Everything about James Boswell totally explained
James Boswell, 10th Laird of Auchinleck and
1st Baronet (
October 29,
1740 -
May 19,
1795) was a lawyer, diarist, and
author born in
Edinburgh,
Scotland. He was the eldest son of a judge,
Alexander Boswell, 8th Laird of Auchinleck and his wife Euphemia Erskine, Lady Auchinleck. Boswell's mother was a strict
Calvinist, and he felt that his father was cold to him. Boswell, who is best known as
Samuel Johnson’s
biographer, inherited his father’s estate Auchinleck in Ayrshire. His name has passed into the
English language as a term (
Boswell,
Boswellian,
Boswellism) for a constant companion and observer.
Boswell is also known for the detailed and frank journals that he wrote for long periods of his life, which remained undiscovered until the 1920s. These included voluminous notes on the
grand tour of Europe that he took as a young nobleman and, subsequently, of his tour of Scotland with Johnson. His journals also record meetings and conversations with eminent individuals belonging to
The Club, including
Lord Monboddo,
David Garrick,
Edmund Burke,
Joshua Reynolds and
Oliver Goldsmith. His written works focus chiefly on others, but he was admitted as a good companion and accomplished conversationalist in his own right.
Early life
Boswell was born near
St Giles Cathedral in
Edinburgh on
29 October,
1740. As a child, he was delicate and suffered from some type of nervous ailment. He was educated at
James Mundell's academy, followed by a string of private tutors before being enrolled at 13 into the arts course at the
University of Edinburgh, studying there from
1753 to
1758. Midway in his studies he suffered a serious depression and nervous illness, but when he recovered he'd thrown off all signs of delicacy and attained robust health. Boswell had swarthy skin, black hair, and dark eyes; he was of average height, and he tended to plumpness. His appearance was alert and masculine, and he'd an ingratiating sense of good humour.
Upon turning nineteen he was sent to continue his studies at the
University of Glasgow, where he was taught by
Adam Smith. While at
Glasgow, Boswell decided to convert to
Catholicism and become a
monk. Upon learning of this, Boswell's father ordered him home. Instead of obeying, Boswell ran away to
London.
Boswell spent three months in London, where he lived the life of a
libertine before he was taken back to Scotland by his father. Upon returning, he was re-enrolled at Edinburgh University and was forced by his father to sign away most of his inheritance in return for an allowance of £100 a year. On
July 30,
1762 Boswell took his oral law exam, which he passed with some skill. Upon this success, Lord Auchinleck decided to raise his son's allowance to £200 a year and allowed him to return to London. It was during this spell in London that Boswell wrote his
London Journal and met Johnson for the first time, on
May 16,
1763; the pair became friends almost immediately. Boswell was eventually nicknamed
Bozzy by Johnson.
The first conversation between Johnson and Boswell is frequently quoted as follows:
Boswell: "Mr. Johnson, I do indeed come from Scotland, but I can't help it."
Johnson: "That, Sir, I find, is what a very great many of your countrymen can't help."
It is widely believed that Johnson despised the Scots; however, on being specifically asked the question, he also admitted that this prejudice was without basis.
European travels
It was around three months after this first encounter with Johnson that Boswell departed for Europe with the initial goal of continuing his law studies at
Utrecht University. He spent a year there and although desperately unhappy the first few months, he quite enjoyed his time in Utrecht. He befriended and fell in love with
Belle van Zuilen, a Dutch intellect and writer. After this, Boswell spent most of the next two years travelling around the continent. During this time he met
Voltaire and
Jean-Jacques Rousseau and made a pilgrimage to
Rome. Boswell also travelled to
Corsica to meet one of his heroes, the independence leader
Pasquale Paoli. His well observed diaries of this time have been compiled into two books
Boswell in Holland and
Boswell and the Grand Tour
Mature life
Boswell returned to London in February
1766 accompanied by Rousseau's mistress, with whom he may have had a brief affair on the journey home. After spending a few weeks in the capital, he returned to Scotland to take his final law exam. He passed the exam and became an
advocate. He practiced for over a decade, during which time he spent no more than a month every year with Johnson. Nevertheless, he returned to London each year in order to mingle with Johnson and the rest of the London literary crowd, and to escape his mundane existence in Scotland. He found enjoyment in playing the intellectual rhyming game
crambo with his peers.
