Online Encyclopedia

LESTE

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V16, Page 499 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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LESTE  , a

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desert wind, similar to the
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Leveche (q.v.), observed in Madeira . It blows from an easterly direction in autumn,winter and spring, rarely in summer, and is of intense dryness, sometimes reducing the relative humidity at
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Funchal to below 20% . The Leste is commonly accompanied by clouds of
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fine red sand . L'ESTRANGE,
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SIR ROGER (1616-1704),
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English pamphleteer on the royalist and court side during the Restoration epoch, but principally remarkable as the first English man of letters of any distinction who made journalism a profession, was born at Hunstanton in Norfolk on the 17th of December 1616 . In 1644, during the
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civil war, he headed a conspiracy to seize the
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town of
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Lynn for the king, under circumstances which led to his being condemned to
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death as a spy . The sentence, however, was not executed, and after four years' imprisonment in Newgate he escaped to the Continent . He was excluded from the Act of Indemnity, but in 1653 was pardoned by Cromwell upon his
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personal solicitation, and lived quietly until the Restoration, when after some delay his services and sufferings were acknowledged by his appointment as licenser of the press . This office was administered by him in the spirit which might be expected from a zealous cavalier . He made himself notorious, not merely by the severity of his
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literary censorship, but by his vigilance in the suppression of clandestine printing . In 1663 (see
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NEws-PAPERS) he commenced the publication of the Public Intelligencer and the News, from which eventually
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developed the famous official paper the
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London
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Gazette in 1665 . In 1679 he again became prominent with the Observator, a journal specially designed to vindicate the court from the charge of a secret inclination to popery . He discredited the Popish Plot, and the suspicion he thus incurred was increased by the conversion of his daughter to
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Roman Catholicism, but there seems no reason to question the sincerity of his own
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attachment to the Church of England .

In 1687 he gave a further

proof of independence by discontinuing the Observator from his unwillingness to advocate James II.'s Edict of Toleration, although he had previously gone all lengths in support of the
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measures of the court . The Revolution cost him his office as licenser, and the remainder of his
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life was spent in obscurity . He died in 1704 . It is to L'Estrange's credit that among the agitations of a busy
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political life he should have found time for much purely literary
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work as a translator of Josephus,
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Cicero,
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Seneca, Quevedo and other standard authors .

End of Article: LESTE
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