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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Benjamin Franklin; Self-Revealed, Volume II
+(of 2), by Wiliam Cabell Bruce
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Benjamin Franklin; Self-Revealed, Volume II (of 2)
+ A Biographical and Critical Study Based Mainly on his own Writings
+
+Author: Wiliam Cabell Bruce
+
+Release Date: August 15, 2011 [EBook #36897]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BENJAMIN FRANKLIN; SELF-REVEALED, VOL II ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Edwards, Josephine Paolucc and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net. (This
+file was produced from images generously made available
+by The Internet Archive.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+BENJAMIN FRANKLIN
+
+SELF-REVEALED
+
+A BIOGRAPHICAL AND CRITICAL STUDY BASED MAINLY ON HIS OWN WRITINGS
+
+BY
+
+WILLIAM CABELL BRUCE
+
+IN TWO VOLUMES
+
+VOLUME II
+
+G. P. PUTNAM'S SONS
+NEW YORK AND LONDON
+_The Knickerbocker Press_
+1917
+
+
+COPYRIGHT, 1917
+BY
+W. CABELL BRUCE
+
+_The Knickerbocker Press, New York_
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+CHAPTER PAGE
+
+I.--FRANKLIN'S PERSONAL CHARACTERISTICS 1
+
+II.--FRANKLIN AS A MAN OF BUSINESS 26
+
+III.--FRANKLIN AS A STATESMAN 95
+
+IV.--FRANKLIN AS A MAN OF SCIENCE 350
+
+V.--FRANKLIN AS A WRITER 423
+
+INDEX 531
+
+
+
+
+Benjamin Franklin
+
+Self-Revealed
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+Franklin's Personal Characteristics
+
+
+The precise explanation of the great concourse of friends that Franklin
+drew about him, at the different stages of his long journey through the
+world, is to be found partly in his robust, honorable character and mental
+gifts. The sterner virtues, which are necessarily the foundations of such
+esteem as he enjoyed, he possessed in an eminent degree. An uncommonly
+virile and resolute spirit animated the body, which was equal in youth to
+the task of swimming partly on and partly under water from near Chelsea to
+Blackfriars, and of exhibiting on the way all of Thevenot's motions and
+positions as well as some of its own, and which shortly afterwards even
+sported about the becalmed Berkshire in the Atlantic almost with the
+strength and ease of one of the numerous dolphins mentioned by Franklin in
+his Journal of his voyage on that ship from England to America. He hated
+cruelty, injustice, rapacity and arbitrary conduct. It was no idle or
+insincere compliment that Burke paid him when he spoke of his "liberal and
+manly way of thinking." How stoutly his spirit met its responsibilities in
+Pennsylvania, prior to the Declaration of Independence, we have seen. The
+risks incident to the adoption of that declaration it incurred with the
+same fearless courage. Of all the men who united in its adoption, he,
+perhaps, was in the best position to know, because of his long residence in
+England, and familiarity with the temper of the English monarch and his
+ministry, what the personal consequences to the signers were likely to be,
+if the American cause should prove unsuccessful. He had a head to lose even
+harder to replace than that of his friend Lavoisier, he had a fortune to be
+involved in flame or confiscation, the joy of living meant to him what it
+has meant to few men, and more than one statement in his writings affords
+us convincing proof that, quite apart from the collective act of all the
+signers in pledging their lives, fortunes and sacred honor to the "glorious
+cause," he did not lose sight of the fact that the Gray Tower still stood
+upon its ancient hill with its eye upon the Traitor's Gate, and its bosom
+stored with instruments of savage vengeance. Indeed, it was the thought
+that his son had been engaged against him in a game, in which not only his
+fortune but his neck had been at stake, that made it so difficult for him,
+forgiving as he was, to keep down the bile of violated nature. But, when
+the time came for affixing his signature to the Declaration, he not only
+did it with the equanimity of the rest, but, if tradition may be believed,
+with a light-hearted intrepidity like that of Sir Walter Raleigh jesting on
+the scaffold with the edge of the axe. "We must all hang together,"
+declared John Hancock, when pleading for unanimity. "Yes," Franklin is said
+to have replied, "we must, indeed, all hang together, or most assuredly we
+shall all hang separately."
+
+The inability of old age, partly from sheer loss of animal vigor, and
+partly from the desire for peace, produced by the general decline in
+vividness of everything in a world, that it is about to quit, to assert
+itself with the force of will and temper, that belongs to us in our prime,
+is one of the most noticeable phenomena of the later stages of human
+existence. But John Adams to the contrary, the evidence all tends to show
+that the resolution of character exhibited by Franklin in the heyday of his
+physical strength he exhibited to the last. He was always slow to anger.
+Independent of the remarkable self-control, which enabled him to preserve a
+countenance, while Wedderburn was traducing him, as fixed as if it had been
+carved out of wood, his anger was not kindled quickly, among other reasons
+because he was too wise and just not to know that, if we could lay aside
+the sensitiveness of exaggerated self-importance, there would be but little
+real occasion for anger in the ordinary course of human life. But when
+meanness, injustice or other aggravated forms of human depravity were to be
+rebuked, the indignation of Franklin remained deliberate, judicious,
+calculating and crushing to the last. One illustration of this we have
+already given in his letter to Captain Peter Landais. Others we shall have
+brought to our attention in several of his letters to Arthur Lee. Upon
+these occasions, angry as he was, he was apt to make out his case with very
+much the same cool completeness as that with which he demonstrated in a
+letter to the British Post Office that it would be a mistake to shift His
+Majesty's mails from the Western to the Eastern Post Route in New Jersey.
+The time never came when he was not fully as militant as the occasion
+required, though never more so.
+
+And his integrity was as marked as his courage. "Splashes of Dirt thrown
+upon my Character, I suffered while fresh to remain," he once said. "I did
+not chuse to spread by endeavouring to remove them, but rely'd on the
+vulgar Adage _that they would all rub off when they were dry_." And such
+was his reputation for uprightness that, as a rule, he could neglect
+attacks upon his character with impunity. The one vaunt of his life, if
+such it can be called, was his statement to John Jay that no person could
+truthfully declare that Benjamin Franklin had wronged him. A statement of
+that kind, uttered by an even better man than Franklin, might well be
+answered in the spirit that prompted Henry IV of France, when his attention
+was called to a memorial inscription, which asserted that its subject never
+knew fear, to remark, "Then he never snuffed a candle with his fingers."
+But that Franklin was a man of sterling probity is unquestionable.[1] "We
+ought always to do what appears best to be done without much regarding what
+others may think of it," he wrote to William Carmichael, and, at more than
+one trying crisis of his career, he rose without difficulty to the
+requirements of his maxim. Lord North had little love for him, but he is
+credited with the remarkable statement, during the American War, that, in
+his belief, Franklin was the only man in France whose hands were not
+stained with stock jobbery. When the false charge was made that Franklin
+had never accounted for one of the many millions of livres entrusted to him
+by our French ally, no pride could suffer more acutely than did his from
+its inability to disprove the charge immediately. When enemies, to whom he
+had never given any just cause of offence whatever, were calumniating him
+towards the close of his life, his desire to leave the reputation of an
+honest man behind him became the strongest of his motives. The flattering
+language of great men, he said in his _Journal of the Negotiation for Peace
+with Great Britain_, did not mean so much to him when he found himself so
+near the end of life as to esteem lightly all personal interests and
+concerns except that of maintaining to the last, and leaving behind him the
+tolerably good character that he had previously supported. Still later he
+wrote to Henry Laurens, accepting the offer of that true patriot and
+gentleman to refute the slanders with regard to his career in France, and
+saying:
+
+ I apprehend that the violent Antipathy of a certain
+ person to me may have produced some Calumnies, which,
+ what you have seen and heard here may enable you easily
+ to refute. You will thereby exceedingly oblige one, who
+ has lived beyond all other Ambition, than that of dying
+ with the fair Character he has long endeavoured to
+ deserve.[2]
+
+When the negotiations for peace between Great Britain and the United States
+began, Richard Oswald, the envoy of Lord Shelburne, told Franklin that a
+part of the confidence felt in him by the English Ministry was inspired by
+his repute for open, honest dealing. This was not a mere diplomatic
+_douceur_, but a just recognition of his candid, straightforward conduct in
+his commerce with men. He was very resourceful and dexterous, if need were,
+and, in his early life, when he was promoting his own, or the public
+interests, he exhibited at times a finesse that bordered upon craftiness;
+but, when Wedderburn taxed him with duplicity, he imputed to Franklin's
+nature a vice incompatible with his frank, courageous disposition. It was
+his outspoken sincerity of character that enabled him, during the American
+War, to retain the attachment of his English friends even when he was
+holding up their land as one too wicked for them to dwell in.
+
+His intellectual traits, too, were of a nature to win social fame. In his
+graphic description of Franklin in extreme old age, Doctor Manasseh Cutler,
+of Massachusetts, brings him before us with these telling strokes of his
+pencil:
+
+ I was highly delighted with the extensive knowledge he
+ appeared to have of every subject, the brightness of
+ his memory, and clearness and vivacity of all his
+ mental faculties, notwithstanding his age. His manners
+ are perfectly easy, and everything about him seems to
+ diffuse an unrestrained freedom and happiness. He has
+ an incessant vein of humour, accompanied with an
+ uncommon vivacity, which seems as natural and
+ involuntary as his breathing.
+
+In other words, whatever knowledge Franklin had was readily available for
+social purposes, and suffused with the gaiety and humor which are so
+ingratiating, when accompanied, as they were in his case, by the desire to
+please and do good.[3] "He had wit at will," is the testimony of an
+unfriendly but honest witness, John Adams. His humor it would be difficult
+to over-emphasize. It ranged from punning, trifling, smutty jests and horse
+laughter to the sly, graceful merriment of Addison and the bitter realism
+of Swift. It irradiated his conversation, his letters, his writings, his
+passing memoranda, at times even his scientific essays and political
+papers. "Iron is always sweet, and every way taken is wholesome and
+friendly to the human Body," he states in his _Account of the New-Invented
+Pennsylvanian Fireplaces_; but his waggish propensity is too much for him,
+and he adds, "except in Weapons." Jefferson said that Franklin was not
+allowed to draft the Declaration of Independence for fear that he would
+insert a joke in it. So far as his humor assumed literary forms, we shall
+speak of it in another place. We are concerned with it now only so far as
+it influenced his conversation. In the _Autobiography_ he tells us that his
+reputation among his fellow-printers at Watts's Printing House in London as
+"a pretty good _riggite_, that is, a jocular verbal satirist," helped to
+support his consequence in the society. In the same book, he also tells us
+that later, wishing to break a habit that he was getting into of
+prattling, punning and joking, which made him acceptable to trifling
+company only, he gave Silence the second place in his little _Book of
+Virtues_. "What new story have you lately heard agreeable for telling in
+conversation?" was one of the standing questions, of his conception, which
+were to be answered by the members of the Junto at each of its meetings.
+And, even when he was in his eighty-third year, he could say to Elizabeth
+Partridge that, notwithstanding the gout, the stone and old age, he enjoyed
+many comfortable intervals, in which he forgot all his ills, and amused
+himself in reading or writing, or in conversation with friends, joking,
+laughing and telling merry stories, as when she first knew him a young man
+about fifty. His puns at times were as flat as puns usually are, and some
+of his stories could hardly have prospered in the ear that heard them, if
+they had not been set off by high animal spirits and contagious good humor.
+But some of those that crept into his letters, whether original or
+borrowed, are good enough for repetition. He seems to have had one for
+every possible combination of circumstances. "The Doctor," Miss Adams
+observes, "is always silent unless he has some diverting story to tell, of
+which he has a great collection." The mutinous and quarrelsome temper of
+his soldiers at Gnadenhutten, when they were idle, put him in mind of the
+sea-captain, who made it a rule to always keep his men at work, and who
+exclaimed, upon being told by his mate, that there was nothing more to
+employ them about, "_Oh, make them scour the anchor._" His
+absent-mindedness, when electrocuting a turkey, in setting up an electric
+circuit through his own body, which cost him the loss of his consciousness,
+and a numbness in his arms and the back of his neck, which did not wear off
+until the next morning, put him in mind of the blunderer who, "being about
+to steal powder, made a hole in the cask with a hot iron." At times, there
+was a subjective quality about his stories which lifted them above the
+level of mere jests. When the suggestion was made that, in view of the
+favor conferred upon America by the repeal of the Stamp Act by Parliament,
+America could not, with any face of decency, refuse to defray the expense
+incurred by Great Britain in stamping so much paper and parchment, Franklin
+did not lack an apposite story in which a hot iron was again made to
+figure.
+
+ The whole Proceeding [he said] would put one in Mind of
+ the Frenchman that used to accost English and other
+ Strangers on the Pont-Neuf, with many Compliments, and
+ a red hot Iron in his Hand; _Pray Monsieur Anglois_,
+ says he, _Do me the Favour to let me have the Honour of
+ thrusting this hot Iron into your Backside?_ Zoons,
+ what does the Fellow mean! Begone with your Iron or
+ I'll break your Head! _Nay Monsieur_, replies he, _if
+ you do not chuse it, I do not insist upon it. But at
+ least, you will in Justice have the Goodness to pay me
+ something for the heating of my Iron._
+
+This story was too good not to have a sequel.
+
+ As you observe [he wrote to his sister Jane] there was
+ no swearing in the story of the poker, when I told it.
+ The late new dresser of it was, probably, the same, or
+ perhaps akin to him, who, in relating a dispute that
+ happened between Queen Anne and the Archbishop of
+ Canterbury, concerning a vacant mitre, which the Queen
+ was for bestowing on a person the Archbishop thought
+ unworthy, made both the Queen and the Archbishop swear
+ three or four thumping oaths in every sentence of the
+ discussion, and the Archbishop at last gained his
+ point. One present at this tale, being surprised, said,
+ "But did the Queen and the Archbishop swear so at one
+ another?" "O no, no," says the relator; "that is only
+ _my way_ of telling the story."
+
+Another rather elaborate story was prompted by Franklin's disapproval of
+the Society of the Cincinnati.
+
+ The States [he said in his famous letter to his
+ daughter] should not only restore to them the _Omnia_ of
+ their first Motto (omnia reliquit servare rempublicam)
+ which many of them have left and lost, but pay them
+ justly, and reward them generously. They should not be
+ suffered to remain, with (all) their new-created
+ Chivalry, _entirely_ in the Situation of the Gentleman
+ in the Story, which their _omnia reliquit_ reminds me
+ of.... He had built a very fine House, and thereby much
+ impair'd his Fortune. He had a Pride, however, in
+ showing it to his Acquaintance. One of them, after
+ viewing it all, remark'd a Motto over the Door
+ [Transcriber's note: The = represents a dash above the
+ O] "[=O]IA VANITAS." "What," says he, "is the Meaning
+ of this [=O]IA? It is a word I don't understand." "I
+ will tell you," said the Gentleman; "I had a mind to
+ have the Motto cut on a Piece of smooth Marble, but
+ there was not room for it between the Ornaments, to be
+ put in Characters large enough to be read. I therefore
+ made use of a Contraction antiently very common in Latin
+ Manuscripts, by which the _m's_ and _n's_ in Words are
+ omitted, and the Omissions noted by a little Dash above,
+ which you may see there; so that the Word is _omnia_,
+ OMNIA VANITAS." "O," says his Friend, "I now comprehend
+ the Meaning of your motto, it relates to your Edifice;
+ and signifies, that, if you have abridged your _Omnia_,
+ you have, nevertheless, left your VANITAS legible at
+ full length."
+
+The determination of the enemies of America after the Revolution to have it
+that, in spite of all appearances to the contrary, America was going from
+bad to worse, brought out still another story:
+
+ They are angry with us and hate us, and speak all
+ manner of evil of us; but we flourish, notwithstanding
+ [he wrote to his grandnephew, Jonathan Williams]. They
+ put me in mind of a violent High Church Factor,
+ resident some time in Boston, when I was a Boy. He had
+ bought upon Speculation a Connecticut Cargo of Onions,
+ which he flatter'd himself he might sell again to great
+ Profit, but the Price fell, and they lay upon hand. He
+ was heartily vex'd with his Bargain, especially when he
+ observ'd they began to _grow_ in the Store he had
+ fill'd with them. He show'd them one Day to a Friend.
+ "Here they are," says he, "and they are _growing_ too!
+ I damn 'em every day; but I think they are like the
+ Presbyterians; the more I curse 'em, the more they
+ _grow_."
+
+It was impossible for such an irrational thing as the duel to escape
+Franklin's humorous insight, and a story like the following tended far more
+effectively to end the superstition upon which it throve than any pains or
+penalties that law could devise:
+
+ A Man [wrote Franklin from Passy to Thomas Percival]
+ says something, which another tells him is a Lie. They
+ fight; but, whichever is killed, the Point in dispute
+ remains unsettled. To this purpose they have a pleasant
+ little Story here. A Gentleman in a Coffee-house
+ desired another to sit farther from him. "Why so?"
+ "Because, Sir, you stink." "That is an Affront, and you
+ must fight me." "I will fight you, if you insist upon
+ it; but I do not see how that will mend the Matter. For
+ if you kill me, I shall stink too; and if I kill you,
+ (you) will stink, if possible, worse than you do at
+ present."
+
+This is one of those stories which make their own application, but the
+grave reflections, by which it was followed, are well worthy of quotation
+too.
+
+ How can such miserable Sinners as we are [added
+ Franklin] entertain so much Pride, as to conceit that
+ every Offence against our imagined Honour merits
+ _Death_? These petty Princes in their own Opinion would
+ call that Sovereign a Tyrant, who should put one of
+ them to death for a little uncivil Language, tho'
+ pointed at his sacred Person; yet every one of them
+ makes himself Judge in his own Cause, condemns the
+ offender without a Jury, and undertakes himself to be
+ the Executioner.
+
+Some _bon mots_, too, of Franklin have come down to us with his stories.
+When a neighbor of his in Philadelphia consulted him as to how he could
+keep trespassers from coming into his back yard, and stealing small beer
+from a keg, which he kept there, he replied, "Put a pipe of Madeira
+alongside of it." When Lord Stormont, the British Ambassador to France,
+hatched the report that a large part of Washington's army had surrendered,
+Franklin was asked whether it was true. "No sir," he said, "it is not a
+truth, it is only a stormont." The result was that for some time no lies
+were told in Paris but only "stormonts." It was not often that the wit of
+Franklin was barbed with malice, but there were good reasons why the malice
+in this instance should never have cost him any regret. When the American
+Commissioners proposed an exchange of prisoners to Lord Stormont, he did
+not deign to reply, but when they followed up their proposition with
+another letter, he returned a communication to them without date or
+signature in these insolent words: "The King's Ambassador receives no
+letters from rebels but when they come to implore his Majesty's mercy." The
+American Commissioners, with Franklin doubtless as their scrivener, were
+quite equal to the occasion. "In answer to a letter which concerns some of
+the most material interests of humanity, and of the two nations, Great
+Britain and the United States of America, now at war," they retorted, "we
+received the inclosed _indecent_ paper, as coming from your lordship, which
+we return, for your lordship's more mature consideration." Between Franklin
+and the vivacity of the Parisians, Lord Stormont found it not a little
+difficult to maintain his position of frigid and relentless dignity.
+Commenting in a letter to John Lovell, after Lord Stormont had left France,
+upon the expense entailed upon the United States by supernumerary
+commissioners, Franklin takes this parting shot at the Ambassador; we
+reduce such of his words as were in French to English:
+
+ I imagine every one of us spends nearly as much as Lord
+ Stormont did. It is true, he left behind him the
+ character of a niggard; and, when the advertisement
+ appeared for the sale of his household goods, all
+ Paris laughed at an article of it, perhaps very
+ innocently expressed, "a great quantity of table linen,
+ which has never been used." "That is very true," say
+ they, "for he has never given any one anything to
+ eat."[4]
+
+Another _bon mot_ of Franklin was his reply when he was told that Howe had
+taken Philadelphia. "No," he said, "Philadelphia has taken Howe"; and so it
+proved. Still another owed its origin to the balloon in its infancy. "Of
+what use is a balloon?" someone asked in Franklin's presence. "Of what
+use," he answered, "is a new-born baby?"
+
+But to form a correct impression of Franklin's humor we should think of it,
+to use Dr. Cutler's comparison, as something as natural to him as the rise
+and fall of his chest in breathing. It played like an iris over the
+commonest transactions of his life. If it was only a lost prayer book of
+his wife that he was advertising for in his _Gazette_, he did it in such
+terms as these:
+
+ Taken out of a Pew in the Church some months since, a
+ Common Prayer-Book, bound in Red, gilt, and letter'd
+ D. F. on each corner. The Person who took it is desir'd
+ to open it, and read the Eighth Commandment, and
+ afterwards return it to the same Pew again; upon which
+ no further Notice will be taken.
+
+At times, the humor is mere waggishness. When he was the Colonial Deputy
+Postmaster-General, he indorsed his letters, "Free, B. Franklin," but,
+after he became the Postmaster-General of the United States, out of
+deference for the American struggle for liberty, he changed the indorsement
+to "B. Free Franklin." Even in his brief memoranda on the backs of letters,
+there are gleams of the same overflowing vivacity. Upon the manuscript of a
+long poem, received by him, when in France, he jotted down the words: "From
+M. de Raudiere, a poor Poet, who craves assistance to enable him to finish
+an epic poem which he is writing against the English. He thinks General
+Howe will be off as soon as the poem appears." When a Benedictine monk, the
+prior for a time of the Abbey of St. Pierre de Chalon, lost money at cards,
+and wrote to him for his aid, he made this endorsement upon the letter:
+"Dom Bernard, Benedictine, wants me to pay his Gaming Debts--and he will
+pray for success to our Cause!"
+
+The humor of Franklin was too broad at times not to find expression
+occasionally in practical jokes. When in England, during his maturer years,
+he was in the habit of pretending to read his Parable against Persecution,
+which he had learnt by heart, and in which the manner of the Old Testament
+is skilfully imitated, out of his Bible, as the fifty-first Chapter of the
+Book of Genesis. The remarks of the Scripturians on it, he said in a letter
+written by him a year before his death, were sometimes very diverting. On
+one occasion, he wrote to the famous English printer, John Baskerville,
+that, to test the acumen of a connoisseur, who had asserted that
+Baskerville would blind all the readers of the nation by the thin and
+narrow strokes of his letters, he submitted to the inspection of the
+gentleman, as a specimen of Baskerville's printing, what was in reality a
+fragment of a page printed by Caslon. Franklin protested that he could not
+for his life see in what respects the print merited the gentleman's
+criticism. The gentleman saw in it everywhere illustrations of the justice
+of this criticism and declared that he could not even then read the
+specimen without pain in his eyes.
+
+ I spared him that Time [said Franklin] the Confusion of
+ being told, that these were the Types he had been
+ reading all his life, with so much Ease to his Eyes;
+ the Types his adored Newton is printed with, on which
+ he has pored not a little; nay, the very Types his own
+ Book is printed with, (for he is himself an Author) and
+ yet never discovered this painful Disproportion in
+ them, till he thought they were yours.[5]
+
+Associated with these moral and intellectual traits was a total lack of all
+anti-social characteristics or habits. When Franklin was in his
+twenty-first year, he made this sage entry in his Journal of his voyage
+from London to Philadelphia:
+
+ Man is a sociable being, and it is, for aught I know,
+ one of the worst of punishments to be excluded from
+ Society. I have read abundance of fine things on the
+ subject of solitude, and I know 'tis a common boast in
+ the mouths of those that affect to be thought wise,
+ _that they are never less alone than when alone_. I
+ acknowledge solitude an agreeable refreshment to a busy
+ mind; but were these thinking people obliged to be
+ always alone, I am apt to think they would quickly find
+ their very being insupportable to them.
+
+In his youth he adopted the Socratic method of argument, and grew, he tells
+us in the _Autobiography_, very artful and expert in drawing people, even
+of superior knowledge, into concessions, the consequences of which they did
+not foresee, entangling them in difficulties out of which they could not
+extricate themselves, and so obtaining victories that neither he nor his
+cause always deserved. But, in a few years, he discovered that these
+victories were Pyrrhic victories, and he gradually left off this doubtful
+kind of dialectics, retaining only the habit of expressing himself in terms
+of modest diffidence, never using when he advanced anything, that might
+possibly be disputed, the words "certainly," "undoubtedly" or any others
+that gave the air of positiveness to an opinion, but rather saying "I
+conceive" or "apprehend" a thing to be so and so; "it appears to me," or "I
+should think it is so or so" for such and such reasons; or "I imagine it to
+be so," or "it is so if I am not mistaken."
+
+ As the chief ends of conversation [he declared] are to
+ _inform_ or to be _informed_, to _please_ or to
+ _persuade_, I wish well-meaning, sensible men would not
+ lessen their power of doing good by a positive,
+ assuming manner, that seldom fails to disgust, tends to
+ create opposition, and to defeat every one of those
+ purposes for which speech was given to us, to wit,
+ giving or receiving information or pleasure.
+
+And that Franklin completely succeeded in rooting out the last vestige of
+dogmatism in his nature we not only have his testimony but that of
+Jefferson, who was not even born when he resolved to do it. "It was one of
+the rules which, above all others, made Dr. Franklin the most amiable of
+men in society," he said, "never to contradict anybody." Long before this,
+when Franklin was only in his forty-fifth year, James Logan wrote of him to
+Peter Collinson in these words: "Our Benjamin Franklin is certainly an
+extraordinary man, one of a singular good judgment, but of equal modesty."
+
+How noble was his capacity for self-effacement in the investigation of
+truth we shall see later on. In this place, it is enough to say that even
+the adulation poured out upon him in France did not in the slightest degree
+turn his head. He accepted it with the ingenuous pleasure with which he
+accepted everything that tended to confirm his impression that life was a
+game fully worth the candle, but, much as he loved France and the French,
+ready as he was to take a sip of everything that Paris pronounced
+exquisite, celestial or divine, it is manifest enough that he regarded with
+no little amusement the effort of French hyperbole to assign to him the
+role of Jupiter Tonans. When Felix Nogaret submitted to him his French
+version of Turgot's epigram, "Eripuit caelo fulmen, sceptrumque tyrannis,"
+Franklin, after acknowledging the flood of compliments that he could never
+hope to merit, with which the writer had overwhelmed him in his letter,
+added, "I will only call your attention to two inaccuracies in the original
+line. In spite of my electrical experiments, the lightning descends just
+the same before my very nose and beard, and, as to tyrants, there have been
+more than a million of us engaged in snatching his sceptre from him." His
+pen, however, was wasting its breath when it attempted to convince a
+Frenchman of that day that his countrymen did not owe their liberties
+solely to him. If the French had not been too generous and well-bred to
+remind him of the millions of livres obtained by him from the French King
+for the support of the American cause, he might have found it more
+difficult to deny that he was the real captor of Cornwallis.
+
+How heartily Franklin hated disputation we have already had some occasion
+to see. This aversion is repeatedly expressed in the _Autobiography_.
+Referring to his arguments with Collins, he tells us in one place that the
+disputatious turn of mind
+
+ is apt to become a very bad habit, making people often
+ extremely disagreeable in company by the contradiction
+ that is necessary to bring it into practice; and
+ thence, besides souring and spoiling the conversation,
+ is productive of disgusts and perhaps enmities where
+ you may have occasion for friendship.
+
+In another place, he has this to say of the contentious Governor Morris,
+one of the Colonial governors of Pennsylvania:
+
+ He had some reason for loving to dispute, being
+ eloquent, an acute sophister, and, therefore, generally
+ successful in argumentative conversation. He had been
+ brought up to it from a boy, his father, as I have
+ heard, accustoming his children to dispute with one
+ another for his diversion, while sitting at table after
+ dinner; but I think the practice was not wise; for, in
+ the course of my observation, these disputing,
+ contradicting, and confuting people are generally
+ unfortunate in their affairs. They get victory
+ sometimes, but they never get good will, which would be
+ of more use to them.
+
+The same thought is stated in a letter from Franklin to Robert Morris in
+which the former told the latter that he would see, on comparing a letter
+which Franklin had written, with the answer, that, if he had replied, which
+he could easily have done, a dispute might have arisen out of it, in which,
+if he had got the better, he should perhaps have got nothing else.
+
+Facetious and agreeable as he was, he was likewise free from the unsocial
+habit of monopolizing conversation:
+
+ The great secret of succeeding in conversation, [he
+ declared], is to admire little, to hear much; always to
+ distrust our own reason, and sometimes that of our
+ friends; never to pretend to wit, but to make that of
+ others appear as much as possibly we can; to hearken to
+ what is said, and to answer to the purpose.
+
+Nor, in making or borrowing these just observations, was Franklin like
+Carlyle who has been wittily said to have preached the doctrine of silence
+in thirty volumes. What he preached in these respects, he practised.
+
+ He was friendly and agreeable in conversation [Miss
+ Logan tells us], which he suited to his company,
+ appearing to wish to benefit his hearers. I could
+ readily believe that he heard nothing of consequence
+ himself but what he turned to the account he desired,
+ and in his turn profited by the conversation of others.
+
+It is hardly just to Franklin, however, to portray his social character
+negatively. The truth is, as the extracts from his correspondence have
+clearly enough shown, he was one of the most companionable and one of the
+kindest and most sympathetic and affectionate of human beings. He detested
+wrangling and discord. He had no patience with malice, and refused to allow
+the _Pennsylvania Gazette_ to be made a vehicle for detraction. To tell a
+chronic grumbler that he was hurt by his "voluminous complaints," or to
+write to a friend that he would have sent him a longer letter but for the
+coming in of a _bavard_ who had worried him till evening was about as close
+as he ever got to fretfulness. There is testimony to the effect that he
+never uttered a hasty or angry word to any member of his household, servant
+or otherwise. Even where he had strong reasons for resentment, he was
+remarkably just, generous and forgiving. Speaking in the _Autobiography_ of
+the manner in which he had been deceived by Governor Keith, he had only
+these mild words of reproof for him:
+
+ He wish'd to please everybody; and, having little to
+ give, he gave expectations. He was otherwise an
+ ingenious, sensible man, a pretty good writer, and a
+ good governor for the people, tho' not for his
+ constituents, the proprietaries, whose instructions he
+ sometimes disregarded. Several of our best laws were of
+ his planning and passed during his administration.
+
+When Bradford was Postmaster, he refused to allow his post-riders to carry
+any newspaper but his own. When the tables were turned, and Franklin was in
+the position as Postmaster himself to shut out every publication from the
+mails except his _Gazette_, he declined to retaliate on Bradford's
+meanness. Drained of money, as he was by Ralph, when they were in London
+together, he nevertheless summed up the situation in the _Autobiography_
+with the charitable statement: "I lov'd him, notwithstanding, for he had
+many amiable qualities." If there was any person for whom Franklin
+entertained, and had just cause to entertain, a bitter feeling of contempt
+and dislike, it was Thomas Penn. Yet, when Lady Penn solicited his
+assistance, for the protection of her interests in Pennsylvania, after the
+Proprietary Government in that Province had collapsed with the royal
+authority, he did all that he could properly do to aid her.
+
+He was always ready for a friendly game of cribbage, cards or chess. Though
+entirely too temperate to indulge any physical appetite to excess, he was
+not insensible to the pleasures of the table in his later years. Wine, too,
+he relished sufficiently to thank God for it liturgically in his youth, and
+to consume a second bottle of it at times in middle age with the aid of his
+friend "Straney." When Col. Henry Bouquet was looking forward to a hot
+summer in Charleston, he wrote to him that he did all that he could for his
+relief, by recommending him to an ingenious physician of his acquaintance,
+who knew the rule of making cool, weak, refreshing punch, not inferior to
+the nectar of the gods. It would not do, of course, to accept too literally
+the song in which Franklin exalted Bacchus at the expense of Venus, or the
+Anacreontic letter to the Abbe Morellet, in which wine was extolled as if
+it were all milk of our Blessed Lady. But these convivial effusions of his
+pen nevertheless assist us in arriving at a correct interpretation of his
+character.
+
+He was fond of music also, and was something of a musician himself. He
+could play on the harp, the guitar and the violin, and he improved the
+armonica, which acquired some temporary repute. His interest in this
+musical instrument owed its birth to the melodious sounds which a member of
+the Royal Society, Mr. Delavel, happened to produce in his presence by
+rubbing his fingers on the edges of bowls, attuned to the proper notes by
+the different measures of water that they contained. It was upon the
+armonica that Franklin played at the social gatherings under M. Brillon's
+roof which he called his Opera, and to which such lively references are
+made in the letters that passed between Madame Brillon and himself. The
+advantages of the instrument, he wrote to Giambatista Beccaria, were that
+its tones were incomparably sweet beyond those of any other; that they
+could be swelled and softened at pleasure by stronger or weaker pressures
+of the fingers, and continued to any length; and that the instrument, being
+once well tuned, never again required tuning.
+
+Blend with all this the happy disposition, which led Franklin to declare in
+his eighty-second year that he comforted himself with the reflection that
+only three incurable diseases, the gout, the stone, and old age, had fallen
+to his share, and that they had not yet deprived him of his natural
+cheerfulness, his delight in books, and enjoyment of social conversation,
+and we can form some adequate idea of what he brought to intercourse with
+his fellow-creatures. Only about two weeks before his death he wrote to
+Jane Mecom from his death-bed:
+
+ I do not repine at my malady, though a severe one, when
+ I consider how well I am provided with every
+ convenience to palliate it, and to make me comfortable
+ under it; and how many more horrible evils the human
+ body is subject to; and what a long life of health I
+ have been blessed with, free from them all.
+
+In his _Proposals Relating to Education_, he dwelt upon the importance of
+"that _Benignity of Mind_, which shows itself in _searching for_ and
+_seizing_ every Opportunity _to serve_ and _to oblige_; and is the
+Foundation of what is called Good Breeding; highly useful to the Possessor,
+and most agreeable to all." This benignity of mind belonged to him in an
+eminent degree. The grape vines that he procured for his friend Quincy at
+the cost of so much trouble to himself were but one of the ten thousand
+proofs that he gave his friends of his undiminished affection and unselfish
+readiness to serve them. Throughout his whole life, he had a way of keeping
+friendship fresh by some thoughtful gift or act of kindness. Books,
+pamphlets, writing materials, seeds of many descriptions, candles, hams,
+American nuts and dried apples, even choice soap, were among the articles
+with which he reminded his friends that he had not forgotten them.
+
+ The Box not being full [he wrote to Collinson], I have
+ put in a few more of our Candles which I recommend for
+ your particular Use when you have Occasion to read or
+ write by Night; they give a whiter Flame than that of
+ any other kind of Candle, and the Light is more like
+ Daylight than any other Light I know; besides they need
+ little or no Snuffing, and grease nothing. There is
+ still a little Vacancy at the End of the Box, so I'll
+ put in a few Cakes of American Soap made of Myrtle Wax,
+ said to be the best Soap in the World for Shaving or
+ Washing fine Linnens etc. Mrs. Franklin requests your
+ Daughter would be so good as to accept 3 or 4 Cakes of
+ it, to wash your Grandson's finest Things with.
+
+In a letter to Bartram, who had informed him that his eye sight was
+failing, Franklin surmises that this good and dear old friend did not have
+spectacles that suited him.
+
+ Therefore [he said] I send you a complete set, from
+ number one to thirteen, that you may try them at your
+ ease; and, having pitched on such as suit you best at
+ present, reserve those of higher numbers for future
+ use, as your eyes grow still older; and with the lower
+ numbers, which are for younger people, you may oblige
+ some other friends. My love to good Mrs. Bartram and
+ your children.
+
+Afterwards, he sends to Bartram several sorts of seed and the English medal
+which had been awarded to him for his botanical achievements. And with them
+went also one of the compliments in which his urbanity abounded. Alluding
+to the medal, he says, "It goes in a Box to my Son Bache, with the Seeds. I
+wish you Joy of it. Notwithstanding the Failure of your Eyes, you write as
+distinctly as ever."
+
+"Please to accept a little Present of Books, I send by him, curious for the
+Beauty of the Impression," he wrote to Benjamin Vaughan, when Temple was on
+the point of visiting England. One of his last gifts was a collection of
+books to Abdiel Holmes, the father of Oliver Wendell Holmes. In addition to
+the gifts that he made to his friends, and the numerous commissions that he
+executed for them, when he was in London, he was prompt to let them feel
+that they could always be certain of his sympathy in every respect that
+affected their prosperity or happiness for good or for evil. In one of his
+letters, he assures Jared Eliot that, if he should send any of his steel
+saws to Philadelphia for sale, the writer would not be wanting, where his
+recommendation might be of service. When at Passy, he wrote to George
+Whatley for a copy of his "excellent little Work," _The Principles of
+Trade_. "I would get it translated and printed here," he said. The same
+generous impulse led him to write to Robert Morris, when Morris was
+acquiring his reputation as "The Financier," "No one but yourself can enjoy
+your growing reputation more than I do." Often as he was honored both at
+home and abroad by institutions of learning, it is safe to say that no
+honor that he ever received afforded him more pleasure than he experienced
+when the degree of Doctor of Divinity was conferred at his instance by the
+University of Edinburgh upon Dr. Samuel Cooper.
+
+In no respect, however, did Franklin commend himself more signally to the
+affection of his friends than in the notice that he took of their children.
+His relations to some of these children were closely akin to those of
+adoption. To John Hughes, Josiah Quincy, Henry Laurens and de Chaumont, he
+wrote at one time or another referring to their "valuable" sons, and
+filling their bosoms with the parental joy that his commendation could not
+fail to excite.
+
+In these attributes of mind, character and nature can readily be found, we
+think, the explanation of that capacity for winning and retaining friends
+which made the life of Franklin as mellow as a ripe peach. The most
+important of them in a social sense lead us, of course, simply to the
+statement that he was far more beloved than most men are because he was
+himself influenced far more than most men are by the spirit of love. His
+sympathy and affection were given to men in gross, and they were given to
+men in detail. His heart was capacious enough to take in the largest
+enterprises of human benevolence, but, unlike the hearts of many
+philanthropists and reformers, it was not so intensely preoccupied with
+them as to have no place for
+
+ That best portion of a good man's life,--
+ His little, nameless, unremembered acts
+ Of Kindness and of Love.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[1] In his _True Benjamin Franklin_, p. 163, Sydney George Fisher makes
+these statements: "In a letter written to Mrs. Stevenson in London, while
+he (Franklin) was envoy to France, he expresses surprise that some of the
+London tradespeople still considered him their debtor for things obtained
+from them during his residence there some years before, and he asks Mrs.
+Stevenson, with whom he had lodged, how his account stands with her.... He
+appears to have overdrawn his account with Hall, for there is a manuscript
+letter in the possession of Mr. Howard Edwards, of Philadelphia, written by
+Hall, March 1, 1770, urging Franklin to pay nine hundred and ninety-three
+pounds which had been due for three years." What Franklin's letter to Mrs.
+Stevenson, which is dated Jan. 25, 1779, states is that he had been told
+after reaching France that Mr. Henley, the linen-draper, had said that,
+when the former left England for America, he had gone away in his debt. The
+letter questions whether Henley ever made such a statement, asks Mrs.
+Stevenson to let the writer know the meaning of it all, and adds: "I
+thought he had been fully paid, and still think so, and shall, till I am
+assur'd of the contrary." The account that the letter asks of Mrs.
+Stevenson was probably for the shipping charges on the white cloth suit,
+sword and saddle, which had been forwarded, as the letter shows, to
+Franklin at Passy by Mrs. Stevenson. Or it may have well been for expense
+incurred by Mrs. Stevenson in performing some similar office for him. For
+instance, when he was on the point of leaving England in 1775, he wrote to
+a friend on the continent that, if he had purchased a certain book for the
+writer, Mrs. Stevenson, in whose hands he left his little affairs till his
+return, which he proposed, God willing, in October, would pay the draft for
+it.
+
+A letter from Franklin to Mrs. Stevenson, dated July 17, 1775, shows that
+there had been mutual accounts between them during his long and familiar
+intercourse with her under the Craven Street roof. With this letter, he
+incloses an order for a sum of money that she had intrusted to him for
+investment, and also an order for L260 more, "supposing," he says, "by the
+Sketch Mr. Williams made of our Accts. that I may owe you about that Sum."
+"When they are finally settled," he further says, "we shall see where the
+Ballance lies, and easily rectify it." If the account in question had any
+connection with these accounts the unliquidated nature of the latter, the
+abruptness with which Franklin was compelled to leave England in 1775,
+coupled with his expectation of returning, the troubled years which
+followed and the difficulty of finally settling detailed accounts, when the
+parties to them are widely separated, furnish a satisfactory explanation of
+the delay in settlement. If Franklin did not pay a balance claimed from him
+by Hall on the settlement of their partnership accounts, after the
+expiration of the partnership in 1766, it was doubtless because of his own
+copyright counter-claim to which we have already referred in our text.
