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    Samuel Johnson, LL.D. ( – December 13, 1784), often referred to simply as Dr. Johnson, was one of England's greatest literary figures: a poet, essayist, biographer, lexicographer and often considered the finest critic of English literature. He was also a great wit and prose stylist whose bons mots are still frequently quoted in print today.

    Among students of philosophy, Dr. Johnson is perhaps best known for his "refutation" of Bishop Berkeley's idealism. During a conversation with his biographer, Johnson became infuriated at the suggestion that Berkeley's idealism could not be refuted. In his anger, Johnson powerfully kicked a nearby stone and proclaimed, of Berkeley's theory, that "I refute it thus!".


        Samuel Johnson
            Life and work
            Early life and education
            Beginning of career
            Establishing career
            Status achieved
            Boswell, Johnson, and the "Journey"
            Final works
            Character sketch
            Legacy
            Major works
                Essays, pamphlets, periodicals
                Poetry
            Popular culture
            Quotations
            See also
            Notes
                Online texts
                Other

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    Life and work

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    Early life and education
    The son of a poor bookseller, Johnson was born in Lichfield, Staffordshire. He attended Lichfield Grammar School. On October 31, 1728, a few weeks after he turned nineteen, he entered Pembroke College, Oxford, as a fellow-commoner. After thirteen months, however, poverty forced him to leave Oxford without taking a degree, and he returned to Lichfield.

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    Beginning of career
    He attempted to work as a teacher and schoolmaster, initially being turned down by the headmaster of Adams' Grammar School, Revd. Samuel Lea, but then finding work at a school in Stourbridge. Aged twenty-five, he married Elizabeth "Tetty" Porter, a widow twenty-one years older than he. His first work published in 1735, was a translation from the French of Lobo's Voyage to Abyssinia.
    In 1736. he established a private academy at Ediel, near Lichfield, He had only three pupils, but one of them was David Garrick, who remained his friend, while becoming the most famous actor of his day. He began the writing of his first major work there, the tragedy "Irene"



    In 1737, Johnson, penniless, left for London with his former pupil David Garrick, There he found employment with Edward Cave, writing for The Gentleman's Magazine. For the next three decades, Johnson wrote biographies, poetry, essays, pamphlets, parliamentary reports and even prepared a catalogue for the sale of the Harleian Library. He continued to live in poverty for much of this time. The poem London (1738) and the Life of Savage (1745; a biography of Johnson's friend and fellow writer Richard Savage, who had shared in Johnson's poverty and died in 1744) are important works from this period.

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    Establishing career
    Between 1747 and 1755, Johnson wrote perhaps his best-known work, A Dictionary of the English Language. Although widely praised and enormously influential, Johnson did not make much money from it as he had to bear the expense of its long composition. During this time, Johnson also wrote a series of semi-weekly essays under the title The Rambler. These essays, often on moral and religious topics, tended to be more grave than the title of the series would suggest. They ran until 1752. Initially they were not popular, but once collected as a volume they found a large audience. Johnson's wife died shortly after the final number appeared.


    Johnson began another series, The Idler, in 1758. These were shorter and lighter than The Rambler and ran weekly for two years. Unlike his independent publication of The Rambler, The Idler was published in a weekly news journal.

    In 1759, Johnson published his philosophical novella Rasselas, said to have been written in two weeks to pay for his mother's funeral. Some years later, however, Johnson gained a notoriety for dilatory writing; contemporary poet Charles Churchill teased Johnson for the delay in producing his long-promised edition of Shakeseare: "He for subscribers baits his hook / and takes your cash, but where's the book?"

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    Status achieved

    In 1762, Johnson was awarded a government pension of three hundred pounds a year, largely through the efforts of Thomas Sheridan and the Earl of Bute. Johnson met James Boswell, his future biographer, the following year. Around the same time, Johnson formed "The Club", a social group that included his friends Joshua Reynolds, Edmund Burke, David Garrick and Oliver Goldsmith. By now, Johnson was a celebrated figure. He received an honorary doctorate from Trinity College, Dublin in 1765, followed by one from Oxford ten years later.

    In 1765, Johnson met Henry Thrale, a wealthy brewer and Member of Parliament, and Thrale's wife, Hester. They quickly became friends and soon Johnson became a member of the family. He stayed with the Thrales for fifteen years until Henry's death in 1781. Hester Thrale's reminiscences of Johnson, together with her diaries and correspondence, are second only to Boswell as a source of biographical information on Johnson.

