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Reference
>
Cambridge History
>
The Age of Johnson
>
Johnson and Boswell
> His work on
The Gentlemans Magazine
his real start as a man of letters
Irene
and its subsequent production on the Stage
Reports of Debates in Parliament
CONTENTS
·
VOLUME CONTENTS
·
INDEX OF ALL CHAPTERS
·
BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
The Cambridge History of English and American Literature in 18 Volumes
(190721).
Volume X. The Age of Johnson.
VIII.
Johnson and Boswell
.
§ 7. His work on
The Gentlemans Magazine
his real start as a man of letters.
It was
The Gentlemans Magazine
that gave Johnson his real start as a man of letters. Founded by Edward Cave, under the name Sylvanus Urban, in January, 1731, it had been growing steadily from small beginnings. Its original purpose was to reprint, from month to month, a selection of the more interesting matter that had appeared in the journals; and the name magazine was, in this its first application to a periodical, intended as a modest title for a collection which made small claim to originality. The idea was not altogether new.
The Grub-street Journal
contains a section of domestic news extracted from other papers, and sometimes so treated as to suggest to the modern reader the more urbane comments in the pages of
Punch.
But, as the editors of
The Grub-street Journal
complained in the preface to
Memoirs of the Society of Grub-street
(1737), their rival of
The Gentlemans Magazine
took anything he fanciednews, letters, essays or versesand printed as much or as little of them as he pleased. The success of the
Magazine
was never in doubt. The first number went into a fifth edition; and with success came ambition. In the number for January, 1739, a correspondent, who evidently was Johnson, observes that the extracts from the weekly journalists have shrunk at length into a very few columns and made way for original letters and dissertations. The
Magazine
now included parliamentary reports, poetical essays, serial stories, mathematical papers, maps, songs with music, and a register of publications. Most of the devices of modern journalism were anticipated in these early numbers. Cave had the luck and the skill to hit on what the public wanted. If we may trust the preface to the collected numbers for 1738, there were immediately almost twenty imitations. Yet
The Gentlemans Magazine
had many features in common with
The Gentlemans Journal; or the Monthly Miscellany,
which Peter Motteux had started in January, 1692, and carried on with flagging zeal to 1694. The earlier periodical had begun on a much higher literary level and remains a work of very great interest; but its fortunes were not watched over by a man of business. It had been modelled partly on
Le Mercure Galant. The Gentlemans Magazine
was, in its origin, independent of both its French and its English forerunners.
9
CONTENTS
·
VOLUME CONTENTS
·
INDEX OF ALL CHAPTERS
·
BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
Irene
and its subsequent production on the Stage
Reports of Debates in Parliament
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