+
+[2] In recent years there has been a tendency to disparage the merits of
+Henry Laurens. The Hales in their _Franklin in France_ speak of him "as a
+very worthy, but apparently very inefficient, member of the Commission." In
+his admirable prolegomena to the _Diplomatic Correspondence of the American
+Revolution_, which is well calculated to excite the regret that lawyers do
+not oftener bring the professional habit of weighing evidence to bear upon
+historical topics, Dr. Francis Wharton says: "The influence he exerted in
+the formation of the treaty was but slight, and his attitude as to the mode
+of its negotiation and as to its leading provisions so uncertain as to
+deprive his course in respect to it of political weight." Dr. Wharton also
+reaches the conclusion that Henry Laurens was deficient, in critical
+moments, both in sagacity and resolution. On the other hand Moses Coit
+Tyler in his _Literary History of the American Revolution_ declares that,
+coming at last upon the arena of national politics, Laurens was soon
+recognized for what he was, "a trusty, sagacious, lofty, imperturbable
+character." In another place in the same work, Tyler speaks of the
+"splendid sincerity, virility, wholesomeness and competence of this
+man--himself the noblest Roman of them all--the unsurpassed embodiment of
+the proudest, finest, wittiest, most efficient, and most chivalrous
+Americanism of his time." And in still another place in the same work the
+_Narrative of the Capture of Henry Laurens_ is described "as a modest and
+fascinating story of an heroic episode in the history of the Revolution, a
+fragment of autobiography fit to become a classic in the literature of a
+people ready to pay homage to whatever is magnanimous, exquisite and
+indomitable in the manly character." To anyone familiar with the whole
+conduct of Laurens in the Tower and the other facts upon which Dr. Wharton
+based his judgment as to his sagacity and firmness at trying conjunctures,
+these statements of Tyler are to a certain extent mere academic puffery. We
+see no reason, however, to shade the character that we have ascribed to
+Laurens in the text. Writing to Franklin about him after his release from
+the Tower, John Adams said: "I had vast pleasure in his conversation; for I
+found him possessed of the most exact judgment concerning our enemies, and
+of the same noble sentiments in all things which I saw in him in Congress."
+And some eighteen months later Franklin wrote to Laurens himself in terms
+as strong as that he should ever look on his friendship as an honor to him.
+
+[3] The Abbe Morellet in his Memoirs gives us very much the same impression
+of the social characteristics of Franklin that Cutler does. "His
+conversation was exquisite--a perfect good nature, a simplicity of manners,
+an uprightness of mind that made itself felt in the smallest things, an
+extreme gentleness, and, above all, a sweet serenity that easily became
+gayety." But this was Franklin when he was certain of his company. "He
+conversed only with individuals," John Adams tells us, "and freely only
+with confidential friends. In company he was totally silent." If we may
+judge by the few specimens reserved by the Diary of Arthur Lee, the Diary
+of John Baynes, an English barrister, and Hector St. John, the author of
+_Letters from an American Farmer_, the grave talk of Franklin was as good
+as his conversation in its livelier moods. After a call with Baynes upon
+Franklin at Passy, Sir Samuel Romilly wrote in his Journal: "Of all the
+celebrated persons whom in my life I have chanced to see, Dr. Franklin,
+both from his appearance and his conversation, seemed to me the most
+remarkable. His venerable patriarchal appearance, the simplicity of his
+manner and language, and the novelty of his observations, at least the
+novelty of them at that time to me, impressed me with an opinion of him as
+one of the most extraordinary men that ever existed."
+
+[4] The lack of generous fare imputed by the Parisians to the table of Lord
+Stormont was in keeping with the hopelessly rigid and bigoted nature
+revealed by his dispatches when in France. Writing from Paris on Dec. 11,
+1776, to Lord Weymouth, he says of Franklin: "Some people think that either
+some private dissatisfaction or despair of success have brought him into
+this country. I can not but suspect that he comes charged with a secret
+commission from the Congress, and as he is a subtle, artful man, and void
+of all truth, he will in that case use every means to deceive, will avail
+himself of the general ignorance of the French, to paint the situation of
+the rebels in the falsest colours, and hold out every lure to the
+ministers, to draw them into an open support of that cause. He has the
+advantage of several intimate connexions here, and stands high in the
+general opinion. In a word, my Lord, I look upon him as a dangerous engine,
+and am very sorry that some English frigate did not meet with him by the
+way." In another letter to Lord Weymouth, dated Apr. 16, 1777, Lord
+Stormont declared that he was thoroughly convinced that few men had done
+more than Franklin to poison the minds of the Americans, or were more
+totally unworthy of his Majesty's mercy.
+
+[5] It was Balzac who said that the _canard_ was a discovery of
+Franklin--the inventor of the lightning rod, the hoax, and the republic.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+Franklin as a Man of Business
+
+
+When some one said to Erskine that punning was the lowest kind of wit, he
+replied that the statement was true, because punning was the foundation of
+all wit.
+
+The business career of Franklin did not move upon such an exalted plane as
+his scientific or political career, but it was the basis on which the
+entire superstructure of his renown as a philosopher and a statesman was
+built up; inasmuch as it was his early release from pecuniary cares which
+enabled him to apply himself with single-minded devotion to electrical
+experiments, and to accept at the hands of the people of Pennsylvania the
+missions to England which opened up the wider horizon of his postmeridian
+life. Quite apart, however, from the scientific and political reputation,
+to which his material success smoothed the way, his business career has an
+intrinsic interest of its own. In itself alone, when the limited
+opportunities afforded by Colonial conditions for the accumulation of a
+fortune are considered, it is a remarkable illustration of the extent to
+which sleepless energy and wise conduct rise superior to the most
+discouraging circumstances. Comparatively few young men aspire to be
+philosophers or statesmen, but almost every young man of merit finds
+himself under the necessity of striving for a pecuniary independence or at
+any rate for a pecuniary livelihood. How this object can be most
+effectually accomplished, is the problem, above all others in the world,
+the most importunate; and the effort to solve it from generation to
+generation is one of the things that invest human existence with perpetual
+freshness. To a young man, involved in the hopes and anxieties of his first
+struggles for a foothold in the world, the history of Franklin, as a
+business man, could not but be full of inspiration, even if it had not
+flowered into higher forms of achievement, and were not reflected in
+publications of rare literary value. But, putting altogether out of sight
+the great fame acquired by Franklin in scientific and political fields, a
+peculiar vividness is imparted to his business career by other
+circumstances which should not be overlooked. His main calling was that of
+a printer, a vocation of unusual importance and influence in a free
+community. "I, Benjamin Franklin, of Philadelphia, printer, late Minister
+Plenipotentiary from the United States of America to the Court of France,
+now President of the State of Pennsylvania," is the way in which he
+describes himself in his will executed less than two years before his
+death. And from that day to this, upon one memorable occasion or another,
+guilds of printers on both sides of the Atlantic have acclaimed him as
+little less than the patron saint of their craft.
+
+Two of his commercial enterprises were the _Pennsylvania Gazette_, the most
+readable newspaper of Colonial America, and _Poor Richard's Almanac_, the
+only almanac that has ever attained the rank of literature. And finally the
+story of Franklin's business vicissitudes and the fortune, that he
+ultimately won, has been pictured with incomparable distinctness in the
+fascinating _Autobiography_. There he has set forth, as no other man with
+such lowly beginnings has had the genius to set forth, the slow, painful
+progress of a printer and merchant, under harsh and rigid conditions, from
+poverty to wealth. That fortune cannot be won under such circumstances
+except by the exercise of untiring industry, pinching frugality and
+unceasing vigilance, but that, with good health, good character, unquailing
+courage and due regard to Father Abraham's harangue, every man can conquer
+adversity, is the moral which the _Autobiography_ has for the youth who has
+no inheritance but his own hands or brain. It is sad to reflect how much
+more impressive and stimulating this moral would be, if the _Autobiography_
+did not also disagreeably remind us that pecuniary ideals subject human
+character to many peculiar temptations of their own, and that, as the
+result of the destructive competition, which extends even to the sapling
+struggling in the thick set copse for its share of light and air, the
+success of one man in business is too often founded upon the ruins of that
+of another.
+
+The business life of Franklin began when he was ten years old. At that age,
+he was taken from Mr. Brownell's school in Boston, and set to the task at
+the Blue Ball, his father's shop, of "cutting wick for the candles, filling
+the dipping mold and the molds for cast candles, attending the shop, going
+of errands, etc." At this he continued until he was twelve years of age,
+but his duties were so distasteful to him that his father feared that,
+unless he could find some more congenial occupation for him, he would run
+off to sea. To avert this danger, Josiah sometimes took Benjamin about with
+him, and showed him joiners, bricklayers, turners, braziers and other
+artisans at their several trades in the hope of awakening an inclination in
+him for one of them. The walks were not unprofitable to the son.
+
+ It has ever since [he says in the _Autobiography_] been
+ a pleasure to me to see good workmen handle their
+ tools; and it has been useful to me, having learnt so
+ much by it as to be able to do little jobs myself in my
+ house when a workman could not readily be got, and to
+ construct little machines for my experiments, while
+ the intention of making the experiment was fresh and
+ warm in my mind.
+
+After this circuit of the various handicrafts, Josiah decided to make a
+cutler of Benjamin, and he placed him on probation with Samuel Franklin, a
+cutler, and a son of Josiah's brother, Benjamin. But Samuel thought that he
+should be paid a fee for instructing his cousin, and the suggestion was so
+displeasing to Josiah that he took the lad back to his own home. He
+doubtless felt that Samuel might have remembered whose roof it was that had
+sheltered his father when the latter first came over from England to
+Boston.
+
+The real inclination, however, that Benjamin discovered at this period of
+his life was for books. His father observed it, and decided to make a
+printer of him, and it was when James, an older son of Josiah, returned
+from England, with a press and letters, to set up as a printer at Boston,
+that Benjamin was finally persuaded to enter into indentures of
+apprenticeship with him. He did not yield at once, because, while he
+preferred the business of a printer to that of a tallow chandler, the salt
+of the sea was still in his blood. Under the provisions of the indentures,
+he was to serve as his brother's apprentice, until he was twenty-one years
+of age, but he was to be allowed the wages of a journeyman during the last
+year of the apprenticeship. It was a fortunate thing for the apprentice
+that he should have become bound to a master, who had been trained for his
+craft in London, and the extraordinary skill which he early acquired as a
+printer was probably due in part to this circumstance. Among the
+publications printed by James, while the apprenticeship lasted, were
+Stoddard's _Treatise on Conversion_, Stone's _Short Catechism_ and _A
+Prefatory Letter about Psalmody_. These publications were all of the kind
+that Franklin afterwards came to regard as hopelessly dry pemmican. Other
+publications, printed by James Franklin, during the same time, were
+various New England sermons, _The Isle of Man, or Legal Proceedings in
+Manshire against Sin_, an allegory, _A Letter from One in the Country to
+his Friend in Boston_, _News from the Moon_, _A Friendly Check from a kind
+Relation to the Chief Cannoneer_ and _A Word of Comfort to a Melancholy
+Country_--all political pamphlets,--several papers on inoculation, and a
+production bearing the quaint title _Hooped Petticoats Arraigned by the
+Light of Nature and the Law of God_. But it was through a publication of a
+very different nature from these that James Franklin has come to occupy his
+position of prominence in the life of his apprentice. This publication was
+the _New England Courant_, already mentioned above. Its first issue
+appeared at Boston on August 21, 1721, and so bold were its pungent
+comments upon the clergy and magistrates of the Colony that, within a year,
+James Franklin was by the Council summoned before it for what it conceived
+to be highly injurious reflections upon the civil authorities. The
+reflections consisted in this: A letter from Newport in the _Courant_ for
+June 11, 1722, stated that a piratical vessel had been seen off Block
+Island, and that two vessels were being fitted out to pursue her. "We are
+advised from Boston," was the conclusion of the letter, "that the
+Government of the Massachusetts are fitting out a ship (The Flying Horse)
+to go after the pirates, to be commanded by Captain Peter Papillon, and
+'tis thought he will sail some time this month, wind and weather
+permitting." The letter, of course, was fictitious, and but a mild piece of
+satire in comparison with some of the prior utterances of the _Courant_.
+But this time the magistracy of the Colony was too much exasperated by the
+past misdemeanors of the _Courant_ to overlook such a gibe at the expense
+of its activity. When questioned by the Council, James admitted that he was
+the owner of the paper, but refused to disclose the name of the author of
+the offensive letter. Benjamin was questioned, too, and united in the
+refusal. This was excusable in him as it was a point of honor for an
+apprentice not to betray his master's secrets, but James had no such plea
+behind which to shelter himself. Indeed, his bearing before the Council
+appears to have been too haughty to warrant the idea that he was much
+concerned about bringing forward any sort of defence. The examination
+resulted in a decision by the Council that the letter was "a high affront
+to the Government" and an order to the Sheriff to commit James to the
+Boston Jail.
+
+A week in jail was sufficient to bring James a whining suppliant to the
+feet of his oppressors. At the end of that time, he addressed an humble
+petition to the Council, acknowledging his folly in affronting the civil
+government, and his indecent behavior, when arraigned for it, and praying
+for forgiveness and less rigorous confinement. The petition was granted,
+but, when he was released, he had been a whole month in durance. In the
+meantime, however, Benjamin, who had attracted the attention of his brother
+and the group of writers, who contributed to the columns of the _Courant_,
+by a sprightly series of letters signed Silence Dogood, of which we shall
+say something hereafter, had been conducting the publication, and, with the
+aid of his literary coadjutors, assailing the proceedings of the Council in
+prose and verse. These attacks continued for six months after James was
+released, and were borne by the Council with a supineness which was
+probably due to the fear of exciting popular sympathy with the _Courant_ as
+a champion of free speech. But in the issue of the _Courant_ for January
+14, 1723, appeared an article so caustic that the Council could contain
+itself no longer. It was headed by the well known lines of _Hudibras_,
+which are significant of the spirit in which the youthful Franklin
+confronted the whole system of Puritan Asceticism:
+
+ In the wicked there's no vice,
+ Of which the saints have not a spice;
+ And yet that thing that's pious in
+ The one, in t'other is a sin.
+ Is't not ridiculous and nonsense,
+ A saint should be a slave to conscience?
+
+The performance has so many earmarks of Franklin's peculiar modes of
+thought and speech that it is hard not to ascribe its authorship to him
+without hesitation. Besides thrusts at the Governor and other public
+functionaries, it lashed the pietists of the place and time with unsparing
+severity. Many persons, it declared, who seemed to be more than "ordinarily
+religious," were often found to be the greatest cheats imaginable. They
+would dissemble and lie, snuffle and whiffle, and, if it were possible,
+would overreach and defraud all who dealt with them.
+
+ For my own part [the writer further declared] when I
+ find a man full of religious cant and pellavar, I
+ presently suspect him to be a knave. Religion is,
+ indeed, the _principal thing_; but too much of it is
+ worse than none at all. The world abounds with knaves
+ and villains; but of all knaves, the _religious knave_
+ is the worst; and villainies acted under the cloak of
+ religion are the most execrable. Moral honesty, though
+ it will not of itself, carry a man to heaven, yet I am
+ sure there is no going thither _without it_. And
+ however such men, of whom I have been speaking, may
+ palliate their wickedness, they will find that
+ _publicans and harlots will enter the kingdom of heaven
+ before themselves_.
+
+The same day, on which this issue of the _Courant_ appeared, the Council
+passed an order, denouncing it in scathing terms, and appointing a
+committee of three persons to consider and report what was proper for the
+Court to do with regard to it. It did not take the committee long to
+report. They condemned the _Courant_ in stern language as an offence to
+church and state, and "for precaution of the like offence for the future,"
+humbly proposed that "James Franklin, the printer and publisher thereof,
+be strictly forbidden by this Court to print or publish the New England
+_Courant_, or any other pamphlet or paper of the like nature, except it be
+first supervised by the Secretary of this Province." The report was
+approved, and followed by an order, carrying its recommendations into
+execution. But the proprietor of the _Courant_ and his literary retainers
+were equal to the crisis. They assembled at once, and resolved that the
+paper should thenceforth be issued in the name of Benjamin, at that time a
+boy of seventeen. At the same time, to retain his hold on his apprentice
+until the expiration of his term, James resorted to a knavish expedient.
+
+ The contrivance [the _Autobiography_ tells us] was that
+ my old indenture should be return'd to me, with a full
+ discharge on the back of it, to be shown on occasion,
+ but to secure to him the benefit of my service, I was
+ to sign new indentures for the remainder of the term,
+ which were to be kept private. A very flimsy scheme it
+ was; however, it was immediately executed.
+
+As the final step in the fraud, the next issue of the _Courant_ announced
+that the late publisher of the paper, finding that so many inconveniences
+would arise by his taking the manuscripts and public news to be supervised
+by the Secretary as to render his carrying it on unprofitable, had entirely
+dropped the undertaking. The _Courant_ itself, however, went merrily along
+in its old evil courses, despite the fact that the same issue, speaking
+through its new management, as if it were an entire stranger to its guilty
+past, deprecated newspaper license in the strongest terms, looked forward
+to a future of genial good-humor only, and even gave expression to such a
+deceitful sentiment as this: "Pieces of pleasancy and mirth have a secret
+charm in them to allay the heats and tumors of our spirits, and to make a
+man forget his restless resentments." These debonair pretences were hardly
+uttered before they were laid aside, and the attacks on the clergy and
+their sanctimonious adherents renewed with as much wit and vivacity as
+formerly, if not more; and so eagerly read were the lampoons of the
+_Courant_ by the population of Boston, which, perhaps, after all,
+stiff-necked as it was, did not differ from most urban populations in
+containing more sinners than saints, that, under the management of "Old
+Janus," the mask behind which young Franklin concealed his features, the
+_Courant_ was in a few months able to raise its price from ten to twelve
+shillings a year. It was a lawless sheet, but, in its contest against
+arbitrary power and muffled speech, it was swimming with a current that was
+to gather up additional elements of irresistible volume and force at every
+stage of its journey towards the open main of present American political
+ideas.
+
+In the management of the _Courant_, Franklin had scored his first business
+success. James might well have made his gifted apprentice his co-partner;
+but, whether from jealousy, the sauciness of the apprentice, mere choler,
+or the domineering temper that we should naturally expect in a man who
+meekly kissed the hand of tyranny after a single week in jail, he was far
+from doing anything of the sort. Smarting under the snubs and blows
+administered to him by a brother, from whose fraternal relationship to him
+he thought that he was entitled to receive somewhat more than the ordinary
+indulgence shown an apprentice, Benjamin, to use his own words, took upon
+him to assert his freedom; presuming that James would not venture to
+produce the new indentures. When James found that his apprentice was about
+to leave him, he prevented him from securing employment with any other
+Boston printer by warning them all against him. The consequence was that
+the boy, between his reputation as "a young genius that had a turn for
+libelling and satyr," the horror with which he was pointed at by good
+people as an infidel or atheist, the lowering eye of the Provincial
+Government, and the rancor with which he was pursued by his brother, found
+himself under a cloud of opprobrium from which he could not escape except
+by making his home in another place than Boston. Knowing that his father
+would detain him, if he learnt that he was about to go elsewhere, he sold
+enough of his books to obtain a small sum of money for his journey, and
+contrived, through the management of Collins, to be secretly taken on board
+of a sloop on the eve of sailing for New York, under the pretence of his
+being a young acquaintance of Collins, who had got a naughty girl with
+child. The flight which followed has been narrated and pictured until it is
+almost as well known as the exodus of the Old Testament. He would be a rash
+writer, indeed, who imagined that he could tell that story over again in
+any words except those of Franklin himself without dispelling a charm as
+subtle as that which forbids a seashell to be removed from the seashore.
