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HISTORICAL AND BIOGRAPHICAL PREFACE.

THIS work was written by Dr. Johnson for | say, "He is the Raphael of Essay Writers." "The Universal Chronicle, or Weekly Gazette," projected in the year 1751, by Mr. J. Newberry, Bookseller. The preface to the Rambler contains an outline of the Life of the celebrated author of these papers; we shall therefore here only present our readers with a few observations on the style, &c. of Dr. Johnson, which he will not find so copiously described as we could wish in our preliminary observations on the Rambler."When common words were less pleasing to the The Doctor is said to have been allowed a share in the profits of this newspaper, for which he was to furnish a short essay on such subjects as might suit the taste of the times, and distinguish this publication from it contemporaries. The first Essay appeared on Saturday, April 15th, 1753, and continued to be published on the same day, weekly, until April 5th, 1760, when the Idler was concluded.

How he differed so widely from such elegant models is a problem not to be solved, unless it be true that he took an early tincture from the writers of the last century, particularly Sir Thomas Browne. Hence the peculiarities of his style, new combinations, sentences of an unusual structure, and words derived from the learned languages. His own account of the matter is, ear, or less distinct in their signification, I familiarized the terms of philosophy, by applying them to popular ideas." But he forgot the obser vation of Dryden:-"If too many foreign words are poured in upon us, it looks as if they were designed, not to assist the natives, but to conquer them." There is, it must be admitted, a swell of language, often out of all proportion to the sentiment; but there is, in general, a fulness of The Rambler may be considered as Johnson's mind, and the thought seems to expand with the great work. It was the basis of that high re-sound of the words. Determined to discard colputation which went on increasing to the end of his days. The circulation of those periodical essays was not, at first, equal to ther merit. They had not, like the Spectators, the art of charming by variety; and indeed how could it be expected? The wits of Queen Anne's reign sent their contributions to the Spectator; and Johnson stood alone. A stage-coach, says Sir Richard Steele, must go forward on stated days, whether there are passengers or not. So it was with the Rambler, every Tuesday and Saturday, for two years. In this collection Johnson is the great moral teacher of his countrymen; his essays form a body of ethics; the observations on life and man-early patron in Lord Somers. ners are acute and instructive; and the papers, however, more upon a fine taste than the vigour professedly critical, serve to promote the cause of of his mind. His Latin poetry shows, that he literature. It must, however, be acknowledged, relished, with a just selection, all the refined and that a settled gloom hangs over the author's delicate beauties of the Roman classics; and mind; and all the essays, except eight or ten, when he cultivated his native language, no woncoming from the same fountain head, no wonder der that he formed that graceful style, which has that they have the raciness of the soil from which been so justly admired; simple, yet elegant; they sprung. Of this uniformity Johnson was adorned, yet never over-wrought; rich in allusensible. He used to say, that if he had joined a sion, yet pure and perspicuous; correct withfriend or two, who would have been able to inter-out labour, and, though sometimes deficient in mix papers of a sprightly turn, the collection would have been more miscellaneous, and, by consequence, more agreeable to the generality of readers.

loquial barbarisms and licentious idioms, he forgot the elegant simplicity that distinguishes the writings of Addison. He had what Locke calls a roundabout view of his subject; and though he was never tainted, like many modern wits, with the ambition of shining in paradox, he may be fairly called an Original Thinker. His reading was extensive. He treasured in his mind whatever was worthy of notice, but he added to it from his own meditation. He collected, qua reconderet, auctaque promeret. Addison was not so profound a thinker. He was born to write, converse, and live with ease; and he found an He depended,

strength, yet always musical. His essays in gcneral, are on the surface of life; if ever original, it was in pieces of humour. Sir Roger de Coverly, and the Tory Fox-hunter, need not to be menIt is remarkable, that the pomp of diction,tioned. Johnson had a fund of humour, but he which has been objected to Johnson, was first assumed in the Rambler. His Dictionary was going on at the same time, and, in the course of that work, as he grew familiar with technical and scholastic words, he thought the bulk of his readers were equally learned; or at least would admire the splendour and dignity of the style. And yet it is well known, that he praised in Cowley the ease and unaffected structure of the sentences. Cowley may be placed at the head of those who cultivated a clear and natural style. Dryden, Tillotson, and Sir William Temple, followed. Addison, Swift, and Pope, with more correctness, carried our language well nigh to perfection. Of Addison, Johnson was used to

