“The Petition of the Letter Z”
AD: American Philosophical Society
[after February 12, 1779?]
From the Tatler. N 1778.
To the worshipful Isaac Bickerstaff, Esq; Censor-General
The Petition of the Letter Z, commonly
called Ezzard, Zed, or Izard,
Most humbly sheweth,
That your Petitioner is of as high Extraction,
and has as good an Estate as any other
Letter of the Alphabet.
He was always
talking of his
Family and of his
being a Man of
Fortune.
That there is therefore no reason why he
should be treated as he is with Disrespect and
Indignity.
And Complaining
of his
being treated, not
with due Respect
That he is not only plac’d at the Tail of the
Alphabet, when he had as much Right as any
other to be at the Head; but is, by the Injustice
of his Enemies totally excluded from the Word
WISE, and his Place injuriously filled by a
little, hissing, crooked, serpentine, venomous
Letter called S, when it must be evident to
your Worship, and to all the World, that
Double U, I, S, E do not spell or sound Wize,
but Wice.
At the tail of
the Commission,
of Ministers
He was not of
the Commission
for France, A Lee
being preferr’d to
him, which made
him very angry;
and the Character
here given of
S, is just what he
in his Passion
gave Lee.
Your Petitioner therefore prays that the Alphabet
may by your Censorial Authority be
reformed, and that in Consideration of his
Long-Suffering & patience he may be placed at
the Head of it; that S may be turned out of the
Word Wise, and the Petitioner employ’d instead
of him;
The most impatient
Man alive
And your Petitioner (as in Duty bound)
shall ever pray, &c.
Mr. Bickerstaff having examined the Allegations
of the above Petition, judges and determines,
that Z be admonished to be content
with his Station, forbear Reflections upon his
Brother Letters, & remember his own small
Usefulness, and the little Occasion there is for
him in the Republick of Letters, since S, whom
he so despises, can so well serve instead of
him.
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