room where his brother artists were assembled. They rose up to a man, and saluted him 'President.' He was affected by the compliment, but declined the honor till he had talked with Johnson and Burke; he went, consulted his friends, and having considered the consequences carefully, then consented. He expressed his belief at the same time that their scheme was a mere delusion: the King, he said, would not patronize nor even acknowledge them, as his majesty was well known to be the friend of another body—The Incorporated Society of Artists."
The truth is, the Royal Academy was planned at the suggestion of the King himself. He had learned, through West, the causes of the indecent bickerings in the Society of Artists, and declared to him that he was ready to patronize any institution founded on principles calculated to advance the interests of art. West communicated the King's declaration to some of the dissenters, who drew up a plan which the king corrected with his own hand. See Spooner's Dictionary of Painters, Engravers, Sculptors, and Architects, article West.
REYNOLDS AND DR. JOHNSON.
In the year 1754, Reynolds accidentally made the
acquaintance of Dr. Samuel Johnson, which ripened
into a mutual and warm friendship, that continued
through life. Of the fruit which he derived from
this intercourse, Reynolds thus speaks, in one of his
Discourses on Art: