OLIVEB GOLDSMITH'S LIFE AND TIMES. [BOOK m. 1759. from the round of a ladder to which of himself he never JEt.3l. could have mounted, looks down with ludicrous contempt on what Mr. Ealph would call the " implements " of his elevation. Let me here add, that since this portion of my book was first written, I have had access to imprinted letters* which not only place Grarrick in a more favourable light than his biographers generally have shown him in, but suggest a tenderness of consideration for what was defective in his character, even greater than I have ventured to claim for him. In the actual path of life he crossed Goldsmith so often, that perhaps the reader will not think it a censurable digression, if in some few additional pages I give him tidings he, has not before seen of a man so famous, and whose gay, bright, glancing little figure, reappears with such frequent and pleasant cheerfulness in every social picture of the time. David G-arrick was, as all of us know, the son of a recruiting captain whose family originally was French (the name was Garrique), and from whom he appears to have inherited his little. figure, his expressive eye, his happy buoyancy of spirit, and restless vivacity of motion. His biographers describe him acting Serjeant Kite at a private play when he was eleven years old; and the first of these letters I have seen, written to his father when he was fifteen, marks exactly that bent of his tastes in describing " a very " pretty woman, only she squints a little, as Captain Brazen * By the kindness of my friend Mr. Golburn, whose property this most interesting collection of Grarrick Letters has become, -with a view, as I hope, to an early publication of them. They will form the most striking and valuable contri- bution that has yet been made to the great actor's history. genius, smiles