Spectator and the Tatler

Joseph ADDISON

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Spectator and the Tatler

“TO ENLIVEN MORALITY WITH WIT”

(ADDISON, Joseph and STEELE, Richard, et al.). The Spectator. Six volumes. WITH: The Tatler. Four volumes. WITH: The Guardian. Two volumes. London: F.C. and J. Rivington et al., 1822. Together, twelve volumes. Octavo, contemporary full brown calf, raised bands, elaborately gilt-decorated spines, black morocco spine labels.

Early 19th-century edition, with engraved title page vignettes, handsomely bound.

These famous and influential periodicals, originally published between 1709 and 1714, consisted of essays by Addison, Richard Steele, Alexander Pope, Thomas Tickell and other contributors. Macaulay considered them “perhaps the finest Essays, both serious and playful, in the English language.” The Tatler addressed subjects ranging from “all accounts of Gallantry, Pleasure, and Entertainment” to poetry and learning, from proper etiquette to the character of the ideal gentleman. The Spectator “appeared daily, and was immensely popular, particularly with the new growing middle-class readership… The papers are mainly concerned with manners, morals, and literature. Their object is ‘to enliven morality with wit, and to temper wit with morality” (Drabble, 925-6). Together Addison and Steele set the pattern and established the vogue for the periodical in the 18th-century and helped create a receptive audience for the emerging art form of the novel.

Light foxing to text; extremities of contemporary calf mildly rubbed. Very handsome.

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