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    Boswell, Johnson, and the "Journey"
    In 1773, ten years after Johnson had met Boswell, the two of them set out on A Journey to the Western Islands of Scotland, the title Johnson used for his account of their travels published in 1775. (Boswell's account, The Journal of a Tour to the Hebrides, was published in 1786, as a preliminary to his "Life of Johnson".) Their visit to the Scottish Highlands and the Hebrides took place while the post-Jacobite pacification was crushing the Scottish clan system, at a moment when the romanticisation of Gaelic culture was accelerating. Johnson proceeded to attack the claims that James Macpherson's Ossian poems were translations of ancient Scottish literature, on the false basis that the Scottish Gaelic language "never was a written language." he was right nonetheless, for Macpherson could not produce his postulated manuscripts. However, Johnson also aided Scottish Gaelic culture by calling for a Bible translation, which was produced soon afterward. Until then, Scottish Gaels had only Bedell's Irish translation.

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    Final works

    In the 1770s, Johnson, who had been in opposition early in life, published a series of pamphlets in favor of the government. In 1770 he produced The False Alarm, a political pamphlet attacking John Wilkes. In 1771, his Thoughts on the Late Transactions Respecting Falkland's Islands appeared, cautioning against war with Spain. In 1774 he printed The Patriot, a critique of what he viewed as false patriotism. The last of these pamphlets, Taxation No Tyranny, 1775, made the case against American colonists, then clamoring loudly for independence.

    Johnson's final major work was the Lives of the English Poets, a project commissioned by a consortium of London booksellers. The Lives, which were critical as well as biographical studies, appeared as prefaces to selections of each poet's work. Johnson died in 1784 and received a burial in Westminster Abbey.

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    Character sketch
    Large and powerfully built, Johnson had poor eyesight, was hard of hearing and had a scarred face as a result of childhood scrofula. He also had a number of tics and other involuntary movements; the symptoms described by Boswell suggest that Johnson surely had Tourette syndrome and possibly obsessive-compulsive disorder. In the medical terms of his own period, he tended towards melancholia.

    Johnson was a devout, conservative Anglican, a staunch Tory and a compassionate man, supporting a number of poor friends under his own roof. He was an opponent of slavery and once proposed a toast to the "next rebellion of the negroes in the West Indies". He had a black manservant, Francis Barber (Frank), whom Johnson made his heir. He admitted to sympathies for the Jacobite cause but by the reign of George III he had come to accept the Hanoverian Succession. He remained a fiercely independent and original thinker, which may explain his deep affinity for John Milton's work despite Milton's intensely radical — and, for Johnson, intolerable — political and religious outlook.

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    Legacy

    Johnson's fame is due in part to the success of Boswell's Life of Johnson. Boswell, however, met Johnson after Johnson had already achieved a degree of fame and stability, leading Boswell's biography to emphasize the latter part of Johnson's life. Consequently, Johnson has been seen more as a gruff but lovable society figure than as the struggling and poverty-stricken writer he was for much of his life.

    Before arriving in London, Johnson stayed in Birmingham, where he is remembered in a frieze within the Old Square. Birmingham Central Library holds a Johnson Collection, containing around two thousand volumes of his works (including many first editions) plus literary periodicals and books about him.

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    Major works
    |
    |colspan=2|

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    Essays, pamphlets, periodicals
    |-
    | 1747 || Plan for a Dictionary of the English Language
    |-
    | 1750-1752   || The Rambler
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    | 1758-1760 || The Idler (1758-1760)
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    | 1770 || The False Alarm
    |-
    | 1774 || The Patriot
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    | 1775 || Taxation No Tyranny
    |-
    |colspan=2|

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    Poetry
    |-
    | 1738 || London
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    | 1747 || Prologue at the Opening of the Theatre in Drury Lane
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    |rowspan=2 valign=top| 1749 || The Vanity of Human Wishes
    |-
    || Irene, a Tragedy
    |}

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    Popular culture

      Johnson was again played by Coltrane in the film Boswell and Johnson's Tour of the Western Islands.
      One of Johnson's famous sayings, "He who makes a beast of himself gets rid of the pain of being a man" is quoted in the introduction to the book and movie Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas (by Hunter S. Thompson), and also in Hell's Angels; the song "Bat Country" by Avenged Sevenfold, dedicated to Hunter S. Thompson, uses the same quotation at the beginning of the music video, and in the introduction to the song.
      Johnson was referenced and quoted in the 1976 Wonder Woman episode Judgement from Outer Space. In the episode Steve Trevor tells Diana Prince that the government's plan to kill a powerful alien is a patriotic necessity. To this Diana says, "To quote Dr. Samuel Johnson: Patriotism is the last refuge of scoundrels'."

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    Quotations

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    See also

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    Notes





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    Online texts
      An online data base of the contents of Dr. Johnson's dictionary, 1st and 4th editions.

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    Other






     
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