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Grant, Ulysses S. (Ulysses Simpson), 1822-1885

"Selections from Five English Poets"

His
essays, which appeared in numerous magazines, brought him into further
notice, especially a series collected later under the title, _The
Citizen of the World_. In 1764 he became a member of Dr. Johnson's
famous "Literary Club" that met at the "Turk's Head." It was to
Johnson that he once said, alluding to his heavy style,--"If you were
to make little fishes talk, they would talk like whales." But there
was no malice in this remark, for the doctor was one of his stanch
friends. Among the other nine original members of the club were Sir
Joshua Reynolds, the artist, and Edmund Burke, the noted statesman.
Before long _The Traveller_ and _The Deserted Village_ gave Goldsmith a
foremost place among the poets of the time, and _The Vicar of
Wakefield_, published in 1776, brought him fame as a novelist. This
book remains to-day, after the lapse of nearly a century and a half,
one of the most widely read of English novels. Two comedies, _The
Good-natured Man_ and _She Stoops to Conquer_, complete the list of his
well-known works, while he wrote many others that were enjoyed by his
contemporaries. He died of a fever at the age of forty-six, and was
buried in the burial ground of the Temple Church.


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