LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
| | PAGE |
| Oliver Goldsmith, from a Painting by Reynolds | [Frontispiece] |
| Goldsmith as a Young Man | [28] |
| Dr. Johnson, Boswell, and Goldsmith at the Mitre Tavern | [46] |
| The Original Agreement between Goldsmith and Dodsley, 1763 | [52] |
| Goldsmith in Middle Age | [56] |
| No. 2, Brick Court, Temple (where Goldsmith died) | [63] |
| Statue of Goldsmith | [80] |
CHAPTER I
"THE BEST BELOVED OF ENGLISH WRITERS"
The Goldsmith family sprang originally from Crayford, a nestling village in Kent. This southern county, in all its loveliness, can thus add this high honour to its other though not greater glories. "To be the best beloved of English writers," said Thackeray, "what a title that is for a man!" This he gave to Goldsmith. It is a title that none will dispute. Here is a love that will never pass away from our hearts. Of Oliver Goldsmith, as poet and novelist, essay-writer, wit and playwright, it may be said that his distinction and celebrity are essentially English. Erin, sweet sister island, that land of loving hearts, gave this child of sun and shade, his birthplace, his home and many dear delightful days, never to be forgotten. Across the separating years, to the very end and through all, the grateful heart of the poet looked back very fondly upon the gentle and pathetic land of his nativity. On November 10, 1728, Oliver Goldsmith first saw the light of that world which, to the last, he loved, and greeted that suffering heart and seeking aspiration of humanity, that above and beyond almost all other men he could, and did, unfailingly compassionate. It is needless to trace and recall, the ancestral traditions of the Goldsmith family. Of its early history in England and later settlement in Ireland, it will suffice that its annals are as honourable as they are obscure. It had its men of light and learning, but their power attained neither fame nor rank, and their virtues were rather domestic than distinguished.