+How, with a fair wind, he found himself, a boy of seventeen, in New
+York,[6] without a claim of friendship, acquaintance or recommendation upon
+a human being in that town; how he fruitlessly applied for employment to
+the only printer there, William Bradford, and was advised by him to go on
+to Philadelphia; how, owing to an ugly squall, he was thirty hours on the
+waters of New York Bay before he could make the Kill, without victuals, or
+any drink except a bottle of filthy rum, and with no companion except his
+boatman and a drunken Dutchman; how after breaking up a fever, brought on
+by this experience, with copious draughts of cold water, he trudged on foot
+all the way across New Jersey from Amboy to Burlington; stopping the first
+day for the night at a poor inn, where travel-stained and drenched to the
+skin by rain, he was in danger of being taken up as a runaway servant;
+stopping the second day at an inn within eight or ten miles of Burlington,
+kept by a Dr. Brown, an infidel vagabond, with a flavor of letters, and
+arriving the next morning at Burlington, where a kindly old woman of whom
+he had bought gingerbread, to eat on his way down the Delaware, gave him a
+dinner of ox cheek with great good will, and accepted only a pot of ale in
+return--all these things are told in the _Autobiography_ in words as well
+known to the ordinary American boy as the prominent incidents of his own
+life. And so also is the descent of the Delaware in the timely boat that
+hove in sight as Benjamin was walking in the evening by the water-side at
+Burlington on the day of his arrival there, and took him aboard, putting in
+about midnight at Cooper's Creek for fear that it had passed in the
+darkness the town which has since grown to be a vast city more luminous at
+night than the heavens above it, and landing at Market Street,
+Philadelphia, the next day, Sunday, at eight or nine o'clock. Here the
+dirty, hungry wayfarer found himself in a land marked by many surprising
+contrasts with the one from which he had fled. There was no biscuit to be
+had in the town, nor could he even obtain a three-penny loaf at the baker
+shop on Second Street; but for three pence he purchased to his astonishment
+three great puffy rolls, so large that, after sating his hunger with one of
+them, as he walked up Market Street as far as Fourth Street, and then back
+by other streets for a drink of river-water to the Market Street Wharf, he
+still had the other two left to give to a mother and child, who had come
+down the Delaware with him, and were on their way to a more distant point.
+But, doubtless, of all the things in that unfamiliar place, the one that
+seemed to him most unlike his former home was the serene, mild face that
+religion wore. It must have been like mollifying oil poured into a wound
+for him to find himself in such an edifice as the Great Quaker meeting
+house near the market with a placid, clean-dressed concourse of
+worshippers, whose brooding silence, so unlike the strident voices of the
+Saints, with whom he had been warring in Boston, soon lulled him to sleep;
+a sleep not so deep or so long, however, that the youth, exhausted by the
+labor of rowing, and the want of rest, could not, when diverted from the
+sign of the disreputable Three Mariners, and directed to the sign of the
+more reputable Crooked Billet, in Water Street, by a friendly Quaker guide,
+consume in profound slumber, with a brief intermission for supper, the
+entire time between dinner and the next morning. He was too young yet to
+need to be reminded by any Poor Richard that there is sleeping enough in
+the grave, and the next morning was to see the beginning of a struggle,
+first for subsistence, and then for a fortune, hard as a muscle tense with
+the utmost strain that it can bear.
+
+With the return of day, he made himself as tidy as he could without the aid
+of his clothes chest, which was coming around by sea, and repaired to the
+printing shop of Andrew Bradford, to whom he had been referred by William
+Bradford, the father of Andrew, in New York. When he arrived at the shop,
+he found the father there. By travelling on horseback, he had reached
+Philadelphia before Benjamin. By him Benjamin was introduced to Andrew
+Bradford, who received him civilly, and gave him breakfast but told him
+that he was not at present in need of a hand, having recently secured one.
+There was another printer in town, however, he said, lately set up, one
+Keimer, who perhaps might employ him. If not, Benjamin was welcome to lodge
+at his house, and he would give him a little work to do now and then until
+he could find steadier employment for him.
+
+Benjamin then went off to see Keimer; and William Bradford accompanied him;
+for what purpose soon became apparent enough. "Neighbor," said Bradford, "I
+have brought to see you a young man of your business; perhaps you may want
+such a one." Keimer asked Benjamin a few questions, put a composing stick
+in his hands to test his competency, and declared that he would employ him
+soon though he had just then nothing for him to do. Then taking old
+Bradford, whom he had never seen before, and whose relationship to Andrew
+he never suspected, to be a friendly fellow townsman, he opened up his
+plans and prospects to his visitors, and announced that he expected to get
+the greater part of the printing business in Philadelphia into his hands.
+This announcement prompted William Bradford to draw him on "by artful
+questions, and starting little doubts, to explain all his views, what
+interest he reli'd on, and in what manner he intended to proceed." "I,"
+observes Franklin, "who stood by and heard all, saw immediately that one of
+them was a crafty old sophister, and the other a mere novice. Bradford left
+me with Keimer, who was greatly surpris'd when I told him who the old man
+was."
+
+There was room enough in Philadelphia for such an expert craftsman as
+Benjamin. Andrew Bradford had not been bred to the business of printing,
+and was very illiterate, and Keimer, though something of a scholar, was a
+mere compositor, and knew nothing of presswork. His printing outfit
+consisted of an old shattered press, and one small, worn-out font of
+English letters. When Benjamin called on him, he was composing directly out
+of his head an elegy on Aquila Rose, a worthy young Philadelphian who had
+just died:
+
+ What mournful accents thus accost mine ear,
+ What doleful echoes hourly thus appear!
+ What sighs from melting hearts proclaim aloud
+ The solemn mourning of this numerous crowd.
+ In sable characters the news is read,
+ Our Rose is withered, and our Eagle's fled,
+ In that our dear Aquila Rose is dead.
+
+These are a few of the many lines in which Keimer, disdaining ink-bottle
+and quill, traced with his composing stick alone from birth to death the
+life of his lost Lycidas. As there was no copy, and but one pair of cases,
+and the threnody was likely to require all the letters that Keimer had, no
+helper could be of any assistance to him. So Benjamin put the old press
+into as good a condition as he could, and, promising Keimer to come back
+and print off the elegy, as soon as it was transcribed into type from the
+tablets of his brain, returned to Bradford's printing-house. Here he was
+given a small task, and was lodged and boarded until Keimer sent for him to
+strike off his poem. While he had been away, Keimer had procured another
+pair of cases, and had been employed to reprint a pamphlet; and upon this
+pamphlet Benjamin was put to work.
+
+During the period of his employment by Keimer, an incident arose which gave
+a decisive turn to his fortunes for a time. Happening to be at New Castle,
+his brother-in-law, Robert Holmes, the master of a sloop that plied between
+Boston and the Delaware River, heard that he was at Philadelphia, and wrote
+to him, earnestly urging him to return to Boston. To this letter Benjamin
+replied, thanking Holmes for his advice, but stating his reasons for
+leaving Boston fully and in such a way as to convince him that the flight
+from Boston was not so censurable as he supposed. The letter was shown by
+Holmes to Sir William Keith, who read it, and was surprised when he was
+told the age of the writer. Benjamin, he said, appeared to be a young man
+of promising parts, and should, therefore, be encouraged, for the printers
+at Philadelphia were wretched ones, and he did not doubt that, if Benjamin
+would set up as a printer there, he would succeed. As to himself, he would
+procure him the public printing and render him any other service in his
+power. Before these circumstances were brought to the knowledge of
+Benjamin, the Governor and Col. French of New Castle proceeded to look him
+up, and one day, while he and Keimer were working together near the window
+of the Keimer printing-office, they saw the pair coming across the street
+in their fine clothes towards its door. As soon as they were heard at the
+door, Keimer, assuming that they were calling upon him, ran down to greet
+them, but the Governor inquired for Benjamin, walked upstairs, and, with a
+condescension and politeness to which the youth was quite unaccustomed,
+paid him many compliments, expressed a desire to be acquainted with him,
+blamed him kindly for not making himself known to him, when Benjamin first
+came to Philadelphia, and invited him to accompany him to the tavern where
+he was going, he said, with Col. French to taste some excellent Madeira.
+
+"I," says Franklin, "was not a little surprised, and Keimer star'd like a
+pig poison'd." But the invitation was accepted, and, at a tavern, at the
+corner of Third Street, and over the Madeira, Keith suggested that the
+youth should become a printer on his own account, and pointed out to him
+the likelihood of his success; and both he and Col. French assured him that
+he would have their interest and influence for the purpose of securing the
+public printing in Pennsylvania and the three Lower Counties on the
+Delaware. When Benjamin stated that he doubted whether his father would
+assist him in the venture, Keith replied that he would give him a letter to
+Josiah, presenting the advantages of the scheme, and that he did not doubt
+that it would be effectual. The result of the conversation was a secret
+understanding that Benjamin should return to Boston in the first available
+vessel with Keith's letter, and, while he was awaiting this vessel,
+Benjamin continued at work with Keimer as usual; Keith sending for him now
+and then to dine with him, and conversing with him in the most affable,
+familiar and friendly manner imaginable.
+
+Later a little vessel came along bound for Boston. With Keith's letter in
+his possession, Benjamin took passage in her, and, after a dangerous voyage
+of two weeks, found himself again in the city from which he had fled seven
+months before. All the members of his family gave him a hearty welcome
+except his brother James, but Josiah, after reading the Governor's letter,
+and considering its contents for some days, expressed the opinion that he
+must be a man of small discretion to think of setting up a boy in business
+who wanted yet three years of being at man's estate. He flatly refused to
+give his consent to the project, but wrote a civil letter to the Governor,
+thanking him for the patronage that he had proffered Benjamin, and stating
+his belief that his son was too young for such an enterprise. Nevertheless,
+Josiah was pleased with the evidences of material success and standing that
+his son had brought back with him from Philadelphia, and, when Benjamin
+left Boston on his return to Philadelphia, it was with the approbation and
+blessing of his parents, and some tokens, in the form of little gifts, of
+their love, and with the promise, moreover, of help from Josiah, in case he
+should not, by the time he reached the age of twenty-one, save enough money
+by his industry and frugality to establish himself in business.
+
+When Benjamin arrived at Philadelphia, and communicated Josiah's decision
+to Keith, the Governor was not in the least disconcerted. There was a great
+difference in persons he was so kind as to declare. Discretion did not
+always accompany years, nor was youth always without it. "And since he will
+not set you up," he said to Benjamin, "I will do it myself. Give me an
+inventory of the things necessary to be had from England, and I will send
+for them. You shall repay me when you are able; I am resolv'd to have a
+good printer here, and I am sure you must succeed." This, the
+_Autobiography_ tells us, was uttered with such apparently heartfelt
+cordiality that Benjamin did not entertain the slightest doubt of Keith's
+sincerity, and, as he had kept, and was still keeping, his plans entirely
+secret, there was no one more familiar with Keith's character than himself
+to warn him that the actual value of Keith's promises was a very different
+thing from their face value. Believing the Governor to be one of the best
+men in the world to have thus unsolicited made such a generous offer to
+him, Benjamin drew up an inventory calling for a small printing outfit of
+the value of about one hundred pounds sterling, and handed it to him. It
+met with his approval, but led him to ask whether it might not be of some
+advantage for Benjamin to be on the spot in England to choose the type, and
+to see that everything was good of its kind. Moreover, he suggested that,
+when Benjamin was there, he might make some useful acquaintance, and
+establish a profitable correspondence with book-sellers and stationers. To
+the advantage of all this Benjamin could not but assent. "Then," said
+Keith, "get yourself ready to go with Annis"; meaning the master of the
+_London Hope_, the annual ship, which was the only one at that time plying
+regularly between London and Philadelphia.
+
+Until Annis sailed, Benjamin continued in the employment of Keimer, whom he
+still kept entirely in ignorance of his project, and was frequently at the
+home of Keith. During this time, Keith's intention of establishing him in
+business was always mentioned as a fixed thing, and it was understood that
+he was to take with him letters of recommendation from Keith to a number of
+the latter's friends in England besides a letter of credit from Keith to
+supply him with the necessary money for buying the printing outfit and the
+necessary printer's supplies. Before Annis' ship sailed, Benjamin
+repeatedly called upon Keith for these letters at different times appointed
+by him, but on each occasion their delivery was postponed to a subsequent
+date. Thus things went on until the ship was actually on the point of
+sailing. Then, when Benjamin called on Keith, to take his leave of him and
+to receive the letters, the Governor's secretary, Dr. Bard, came out from
+Keith and told him that the Governor was busily engaged in writing, but
+would be at New Castle before the ship, and that there the letters would be
+delivered. Upon the arrival of the ship at New Castle, Keith, true to his
+word, was awaiting it, but, when Benjamin went to Keith's lodgings to get
+the letters, the Governor's secretary again came out from him with a
+statement by him that he was then absorbed in business of the utmost
+importance, but that he would send the letters aboard. The message was
+couched in highly civil terms, and was accompanied by hearty wishes that
+Benjamin might have a good voyage, and speedily be back again. "I returned
+on board," says Franklin in the _Autobiography_, "a little puzzled, but
+still not doubting." At the very beginning of the voyage, Benjamin and his
+graceless friend Ralph had an unusual stroke of good luck. Andrew Hamilton,
+a famous lawyer of Philadelphia, who was accompanied by his son, afterwards
+one of the Colonial Governors of Pennsylvania, Mr. Denham, a Quaker
+merchant, and Messrs. Onion and Russell, the masters of the Principio Iron
+Works in Cecil County, Maryland, had engaged the great cabin of the ship;
+so that it looked as if Benjamin and Ralph, who were unknown to any of the
+cabin passengers, were doomed to the obscurity and discomfort of the
+steerage. But, while the ship was at New Castle, the elder Hamilton was
+recalled to Philadelphia by a great fee in a maritime cause, and, just
+before she sailed, Col. French came on board, and treated Benjamin with
+such marked respect that he and Ralph were invited by the remaining cabin
+passengers to occupy the cabin with them--an invitation which the two
+gladly accepted. They had good reason to do so. The cabin passengers formed
+a congenial company, the plenteous supply of provisions laid in by Andrew
+Hamilton, with the stores to which they were added, enabled them to live
+uncommonly well, and Mr. Denham contracted a lasting friendship for
+Benjamin. The latter, however, had not lost sight of the letters from Keith
+which had been so long on their way to his hands. As soon as he learnt at
+New Castle that Col. French had brought the Governor's dispatches aboard,
+he asked the captain for the letters that were to be under his care. The
+captain said that all were put into the bag together, and that he could not
+then come at them, but that, before they landed in England, Benjamin should
+have the opportunity of picking them out. When the Channel was reached, the
+captain was as good as his word, and Benjamin went through the bag; but no
+letters did he find that were addressed in his care. He picked out six or
+seven, however, that he thought from the handwriting might be the promised
+letters, especially as one was addressed to Basket, the King's printer, and
+another to some stationer. On the 24th day of December, 1724, the ship
+reached London. The first person that Benjamin waited upon was the
+stationer, to whom he delivered the letter addressed to him, with the
+statement that it came from Governor Keith. "I don't know such a person,"
+the stationer said, but, on opening the letter, he exclaimed, "O! this is
+from Riddlesden. I have lately found him to be a compleat rascal, and I
+will have nothing to do with him, nor receive any letters from him." With
+that he gave the letter back to Benjamin and turned on his heel to serve a
+customer. Then it was that Benjamin, putting two and two together, began to
+doubt Keith's sincerity, and looked up Mr. Denham, and told him what had
+happened. There was not the least probability, Mr. Denham declared, that
+Keith had written any letters for him. No one, he said, who knew the
+Governor, trusted him in the slightest degree, and, as for his giving a
+letter of credit to Benjamin, he had no credit to give. One advantage,
+however, Benjamin reaped from the deception practised upon him. Both Mr.
+Denham and himself as well as the stationer knew that Riddlesden was a
+knave. Not to go further, Deborah's father by becoming surety for him had
+been half ruined. His letter disclosed the fact that there was a scheme on
+foot to the prejudice of Andrew Hamilton, and also the fact that Keith was
+concerned in it with Riddlesden; so, when Hamilton came over to London
+shortly afterwards, partly from ill will to Keith and Riddlesden, and
+partly from good will to Hamilton, Benjamin adopted the advice of Mr.
+Denham and waited on him, and gave him the letter. He thanked Benjamin
+warmly, and from that time became his friend, to his very great advantage
+on many future occasions. "I got his son once L500," notes the grateful
+Franklin briefly in a foot-note of the _Autobiography_.
+
+By cozenage almost incredible, Benjamin, at the age of eighteen, had been
+thus lured off to London; the London of Addison, Pope and Sir Isaac Newton.
+Rather than confess the emptiness of his flattering complaisance Keith
+preferred to rely upon the chance that, once in London, the youth would be
+either unable or disinclined to return to his own native land. It would be
+hard to say what might have become of him if he had not had the skill as a
+printer which exemplified in a striking way the truth of two of the sayings
+of Poor Richard, "He that hath a Trade hath an Estate" and "He that hath a
+Calling, hath an Office of Profit and Honour."
+
+The most serious stumbling block to his advancement in London was the one
+that he brought over seas with him, namely, Ralph himself, who had deserted
+his wife and child in Philadelphia, and now let his companion know for the
+first time that he never meant to return to that city. All the money that
+Ralph had, when he left home, had been consumed by the expenses of the
+voyage, but Benjamin was still the possessor of fifteen pistoles when the
+voyage was over, and from this sum Ralph occasionally borrowed while he
+was endeavoring to convert some of his high-flown ambitions into practical
+realities. First, he applied for employment as an actor, only to be told by
+Wilkes that he could never succeed on the stage, then he tried to induce
+Roberts, a publisher in Paternoster Row, to establish a weekly periodical
+like the _Spectator_, with himself as the Addison, on certain conditions to
+which Roberts would not give his assent. Finally, he was driven to the
+stress of seeking employment as a copyist for stationers and lawyers about
+the Temple, but he could not find an opening for even such ignoble drudgery
+as this. Soon all of Benjamin's pistoles were gone. But, in the meantime,
+with his training as a printer, he had secured employment without
+difficulty at Palmer's, a famous printing-house in Bartholomew Close, where
+he remained for nearly a year. Here he labored pretty diligently, but with
+Ralph as well as himself to maintain, and with the constant temptations to
+expense, afforded by playhouses and other places of amusement, he was
+unable to hoard enough money to pay his passage back to Philadelphia.
+
+For a time, after Ralph and himself arrived at London, they were
+inseparable companions, occupying the same lodgings in Little Britain, the
+home of bookstalls, and sharing the same purse. But when Ralph drifted off
+into the country, all intercourse between the friends was brought to an end
+by the overtures that Benjamin made to his mistress in his absence. It was
+then that Benjamin, relieved of the burden which the pecuniary necessities
+of Ralph had imposed on him, began to think of laying aside a little money,
+and left Palmer's to work at Watts' near Lincoln's Inn Fields, a still more
+important printing-house, where he was employed so long as he remained in
+London. His reminiscences of this printing-house are among the most
+interesting in the _Autobiography_. One episode during his connection with
+it presents him to us with some of the lines of his subsequent maturity
+plainly impressed on him. "I drank," he says, "only water; the other
+workmen, near fifty in number, were great guzzlers of beer." When they
+observed that his physical strength was superior to theirs, they wondered
+that the Water-American, as they called him, should be stronger than they
+who drank strong beer. A boy was incessantly running between an alehouse
+and the printing-house for the purpose of keeping the latter supplied with
+drink. Benjamin's pressmate drank every day a pint of beer before
+breakfast, a pint at breakfast, with his bread and cheese, a pint between
+breakfast and dinner, a pint at dinner, a pint in the afternoon about six
+o'clock, and another pint when he had done his day's work. Franklin vainly
+endeavored to convince him that the physical strength, produced by beer,
+could only be in proportion to the grain or barley-flour dissolved in water
+that the beer contained, that there was more flour in a pennyworth of
+bread, and that, therefore, if he would eat that with a pint of water, it
+would give him more strength than a quart of beer. As it was, he had four
+or five shillings to pay out of his wages every Saturday night for muddling
+liquor, and in this way he and his fellow-workmen kept themselves always
+under.
