Synopses & Reviews
Synopsis
Excerpt from English Men of Letters: Samuel Richardson
If his apprenticeship began in 1706 and lasted seven years, it must have come to an end in 1713. For five or six years more he continued to work as a compositor and corrector of the press, and part of the time as an overseer. Then, in 1719, he took up his freedom, and began business as a master printer in an unidentified court in Fleet Street, filling his spare time by the prep aration for the booksellers of prefaces, indexes, and what he terms vaguely honest dedications. It is probably to this occupation that we owe the elaborate Collection of the Moral and Instructive Sentiments, etc.
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