Boswell married his cousin, Margaret Montgomerie, in November
1769. She remained faithful to Boswell, despite his frequent liaisons with prostitutes, until her death of
tuberculosis in
1789. After his infidelities he'd deliver tearful apologies to her and beg her forgiveness, before again promising her, and himself, that he'd reform. James and Margaret had four sons and three daughters. Two sons died in infancy; the other two were
Alexander (1775-1822) and James (1778-1822). Their daughters were Veronica (1773-1795), Euphemia (1774-ca. 1834) and Elizabeth (1780-1814). Boswell also had at least two illegitimate children, Charles (1762-1764) and Sally (1767-1768?).
Despite his relative literary success with accounts of his European travels, Boswell was an unsuccessful advocate. By the late 1770s he descended further and further into alcoholism and gambling addiction. Throughout his life, from childhood until death, he was beset by severe swings of mood. His depressions frequently encouraged, and were exacerbated by, his various vices. His happier periods usually saw him relatively vice-free. His character mixed a superficial
Enlightenment sensibility for reason and taste with a genuine and somewhat
Romantic love of the sublime and a propensity for occasionally puerile whimsy. The latter, along with his tendency for drink and other vices, caused many contemporaries and later observers to regard him as being too lightweight to be an equal in the literary crowd that he wanted to be a part of. However, his humour and innocent good nature won him many lifelong friends.
Boswell was a frequent guest of Lord Monboddo at
Monboddo House, a setting where he gathered significant observations for his writings by association with Samuel Johnson,
Robert Burns,
Lord Kames, Lord Monboddo and other luminaries.
After Johnson's death in
1784, Boswell moved to London to try his luck at the English
Bar, which proved even more unsuccessful than his career in Scotland. He also offered to stand for Parliament but failed to get the necessary support, and he spent the final years of his life writing his
Life of Johnson. During this time his health began to fail due to
venereal disease and his years of drinking. Boswell died in London in 1795.
Boswell's Life of Samuel Johnson
Image:JoshuaReynoldsParty.jpg|A literary party at Sir Joshua Reynolds - 1781. The painting shows the friends of Reynolds including Boswell at left - use cursor to identify others. |180px|thumb
poly 133 343 124 287 159 224 189 228 195 291 222 311 209 343 209 354 243 362 292 466 250 463 Dr Johnson - Dictionary writer
poly 76 224 84 255 43 302 62 400 123 423 121 361 137 344 122 290 111 234 96 225 Boswell - Biographer
poly 190 276 208 240 229 228 247 238 250 258 286 319 282 323 223 323 220 301 200 295 Sir Joshua Reynolds - Host
poly 308 317 311 270 328 261 316 246 320 228 343 227 357 240 377 274 366 284 352 311 319 324 David Garrick - actor
poly 252 406 313 343 341 343 366 280 383 273 372 251 378 222 409 228 414 280 420 292 390 300 374 360 359 437 306 418 313 391 272 415 Edmund Burke - statesman
rect 418 220 452 287 Pasqual Paoli - Corsican independent
poly 455 238 484 253 505 303 495 363 501 377 491 443 429 439 423 375 466 352 Charles Burney - music historian
poly 501 279 546 237 567 239 572 308 560 326 537 316 530 300 502 289 Thomas Warton - poet laureate
poly 572 453 591 446 572 373 603 351 562 325 592 288 573 260 573 248 591 243 615 254 637 280 655 334 705 396 656 419 625 382 609 391 613 453 Oliver Goldsmith - writer
rect 450 86 584 188 prob.The Infant Academy 1782
rect 286 87 376 191 unknown painting
circle 100 141 20 An unknown portrait
poly 503 192 511 176 532 176 534 200 553 219 554 234 541 236 525 261 506 261 511 220 515 215 servant - poss. Dr Johnson's hier
rect 12 10 702 500 Use button to enlarge or use hyperlinks
desc bottom-left
When the
Life of Johnson was published in 1791 it at once commanded the admiration that Boswell had sought for so long, and it has suffered no diminution since. Its style was revolutionary - unlike other biographies of that era it directly incorporated conversations that Boswell had noted down at the time for his journals. He also included far more personal and human details than contemporary readers were accustomed to. Instead of writing a respectful and dry record of Johnson's public life, in the style of the time, he painted a vivid portrait of the complete man. It is still often said to be the greatest biography yet written, and the longevity of Dr. Johnson's fame perhaps owes much to the work.