+
+Benjamin began at Watts' as a pressman, but, after some weeks of service,
+he was transferred by the master to the composing-room. There a toll of
+five shillings for drink was demanded of him by the other compositors as
+the price of his admission to their society. At first he refused to pay it,
+as he had already paid a similar _bienvenu_ in the press-room, and the
+master followed his refusal up by positively forbidding him to pay it; but
+after a few weeks of recusancy he learnt how despotic a thing an inveterate
+custom is. He was excommunicated for a while by all his fellow-workmen, and
+could not leave the composing-room for even the briefest time without
+having his sorts mixed or his pages transposed by the Chapel ghost, who
+was said to have a deep grudge against all imperfectly initiated
+compositors. Master or no master, he finally found himself forced to comply
+with the custom and to pay the exaction, convinced as he became of the
+folly of being on ill terms with those with whom one is bound to live
+continually. Erelong his offence was forgotten, and his influence firmly
+established among his fellow-compositors. It was prevailing enough to
+enable him to propose some reasonable changes in the Chapel laws, and to
+carry them through in the face of all opposition. At the same time, the
+example of temperance, set by him, induced a great part of his companions
+to give up their breakfast of beer, bread and cheese, and to supply
+themselves from a neighboring public-house with a large porringer of hot
+water-gruel, seasoned with butter and pepper, and crumbed with bread, for
+the price of a pint of beer, namely, three half-pence. This made a more
+comfortable as well as a cheaper breakfast, and one that left their heads
+clear besides. Those of Benjamin's fellow-workmen whom he could not reclaim
+fell into the habit of using his credit for the purpose of getting beer
+when their _light_ at the alehouse, to use their own cant expression, was
+out. To protect himself, he stood by the pay-table on Saturday night, and
+collected enough from their wages to cover the sums for which he had made
+himself responsible, amounting sometimes to as much as thirty shillings a
+week. The loan of his credit in this way and his humor gave him an assured
+standing in the composing-room. On the other hand, his steadiness--for he
+never, he says, made a St. Monday--recommended him to the favor of his
+master; and his uncommon quickness in composing enabled him to secure the
+higher compensation which was paid for what would now be termed "rush
+work." His situation was at this time very agreeable and his mind became
+intently fixed upon saving as much of his wages as he could.
+
+Finding that his lodgings in Little Britain were rather remote from his
+work, he obtained others in Duke Street, opposite the Romish Chapel, with a
+widow, who had been bred a Protestant, but had been converted to
+Catholicism by her husband, whose memory she deeply revered. It is a
+pleasing face that looks out at us from the portrait painted of her by
+Franklin in the _Autobiography_. She
+
+ had lived much among people of distinction, and knew a
+ thousand anecdotes of them as far back as the time of
+ Charles the Second. She was lame in her knees with the
+ gout, and, therefore, seldom stirred out of her room,
+ so sometimes wanted company; and hers was so highly
+ amusing to me, that I was sure to spend an evening with
+ her whenever she desired it. Our supper was only half
+ an anchovy each, on a very little strip of bread and
+ butter, and half a pint of ale between us; but the
+ entertainment was in her conversation. My always
+ keeping good hours, and giving little trouble in the
+ family, made her unwilling to part with me; so that,
+ when I talk'd of a lodging I had heard of, nearer my
+ business, for two shillings a week, which, intent as I
+ now was on saving money, made some difference, she bid
+ me not think of it, for she would abate me two
+ shillings a week for the future, so I remained with her
+ at one shilling and six pence as long as I staid in
+ London.
+
+It was in the garret of this house that the nun mentioned by us in
+connection with the religious opinions of Franklin passed her secluded
+life.
+
+It was while he resided here that Wygate, a fellow-printer, made a proposal
+to him that, if accepted, might have given a different direction to his
+career. Drawn to Benjamin, who had taught him how to swim, by common
+intellectual tastes, and by the admiration excited in him by Benjamin's
+vigor and agility as a swimmer, he suggested to the latter that they should
+travel all over Europe together, and support themselves as they went by the
+exercise of their handicraft. Benjamin was disposed to adopt the
+suggestion, but, when he mentioned it to his friend, Mr. Denham, upon whom
+he was in the habit of calling, the latter disapproved of it, and advised
+him to dismiss every thought from his mind except that of returning to
+Pennsylvania, which he was about to do himself. Nay more, he told Benjamin
+that he expected to take over a large amount of merchandise with him, and
+to open a store in Philadelphia; and he offered to employ Benjamin as his
+clerk to keep his books, when the latter had acquired a sufficient
+knowledge of bookkeeping under his instruction, copy his letters, and
+attend to the store. In addition, he promised that, as soon as Benjamin
+should have the requisite experience, he would promote him by sending him
+with a cargo of bread-stuffs to the West Indies, and would, moreover,
+procure profitable commissions for him from others, and, if Benjamin made a
+success of these opportunities, establish him in life handsomely. The
+proposal was accepted by Benjamin. He was tired of London, remembered with
+pleasure the happy months spent by him in Pennsylvania, and was desirous of
+seeing it again. He agreed, therefore, at once, to become Mr. Denham's
+clerk at an annual salary of fifty pounds, Pennsylvania money. This was
+less than he was earning at the time as a compositor, but Mr. Denham's
+offer held out the prospect of a better future on the whole to him.
+
+After entering into this agreement, Benjamin supposed that he was done with
+printing forever. During the interval preceding the departure of Mr. Denham
+and himself for America, he went about with his employer, when he was
+purchasing goods, saw that the goods were packed properly for shipment, and
+performed other helpful offices. After the stock of goods had been all
+safely stored on shipboard, he was, to his surprise, sent for by Sir
+William Wyndham, who had heard of his swimming exploits, and who offered to
+pay him generously, if he would teach his two sons, who were about to
+travel, how to swim; but the two youths had not yet come to town, and
+Benjamin did not know just when he would sail; so he was compelled to
+decline the invitation. The offer of Sir William, however, made him feel
+that he might earn a good deal of money, were he to remain in England and
+open a swimming school, and the reflection forced itself upon his attention
+so strongly that he tells us in the _Autobiography_ that, if Sir William
+had approached him earlier, he would probably not have returned to America
+so soon.
+
+He left Gravesend for Philadelphia on July 23, 1726, after having been in
+London for about eighteen months. During the greater part of this time, he
+had worked hard, and spent but little money upon himself except in seeing
+plays and for books. It was Ralph who had kept him straitened by borrowing
+sums from him amounting in the whole to about twenty-seven pounds. "I had
+by no means improv'd my fortune," Franklin tells us in the _Autobiography_,
+"but I had picked up some very ingenious acquaintance, whose conversation
+was of great advantage to me; and I had read considerably."[7]
+
+After a long voyage, he was again in Philadelphia, and Keith was now a
+private citizen. When Benjamin met him on the street, he showed a little
+shame at the sight of his dupe, but he passed on without saying anything.
+Keimer seemed to have a flourishing business. He had moved into a better
+house, and had a shop well supplied with stationery, plenty of type, and a
+number of hands, though none of them were efficient.
+
+Mr. Denham opened a store in Water Street, and the merchandise brought over
+with him was placed in it. Benjamin gave his diligent attention to the
+business, studied accounts, and was in a little while an expert salesman.
+But then came one of those sudden strokes of misfortune, which remind us on
+what perfidious foundations all human hopes rest. Beginning with his
+relations to Mr. Denham, Franklin narrates the circumstances in these
+words:
+
+ We lodg'd and boarded together; he counsell'd me as a
+ father, having a sincere regard for me. I respected and
+ loved him, and we might have gone on together very
+ happy, but, in the beginning of February, 1726/7, when
+ I had just pass'd my twenty-first year, we both were
+ taken ill. My distemper was a pleurisy, which very
+ nearly carried me off. I suffered a good deal, gave up
+ the point in my own mind, and was rather disappointed
+ when I found myself recovering, regretting, in some
+ degree, that I must now, some time or other, have all
+ that disagreeable work to do over again. I forget what
+ his distemper was; it held him a long time, and at
+ length carried him off. He left me a small legacy in a
+ nuncupative will, as a token of his kindness for me,
+ and he left me once more to the wide world; for the
+ store was taken into the care of his executors, and my
+ employment under him ended.
+
+Franklin did have all that disagreeable work to do over again, for it was
+of a pleuritic abscess that he died in the end. Of Mr. Denham we cannot
+take our leave without drawing upon the _Autobiography_ for an incident
+which shows that he was one of the many good men whose friendship was given
+so generously to Franklin. He was at one time a merchant at Bristol, and
+failed in business. After compounding with his numerous creditors, he
+migrated to America where he made a fortune in a few years. While he was
+in England with Benjamin, he invited his former creditors to an
+entertainment, and, when they were all seated, thanked them for the easy
+terms on which they had compromised their claims against him. Duly thanked,
+they supposed that there was nothing in store for them but the ordinary
+hospitality of such an occasion, but, when each turned his plate over, he
+found under it an order upon a banker for the full amount, with interest,
+of the unpaid balance of the debt that he had released.
+
+At the time of Mr. Denham's death, Franklin had only recently arrived at
+the age of twenty-one. Holmes, his brother-in-law, now urged him to return
+to his trade, and Keimer offered him a liberal yearly wage to take charge
+of his printing-office, so that he himself might have more time for his
+stationery business. Franklin had heard a bad character of Keimer in London
+from Keimer's wife and her friends, and he was reluctant to have anything
+more to do with him; so much so that he endeavored to secure employment as
+a merchant's clerk, but, being unable to do so, he closed with Keimer.
+
+ I found in his house [says the _Autobiography_] these
+ hands: Hugh Meredith, a Welsh Pennsilvanian, thirty
+ years of age, bred to country work; honest, sensible,
+ had a great deal of solid observation, was something of
+ a reader, but given to drink. Stephen Potts, a young
+ countryman of full age, bred to the same, of uncommon
+ natural parts, and great wit and humour, but a little
+ idle. These he had agreed with at extream low wages per
+ week, to be rais'd a shilling every three months, as
+ they would deserve by improving in their business; and
+ the expectation of these high wages, to come on
+ hereafter, was what he had drawn them in with. Meredith
+ was to work at press, Potts at book-binding, which he,
+ by agreement, was to teach them, though he knew neither
+ one nor t'other. John,--a wild Irishman, brought up to
+ no business, whose service, for four years, Keimer had
+ purchased from the captain of a ship; he, too, was to
+ be made a pressman. George Webb, an Oxford scholar,
+ whose time for four years he had likewise bought,
+ intending him for a compositor, of whom more presently;
+ and David Harry, a country boy, whom he had taken
+ apprentice.
+
+George Webb is later described by Franklin as being lively, witty,
+good-natured and a pleasant companion, but idle, thoughtless, and imprudent
+to the last degree. While a student at Oxford, he had become possessed with
+the desire to see London and be a player. Yielding to this impulse, he
+walked outside of Oxford, hid his gown in a furze bush, and strode on to
+London where he fell into bad company, spent all his money, pawned his
+clothes and lacked bread; having failed to secure an opening as a player.
+While in this situation, he was induced by his necessities to bind himself
+to go over to America as an indentured servant, and this he did without
+ever writing a line to his friends to let them know what had become of him.
+John, the Irishman, soon absconded. With the rest of Keimer's awkward
+squad, Franklin quickly formed very agreeable relations, all the more so
+because they had found Keimer incapable of teaching them, but now found
+that Franklin taught them something daily. By Keimer, too, Franklin was for
+a time treated with great civility and apparent regard. The selfish reasons
+for such treatment were patent enough.
+
+ Our printing-house [declares the _Autobiography_] often
+ wanted sorts, and there was no letter-founder in
+ America; I had seen types cast at James's in London,
+ but without much attention to the manner; however, I
+ now contrived a mould, made use of the letters we had
+ as puncheons, struck the matrices in lead, and thus
+ supply'd in a pretty tolerable way all deficiencies. I
+ also engrav'd several things on occasion; I made the
+ ink; I was warehousman, and everything, and, in short,
+ quite a fac-totum.
+
+Keimer was simply using Franklin to lick his rough cubs into shape. The
+value of Franklin's services declined every day as his other hands became
+more efficient, and, when he paid him his wages for the second quarter, he
+let him know that he thought that he should submit to a reduction. By
+degrees, he grew less civil, assumed a more imperious air, became
+fault-finding and captious, and seemed ready for an outbreak. Nevertheless,
+Franklin preserved his patience, thinking that Keimer's demeanor was partly
+due to his embarrassed circumstances. But a very small spark was enough to
+produce an explosion. Startled one day by a loud noise near the
+court-house, Franklin put his head out of the window of the printing-office
+to see what was the matter. Just then, Keimer, who was in the street,
+looked up and saw him, and called out to him in vociferous and angry tones
+to mind his business, adding some reproachful words that nettled Franklin
+the more because they were heard by the whole neighborhood. Keimer made
+things still worse by coming up into the printing-office and continuing his
+rebuke. High words passed between the two, and Keimer gave Franklin the
+quarter's notice to quit, to which he was entitled, saying as he did it
+that he wished he could give him a shorter one. Franklin replied that the
+wish was unnecessary, and, taking up his hat, walked out of doors,
+requesting Meredith, as he left, to take care of some of his things that
+remained behind him, and to bring them to his lodgings. This Meredith, who
+had a great regard for Franklin, and regretted very much the thought of
+being in the printing-office without him, did the evening of the same day,
+and he availed himself of the opportunity to dissuade Franklin from
+returning to New England. Keimer, he said, was in debt for all that he
+possessed, his creditors were beginning to be uneasy, and he managed his
+shop wretchedly, often selling without profit for ready money, and
+frequently giving credit without keeping an account. He must, therefore,
+fail, which would make an opening for Franklin. To this reasoning Franklin
+objected his want of means. Meredith then informed him that his father had
+a high opinion of him, and, from some things, that his father had said to
+him, he was sure that, if Franklin would enter into a partnership with him,
+the elder Meredith would advance enough money to set them going in
+business. His time with Keimer, he further said, would be out in the
+spring. Before then, they might procure their press and type from London.
+"I am sensible," added Meredith, "I am no workman; if you like it, your
+skill in the business shall be set against the stock I furnish, and we will
+share the profits equally."
+
+Franklin acceded to the proposal, and Meredith's father ratified it all the
+more willingly as he saw that Franklin had a great deal of influence with
+his son, had prevailed on him to abstain from dram-drinking for long
+periods of time, and might be able to induce him to give up the miserable
+habit entirely when they came to form the close relations of partners with
+each other. An inventory of what was needed for the business was
+accordingly given to the father; an order for it was placed by him in the
+hands of a merchant; and the things were sent for. Until they arrived, the
+partnership was to be kept secret, and Franklin was to seek employment from
+Bradford. Bradford, however, was not in need of a hand, and for some days
+Franklin was condemned to idleness. But opportunely enough the chance
+presented itself to Keimer just at this time of being employed to print
+some paper money for the Province of New Jersey which would require cuts
+and type that nobody but Franklin was clever enough to execute or make.
+Fearing that Bradford might employ him, and secure the work, Keimer sent
+Franklin word that old friends should not be estranged by a few passionate
+words, and that he hoped Franklin would return to him. Influenced by the
+desire of Meredith to derive still further benefit from his instruction,
+Franklin did return to Keimer, and entered upon relations with him that
+proved more satisfactory than any that he had had with him for some time
+past. Keimer secured the New Jersey contract.
+
+ The New Jersey jobb was obtain'd [the _Autobiography_
+ states], I contriv'd a copperplate press for it, the
+ first that had been seen in the country; I cut several
+ ornaments and checks for the bills. We went together to
+ Burlington, where I executed the whole to satisfaction;
+ and he received so large a sum for the work as to be
+ enabled thereby to keep his head much longer above
+ water.
+
+One of the attractive things about the youth of Franklin is the extent to
+which his love of reading and intellectual superiority gave him a standing
+with distinguished or prominent men much older than himself. In the case of
+Sir William Keith, the standing produced nothing but deception and
+disappointment, but, in the case of Cotton Mather, it supplied Franklin
+with one of those moral lessons for which his mind had such an eager
+appetency.
+
+ The last time I saw your father [he wrote late in life
+ to Samuel Mather, the son of Cotton] was in the
+ beginning of 1724, when I visited him after my first
+ trip to Pennsylvania. He received me in his library,
+ and on my taking leave showed me a shorter way out of
+ the house through a narrow passage, which was crossed
+ by a beam overhead. We were still talking as I
+ withdrew, he accompanying me behind, and I turning
+ partly toward him, when he said hastily, _Stoop,
+ stoop!_ I did not understand him, till I felt my head
+ hit against the beam. He was a man that never missed
+ any occasion of giving instruction, and upon this he
+ said to me, "_You are young, and have the world before
+ you_; STOOP _as you go through it, and you will miss
+ many hard thumps_." This advice, thus beat into my
+ head, has frequently been of use to me; and I often
+ think of it, when I see pride mortified, and misfortune
+ brought upon people by their carrying their heads too
+ high.
+
+Gov. William Burnet, of New York, the son of the famous English Bishop of
+that name, was another conspicuous personage to whose friendly notice the
+youth was brought. Shortly after the apt admonition of Cotton Mather, when
+Franklin was on his return to Philadelphia, the Governor heard from the
+captain of the vessel, by which Franklin had been conveyed to New York,
+that a young man, one of his passengers, had a great many books with him,
+and asked the captain to bring this young man to see him. The Governor
+loved books and lovers of books.
+
+ I waited upon him accordingly [says Franklin] and
+ should have taken Collins with me but that he was not
+ sober. The gov'r. treated me with great civility,
+ show'd me his library, which was a very large one, and
+ we had a good deal of conversation about books and
+ authors. This was the second governor who had done me
+ the honour to take notice of me; which, to a poor boy
+ like me, was very pleasing.
+
+The happy consequences to Ralph and himself of the respect, shown him by
+Col. French at New Castle, and the lasting sense of gratitude that he soon
+afterwards excited in Andrew Hamilton have just been mentioned. This
+capacity for arresting the attention of men of years and influence now made
+its mark in New Jersey. Some of the principal men of the province were
+appointed by the Assembly to oversee the working of Keimer's press, and to
+take care that no more bills were printed than were authorized by law. They
+discharged this duty by turns, and usually each one, when he came, brought
+a friend or so with him for company. In this way, Franklin was introduced
+to a considerable group of persons who invited him to their houses,
+introduced him to their friends, and showed him much attention. Keimer, on
+the other hand, perhaps, Franklin surmises, because his mind had not been
+so much improved by reading as his, was a little neglected, though the
+master. The explanation given by Franklin for this neglect would seem a
+rather inadequate one when we recollect that in the same context he sums up
+the character of Keimer in these trenchant words: "In truth, he was an odd
+fish; ignorant of common life, fond of rudely opposing receiv'd opinions,
+slovenly to extream dirtiness, enthusiastic in some points of religion, and
+a little knavish withal." Like St. Sebastian, poor Keimer will never be
+drawn without that arrow in his side.
+
+For three months Franklin remained at Burlington, making printer's ink
+money. At the end of that time, he could reckon among his friends Judge
+Allen, Samuel Bustill, the Secretary of the Province, Isaac Pearson, Joseph
+Cooper, and several of the Smiths, members of the Assembly, and Isaac
+Decow, the surveyor-general.
+
+ The latter [he says] was a shrewd, sagacious old man,
+ who told me that he began for himself, when young, by
+ wheeling clay, for the brickmakers, learned to write
+ after he was of age, carri'd the chain for surveyors,
+ who taught him surveying and he had now by his
+ industry, acquir'd a good estate; and says he, "I
+ foresee that you will soon work this man out of his
+ business, and make a fortune in it at Philadelphia." He
+ had not then the least intimation of my intention to
+ set up there or anywhere. These friends were afterwards
+ of great use to me, as I occasionally was to some of
+ them. They all continued their regard for me as long as
+ they lived.
+
+Shortly after the completion of the New Jersey contract, the new type,
+which had been ordered for Franklin and Meredith from London, arrived at
+Philadelphia. With Keimer's consent, the two friends left him before he
+knew of its arrival. They rented a house near the market, and, to reduce
+the rent of twenty-four pounds a year, they sublet a part of it to Thomas
+Godfrey, who was to board them. They had scarcely made ready for business
+when George House, an acquaintance of Franklin, brought to them a
+countryman who had inquired of him on the street where he could find a
+printer. By this countryman the firm was paid for the work that he gave
+them the sum of five shillings, and this sum, Franklin declares in the
+_Autobiography_, being their first fruits, and coming in at a time when
+they had expended all their available cash in preparing for business,
+awakened more pleasure in him than any crown that he had ever since earned,
+and, besides, made him prompter than he, perhaps, would otherwise have been
+to help beginners. Whether there were any "boomers," to use the cant term
+of to-day, in Philadelphia at that time the _Autobiography_ does not tell
+us, but there was, to use another cant term of to-day, at least one
+"knocker."
