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EUSTACE BUDGELL (1686-1737)

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Originally appearing in Volume V04, Page 750 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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EUSTACE

BUDGELL (1686-1737)  ,
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English man of letters, the son of Dr . Gilbert Budgell, was born on the 19th of August 1686 at St Thomas, near Exeter . He matriculated in 1705 at Trinity College, Oxford, and afterwards joined the Inner Temple,
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London; but instead of studying law he devoted his whole attention to literature . Addison, who was first cousin to his
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mother, befriended him, and, on being appointed secretary to Lord Wharton, lord-
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lieutenant of Ireland in 1710, took Budgell with him as one of the clerks of his office . Budgell took
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part with Steele and Addison in writing the Taller . He was also a contributor to the Spectator and the
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Guardian, his papers being marked with an X in the former, and with an asterisk in the latter . He was subsequently made under-secretary to Addison, chief secretary to the lords justices of Ireland, and deputy-clerk of the council, and became a member of the Irish parliament . In 1717, when Addison became
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principal secretary of state in England, he procured for Budgell the place of accountant and
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comptroller-general of the revenue in Ireland . But the next
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year, the duke of Bolton being appointed lord-lieutenant, Budgell wrote a
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lampoon against E . Webster, his secretary . This led to his being removed from his
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post of accountant-general, upon which he returned to England, and, contrary to the advice of Addison, published his case in a pamphlet . In the year 1720 he lost £20,000 by the South Sea scheme, and afterwards spent £500o more in unsuccessful attempts to get into parliament .

He began to write

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pamphlets against the
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ministry, and published many papers in the Craftsman . In 1733 he started a weekly periodical called the Bee, which he continued for more than a
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hundred numbers . By the will of Matthew Tindal, the deist, who died in 1733, a legacy of 2000 guineas was
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left to Budgell; but the bequest (which had, it was alleged, been inserted in the will by Budgell himself) was successfully disputed by Tindal's
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nephew and nearest heir, Nicholas Tindal, who translated and wrote a Continuation of the
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History of England of Paul de Rapin-Thoyras . Hence Pope's lines " Let Budgell charge low
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Grub Street on his
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quill, And write whate'er he pleased—except his will." 1 Budgell is said to have sold the second
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volume of Tindal's
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Christianity as Old as the Creation to Bishop Gibson, by whom it was destroyed . The
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scandal caused by these transactions ruined him . On the 4th of May 1737, after filling his pockets with stones, he took a boat at Somerset-stairs, and while the boat was passing under the
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bridge threw himself into the
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river . On his desk was found a slip of paper with the words—" What Cato did, and Addison approved, cannot be wrong." Besides the
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works mentioned above, he wrote a
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translation (1714) of the Characters of
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Theophrastus . He never married, but left a natural daughter, Anne Eustace, who became an actress at Drury Lane . See Cibber's Lives of the Poets, vol. v .

End of Article: EUSTACE BUDGELL (1686-1737)
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