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From the Westminster
Magazine: Swift,
Goldsmith, Garrick, et al.
by
Arthur Sherbo
Over the past few years I have had published a number of articles on or deriving from eighteenth-century periodicals, largely but not exclusively in Studies in Bibliography.[1] As before, I am still on the lookout for that which has gone unnoted or has long been forgotten.
The Westminster Magazine, or Pantheon of Taste (hereafter WM) was first published in January 1773 and ended publication in December 1785, microfilm of the thirteen volumes being made in 1973 by University Microfilms of Ann Arbor, Michigan. While scholars working before 1973 were able to consult some volumes of the periodical in scattered locations, I am not sure that any of these scholars was able to consult all the volumes. Thus, Mary E. Knapp used the first volume of the WM in her Checklist of Verse by David Garrick (1955), but no other, with the result that at least twenty-five more entries might have been included for appearances of verse by Garrick in the WM.[2] In the 1779 WM (pp. 459-461) a memoir of Garrick has an appended footnote which identifies his earliest contributions to the Gentleman's Magazine, poems in the volume for 1740 on pages 460, 461, 462, 464 and eight verses added to a poem by Gilbert Walmesley (p. 567). This last is not in Miss Knapp's Checklist, nor is a poem on p. 462 of the 1740 Gentleman's Magazine, a poem which she lists only in its autograph form in the Folger (#8a), i.e. Garrick's answer to some verses by L. (Mr. Logie) to Chloe.[3] Number 364 in Knapp, Garrick's "Prologue for the Benefit of the Theatrical Fund of the Drury Lane Theatre," appeared in many periodicals, but its appearance in the WM in 1776 (p. 327-328) is overlooked in her Checklist and in an article devoted solely to that poem.[4] Number 199 in the Checklist is Garrick's own epitaph; it appears in the Whitehall Evening-Post for March 2-4, 1779 and
Tom Fool, the tenant of this narrow space,
(He play'd no foolish part to chuse the place)
Hoping for mortal honours e'en in death,
Thus spoke his wishes with his latest breath.
"That Hal, sweet-blooded Hal, might once a-year,
Quit social joys to drop a friendly tear;
That Earle, with magic sounds that charm the breast,
Should with a requiem teach his soul to rest;
Full charg'd with humour, that the sportive Rust
Should fire three vollies o'er the dust to dust;
That Honest Benson, ever free and plain,
For once shou'd sigh, and wish him back again;
That Hoare too might complete his glory's plan,
Point to his grave and say—I lik'd the man."
In addition to the reprinting of poems by Garrick, the WM printed an anecdote about him which is absent from Stone and Kahrl. If it is true, it is sufficiently interesting for inclusion in any account of Garrick. The March 1779 WM (p. 120) printed an anecdote of Garrick's "first appearance in the character of Richard III at the Theatre in Goodman's-Fields" which had him so hoarse at the end of the second act that he could not have gone on had not a gentleman present behind the scenes "having luckily a Seville orange in his pocket" gave it to him, with the result that he finished the part to great applause. But, "had it not been owing to this trifling incident, we might have been deprived of the greatest ornament the British, or perhaps any other stage ever acquired." Incidentally, Tom Davies and Arthur Murphy, early biographers of Garrick, evidently did not know the anecdote.
The WM would not, of course, be of more than passing interest, if all one could glean from it was the Garrick material. And there is bigger game. Assuredly, one of the pleasures derivable from the turning over of the pages of old periodicals is the discovery of completely forgotten pieces, usually by minor writers, even obscure ones, for the works of major writers have usually surfaced because of the researches of many scholars. And when one comes upon an attribution in one of these periodicals to a major author the chances are excellent that the piece in question is not his. But there is always the off-chance it may be his. So very much has been written about Jonathan Swift that one is understandably chary of attributing a new piece to him, but the WM has not had wide exposure, and the attribution, a tentative one, is by a correspondent to that periodical and not by me. I refer to "A Humourous Description of Mortality, Said to be wrote by the Late JONATHAN SWIFT, D.D. DEAN OF ST. PATRICK's, DUBLIN." I quote the whole, depending upon others more knowledgeable about Swift's prose to render a decision.