did not know it, nor was he willing to descend to the familiar idiom and the variety of diction which that mode of composition required. The letter, in the Rambler, No. 12, from a young girl that wants a place, will illustrate this observation. Addison possessed an unclouded imagination, alive to the first objects of nature and of art. He reaches the sublime without any apparent effort. When he tells us, "If we consider the fixed stars as so many oceans of flame, that are each of them attended with a different set of planets; if we still discover new firmaments and new lights that are sunk further in those unfathomable depths of æther, we are lost in a labyrinth of suns and worlds, and confounded with the magnifi

cence and immensity of nature;” the ease, with | fellow at Cambridge, but, as Johnson, being which this passage rises to unaffected grandeur, himself an original thinker, always revolted from is the secret charm that captivates the reader. servile imitation, he has printed the piece, with Johnson is always lofty; he seems, to use Dry- an apology, importing that the journal of a citizen den's phrase, to be o'er informed with meaning, in the Spectator almost precluded the attempt of and his words do not appear to himself adequate any subsequent writer. This account of the to his conception. He moves in state, and his pe- Idler may be closed, after observing, that the riods are always harmonious. His Oriental Tales author's mother being buried on the 23d of Janare in the true style of eastern magnificence, and uary 1759, there is an admirable paper, occasionyet none of them are so much admired as the Vi-ed by that event, on Saturday the 27th of the sions of Mirza. In matters of criticism, Johnson same month, No. 41. The reader, if he pleases, is never the echo of preceding writers. He thinks may compare it with another fine paper in the and decides for himself. If we except the Essays Rambler, No. 54, on the conviction that rushes on the pleasures of imagination, Addison cannot on the mind at the bed of a dying friend. be called a philosophical critic. His moral Essays are beautiful; but in that province nothing can exceed the Rambler, though Johnson used to say, that the Essay on "The Burthens of Mankind" (in the Spectator, No. 558) was the most exquisite he had ever read. Talking of himself, Johnson said, "Topham Beauclark has wit, and every thing comes from him with ease; but when I say a good thing, I seem to labour." “London, Jan. 5, 1759. Advertisement. The When we compare him with Addison, the con- proprietors of the paper, entitled "The Idler," trast is still stronger. Addison lends grace and having found that those essays are inserted in ornament to truth; Johnson gives it force and the newspapers and magazines with so little energy. Addison makes virtue amiable; John-regard to justice or decency, that the Universal son represents it as an awful duty. Addison insinuates himself with an air of modesty; Johnson commands like a dictator; but a dictator in his splended robes, not labouring at the plough. Addison is the Jupiter of Virgil, with placidries, made yet more injurious by contempt, they serenity talking to Venus:

"Vultu, quo cœlum tempestatesque serenat." Johnson is Jupiter Tonans; he darts his lightning, and rolls his thunder, in the cause or virtue and piety. The language seems to fall short of his ideas; he pours along, familiarising the terms of philosophy, with bold inversions, and sonorous periods; but we may apply to him what Pope has said of Homer:-"It is the sentiment that swells and fills out the diction, which rises with it, and forms itself about it; like glass in the furnace, which grows to a greater magnitude, as the breath within is more powerful, and

the heat more intense."

It is not the design of this comparison to decide between those two eminent writers. In matters of taste every reader will chose for himself. Johnson is always profound, and of course gives the fatigue of thinking. Addison charms while he instructs; and writing, as he always does, a pure, an elegant, and idiomatic style, he may be pronounced the safest model for imitation.

The Idlers, during the time of their publication, were frequently copied into contemporary works without any acknowledgment. The author, who was also a proprietor of the Universal Chronicle, in which they appeared, hurled his vengeance on the pirates in the following "Hue and Cry," which, as coming from Dr. Johnson's pen, may justly be deemed a literary curiosity.

