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LESTE , a See also: desert See also: wind, similar to the See also: Leveche (q.v.), observed in See also: 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 See also: Funchal to below 20%
.
The Leste is commonly accompanied by clouds of See also: fine red See also: sand
.
L'ESTRANGE, See also: SIR See also: ROGER (1616-1704), See also: English pamphleteer on the royalist and See also: court See also: side during the Restoration epoch, but principally remarkable as the first English See also: man of letters of any distinction who made journalism a profession, was See also: born at Hunstanton in See also: Norfolk on the 17th of See also: December 1616
.
In 1644, during the See also: civil war, he headed a conspiracy to seize the See also: town of See also: Lynn for the See also: king, under circumstances which led to his being condemned to
See also: death as a See also: spy
.
The See also: sentence, however, was not executed, and after four years' imprisonment in Newgate he escaped to the Continent
.
He was excluded from the See also: Act of Indemnity, but in 1653 was pardoned by See also: Cromwell upon his See also: personal solicitation, and lived quietly until the Restoration, when after some delay his services and sufferings were acknowledged by his See also: appointment as licenser of the See also: press
.
This office was administered by him in the spirit which might be expected from a zealous See also: cavalier
.
He made himself notorious, not merely by the severity of his See also: literary censorship, but by his vigilance in the suppression of clandestine printing
.
In 1663 (see See also: NEws-PAPERS) he commenced the publication of the Public Intelligencer and the News, from which eventually See also: developed the famous official paper the See also: London See also: Gazette in 1665
.
In 1679 he again became prominent with the Observator, a journal specially designed to vindicate the court from the See also: charge of a secret inclination to popery
.
He discredited the Popish See also: Plot, and the suspicion he thus incurred was increased by the conversion of his daughter to See also: Roman Catholicism, but there seems no reason to question the sincerity of his own See also: attachment to the See also: Church of
See also: England
.
In 1687 he gave a further proof of independence by discontinuing the Observator from his unwillingness to advocateSee also: James II.'s Edict of Toleration, although he had previously gone all lengths in support of the
See also: measures of the court
.
The Revolution cost him his office as licenser, and the See also: remainder of his See also: life was spent in obscurity
.
He died in 1704
.
It is to L'Estrange's See also: credit that among the agitations of a busy See also: political life he should have found See also: time for much purely literary See also: work as a translator of See also: Josephus, See also: Cicero, See also: Seneca, Quevedo and other See also: standard authors
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