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Bolt Court. Johnson's house stands in the north-west corner of the little enclosure, now given over to unattractive places of business, but formerly described by topographers as "fashionable." In the interior the house is much altered, though it still reveals an ancient oak-balustraded staircase, while at the street door hangs a huge cross-chain which dates from Johnson's time. The topmost room the sky parlour, or "first floor down the chimney," as Beau Tibbs would

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have called it is a garret
Occupying the entire length of
the building, and having five
windows. This was the manu-
factory of the famous Diction-
ary.
Here, duly partitioned
off, laboured the Doctor's six
amanuenses; here came Joseph
Warton, and Roubillac and
Reynolds; and here, when the
place was promoted to the rank
of library, Dr. Burney found
the great Lexicographer in
company with "five or six
Greek folios, a deal writing-
desk, and a chair and a half."
This last is the memorable
piece of furniture in the

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manipulation of which its possessor was so proficient. He "never forgot its defect," said Miss Reynolds; "but would either hold it in his hand, or place it with great composure against some support, taking no notice of its imperfection to his visitor." At Gough Square (" Goff Square," he spells it in a letter to Miss Porter of 12th July, 1749) Johnson lived ten years. Hence he sent forth the Vanity of Human Wishes, the Rambler, the essays for Hawkesworth's Adventurer, the Dictionary, the Idler, and the proposals for Shakespeare. Hence, too, he dispatched that epistle to Chesterfield, which is still the pride of independent men of letters. At Gough Square,

in 1752, he lost his wife; and seven years afterwards his mother. "The life which made my own life pleasant is at an end," he wrote mournfully of the latter bereavement; and to pay his mother's modest debts, he penned the story of Rasselas.

But before Rasselas was published in the April of 1759, he had quitted Gough Square, the precise date of his departure being fixed by a letter to his step-daughter, Lucy Porter. "I have this day moved my things," he writes on March 23rd, "and you are now to direct to me at Staple Inn, London." Staple Inn is another of his Holborn residences. From this he moved to Gray's Inn, and thence again to a first floor at I, Inner Temple Lane, on the southern side of Fleet Street. Here he remained from 1760 to 1765. The house, which was long inscribed "Dr. Johnson's Staircase," was pulled down in 1857, and Johnson's Buildings has now obliterated the site. If his existence here has been accurately described, it was not of the happiest. "He lived," says Arthur Murphy, "in poverty, total idleness, and the pride of literature"; and a chance caller was surprised to find him, on one occasion, absolutely unprovided with pen, ink, or paper. His library was hidden away in a couple of garrets up four pair of stairs, commanding a view of St. Paul's and the surrounding roofs. He had many good books, but they were ill-arranged and ill-kept. It was to Inner Temple Lane in 1762 that Murphy brought him tidings of the pension later conferred upon him by Lord Bute; and at Inner Temple Lane, in virtue of the honorary degree of the University of Dublin, he first became a Doctor. It was here, too, that he was visited by Mme. de Boufflers, speeding his parting guest with the grotesque ceremonial described by Boswell. "All at once I heard a noise like thunder. This was occasioned by Johnson, who, it seems, on a little recollection, had taken it into his head that he ought to have done the honours of his literary residence to a foreign lady of quality, and eager to show himself a man of gallantry, was hurrying down the stair-case in violent agitation. He overtook us before we reached the Temple-gate, and, brushing in between me and Madame de Boufflers, seized her hand, and conducted her to her coach." In Inner Temple Lane, again, it was that Ozias Humphrey, the miniature painter, discovered him, close upon one o'clock in the day, "waving over his breakfast like a lunatic,"

and arrayed as to his person in a rusty brown suit, an ancient black wig, unbuttoned shirt-sleeves, and a pair of old shoes worn slipperwise. But when he began to talk, everything was "as correct as a second edition"; and his visitor found it impossible to argue with him, he was "so sententious and so knowing."

From Inner Temple Lane, Johnson migrated to No. 7, Johnson's Court, where, in 1775, he received a second honorary degree, that of D.C.L., Oxford. Johnson's Court (the name of which is a mere coincidence) lies on the north side of Fleet Street to the north and west of the present Anderton's Hotel. While here, he published his Journey to the Western Islands, and his long-promised Shakespeare.