As you have been pleased very generously to honour me with your friendship, I think myself obliged to throw off all disguise, and discover to you my real circumstances; which I shall with all the openness and freedom imaginable. You'll be surprised at the beginning of my story, and think the whole a banter; but you may depend upon its being actually true; and, if need were, I could bring the Parson of the Parish to testify the same. You must know then, that at this present time I live in a little sorry (a) house of clay, that stands upon the waste as other cottages do; and, what is worst of all, am liable to be turned out at a minute's warning. It is a sort of copyhold tenure, and the custom of the manor is this: for the first thirty years I am to pay no rent, but only do suit and service, and attend upon the (b) Courts, which are kept once a-week, and sometimes oftener; for twenty years after this, I am to pay (c) a Rose every year; and further than this, during the remainder of life, I am to pay a Tooth (which you'll say is a whimsical sort of an acknowledgment) every two or three years, or oftener if it should be demanded; and if I have nothing more to pay, "Out" must be the word, and it will not be long ere my person will be seized.—I might have had my tenement, such as it is, upon much better terms, if it had not
P.S. This room that I value so much, was set on (o) fire once, and my whole building in danger of being demolished, by an unlucky (p) boy throwing his lighted torch in at the window, the casement happening to be open.-----I must not forget to tell you. that the (q) person who is sent about to gather our quit-rents before-mentioned, is a queer, little, old, round-shouldered fellow, with scarce any hair upon his head; which grotesque figure, together with his invidious employments, makes him generally slighted, and oftentimes much abused. He has a prodigious stomach of his own; whatever he gets, it goes all into his unrighteous maw, which makes a fool of the Ostrich for digestion; he is continually exercising his grinders upon one thing or another, and yet he is as poor as a rake, and by that means goes so light that he is often at a man's heels before he thinks of him; he is very absolute and ready in executing his commission; and has a relation, one (r) Tide a Waterman, that is full as saucy and peremptory as himself. If you meet with either of them, and cry out "Stop a little," the devil a moment they'll stay. (1780, pp. 70-71)
I append the footnoted explanations of the allegory: a (The body.), b (Divine Service.), c (The colour from his cheek.), d (Adam and Eve.), e (The Devil.), f (Paradise.), g (Jehovah.), h (His Stomach.), i (His Head.), k (Clothes.), l (His death.), m (The worms.), n (The heart.), o (By love.), p (Cupid.), q (Time. This description is elegant, and the slighting and abusing Time, the Teeth of Time, and Man's abuse of the precious jewel, even when he is at his heels, i.e. Death, reminds me of a line I have somewhere seen, "Every moment of Time is a monument to God's Mercy."), r The Author, no doubt, had the old Proverb in his Thought, viz. "Time and Tide will stay for no Man." A "great Man in Abchurch-lane" is explained as "Probably alluding to some Physician or Quack Doctor, resident in that place, who might at that time be famous for curing those vermin in the body." Whoever wrote these notes, and it was not the author, was right. In Swift's The Importance of the Guardian Considered "Mr. John Moor the Apothecary at the Pestle and Mortar" is mentioned (VIII. 9 in The Prose Works, ed. Herbert Davis and Irvin Ehrenpreis), but not otherwise identified. He is, however, the worm-powder man. See Pope's poem, "To Mr. John Moore, Author of the Celebrated Worm-Powder," (Twickenham ed., VI, 161-164) with its reference to
George Lyttelton, first Baron Lyttelton, friend of Pope, patron of James Thomson and David Mallet, and to whom Fielding dedicated Tom Jones, has been called "A Minor Augustan" by his modern biographer.[7] His poems were included in that collection of English poets for which Dr. Johnson wrote the Lives, and of those poems Johnson wrote that "they have nothing to be despised and little to be admired. . . . His little performances, whether Songs or Epigrams, are sometimes sprightly and sometimes insipid. His epistolary pieces have a smooth equability, which cannot much tire because they are short, but which seldom elevates or surprizes" (ad finem). In any event there is one poem by him in the WM which does not appear in any collection I have seen. It is titled "On Good Humour," with the first line "Tell me ye sons of Phoebus, what is this," and was said to be "[By the late Lord Lyttelton]" in the April 1774 number (p. 431).
