The Works of Samuel Johnson, Volume 05 - Miscellaneous Pieces by Samuel Johnson
page 65 of 591 (10%)
page 65 of 591 (10%)
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For Frenche of Paris was to her unknowne.
Chaucer's Prologue to the Prioress' Tale. [4] Dr. Johnson's Dictionary was published on the fifteenth day of April 1755, in two vols. folio, price 4_l_. 10_s._ bound. The booksellers who engaged in this national work were the Knaptons, Longman, Hitch and Co. Millar, and Dodsley. ADVERTISEMENT TO THE FOURTH EDITION OF THE ENGLISH DICTIONARY[1]. Many are the works of human industry, which to begin and finish are hardly granted to the same man. He that undertakes to compile a dictionary, undertakes that, which, if it comprehends the full extent of his design, he knows himself unable to perform. Yet his labours, though deficient, may be useful, and with the hope of this inferiour praise, he must incite his activity, and solace his weariness. Perfection is unattainable, but nearer and nearer approaches may be made; and, finding my Dictionary about to be reprinted, I have endeavoured, by a revisal, to make it less reprehensible. I will not deny that I found many parts requiring emendation, and many more capable of improvement. Many faults I have corrected, some superfluities I have taken away, and some deficiencies I have supplied. I have methodised some parts that were disordered, and illuminated some that were obscure. |
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