In 1793 his father's death gave Rogers the principal share in the banking house in Cornhill, and a considerable income. He left
Newington Green and established himself in
chambers in the Temple. Within his intimate circle at this time were his best friend, Richard Sharp (
Conversation Sharp), and the artists
John Flaxman,
John Opie,
Martin Shee and
John Henry Fuseli. He also made the acquaintance of
Charles James Fox, with whom he visited the galleries in Paris in 1802, and whose friendship introduced him to
Holland House. In 1803 he moved to 22
St James's Place, where for fifty years he entertained all the celebrities of London. Flaxman and
Charles Alfred Stothard had a share in the decoration of the house, which Rogers virtually rebuilt, and proceeded to fill with works of art. His collections at his death realised £50,000. In the mid-nineteenth century, social breakfasts were in vogue in London. Rogers hosted social breakfasts with guests such as
Thomas Macaulay,
Henry Hallam,
Sydney Smith,
George Howard, 7th Earl of Carlisle,
Philip Stanhope, 5th Earl Stanhope,
Nassau Senior,
Charles Greville,
Charles Lamb,
Henry Hart Milman,
Anthony Panizzi,
George Cornewall Lewis,
Sylvain Van de Weyer,
Charles Babbage and
Catharine Sedgwick An invitation to one of Rogers's breakfasts was a formal entry into literary society, and his dinners were even more select. His social success was due less to his literary position than to his powers as a conversationalist, his educated taste in all matters of art, and no doubt to his sarcastic and bitter wit, for which he excused himself by saying that he had such a small voice that no one listened if he said pleasant things. "He certainly had the kindest heart and unkindest tongue of any one I ever knew," said
Fanny Kemble. He helped the poet
Robert Bloomfield, he reconciled
Thomas Moore with
Francis Jeffrey and with Byron, and he relieved
Sheridan's difficulties in the last days of his life. Moore, who refused help from all his friends, and would only owe debts to his publishers, found it possible to accept help from Rogers. He procured a pension for
HF Cary, the translator of
Dante, and obtained
Wordsworth his sinecure as distributor of stamps.
John Mitford, while maintaining his country livings, rented permanent lodgings in Sloane Street, where he enjoyed "the most perfect intimacy with Samuel Rogers for more than twenty years". He lent
Edward Moxon £500 to establish himself as a publisher. Rogers was in effect a literary dictator in England. He made his reputation by
The Pleasures of Memory when
William Cowper's fame was still in the making. He became the friend of Wordsworth,
Walter Scott and Byron, and lived long enough to give an opinion as to the fitness of
Alfred Tennyson for the post of
Poet Laureate.
Alexander Dyce, from the time of his first introduction to Rogers, was in the habit of writing down the anecdotes with which his conversation abounded. In 1856 he arranged and published selections as
Recollections of the Table-Talk of Samuel Rogers, to which is added
Porsoniana. Rogers himself kept a notebook in which he entered impressions of the conversation of many of his distinguished friends—Fox,
Edmund Burke,
Henry Grattan,
Richard Porson,
John Horne Tooke,
Talleyrand,
Lord Erskine, Scott, Lord Grenville and the
Duke of Wellington. They were published by his nephew William Sharpe in 1859 as
Recollections by Samuel Rogers;
Reminiscences and Table-Talk of Samuel Rogers, Banker, poet, and Patron of the Arts, 1763–1855 (1903), by GH Powell, is an amalgamation of these two authorities. Rogers held various honorary positions: he was one of the trustees of the
National Gallery; and he served on a commission to inquire into the management of the
British Museum, and on another for the rebuilding of the
Houses of Parliament. He was elected a
Fellow of the Royal Society in November 1796. ==Later life==