OLIVER GOLDSMITH'S LIFE AND TIMES. [BOOK m. 1763. " perhaps we could perfectly understand." Arthur Murphy mUs. calls it a humour which pleased the more for seeming- undesigned.* It might more briefly have been defined, I imagine, as the feeling of a superiority to his subject. No man was ever so free, said Johnson very happily, when he was going to say a good thing, from a look which expressed that it was coming; or, when he' had said it, from a look that expressed that it had come.t This was a sense of the same superiority; and it gave Beauclerc a predomi- nance of a certain sort over his company, little likely to be always pleasant, and least so when it pointed shafts of sarcasm against Ms friends. Even Johnson was not tolerant of these. " Sir," he said to him, after one of his malicious sallies, " you never open your mouth but with " intention to give pain; and you have often given rne pain, " not from the power of what you said, but from seeing your " intention." J No one suffered from the evil habit so much as Goldsmith, y, 28. Boswell, vii. 265. "As Johnson and I," Boswell adds, " accompanied Sir Joshua Beynolds in his coach, Johnson said, ' There is in " ' Beauclerk a predominance over his company, that one does not like. But he is " ' a man who has lived so much in the world, that he has a short story on every " ' occasion : he is always ready to talk, and is never exhausted.' " f Bosiuett,'-m. 321. " Sir," he said to Boswell, on another occasion, " every- ." thing comes from him so easily. It appears to me that I labour, when I say a " good thing." BOSWELL. " You are loud, Sir, but it is not an effort of mind." I could give many examples of. this exquisite ease of Beauclerk's talk, but one perhaps mil be enough. During one of the frequent disputes when the whigs, " the cursed whigs," "the bottomless whigs," as Johnson called them, had become predominant in the club, and when, in the course of repelling a bitter attack on Fox and Burke, Beauclerk had fallen foul of George Steevens, Boswell interposed : " The gentleman, Mr. Beauclerk, against whom you are so violent, is, I know, a man of good principles." BEATJCLERC. "Then he does riot wear them out in practice." JBos. vii. 123. J Lord Charlemont, who loved him thoroughly, has not omitted to observe this. "He was eccentric, often querulous, entertaining a contempt for the generality "of the world, which the politeness of his manners could not always conceal; " but to those whom he liked, most generous and friendly." Hardy's Life, i. 344. And see Bosnuell, vii. 258-60. r