
Showing posts with label Samuel Johnson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Samuel Johnson. Show all posts
Friday, January 02, 2009
All Too Brief a Life -- Two brief Lives of Lincoln

Thursday, January 01, 2009
Procrastinating in the New Year

I intended to greet the New Year here last night, first thing after our private celebrations, but I didn't get to this until tonight. And now it's already late again, and I find I don't have the book I wanted to use so that I might start the year with an appropriate quote. Typical. What have I done with all of today?!
The anecdote from the biography told of how Johnson wrote this essay, amusingly enough, "hastily" at a friend's house, the boy from the press standing by, waiting for copy.
How could I not want that essay, written under those circumstances?
Well, it's not in any book I own, because I've never been able to find, or afford the kind of Samuel Johnson books I want. I've looked at the Yale edition of The Rambler online, but a full run of all nine volumes sells for, at least, seven hundred and fifty dollars! I'm about to spend eight hundred dollars repairing my car. I think that that will have to come first. (When, oh when, well I ever get an edition of the complete Rambler of my own?! I'm greedy for more of Sam J.)
It's getting later and later, so should I just put off my first blog of the year until the 2nd?
Finding Johnson's essay online, I find this in the first paragraph:
"...I grew every moment more irresolute, my ideas wandered from the first intention, and I rather wished to think, than thought upon any settled subject; till at last I was awakened from this dream of study by a summons from the press: the time was come for which I had been negligently purposing to provide, and, however dubious or sluggish, I was necessitated to write."
Comrade!!
Tags:
biography,
essays,
new year,
peter martin,
Samuel Johnson
Wednesday, December 31, 2008
The New Standard of David Herbert Donald

From Nicolay & Hay in 1890, to Ida Tarbell in 1900, to Beveredge, to Sandburg, to James G. Randall, our 16th President has never lacked a standard life in print for each passing generation.
So what makes David Herbert Donald’s Lincoln the standard life for our times? First, Donald had access to the Lincoln Papers, which previous biographers did not. As a result of the materials available to him, but perhaps more importantly, because of the man who emerged from those sources, Donald’s portrait is of a very different, and much more accessibly modern man than the one we know from the earlier portraits.
I’ll let Donald (from his preface,) speak for himself:
“In focusing closely on Lincoln himself – on what he knew, when he knew it, and why he made his decisions – I have, I think, produced a portrait rather different from that of other biographers. It is perhaps a bit more grainy than most, with more attention to his unquenchable ambition, to his brain-numbing labor in his law practice, to his tempestuous married life, and to his defeats. It suggests how often chance, or accident, played a determining role in shaping his life. And it emphasizes his enormous capacity for growth, which enabled one of the least experienced and most poorly prepared men ever elected to high office to become the greatest American President.”

David Herbert Donald’s Lincoln is still our Lincoln, but in the hands of this extraordinary historian and biographer, Abraham Lincoln is once again his own man as well; flawed, sad, brilliant and profoundly human.
Friday, December 12, 2008
I will NOT buy another book about Samuel Johnson... okay, maybe I will


Not enough though. I own two delightful out-of-print books by James Lowry Clifford; Young Sam Johnson and Dictionary Johnson, both worth finding and reading still, Liz Picard's book on Johnson's London, and on and on...


Shocking, my dears, wonderfully, delightfully shocking. And touching. And, damn, now I think I have to own the Meyers.
Today for lunch I'm having a slice or two of Peter Martin's Samuel Johnson: A Biography. Recommended by Harold Bloom (oh dear,) but also by Henry Hitchings, who wrote a very good book I also own, Dr. Johnson's Dictionary: The Extraordinary Story of the Book That Defined the World. I read Martin's introduction, and now, I fear, I may have to have this one too.
What's wrong with that?! I will have to try and sneak them home if I do, as I'm already being frowned at in that quarter for the haul I brought home on Employee Shopping Days.
But this is Dr. Johnson! How can I not? Right?! right?
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