Go to page content

Vanity of Human Wishes

Professor emeritus offers new insight into Johnson's great poem

Research | Books at Memorial

A literary imitation is an adaptation of another writer’s text.

It is not a standalone poem that can be fully understood in isolation from its source.

Themes and subjects

There is a grandparent poem behind it, specifying the themes and subjects to be dealt with, and even influencing the amount of space to be given to each.

Why did Samuel Johnson choose this form to write in? What specific benefit did imitating Juvenal’s Satire X offer him? What opportunities did it present? What obstacles? What did he evade, what embrace, and why?

Such are the questions Dr. Patrick O’Flaherty, professor emeritus at Memorial, touches on in A Reading of Samuel Johnson’s The Vanity of Human Wishes. The Tenth Satire of Juvenal, Imitated (1749).

Poet at work

Johnson indicated which sections of Satire X he used as the basis of the separate parts of his own poem.

In this essay each adaptation is examined in turn, taking the reader, as it were, inside the poet’s study to watch him working.

The reading offers new insights into the artistry and purposes of this great poem.

A Reading of Samuel Johnson’s The Vanity of Human Wishes. The Tenth Satire of Juvenal, Imitated (1749) is published by Long Beach Press.

Latest News

Interim dean appointed

Dr. Robert Bailey appointed as interim dean, School of Science and the Environment, Grenfell Campus

Beyond the ecological

A place-based approach to understanding landscape changes

Perfect portions

Met at Memorial: tipping the scales on restaurant efficiency

From charity to social enterprise

Celebrating the history of social work education and practice in N.L.

Trans Dudes with Lady Cancer

Documentary screening, panel discussion on transgender individuals and cancer

Linguistic legacy

Canada Research Chair to continue work supporting Indigenous language revival