In this big bustling book on one of historyâs most famous literary couplings, James Boswell and Samuel Johnson - the original BoJo - John Radner tracks a creative partnership âthat was much more volatile, contentious and troubled than their published writings indicateâ, from the first meeting on 16 May 1763 to Johnsonâs death in 1784 and Boswellâs Life in 1791. Boswellâs allusion to âthis great Man and poor Meâ and plaintive âWill you really take charge of me?â suggests one-sidedness, but Johnsonâs early declaration - âMy dear Boswell! I do love you very muchâ - supports Radnerâs case against viewing Boswell as âessentially a parasiteâ.
The story of this mentor-mentee relationship, âan evolving, multifaceted collaborationâ, is complex and Radner relishes its richness. Sometimes the detail is deafening. Radner sets the reader little exercises, proposing days in the archives comparing letters and journals, or suggesting 15 minutes pondering how we might sketch the lives of contemporaries.
In Radnerâs account of Boswellâs motivation, âan insecure young man with a cold, judgemental father findsâŠa childless widower who zestfully âadoptsâ himâ. Johnson spotted Boswellâs neediness: âThere must always be a Struggle between a Father and Son, while the one aims at power, and the other at Independencyâ. Father-son clichĂ©s aside, Boswell found in Johnson âa fellow depressiveâ. Their moods matched.
There are shades of Men Behaving Badly when the companions âcompeted for the attentions of women, both real and imaginedâ
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Two key aspects of the relationship stand out: the extent to which Johnsonâs biographical - and autobiographical - efforts in The Lives of the Poets offered an ethics of representation for Boswell, engaged in his biography of Johnson, and the significance of their different versions of the Scottish journey as revealed by Johnsonâs letters and Boswellâs draft journal.
As Johnson laboured on his Lives of the Poets, creeping closer to contemporaries, he warned against being too exacting in telling tales of those with living friends and relatives: ârather to say nothing that is false, than all that is trueâ. His Life of Pope challenged the idea of letters as soul-baring missives, instead maintaining that âno transactionâŠoffers stronger temptations to fallacy and sophistication than epistolary discourseâ.
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As Anglo-Scottish relations go, the Johnson-Boswell collaboration is compelling as father figure and junior partner jostle for their own sense of self. Starting in London, the friendship was sealed in Scotland during three months in the Highlands and Hebrides in the autumn of 1773. On this road trip, Johnson was friend and fiend, mentor and tormentor, taunting Boswell about drink and desire. We see the duo reciting Macbeth; sharing fears of being murdered in their sleep, each spooked by skeletons and ghosts; visiting Hawthornden at Johnsonâs insistence to see where Ben Jonson and William Drummond conducted an earlier cross-border literary conversation.
There are shades of Men Behaving Badly when the companions âcompeted for the attentions of specific women, both real and imagined, and challengedâŠeach otherâs potencyâ, Boswell wrestling with images of his mentor refusing a backstage pass at Drury Lane, because, as Johnson told David Garrick, âthe White bubbies and the silk stockings of your Actresses excite my Genitalsâ; Johnson threatening Boswell with castration, saying âheâd make a very good eunuchâ; Boswell vomiting after drinking the punch Johnson warned him off. Every Johnson needs his Boswell, and vice versa.
With so much time together, they needed constructive time apart: âeach friend occasionally sought to free himself from the enlivening, reassuring, but also confining and controlling presence of the other in order to escape his companionâs defining expectationsâ. Reading Radner, I envisaged Boswell and Johnson variously as Bialystock and Bloom, Hal and Falstaff, Morecambe and Wise, and The Odd Couple. As a biography of friendship, this book offers sound advice: keep your friends close, and your biographer closer.
Johnson and Boswell: A Biography of Friendship
By John B. Radner
Yale University Press, 415pp, ÂŁ29.95
ISBN 9780300178753 and 189087 (e-book)
Published 29 March 2013
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