Johnson of London Part 13 'The Mitre Tavern'
THE MITRE TAVERN “In vino veritas”
(Enter Boswell, in the street.)
BOSWELL (To the audience as he stretches his arms and legs) Well, I
went to Edinburgh and did some work and now I’m back in London! And, I’m stiff
from hours in the stage coach. Cooped up and thrown
about! Edinburgh to London by road! And what a
road! In places it’s like a ploughed field. In places
it is a ploughed field! Anyway, I am back! (He
looks around.) On holiday, so to speak.
Now I’m sure it was here we arranged to meet, right on this
corner. He’s late. Then we’re going to the Mitre
Tavern. I’ll just see if he’s coming. (He walks off a little to the
right. Johnson comes hurrying in from the left.)
JOHNSON Where is he? Late as usual! Why can’t
he be punctual like me? (He sees Boswell.) There you are
Sir. Welcome back! Come on now. Stop
dawdling. To the Mitre!
(Boswell stands to one side to let Johnson pass.)
Not that way. Down here, Bozzy! The old back
doubles! I could walk from St Pauls to the Abbey in half the time
you take, just by using the back doubles! London is full of them.
They say a true Londoner must be born within the sound of Bow
Bells. That’s rubbish, Bozzy! No, a true Londoner is the man who
knows all the back doubles around Fleet Street and The Strand. (Boswell takes
out a pencil and paper.) For heaven’s sake don’t write that
down! Get on! Get on!
(They cross and re-cross the stage and Johnson becomes more and more
lost.)
Now, the Mitre Tavern. Where is it? Just a
moment. And here it is! (He points to the right, then
turns a semi-circle and finds it on the left.) Ah, well, more or
less!
(They go in and sit at a table.)
The Mitre Tavern, Boswell. The Mitre off Fleet Street. These
walls have heard far more sense, real sense, Bozzy, than all your university
common rooms. There is too much thinking and not enough doing at our
universities. There is life here, Bozzy, and life is more important
than books. Now, how was Scotland?
BOSWELL I want to take you there, Sir. Just to prove to
you that we are civilised. You would love Scotland.
JOHNSON I do already, Bozzy, (whispering to Boswell) but I daren’t admit
it! But I will go. You arrange everything, Bozzy, and
we’ll go.
BOSWELL You love travel, Sir.
JOHNSON Of course, I love travel! If I had no duties, I
would spend my whole life driving briskly in a post-chaise with a pretty woman.
BOSWELL There’s a confession! (He notes it down in his notebook.)
JOHNSON It’s common sense, Bozzy. Travelling and the
sight of a pretty girl are two things that lull you into thinking that life is
a happy business after all. Travelling is a sort of
opium. It takes you away from the weight of the day to day.
BOSWELL And the pretty girl?
JOHNSON The pretty girl is a … a stimulation. But she
must be clever too.
BOSWELL You would have everything, Sir.
JOHNSON Every man would have everything, Bozzy, if only he would
admit it!
BOSWELL (With his notebook in his hand) You mentioned the
university, Sir. Do you not regret not teaching in a university?
JOHNSON I would have been comfortable, but that sort of comfort
would have been the kiss of death. I'd have vegetated,
Bozzy. I would not have seen life! I wouldn’t have seen
you! I wouldn’t have walked the streets of London with poor Richard
Savage, God bless him!
BOSWELL The poet, Savage, who never had any money? You
wrote his life!
JOHNSON That’s right. I wrote his life. And a sad life
it was. He lost all his money and he lost all his friends, but he had
talent. Yes, he could write. He was poor, and I was poor then
too. When you are poor, you live intensely, though I do not
recommend it. Being poor is good when it’s over and done with, like
so many things.
BOSWELL (With notebook at the ready.) You have written many great works,
Sir. Do you write for the love of instructing your fellow men?
JOHNSON Don’t be pompous, Bozzy. No one but a blockhead
ever wrote for anything but money!
(They are served two large pewter tankards of beer.)
The great end of life is to seek happiness, Bozzy. A tavern
chair is the throne of human felicity. Whenever I enter an inn, I
leave my cares at the door. Here we’re all equals. Here
we’re all cheerful. We are at home. Here we talk, and
argue, and I love it.
BOSWELL You find a tavern a reflection of the world outside.
