Selections from the Observator (1681-1687)

audiobook

Selections from the Observator (1681-1687)

by Sir Roger L'Estrange

EN·~1 hours·12 chapters

Chapters

12 total
1

The Augustan Reprint Society

0:02
2

SIR ROGER L'ESTRANGE

0:01
3

SELECTIONS FROM THE OBSERVATOR

25:13
4

NOTES TO THE INTRODUCTION

4:15
5

BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTE

0:57
6

THEOBSERVATOR

16:33
7

THEOBSERVATOR. - In QUESTION and ANSWER.

12:34
8

THEOBSERVATOR. - In QUESTION and ANSWER.

12:20
9

THEOBSERVATOR. - In DIALOGUE.

12:17
10

THEOBSERVATOR,

13:48

Description

When England’s restored monarchy struggled to shape public opinion, a sixty‑five‑year‑old royalist named Sir Roger L’Estrange launched a daring new newspaper. From April 1681 to March 1687 he produced 931 single‑sheet issues of the Observator, each written as a lively dialogue that pitted opposing voices against one another. The paper blended official propaganda with the author’s fierce, reactionary convictions, turning the streets of London into a stage for polemic and wit.

Listening to these selections offers a vivid portrait of a turbulent era—heated debates over press freedom, religious tension, and the power of the Crown. L’Estrange’s sharp prose and the paper’s rapid, three‑times‑a‑week rhythm reveal how early journalism began to resemble the modern news cycle, while also exposing the personal vendettas that drove the era’s “bloodhound of the press.” For anyone curious about the roots of English periodicals, the Observator provides an engrossing, authentic glimpse into the birth of partisan journalism.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~1 hours (114K characters)

Series

Augustan Reprint Society, publication number 141

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Colin Bell, Hazel Batey, Joseph Cooper and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net

Release date

2012-07-26

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Sir Roger L'Estrange

Sir Roger L'Estrange

1616–1704

A fierce Royalist voice in one of England’s most turbulent eras, he turned pamphlets, polemics, and journalism into political weapons. His career mixed literary energy with controversy, leaving a vivid mark on Restoration public life.

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