Charles James Fox is better known to historians than to students of literature, but he was no exception to the rule that most educated men of the eighteenth century could turn their hand to verse, often of the occasional kind. I wish to call attention to three of his verse efforts that appeared in the WM. The first to appear, in the June 1775 number (p. 325), is titled "Upon Mrs. C--E. By Mr. C. F--X," beginning "Where the loveliest expression to features is join'd" and continuing in similarly complimentary vein. Frances Crewe, daughter of Fulke Greville, married John Crewe in 1766 and soon became a famous Whig hostess and politician.[8] Next chronologically is "An Invocation to Poverty. Said to be written by the Hon. Mr. C. F-x, after the Reflexion on his Penury, thrown out in the House of Commons last Sessions by Mr. Ad--s," in the August 1776 number, "Oh! Poverty! of pale consumptive hue" (p. 440). The poem was also printed in the Sept. 1776 Gentleman's Magazine (p. 428), without "by Mr. Ad--s" and again seven years later in that same periodical (p. 379). The editors of the WM, possibly influenced by the Gentleman's Magazine reprinting, also reprinted the poem in 1783 (p. 585). In the winter of 1773-74 Fox owed some £140,000 in debts, his father finally bailing him out.[9] The only "Mr. Ad--s" in the House of Commons at this time has to be William Adam (no "s") with whom Fox fought a duel on November 29, 1779, in Hyde Park (DNB). Fox suffered a slight wound and remarked, "I should infallibly have been killed, if Mr. Adam had not been using government powder." The last of the three poems also has a political atmosphere. It is the "Epistle from the Hon. Charles Fox, partridge-shooting, to the Hon. John Townshend, cruising" in Jan. 1780 (p. 46), a long, three-column affair beginning "While you, dear Townshend, o'er the billows ride" and full of political allusions.
The DNB states that Henry Fox's marriage to the daughter of Charles, second Duke of Richmond, was "secretly solemnised at the house of Sir Charles Hanbury Williams, the Lady's parents having refused their consent." The March 1773 WM (p. 221) contained the following poem, which I quote
By Sir Charles H. Williams.
Great G--e advances on the plain
To view his troops and concubine,
The godly blessings of his reign!
The trumpets sound, the colours bound,
The fields all blaze with arms;
Thus Trojan true the Tacticks shew,
And Helen all her charms.
The God of War and Love by turns
Preside upon his phiz;
One while you'd think for war he burns,
Another while for Miss.
You'd think when he surveys his men,
He'd waste the world for fame;
And that he'd people it again,
When he surveys his dame.
'Tis all a farce, and nothing more;
This am'rous martial Knight
Age won't allow t' enjoy his W--e,
Nor courage let him fight.
When the 1773 Johnson-Steevens Shakespeare was published Philip Stanhope, Earl of Chesterfield, evidently sent a set to a young lady of his acquaintance, for the November 1773 WM (p. 668) includes a poem titled "Verses sent to a Young Lady, with the New Edition of Shakespeare. By the Right Hon. the Earl of C--.", beginning "Poet of Nature, thou whose boundless art," a thoroughly conventional piece of versification and literary appreciation. Some three years later, May 1776, two poems attributed to him appeared (p. 327), one entitled simply "Verses by the Earl of Chesterfield," beginning "Chlorinda still rejects my hand"; the other, "By the Same," beginning "Let social mirth with gentle manners join." One imagines that the key words in the opening line are "social" and "gentle," the Earl being notoriously hostile to more unseemly mirth.
