The Rambler No. 4
By
Samuel Johnson
RAMBLER.
NUMB. 4. Price 2 d.pricepriceThis issue cost two pence. In the eighteenth-century coinage system, 12 pence made a shilling, and 20 shillings made a pound. According to the Old Bailey Online, "A waterman would expect six pence to take you from Westminster to London Bridge, while a barber asked the same to dress your wig and give you a shave." While two pence was not out of reach for most people, the publication frequency of The Rambler and similar items would make regular personal purchasing out of the realm of possibility for most. However, men might read a copy in a coffeeshop, entry to which, in the seventeenth century, was a penny. For a deeper look at money, purchasing power, and income, see Robert Hume's article "The Value of Money in Eighteenth-Century England: Incomes, Prices, Buying Power—-and Some Problems in Cultural Economics" in Huntington Library Quarterly (2015). - [TH]
SATURDAY, 31 March 1750
To be Continued on TUESDAYS and SATURDAYS
Simul et jucunda et idonea dicere Vitae.epigraphepigraphFrom Horace's Ars Poetica 334: 'to deliver at once both the pleasures and the necessaries of life" (Perseus Project). - [TH] HOR[ace]HoraceHoraceQuintus Horatius Flaccus, or Horace, was a Roman lyric poet of the 1st century BCE. The image above is a broze portrait medal containing his likeness, dating to the 4th century CE, housed in the Bibliothèque Nationale, Paris (Encyclopedia Britannica). - [TH]
THE Works of Fiction, with which the present Generation seems more particularly delighted, are such as exhibit Life in its true State, diversified only by Accidents that daily happen in the World, and influenced by those Passions and Qualities which are really to be found in conversing with Mankind.
THIS Kind of Writing may be termed not improperly the Comedy of Romance, and is to be conducted nearly by the Rules of Comic Poetry. Its Province is to bring about natural Events by easy Means, and to keep up Curiosity without the Help of Wonder: it is therefore precluded from the Machines and Expedients of the Heroic Romanceheroic, heroicHeroic romance is a genre that flourished during the 17th century and remained popular, as parodied by Charlotte Lennox in The Female Quixote, into the 18th. It had a profound influence on the development of the novel, though many writers of the 18th century would work to dissociate the genres, as Johnson does here. Formaally loose in structure, heroic romances also "deliberately eschew[ed] contemporaneity"; their plots featured courtly lovers engaged in "heroic stories of love and war in a remote and idealized past" (Shellinger, Encyclopedia of the Novel, 1046). Some representative heroic romances include Euphues by John Lyly, L'Astree by Honore d'Urfe, and Clelie by Madame de Scudery. - [TH] and can neither employ Giants to snatch away a Lady from the nuptial Rites, nor Knights to bring her back from Captivity; it can neither bewilder its Personages in Desarts, nor lodge them in imaginary Castles.
I REMEMBER a Remark made by ScaligerScaligerScaligerJulius Caesar Scaliger (1484-1558) was a Franco-Italian humanist polymath most widely-known for his Poetices Libri Septem (1561). For more information on the Poetices, see Bernard Weinberg's "Scaliger versus Aristotle on Poetics" (1942) and this review by David Marsh of a new edition and German translation of the whole. Scaliger critiques the poetry of Italian humanist Giovanni Pontano (1429-1503). - [TH] upon Potanus, that all his Writings are filled with Images, and that