Chronicle in which they first appear, is not always mentioned, think it necessary to declare to the publishers of those collections, that however patiently they have hitherto endured these inju

have now determined to endure them no longer. --They have already seen essays, for which a very large price is paid, transferred with the most shameless rapacity into the weekly or monthly compilations, and their right, at least for the present, alienated from them, before they could themselves be said to enjoy it. But they would not willingly be thought to want tenderness even for men by whom no tenderness hath been shown. The past is without remedy, and shall be without resentment. But those who have been thus busy with their sickies in the fields of their neighbours, are henceforward to take notice, that the time of impunity is at an end. Whoever shall, without our leave, lay the hand of rapine upon our papers, is to expect that we shall vindicate our due, by the means which justice prescribes, and which are warranted by the immemorial prescriptions of honourable trade. We shall lay hold, in our turn, on their copies, degrade them from the pomp of wide margin and diffuse typography, contract them into a narrow space, and sell them at an humble price; yet not with a view of growing rich by confiscations, for we think not much bet

we shall therefore, when our losses are repaid, give what profit shall remain to the Magdalens: for we know not who can be more properly taxed for the support of penitent prostitutes than prostitutes in whom there yet appears neither peni

The Essays written by Johnson in the Adventurer may be called a continuation of the Rambler. The Idler, in order to be consistent with the as-ter of money got by punishment than by crimes: sumed character, is written with abated vigour, in a style of ease and unlaboured elegance. It is the Odyssey after the Iliad. Intense thinking would not become the Idler. The first number presents a well-drawn portrait of an Idler, and from that character no deviation could be made.tence nor shame."Accordingly, Johnson forgets his austere manner, and plays us into sense. He still continues his lectures on human life, but he adverts to common occurrences, and is often content with the topic of the day. An advertisement in the beginning of the first volume informs us, that twelve entire Essays were a contribution from different hands. Cine of chau, No. 33, is the journal of a Senior

The effect of this singular manifesto is not now known; but if "essays for which a large price has been paid" be not words of course, they may prove that the author received an immediate remuneration for his labour, independent of his share in the general profits.

Nos. 33, 93, and 96, were written by Mr. Thomas Warton. Thomas Warton was the

"A Companion to the Guide, and a Guide to the Companion; being a complete Supplement to all the Accounts of Oxford hitherto published." The lapse of time, and the new reign, had now entirely restored to Oxford its ancient virtue of loyalty; and Warton, who had lamented the death of George II. in a copy of verses addressed to Mr. Pitt, continued the courtly strain, though with due dignity, in lines on the marriage of George III. and on the birth of the Prince of Wales, printed in the university collection. Still ranking equally with the wits and with the poets of Isis, he edited in 1764 the "Oxford Sausage," of several pieces in which lively miscellany he was the writer. In 1766 he again appeared as a classical editor by superintending the Anthology of Cephalus, printed at the Clarendon-press, to which he perfixed a learned and ingenious preface. He took the degree of B. D. in 1761, and in 1771 was instituted to the small living of Kiddington in Oxfordshire, on the presentation of the Earl of Litchfield, then chancellor of the university. An edition of Theocritus in 2 vols. 4to. which was published in 1770, gave him celebrity not only at home, but among the scholars of the continent.