Next to coming upon new pieces, one is almost equally excited by the discovery of textual variants in known pieces. The WM for June 1773 (p. 388) printed a poem, "On the Day of Judgement. By Dr. Swift, and not published among his Works," the text of which differs radically from the accepted text.
I sunk from Reverie to Rest.
An horrid vision seiz'd my head;
I saw the graves yawn up their dead;
Jove arm'd with terrors ope'd the skies,
The thunder roars, and lightning flies;
While each pale spectre hangs its head,
Jove nodded, burst the clouds, and said,----
"You whom the various Sects have shamm'd,
"And come to see each other damn'd,
"As Priests have threaten'd (tho' they knew
"No more of my decrees than you)
"The world's vain business now being o'er,
"Such Dogmas may prevail no more;
"I 'gainst such Blockheads set my wit:
"I damn you all!----Go, go, you're bit."
From one text to another. The April 1774 WM (pp. 205-207) prints
I am not sure what, if any, significance to attach to the attention paid to Goldsmith's work in the WM. Arthur Friedman writes,
And then there are other bits and pieces. Dr. Johnson's Dictionary is such a formidable affair, more than 3000 pages in the two folio volumes of the revised 1773 edition, that few have been hardy (or foolhardy) enough to analyze its contents to any great extent. Any detailed or statistical information about it should, therefore, be very welcome. Helen Louise McGuffie records that in the WM for March 1776 "Leveller" essay number 14 "Includes a brief burlesque of SJ's diction,"[15] but unaccountably fails to notice in the same issue (p. 136) another, much more interesting piece on Johnson. A correspondent who signed with four asterisks wrote,
Johnson | [Nathaniel] Bailey | Difference. | |
P | 692 | 894 | 202 |
C | 434 | 831 | 397 |
I | 424 | 675 | 251 |
S | 387 | 641 | 254 |
R | 372 | 467 | 95 |
A | 290 | 495 | 205 |
M | 287 | 442 | 155 |
T | 264 | 418 | 154 |
F | 235 | 351 | 116 |
D | 216 | 531 | 315 |
U | 200 | 277 | 77 |
G | 182 | 249 | 67 |
B | 169 | 263 | 94 |
E | 159 | 359 | 200 |
L | 159 | 191 | 32 |
H | 106 | 201 | 99 |
O | 92 | 166 | 74 |
N | 91 | 122 | 31 |
Q | 41 | 51 | 10 |
K | 7 | 9 | 2 |
W | 5 | 28 | 23 |
Y | 0 | 2 | 2 |
Z | 0 | 3 | 3 |
---- | ---- | ---- | ---- |
4812 | 7670 | 2868 |
Professor McGuffie (p. 201) includes a "'Letter signed C. Risp.' Writer reports on number of borrowed words in the Dictionary" in the WM for January 1777 (p. 25). The nature of her work obviated against any more elaborate digest of the letter, yet the literature on the Dictionary, abundant as it is, contains few pieces as detailed as this letter and that for March 1776. C. Risp writes,
