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DR JOHNSON MR SAVAGE EPU EB
About this book
A classic reissue of Richard Holmes's brilliant book on Samuel Johnson's friendship with the poet Richard Savage, which won the James Tait Black Prize for Biography.
Dr Johnson & Mr Savage is the story of a mysterious eighteenth-century friendship. Richard Savage was a poet, playwright and convicted murderer who roamed through the brothels and society salons of Augustan England creating a legend of poetic injustice. Strangest of all his achievements was the friendship he inspired in Samuel Johnson, then a young, unknown schoolmaster just arrived in London to seek his literary fortune. This puzzling intimacy helped to form Johnson's experience of the world and human passions, and led to his masterpiece The Life of Richard Savage, which revolutionized the art of biography and virtually invented the idea of the poet as a romantic, outcast figure.
Richard Holmes gradually reconstructs this alliance, throwing suprising new light on the character of Dr Johnson. This extraordinary book also questions the very nature of life-writing and exposes the conflicts between friendship, truth and advocacy which the modern form has inherited.
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Information
Chapter 1
Death
Mr Richard Savage, Gent. Report has just reached us in the Bristol mails, of the Demise of Mr Richard Savage, son of the late Earl Rivers, in the debtorâs Confinements of Bristol Newgate gaol. Mr Savage will be recalled as the unhappy Poet and author of âThe Wandererâ, convicted at the Old Bailey on a capital charge of Murder, and sometimes Volunteer Laureate to her Gracious Majesty Queen Caroline.Much obscurity attends the Passage of his early life. We have it on his own Authority that he was born in the parish of St Andrewâs, Holborn, in 1698, the bastard Son of the present Mrs Anne Brett, then Lady Macclesfield (though she never acknowledged his Claim), and the late 4th Earl Rivers of Rivers House, Great Queen Street, Holborn. These Circumstances are obliquely referred to in his memorable poem âThe Bastardâ first given to the World shortly after his Trial in 1728.Mr Savage first came to Notice with two Spanish dramas, and his Tragedy of âSir Thomas Overburyâ produced at Drury Lane by Mr Cibber in 1723. He was befriended by the essayist Sir Richard Steele, and published a number of poetical Works in The Plain Dealer magazine of Mr Aaron Hill, who proclaimed his Merits and drew attention to his Plight. He became associated with Mr Alexander Pope of Twickenham, and is rumoured to have supplied many of the Scurrilities that furnished the latterâs poetical Satire of âThe Dunciadâ.As a frequenter of the Coffeehouse, the Salon, and the Green Room, Mr Savage found his Name connected with many of the illustrious Ladies of the day, including the actress Mrs Anne Oldfield, the poetess Martha Sansom, and that assiduous writer of Scandalous romances, Mrs Eliza Haywood.In November 1727, in consequence of an Affray at Robinsonâs Coffeehouse, Charing Cross, he was arrested on a capital charge of Wounding and Murder, found guilty by a Grand Jury Court at the Old Bailey under the direction of Judge Page, and condemned to suffer execution at Tyburn. His Case became celebrated among the Literati and Beau Monde of the capital, and in consequence of the Intercession of his kinsman Lord Tyrconnel and the renowned Patroness of poets my Lady Hertford, he received the Royal Pardon in February 1728.In relating his Misfortunes, it is remarkable that Mr Savage always afterwards stated that his Mother Mrs Anne Brett, the former Lady Macclesfield, had unaccountably urged the Execution of his sentence against all representations of Mercy, and that it was only the gracious Intercession of her Majesty Queen Caroline which saved him from the Hangmanâs Noose. Mr Savage immediately thereafter tasted the delights of Celebrity, and applied precipitously for the position of Poet Laureate; which, failing to obtain, he appointed himself âVolunteer Laureateâ to the Queen thereby obtaining an Allowance of ÂŁ50 per annum until her majestyâs death in 1737. These Facts we have on the Authority of Mr Thomas Birch of the Royal Society.Mr Savage now came under the Patronage of his generous kinsman Lord Tyrconnel, to whom his poem âThe Wandererâ is dedicated. But in consequence