21 - To John Bindley, [London], 12 July 1766
Summary
See headnote to previous letter. Goldsmith and Bindley continue their exchange here with Goldsmith noting Bindley's younger brother's illness. James Bindley (1739–1818) was a book collector and a fellow of Peterhouse, Cambridge (1762–8). Goldsmith writes of him: ‘I never knew any one so short a time whose mind I fancy’d more like my own, that is in other words that I loved better.’ The younger Bindley assisted Edmond Malone with the third edition of Boswell's Life of Johnson (1799). He was also a friend of John Nichols, who described him in the fourth volume of Illustrations as a ‘kind-hearted and intelligent Bibliographer’. James Bindley suffered with ill health through much of his life.
The copy-text is the manuscript in the Beinecke Library, Yale University. It was first published in 1964 by Balderston in the Yale University Library Gazette, the year after Yale had acquired it from a private collection in Australia. Below Goldsmith's signature at the foot of the letter ‘Author of the Traveller & other works of genius’ is written in a different, later hand.
Dear Sir
You tell me I forgot to date my letter. I did that by design for if ever my letters come before a court of justice, as they want a date no body can take any hold of them. What do you think of me there? Now I will give you a receipt to make a conjuring box! Take four penny worth of half pence and rivet them together at the edge. Then let there be an hole in the bottom of these here halfpence to hold a die, or a conjurors ball no matter which, then you have a little tin box with which you cover the half pence, while the halfpence cover the die, and so taking the cover off and putting it on you can conjure. This I keep as a secret except upon particular occasions. Am I any body now? You are going to build two houses an hot house and a cold house. Ill be hanged but the one is an oven and the other a drain. I find however the pot pourri has succeeded, but the truth is, it was Mrs Bindley that was my operator, and I entreat that you may be kept away from the jar.
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- Information
- The Letters of Oliver Goldsmith , pp. 63 - 65Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2018