+
+ There are croakers in every country [says Franklin in
+ the _Autobiography_] always boding its ruin. Such a one
+ then lived in Philadelphia: a person of note, an
+ elderly man, with a wise look and a very grave manner
+ of speaking; his name was Samuel Mickle. This
+ gentleman, a stranger to me, stopt one day at my door,
+ and asked me if I was the young man who had lately
+ opened a new printing-house. Being answered in the
+ affirmative, he said he was sorry for me, because it
+ was an expensive undertaking, and the expense would be
+ lost; for Philadelphia was a sinking place, the people
+ already half bankrupts, or near being so; all
+ appearances to the contrary, such as new buildings and
+ the rise of rents, being to his certain knowledge
+ fallacious, for they were, in fact, among the things
+ that would soon ruin us. And he gave me such a detail
+ of misfortunes now existing, or that were soon to
+ exist, that he left me half melancholy. Had I known him
+ before I engaged in this business, probably I never
+ should have done it. This man continued to live in this
+ decaying place, and to declaim in the same strain,
+ refusing for many years to buy a house there, because
+ all was going to destruction; and at last I had the
+ pleasure of seeing him give five times as much for one
+ as he might have bought it for when he first began his
+ croaking.
+
+The outlook of Franklin was a cheerful, optimistic one, and he had no
+sympathy with pessimists of any sort. Even his civic interests came back to
+him in personal profit, since, aside from its public aims, the Junto was a
+most useful aid to the business of Franklin and Meredith. All its members
+made a point of soliciting patronage for the new printing firm. Breintnal,
+for instance, obtained for it the privilege of printing forty sheets of the
+history which the Quakers published of their sect; the rest having gone to
+Keimer. The price was low, and the job cost Franklin and Meredith much hard
+labor. The work, Franklin tells us, with the fond minuteness with which a
+man is disposed to dwell upon the events of his early life, was a folio, of
+_pro patria_ size, and in pica, with long primer notes. Franklin composed
+it at the rate of a sheet a day, and Meredith ran off what was composed at
+the press. It was often eleven at night and later, when Franklin had
+completed his distribution for the work of the next day, for now and then
+he was set back by other business calls. So resolved, however, was he never
+to default on his sheet a day that one night, when one of his forms was
+accidentally broken up, and two pages of his work reduced to pi, he
+immediately distributed and composed it over again before he went to bed,
+though he had supposed, when the accident occurred, that a hard day's task
+had ended. This industry brought the firm into favorable notice, and
+especially was Franklin gratified by what Dr. Baird had to say about it.
+When the new printing-office was mentioned at the Merchants' Every Night
+Club, and the opinion was generally expressed that three printing-offices
+could not be maintained in Philadelphia, he took issue with this view; "For
+the industry of that Franklin," he said, "is superior to anything I ever
+saw of the kind; I see him still at work when I go home from club, and he
+is at work again before his neighbors are out of bed." This statement led
+one of the persons who heard it to offer to furnish the new firm with
+stationery; but it was not yet ready to open a stationery shop.
+
+About this time, George Webb, who had bought his time of Keimer, with the
+aid of one of his female friends, solicited from the firm employment as a
+journeyman. Its situation was not such as to warrant his employment, but
+Franklin indiscreetly let him know as a secret that he expected to
+establish a newspaper soon; when he might have work for him. Bradford's
+newspaper, _The American Mercury_, he told Webb, was a paltry thing, stupid
+and wretchedly managed, and yet was profitable. "Three can keep a Secret if
+two are dead," is a saying of Poor Richard. It would have been well if
+Franklin on this occasion had been mindful of the wisdom in which it was
+conceived. He requested Webb not to mention what he said; but, as is often
+true under such circumstances, it would have been more prudent for him to
+have asked him to mention it. Webb did tell Keimer, and he immediately
+published the prospectus of a newspaper on which Webb was to be employed.
+This was resented by Franklin, and, to counteract the scheme, he and his
+friend Breintnal wrote some clever little essays for Bradford's newspaper
+under the title of the "Busy Body." In that dull sheet, they were, to
+borrow Shakespeare's image, like bright metal on sullen ground. Public
+attention was fixed upon them, and Keimer's prospectus was overlooked. He
+founded his newspaper nevertheless, and conducted it for nine months under
+the prolix name of the _Universal Instructor in all Arts and Sciences and
+Pennsylvania Gazette_. It never had, at any time, more than ninety
+subscribers, and, at the end of the nine months, in 1729, Franklin, who had
+for some time had his arms extended to catch it when it fell, bought it at
+a trifling price. Under his ownership, the cumbrous name of the paper was
+cut down simply to that of the _Pennsylvania Gazette_, and the absurd plan
+formed by Keimer of publishing an instalment of Chambers' Universal
+Dictionary of all the Arts and Sciences in every issue was abandoned for a
+strain of original comment and unctuous humor which made the _Gazette_ in
+popularity second only to _Poor Richard's Almanac_. Under Franklin's hands,
+the paper assumed from the beginning a better typographical appearance than
+any previously known to the Province, and some spirited observations by him
+on a controversy between Governor Burnet and the Massachusetts Assembly,
+which called into play his aversion to political tyranny, aroused so much
+public attention that all the leading citizens of the Province became
+subscribers. Many other subscribers followed in their train, and the
+subscriptions went on continually increasing until in a few years, to quote
+Franklin's own words, the _Gazette_ proved extremely profitable to him.
+
+ This was one of the first good effects of my having
+ learnt a little to scribble [he tells us], another was
+ that the leading men, seeing a newspaper now in the
+ hands of one who could also handle a pen, thought it
+ convenient to oblige and encourage me. Bradford still
+ printed the Votes and laws, and other publick business.
+ He had printed an address of the House to the Governor,
+ in a coarse, blundering manner; we reprinted it
+ elegantly and correctly, and sent one to every member.
+ They were sensible of the difference: it strengthened
+ the hands of our friends in the House, and they voted
+ us their printers for the year ensuing.
+
+Among these friends, was the grateful Andrew Hamilton.
+
+The young printer had pushed himself forward successfully enough to make
+his competition keenly felt by both Keimer and Bradford. But now
+unexpectedly, when all the omens were so fair, he found himself on the
+brink of ruin. For some time past, he had faithfully observed his
+obligations to Meredith, though his friends lamented his connection with
+him. Meredith was no compositor, and but a poor pressman, and, if he had
+been the best compositor or pressman in the world, he would have been a
+poor partner, for he was seldom sober. While Franklin was bearing him along
+on his back as well as he could, Meredith's father found himself unable to
+advance for the firm the second instalment of one hundred pounds, necessary
+to complete the payment for its printing outfit. The result was that the
+merchant, who had sold it to the firm, grew impatient, and sued them all.
+They gave bail, but realized that, if the money could not be raised in
+time, judgment and execution would follow, and that the outfit would be
+sold at half price. Then it was, to recall the simple and affecting words
+of Franklin himself in the _Autobiography_, that two true friends, William
+Coleman and Robert Grace, whose kindness he had never forgotten, and never
+would forget, while he could remember anything, came to him separately,
+unknown to each other, and, without any application from him, each offered
+to advance to him all the money that should be necessary to enable him to
+acquire the whole business of the firm, if that should be practicable.[8]
+They did not like the idea of his continuing to be a partner of Meredith,
+who, they said, was often seen drunk in the streets, and playing at low
+games in alehouses to the discredit of the firm. Distressing, however, as
+his situation was, Franklin appears to have acted with a high-minded regard
+to the proprieties of the occasion. He told Coleman and Grace that, so long
+as there was any prospect that the Merediths might live up to their
+agreement, he was under too great obligations to them for what they had
+done, and would do, if they could, to suggest a dissolution of the
+partnership, but that, if they finally defaulted in the performance of
+their part of the agreement, and the partnership was dissolved, he would
+feel at liberty to accept the assistance of his friends.
+
+But he was astute as well as conscientious. After the matter had rested in
+this position for some time, he said to Meredith:
+
+ Perhaps your father is dissatisfied at the part you
+ have undertaken in this affair of ours, and is
+ unwilling to advance for you and me what he would for
+ you alone. If that is the case, tell me, and I will
+ resign the whole to you, and go about my business.
+
+ No, said he, my father has really been disappointed,
+ and is really unable; and I am unwilling to distress
+ him farther. I see this is a business I am not fit for.
+ I was bred a farmer, and it was a folly in me to come
+ to town, and put myself, at thirty years of age, an
+ apprentice to learn a new trade. Many of our Welsh
+ people are going to settle in North Carolina, where
+ land is cheap. I am inclin'd to go with them, and
+ follow my old employment. You may find friends to
+ assist you. If you will take the debts of the company
+ upon you; return to my father the hundred pound he has
+ advanced; pay my little personal debts, and give me
+ thirty pounds and a new saddle, I will relinquish the
+ partnership, and leave the whole in your hands.
+
+Franklin agreed to this proposal. It was made the basis of a contract which
+was immediately signed and sealed. Meredith received the thirty pounds and
+the saddle, and soon afterwards went off to North Carolina, whence he sent
+to Franklin the next year two long letters containing the best account of
+the climate, soil, husbandry and other features of that Province that had
+been given up to that time. "For in those matters," adds Franklin, with his
+usual generosity, "he was very judicious. I printed them in the papers, and
+they gave great satisfaction to the publick."
+
+After the departure of Meredith for North Carolina, Franklin turned to the
+two friends who had proffered their help. He accepted from each of them,
+because he would not give an unkind preference to either, one half of the
+money he needed, paid off the debts of the partnership, advertised its
+dissolution and went on with the business in his own name. This was on July
+14, 1730.
+
+Seasonably for him, there was a loud cry among the people at this time for
+a more abundant issue of paper money. The wealthier members of the
+community were all against the proposition. They feared that an addition to
+the existing paper circulation would depreciate, as it had done in New
+York, and that the debts due to them would be discharged by payment in a
+medium worth less than its nominal value. The question was discussed by the
+Junto, and Franklin argued in favor of the issue; being persuaded that the
+prosperity of the Province had been very much promoted by a small previous
+issue of paper money in 1723. He remembered, he says in the
+_Autobiography_, that, when he first walked about the streets of
+Philadelphia, eating his roll, most of the houses on Walnut Street, between
+Second and Front Streets, and many besides, on Chestnut and other streets,
+were placarded, "To be let"; which made him feel as if the inhabitants of
+Philadelphia were deserting the town one after the other; whereas at the
+time of this discussion all the old houses were occupied, and many new ones
+were in process of construction. Not content with presenting his views on
+the subject to the Junto, he wrote an anonymous pamphlet on it entitled
+_The Nature and Necessity of a Paper Currency_. This pamphlet was well
+received by the common people, he tells us, but met with the disfavor of
+the rich, because it swelled the clamor for more money. Their opposition,
+however, for lack of writers, competent to refute its reasoning,
+languished, and the issue was authorized by the Assembly. Franklin's
+friends in the house rewarded him for his part in the controversy over it
+by employing him to print the money. "A very profitable jobb and a great
+help to me," remarks Franklin complacently in the _Autobiography_, and he
+adds, "This was another advantage gain'd by my being able to write."
+
+Through the influence of his friend Hamilton, he likewise secured the
+contract for printing the paper money, issued by the Three Lower Counties
+on the Delaware. "Another profitable jobb as I then thought it," he says,
+"small things appearing great to those in small circumstances." Hamilton
+also procured for him the privilege of printing the laws and legislative
+proceedings of the Three Lower Counties, and he retained it as long as he
+remained in the printing business. Now, for the first time, he felt that
+his position was assured enough for him to open up a small stationery shop,
+where he sold blanks of all sorts, paper, parchment, chapmen's books and
+other such wares. The blanks he believed to be "the correctest that ever
+appear'd among us, being assisted in that by my friend Breintnal." The
+demands on his printing-office, too, increased to such a degree that he
+employed a compositor, one Whitemarsh, an excellent workman, whom he had
+known in London, and undertook the care of an apprentice, a son of the
+ever-to-be-lamented Aquila Rose. Soon he was prospering to such an extent
+that he could begin to pay off the debt that he owed on his printing
+outfit. These are the words in which he himself described his situation at
+this time:
+
+ In order to secure my credit and character as a
+ tradesman, I took care not only to be in _reality_
+ industrious and frugal, but to avoid all appearances to
+ the contrary. I drest plainly; I was seen at no places
+ of idle diversion. I never went out a fishing or
+ shooting; a book, indeed, sometimes debauch'd me from
+ my work, but that was seldom, snug, and gave no
+ scandal; and, to show that I was not above my business,
+ I sometimes brought home the paper I purchas'd at the
+ stores thro' the streets on a wheel-barrow. Thus being
+ esteem'd an industrious, thriving young man, and paying
+ duly for what I bought, the merchants who imported
+ stationery solicited my custom; others proposed
+ supplying me with books, and I went on swimmingly. In
+ the meantime, Keimer's credit and business declining
+ daily, he was at last forc'd to sell his printing-house
+ to satisfy his creditors. He went to Barbadoes, and
+ there lived some years in very poor circumstances.
+
+For some time before Keimer went off to Barbadoes, he had been in the
+condition of an unsound tree, which still stands but with a dry rot at its
+heart momentarily presaging its fall. As far back as Issue No. 27 of _The
+Universal Instructor in all Arts and Sciences_, and _Pennsylvania Gazette_,
+he had found it necessary to explain a week's delay in the publication of
+that issue by stating to the public that he had been awakened, when fast
+asleep in bed, about eleven at night, over-tired with the labor of the day,
+and taken away from his dwelling by a writ and summons; it being basely and
+confidently given out that he was that very night about to run away, though
+there was not the least color or ground for such a vile report. He was, he
+further declared, "the shuttlecock of fortune ... the very but for villany
+to shoot at, or the continued mark for slander and her imps to spit their
+venom upon." It was remarkable, he thought, that
+
+ a person of strict sincerity, refin'd justice, and
+ universal love to the whole creation, should for a
+ series of near twenty years, be the constant but of
+ slander, as to be three times ruin'd as a
+ master-printer, to be nine times in prison, one of
+ which was six years together, and often reduc'd to the
+ most wretched circumstances, hunted as a partridge upon
+ the mountains, and persecuted with the most abominable
+ lies the devil himself could invent or malice utter.
+
+It was but the old story of the man, who is dizzy, thinking that the whole
+world is spinning around.
+
+David Harry, Keimer's former apprentice, had also opened a printing-office
+in Philadelphia. When his enterprise was in its inception, Franklin
+regarded his rivalry with much uneasiness on account of his influential
+connections. He accordingly proposed a partnership to him, a proposal
+which, fortunately for the former, was disdainfully refused. "He was very
+proud," says Franklin, "dress'd like a gentleman, liv'd expensively, took
+much diversion and pleasure abroad, ran in debt, and neglected his
+business; upon which, all business left him." The result was that Harry had
+to follow Keimer to Barbadoes, taking his printing outfit with him. Here
+the former apprentice employed the former master as a journeyman; they
+frequently quarrelled with each other; Harry steadily fell behind, and was
+compelled to sell his type, and to return to his country work in
+Pennsylvania. The purchaser of the outfit employed Keimer to operate it,
+but, in a few years more, Keimer was transported by death out of the world,
+which for a considerable part of his life he had seen only through the
+gratings of a jail.
+
+The departure of Harry left Franklin without any competitor except his old
+one, Bradford, who was too rich and easy-going to actively push for
+business. But, in one respect, Bradford was a formidable rival. He was the
+Postmaster at Philadelphia, and his newspaper flourished at the expense of
+the _Gazette_ upon the public impression that his connection with the
+Post-office gave him facilities for gathering news and for circulating
+advertisements that Franklin did not enjoy.
+
+To this period belong Franklin's treaty for a wife with enough means to
+discharge the balance of one hundred pounds still due on his printing
+outfit, and his final recoil to Deborah whose industry and frugality were
+far more than the pecuniary equivalent of one hundred pounds. After his
+marriage, he was, if anything, even more industrious than before, and this
+is what he has to say about his habits and employments during the period
+that immediately followed that event:
+
+ Reading was the only amusement I allow'd myself. I
+ spent no time in taverns, games, or frolicks of any
+ kind; and my industry in my business continu'd as
+ indefatigable as it was necessary. I was indebted for
+ my printing-house; I had a young family coming on to be
+ educated, and I had to contend with for business two
+ printers, who were established in the place before me.
+ My circumstances, however, grew daily easier. My
+ original habits of frugality continuing, and my father
+ having among his instructions to me when a boy,
+ frequently repeated a proverb of Solomon, "Seest thou a
+ man diligent in his calling, he shall stand before
+ kings, he shall not stand before mean men," I from
+ thence considered industry as a means of obtaining
+ wealth and distinction, which encourag'd me, tho' I did
+ not think that I should ever literally _stand before_
+ kings, which, however, has since happened; for I have
+ stood before _five_, and even had the honour of sitting
+ down with one, the King of Denmark, to dinner.
+
+Another passage in the _Autobiography_ tells us just what degree of
+frugality Franklin and Deborah practiced at this stage of his business
+career.
+
+ We kept no idle servants [he says], our table was plain
+ and simple, our furniture of the cheapest. For
+ instance, my breakfast was a long time bread and milk
+ (no tea), and I ate it out of a twopenny earthen
+ porringer, with a pewter spoon. But mark how luxury
+ will enter families, and make a progress, in spite of
+ principle: being call'd one morning to breakfast, I
+ found it in a China bowl, with a spoon of silver! They
+ had been bought for me without my knowledge by my wife,
+ and had cost her the enormous sum of three-and-twenty
+ shillings, for which she had no other excuse or apology
+ to make, but that she thought _her_ husband deserv'd a
+ silver spoon and China bowl as well as any of his
+ neighbors. This was the first appearance of plate and
+ China in our house, which afterward, in a course of
+ years, as our wealth increased, augmented gradually to
+ several hundred pounds in value.
+
+In 1732 was first published, at fivepence a copy, Franklin's famous almanac
+known as _Poor Richard's Almanac_, which for twenty-five years warmed the
+homes of Pennsylvania with the ruddy glow of its wit, humor and wisdom. His
+endeavor in conducting it he tells us was to make it both entertaining and
+useful, and he was so successful that he reaped considerable profit from
+the nearly ten thousand copies of it that he annually sold. Hundreds of the
+inhabitants of Pennsylvania, who read nothing else, read the _Almanac_. Its
+infectious humor, its coarse pleasantry, its proverbs and sayings so much
+wiser than the wisdom, and so much wittier than the wit of any single
+individual, made the name of Franklin a common household word from one end
+of Pennsylvania to another, and, when finally strained off into Father
+Abraham's speech, established his reputation as a kindly humorist and moral
+teacher throughout the world.
+
+In somewhat the same spirit of instruction as well as entertainment was the
+_Gazette_, too, conducted.
+
+ I considered my newspaper, also [says Franklin], as
+ another means of communicating instruction, and in that
+ view frequently reprinted in it extracts from the
+ _Spectator_, and other moral writers; and sometimes
+ publish'd little pieces of my own, which had been first
+ compos'd for reading in our Junto.
+
+The caution exercised by the _Gazette_ in shutting out malice and personal
+abuse from its columns is the subject of one of the weightiest series of
+statements in the _Autobiography_.
+
+ In the conduct of my newspaper [Franklin declares] I
+ carefully excluded all libelling and personal abuse,
+ which is of late years become so disgraceful to our
+ country. Whenever I was solicited to insert anything
+ of that kind, and the writers pleaded, as they
+ generally did, the liberty of the press, and that a
+ newspaper was like a stage-coach, in which any one who
+ would pay had a right to a place, my answer was, that I
+ would print the piece separately if desired, and the
+ author might have as many copies as he pleased to
+ distribute himself, but that I would not take upon me
+ to spread his detraction; and that, having contracted
+ with my subscribers to furnish them with what might be
+ either useful or entertaining, I could not fill their
+ papers with private altercation, in which they had no
+ concern, without doing them manifest injustice. Now,
+ many of our printers make no scruple of gratifying the
+ malice of individuals by false accusations of the
+ fairest characters among ourselves, augmenting
+ animosity even to the producing of duels; and are,
+ moreover, so indiscreet as to print scurrilous
+ reflections on the government of neighboring states,
+ and even on the conduct of our best national allies,
+ which may be attended with the most pernicious
+ consequences. These things I mention as a caution to
+ young printers, and that they may be encouraged not to
+ pollute their presses and disgrace their profession by
+ such infamous practices, but refuse steadily, as they
+ may see by my example that such a course of conduct
+ will not, on the whole, be injurious to their
+ interests.
