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EZV

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Originally appearing in Volume V25, Page 866 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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EZV  38 Factory of factory and workshop premises .

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Modern
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work- Buildings . again tried his fortune on the stage with The Conscious Lovers, the best and most successful of his comedies, produced in December 1722 . Meanwhile the gallant captain had turned aside to another kind of
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literary work, in which, with the assistance of his friend Addison, he obtained a more enduring reputation . There never was a time when literary talent was so much sought after and rewarded by statesmen . Addison had already been waited on in " his humble lodgings in the Haymarket," and advanced to office, when his friend the successful dramatist was appointed to the office of gazetteer . This was in
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April or May 1707 . It was Steele's first connexion with journalism . The periodical was at that time taking the place of the pamphlet as an instrument for working on public opinion . The .
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Gazette gave little opening for the
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play of Steele's lively pen, his main duty, as he says, having been to " keep the paper very innocent and very insipid "; but the position made him familiar with the new field of enterprise in which his inventive mind soon discerned materials for a project of his own . The Taller made its first appearance on the 12th of April 1709 . It was partly a newspaper, a journal of politics and society, published three times a week .

Steele's position as gazetteer furnished him with

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special advantages for
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political
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news, and as a popular frequenter of coffee-houses he was at no loss for social gossip . But Steele not only retailed and commented on social news, a
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function in which he had been anticipated by Defoe and others; he also gradually introduced into the Taller as a special feature essays on general questions of manners and morality . It is not strictly true that Steele was the inventor of the
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English " essay "—there were essayists before the 18th century, notably Cowley and Temple; but he was the first to use the essay for periodical purposes, and he and Addison together
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developed a distinct
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species, to which they gave a permanent character, and, in which 'they had many imitators . As a humbler motive for this fortunate venture Steele had the pinch of impecuniosity, due rather to excess of
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expenditure than to smallness of. income: He had ,300 a
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year from his gazetteership (paying a tax of £45),
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ioo as gentleman waiter to Prince George, £85o from the Barbadoes estates of his first wife, a widow named . Margaret Stretch, and some fortune by his second wife—Mrs Mary Scurlock, the " dear Prue " of his charming letters., But Steele lived in considerable state after his second
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marriage, and before he started the Taller was reduced to the necessity of borrowing . The assumed name of the editor was Isaac Bickerstaff, but Addison discovered the real author in the
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sixth number, and began to contribute in the eighteenth . It is only
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fair to Steele to state that the success of the Taller was established before Addison joined him, and that Addison contributed to only
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forty-two of the two
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hundred and seventy-one numbers that had appeared when the paper was stopped, obscurely, in
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January 1711 . Some papers satirizing Harley appeared in the Taller, and Steele lost or resigned the
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post of gazetteer . It is possible that this political recklessness may have had something to do with the sudden end of the venture . Only two months elapsed between the stoppage of the Taller and the appearance of the Spectator, which was the
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organ of the two friends from the 1st of March 1711,611 the 6th of December 1712 . Addison was the chief contributor to the new venture, and the
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history of it belongs more to his
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life . Nevertheless, it is to be remarked as characteristic of the two writers that in this as in the Taller Addison generally follows Steele's lead in the choice of subjects .

The first

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suggestion of
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Sir Roger de Coverley was Steele's although it was Addison that filled in the outline of a good-natured country gentleman with the numerous little whimsicalities that convert Sir Roger into an amiable and exquisitely ridiculous provincial oddity . Steele had neither the fineness of touch nor the humorous malice that gives life and distinction to Addison's picture; the Sir Roger of his
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original hasty sketch has good sense as well as good nature, and the treatment is comparatively
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commonplace from a literary point of view, though unfortunately not commonplace in its charity . Steele's suggestivevivacity gave many another hint for the elaborating skill of his friend . The Spectator was followed by the
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Guardian, the first number of which appeared on the 12th of March 1713 .. It had a much shorter career, extending to only a hundred and seventy-six numbers, of which Steele wrote eighty-two . This was the last of his numerous
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periodicals in which he had the material assistance of Addison . But he continued for several years to project
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journals, under various titles, some of them political, some social in their
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objects, most of them very short-lived . Steele was a warm partisan of the principles of the Revolution, as earnest in his political as in his other convictions . The English-man was started in
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October 1733, immediately after the stoppage of the Guardian, to assail the policy of the Tory
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ministry . The Lover, started in
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February 1714, was more general in its aims; but it gave place in a month or two to the Reader, a
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direct counterblast to the Tory Examiner . The Englishman was resuscitated for another
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volume in 1715; and he subsequently projected in rapid succession three unsuccessful ventures—Town Talk, the Tea Table and Chit Chat . Three years later he started his most famous political paper the Plebeian, rendered memorable, by the fact that it embroiled him with his old ally Addison .

The subject of controversy between the two lifelong friends was

Sunderland's Peerage
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Bill . Steele's last venture in journalism was the Theatre, 1720, the immediate occasion of which was the revocation of his patent for Drury Lane . Besides these journals he wrote also several
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pamphlets on passing questions—on the disgrace of Marlborough in 1711, on the fortifications of• Dunkirk in 1713, on. the " crisis " in 1714, An Apology for Himself and his Writings (important biographically) in the same year, and on the South Sea
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mania in 1720 . The fortunes of Steele as a zealous Whig varied with the fortunes of his party . Over the Dunkirk question he waxed so hot that he threw up a pension and a commissionership of stamps, and went into parliament as member for
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Stockbridge to attack the ministry with voice and
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vote as well as with pen . But he had not sat many weeks when he was expelled from the house for the language of his pamphlet on the Crisis, which was stigmatized as seditious . The Apology already mentioned was his vindication of himself on this occasion . With the accession of the House of Hanover his fortunes changed: Honours and substantial rewards were showered upon him . He was made a justice of the peace, deputy-
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lieutenant of Middlesex, surveyor of the royal stables, governor of the royal
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company of comedians —the 'last,a lucrative post—and was also knighted (1715) . After the suppression of the Jacobite
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rebellion he was appointed one of the commissioners of forfeited estates, and spent some two years, in Scotland in that capacity . In 1718 he obtained a patent for a, plan for bringing salmon alive from Ireland . Differing from his friends in power on the question of the Peerage Bill he was deprived of some of his offices, but when Walpole became chancellor of the
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exchequer in 1721 he was reinstated .

With all. his emoluments however the imprudent, impulsive, ostentatious and generous Steele could never get clear of

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financial difficulties, and he was obliged to retire from
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London 111 1724 and live in the. country . He spent his last years on his wife's estate of Llangunnor in Wales, and, his
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health broken down by a paralytic seizure, died at Carmarthen on the 1st of September 1728 . A selection from Steele's essays, with a prefatory memoir, has been edited by Mr Austin Dobson (1885 ; revised 1896) . Mr Dobson contributed a fuller biography to Mr Andrew Lang's series of English Worthies, in 1886 . In 1889 another and more exhaustive life was published by Mr G . A . Aitken, who has also edited Steele's plays (1898) and the Taller (1898) . (W . M.; A .

End of Article: EZV
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THIRD BOOK OF [I Esdras] EZRA
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EZZO, or EHRENFRIED (c. 954–1024)

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