The question has often been asked of how a man such as Boswell could have produced so remarkable a work as the
Life of Johnson. Among those who attempted an answer were
Macaulay and
Carlyle: the former arguing, paradoxically, that Boswell's uninhibited folly and triviality were his greatest qualifications; the latter, with deeper insight, replying that beneath such traits were a mind to discern excellence and a heart to appreciate it, aided by the power of accurate observation and considerable dramatic ability.
(Macaulay's venomous condemnation of Boswell's personality may have had a political foundation: Boswell was a Tory, and as such a target for Whig historian Macaulay's attacks. In addition, Macaulay's grandfather was the victim of one of Johnson's sharpest rebukes: "Sir, are you so grossly ignorant of human nature, as not to know that a man may be very sincere in good principles, without having good practice?").
Slavery
Boswell was present at the meeting of the
Committee for the Abolition of the Slave Trade in May 1787 set up to persuade
William Wilberforce to lead the abolition movement in Parliament. However, the abolitionist
Thomas Clarkson records that by 1788 Boswell "after having supported the cause... became inimical to it."
Boswell's most prominent display of support for the slavery movement was his 1791 poem 'No Abolition of Slavery; or the Universal Empire of Love,' which lampooned Clarkson, Wilberforce and
Pitt. The poem also supports the common suggestion of the pro-slavery movement, that the slaves actually enjoyed their lot: "The cheerful gang! - the negroes see / Perform the task of industry."
Quotations
"I don't recollect having had any other valuable principle impressed upon me by my father except a strict regard for truth, which he impressed upon my mind by a hearty beating at an early age when I lied, and then talking of the dishonour of lying."
"My heart warmed to my countrymen, and my Scotch blood boiled with indignation. I jumped from the benches, roared out 'Damn you, you rascals!', hissed and was in the greatest rage ... I hated the English; I wished from my soul that the Union was broke and that we might give them another battle of Bannockburn" recounting a situation where Londoners had been openly mocking two Highland officers and he'd jumped to their defence.
"For my own part I think no innocent species of wit or pleasantry should be suppressed: and that a good pun may be admitted among the smaller excellencies of lively conversation."
In a poem about himself:
"Boswell is pleasant and gay, / For frolic by nature designed; / He heedlessly rattles away / When company is to his mind."
"We can't tell the precise moment when friendship is formed. As in filling a vessel drop by drop, there's at last a drop which makes it run over. So in a series of kindnesses there is, at last, one which makes the heart run over."
On his last meeting with Johnson:
"We bade adieu to each other affectionately in the carriage. When he'd got down upon the foot pavement he called out 'Fare you well'; and without looking back, sprung away with a kind of pathetic briskness, if I may use that expression, which seemed to indicate a struggle to conceal uneasiness, and impressed me with a foreboding of our long, long separation."
Samuel Johnson once criticised Boswell for the Scottish habit of eating oats for breakfast:
"In England we wouldn't think of eating oats. We only feed them to Horses." to which Boswell replied:
"Well, maybe that's why in England you've better horses, and in Scotland we've better men"
Discovery of papers
In the 1920s a great part of Boswell's private papers, including intimate journals for much of his life, were discovered at
Malahide Castle, north of
Dublin. These provide a hugely revealing insight into the life and thoughts of the man. They were sold to the American collector
Ralph H. Isham and have since passed to
Yale University, which has published general and scholarly editions of his journals and correspondence. A second cache was discovered soon after and also purchased by Isham. A substantially longer edition of
A Journal of a Tour to the Hebrides was published in 1936 based on his original manuscript. His
London Journal 1762-63, the first of the Yale journal publications, appeared in 1950. The last,
The Great Biographer, 1789-1795, was published in 1989.
Works
Published journals
Boswell's London Journal, 1762-1763
Boswell in Holland, 1763-1764, including his correspondence with Belle de Zuylen (ZeÌlide)
Boswell in Search of a Wife, 1766-1769
Boswell for the Defence, 1769-1774
Boswell in Extremes, 1776-1778
Boswell, the Applause of the Jury, 1782-1785
Boswell, the English Experiment, 1785-1789
Further Information
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