal the ſoul of an Oroondates, a ſoul that thrills with the moſt ſenſible emotions at the ſight of beauty. Love eaſily finds acceſs where the mind is naturally inclined to melancholy; we foſter the pleaſing deluſion, it grows up with our frame, and becomes a part of our being; long have I laboured under the influence of that paſſion; long vented my grief in unavailing ſighs. Beſides, your thin meagre man is always the moſt violent lover: a thouſand deluſions enter his paperſcull, which the man of guts never dreams of. In vain does Cupid ſhoot his arrows at the plump exiſtence, who is intrenched in a ſolid wall of fat: they are buried like ſhrimps in melted butter; as eggs are preſerved by mutton-tallow, from rottenneſs and putrefaction, ſo he, by his greaſe, is preſerved from love. Pleaſed with his pipe, he ſits and ſmoaks in his elbow-chair; totally unknown to him is the ardent paſſion that actuates the ſentimental ſoul: alas! unhappy man! he never indulged in the pleaſing reverie which inſpires the ſpindle-ſhanked lover, as he ſtrays through nodding foreſt by gliding ſtream; if he marries, he chuſes a companion fat as himſelf; they lie together, and moſt muſical is their ſnore; they melt like two pounds of butter in one plate in a ſun-ſhiny-day. Pray, Boſwell, remember me kindly to honeſt Johnſton. Let me know if his trees are growing well, at his paternal eſtate of Grange; if he is as fond of Melvil's memoirs as he uſed to be; and if he continues to ſtretch himſelf in the ſun upon the mountains near Edinburgh. I ever am, Yours moſt affectionatly, ANDREW ERSKINE. LETTER XXXVII. Kelly, July 6, 1761. Dear BOSWELL, NOTHING happened during my journey; I arrived in Aberdeen on Thurſday laſt; the town is really neater, cleaner, and better than you would imagine; but the country around is diſmal; long gloomy moors, and the extended ocean, are the only proſpects that preſent themſelves; the whole region ſeems as if made in direct oppoſition to deſcriptive poetry. You meet here with none of the lengthened meads, ſunny vales, and daſhing ſtreams, that brighten in the raptured poet's eye; however, as I believe you have been here, I ſhall trouble you with no farther deſcriptions. Never was parting more tender than that of mine with George Robertſon the poſtilion, and the Kelly chaiſe at Dundee water-ſide; we formed as dolorous a trio as then exiſted upon the face of this valley of tears. Oh George! O Erſkine! were the cries that echoed acroſs the waves, and along the mountains. Tears trickled down the rugged boatman's face, An unpaid freight he thought no harder caſe; The ſeals no longer ſported in the ſea, While ev'ry bell rung mournful in Dundee, Huge ploughmen wept, and ſtranger ſtill, 'tis ſaid, So ſtrong is ſympathy, that aſſes bray'd. Farewel lovely George, I roared out, and oh! if you ſhould happen to be dry, for ſuch is the nature of ſorrow; take this ſhilling, and ſpend it in the ſugared ale, or the wind-expelling dram: with ſweet reluctance he put forth his milk-white hand, cold with clammy ſweat, and with a faultering voice, feebly thanked me. Oh! I ſhall never forget my emotions when he drove from me, and the chaiſe leſſened in my view; now it whirled ſublime along the mountains edge; now, I ſcarcely ſaw the head of George nodding in the vale. Thus, on the ſummit of a craggy cliff, which high overlooks the reſounding waves, Jean, Suſan, or Nell, ſees in a boat her lovely ſailor, who has been torn from her arms by a cruel preſs-gang; now it climbs the higheſt ſeas; now it is buried between two billows, and vaniſhes from her ſight. Weep not, ſweet maid, he ſhall return loaded with honours; a gold watch ſhall grace each fob, a pair of ſilver buckles ſhall ſhine reſplendent upon his ſhoes, and a ſilk handkerchief ſhall be tied around his neck, which ſoon ſhall cover thy ſnowy boſom. When the chaiſe was totally loſt, and my breaſt was diſtracted with a thouſand different paſſions; all