she would make an impression that would soften even your hard heart." "No need of any further. trial,' said he, laughing, for she has done that already; and so soft was the impression that it absolutely all dissolved!-melted quite away, and not a trace of it left!' 66 "Mr. Seward then proposed that she should marry Sir John Miller, who has just lost his wife; and very gravely said, he had a great mind to set out for Tun- · bridge, and carry her with him to Bath, and so make the match without delay! "But surely,' said Mrs. Thrale, if you fail, you will think yourself bound in honour to marry her yourself?? 666 "Why, that's the thing,' said he; 'no, I can't take the little Sophy myself; I should have too many rivals; rivals; no, that won't do.' "How abominably conceited and sure these pretty gentlemen are! However, Mr. Crutchley here made a speech that half won my heart. 6 "I wish,' said he, Miss Streatfield was here at this moment to cuff you, Seward !' "Cuff me,' cried he. 'What, the little Sophy!— and why?' "For disposing of her so freely. I think a man deserves to be cuffed for saying any lady will marry him.' "I seconded this speech with much approbation.". "London, Jan. 1783.- Before they went came Miss Streatfield, looking pale, but very elegant and pretty. She was in high spirits, and I hope has some reason. She made, at least, speeches that provoked such surmises. When the Jacksons went, "That,' said I, 'is the celebrated Jackson of Exeter; I dare say you would like him if you knew him.' 6 "I dare say I should,' cried she, simpering; for he has the two requisites for me, he is tall and thin.' "To be sure, this did not at all call for raillery! Dr. Vyse has always been distinguished by these two epithets. I said, however, nothing, as my mother was present; but she would not let my looks pass unnoticed. 666 "Oh!' cried she, 'how wicked you look!—No need of seeing Mrs. Siddons for expression!—However, you know how much that is my taste,-tall and thin!—but you don't know how àpropos it is just now!'" Nine years after the last entry, we find: 66 May 25, 1792.-We now met Mrs. Porteous; and who should be with her but the poor pretty S. S., whom so long I had not seen, and who has now lately been finally given up by her long-sought and very injurious lover, Dr. Vyse? "She is sadly faded, and looked disturbed and unhappy; but still beautiful, though no longer blooming; and still affectionate, though absent and evidently absorbed. We had a little chat together about the Thrales. In mentioning our former intimacy with them, ‘Ah, those,' she cried, 'were happy times!' and her eyes glistened. Poor thing! hers has been a lamentable story !—Imprudence and vanity have rarely been mixed with so much sweetness, and good-humour, and candour, and followed with more reproach and ill success. We agreed to renew acquaintance next winter; at present she will be little more in town." In a letter to Madame D'Arblay, Oct. 20, 1820, Mrs. Piozzi says: "Fell, the bookseller in Bond Street, told me a fortnight or three weeks ago, that Miss Streatfield lives where she did in his neighbourhood, Clifford Street, S. S. still." On the 18th January, 1821: "The once charming S. S. had inquired for me of Nornaville and Fell, the Old Bond Street booksellers, so I thought she meditated writing, but was deceived." The story she told the author of " Piozziana," in proof of Johnson's want of firmness, clearly refers to this lady: "I had remarked to her that Johnson's readiness to condemn any moral deviation in others was, in a man so entirely before the public as he was, nearly a proof of his own spotless purity of conduct. She said, 'Yes, Johnson was, on the whole, a rigid moralist; but he could be ductile, I may say, servile; and I will give you an instance. We had a large dinner-party at our house; Johnson sat on one side of me, and Burke on the other; and in the company there was a young female (Mrs. Piozzi named her), to whom I, in my peevishness, thought Mr. Thrale superfluously attentive, to the neglect of me and others; especially of myself, then near my confinement, and dismally low-spirited; who notwithstanding which, Mr. T. very unceremoniously begged of me to change place with Sophy was threatened with a sore throat, and might be injured by sitting near the door. I had scarcely swallowed a spoonful of soup when this occurred, and was so overset by the coarseness of the proposal, that I burst into tears, said something petulant—that perhaps ere long, the lady might be at the head of Mr. T.'s table, without displacing the mistress of the house, &c., and so left the apartment. I retired to the drawing-room, and for an hour or two contended with my vexation, as I best could, when Johnson and Burke came up. On seeing them, I resolved to give a jobation to both, but fixed on Johnson for my charge, and asked him if he had noticed what passed, what I had suffered, and whether allowing for the state of my nerves, I was much to blame? He answered, "Why, possibly not; your feelings were outraged." I said, "Yes, greatly so; and I cannot help remarking with what blandness and composure you witnessed the outrage. Had this transaction been told of others, your anger would have known no bounds; but, towards a man who gives good dinners &c., you were meekness itself!" Johnson coloured, and Burke, I thought, looked foolish; but I had not a word of answer from either." The only excuse for Mr. Thrale is to be found in his mental and bodily condition at the time, which made it impossible for Johnson or Burke to interfere without a downright quarrel with him, nor without making matters worse. This, however, is not the only instance in which Johnson witnessed Thrale's laxity of morals without reproving it. Opposite the passage in which Boswell reports Johnson as palliating infidelity in a husband by the remark, that the man imposes no bastards on his wife, she writes: "Sometimes he does. Johnson knew a man who did, and the lady took very tender care of them." Madame D'Arblay was not uniformly such a source of comfort to her as that lady supposed. The entries in "Thraliana" relating to her show this: "August, 1779.-Fanny Burney has been a long time from me; I was glad to see her again; yet she makes me miserable too in many respects, so restlessly and apparently anxious, lest I should give myself airs of patronage or load her with the shackles of dependance. I live with her always in a degree of pain that precludes friendship-dare not ask her to buy me a ribbon - dare not desire her to touch the bell, lest she should think herself injured-lest she should forsooth appear in the character of Miss Neville, and I in that of the widow Bromley. See Murphy's Know Your Own Mind."" 6 "Fanny Burney has kept her room here in my house seven days, with a fever or something that she called a fever; I gave her every medicine and every slop with my own hand; took away her dirty cups, spoons, &c. ; moved her tables: in short, was doctor, and nurse and maid-for I did not like the servants should have additional trouble lest they should hate her for it. And now, with the true gratitude of a wit, she tells me |