“At
this time I observed upon the dial-plate of his watch a short Greek inscription,
taken from the New Testament, being the first words of our Saviour’s solemn
admonition to the improvement of that time which is allowed us to prepare for
eternity; `the night cometh when no man can work.’ He sometime afterwards laid
aside this dial-plate; and when I asked him the reason, he said `It might do
very well upon a clock which a man keeps in his closet; but to have it upon his
watch which he carries about with him, and which is often looked at by others,
might be censored as ostentatious.’ Mr. [George] Steevens is now possessed of
the dial-plate inscribed as above.”
The
inscription is from John 9:4, in the King James translation: “I must work the
works of him that sent me, while it is day: the night cometh, when no man can
work.” In his biography of Johnson, published in 1787, four years before Boswell’s,
Sir John Hawkins fleshes out the incident. The watch, he reports, was made by “those
eminent artists Mudge and Dutton: it was of metal, and the outer case covered
with tortoise-shell; he paid for it seventeen guineas.” The Greek inscription
contained a typo, Hawkins says, and adds of the watch: “This, though a memento
of great importance, he, about three years after, thought pedantic; he,
therefore, exchanged the dial-plate for one in which the inscription was omitted.”
If
the purchase of a handsome watch by Johnson seems like an uncharacteristic
indulgence (even with the scriptural warning), Robert DeMaria Jr. reminds us
otherwise in Samuel Johnson and the Life
of Reading (1997). Johnson liked owning “fine books” and “enjoyed superior
things, even some gaudy things – the red suit he wore to the performance of
Irene and the extravagantly expensive gold watch he had inscribed with the
biblical reminder of death and judgment (nigh cometh), which ended up in the
hands of the Shakespearean collector George Steevens, for example.”
The
passage from John resonated with Johnson. He cites it again in The Idler #43: “Let him that desires to
see others happy make haste to give while his gift can be enjoyed, and remember
that every moment of delay takes something from the value of his benefaction.
And let him who purposes his own happiness reflect, that while he forms his
purpose the day rolls on, and the night
cometh when no man can work.” And in a diary entry (Diaries, Prayers, and Annals, Yale University Press, 1958) from
1768:
“Ejaculation.
Imploring Diligence.
O
God, make me to remember that the night
cometh when no man can work.”
Jeffrey
Meyers in Samuel Johnson: The Struggle
(2008) suggests that Johnson’s obsessive anxiety over “Time's winged chariot” (which
is, after all, perfectly human), had its root in “his acute sense of the
disparity between intention and execution, between what he’d hoped to achieve
and the disappointed result.” Meyers writes: “The fear of failure prevented him
from completing or even starting a book. He had inscribed in Greek on his
pocket watch the admonition from John 9:4: `the night cometh’ when no man can
work. In his life of Pope he mentioned `indolence, interruption, business, and
pleasure’ as impediments to literary work.”
Quintessentially
human, Johnson embodied contradiction. He was a sluggard who labored all his
life, a writer who countered indolence with toil. In his Dictionary he defined the verb “to labour” as “to work at; to move
with difficulty; to form with labour; to prosecute with effect.” And, of
course, a lexicographer is “a harmless drudge.”
1 comment:
There is a sundial at Hampton Court Palace inscribed "Watch Slower - Watch Faster" (which I believe (?) belonged to David Garrick). Practical maybe, but I always think this inscription has a biblical urgency to it like "tempus fugit'.
Post a Comment