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The Odd Couple
August 2023
|The Scots Magazine
Dr Johnson and James Boswell were an unlikely duo, but their landmark accounts of the post-Jacobite Highlands still entertain and inform today
IT was 250 years ago this month that an unlikely pair set off on the road trip of a lifetime.
Dr Samuel Johnson was the celebrated 63-year-old dictionary author who had clawed his way up from poverty and debt. He was now Britain's most revered man of letters with a pension from the King. Tall, bulky, blind in one eye, partially deaf and with tics which would be posthumously diagnosed as Tourette's, he was a committed Tory and didn't think much of Scotland or the Scots.
James Boswell was 30 years his junior, an Edinburgh lawyer, the son of a judge and heir to the family's estates of Auchinleck in Ayrshire. A drinker and a womaniser, he is most famous for devotion to his older friend, which would culminate in his celebrated biography.
Their trip, to the post-Jacobite Highlands, would spawn two books: Johnson's shorter travelogue A Journey Western Islands Of Scotland and Boswell's gossipy The Journal Of A Tour To The Hebrides. Both were hugely popular, are still in print and have inspired plays, films and TV series, with their picture of clan-based society already fading into romantic history.
It was improbable that the two became friends at all. Boswell told the story that when he was introduced to Johnson as a Scot, he, rather pathetically, said, "I do indeed come from Scotland but I cannot help it," to which Johnson replied, "That, sir, I find is what a very great many of your countrymen cannot help." Eleven years later, the pair embarked on a long-planned tour of the Hebrides - the idea inspired by a book Johnson had read as a child - Johnson arriving in Edinburgh in August 1773, Boswell full of boyish glee to have enticed his friend north.
هذه القصة من طبعة August 2023 من The Scots Magazine.
اشترك في Magzter GOLD للوصول إلى آلاف القصص المتميزة المنسقة، وأكثر من 9000 مجلة وصحيفة.
هل أنت مشترك بالفعل؟ تسجيل الدخول
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