Book contents
- The Literary Criticism of Samuel Johnson
- The Literary Criticism of Samuel Johnson
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Epigraph
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- Abbreviations
- Introduction
- Part I Johnson’s Criticism and the Forms of Feeling
- Part II Critical Relations and the Art of Literary History
- Part III Johnson, Dramatic Poetry and Thinking
- Part IV Time, Truth and History
- Part V Editing Lives, and Life
- Chapter 9 Annotated Immortality
- Chapter 10 Arts of Structure and the Rhythm of the Lives
- Appendix Irony in Revolt: F. R. Leavis Reads Johnson
- Bibliography
- Index
Chapter 10 - Arts of Structure and the Rhythm of the Lives
from Part V - Editing Lives, and Life
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 September 2023
- The Literary Criticism of Samuel Johnson
- The Literary Criticism of Samuel Johnson
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Epigraph
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- Abbreviations
- Introduction
- Part I Johnson’s Criticism and the Forms of Feeling
- Part II Critical Relations and the Art of Literary History
- Part III Johnson, Dramatic Poetry and Thinking
- Part IV Time, Truth and History
- Part V Editing Lives, and Life
- Chapter 9 Annotated Immortality
- Chapter 10 Arts of Structure and the Rhythm of the Lives
- Appendix Irony in Revolt: F. R. Leavis Reads Johnson
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
When the Lives first appeared as “Prefaces,” the final, resonant, paragraph was the conclusion of the “Life of Gray.” But when individual “Lives” were printed separately from the poems, this particular grace was replaced by the possibility of reading with more continuity from one “Life” to the next. Such integration highlights internal transitions, changes and shifts of topic and tone; gradations of critical engagement mark Johnson’s developing interpretation of his task. Each “Life” inscribes an individual career; this is placed in the context of other “Lives” to draw attention to ends and beginnings. Johnson thereby resurrects within his late eighteenth-century present the ghosts of a 150-year poetical past. He actualizes this past in the fictional imagination of the living. The artistic moral of the Lives arises from the succession of births and deaths of poets whose company was the late-life mental habitation of a critic who found solitude unbearable.
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- Information
- The Literary Criticism of Samuel JohnsonForms of Artistry and Thought, pp. 174 - 188Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2023