Samuel Johnson
Dr. Samuel Johnson (September 18, 1709 - December 13, 1784), often referred to simply as Dr. Johnson, was one of England's greatest literary figures, whose witty asides are still frequently quoted in print today. He was also a lexicographer.
Although best remembered as the compiler of the first comprehensive English dictionary, Dr. Johnson was more than a scholar. Born at Lichfield and educated at Lichfield Grammar School and Pembroke College, Oxford, he moved to London in 1737 with his wife, Tetty, who was twenty years his senior, and began to earn a living as a journalist and critic, whilst working on plays, poetry and biographies.
Johnson began A Dictionary of the English Language in 1747, but did not complete it until 1755. It made his name, but not his fortune. Another of his major works, the satire Rasselas (1759), was written specifically to raise money to pay for his mother's funeral.
Johnson was at the centre of a literary circle which included such figures as Oliver Goldsmith, Edmund Burke and David Garrick, and founded the Literary Club. In 1763, a young Scottish writer, James Boswell, introduced himself to Johnson. Together they toured the Western Isles of Scotland in 1773, a journey which Johnson immortalised in print. As a conservative, he was also a fierce critic of the American Revolution. In Taxation No Tyranny, he asked, "How is it that we hear the loudest yelps for liberty among the drivers of negroes?"
Dr. Johnson's last great work was the ten-volume Lives of the English Poets, published between 1779 and 1781. He died in 1784 and is buried in Westminster Abbey.
As well as to his output, Johnson owes his reputation to his biographer, James Boswell, who presents us with a picture of a very pious man of Tory common sense, and kindly heart, beneath a sometimes unkempt and gruff exterior. Another of Johnson's great friends were Henry Thrale and Hester Thrale. The latter's diaries and correspondence are a major source of information about Johnson.
His time in Birmingham is remembered by a frieze in the city's Old Square, an area much changed from when he lived there. Birmingham Central Library has a Johnson Collection. It has around 2000 volumes of works by him, and books and periodicals about him. It includes many of his first editions.
External Links
e-texts of some biographies of Samuel Johnson:
Referenced By
1700 in literature | 1700s in literature | 1701 in literature | 1702 in literature | 1703 in literature | 1704 in literature | 1705 in literature | 1706 in literature | 1707 in literature | 1708 in literature | 1709 | 1709 in literature | 1720s BC | 1747 | 1747 in literature | 1755 | 1759 in literature | 1763 in literature | 1777 in literature | 1784 | 1784 in literature | 1785 in literature | 18 September | 18th Century | 18th September | 29 October | 29th October | A Dictionary of the English Language | A Tale of a Tub | AardvarK | Alexander Chalmers | Alexander Wedderburn, 1st Earl of Rosslyn | Ambrose Philips | Anatomy of Melancholy | Arthur Murphy | Arthur Young | As You Like It | As You Like It--Text | Baron Boyle of Marston | Beryl Bainbridge | Biographical Listing/J | Black Adder | Blackadder | Blackadder's Christmas Carol | Blackadder: Back & Forth | Blackadder: the Cavalier Years | Blackadder Goes Forth | Blackadder II | Blackadder the Third | British poetry | Burntwood | Charing Cross | Charing Cross, London, England | Charles Burney | Charlotte Lennox | Claret | Cockfight | Cockfighting | Columbia College | Columbia Law School | Columbia University | David Garrick | Derby | Derby, Derbyshire | Derby, Derbyshire, England | Derby, England | Derby City | Derby City, England | Derby UA | Dictionary | Earl of Cork | Earl of Orrery | Earls of Cork | Edmond Malone | Edward Thurlow, 1st Baron Thurlow | Edward Thurlow, 1st Lord Thurlow | Edward Young | Eighteenth Century | England, England | English novel | English poet | English poetry | English poets | Essayist | Essayists | Fallacies of definition | Famous English people | Famous People Who Have Commited Suicide | Famous People Who Have Committed Suicide | Fanny Burney | Fleeming Jenkin | Frances Burney | Frances D'Arblay | Francois-Marie Arouet | Francois Marie Arouet | Francois Marie Arouet de Voltaire | François-Marie Voltaire | George Birkbeck Norman Hill | George Colman the Elder | George Ord ...
|