OLIYBK GOLDSMITH'S LIFE AND TIMES. [BOOK m. 1764. It was not till the sacrifice was more complete, and the grave mae. had closed over it, that the " partiality " of his friends ceased to take these equivocal shapes. " There is not a bad line " in that poem, of the Traveller" said Langton, as they sat talking together at Reynolds's, four years after the poet's death; " not one of Diyden's careless verses." " I was glad," interposed Reynolds, " to hear Charles Fox say it was one " of the first poems in the English language." " Why were " you glad ?" rejoined Langton. " You surely had no doubt "of this before?" "No," exclaimed Johnson, decisively; " the merit of the Traveller is so well established, that • " ]\£r. Fox's praise cannot augment it, nor his censure " diminish it."* 1765. Not very obvious at the first, however, was its progress to -2Gt.37. this decisive eminence. From the first it had its select admirers, but their circle somewhat slowly widened. " The " beauties of this poem," observed the principal literary newspaper of the day, the St. James's Chronicle, two months after its publication, " are so great and various, that we " cannot but be surprised they have not been able to recom- of strife that elicited gratitude to the gods. Mrs. Cholmondeley (according to Johnson "a very airy lady," JBoswell, iv. 272) was a younger sister of Mrs. Woffington the actress, married to the Hon. and Rev. George Cholmondeley. Fanny Reynolds, Johnson's "dearest dear," was eighty when she died, in November 1807. * Reynolds continued : "But his friends may suspect they had too great a " partiality for him." JOHNSON. "Nay, sir, the partiality of his friends was "always against him. It was with difficulty we could give him a hearing. , '' Goldsmith had no settled notions upon any subject; so he talked always at " random. It seemed to be his intention to blurt out whatever was in his mind, " and see what would become of it. He was angry, too, when catched in an '' absurdity; but it did not prevent him from falling into another the next minute." Baswell, vii. 84-5. A little later, when Johnson was complaining of Langton being too silent at the club, and letting the whigs have it all their own way, '' Sir," saidBoswell, " you will recollect that he very properly took up Sir Joshua for " being glad that Charles Pox had praised Goldsmith's Traveller, and you joined " him." JOHNSON. " Yes, sir, I knocked Fox on the head without ceremony." ' how strangely people will differ in opinion about a literary performance. Burke