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Samuel Johnson

Samuel Johnson (18 September 1709 [OS 7 September] – 13 December 1784), often called Dr Johnson, was an English writer who made lasting contributions as a poet, playwright, essayist, moralist, literary critic, sermonist, biographer, editor, and lexicographer. The Oxford Dictionary of National Biography calls him "arguably the most distinguished man of letters in English history".[1]

This article is about the writer. For other people with the same name, see Samuel Johnson (disambiguation).

Samuel Johnson

(1709-09-18)18 September 1709
(OS 7 September)

Lichfield, England

13 December 1784(1784-12-13) (aged 75)

London, England
Elizabeth Porter (née Jervis)
(m. 1735; died 1752)

Dr Johnson

English, Latin

Born in Lichfield, Staffordshire, he attended Pembroke College, Oxford, until lack of funds forced him to leave. After working as a teacher, he moved to London and began writing for The Gentleman's Magazine. Early works include Life of Mr Richard Savage, the poems London and The Vanity of Human Wishes and the play Irene. After nine years' effort, Johnson's A Dictionary of the English Language appeared in 1755, and was acclaimed as "one of the greatest single achievements of scholarship".[2] Later work included essays, an annotated The Plays of William Shakespeare, and the apologue The History of Rasselas, Prince of Abissinia. In 1763 he befriended James Boswell, with whom he travelled to Scotland, as Johnson described in A Journey to the Western Islands of Scotland. Near the end of his life came a massive, influential Lives of the Most Eminent English Poets of the 17th and 18th centuries.


Dr Johnson was a devout Anglican,[3] and a committed Tory. Tall and robust, he displayed gestures and tics that disconcerted some on meeting him. Boswell's Life of Samuel Johnson, along with other biographies, documented Johnson's behaviour and mannerisms in such detail that they have informed the posthumous diagnosis of Tourette syndrome,[4] a condition not defined or diagnosed in the 18th century. After several illnesses, he died on the evening of 13 December 1784 and was buried in Westminster Abbey.


In his later life Johnson became a celebrity,[5] and following his death he was increasingly seen to have had a lasting effect on literary criticism, even being claimed to be the one truly great critic of English literature.[6] A prevailing mode of literary theory in the 20th century drew from his views,[7] and he had a lasting impact on biography.[8] Johnson's Dictionary had far-reaching effects on Modern English,[2] and was pre-eminent until the arrival of the Oxford English Dictionary 150 years later.[9] Boswell's Life was selected by Johnson biographer Walter Jackson Bate as "the most famous single work of biographical art in the whole of literature".[8]

(1998), Samuel Johnson. A Biography, Berkeley: Conterpoint, ISBN 978-1-58243-524-4

Bate, W. Jackson

Fine, L. G. (May–June 2006), "Samuel Johnson's illnesses", J Nephrol, 19 (Suppl 10): S110–114,  16874722

PMID

(8 December 2008), "Man of Fetters: Dr. Johnson and Mrs. Thrale", The New Yorker, vol. 84, no. 40, pp. 90–96, retrieved 9 July 2011.

Gopnik, Adam

Hodgart, M. J. C. (1962), Samuel Johnson, London: Batsford "Makers of Britain" series

Johnson, Samuel (1952), Chapman, R. W. (ed.), Letters, Oxford: Clarendon,  0-19-818538-3

ISBN

Johnson, Samuel (1968), Bate, W. Jackson (ed.), Selected Essays from the Rambler, Adventurer, and Idler, New Haven - London: Yale University Press,  978-0-300-00016-0

ISBN

Johnson, Samuel (2000), Greene, Donald (ed.), Major Works, Oxford: Oxford University Press,  0-19-284042-8

ISBN

Johnston, Freya, "I'm Coming, My Tetsie!" (review of Samuel Johnson, edited by David Womersley, Oxford, 2018,  978 0 19 960951 2, 1,344 pp.), London Review of Books, vol. 41, no. 9 (9 May 2019), pp. 17–19. ""His attacks on [the pursuit of originality in the writing of literature] were born of the conviction that literature ought to deal in universal truths; that human nature was fundamentally the same in every time and every place; and that, accordingly (as he put it in the 'Life of Dryden'), 'whatever can happen to man has happened so often that little remains for fancy or invention.'" (p. 19).

ISBN

(1944), "Johnson as Critic", Scrutiny, 12: 187–204

Leavis, F. R.

(1898), "Johnsoniana", Studies of a Biographer, vol. 1, London: Duckworth and Co., pp. 105–146

Stephen, Leslie

"Big Talkers" (review of Leo Damrosch, The Club: Johnson, Boswell, and the Friends Who Shaped an Age, Yale University Press, 473 pp.), The New York Review of Books, vol. LXVI, no. 9 (23 May 2019), pp. 26–28.

Uglow, Jenny

at Standard Ebooks

Works by Samuel Johnson in eBook form

at Project Gutenberg

Works by Samuel Johnson

at Internet Archive

Works by or about Samuel Johnson

at Internet Archive

Works by or about Dr Johnson

at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)

Works by Samuel Johnson

Samuel Johnson's Dictionary Online

Samuel Johnson and Hodge his Cat

arranged chronologically

Full text of Johnson's essays

BBC Radio 4 audio programs: and Great Lives

In Our Time

 – online exhibition from Houghton Library, Harvard University

A Monument More Durable Than Brass: The Donald and Mary Hyde Collection of Dr. Samuel Johnson

comprehensive collection of quotations

The Samuel Johnson Sound Bite Page

at the National Portrait Gallery, London

Samuel Johnson

at Project Gutenberg by James Boswell, abridged by Charles Grosvenor Osgood in 1917 "... omitt[ing] most of Boswell's criticisms, comments and notes, all of Johnson's opinions in legal cases, most of the letters, ..."

Life of Johnson