younger brother of Dr. Joseph Warton, and was born at Basingstoke in 1728. He very early manifested a taste for verse; and there is extant a well-turned translation of an epigram of Martial composed by him in his ninth year. He was educated under his father, who kept a school at Basingstoke, till he was admitted in 1743 a commoner of Trinity College, Oxford. Here he exercised his poletical talent to so much advantage, that on the appearance of Mason's Elegy of "Isis," which severely reflected on the disloyalty of Oxford at that period, he was encouraged by Dr. Huddesford, president of his college, to vindicate the cause of the university. This task he performed with great applause, by writing, in his 21st year, "The Triumph of Isis;" a piece of much spirit and fancy, in which he retaliated upon the bard of Cam by satirising the courtly venality then supposed to distinguished the loyal university, and sung in no common strains the past and present glories of Oxford. This on his part was fair warfare, though as a peace-offering he afterwards excluded the poem from his volume of collected pieces. His "Progress of Discontent," published in 1750, in a miscellany entitled "The Student," exhibited to great advantage his power in the familiar style, and A History of English Poetry is said to have his talent for humour, with a knowledge of life been meditated by Pope, who was but indifferextraordinary at his early age, especially if com- ently qualified by learning, whatever he might posed, as is said, for a college-exercise in 1746. In have been by taste, for such an undertaking. 1750 he took the degree of M. A., and in the fol- Gray, who possessed every requisite for the work, lowing year became a Fellow of his college. He except industry, entertained a distant idea of enappears now to have unalterably devoted him-gaging in it, with the assistance of Mason; but self to the pursuit of poetry and elegant literature he shrunk from the magnitude of the task, and in a university-residence. His spirited satire, readily relinquished his project, when he heard entitled "Newmarket," and pointed against the that a similar design was adopted by Warton. ruinous passion for the turf; his "Ode for Mu- At what period he first occupied himself in this sic ;" and "Verses on the Death of the Prince of extensive plan of writing and research, we are Wales;" were written about this time; and in not informed; but in 1774 he had proceeded so 1753 he was the editor of a small collection of far as to publish the first volume in quarto; and poems, which, under the title of "The Union," he pursued an object now apparently become the was printed at Edinburgh, and contained several great mark of his studies, with so much assiduity, of his own pieces. In 1754 he made himself that he brought out a second volume in 1778, and known as a critic and a diligent student of poeti- a third in 1781. He now relaxed in his labours, cal antiquities, by his observations on Spenser's and never executed more than a few sheets of a Fairy Queen, in one volume, afterwards enlarg- fourth volume. The work had grown upon his ed to two volumes; a work well received by the hands, and had greatly exceeded his first estipublic, and which made a considerable addition mate; so that the completion of the design, to his literary reputation. These various proofs which was to have terminated only with the of his abilities caused him very properly to be commencement of the eighteenth century, was elected in 1757 professor of poetry to the univer- still very remote, supposing a due proportion to sity, an office which he held for the usual period have been preserved throughout. Warton's of ten years, and rendered respectable by the "History of English Poetry" is regarded as his erudition and taste displayed in his lectures. Dr. opus magnum; and is indeed an ample monument Johnson was at this time publishing his "Idler," of his reading, as well as of his taste and critical and Warton who had long been intimately ac- judgment. The majority of its readers, however, quainted with him, contributed the three papers will probably be of opinion that he has dwelt too we have mentioned to that work. He gave a minutely upon those early periods in which poespecimen of his classical proficiency in 1758 by try can scarcely be said to have existed in this the publication "Inscriptionum Romanarum country, and has been too profuse of transcripts Metricarum Delectus," a collection of select Latin from pieces destitute of all merit but their age. epigrams and inscriptions, to which were annex- Considered, however, as literary antiquarianism, ed a few modern ones, on the antique model, five the work is very interesting; and though inaccu of them by himself. He drew up in 1760, for the racies have been detected, it cannot be denied to Biographica Britannica, the life of Sir Thomas abound with curious information. His brother Pope, which he published separately, much gave some expectation of carrying on the history enlarged, in 1772 and 1780. Another con- to the completion of the fourth volume, but tribution to literary biography was his "Life seems to have done little or nothing towards fuland Literary Remains of Dr. Bathurst," pub-filling it. As a proof that Warton began to be lished in 1761. A piece of local humour, weary of his task, it appears that about 1781 he which was read at the time with great avidity, had turned his thoughts to another laborious undropped from his pen in 1760 with the title, dertaking, which was a county-history of Ox