of some Misunderstanding, he shortly reverted to his previous condition of Poverty, and with the Cessation of the Queenâs allowance, he was thrown once more upon his Wits and his Friends, in the Town. He once again began to publish a number of poetical Works, in the new Gentlemanâs Magazine of Mr Edward Cave at St Johnâs Gate, Clerkenwell, among which was his poem âOf Public Spiritâ (1737); but was menaced with a charge of Obscene Libel for his poem âThe Progress of a Divineâ.The condition of his Poverty being unrelieved, he threw himself with increasing confidence on the Generosity of his many friends, among whom Mr Solomon Mendez of Hackney, and Mr James Thomson, the distinguished author of âThe Seasonsâ, at Richmond; though it is to be feared that some Nights were passed in the Cellars and on the Bulks of Covent Garden, in the company of Beggars, Thieves, and other Denizens of Grub Street.Mr Savage had for some time revolved a plan of Retirement to the country, where he hoped to re-write and refurbish his original Tragedy of âSir Thomas Overburyâ. Accordingly through the Generosity of Mr Alexander Pope, a Subscription of ÂŁ50 per annum was organized among his friends, and in the summer of 1739 Mr Savage departed for Wales. Here he settled at Swansea and its Environs, where he is supposed to have met his Friend the poet Mr John Dyer, and paid court to the celebrated Beauty of Llanelli, Mrs Bridget Jones. But his Funds once again running low, Mr Savage returned to Bristol to write his Tragedy and informed his Friends of his imminent Return to the Capital, at which much of his Subscription was unaccountably discontinued.In January 1743 Mr Savage was precipitately arrested for Debt, and conveyed to the Newgate Prison in Bristol, where he received the personal Attentions of the Gaoler Mr Dagge, and died suddenly in his Room on 1st August 1743, being buried at Mr Daggeâs expense in St Peterâs Churchyard, six feet from the south Door of the church.Mr Richard Savage never married, and had no known Off-spring, though he is survived by his reputed mother Mrs Anne Brett, the former Lady Macclesfield, of Old Bond Street, London. His personal Papers have been obtained by his editor Mr Edward Cave, of the Gentlemanâs Magazine.
Whom Phoebus favourâd, on whom Fortune frownâdLies deep beneath this consecrated ground.Savage the name: â he was designâd by Fate,That errâd at his conception, to be great.And such he was, in boundless wit and pride;Tide and heir his Motherâs lust denyâd.
⌠His life was Want, yet could his duteous VerseThe Cruelâs praise, that help withheld, rehearse.Danger extreme*, thâunhappy lawless knew,And woes he felt, as woes were all his due.Twice sovâreign Mercy found, a Queen* to save,From pitying Heaven, to end his cares, a grave.4
Mr Urban: As your Collections show how often you have owed the Ornaments of your poetical Pages, to the Correspondence of the unfortunate and ingenious Mr Savage, I doubt not but you have so much regard to his Memory as to encourage any designs that may have a tendency to the Preservation of it from Insults or Calumnies, and therefore with some Degree of Assurance intreat you to inform the Publick, that his Life will speedily be published by a Person who was favoured with his Confidence, and received from himself an Account of most of the Transactions which he proposes to mention to the Time of his Retirement to Swansea in Wales.5
It may be reasonably imagined that others may have the same Design, but as it is not credible that they can obtain the same Materials, it must be expected they will supply from Invention the want of Intelligence, and that under the Title of the Life of Savage they will publish only a Novel filled with romantick Adventures, and imaginary Amours. You may therefore perhaps gratify the Lovers of Truth and Wit by giving me leave to inform them in your Magazine, that my Account will be published in 8vo by Mr Roberts in Warwick-Lane.6
Table of contents
- Title Page
- Copyright
- Table of Contents
- Prologue
- Chapter 1 Death
- Chapter 2 Love
- Chapter 3 Night
- Chapter 4 Mother
- Chapter 5 Bard
- Chapter 6 Murder
- Chapter 7 Fame
- Chapter 8 Friendship
- Chapter 9 Arcadia
- Chapter 10 Charon
- Appendix Note on Savageâs birth and identity
- Select Bibliography
- References
- Index
- Acknowledgements
- About the Author
- Praise
- Also By Richard Holmes
- About the Publisher