JOHNSON The opposite, Sir, the very opposite! Where else
can a general and a gardener, a blacksmith and a peer of the realm all sit down
together? Every man who pays for his beer and holds it well is
welcome. An inn is the only sensible vision of
society. We are all masters here and we are all guests.
BOSWELL Writing, I believe, depends upon inspiration. I wait for
those glorious moments of creative power and then pour forth my soul on paper.
JOHNSON Then you will wait a long time. Any man can
write if he sets himself doggedly to it. You can write from eight to
one thirty every morning if you decide to. Inspiration is a long
time coming, Bozzy. Inspiration is very coquettish. Ignore her, start
without her and then she’ll come to you.
BOSWELL It must be wonderful to be a great writer, sir.
JOHNSON You’re leading me on tonight, Bozzy, but tonight I will be
patient with you! I’ve missed you, I must admit it. I don’t know
much about greatness but to write at all is to be one step out of
hell. I wish I had been a painter like Sir Joshua or a composer like
Herr Mozart. Surely a painting springs from less anguish than words
do. Surely music comes with less agony than
writing. There is too much thought behind words. Music is
feeling. Mozart must have been happy when he wrote his
music. Or perhaps he wasn’t. Perhaps he wasn’t.
I suppose I have a way with words, Bozzy. That is my one
talent and I must use it well. We must all use our one talent well.
Even you, Bozzy! Perhaps you will write one book that is really worthwhile.
Perhaps!
BOSWELL But it must be a joy to create a poem.
JOHNSON There you go again, leading me on! There is joy
in weaving the first thoughts but there is the sweat of getting it right and it
is never perfect, and then come the days of frustration of not writing
anything, and the hardest thing of all, Bozzy, is the burden of having a poet’s
mind.
BOSWELL A poet’s mind?
JOHNSON A poet’s mind. A mind that is unhinged enough to
create great poems is unhinged enough to go off in all
directions. If poets think much or think long, they think sad
thoughts, Bozzy.
People say “Oh he wrote some good stuff, but then he led an odd life and
went a little crazy.” It was the same mind that produced the
poems and the life! They are linked, Bozzy. They work
together, the good and the bad.
BOSWELL I never know how to tackle life. I can never
bring myself to make sensible plans for the future. I’m always
taking the wrong decisions. I think I’m learning something and
then I make the same mistakes again and again. But with age, Sir,
life must be easier to live.
JOHNSON Life never gets easier, Bozzy. Look at the old
people hour by hour sitting at home by the fireplace. They repeat
the same sentence all morning and turn over in their minds some eternal worry
they can never resolve. Does life leave them in peace for their
final days? No, they are still fighting some old battle from years before when
they were lucid. Old age can be very unkind to us,
Bozzy. Very unkind.
As for me, I am more in a muddle than ever I was! The last
time I had things straight was when I was a child. From youth
through to age there are no certainties. All is in
doubt. I remember a verse of our old school song:
“Childhood will change to youth,
Manhood come soon.
Life’s morning mists will melt
Into clear noon.”
We used to sing it often and it has stayed with me ever
since. But it is wrong, Bozzy, completely wrong. We start out
clearly but then with youth and manhood that’s when the mists come!
We never get things straight. There’s always another hill to
climb.
Don’t save yourself for the future, Bozzy. That sort of
future never comes. And that reminds me, plan our trip to your
country, Bozzy. Plan it now.
BOSWELL I intend to, Sir.
JOHNSON The way to Hell is paved with good
intentions. Do it today, Bozzy. Do it today.
BOSWELL You write, Sir, to promote good behaviour.
JOHNSON Don’t be pompous. I write to live. If
anyone reads what I write, it is because they find it
interesting. The wisest book in the world is useless if it’s not
read. Think how many books are up on the shelf gathering dust and with their
pages going brown year after year! Don’t write one of those books,
Bozzy! Write a book that people read.
Be honest with yourself. Don’t pose. Don’t use the
latest phrase of the day just to prove you’re up to date. It’s
empty, Bozzy. It’s all empty. Don’t pretend! You’ll always be found
out sooner or later. “Esto quod es!” That’s a good
motto. “Be what you are.” Look, Bozzy! Look at these
drinkers. Here they are honest. When they are sober and
on their best behaviour, be careful of them. At least we are honest
when we are enjoying ourselves. No man is a hypocrite in his pleasures.
