262 OLIYEK GOLDSMITH'S LIFE AND TIMES. [BOOK in. 1759. strained or excessive song of triumph. " The favor I meet JiuJl. " with from ye Greatest men," he writes to his brother on the 19th of April, " has made me far from repenting of " my choice. I am very intimate with Mr. Glover, who will " bring out a Tragedy next winter upon my ace*. Twice I " have sup'd wth ye Great Mr. Murray, Counsell1', and shall « wth jy/Q.. Pope, by his Introduction. I sup'd with ye Mr. " Littleton, ye Prince's Favourite, last Thursday night, and "that with ye highest Civility and complaisance. He told " me he never knew what Acting was till I appeared, and said " I was only born to act w* Shakespear writ. These things " daily occurring give me Great Pleasure. I din'dawith Ld "Hallifax and Ld Sandwich, two very ingenious Noblemen, "yesterday, and am to dine at Ld Hallifax's next Sunday " with Ld Chesterfield. I have the Pleasure of being very " intimate, too, with Mr. Hawkins Browne, of Burton.* In "short, I believe nobody (as an Actor) was ever more " caress'd, and my Character as a private Man makes 'em " more desirous of my Company. (All this entre nous, as one " Brothr to another.) I am not fix'cl for next year, but shall " certainly be at ye Other End of ye Town. I arn offered 500 " guineas and a Clear Benefit, or part of ye Management." Here, then, I leave him, rapidly on his way to the other end of town, manager in expectancy already, the architect in six months of a fortune which went on increasing for thirty- six years, now as always the darling of the great,f and a * The author, among other things, of A Pipe of Tobacco (the original of the Rejected Addresses, Odes and Addresses, &c. &e.), -which Goldsmith praises deservedly in his Beauties of English Poetry, not on the ground that the parody is ridiculous, but that the imitation is excellent. " I am told" he remarks "that " he had no good original manner of his own, yet we see how well he succeeds " when he turns an imitator." i. 261. Johnson thought him the best " converger" he had ever met. Mrs. Piozzi, 173. • t " I dined to-day at Garrick's," writes Horace Walpole to Bentley (August 15, 1755): "there were the Duke of Grrafton, Lord and Lady Eochford, Lady Holder- in the exact