+
+By 1733 Franklin was sufficiently established in business to branch out
+still more. That year he sent one of his journeymen, Thomas Whitemarsh, to
+Charleston, South Carolina, where a printer was needed, under an agreement
+of partnership which was the prototype of most of the subsequent articles
+of copartnership formed by him with other printers under similar
+conditions; that is to say, he furnished the printing outfit, paid one
+third of the expenses, and received one third of the profits. The history
+of this partner gave Franklin an opportunity to moralize a little in the
+_Autobiography_ upon the importance of a knowledge of accounts rather than
+of music or dancing as a part of female education. The Carolina printer was
+a man of education and honest, but ignorant of accounts, and, though he
+made occasional remittances, Franklin could never get any account from him,
+nor any satisfactory statement of the condition of the partnership
+business. On his death, however, his widow, who had been born and bred in
+Holland, not only sent Franklin as clear a statement as was possible of the
+past transactions of the firm, but subsequently rendered him an exact
+account every quarter with the utmost punctuality, and, besides, managed
+the business with such success that she reared a family of children
+decently, and, upon the expiration of the copartnership, purchased the
+outfit from Franklin, and turned it over to her son.
+
+The success of the Carolina partnership encouraged Franklin to form
+partnerships with other journeymen of his, and by 1743 he had opened three
+printing-offices in three different colonies, and proposed to open a
+fourth, if he could find a suitable person to take charge of it. Others
+were opened by him later. Among the persons besides Whitemarsh, established
+by him at different times as printers, under one arrangement or another
+with himself, were Peter Timothy in South Carolina, Smith and Benjamin
+Mecom in Antigua, James Parker in New York, his brother in Rhode Island,
+Hall and Miller and Samuel Holland at Lancaster, and William Daniell at
+Kingston, Jamaica. Speaking of his partners in the _Autobiography_, he says
+of them:
+
+ Most of them did well, being enabled at the end of our
+ term, six years, to purchase the types of me and go on
+ working for themselves, by which means several families
+ were raised. Partnerships often finish in quarrels; but
+ I was happy in this, that mine were all carried on and
+ ended amicably, owing, I think, a good deal to the
+ precaution of having very explicitly settled, in our
+ articles, everything to be done by or expected from
+ each partner, so that there was nothing to dispute,
+ which precaution I would therefore recommend to all who
+ enter into partnerships; for, whatever esteem partners
+ may have for, and confidence in each other at the time
+ of the contract, little jealousies and disgusts may
+ arise, with ideas of inequality in the care and burden
+ of the business, etc., which are attended often with
+ breach of friendship and of the connection, perhaps
+ with lawsuits and other disagreeable consequences.
+
+Two other business enterprises of Franklin merit notice. He was the founder
+of the first newspaper in the United States to be published in a foreign
+tongue, namely, the _Philadelphische Zeitung_, which owed its origin to the
+large number of Germans who came over to Pennsylvania during the Colonial
+Period. He was also the founder of a monthly literary magazine which for
+some reason he does not mention in the _Autobiography_ at all. It was the
+second enterprise of the kind undertaken in America, and was known as _The
+General Magazine and Historical Chronicle for All the British Plantations
+in America_. To Franklin as a business man might aptly be applied the words
+of Emerson with respect to Guy:
+
+ Stream could not so perversely wind
+ But corn of Guy's was there to grind.
+
+One exception, however, appears to have been this magazine which lasted but
+a short time. It was ill-starred from the start. When Franklin was ready to
+spring it upon the public, he engaged John Webbe as its editor, but Webbe
+betrayed the project to Bradford, who at once announced that, a little
+later, a magazine would be offered to the public edited by Webbe, and
+published by himself. When the first number of Franklin's magazine came
+out, he stated that its publication was earlier than he had intended
+because of the faithless conduct of Webbe. This Webbe resented by charging
+Franklin, who was then Postmaster at Philadelphia, with shutting out
+Bradford's _Mercury_ from the post, but Franklin silenced his fire by
+stating and proving that he had had no choice in the matter, because he had
+been commanded by Postmaster-General Spottswood, on account of Bradford's
+failure as Postmaster at Philadelphia to account with him, to suffer no
+longer any of his newspapers or letters to be conveyed by post free of
+charge.
+
+The business of Franklin received another push forward with the political
+consequence which he acquired through the _Gazette_ and the influence of
+the Junto. In 1736, he was chosen Clerk of the General Assembly, and in the
+succeeding year he was appointed Postmaster at Philadelphia, in the place
+of Bradford, by Alexander Spottswood, who had been Governor of Virginia,
+and was then the Deputy Postmaster-General for America. The salary of the
+Postmastership was small, but, for the purposes of the _Gazette_, the
+office gave him the same advantage that Bradford had enjoyed, when he
+refused to allow that newspaper to be carried by his post-riders. The
+positions of the two men were now reversed, but Franklin was too
+magnanimous to remind Bradford, sternly, as he did Jemmy Read, that
+Fortune's Wheel is ever turning. "My old competitor's newspaper," he says,
+"declined proportionably, and I was satisfy'd without retaliating his
+refusal, while postmaster, to permit my papers being carried by the
+riders." Bradford had suffered, Franklin adds, "for his neglect in due
+accounting." And this gave him occasion to observe that regularity and
+clearness in rendering accounts and punctuality in making remittances are
+"the most powerful of all recommendations to new employments and increase
+of business."
+
+The office of Clerk of the Assembly also had its business value.
+
+ Besides the pay for the immediate service as clerk
+ [Franklin says] the place gave me a better opportunity
+ of keeping up an interest among the members, which
+ secur'd to me the business of printing the votes,
+ laws, paper money, and other occasional jobbs for the
+ public, that, on the whole, were very profitable.
+
+The first year that he came up for election the vote in his favor was
+unanimous, but the next year, while he was elected, it was only after a new
+member had made a long speech against him in the interest of another
+candidate. How Franklin conciliated the unfriendliness of this member is
+fully told in the _Autobiography_;
+
+ I therefore did not like the opposition of this new
+ member, who was a gentleman of fortune and education,
+ with talents that were likely to give him, in time,
+ great influence in the House, which, indeed, afterwards
+ happened. I did not, however, aim at gaining his favour
+ by paying any servile respect to him, but, after some
+ time, took this other method. Having heard that he had
+ in his library a certain very scarce and curious book,
+ I wrote a note to him, expressing my desire of perusing
+ that book, and requesting he would do me the favour of
+ lending it to me for a few days. He sent it
+ immediately, and I return'd it in about a week with
+ another note, expressing strongly my sense of the
+ favour. When we next met in the House, he spoke to me
+ (which he had never done before), and with great
+ civility; and he ever after manifested a readiness to
+ serve me on all occasions, so that we became great
+ friends, and our friendship continued to his death.
+ This is another instance of the truth of an old maxim I
+ had learned, which says, "_He that has once done you a
+ kindness will be more ready to do you another, than he
+ whom you yourself have obliged._" And it shows how much
+ more profitable it is prudently to remove, than to
+ resent, return, and continue inimical proceedings.
+
+The artifice practised by Franklin on this occasion has been condemned.
+What he really did, of course, was to use gratified vanity as a foil to
+mortified vanity. The possible consequences of the new member's hostility
+were too serious for him to say as Washington was in the habit of saying
+when he had a bad cold: "Let it go as it came." He knew that the malice was
+as shallow as the good will; and the alternatives were resentment,
+sycophancy, or a little subtlety. Under the circumstances, Franklin would
+not have been Franklin, if he had not elected subtlety.
+
+Nothing was now wanting to the full development of his business career
+except the repetition in other communities of the success that had crowned
+his personal exertions in Pennsylvania. Referring to the state of his
+business at this time, he says in the _Autobiography_;
+
+ My business was now continually augmenting, and my
+ circumstances growing daily easier, my newspaper having
+ become very profitable, as being for a time almost the
+ only one in this and the neighboring provinces. I
+ experienced, too, the truth of the observation, "_that
+ after getting the first hundred pound, it is more easy
+ to get the second_," money itself being of a prolific
+ nature.
+
+The outcome of it all was that, in the year 1748, at the age of forty-two,
+he flattered himself, to repeat his own language, that, by the sufficient,
+though moderate, fortune which he had acquired, he had secured leisure
+during the rest of his life for philosophical studies and amusements.
+
+The plan that he formed for securing this leisure, which he turned to such
+fruitful, purposes, was marked by his usual good judgment. In 1744, he had
+taken into his employment David Hall, a Scotch journeyman, and a friend of
+Strahan. He now admitted Hall to partnership with him. "A very able,
+industrious, and honest partner, Mr. David Hall, with whose character I was
+well acquainted, as he had work'd for me for four years," are the terms in
+which he speaks of Hall in the _Autobiography_. "He took off my hands," he
+continues, "all care of the printing-office, paying me punctually my share
+of the profits. The partnership continued eighteen years, successfully for
+us both." Under the provisions of the partnership agreement, Hall was to
+carry on the printing and publishing business of Franklin in his own way,
+but in the firm name of Franklin and Hall, and Hall was to pay to Franklin
+a thousand pounds a year for eighteen years; at the end of which period
+Hall was to become the sole proprietor of the business.[9] Exactly what
+income Franklin was deriving from his printing and publishing business at
+the time that this agreement was entered into is not known, but reasonable
+conjecture has placed it at something like two thousand pounds a year. At
+that time he was also the owner of a considerable amount of property,
+representing invested returns from his business in the past. The _Gazette_
+continued to be published until the year 1821. When the term of eighteen
+years, during which the partnership was to last, expired in 1766, the
+profits had been over twelve thousand pounds, Pennsylvania currency, from
+subscriptions, and over four thousand pounds, Pennsylvania currency, from
+advertisements. Judged by the standards of the time and place, it was an
+extraordinary degree of success which had enabled Franklin in some twenty
+years to establish so lucrative a business as that which he handed over to
+the management of Hall in 1748, and few indeed have been the men in
+mercantile history, who have been willing, after so long a period of
+prosperous addiction to gain, to turn away to purely intellectual and
+unremunerative pursuits from such a prospect of increasing self-enrichment
+as that renounced by Franklin when he wrote to Cadwallader Colden that he,
+too, was taking the proper measures for obtaining leisure to enjoy life and
+his friends more than in the past; having put his printing-house under the
+care of his partner, David Hall, absolutely left off book-selling, and
+removed to a more quiet part of the town, where he was settling his old
+accounts, and hoped soon to be quite master of his own time, and no longer,
+as the song had it, at everyone's call but his own. Nobody knew better than
+he that, if, after getting the first hundred pounds, it is easier to get
+the second, it is still easier, after getting the second hundred pounds, to
+get the third.
+
+For Hall, Franklin entertained uninterrupted feelings of respect and
+affection, down to the date of the former's death on December 17, 1772. "My
+Love to Mr. Hall," is one of his messages to Deborah some seven years after
+the firm of Franklin and Hall was created. Before that he had written to
+Strahan, "Our friend, Mr. Hall, is well, and manages perfectly to my
+satisfaction." Many years after the death of Hall, the account between
+Franklin and him had not been wholly settled, and a letter from the former
+to Strahan in the year 1785 tells him that Hall and himself had not been of
+the same mind as to "the value of a copyright in an established newspaper,
+of each of which from eight to ten thousand were printed," but "were to be
+determined" by Strahan's opinion. "My long absence from that country, and
+immense employment the little time I was there," Franklin wrote, "have
+hitherto prevented the settlement of all the accounts that had been between
+us; though we never differed about them, and never should if that good
+honest man had continued in being."
+
+Franklin's failure to forecast the stubborn hostility of the Colonies to
+the Stamp Act not only cost him some personal popularity but it caused his
+firm some pecuniary loss. Anticipating with his usual shrewdness the
+passage of that Act, which imposed a tax of a sterling half-penny on every
+half-sheet of a newspaper, however small, he sent over to Hall one hundred
+reams of large half-sheet paper, but permission could not be obtained to
+have it stamped in America, and it was all reshipped to England at a loss.
+
+ As to the Paper sent over [he wrote to Hall] I did it
+ for the best, having at that time Expectations given me
+ that we might have had it stampt there; in which case
+ you would have had great Advantage of the other
+ Printers, since if they were not provided with such
+ Paper, they must have either printed but a half sheet
+ common Demi, or paid for two Stamps on each Sheet. The
+ Plan was afterward alter'd notwithstanding all I could
+ do, it being alledged that Scotland & every Colony
+ would expect the same Indulgence if it was granted to
+ us. The Papers must not be sent back again: But I hope
+ you will excuse what I did in Good will, tho' it
+ happen'd wrong.
+
+After the retirement of Franklin from active business, he still continued
+to hold his office as Postmaster at Philadelphia, and, while holding it, he
+was employed by the Deputy Postmaster-General for America as his
+comptroller to examine and audit the accounts of several of his subordinate
+officers. Upon the death of the Deputy Postmaster-General, he was appointed
+his successor, jointly with William Hunter, of Virginia, by the British
+Postmasters-General. When the pair were appointed, the office had never
+earned any net revenue for the British Crown. Under the terms of their
+appointment, they were to have six hundred pounds a year between them, if
+they could make that sum out of its profits, and, when they entered upon
+it, so many improvements had to be effected by them that, in the first four
+years, it ran into debt to them to the extent of upwards of nine hundred
+pounds; but, under the skilful management of Franklin, it became
+remunerative, and, before he was removed by the British Government, after
+his arraignment before the Privy Council, it had been brought to yield
+three times as much clear revenue to the Crown as the Irish Post-office.
+"Since that imprudent transaction," Franklin observes in the
+_Autobiography_, "they have receiv'd from it--not one farthing!"
+
+On August 10, 1761, eight years after the appointment of Franklin and
+Hunter, and a few weeks before Foxcroft succeeded Hunter, there was a net
+balance of four hundred and ninety-four pounds four shillings and eight
+pence due by the American Post-office to the British Crown; which was duly
+remitted. "And this," exclaims the astonished official record of the fact
+in England, "is the first remittance ever made of the kind." Between August
+10, 1761, and the beginning of 1764, the net profits of the American
+Post-office amounted to two thousand and seventy pounds twelve shillings
+and three and one quarter pence, and drew from the British
+Postmasters-General the statement, "The Posts in America are under the
+management of persons of acknowledged ability." With this record of
+administrative success, it is not surprising that, when Franklin was
+removed from office, he should have written to Thomas Cushing these bitter
+words:
+
+ I received a written notice from the Secretary of the
+ general post-office, that His Majesty's
+ postmaster-general _found it necessary_ to dismiss me
+ from my office of deputy postmaster-general in North
+ America. The expression was well chosen, for in truth
+ they were _under a necessity_ of doing it; it was not
+ their own inclination; they had no fault to find with
+ my conduct in the office; they knew my merit in it, and
+ that, if it was now an office of value, it had become
+ such chiefly through my care and good management; that
+ it was worth nothing, when given to me; it would not
+ then pay the salary allowed me, and, unless it did, I
+ was not to expect it; and that it now produces near
+ three thousand pounds a year clear to the treasury
+ here. They had beside a personal regard for me. But as
+ the postoffices in all the principal towns are growing
+ daily more and more valuable, by the increase of
+ correspondence, the officers being paid _commissions_
+ instead of _salaries_, the ministers seem to intend, by
+ directing me to be displaced on this occasion, to hold
+ out to them all an example that, if they are not
+ corrupted by their office to promote the measures of
+ administration, though against the interests and rights
+ of the colonies, they must not expect to be continued.
+
+Not only was the American postal service made by Franklin's able management
+to yield a net revenue to the British Crown, but it was brought up to a
+much higher level of efficiency. For one thing, the mails between New York
+and Philadelphia were increased from one a week in summer and two a month
+in winter to three a week in summer and one a week in winter. In 1764, a
+Philadelphia merchant could mail a letter to New York and receive a reply
+the next day. For another thing, post-riders were required to carry all
+newspapers offered to them for carriage whether the newspapers of
+postmasters or not. In the discharge of his postal duties, Franklin was
+compelled to make many long journeys outside of Pennsylvania, and these
+journeys did much, as we have said, to extend his reputation on the
+American continent and to confirm his extraordinary familiarity with
+American conditions. As soon as he was appointed Deputy Postmaster-General
+for America with Hunter, William Franklin was appointed Comptroller of the
+Post-office. The post-office at Philadelphia he first conferred upon
+William Franklin, then upon Joseph Read, one of Deborah's relatives, and
+then upon Peter Franklin, Franklin's brother. Indeed, so long as there was
+a Franklin or a Read willing to enter the public service, Franklin's other
+fellow-countrymen had very little chance of filling any vacant post in the
+American Post-office. This was doubtless due not only to his clannishness
+but also to the fact that, as far as we can now judge, nepotism was a much
+more venial offence in the eyes of the public during the colonial era than
+now. Even now it may be doubted whether the disfavor with which it is
+regarded is prompted so much by its prejudicial tendency from a public
+point of view as by its tendency, from the point of view of the spoilsman,
+to interfere with the repeated use of office for partisan purposes.
+
+The income upon which Franklin retired from business was the sum of one
+thousand pounds a year for eighteen years, which Hall agreed to pay him,
+the small salary, arising from the office of Postmaster at Philadelphia,
+and the income, supposed to be about seven hundred pounds a year, produced
+by his invested savings. When in England, in addition to the one thousand
+pounds a year, paid to him by Hall, which ended in the year 1766, and the
+income derived by him from invested savings, he received a salary of three
+hundred pounds a year from his office as Deputy Postmaster-General for
+America, until he was removed in 1774, and for briefer periods a salary of
+five hundred pounds a year from his office as Colonial Agent for
+Pennsylvania, and salaries of four hundred pounds, two hundred pounds and
+one hundred pounds as the Colonial Agent of Massachusetts, Georgia and New
+Jersey, respectively. With his removal from his office of Deputy
+Postmaster-General, all these agencies and the salaries attached to them
+came to an end. When the annuity paid to him by Hall ceased, his income was
+so seriously curtailed that he was compelled, as we have seen, to remind
+Deborah of the fact. After his return from England in 1775, he was
+appointed the Postmaster-General of the United States at a salary of one
+thousand pounds a year.
+
+For his public services in France, he was allowed at first a salary of five
+hundred pounds a year and his expenses, and subsequently, when his rank was
+advanced to that of ambassador, two thousand five hundred pounds a year.
+When he returned from France to America, he communicated to his old friend,
+Charles Thomson, the Secretary of Congress, his hope that Congress might be
+kind enough to recognize the value of his services and sacrifices in the
+American cause by granting him some small tract of land in the West. He
+saw, he said, that Congress had made a handsome allowance to Arthur Lee for
+his services to America in England before his appointment as Commissioner
+to France, though it had made none to the writer or to Mr. Bollan, who were
+also parties to these services. Moreover, Lee, on his return to America, as
+well as John Jay, had been rewarded by Congress with a good office. The
+letter, of course, made out an irrefragable case; for, if the United States
+had given the whole Northwest Territory to Franklin, his heirs and assigns
+forever, the gift would hardly have exceeded the value of his services. It
+was written just before the Old Congress gave way to the First Congress
+under the Federal Constitution, and nothing ever came of it. The conduct of
+the Old Congress to Franklin in other respects had been so ungenerous that
+it is hardly likely that it would have made any response to the appeal
+anyhow unless solicited by a more intriguing spirit than his.
+
+The State of Georgia was more mindful of its obligations to him, and voted
+him the right to take up three thousand acres of land within its limits.
+
+After his return from France, a great rise took place in the value of real
+estate in Philadelphia, and his houses and lots reaped its benefits to a
+conspicuous degree. On Jan. 29, 1786, he wrote to Ferdinand Grand, "My own
+Estate I find more than tripled in Value since the Revolution"; and similar
+statements are to be found in other letters of his at this time.
+
+At this period of his life, a considerable amount of his attention was
+given to the improvement of his property. On Apr. 22, 1787, in a letter to
+Ferdinand Grand, he said, "The three Houses which I began to build last
+year, are nearly finished, and I am now about to begin two others. Building
+is an Old Man's Amusement. The Advantage is for his Posterity."
+
+When Franklin died, his estate consisted of ten houses in Philadelphia, and
+almost as many vacant lots, a pasture lot near Philadelphia, a farm near
+Burlington, New Jersey, a house in Boston, the right to the three thousand
+acres of land in Georgia, a tract of land on the Ohio, a tract of land in
+Nova Scotia, twelve shares of the capital stock of the Bank of North
+America and bonds of individuals in excess of eighteen thousand pounds. The
+value of his entire estate was supposed to be between two hundred and two
+hundred and fifty thousand dollars.
