Poet, essayist, biographer, lexicographer, critic, conversationalist and wit, Dr Johnson is one of the great figures of English literature, perhaps the most quoted English writer after Shakespeare. Our view of Johnson has been overwhelmingly shaped by James Boswell's Life of Samuel Johnson, published in 1791, the most famous biography in the English language. But invaluable as Boswell is as a source, he should not be the last word.
This new biography illuminates the Johnson that Boswell never knew: the awkward youth, the unsuccessful schoolmaster, the eccentric marriage, his early years in London in the 1740s scratching a living, the epic struggle to produce the Dictionary. Very much the outsider, rather than the supremely confident dispenser of robust common sense.
Using material unknown to previous biographers, Peter Martin describes the psychological knife-edge on which Johnson felt he lived, caused by his severe melancholia and his physical diseases. He explores Johnson's role in the publishing and printing world of the time and he reveals how important women were to Johnson throughout his life.
The Samuel Johnson that emerges from this enthralling biography is still the foremost figure of his age but a more rebellious, unpredictable and sympathetic figure than the one that Boswell so memorably portrayed.
Yet this is also an intimate picture of domestic life, which mingles the greatest talkers of a talkative age with the hero's humbler friends in a picture which is, before all things, humane.
Boswell's classic biography of the eighteenth-century English lexicographer, critic, and conversationalist.
In this biography - a work that won three of the most prestigious literary prizes this country offers - W. Jackson Bate delves deep into the character that formed Johnson's...
The Samuel Johnson that emerges from this enthralling biography is still the foremost figure of his age but a more rebellious, unpredictable and sympathetic figure than the one that Boswell so memorably portrayed.
" Published in 1791, the book has become far more familiar than Johnson's own works, and this edition provides an accessible, abridged edition of the classic biography.
Johnson's books in 1785 ; if this is true , it shows that some books not listed in the catalogue were sold at that time . Alain - René LeSage , The Adventures of Gil Blas , 3d ed . ( London : J. Osborne , 1751 ) , and John Newbery ...
86. T. B. Macaulay, "Essay on Johnson," in Macaulay's and Carlyle's Essays on Samuel Johnson, ed. W. Strunk, Jr. (New York, 1895), 60—62. See W. K. Wimsatt, The Prose Style of Samuel Johnson (New Haven, 1941), 50. 87.
Samuel Johnson on Shakespeare
Volume I Samuel Johnson Roger Lonsdale. literature reveals general 'nature' through its reXection of 'sublunary nature', i.e. the way the world 'really' is, and thus communicates with the 'natural' feelings of the reader.
This is the first and only scholarly edition of Sir John Hawkins's Life of Samuel Johnson, LL.D. , a work that has not been widely available in complete form for more than two hundred years.