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fordshire; and in 1782 he published as a speci- mind by curious and elegant literature, his various men a topographical account of his parish of Kid-productions abundantly testify; yet he appears dington. In the same year he entered into the to have wanted the resolution and steady induscelebrated Chattertonian controversy, and pub- try necessary for the completion of a great lished An Inquiry into the Authenticity of the design; and some remarkable instances of inacPoems ascribed to Rowley, which he decidedly curacy or forgetfulness prove that his exertions pronounced to be the fabrication of their pre- were rather desultory than regular. This dispotended editor. His income was augmented in sition was less injurious to him in his poetica: this year by presentation to a donative in Somer- capacity than in any other, whence he will probasetshire; and as he was free both from ambition bly live longest in fame as a poet. Scarcely any and avarice, he seems to have looked no farther one of that tribe has noted with finer observation for ecclesiastical promotion. In 1785 the place the minute circumstances in rural nature that of Camden-professor of history at Oxford, vacant afford pleasure in description, or has derived from by the resignation of the present Sir W. Scott, the regions of fiction more animated and pictuwas conferred upon him. He attended to his resque scenery. His pieces are very various in duties so far as to deliver a learned and ingenious subject, and none of them long. He can only inaugural lecture, but that was the limit of his rank among the minor poets; but perhaps few professional exertions. Another office at this volumes in that class will more frequently be time demanded new efforts. At his Majesty's taken up for real amusement. Several editions express desire the post of Poet-laureat, vacated by of his poems were called for in his life-time, and the death of Whitehead, was offered to him; since his death an edition of his works has been and, in accepting it, he laudably resolved to use given by Mr. Mant, in 2 vols. octavo, 1802, with his best endeavours for rendering it respectable. a biographical account of the author prefixed. He varied the monotony of anniversary court compliment by retrospective views of the splendid period of English history and the glories of chivalry, and by other topies adapted to poetical description, though little connected with the proper theme of the day; and though his lyric strains underwent some ridicule on that account, they in general enhanced the literary valuation of laureat odes. His concluding publication was Sir Joshua Reynolds was the son of a clergyan edition of the juvenile poems of Milton, in which it was his purpose to explain his allusions, man at Plympton, in Devonshire, and born there point out his imitations, illustrate his beauties, in 1723. Being intended for the church, he and elucidate his obsolete diction and peculiar received a suitable education under his father, phraseology. This was a task of no great effort and then removed to Oxford, where he took his to one qualified like Warton; and engaging in it, degrees in arts; but having a great taste for draw rather than in the completion of his elaborate ing, he resolved to make painting his profession, plans, seems to prove that the indolence of ad- and accordingly was placed under Hudson the vancing years and a collegiate life was gaining portrait painter. About 1749 he went to Italy, upon him. Of this work the first edition appear-in company with the honourable Mr. Keppel, his ed in 1785, and the second in 1791, a short time before his death. He had intended to include in his plan a similar edition of the Paradise Regained, and the Samson Agonistes, of the great author, of whom, notwithstanding religious and political differences, he was a warm admirer; and he left notes on both these pieces. But his constitution now began to give way, though the period of old age was yet distant. In his 62d year an attack of the gout shattered his frame, and was succeeded, in May 1790, by a paralytic seizure, which carried him off at his lodgings in Oxford. His remains were interred, with every academical honour, in the chapel of Trinity College.

early friend and patron. After studying the works of the most illustrious masters two years, Mr. Reynolds returned to London, where he found no encouragement given to any other branch of the art than to portrait painting. He was of course under the necessity of complying with the prevailing taste, and in that walk soon became unrivalled. The first picture by which he distinguished himself, after his return, was the portrait of Mr. Keppel. He did not, however, confine himself to portraits, but painted several historical pictures of high and acknowledged merit. When the royal academy was instituted he was appointed president, which station he held with honour to himself and advantage to the The character of Thomas Warton was mark- arts till 1791, and then resigned it. He was ed by some of those peculiarities which common- also appointed principal painter to the king, and ly fix upon a man the appellation of an humorist; knighted. His literary merits, and other acand a variety of stories current among the col-complishments, procured him the friendship of legians show that he was more intent upon grati- the most distinguished men of genius in his time, fying his own habitual tastes, than regardful of particularly Johnson, Burke, Goldsmith, and the usual modes and decorums of society. But Garrick: and Sir Joshua had the honour of instihe was substantially good-humoured, friendly, tuting the literary club, of which they were memand placid; and if his dislike of form and re-bers. He was likewise a member of the royal straint sometimes made him prefer the company of inferiors to that of equals, the choice was probably in some measure connected with that love of nature, and spirit of independence, which may De discerned in his writings. That he employed a large portion of his time in the cultivation of his

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society, and of that of antiquaries; and was created doctor of laws by the universities of Oxford and Dublin. Sir Joshua's academical discour ses display the soundest judgment, the most refined taste, and a perfect acquaintance with the works of different masters; and are written in a

clear and elegant style. He died in 1792, and lies buried in St. Paul's cathedral. Having no children, he bequeathed the principal part of his property to his niece, since married to the Earl of Inchiquin, now Marquis of Thomond.

