Johnson of London Part 18 'Oxford revisited'
OXFORD REVISITED
(Boswell comes in hurriedly.)
BOSWELL We are in Oxford now. Brasenose is just over
there, the Bodleian is behind me and there is the spire of St Mary’s. Time is
going on. Johnson is getting older. I can see it in his
ways. Little changes, walking a little slower, his head and
shoulders a little more stooped. Little things. I am
getting older too, I suppose. The students here certainly look more
boyish than before. I used to be able to mingle with
them. I am well past that now. Still, upwards and onwards!
I thought I’d surprise him by getting up early and buying some rolls for
his breakfast. I… but here he is. He’s up and about
already. I must get to the baker’s quickly. Now if I go
down here, that should bring me to the Broad, and the Broad will take me to the
Cornmarket where the baker’s is. (He goes quickly.)
JOHNSON (Walking in from the other direction.)
Was that Boswell skulking off? It looked like
Boswell. No, Bozzy is never up this early! I stay in bed far too
long as well but a change of place works wonders. I will get up
early every day I am here! (He sighs) I wonder how long that will
last!
(He looks around.)
Back here at Oxford!
(He points out the buildings, north, south, east and west.)
The Bodleian library. Brasenose. All
Souls. And over there, St Mary’s, the University Church.
(He indicates two parallel streets.)
The High and the Broad.
It is strange how geography, a place, can fool us. Standing
on these stones I feel just as I felt when I was here at 19. Coming back to the
same place recreates the old fears and the old hopes just as if the years in
between had not passed by. That can happen with an old school friend
that you have not seen for years. After a moment or so you both
carry on chatting as if you had said goodbye to each other the night
before. We don’t change much, do we! With a little twist
and a skip, I could still be the same student I was. I used to go
through that door, I remember, and I used to run up those stairs. I
was always late for my tutorial! Huh! There’s not much running in me now.
Now this must be Bozzy!
(Boswell comes in, a bag of rolls in his hand.)
Bozzy, you are out and about so early? That’s not like you!
BOSWELL Bread rolls, Sir. Still hot! Have
one.
JOHNSON From the bakery in the Cornmarket?
BOSWELL Of course.
JOHNSON Then I’ll have two!
(He sees a group of undergraduates walking by, off stage.)
Look at them! Books, gowns, shining morning faces!
There they go. This year’s batch. They look so
pale and thin. They haven’t filled out yet. They are still overgrown
boys. There they go, running up the same stairs as I did, late for
their tutorials. No wonder the steps are worn!
Poor students! ‘The finest days of your life’; they
say! How little they know.
There are different groups, you know, Bozzy. First, there are
the melancholy ones. They are all too aware of the time slipping
by. They think too much and they forget to live. Their
youth goes anyway. They might as well enjoy it! That is
what youth is for!
Group two! The workers! And how they
work! They spend hour after hour in the Bodleian
here. Heads down, elbows on the desk. Page after
page! Book after book! Fame is the spur, I suppose!
‘O’er Bodley’s dome his future labours spread
And Bacon’s mansion trembles o’er his head.
BOSWELL What’s that, Sir?
JOHNSON ‘The Vanity of Human Wishes’, Bozzy. Stanza
13. You haven’t read it? Really Bozzy, there are some
gaps in your knowledge which you should take immediate steps to
fill. I wrote that in 49, when I was much younger. That
was when I was at war with the world!
Look at them. Look at their worried frowns as they make to
the library. These are the palest and thinnest
group! Fools! There they go! Just look at
them! And they are all so lonely! You can’t cuddle up to
a book at night! Can you confide in your mother or your father when
you are a brilliant young man? It’s just not done! Can
you open your mind to a fellow student when it is the fashion to be
cynical? That fellow student is probably as lonely as you, but
neither of you know this, the more’s the pity.
And then there is group three. You see them over there,
Bozzy? There they go, walking unsteadily along the pavement, each one holding
up another to stop them falling in the gutter. They haven’t gone to
bed. They have spent the whole night carousing in some college or
other! They lead a life of drinking and hunting and hunting and
drinking. You would be in this group, Bozzy! Am I
right? At least they fill up their three short
years! Perhaps they are the wisest group! Get some good
times in the bag when you’re young. That’s their philosophy. There’s
plenty of time later on to be serious. Look at John
Donne. All those passionate love poems when he was young.