of a ſudden I broke out into the following ſoliloquy. — Surely, ſurely mortal man is a chaiſe; now trailing through the heavy ſand of indolence, anon jolted to death upon the rough road of diſcontent; and ſhortly after ſunk in the deep rut of low ſpirits; now galloping on the poſt-road of expectation, and immediately after, trotting on the ſtony one of diſappointment; but the days of our driving ſoon ceaſe, our ſhafts break, our leather rots, and we tumble into a hole. Adieu, yours, ANDREW ERSKINE• LETTER XXXVIII. Kelly, July 7, I762. Dear BOSWELL, I IMAGINED, that by ceaſing to write to you for ſome time, I ſhould be able to lay up a ſtock of materials, enough to aſtoniſh you, and that, like a river damm'd up, when let looſe, I ſhould flow on with unuſual rapidity; or like a man, who has not beat his wife for a fortnight, I ſhould cudgel you with my wit for hours together; but I find the contrary of all this is the caſe; I reſemble a perſon long abſent from his native country, of which he has formed a thouſand endearing ideas, and to which he at laſt returns; but alas! he beholds with ſorrowful eyes, every thing changed for the worſe; the town where he was born, which uſed to have two ſnows and three ſloops trading to all parts of the known world, is not now maſter of two fiſhing-boats; the ſteeple of the church, where he uſed to ſleep in his youth, is rent with lightning; and the girl on whom he had placed his early affections, has had three baſtard children, and is juſt going to be delivered of a fourth; or I reſemble a man who has had a fine waiſtcoat lying long in the very bottom of a cheſt, which he is determined ſhall be put on at the hunter's ball; but woes me, the lace is tarniſhed, and the moths have devoured it in a melancholy manner; theſe few ſimilies may ſerve to ſhew, that this letter has little chance of being a good one; yet they don't make the affair certain. Prince Ferdinand beat the French at Minden; Sheridan, in his lectures, ſometimes ſpoke ſenſe; and John Home wrote one good play. I have read Lord Kames's Elements, and agree very heartily with the opinion of the Critical Reviewers; however, I could often have wiſhed, that his Lordſhip had been leſs obſcure, or that I had had more penetration; he praiſes the Mourning Bride exceſſively, which, nevertheleſs, I can't help thinking a very indifferent play; the plot wild and improbable, and the language infinitely too high and ſwelling. It is curious to ſee the opinions of the Reviewers concerning you and me; they take you for a poor diſtreſſed gentleman, writing for bread, and me for a very impudent Iriſhman; whereas you are heir to a thouſand a year, and I am one of the moſt baſhful Scotſmen that ever appeared: I confeſs, indeed, my baſhfulneſs does not appear in my works, for them I print in the moſt impudent manner; being exceeded in that reſpect by no body but James Boſwell, Eſq; Yours, &c. ANDREW ERSKINE. LETTER XXXIX. Kames, October 19, 1762. Dear ERSKINE, IN my own name, and in the name of Lord Kames, I deſire to ſee you here immediately: I have been reading the Elements of Criticiſm. You and the Reviewers have pronounced enough of ſerious panegyric on that book. In my opinion, it has the good properties of all the four Elements. It has the ſolidity of earth, the pureneſs of air, the glow of fire, and the clearneſs of water. The language is excellent, and ſometimes riſes to ſo noble a pitch, that I exclaim in imitation of Zanga in the Revenge. I like this roaring of the Elements: If this does not bring you, nothing will; and ſo Sir, I continue, Yours as uſual, JAMES BOSWELL. LETTER XL. Kelly. October 28, 1762. Dear BOSWELL, HOW ſhall I begin? what ſpecies of apology ſhall I make? the truth is, I really couId not write, my ſpirits have been depreſſed ſo unaccountably. I have had whole mountains of lead preſſing me down: you would have thought that five Dutchmen had been riding on my back, ever ſince I ſaw