CHAP. viii.j THE CLUB AND ITS FIRST MEMBERS. very interesting to all men. The self-complacent young ir«3. Scot could hardly have opened it better, than by showing ML 33, how much his coolness and self-complacency could bear. He rallied from the shock; and, though he did not open his mouth again, very widely opened his ears, and showed eager- ness and admiration unabated. " Don't be uneasy," said Davies, following him to the door as he went away : " I can see he likes you very well."* So emboldened, the " giant's den" itself was daringly invaded after a few days; and the giant, among other unusual wrays of showing his benevolence, took to praising Garrick this time. After that, the fat little pompous figure now eager to make itself the giant's shadow, might be seen commonly on the wait for Mm at his various haunts : in ordinaries at the social dinner hour, or by Temple-bar in the jovial midnight watches (Johnson's present habit, as he tells us himself, was to leave Ms chambers at four in the afternoon, and seldom to return till two in the morning) to tempt Mm to the Mitre. They supped at that tavern for the first time on the 25th of June; but Boswell, who tells us what passed, has failed to tell us at what particular dish it was of their " good supper," or at what glass of the " two bottles " of port they disposed of, that Johnson suddenly roared across the table, " Give me your hand; I have taken a liking to you." They talked of Goldsmith. He was a somewhat uneasy subject to Boswell, who could not comprehend how he had managed to become so great a favourite with so great a man. For he had published absolutely nothing with Ms name (Boswell himself had just published " Newmarket, a Tale "); he was a man that as yet you never heard of, but as " one " Dr. Goldsmith;" and all who knew Mm seemed to know that * Soswett, ii. 168. ked towards the room. Mr. Boswell was the person. This