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457. another Italian authour: G. C. Cappaccio.

458. the ballad of Lilliburlero: A popular Whig ballad, composed by Thomas, 1st Marquess of Wharton (1648–1715), which is said to have sung James II out of three kingdoms.

459. One of the company: Bishop Percy.

460. an eminent person: Edmund Burke.

461. May 8: Rather, 8 April.

462. a certain celebrated actor: Spranger Barry.

463. a certain authour: Arthur Murphy.

464. another… actor: David Garrick.

465. Or, driven… pole to pole: Alexander Pope, Imitations of Horace, Epistle II.ii.276–7 (1737).

466. Man… to be blest: Alexander Pope, An Essay on Man (1732-4), i.96.

467. mediocribus… columnce: ‘For poets to be second-rate is forbidden equally by gods, by men, and by booksellers’ – Horace, Ars Poetica, ll. 372-3. See above, n. 415.

468. as there is… exquisite in its kind: Untraced.

469. a gentleman: James Boswell.

470. a man very low in his profession: Dr W. Duncan.

471. ∗∗∗∗∗∗∗∗∗∗∗: Alexander Wedderburne.

472. ∗∗∗∗: John Home, the dramatist.

473. two other gentlemen: Edward Dilly and Sir John Miller.

474. the preacher in the morning: The Revd John Burrows.

475. The preacher in the afternoon: The Revd S. Popham.

476. a distinguished gentleman of our acquaintance: Charles Fox.

477. a Deist: Dr Richard Brocklesby.

478. to communicate: That is to say, to take communion.

479. an acquaintance: Probably James Boswell.

480. Nil admirari: ‘Nothing is to be admired’ – Horace, Epistles, I.vi.i.

481. Amoret’s… sustain: Edmund Waller (1606–87), ‘To Amoret’ (‘Fair! that you may truly know’), ll. 39–46.

482. electuary: A medicinal conserve or paste, consisting of a powder or other ingredient mixed with honey, preserve, or syrup of some kind (OED).

483. bolus: A medicine of round shape adapted for swallowing, larger than an ordinary pill (OED).

484. quid tentasse nocebit: ‘It can do no harm to try.’

485. four of our friends: Sir Joshua Reynolds, Edmund Burke, Topham Beauclerk (acid), and Bennet Langton (muddy).

486. The Beggar’s Opera: John Gay, The Beggar’s Opera (1728).

487. A very eminent physician: Perhaps Sir John Pringle.

488. labefactation: A shaking, weakening; overthrow, downfall (OED).

489. ‘worthy’… characterises him: James Thomson, ‘Summer’ (1727), l. 1423.

490. a young gentleman… an eminent singer: Richard Brinsley Sheridan and Elizabeth Linley.

491. Hudibras: Samuel Butler, Hudibras (1663–80); an anti-Presbyterian burlesque poem.

492. A gentleman: James Boswell.

493. Sir Roger de Coverley: The embodiment of Tory attitudes in The Spectator.

494. Somebody: Sir Joshua Reynolds.

495. Gaudium… Luctus: Gaudium: a feast or celebration. Luctus: a funeral or act of mourning.

496. Nil dat quod non habet: He who has nothing can give nothing.

497. nemo… non didicit: No one can teach what he has not learned.

498. non numero sed pondere: Not by number but by weight.

499. Bedlam: The Hospital of St Mary of Bethlehem, used as an asylum for the reception and cure of mentally deranged persons; originally situated in Bishopsgate, in 1676 rebuilt near London Wall, and in 1815 transferred to Lambeth (OED).

500. an acquaintance of ours: Suggestions include Bishop Percy and Dr Michael Lort (or Lait).

501. another very ingenious gentleman: George Steevens.

502. an old amanuensis: Probably V.J. Peyton, one of Johnson’s assistants on the Dictionary.

503. homo caudatus: Man with a tail.

504. in my heart of hearts: Cf. Hamlet, III.ii. 66.

505. the King and Queen: Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette.

506. flints of wood: Wooden imitation flintlock muskets.

507. insulated: Johnson is here using ‘insulated’ to mean ‘not contiguous on any side’, or isolated.

508. Nec… laudo: I do not admire it; nor do I much commend it.’

509. D∗∗∗∗∗∗∗∗’s: D’Argenson’s.

510. Prince Titi; Bibl. des Fees: Themiseul de Saint-Hyacinthe, Histoire du Prince Titi (1735); Bibl[iotheque]. des Fees probably refers to one of the many reprintings of fairy stories compiled by Charles Perrault (1628–1703).

511. ALn. and Anchises… Nilus: Aeneas was the son of Aphrodite and Anchises, whom he carried from the sack of Troy before going on to found Rome. Nilus is possibly a slip for Nisus, a companion of Aeneas and casualty of the war to conquer the future site of Rome.

512. Austin Nuns: Nuns of the Augustinian order.

513. aqua fortis: Nitric acid.

514. Speculum humance Salvationis: ‘The mirror of human salvation’ – a very rare and early printed book.

515. Mrs. S—’s friend: Mrs Strickland’s friend Captain Killpatrick.

516. the Grand Chartreux: A charterhouse, or charitable hospital.

517. Enfans trouves: Foundlings.

518. Neff: Nave.

519. Madame —: Madame du Bocage.

520. a lAngloise: In the English manner.

521. an Irish gentleman: Probably Captain Killpatrick.

522. a Frenchman of great distinction: Probably the French ambassador.

523. A Madame… trop: To Madame La Contesse de —. [Madame de Bouffiers]… Yes, madame, the moment has come, and I must leave. But why must I go? Am I bored? I will be bored elsewhere. Do I seek some pleasure, or some relief? I seek nothing, I hope for nothing. To go and see what I have seen, to be slightly pleased (rejoue a slip for rejoui?], slightly displeased, to remind myself of the vanity of life, to complain about my lot, to harden myself to externalities: this is all that can be reckoned as the diversions of the year. Madame, may God bestow on you all life’s pleasures, together with a mind which can enjoy them without surrendering to them overmuch.

524. vir… paucarum literarum: A man of very acute intellect, and little literature.’

525. Miss —: Miss Aikin.

526. a little Presbyterian parson: The Revd R. Barbauld.

527. To suckle fools… small-beer: Othello, II.i.162.

528. the Congress: The annual meeting of the Church of England.

529. dilecto familiari nostro: Our beloved kinsman.