you; or that I had been covered with ten thouſand folios of controverſial divinity; you would have imagined that I was cramm'd in the moſt denſe part of a plumb-pudding, or ſteeped in a hogſhead of thick Engliſh port. Heavens! is it poſſible, that a man of ſome fame for joking, poſſeſſed of no unlaughable talent in punning, and endued with no contemptible degree of livelineſs in letter-writing, ſhould all of a ſudden have become more impenetrably ſtupid than a Hottentot legiſlator, or a moderator of the general aſſembly of the kirk of Scotland. By that ſmile which enlivens your black countenance, like a farthing candle in a dark cellar, I perceive I am pardoned; indeed I expected no leſs; for, I believe, if a ſword was to run you through the body, or a rope was to hang you, you would forget and forgive: you are at Kames juſt now, very happy, I ſuppoſe; your letter ſeems to come from a man in excellent ſpirits; I am very unequal at preſent to the taſk of writing an anſwer to it, but I was reſolved to delay no longer, leſt you ſhould think I neglected you wilfully; a thought, I'm ſure, you never ſhall have occaſion to entertain of me, though the miſt of dulneſs ſhould for ever obſcure and envelope my fancy and imagination. I cannot think of coming to Kames, yet I am ſufficiently thankful for the invitation; my lowneſs would have a very bad effect in a chearful ſociety; it would be like a dead march in the midſt of a hornpipe, or a mournful elegy in a collection of epigrams. Farewell. Yours, &c. ANDREW ERSKINE. LETTER XLI. Parliament-Cloſe, Nov. 10, 1762. Dear ERSKINE, ALL I have now to ſay, is to inform you, that I ſhall ſet out for London on Monday next, and to beg that you may not leave Edinburgh before that time. My letters have often been carried to you over riſing mountains and rolling ſeas. This puſues a a ſimpler tract, and under the tuition of a cadie, is tranſmitted from the Parliament-Cloſe to the Cannongate. Thus it is with human affairs; all is fluctuating, all is changing. Believe me, Yours, &c. JAMES BOSWELL. LETTER XLII. London, Nov. 20, 1762. Dear ERSKINE, WHAT ſort of a letter ſhall I now write to you? Shall I cram it from top to bottom with tables of compound intereſt? with anecdotes of Queen Anne's wars? with excerpts from Robertſon's hiſtory? or with long ſtories translated from Olaus Wormius? To paſs four and twenty hours agreeably was ſtill my favourite plan. I think at preſent, that the mere contemplation of this amazing buſtle of exiſtence, is enough to make my four and twenty go merrily round. I went laſt night to Covent-Garden; and ſaw Woodward play Captain Bobadil: he is a very lively performer; but a little extravagant: I was too late for getting into Drury-Lane, where Garrick played King Lear. That inimitable actor is in as full glory as ever; like genuine wine, he improves by age, and poſſeſſes the ſteady and continued admiration even of the inconſtant Engliſh. I don't know what to ſay to you about myſelf: if I can get into the guards, it will pleaſe me much; if not, I can't help it. Perhaps you may hear of my turning Templar, and perhaps ranger of ſome of his Majeſty's parks. It is not impoſſible but I may catch a little true poetic inſpiration, and have my works ſplendidly printed at Strawberry-hill, under the benign influence of the Honourable Horace Walpole. You and I Erſkine are, to be ſure, ſomewhat vain. We have ſome reaſon too. The Reviewers gave great applauſe to your Odes to Indolence and impudence; and they called my poems 'agreeable light pieces,' which was the very character I wiſhed for. Had they ſaid leſs, I ſhould not have been ſatisfied; and had they ſaid more, I ſhould have thought it a burleſque. What a fine animated proſpect of life now ſpreads before me! Be aſſured, that my genius will be highly improved, and pleaſe yourſelf with the hopes of receiving letters ſtill more entertaining. I ever am, Your affectionate friend, JAMES BOSWELL.