OLIYEE GOLDSMITH'S LIFE AND TIMES. [Bo<»m. 1765. « 'Ireland,* and that, hearing that I was a native of that .ZEt.37. " ' country, he should Tbe glad to do me any kindness.' And " what did you answer, asked I, to this gracious offer ? " ' Why,' said he, ' I could say nothing but that I had a " ' brother there, a clergyman, that stood in need of help : " ' as for myself'" (this was added for the benefit of Hawkins) " ' I have no dependence on the promises of great " ' men : I look to the booksellers for support; they are my " 'best friends, and I am not inclined to forsake them, "'for others.' Thus," adds the teller of the anecdote, " did this idiot in the affairs of the world trifle with his " fortunes, and put back the hand that was held out to assist " him! Other offers of a like kind he either rejected or " failed to improve, contenting himself with the patronage " of one nobleman, whose mansion afforded Mm the delights " of a splendid table, and a retreat for a few days from the " metropolis." f The incident related may excuse the comment attached to it. Indeed, the charge of idiotcy in the affairs of the Hawkins-world, may even add to the pleasure with which we contemplate that older-world picture beside it, of frank sim- plicity and brotherly affection. This poor poet, who, incom- prehensibly to. the Middlesex magistrate, would thus gently have turned aside to the assistance of his poorer brother the hand held out to assist himself, had only a few days before been obliged to borrow fifteen shillings and sixpence " in Fleet-street," of one of those " best friends " with whose support he is now fain to be contented. But the reader has already seen that since the essay on Polite Learning was written, its author's personal experience had * The earl was already lord-lieutenant, and held that office till G-renville's ministry-went out. f Life of Johnson, 419. d