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fit of your services.' His labours, however, though the reward came from another quarter, did not go unrewarded.

On his return to England, he found his two maiden sisters, (Mary and Lætitia,) both a little younger than himself, keeping at Colchester a boarding-school for young ladies. It was not without some difficulty that they contrived to keep up, in that situation, a respectable appearance. I do not remember exactly what time it was, but it was during Lord North's administration, and a considerable number of years after the publication of that work of his, that a pension of 50l. a year for life was granted to each of these sisters.

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You will have been expecting to hear something of the young Telemachus, to whom, on the occasion of his visit to this island, my ex-reverend friend came officiating in the character of Mentor how it happened I do not exactly remember, but so it was, that notwithstanding my intimacy with the Mentor, I never saw the Telemachus. The case must have been that Mentor must have been a considerable time in England before he deigned to visit my humble roof, if a garret in Lincoln's Inn may be so termed. The giddiness produced by the exalted vortex, in which, on his arrival, he found himself whirled, kept out of his remembrance, I believe for some

months, the little debt he owed to my father; and till matters were thus settled with the father, it was not natural he should feel disposed to pay a visit to the son, who, at that time, was all but unknown to him. The stay of the Prince must, I think, have been but short. By whatsoever cause this shortness was produced, no dissatisfaction towards the Mentor, in the breast either of the Prince or of his royal uncle, could have had any part in it. A letter I remember seeing from the King to him shortly after the return of the Prince to Warsaw, concluded with these words: Et dans tout ce que je vois en lui, je reconnois votre ouvrage.'

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In addition to the two situations above mentioned, one of which, by his departure from Warsaw, the other by the departure of the Prince from England, were become sinecures, one which I have not yet mentioned, was far indeed from being so. From the day of his arrival in London to I believe the day of his death, which took place before that of the virtuous and unhappy King, scarce a post-day arrived, in which he did not write a Letter to the King: in short, he was in fact the Minister, and more than the Plenipotentiary of the King to this Court in trust and effect, though not in name. In name he would have been, but it was a maxim with George the Third, and being so natural an one, I know

not that in his instance it was a new one, not to receive as a diplomatic agent for doing business with him, and in this way on a footing savouring of equality, any subject of his own: the same maxim prevented, I remember, another old friend of mine from being received in form as agent from the free city of Hamburgh. As an expedient for producing the substance without the form, a Pole, of the name of Bukati, was sent by the King with the concurrence of the Senate, if that was necessary, in the character of resident to reside in this Court, in which character he continued to reside for a considerable number of years, and I believe as long as he lived. I knew something of him; I used every now and then to see him; I remember dining with him on a summer's day, at a comfortable and pleasant apartment he had in a spacious mansion, occupied as a boarding-school, by Johnson's friend, Elphinston, who published a book in such English as you see employed in French Grammars, for the purpose of teaching Frenchmen how to pronounce English, written for the purpose of demonstrating, that it is an Englishman's bounden duty to write English exactly as he speaks it.* But Elphiniston was

* [James Elphinston was a miscellaneous writer and schoolmaster, was born at Edinburgh Dec. 6, 1721, died Oct. 8, 1809. "In 1751, he married, and leaving Scotland, fixed his abode near London, first at Brompton, and afterwards at

not Bukati, nor in intellect would he have gained much by being so; not that he was at all the worse for this, but the better. It was for the express purpose of officiating in the character of a cypher, that he was sent to this country and retained in it. In every thing but bulk, in which

Kensington, where for many years he kept a school in a large and elegant house opposite to the royal gardens, and had considerable reputation; his scholars always retaining a very grateful sense of his skill as a teacher, and his kindness as a friend." "About 1753, he composed an English Grammar for the use of his school, which he afterwards enlarged and published in 2 vols. 12mo." (The Analysis of the French and English Languages, with their Roots and Idioms. Lond. 1756. 2 vols. 12mo. 5s. Principles of the English Language Di'gested, Lond. 1765. 2 vols. 12mo. Abridged, Lond. 1765. '8vo. 3s. Animadversions upon ELEMENTS OF CRITICISM, calculated equally for the Benefit of that celebrated Work, and the Improvement of English Style; with an Appendix on 'Scotticisms. Lond. 1771. 8vo. 2s. 6d.' Dr. Watt's Bibl. Brit.) "The late Mr. John Walker, a very competent judge, spoke highly of this work. In the year 1763, Mr. Elphinston published a poem called Education; but his taste was ill-adapted to poetry, of which unfortunately he never could be persuaded; and this erroneous estimate of his talents led him to translate Martial, for which he issued proposals about 1778, and was at least fortunate in the number of his subscribers. Previous to this he had, for what reason we are not told, given up his school, and in 1778, removed altogether from Kensington, where in the same year his wife died. He then visited Scotland, and while in that city there was a design started of establishing a Professorship of Modern Languages in the University of Edinburgh, with a view that Mr. Elphinston should

he reminded one of a fat ox; he was a puppet, and Lind it was that moved the wires.

Every now and then I used to see a letter from the King to his faithful, intelligent, and zealous agent. Once I remember, at my friend's desire, in consequence of a sudden and impera

fill the chair; but, although this never took place, he gave a course of Lectures on the English language, both at Edinburgh and Glasgow. After his return to London, he published his Translation of Martial, in 1782, 4to, which exhibited most wonderful proofs of a total want of judgment, both in the Translation and Notes. In the latter he gives some specimens of his new mode of spelling, which he explained more at large in 1786, in a work entitled Propriety Ascertained in her Picture, 2 vols. 4to. In this he endeavoured to establish a system of spelling according to pronunciation, and although he stood entirely alone in his opinion of its value, he persisted in his endeavours, and followed it up by English Orthography Epitomized, and Propriety's Pocket-Dictionary. In 1794," (1791,)" he published in 6 vols. 12mo. a selection of his Letters to his friends, with their answers," (Forty Years' Correspondence between Geniusses ov boath Sexes, and James Elphinston, in six Pocket-Vollumes, foar ov Oridginal Letters, two' ov Poetry; two other volumes were published in 1794, with this corrected title, Fifty Years' Correspondence, Inglish, French, and Lattin, in Proze and Verse, between Geniusses of boath Sexes and James Elphinston, in 8 Pocket-Vollumes, including an Appendix Miscellaneous. Dhe Oridginal Letters, to' be seen in dhe Hands ov dhe Edditor.) " entirely spelt in his new way; the appearance of which was so unnatural, and the reading so difficult and tiresome, that by this, as well as his other works on the same subject, he must have been a considerable loser," (but the eight volumes are printed on very VOL. II.

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