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    EARLY FRENCH POETS
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    THE

    EARLY FRENCH POETS,

    A SERIES OF NOTICES AND TRANSLATIONS:

    WITH AN

    _Introductory Sketch of the History of French Poetry._

    BY THE REV. HENRY CARY, M.A.

    MDCCCXLVI.

    * * * * *

    _Shortly will be published_,

    THE ODES OF PINDAR,

    IN ENGLISH VERSE.

    SECOND EDITION, WITH NOTES,

    EDITED BY THE REV. HENRY CARY, M.A.

    * * * * *

    _Preparing for the Press_,

    THE

    LITERARY JOURNAL AND LETTERS

    OF THE

    REV. HENRY FRANCIS CARY.

    _WITH A MEMOIR_.

    BY HIS SON, THE REV. HENRY CARY, M.A.



    * * * * *




    LIVES

    OF

    ENGLISH POETS,

    FROM

    JOHNSON TO KIRKE WHITE,

    DESIGNED AS A CONTINUATION OF JOHNSON'S LIVES.

    BY THE LATE

    REV. HENRY FRANCIS CARY, M.A.

    TRANSLATOR OF DANTE.

    MDCCCXLVI.

    * * * * *


    EDITOR'S PREFACE.

    The papers of which this volume is composed originally appeared in the
    London Magazine, between the years 1821 and 1824. It was the author's
    intention to continue the series of Lives to a later period, but a
    change in the proprietorship of the Magazine prevented the completion of
    his plan. They are now for the first time published in a separate form,
    and under their author's name.

    In seeing the work through the press, the Editor has had occasion only
    to alter one or two particulars in the Life of Goldsmith, which the
    labours of that Poet's more recent biographer, Mr. Prior, have
    subsequently elucidated.

    HENRY CARY.

    WORCESTER COLLEGE, OXFORD. _Dec_. 1, 1845.

    CONTENTS.


    SAMUEL JOHNSON

    JOHN ARMSTRONG

    RICHARD JAGO

    RICHARD OWEN CAMBRIDGE

    TOBIAS SMOLLETT

    THOMAS WARTON

    JOSEPH WARTON

    CHRISTOPHER ANSTEY

    WILLIAM MASON

    OLIVER GOLDSMITH

    ERASMUS DARWIN

    WILLIAM JULIUS MICKLE

    JAMES BEATTIE

    WILLIAM HAYLEY

    SIR WILLIAM JONES

    THOMAS CHATTERTON

    HENRY KIRKE WHITE





    LIVES OF ENGLISH POETS.

    * * * * *

    SAMUEL JOHNSON.

    There is, perhaps, no one among our English writers, who for so great a
    part of his life has been an object of curiosity to his contemporaries
    as Johnson. Almost every thing he said or did was thought worthy of
    being recorded by some one or other of his associates; and the public
    were for a time willing to listen to all they had to say of him. A mass
    of information has thus been accumulated, from which it will be my task
    to select such a portion as shall seem sufficient to give a faithful
    representation of his fortunes and character, without wearying the
    attention of the reader. That any important addition should be made to
    what has been already told of him, will scarcely be expected.

    Samuel Johnson, the elder of two sons of Michael Johnson, who was of an
    obscure family, and kept a bookseller's shop at Lichfield, was born in
    that city on the 18th of September, 1709. His mother, Sarah Ford, was
    sprung of a respectable race of yeomanry in Worcestershire; and, being a
    woman of great piety, early instilled into the mind of her son those
    principles of devotion for which he was afterwards so eminently
    distinguished. At the end of ten months from his birth, he was taken
    from his nurse, according to his own account of himself, a poor diseased
    infant, almost blind; and, when two years and a half old, was carried to
    London to be touched by Queen Anne for the evil. Being asked many years
    after if he had any remembrance of the Queen, he said that he had a
    confused but somehow a sort of solemn recollection of a lady in diamonds
    and a long black hood. So predominant was this superstition relating to
    the king's evil, that there was a form of service for the occasion
    inserted in the Book of Common Prayer, and Bishop Bull,[1] in one of his
    Sermons, calls it a relique and remainder of the primitive gift of
    healing. The morbidness of constitution natural to him, and the defect
    in his eye-sight, hindered him from partaking in the sports of other
    children, and probably induced him to seek for distinction in
    intellectual superiority. Dame Oliver, who kept a school for little
    children, in Lichfield, first taught him to read; and, as he delighted
    to tell, when he

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