Samuel JohnsonDespite his status as one of the founding fathers of modern English literature, few of Samuel Johnson's works are widely read today. This book suggests that his writings need to be appreciated in the context of contemporary debates over the role and status of literature within a rapidly expanding culture. |
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Page 16
... Howard Weinbrot highlights the nationalistic impulse behind this critique , suggesting that the poem ' regards the collapse of London as an emblem of the larger collapse of the nation ' . Johnson ' laments French influ- ence and British ...
... Howard Weinbrot highlights the nationalistic impulse behind this critique , suggesting that the poem ' regards the collapse of London as an emblem of the larger collapse of the nation ' . Johnson ' laments French influ- ence and British ...
Page 19
... Howard Weinbrot , as ' one of the great poems in the English language ' , 14 although David Garrick is said to have pronounced it ' as hard as Greek ' ( Life , 138 ) . It is a moral rather than a political satire , with what Boswell ...
... Howard Weinbrot , as ' one of the great poems in the English language ' , 14 although David Garrick is said to have pronounced it ' as hard as Greek ' ( Life , 138 ) . It is a moral rather than a political satire , with what Boswell ...
Page 21
... Howard Weinbrot has drawn attention to Johnson's use of verbs in his poetry , 18 and in the opening lines of Vanity we are exhorted , in a series of imperatives , to ' Remark ' , ' watch ' and ' say ' ( Vanity , II . 3-5 ) . This ...
... Howard Weinbrot has drawn attention to Johnson's use of verbs in his poetry , 18 and in the opening lines of Vanity we are exhorted , in a series of imperatives , to ' Remark ' , ' watch ' and ' say ' ( Vanity , II . 3-5 ) . This ...
Contents
London and The Vanity of Human Wishes | 1 |
The Rambler and the Idler | 25 |
The Dictionary | 39 |
Copyright | |
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Abyssinia Addison Alvin Kernan audience biography Boswell Boswell's Cambridge character characterized Chesterfield classical concept criticism culture David Garrick despite developed Dryden Edward Cave eighteenth century English essay explore fiction Fielding's friends Garrick genre Greene Henry Fielding Hester Thrale Highland highlights Howard Erskine Howard Weinbrot Human Wishes Ibid Idler imitation Imlac included J. C. D. Clark James Boswell John Johnson argues Johnson's Poetry Journey Juvenal Juvenal's knowledge language letter Lichfield literary literature London modern moral narrative narrator nature Nekayah neoclassical neoclassicism novel Oxford University Press Pekuah periodical philosophical play poem poet political preface Printing Technology prose published Rambler Rasselas readers readership Reddick represent Robert DeMaria Samuel Johnson Samuel Johnson Oxford Samuel Richardson satire Savage seen Shakespeare significant social Spectator suggests Terry Eagleton Thrale tion Tom Jones tone tour tradition tragedy Vanity of Human vernacular virtue Walter Jackson Bate words writers