‘I wonder, by my troth, what thou and I
Did, till we loved? Were we not weaned till then?
But sucked on country pleasures, childishly.’
And then he became Dean of St Pauls.
‘No man is an island! Never send to know for whom the bell
tolls. It tolls for thee.’
What lines, Bozzy. What lines. We are privileged
to have them.
All these students are wearing the stone doorsteps a little bit lower,
and they’ll still be here in a hundred years. The youth of Oxford
doesn’t grow any older. And the students are what matter here not
the tutors and professors you see ambling up the High or this tired old man
come back to reminisce.
BOSWELL So life here at university is not as easy as people think?
JOHNSON The young take themselves so seriously,
Bozzy! They think they can change the world. In their zeal, they are
thinking of themselves, Bozzy, not of the world!
They have a hard time here, Bozzy. They feel that their real
way lies down the road they didn’t take. They plumb depths that we
old and feeble people can never reach! There is much unhappiness at Oxford,
Bozzy, behind the bright smiling faces! (He looks up at the college
building.)
What stories these old rooms could tell!
(He points to another group of students.)
Yes, there they go! And their predecessors and all their successors are
all alike. They come with bright eyes in the autumn. But
it is a hard winter, the first winter at Oxford!
BOSWELL Still it can’t be all bad, Sir.
JOHNSON No, Bozzy, it is not. I met an old friend last
night, Bozzy, between Pembroke and Christchurch. He came up to me in
the street and introduced himself. Oliver
Edwards! Ollie! I last saw him 50 years ago. You see we
all come doddering back here for a last look.
BOSWELL That must have been a memorable meeting, Sir.
JOHNSON It was. ‘Dr Johnson’ he said to me after we had
been talking a little. ‘Dr Johnson, you are a
philosopher. I have tried too in my time to be a philosopher, but I
don’t know how, cheerfulness was always breaking in!’
That’s the way to look at things, Bozzy.
(He makes gestures with his hands.)
Always rise up to cheerfulness.
BOSWELL How is Mr Edwards, Sir?
JOHNSON He has lived a good, solid life. He has never
set the Thames on fire but he has, I am sure, done many little acts of
kindness, and they count, Bozzy. They count more than setting rivers
on fire.
He was a solicitor for many years. Then he retired to a
farm. He lives a good regular life and I envy it. ‘Dr
Johnson,’ he said, ‘I must have my regular meals and a glass of good
wine. I find I require it. And a late
supper. A late supper I consider a turnpike which a man must pass
through in order to get to bed.’
How easily some people sail through life, Bozzy! Oxford, the
law, a farm, a glass of wine and a pleasant supper before going to
bed! I suppose they have their worries too, but they deal with
them. That’s the secret, Bozzy. It’s not what life
throws at you, but it’s how you deal with it! Some people have the
answer. They are born happy! What a
gift. Their whole journey is a happy one and I envy them. Still,
up and on! What do you think, Bozzy?
BOSWELL I think we should have a drink, Sir. I have a
terrible thirst. Let’s find an inn. You must know them all.
JOHNSON (Brightening) The Bear Inn,
Bozzy. The other side of the High. Not far at all. I’ll
race you there. On to the Bear!
(Johnson starts at a slow trot, calling as he leaves.)
Come on, Bozzy! Come on!
(Boswell follows with a sigh and a gesture of resignation.)
JOHNSON (Crossing the stage again.) A short
cut. There always used to be a short cut through
here. Straight through the Dean’s garden. But this door
always used to be open. Fifty years ago it was always
open. (He looks up.) Perhaps I could get over the
wall. One foot here. The second foot
there. Yes, why not?
(He leaves, puffing.)
VOICE (off) Hey, you there! This garden is private
property! Get out!
BOSWELL (Running in.) Where’s he gone
now? Not far at all!
(He shouts to a person off stage.)
Excuse me! Where is the Bear Inn?
VOICE Well, it’s not through
this garden. Someone has just climbed the wall and trampled on all
my geraniums. Go round by the road like everybody else!
BOSWELL Johnson will get us both arrested! The
philosopher of ‘The Rambler’ in jail in Oxford! Heavens!
JOHNSON (Off, shouting) Come on, Bozzy!
BOSWELL I’ll Bozzy him. Where was that
from? Must be over there. (He leaves hurriedly.)
Comments
Post a Comment