As its author lamented in its final essay, "I have never been much a favourite to the publick," the publication was not an immediate success. Perhaps this was due to Johnson's departure from
The Spectator, which could be considered his precedent. The latter was a periodical published from 1711 to 1712 by
Joseph Addison and
Richard Steele, popular for its light treatment of elevated subjects by "enliven[ing] morality with wit." In tone and subject matter,
The Rambler was both lengthier and more serious than its popular ancestor in the genre. It also had a strong element of
didacticism. The Rambler contained more sermon-like reflective essays and lacked the Spectator's "dramatic" qualities. There were many, however, who religiously read and appreciated the publication. In his
biography of Johnson,
James Boswell quotes one contemporary review of
The Rambler by
Bonnell Thornton and
George Colman, "May the publick favours crown his merits, and may not the English, under the auspicious reign of George the Second, neglect a man, who, had he lived in the first century, would have been one of the greatest favourites of Augustus."
The Rambler was widely respected for the quality and power of the writing and the masterful use of language and rhetoric. ==Revival==