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In 1755 British writer Samuel Johnson published an acerbic letter to Lord Chesterfield rebuking his...

In 1755 British writer Samuel Johnson published an acerbic letter to Lord Chesterfield rebuking his patron for neglect and declining further support. Johnson's rejection of his patron's belated assistance has often been identified as a key moment in the history of publishing, marking the end of the culture of patronage. However, patronage had been in decline for 50 years, yet would survive, in attenuated form, for another 50. Indeed. Johnson was in 1762 awarded a pension by the Crown—a subtle form of sponsorship, tantamount to state patronage. The importance of Johnson's letter is not so much historical as emotional: it would become a touchstone for all who repudiated patrons and for all who embraced the laws of the marketplace.

The author of the passage mentions Johnson's 1762 pension award in order to

A.

provide a specific example of patronage's surviving into the second half of (he eighteenth century

B.

emphasize that patronage still helped support Johnson's writing after his letter to Chesterfield

C.

provide evidence for a general trend in the later half of the

D.

eighteenth century of private patronage's being replaced by state sponsorship

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