Difference between revisions of "Lectures on Rhetoric and Belles Lettres"
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Revision as of 10:04, 30 August 2013
by Hugh Blair
In 1767 Blair published Heads of the Lectures on Rhetoric and Belles Lettres, in the University of Edinburgh, which was reissued in 1771 and 1777. By the early 1780s he was considering publishing the lectures themselves, allegedly because he was worried about the wide circulation of corrupt manuscript copies, but perhaps also because he was then contemplating his retirement from the classroom. Lectures on Rhetoric and Belles Lettres appeared in two quarto volumes on 7 June 1783 in London, and on 5 July in Edinburgh. The publishers were once again Strahan, Cadell, and Creech, who paid Blair a handsome fee of £1500. As the author explained to his publishers on 21 June 1783, the work was based ‘on plain common sense, so as to be intelligible to all, without any abstruse metaphysics’ (NL Scot., MS 3813, fols. 17–18). It also benefited from Blair's comprehensive approach to his subject, which included discussions of the principles of taste and criticism, the rise and development of language, style, and various types of eloquence, both written and oral. Blair's book immediately became the new standard for the study of rhetoric and literary criticism, and was particularly popular and influential in the United States, where the Sermons also enjoyed great fame during the first half of the nineteenth century. In July 1784 Blair officially became joint holder of the rhetoric and belles-lettres chair with his disciple William Greenfield, who had already begun lecturing and collecting the class fees, while Blair continued to receive the £70 annual salary for life. [1]
Bibliographic Information
Author: Hugh Blair, (1718-1800)
Title: Lectures on Rhetoric and Belles Lettres
Published: Philadelphia: Printed and sold by Robert Aitken, 1784.
Edition:
Evidence for Inclusion in Wythe's Library
Description of the Wolf Law Library's copy
References
- ↑ Richard B. Sher, ‘Blair, Hugh (1718–1800)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; online edn, Oct 2009 accessed 11 June 2013