"He for Subscribers baits his hook,

And takes their cash—but where's the Book ?”

sang the inexorable Churchill, in reprobation of the great man's tardiness. At Johnson's Court, the Doctor was already surrounded by his little colony of pensioners. Levett,

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Officious, innocent, sincere,

Of every friendless name the friend,"

occupied the garret ; and blind Miss Williams the ground floor. On Easter-day, 1773, Boswell, to his delight, dined with his Mentor chez lui, on "a boiled leg of lamb and spinach, a veal pye, and a rice pudding"-a repast far superior to the Lacedemonian "black broth" which Foote, in allusion to Johnson's coloured servant, Francis Barber, had led him to anticipate. On the contrary, everything was excellent of its kind, and served in good order. Johnson's earliest letter from Johnson's Court is dated 17th October, 1765; and he left it in March 1776 for 8, Bolt Court, between Gough Square and Fleet Street. No. 8 stood upon the site of what, until very recently, was the Stationers' Company's school; and this again had been the printing office which Bensley, the printer, had erected to take the place of Johnson's former dwelling when, in 1819, it was burned down. In the Doctor's time the Bolt Courthouse had a garden at the back, in which (credite posteri !), only a few weeks before his death, he gathered three bunches of grapes; and at its door were two stone seats, from

one of which, in 1783, being returned from church "in a placid frame of mind," he discoursed to Boswell of many things from burnt bones and dried orange peel to orchards and hot-houses. This garden afterwards became the playground of the Stationers' Company's School. No. 8 Bolt Court was Johnson's last home; and on Monday, the 13th December, 1784, he died peacefully in the back room of its first floor. Not long afterwards, Isaac Disraeli, then a youth of seventeen, knocked at the door to make enquiry about a manuscript he had forwarded to Johnson, of which he had heard nothing. His summons was answered by Francis Barber, who told him that the Doctor had been dead some hours.

As might be supposed, Johnson was a devout, if intermittent, church-goer. "He was not constant in his attendance on divine worship," says Hawkins; "but, from an opinion peculiar to himself, which he once intimated to me, seemed to wait for some secret impulse as a motive to it." "Whenever I miss church on a Sunday," he told Boswell at seventy, "I resolve to go another day. But I do not always do it." He was, however, a rigid Sabbatarian, carefully regulating his Sunday reading; and Boswell noticed "that he would not even look at a proof-sheet of his Life of Waller on Good Friday.” Living as he did for so many years in mid-Fleet Street, he had several famous churches in his neighbourhood. He was close to St. Dunstan's and the Temple, while St. Bride's was at one end of Fleet Street and St. Clement Danes at the other. Bolt Court, Johnson's Court, and Gough Square were in the parish of St. Dunstan, which was consequently his parish church; but Boswell makes no reference to his attendance, either there or at St. Bride's. There is mention of his going to St. Paul's; and, on one occasion, to the Temple Church, where he heard Gregory Sharpe praying fervently for the blessing of Liberty, which drew from him the remark that prayer against licentiousness would be more to the point. But his favourite place of worship was St. Clement Danes, where he was well known. Here he had his seat in pew No. 18, North Gallery, next the pulpit, at that date occupied by Mr. Burrows. On 9th April 1773, he took Boswell with him. "His behaviour was, as I had imaged to myself, solemnly devout. I never shall forget the tremulous earnestness with which he pronounced the awful petition in the Litany: In the

hour of death, and in the day of judgment, Good Lord, deliver us!"" It was in St. Clement Danes, eleven years later, that, "after a confinement of 129 days," he returned thanks to God for his recovery from sickness.1

As may be gathered from his melancholy habit, Johnson was not averse from diversions in general. They filled the intervals between thought and vacuity, he said; and of public amusements he affirmed, more questionably, that they kept people from vice. It was, moreover, his opinion that, as no man was a hypocrite in his pleasures, his choice of them really revealed his character. The revelation vouchsafed in his own case is not, however, abundantly manifested by his biographer. From his recommending the St. George's Spa Water to Mrs. Thrale, it may perhaps be concluded that he was familiar with the old pleasure resort which once occupied the site of Bedlam, and was known as the Dog and Duck; but from the playful proposal which, much to Lady Sydney Beauclerk's disgust, he once made to his friends to take—that is, rentCuper's, or (more vulgarly) Cupid's, Gardens, now traversed by the Waterloo Bridge Road,-it would be too much to assume he had any experimental acquaintance with that eighteenth-century Cremorne. But he certainly did frequent Mary

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lebone Gardens, for he went with George Steevens to see the fireworks of the famous pyrotechnist, Torré, to whose exhibition he was afterwards unkind enough to liken the poetry of Gray. It was on this occasion that the Doctor figured in the (for him) unusual character of ringleader in a riot. The evening was wet, and the damp squibs and Catharine wheels declined to go off. Johnson, resenting this as parsimony on the part of the management, proposed to threaten to smash the coloured lamps, a suggestion which

1 His pew is now distinguished by a brass plate with an inscription. This was erected in 1851 by some of the parishioners of St. Clement Danes. At the centenary of Johnson's death, December, 1884, there was a memorial service, when the pew was draped in violet, and a cast of the bust by Nollekens placed on the ledge in front. The occasion was also marked by an excellent address from the Rector, Dr. John Lindsay.

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