Your Correspondent,
C. RISP.
- Latin 6732
- French 4812
- Saxon 1665
- Greek 1148
- Dutch 691
- Italian 211
- German 106
- Welch 95
- Danish 75
- Spanish 56
- Islandic 50
- Swedish 34
- Gothic 31
- Hebrew 16
- Teutonic 15
- Arabic 13
- Irish 6
- Runic 4
- Flemish 4
- Erse 4
- Syriac 3
- Scottish 3
- Irish and Erse 2
- Turkish 2
- Irish and Scotish 1
- Portuguese 1
- Persian 1
- Frisic 1
- Persic 1
- Uncertain 1
- Total 15,784
Words derived from the
William Richardson, Professor of Humanities at Glasgow, is principally
Who wrote for the WM? According to two friends of Isaac Reed, both of whom wrote biographical accounts of him, Reed began to contribute biographical articles to the WM about 1773 and continued to do so until about 1780.[17] None of these biographical articles has been identified. Indeed, Nichols's statement, "The biographical articles are from his pen" (p. 80), if taken literally, means that all the biographical articles are Reed's. Reed, according to the same authorities, also wrote biographical articles during this same period for the Gentleman's Magazine and the European Magazine, although the latter did not begin publication until 1782. One of Reed's earliest manuscripts is a collection of "Anecdotes of Sundry Eminent Personages—1765,"[18] and he both collected biographical material and published biographical accounts much of his life. Among other biographical compendia are the fourteen Lives he added to a 1790 edition of The Works of the English
A few, very few, remaining pieces must come under the heading of miscellaneous information. Thus, a memoir of Bishop Richard Hurd in the May 1781 WM contains a bibliography of his writings (p. 229) which includes "Discord: A Satire, 4to 17----", not elsewhere attributed to him. The British Library catalogue of printed books lists an anonymous 1773 quarto, "Discord. A Satire [In Verse]," which is almost positively the work attributed to Hurd and which must now be included in any discussion of Hurd's career. In November of this same year a contributor pointed out for the first time that Henry Layng, on the evidence of certain lines from one of his poems, quoted in a footnote (p. 633), had helped Pope in his translation of the
Notes
It must be understood that these are not previously unknown verses but rather unrecorded printings, by Miss Knapp, of known verses. I give vol. no., year, pages of WM followed by item nos. in Knapp: 3 (1775), 327 (#112, #447); 4 (1776), 157 (#392), 215 (#405), 327 (#364); 5 (1777), 103 (#41), 218 (#329), 328 (#287), 329 (#396), 496 (#404), 665 (#215), 666 (#385), 667 (#386); 6 (1778), 106 (#272), 278 (#216), 331 (#456), 439 (#406), 440 (#283), 673 (#313, #314); 7 (1779), 162 (#199), 431 (#458, #210, #146, #47).
Gerald M. Berkowitz, David Garrick, a Reference Guide (1980), begins his bibliography with items from 1741, doubtless unaware of the pieces in 1740. There are other lacunae in this Reference Guide.
For Rust, see The Letters of David Garrick, ed. David M. Little and George M. Kahrl, 3 vols. continuously paged (1963), p. 1269, and for Sir Thomas Mills (below), see Little and Kahrl, p. 828.
See John W. Derry, Charles James Fox (1972), p. 208, for the Whig toast at Fox's successful 1784 campaign: "Buff and Blue and Mrs. Crewe." The poem to Mrs. Crewe was reprinted in the Nov. 1783 WM (pp. 581-582).
See Derry, Charles James Fox, pp. 50-51. Derry does not mention any of the three poems under discussion.
See Some Materials Towards Memoirs of the Reign of King George II, by Lord John Hervey, ed. Romney Sedgwick (1931), III. 829-830.
The Correspondence of Jonathan Swift, ed. Sir Harold Williams (1963-65), I. 338, 349; II. 66 and Alumni Dublinenses . . . (1924), pp. 15 and 795-796. However, George P. Mayhew has suggested Dr. Francis Andrews, Provost of Trinity College (PQ, 1974, 213-221). See Pat Rogers, ed. Jonathan Swift, The Complete Poems (1983), pp. 863-865 for a full discussion of the various versions of the poem. Rogers tentatively ascribes The Friends to Richard Griffith, but gives no evidence for his identification.
None of the three letters discussed is listed in the Johnson bibliography edited by James L. Clifford and Donald J. Greene (1970).
John Nichols in the Gentleman's Magazine for February 1807 (pp. 80-82) and James Bindley in the European Magazine for the same date (pp. 83-86).
Jesse Adele Gilmer, "Steady Reed: The Life and Literary Career of Isaac Reed, Esquire [1742-1806]," 1971, University Microfilms, pp. 21-22. Hereafter Gilmer.
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