(A man weaves in from the right, very drunk, his hat over his face,
carrying a mug of beer in one hand and a bar stool in the other.)
Look, look at him! Another sip and he will fall to the
ground. He’s no hypocrite at the moment, but the man praying next to
you at church very well may be. Of course, he may be a saint, too.
(The man trips and falls insensible at Johnson’s
feet. Johnson bends and removes his hat.)
BOSWELL Aah! It’s Levet!
JOHNSON He’ll never be a saint. Though, I don’t know, he
may be half way there already. Leave him! Leave
him! He’s safe enough here with us. (He pats Levet on the
head and replaces his hat.)
BOSWELL I nearly forgot. Here’s a work by a young
man. He begs you to look at it and give your opinion.
(He gives Johnson a rather crumpled piece of paper.)
JOHNSON Umph! (He reluctantly takes the paper and begins
to read.)
BOSWELL (Looking up.) Oh my goodness, that
barmaid. She’s new, isn’t she? There is beauty for
you! That sort of woman would keep you awake at night.
JOHNSON (Looking up from the paper he is reading.) She has some
softness indeed. (Then, firmly) But then so has a
pillow! Now, to business.
(Boswell is still gazing at the barmaid. Jonson speaks
louder.)
To business!
BOSWELL Yes. Yes, of course.
LEVET (Still lying on the
floor, he raises his head.) A fine figure of a lady, yes. Fine legs.
Cheers!
JOHNSON (He points at the paper and looks at Boswell)
It’s not yours, is it, Bozzy?
BOSWELL (Laughing) No, it’s not mine.
JOHNSON Are you sure?
BOSWELL Of course, I am sure.
JOHNSON (Mumbling rhythmically as he reads.)
Da, da, de, da, de,
da. So, so. Yes. Da, de, da.
BOSWELL I’ll write your opinion, Sir, here at the bottom of the
paper.
JOHNSON (Giving the paper to Boswell.) Then write “Your work
is both original and good”
BOSWELL (Writing happily) Well now, that is generous, very
generous!
JOHNSON (Loudly) Comma.
BOSWELL Comma. (He looks
expectantly at Johnson)
JOHNSON “But the part that is
original is not good, and the part that is good …
BOSWELL (Crestfallen) …is not original!”
JOHNSON Precisely!
BOSWELL Oh dear.
JOHNSON Are you sure it wasn’t yours, Bozzy?
BOSWELL (Hesitantly) Well…
JOHNSON I thought so. Leave the poetry alone,
Bozzy. Stick to prose. That’s what you’re good
at. Stick to prose.
BOSWELL (Tearing up the paper ruefully) I will never write another
poem in my life!
And as regards my prose, Sir, how can I improve?
JOHNSON Don’t paint too clear a picture, Bozzy. Don’t do
the readers’ work. Just give them a suggestion. Give them
the scent and when they arrive, they’ll think they got there all by
themselves. That’s the art of writing well. Don’t say too much. Just
keep quiet!
BOSWELL It’s very hard for me to keep quiet! (He
clenches his fist resolutely.) But I’ll do my best!
Now, another drink, Sir. May I suggest some claret?
JOHNSON You may suggest claret, Bozzy, but I will not drink
it. Claret is the liquor for boys, port is for men; but he who
aspires to be a hero must drink brandy!
BOSWELL Two brandies, then?
JOHNSON Two brandies.
LEVET (Indistinctly, from the
floor) Three brandies!
BOSWELL (Shouting to the pretty barmaid) Two…(Levet tugs
at his leg and grunts loudly) Make that three brandies!
So, I’ll see you in Scotland, Sir?
JOHNSON Me on a pony? Gadding about the Highlands? But
I’ll come, Bozzy. You arrange it all and send for me, and I’ll not
let you down. Get that pony ready and make sure it’s a strong one.
Feed it up well, Bozzy. Give it plenty of oats! That is,
if there are any left over after the people have had a go at them!
(The barmaid brings the drinks.)
BOSWELL Three brandies for three heroes!
JOHNSON (Raising his glass.) And here’s to Scotland!
BOSWELL (Raising his glass.) To Scotland!
LEVET (From the floor. He raises his glass with some
difficulty.)
And to Yorkshire! (He
drinks.)
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