Between 1745 and 1755, Johnson wrote perhaps his best-known work,
A Dictionary of the English Language. The rise in literacy and the declining cost of printing demanded clearer standards in spelling, meaning and grammar. It was on the morning of
June 18, 1746 that Johnson, over breakfast at the Golden Anchor tavern in London, signed a contract with the booksellers/publishers William Strahn and associates to produce an authoritative dictionary of the English language. The contract stated that Johnson was to be paid 1500
Guineas (£1,575) in installments based on delivery of manuscript pages; all expenses relating to the project,
ie ink, paper, assistants,
etc to be at Johnson's cost and responsibility. It was assumed by Johnson himself that the project would take approximately three years. It would take, in fact, nearly ten years.
Despite common assumptions, Johnson's was not the first dictionary of the English language. In the preceding 150 years there had been upward of nearly twenty "English" dictionaries. The first, published in 1538, was a small Latin-English dictionary by
Sir Thomas Elyot. Robert Cawdrey's "Table Alphabeticall", published in 1604, was the first monolingual English dictionary. Johnson's dictionary was to rise above all these because of his meticulous research; his depth and breadth of definitions and his careful use of description,
eg:-
PHILOLOGY
<p>Criticism; grammatical learning
<p>"Temper all discourse of philology with interspersions of morality."
<p>-- William Walker,
English Examples of
the Latine Syntaxis (1683)
<p>The published dictionary was a huge book: with pages nearly 1½ feet tall and 20 inches wide, it contained 42,773 words; it also sold for the huge price of £4/10
s.. It would be years before "Johnson's Dictionary", as it came to be known, would ever turn a profit; authors' royalties being unknown at that time, Johnson, once his contract to deliver the book was fulfilled, received no further monies connected to the book. Johnson, once again a freelance writer, albeit now a famous one, faced a grim hand-to-mouth existence; however, in July 1762 the twenty-four year old King
George III granted Johnson an annual pension of £300. While not making Johnson rich, it allowed him a modest yet comfortable independence for the remaining twenty-two years of his life.
<P>During the decade he worked on "the Dictionary", Johnson, needing to augment his precarious income, also wrote a series of semi-weekly essays under the title
The Rambler. These essays, often on moral and religious topics, tended to be more grave than the title of the series would suggest. They ran until 1752. Initially they were not popular, but once collected as a volume they found a large audience. Johnson's wife died shortly after the final issue appeared.
During his work on the dictionary, Johnson made many appeals for financial help in the form of subscriptions: patrons would get a copy of the first edition as soon as it was printed in compensation for their support during its compilation. Among the patrons to whom he appealed in vain was
Lord Chesterfield. After the dictionary was finally published, Chesterfield sent Johnson a large cheque. Johnson returned it with his now famous
Letter to Chesterfield, in which he compares himself to a drowning man who calls for help vainly, then slowly swims to shore and crawls up on the beach, only to be offered a belated assistance.
He later altered a line in "The Vanity of Human Wishes":
These ills the Scolars life entail,
Toil, Envy, Want, The Garrett and the Jail
by replacing the word "Garrett" with "Patron".
Johnson began another series,
The Idler, in 1758. These were shorter and lighter than
The Rambler and ran weekly for two years. Unlike his independent publication of
The Rambler,
The Idler was published in a weekly news journal.
In 1759, Johnson published his philosophical novella
Rasselas, written in one week to pay for his mother's funeral and settle her debts. Some years later, however, Johnson gained a notoriety for dilatory writing; contemporary poet
Charles Churchill teased Johnson for the delay in producing his long-promised edition of Shakespeare: "He for subscribers baits his hook / and takes your cash, but where's the book?"