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The books to which Samuel Johnson subscribed are worth identifying, both because they depict his range of associations and because they may be presumed to have been at some time on his shelves and formed part of his reading. Some can be recognized from the catalogue of the sale of his books at Christie's, 18 February 1785. Several of the actual copies are known to have survived;[1] some of these are already mentioned in J. D. Fleeman, A Preliminary Handlist of Copies of Books associated with Dr. Samuel Johnson (Oxford Bibliographical Society, Occasional Publications no. 17, 1984).[2]

The following list is an attempt to bring together the titles which include Johnson's name among their subscribers. This task was first attempted by Iolo A. Williams in his Points in Eighteenth-Century Verse (1934), 111-113. A slightly fuller list was offered by Donald D. Eddy, J. D. Fleeman, and W. R. Keast in the Johnsonian News Letter, 25.4 (Dec. 1965), 2-3, and again in the New Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature, ii (1971), col. 1150. Further additions were proposed by R. H. Lonsdale, 'Johnson as Subscriber: some Additions', Notes & Queries, 225 (Oct. 1980), 410-412, and by the late H. B. Forster, Notes & Queries, 228 (Feb. 1983), 54-55.

The chronological appendix that follows the main listing by author reveals that Johnson subscribed to eleven books in the 1750s, fourteen in the 1760s, eighteen in the 1770s, and, although he died in 1784, seventeen books in the 1780s. The most active period by far involved twenty books from 1772 to 1782. The earliest volume to which he subscribed is Brooke's Gustavus Vasa of 1739 (10). We list the Palladio, of 1738 (46), merely because of its proximity in time; because of the subject matter we have little faith in the attribution. We omit entirely such earlier works as John Oldmixon's History of England during the reigns of the Royal House of Stuart . . . (London, 1730; copies at NIC, Goldberg). The name of 'Mr. Samuel Johnson' is among


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the subscribers, but we do not believe that our Samuel Johnson, virtually penniless at the age of twenty-one, subscribed to the book.

Apparently as Johnson's fame and reputation increased, he was solicited more frequently for subscriptions; and as his personal finances improved, he was able to subscribe more often. The final three books in the list were published after his death, yet there is every indication that these were genuine subscriptions by Johnson.

The form in which Johnson's name is recorded in the subscription lists is not always unequivocal: 'Mr. Johnson' requires stronger supporting evidence than does 'Samuel Johnson, LL.D.', but in a preliminary list such as this there is not always room for debate. At this early stage we have preferred to be inclusive, and there are doubtless several items here which will eventually be discarded or degraded. Corroboration of an identification must derive from some association with the names of Johnson's known acquaintances, yet of those there is no complete list. Johnson's letter of (?) December 1753 (Letters 49.1) and the progress of the subscription for his own edition of Shakespeare show that it was usual to enlist the aid of friends.[3] The notes of Dr Lonsdale and of Mr Forster supply further arguments. We are indebted to both of them for their generous communication of several discoveries.

The main entries and dates are those listed in the Eighteenth-Century Short Title Catalogue (ESTC). Four other categories usually follow: the form of Johnson's name that appears in the subscription list, notes chiefly about other subscribers, published references to the book or to Johnson's connection with it, and the copies on which the record is based. A full listing of copies presents some difficulties, for with few exceptions the following titles are not scarce (ESTC sometimes reports fifty or more locations). It seems unnecessary to record all of these since ESTC is now widely available on microfiche, in an on-line database through RLIN terminals, and on CDROM. Furthermore, because each verified entry in ESTC supplies a call-number or shelf-mark, we have also omitted these from the list.

Locations recorded here make no pretensions to a census, and they are verified either by ESTC or by the personal inspection of the compilers. The three libraries best known to us are the Bodleian, Cornell, and the National Library of Scotland. We are grateful to Mrs. Charlotte A. Stewart-Murphy for keeping us abreast of the fine holdings in McMaster University Library, in Hamilton, Ontario. We are also indebted to many friends, booksellers, librarians, and collectors, preeminent among whom is Herman W. Liebert, whose distinguished collection until its recent dispersal made a prominent showing in this list, and whose unerring instinct for a Johnsonian item has contributed greatly to our compilation. There are few items here which he did not at some time own, and fewer which he did not know. His inexhaustible enthusiasm and assistance deserve particular thanks.