Publisher's Synopsis
Excerpt from Selected Essays of Joseph Addison
And Spectator in the formation of the English N ovel', it can scarcely be denied that to those periodicals is due the Eighteenth Century Essay. Indeed, one might almost write Modem English Essay, since (making due allowance for increased complexities of life and larger fields of discussion) neither in the com pressed dogmata vitae of Bacon, nor in the utterances, leisurely or courtly, of Cowley and Temple, do we find anything so nearly corresponding to the existing journalistic middle article as many of the later papers in the Tatler of 1709-11. From the outset, Captain Steele, the Editor of that Letter of Intelli gence, had proclaimed his intention of observing upon the Mariners of the Pleasurable as well as the Busie Part of Mankind but it was not until his eighteenth number had been reached that the note of a new method was definitely struck. This was in a contributed paragraph on the Distress (of the N ews Writers, whose lamentable fate it was, in default of fresh advices from France 'or Holland, to have to manufacture their own material to sing the furious troops in battle join'd, when there was no battle to abandon sieges never begun; and to raise the hymn.
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