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Eustace I6s6-1737 Budgell

secretary, ireland and wrote

BUDG'ELL, EUSTACE I6S6-1737 ). An Eng lish essayist and miscellaneous writer. He stud ied at Trinity College, Oxford, and at the Inner Temple, and was admitted to the bar. In 1709 be was appointed a clerk, and in 1715 under-secre tary to his second consin, Joseph Addison, who in those years was Secretary for Ireland. He also held office as chief secretary to the lords jus tices and deputy clerk of the council, and was elected to the Irish House of Commons. In 1717, upon Addison's departure for England to become first Secretary of State, be obtained through him the lucrative post of Accountant-General. Soon, however, be quarreled with Webster, the new Sec retary for Ireland, lost his places, and returned to England. Having invested in Law's South Sea scheme, he lost, he says. "above twenty thousand pounds . . . by that notorious piece of vil lainy." He wrote violent pamphlets against the Government. and from February. 1733, to June, 1735. published The Ike, a weekly periodical.

Already in poverty, harassed by controversies and suits at law, and apparently mentally un balanced. he was, in 1733, accused of having made away with a bond for £1001) advanced to him by Matthew Tindal, and with having entered interpolations in 'Findars will. The charge. though not proved, rendered him desperate. and he drowned himself in the Thames. Ile wrote for the Spectator, for the most part over the sig nature 'N..' thirty-seven papers, of which "Sir Roger as a Hunter" (No. 116, Friday, July 13, 1711) is perhaps as good as any. He was also the author of a translation (1714) of the Napa(crillas of Theophrastns, and of the Memoirs of the Life and character of the Late Earl of Orrery and the Family of the Boyles ( 1732). For an autobiographic account of his grievances, consult his Liberty and Property: .1 Pamphlet (London, 1732).