The Connoisseur (newspaper)

The Connoisseur (by Mr. Town [pseud.], Critic, and Censor-General. 2 vols. 140 nos. (31 January 1754 – 30 September 1756)), was a London weekly eighteenth century newspaper founded and chiefly run by George Colman the Elder and the parodist Bonnell Thornton as a 'plebeian' counterpart to Edward Moore's The World, a periodical of about the same time, which dealt more with the interests of aristocrats.[1] James Boswell says in his Life of Johnson:

"I mentioned the periodical paper called 'THE CONNOISSEUR'. He said it wanted matter. No doubt it had not the deep thinking of Johnson's writings. But surely it has just views of the surface of life, and a very sprightly manner. His opinion of 'THE WORLD' was not much higher than of 'THE CONNOISSEUR'.

The Connoisseur, 1754

Further reading

  • The Connoisseur. v.1 (1754)
  • A. Chalmers. "Historical and biographical preface to The Connoisseur." British Essayists, v.30. London: 1817
gollark: I guess if you want to send strings across TIS-3D infrared networks, you could with careful design probably get 4 bits/tick then, which is not entirely awful.
gollark: TIS-3D can internally store values between -32768 and 32767. That's, er, two bytes.
gollark: Redstone allows 4 bits (0-15) per toggling. Can those take a tick? No idea.
gollark: Well, you're wasting 15/16ths of the bandwidth, then.
gollark: Analog or digital?

References

  1. Ogée, Frédéric (editor) (1887). Studies on Voltaire and the Eighteenth Century, Volume 357. Voltaire Foundation. pp. 155, n. 49. ISBN 0729405540.CS1 maint: extra text: authors list (link)


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