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Yes it's Samuel Johnson. There is an idealized view that 18th century London coffee-houses were full of great men exchanging dazzling repartee on the popular matters of the day. These meetings led to political clubs and eventually to the formation of a London intelligentsia which had significant political influence particularly on the Whigs. Steele and Addison were Whig politicians. Augustan refers to Alexander Pope's suggestion that the supposed importance of poetry meant they were living in an 'Augustan age' since poetry in the time of Augustus had focused on politics and the role of the individual versus the state.
It's not completely wrong - there certainly were such coffee-houses. Johnson regularly frequented the Turk's Head where other clientele included the actor-managers David Garrick (Johnson's great personal friend) and Thomas Sheridan and artists and writers such as Joshua Reynolds, Oliver Goldsmith and Edmund Burke. The author is trying to convey a sense of literary London where a young Coleridge could meet and talk with leading figures in the arts or Whig politics in a social setting.
Upvote:1
"Coffee houses" were social meeting places where people of the same trade or profession would often meet. Some of these coffee houses (and similar places such as pubs and clubs) were places where writers would meet. Samuel Johnson, being a leading writer, would be a leading light of such a circle, and other writers would want to go to the places he frequented to meet him.
Perhaps the most famous example of such a coffeehouse was Lloyd's of London, founded by one Edward Lloyd, where all the "underwriters' (insurers) met, to do business with each other. The result was the world's most famous insurance syndicate, named after the place where they (and their successors) first did business.
Upvote:4
Yes, this is about Samuel Johnson, the author, critic and lexicographer, and the personage of the "Life of Johnson" by Boswell. He spent much of his life in pubs (even used to have his mail address on one of them, probably the Ye Olde Cheshire Cheese (at least the memorial plate in the pub says so). There was an intellectual circle centered around him. They mostly met and communicate in pubs.
Wikipedia says:
Around the spring of 1763, Johnson formed "The Club", a social group that included his friends Reynolds, Burke, Garrick, Goldsmith and others (the membership later expanded to include Adam Smith and Edward Gibbon). They decided to meet every Monday at 7:00 pm at the Turk's Head in Gerrard Street, Soho, and these meetings continued until long after the deaths of the original members.
This is another pub. But he organized several such clubs during his life.