< Page:Johnsonian Miscellanies II.djvu
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or proved too short for his undertakings. Respecting the fertility
of his genius, the resources of his learning, and the accuracy of his judgment, the darkness and the light were both alike T .
press, during eighteen months he left Frank, ' took bribes for denying his his house at one in the night with master to others, when Mr. Steevens the Hampstead patrole. Nichols, wanted his assistance in his Shake- Lit. Hist. v. 427. speare?
Miss Hawkins (Memoirs, i. 153) * * The darkness and light to thee
says that Johnson's man-servant, are both alike.' Psalms, cxxxix. II.
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