Richard Steele, the Whig essayist and dramatist,
and an acceptable character by choosing a side ... I will never hereafter do more than my part without knowing the terms I act upon and I think what I have said deserves a good establishment for life ... I cannot turn so much time that way and be supported by assistants equal to the work for less than £1,000 a year. And before I enter upon the argument I hope to receive £500 or be excused from so painful, so anxious and so unacceptable a service.
The £500 was forthcoming
In Parliament Steele supported the Administration in a number of speeches but was prepared on occasion to put an independent point of view because, as he wrote to his wife, ‘I have always an unfashionable thing called conscience in all matters of judicature or justice’.
stood up and said to this purpose ... I cannot but be of opinion that to put severities upon men merely on account of religion is a most grievous and unwarrantable proceeding. But indeed the Roman Catholics hold tenets which are inconsistent with the being and safety of a Protestant people; for this reason we are justified in laying upon them ... penalties ... but, Sir, let us not pursue Roman Catholics with the spirit of Roman Catholics but act towards them with the temper of our own religion.
Pol. State, xiii. 417-19; Corresp. 338.
After the split in the Whig party in April 1717 he continued to support the Administration, speaking for the army estimates, December 1717 and January 1718, and voting for the repeal of the Occasional Conformity and Schism Acts in January 1719. Two months later, however, he went into opposition over the projected peerage bill, producing in support of his views the Plebeian, which was answered by Addison’s Old Whig. In December 1719 he was the first to speak against the committal of the bill, arguing ‘in a very masterly speech’
Sir R. Steele is grown such a malcontent that he now takes the ministry directly for his mark and treats them in the House for some days past in so very frank a manner that they grow quite angry, and ’tis talked as if it would not be impossible to see him very soon expelled the House. He has quarrelled with the lord chamberlain, that a new licence has been granted to Wilks, Cibber and Booth, which ... [has] left him with his patent but not one player. And so the lord chamberlain’s authority over the playhouse is restored and the patent ends in a joke.
Corresp. 145-54, 541; HMC 2nd Rep. 71.
Steele next turned his attention to the South Sea Company which he attacked in pamphlets and in his new periodical the Theatre, January to April 1720; and in March he followed Walpole in opposing the proposals of the company for reducing the national debt. After the crash and during the debate on the South Sea directors, 12 Dec. 1720, he observed that
this nation, which two years ago possessed more weight and greater credit than any other nation in Europe, was reduced to its present distress by a few cyphering cits, a species of men of equal capacity, in all respects ... with those animals who saved the capitol, who were now to be screened by those of greater figure.
However, as with the Jacobite lords in 1716, Steele soon ceased to belabour a beaten foe. In March 1721 he spoke against forcing Robert Knight, the absconding South Sea cashier, to give evidence; and in April and June he joined Walpole in urging leniency for John Aislabie
Sir R. Steele got his election by a merry trick. He scooped an apple and put ten guineas into it, and said it should be deposited for the wife of any of the voters that should be the first brought to bed that day 9 months. Upon this, several that would have been against him and who lived some miles from the town, posted home to capacitate their wives to claim the apple, and the next morning the election passed in his favour before they returned.
HMC 7th Rep. 247-8.
In the new Parliament Steele took little active part, withdrawing in 1724, harassed by debts and ill-health, to his dead wife’s property in Wales, where he died 1 Sept. 1729.