We shall conclude our sketch of the life of this illustrious artist, by quoting his opinion of Dr. Johnson, which is equally honourable to himself and his friend. Speaking of his own discourses, our great artist says, "Whatever merit they have must be imputed, in a great measure, to the education which I may be said to have had under Dr. Johnson. I do not mean to say, though it certainly would be to the credit of these discourses if I could say it with truth, that he contributed even a single sentiment to them; but he qualified my mind to think justly. No man had, like him, the faculty of teaching inferior minds the art of thinking. Perhaps other men might have equal knowledge, but few were so communicative. His great pleasure was to talk to those who looked up to him. It was here he exhibited his wonderful powers. In mixed company, and frequently in company that ought to

have looked up to him, many, thinking they had a character for learning to support, considered it as beneath them to enlist in the train of his auditors; and to such persons he certainly did not appear to advantage, being often impetuous and over-bearing. The desire of shining in conversa tion was in him indeed a predominant passion; and if it must be attributed to vanity, let it at the same time be recollected, that it produced that loquaciousness from which his more intimate friends derived considerable advantage. The observations which he made on poetry, on life, and on every thing about us, I applied to our art, with what success others must judge." No. 67 was written by another intimate and affectionate friend of Dr. Johnson's, Bennet Langton, Esq. of Langton in Lincolnshire. His acquaintance with Dr. Johnson commenced soon after the conclusion of the Rambler, which Mr. Langton, then a youth, had read with so much admiration that Mr. Boswell says he came to London chiefly with a view of being introduced to its author. Mr. Langton died December the 18th, 1801.

HISTORICAL PREFACE TO THE RAMBLER.

THE long space which intervened between the GUARDIAN and the RAMBLER, from 1713 to 1750, was filled up by many attempts of the periodical kind, but scarcely any of these had a reformation of manners and morals for their object. A few valuable papers on general and useful topics appeared, but so incumbered with angry political contests, as to be soon forgotten. Dr. Johnson was the first to restore the periodical essay to its original purpose, and it will appear soon that there is none of his works on which he set a higher value than on his RAMBLER. He seems to have thought, that it would constitute his principal fame, and the learned world appear to have been of the same opinion.

Its commencement was a matter of great importance with him; and he was so desirous to benefit the age by this production, that he began to write with the solemnity of preparatory prayer. In the volume of his Devotions, published soon after his death, we find the following, entitled "Prayer on the RAMBLER."

"Almighty God, the giver of all good things, without whose help all labour is ineffectual, and without whose grace all wisdom is folly; grant, I beseech thee, that in this my undertaking, thy HOLY SPIRIT may not be withheld from me, but that I may promote thy glory, and the salvation both of myself and others: grant this, O Lord, for the sake of JESUS CHRIST, Amen."

The first paper was published on Tuesday, March 20, 1750, and the work continued without the least interruption, every Tuesday and Sa

turday, until Saturday, March 14, 1752, on which day it closed.

The sale was very inconsiderable, and seldom exceeded five hundred copies: and it is very remarkable that the only paper which had a prosperous sale (No. 97) was one of the very few which Dr. Johnson did not write. It was written by Richardson, author of Clarissa, Pamela, and Sir Charles Grandison. Modern taste will not allow it a very high place, but its style was at that time better adapted to the readers of the RAMBLER than that of Dr. Johnson.-It may here be noticed, that the assistance our author received from correspondents amounted to a very small proportion. The four billets in No. 10, were written by Miss Mulso, afterwards Mrs. Chapone; No. 30, was written by Miss Talbot, and Nos. 44, and 100, by the learned and celebrated Mrs. Carter.

Of the characters described in the RAMBLER, some were not altogether fictitious, yet they were not exact portraits. The author employed some adventitious circumstances to produce effect. Prospero, in No. 200, was intended for the celebrated actor Garrick. By Gelidus in No. 24, the author is said to have meant Mr. Coulson, a mathematician, who formerly lived at Rochester. The man "immortalized for purring like a cat," was one Busby, a proctor in the Commons. He who barked so ingeniously, and then called the drawer to drive away the dog, was father to Dr. Saltar of the Charterhouse. He who sung a song, and by correspondent motions

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