[3]
Henry Thrale's best friend, Arthur Murphy, first recommended Samuel to the Thrales advising them:
to wish for Dr. Johnson's conversation, extolling it in terms which that of no other person could have deserved, till we were only in doubt how to obtain his company and find an excuse for the invitation.
Henry Thrale was a sensible, unassuming man, whom Johnson loved and esteemed, and who returned Johnson's attachment with the sincerest regard.
Ten years after his single-handed production of his epoch making English dictionary, Samuel Johnson was introduced on to the Thrales on the 9th or 10th of January 1765, invited to meet a young shoemaker who was also a poet. The evening was a success and every subsequent Thursday night during the winter of 1764-5 Johnson was a guest of the Thrales.
The friendship continued until the summer of 1766, when following a very severe bout of depression, Johnson spent four months recuperating with the Thrales at their Streatham [4] country house. From this time until 1782 there was always a room set aside for Johnson's use at Streatham and at Brewery House [5], where he usually stayed in the middle of each week, reserving Friday for his literary club [6] and staying the weekends at his Fleet Street house [7].
Johnson's regard for the Thrales was very real, and it was heartily returned. Of Hester, Johnson wrote…
Her colloquial wit was a fountain of perpetual flow.
After this, Johnson became a part of the Thrale household and Streatham Park became a country retreat for a wide intellectual circle. Johnson was the lion-in-chief.
The library [9] became the focal point of the Thrales social life. Mrs. Thrale had a taste for literary guests and literary guests had on their part, a taste for the good dinners. James Boswell described…
The witty and the eminent who assembled in numerous companies.
In August 1777 Mrs Elizabeth Montagu wrote…
On Wednesday I dined at Streatham … We had a most elegant dinner, and the best of all feasts, sense and wit and good humour. Mrs Thrale is a woman of very superior understanding, and very respectable as a Wife, a Mother, a friend and a Mistress of a Family … Mr Thrale has a fruit garden and a kitchen garden that may vie with the Hesperian Gardens for fruit and flowers.
The novelist and diarist Fanny Burney [11], a close friend of Mrs Thrale and daughter of Charles Burney, nicknamed Henry Thrale's collection the 'Streatham Worthies' - a reference to the celebrated 'Temple of British Worthies' at Stowe [12]. When she was admitted to the circle her beloved Samuel Crisp wrote …
Where will you find such another set? Oh, Fanny, set this down as the happiest period of your life.
Some years later in a letter to Sir Robert Chambers, Johnson wrote…
One great abatement of all miseries was the attention of Mr. Thrale, which from our first acquaintance was never intermitted.
Johnson also wrote about Hester Thrale on the occasion of her thirty-fifth birthday [13] and he later wrote a Latin Ode to Hester Thrale [14].
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To bring you a more reliable & user-friendly experience by mid-2024, we are significantly improving Thrale.com.
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