+
+Under his management, the _Gazette_ was probably the best newspaper
+produced in Colonial America. In its early history, it appeared first twice
+a week, and then weekly, and consisted of but a single sheet, which, when
+folded, was about 12 by 18 inches square. Parton is not accurate, as his
+own context shows, in stating that Franklin "originated the modern system
+of business-advertising." Other newspapers of the time, including
+Bradford's _Mercury_, contained advertisements for the recovery of runaway
+servants and slaves, and lost or stolen articles, and for the sale of
+different kinds of merchandise. When Franklin fled from Boston, his brother
+James advertised for another apprentice in the _Courant_. Nor is Parton
+accurate, either, in stating that Franklin "invented the plan of
+distinguishing advertisements by means of little pictures, which he cut
+with his own hands." There were such cuts in Bradford's _Mercury_ even
+before the _Gazette_ was founded. The _Gazette_ won a position of its own
+because its proprietor and editor brought to its issues that knowledge of
+human life and human nature and that combination of practical sagacity,
+humor and literary skill which he carried into everything. The latest
+advices of the day, foreign and domestic, which were tardy enough, extracts
+from the _Spectator_ and other moral writers of the age, verses from
+contemporary poets, cuttings from the English newspapers, broad, obscene
+jokes, as unconscious of offence as the self-exposure of a child or an
+animal, all assembled with the instinctive eye to unity of effect, which is
+the most consummate achievement of journalistic art, made up the usual
+contents of the _Gazette_. Now, along with news items of local and outside
+interest, we have a humorous account of a lottery in England, by which, for
+the better increase of the King's subjects, all the old maids are to be
+raffled for; now some truculent flings at the Catholics, the _caput
+lupinum_ of that age; now a hint to a delinquent subscriber that it was
+considerably in his power to contribute towards the happiness of his most
+humble obliged servant; now an exasperating intimation that the _Mercury_
+has been depredating upon the columns of its rival; now some little essay
+or dialogue from the pen of Franklin himself, good enough to be classed as
+literature. The open, kindly, yet shrewd, face, with the crow's-feet,
+furrowed by the incessant play of humor about the corners of its eyes,
+looks out at us from every page.
+
+The editor of the _Gazette_ sustains to his readers a relation as personal
+as that sustained by Poor Richard to his. He goes off to New Jersey to
+print some paper currency for that Colony, and he inserts this paragraph in
+the _Gazette_: "The Printer hopes the irregular Publication of this Paper
+will be excused a few times by his Town Readers, on consideration of his
+being at Burlington with the press, labouring for the publick Good, to make
+Money more plentiful." The statement that a flash of lightning in Bucks
+County had melted the pewter buttons off the waistband of a farmer's
+breeches elicits the observation, "Tis well nothing else thereabouts was
+made of pewter." When contributions by others failed him, he even wrote
+letters to himself under feigned names. "Printerum est errare," we are
+told, and then, under this announcement, Franklin, in another name,
+addresses the following facetious letter to himself:
+
+ Sir, As your last Paper was reading in some Company
+ where I was present, these Words were taken Notice of
+ in the Article concerning Governor Belcher (After which
+ his Excellency, with the Gentlemen trading to New
+ England, died elegantly at Pontack's). The Word died
+ should doubtless have been dined, Pontack's being a
+ noted Tavern and Eating house in London for Gentlemen
+ of Condition; but this Omission of the Letter (n) in
+ that Word, gave us as much Entertainment as any Part of
+ your Paper. One took the Opportunity of telling us,
+ that in a certain Edition of the Bible, the Printer
+ had, where David says I am fearfully and wonderfully
+ made, omitted the Letter (e) in the last Word, so that
+ it was, I am fearfully and wonderfully mad; which
+ occasion'd an ignorant Preacher, who took that Text, to
+ harangue his Audience for half an hour on the Subject
+ of Spiritual Madness. Another related to us, that when
+ the Company of Stationers in England had the Printing
+ of the Bible in their Hands, the Word (not) was left
+ out of the Seventh Commandment, and the whole Edition
+ was printed off with Thou shalt commit Adultery,
+ instead of Thou shalt not, &c. This material Erratum
+ induc'd the Crown to take the Patent from them which is
+ now held by the King's Printer. The Spectator's Remark
+ upon this Story is, that he doubts many of our modern
+ Gentlemen have this faulty edition by 'em, and are not
+ made sensible of the Mistake. A Third Person in the
+ Company acquainted us with an unlucky Fault that went
+ through a whole Impression of Common-Prayer Books; in
+ the Funeral Service, where these Words are, We shall
+ all be changed in a moment, in the twinkling of an Eye,
+ &c., the Printer had omitted the (c) in changed, and it
+ read thus, We shall all be hanged, &c. And lastly, a
+ Mistake of your Brother News-Printer was mentioned, in
+ The Speech of James Prouse written the Night before he
+ was to have been executed, instead of I die a
+ Protestant, he has put it, I died a Protestant. Upon
+ the whole you came off with the more favourable
+ Censure, because your Paper is most commonly very
+ correct, and yet you were never known to triumph upon
+ it, by publickly ridiculing and exposing the continual
+ Blunders of your Contemporary Which Observation was
+ concluded by a good old Gentleman in Company, with this
+ general just Remark, That whoever accustoms himself to
+ pass over in Silence the Faults of his Neighbours,
+ shall meet with much better Quarter from the World when
+ he happens to fall into a Mistake himself; for the
+ Satyrical and Censorious, whose Hand is against every
+ Man, shall upon such Occasions have every Man's Hand
+ against him.
+
+This is an accusation of plagiarism made by Franklin against Bradford:
+
+ When Mr. Bradford publishes after us [he declared], and
+ has Occasion to take an Article or two out of the
+ _Gazette_, which he is always welcome to do, he is
+ desired not to date his Paper a Day before ours, (as
+ last Week in the Case of the Letter containing Kelsey's
+ Speech, &c) lest distant Readers should imagine we take
+ from him, which we always carefully avoid.
+
+Bradford hit back as best he could. On one occasion he charged that the
+contract for printing paper money for the Province of New Jersey had been
+awarded to Franklin at a higher bid than that of another bidder. "Its no
+matter," he said, "its the Country's Money, and if the Publick cannot
+afford to pay well, who can? Its proper to serve a Friend when there is an
+opportunity."
+
+One of Franklin's favorite devices for filling up gaps in the _Gazette_ was
+to have himself, in the guise of a correspondent, ask himself questions,
+and then answer them. "I am about courting a girl I have had but little
+acquaintance with; how shall I come to a knowledge of her faults, and
+whether she has the virtues I imagine she has," is one such supposititious
+question. "Commend her among her female acquaintance," is the ready-made
+answer. Another imaginary question was of this tenor: "Mr. Franklin: Pray
+let the prettiest Creature in this Place know (by publishing this), that if
+it was not for her Affectation she would be absolutely irresistible." Next
+week a flood of replies gushed out of the editor's pigeon-holes. One ran
+thus:
+
+"I cannot conceive who your Correspondent means by 'the prettiest creature'
+in this Place; but I can assure either him or her, that she who is truly
+so, has no Affectation at all."
+
+And another ran thus:
+
+"Sir, Since your last Week's Paper I have look'd in my Glass a thousand
+Times, I believe, in one way; and if it was not for the Charge of
+Affectation I might, without Partiality believe myself the Person meant."
+
+At times we cannot but suspect that Franklin has deliberately created a
+sensation for the purpose of quickening the sale of the _Gazette_. For
+instance, a peruke maker in Second Street advertises that he will "leave
+off the shaving business after the 22nd of August next." Commenting on this
+advertisement, Franklin observes that barbers are peculiarly fitted for
+politics, for they are adept shavers and trimmers; and, when the angry
+peruke maker calls him to task for his levity, he replies that he cherishes
+no animosity at all towards him, and can only impute his feelings to a
+"Want of taste and relish for pieces of that force and beauty which none
+but a University bred gentleman can produce."
+
+On another occasion, when advertising the sailing of a ship, he added this
+N. B. of his own: "No Sea Hens, nor Black Gowns will be admitted on any
+terms." To such a degree were some of the clergy incensed by it that they
+withdrew their subscriptions; but it is not unlikely that in a day or so
+twice their number in scoffers were added to the subscription list of the
+young printer. At times the fooling is bald buffoonery.
+
+ On Thursday last [he informed his readers] a certain
+ P--r ('tis not customary to give names at length on
+ these occasions) walking carefully in clean clothes
+ over some barrels of tar on Carpenter's Wharf, the head
+ of one of them unluckily gave way, and let a leg of him
+ in above the knee. Whether he was upon the Catch at
+ that time, we can not say, but 'tis certain he caught a
+ _Tar-tar_, 'Twas observed he sprang out again right
+ briskly, verifying the common saying, as nimble as a
+ Bee in a Tar barrel. You must know there are several
+ sorts of bees: 'tis true he was no honey bee, nor yet a
+ humble bee: but a _Boo-bee_ he may be allowed to be,
+ namely B. F.
+
+Franklin was a publisher of books as well as a newspaper proprietor. Most
+of the books and pamphlets published by him were of a theological or
+religious nature, in other words books which, aside from the pecuniary
+profit of printing them, he was very much disposed to regard as no books at
+all. Others were of a description to serve the practical wants of a society
+yet simple in its structure, such as _The Gentlemen's Pocket Farrier_ and
+_Every Man his Own Doctor, or the Poor Planter's Physician_. But some were
+of real note such as two little volumes of native American poetry, Colden's
+_Essay on the Iliac Passion_, which is said to have been the first American
+medical treatise, Cadwallader's _Essay on the West India Dry Gripes_, and
+James Logan's translation of Cato's _Moral Distichs_, which Franklin
+regarded as his _chef d'oeuvre_, and which is said to have been the first
+book in the Latin tongue to have been both translated and printed in
+America. Worthy of mention also are various publications on the subject of
+slavery, precursors of the endless succession a little later on of
+anti-slavery tracts, books and speeches, which anon became a mountain. The
+mercantile business, of which Franklin's stationery shop was the nucleus,
+was of a highly miscellaneous character. In addition to books and pamphlets
+printed by himself, he imported and sold many others including chapmen's
+books and ballads.
+
+ At the time I establish'd myself in Pennsylvania [he
+ tells us in the _Autobiography_], there was not a good
+ bookseller's shop in any of the Colonies to the
+ southward of Boston. In New York and Philad'a the
+ printers were indeed stationers; they sold only paper,
+ etc., almanacs, ballads, and a few common school-books.
+ Those who lov'd reading were oblig'd to send for their
+ books from England.
+
+The spirit in which he imported the pamphlets sold by him is indicated in
+one of his letters to Strahan. "Let me have everything, good or bad, that
+makes a Noise and has a Run," he says. His stock of merchandise included
+everything usually sold at a stationer's shop such as good writing paper,
+choice writing parchment, cyphering slates and pencils, Holman's ink
+powders, ivory pocket books, pounce and pounce boxes, sealing wax, wafers,
+pencils, fountain pens, choice English quills, brass inkhorns, and sand
+glasses. There were besides "fine mezzotints, a great variety of maps,
+cheap pictures engraved on copper plate of all sorts of birds, beasts,
+fishes, fruits, flowers etc., useful to such as would learn to draw." Along
+with these things, and choice consignments of the Franklin Crown Soap, were
+vended articles almost as varied as the contents of a junkshop, such as
+the following:
+
+ very good sack at 6s per gallon, glaz'd fulling papers
+ and bonnet-papers, very good lamp-black, very good
+ chocolate, linseed oil, very good coffee, compasses and
+ scales, Seneca rattlesnake root, with directions how to
+ use it in the pleurisy &c, dividers and protractors, a
+ very good second hand two-wheel chaise, a very neat,
+ new fashion'd vehicle, or four wheel'd chaise, very
+ convenient to carry weak or other sick persons, old or
+ young, good Rhode Island cheese and codfish, quadrants,
+ forestaffs, nocturnals, mariner's compasses, season'd
+ murchantable boards, coarse and fine edgings, fine
+ broad scarlet cloth, fine broad black cloth, fine white
+ thread hose and English sale duck, very good iron
+ stoves, a large horse fit for a chair or saddle, the
+ true and genuine Godfrey's cordial, choice bohea tea,
+ very good English saffron, New York Lottery tickets,
+ choice makrel, to be sold by the barrel, a large copper
+ still, very good spermacety, fine palm oyl, very good
+ Temple spectacles and a new fishing net.
+
+Another commodity in which Franklin dealt was the unexpired time of
+indentured or bond servants, who had sold their services for a series of
+years in return for transportation to America. This traffic is illustrated
+in such advertisements in the _Gazette_ as these: "To be sold. A likely
+servant woman, having three years and a half to serve. She is a good
+spinner"; "To be sold. A likely servant lad about 15 years of age, and has
+6 years to serve." And alas! the humanitarian, who strove so earnestly,
+during the closing years of his life, when he was famous and rich, and the
+President of the Pennsylvania Society for Promoting the Abolition of
+Slavery, to bring home the horrors of slavery to the Southern conscience,
+was himself what involved until the end utter social disrepute in the
+slaveholding South, that is to say, a negro-trader. "Some of these slaves,"
+Paul Leicester Ford tells us in _The_ _Many Sided Franklin_, "he procured
+from New England where, as population grew in density, the need for them
+passed, leading to their sale in the colonies to the southward." The
+business was certainly a repulsive one, even when conducted by such a lover
+of the human species as Franklin. How far this is true the reader can judge
+for himself when he reads the following advertisements, which are but two
+of the many of the same kind that appeared in the _Gazette_:
+
+ To be sold a likely negro woman, with a man-child, fit
+ for town or country business. Enquire of the printer
+ hereof.
+
+ To be sold. A prime able young negro man, fit for
+ laborious work, in town or country, that has had the
+ small pox: As also a middle aged negro man, that has
+ likewise had the small pox. Enquire of the printer
+ hereof: Or otherwise they will be expos'd to sale by
+ publick vendue, on Saturday the 11th of April next, at
+ 12 o'clock, at the Indian-king, in Market Street.
+
+While Franklin was printing pamphlets against slavery and selling negroes,
+and Deborah was stitching pamphlets and vending old rags, Mrs. Read, the
+mother of Deborah, was engaged in compounding and vending an ointment
+suited to conditions still graver than those for which the Franklin Crown
+Soap was intended. We can hardly doubt that this advertisement, which was
+published in the _Gazette_, was penned by the same hand which wrote the
+_Ephemera_:
+
+ The Widow Read, removed from the upper End of High
+ Street to the _New Printing Office_ near the Market,
+ continues to make and sell her well-known Ointment for
+ the ITCH, with which she has cured abundance of People
+ in and about this City for many Years past. It is
+ always effectual for that purpose, and never fails to
+ perform the Cure speedily. It also kills or drives away
+ all Sorts of Lice in once or twice using. It has no
+ offensive Smell, but rather a pleasant one; and may be
+ used without the least Apprehension of Danger, even to
+ a sucking Infant, being perfectly innocent and safe.
+ Price 2s. a Galleypot containing an Ounce; which is
+ sufficient to remove the most inveterate Itch, and
+ render the Skin clear and smooth.
+
+The same advertisement informed the public that the Widow Read also
+continued to make and sell her excellent _Family Salve_ or Ointment, for
+Burns or Scalds, (Price 1s. an Ounce) and several other Sorts of Ointments
+and Salves as usual.
+
+From this review of the business career of Franklin, it will be seen that
+the stairway, by which he climbed to pecuniary independence and his wider
+fame, though not long, was, in its earlier gradations, hewn step by step
+from the rock. From the printing office of Keimer to Versailles and the
+_salon_ of Madame Helvetius was no primrose path. As long as the human
+struggle in its thousand forms, for subsistence and preferment, goes on, as
+long as from year to year youth continues to be rudely pushed over the edge
+of the nest, with no reliance except its own strength of wing, it is safe
+to say that the first chapters of the _Autobiography_ will remain a
+powerful incentive to human hope and ambition.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[6] In 1723 the town of New York had a population of seven or eight
+thousand persons.
+
+[7] In his edition of Franklin's works, vol. x., p. 154, Smyth says of him,
+when he was in London in his youth, "His nights were spent in cynical
+criticism of religion or in the company of dissolute women." It is likely
+enough that the religious skepticism of Franklin at this time found
+expression in his conversation as well as in his _Dissertation on Liberty
+and Necessity_, though there is no evidence to justify the extreme
+statement that his nights _were spent_ in irreligious talk. His days, we do
+know, were partly spent in listening to London preachers. He may have had
+good reason, too, to utter a _peccavi_ in other sexual relations than those
+that he so disastrously attempted to sustain to Ralph's mistress; but of
+this there is no evidence whatever.
+
+[8] The ineffaceable impression of gratitude left upon the mind of Franklin
+by the timely assistance of these two dear friends was again expressed in
+the Codicil to his Will executed in 1789. In it he speaks of himself as
+"assisted to set up" his business in Philadelphia by kind loans of money
+from two friends there, which was the foundation, he said, of his fortune
+and of all the utility in life that might be ascribed to him.
+
+[9] The interest of Franklin in the Art of Printing did not end with his
+retirement from his vocation as a printer. When he arrived in England in
+1757, he is said to have visited the composing-room at Watts' printing
+establishment, where he was employed many years before, and to have
+celebrated the occasion by giving to the composing force there a
+_bienvenu_, or fee for drink, and proposing as a toast "Success to
+Printing." The type of Baskerville, the "charming Editions" of Didot _le
+Jeune_, the even finer _Sallust_, and _Don Quixote_ of Madrid, and the
+method of cementing letters, conceived by John Walter, the founder of the
+_London Times_, all came in for his appreciative attention. It is said that
+the process of stereotyping was first communicated to Didot by him. When he
+visited the establishment of the latter, in 1780, he turned to one of his
+presses, and printed off several sheets with an ease which excited the
+astonishment of the printers about him. Until the close of his life he had
+a keen eye for a truly black ink and superfine printing paper and all the
+other niceties of his former calling. The only trace of eccentricity in his
+life is to be found in his methods of punctuation, which are marked by a
+sad lack of uniformity in the use of commas, semicolons and colons, and by
+the lavish employment of the devices to denote emphasis which someone has
+happily termed "typographical yells."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+Franklin as a Statesman
+
+
+The career of Franklin as a public official began in 1736, when he was
+appointed Clerk of the General Assembly of Pennsylvania. In this position,
+he remained until his retirement from business precipitated so many
+political demands upon him that he had to give it up for still higher
+responsibilities.
+
+ The publick [he says in the _Autobiography_] now
+ considering me as a man of leisure, laid hold of me for
+ their purposes, every part of our civil government, and
+ almost at the same time, imposing some duty upon me.
+ The Governor put me into the commission of the peace;
+ the corporation of the city chose me of the common
+ council, and soon after an alderman; and the citizens
+ at large chose me a burgess to represent them in
+ Assembly.[10]
+
+His legislative seat was all the more agreeable to him because he had grown
+tired as clerk of listening to debates in which he could take no part, and
+which were frequently so lifeless that for very weariness he had to amuse
+himself with drawing magic squares or circles, or what not, as he sat at
+his desk. The office of justice of the peace he withdrew from by degrees,
+when he found that, to fill it with credit, more knowledge of the common
+law was requisite than he possessed, and, in this connection, the belief
+maybe hazarded that his influence in Congress and the Federal Convention of
+1787 would have been still greater, if he had been a better lawyer, and,
+therefore, more competent to cope in debate with contemporaries fitter than
+he was to discuss questions which, true to the time-honored Anglo-Saxon
+traditions, turned largely upon the provisions of charters and statutes.
+That he was lacking in fluency of speech we have, as we have seen, his own
+admission--a species of evidence, however, by no means conclusive in the
+case of a man so little given to self-praise as he was. But there is
+testimony to convince us that, as a debater, Franklin was, at least, not
+deficient in the best characteristic of a good debater, that of placing the
+accent upon the truly vital points of his case.
+
+ I served [declares Jefferson] with General Washington
+ in the legislature of Virginia, before the revolution,
+ and, during it, with Dr. Franklin in Congress. I never
+ heard either of them speak ten minutes at a time, nor
+ to any but the main point, which was to decide the
+ question. They laid their shoulders to the great
+ points, knowing that the little ones would follow of
+ themselves.
+
+What John Adams has to say about Franklin as a legislator is manifestly the
+offspring of mere self-love. After taking a view of his own legislative
+activity through the highly magnifying lens, which he brought to bear upon
+everything relating to himself, he pictures Franklin in Congress as "from
+day to day, sitting in silence, a great part of his time fast asleep in his
+chair."
+
+But whatever were the demerits of Franklin as a speaker, his influence was
+very great in every legislative assembly in which he ever sat. To begin
+with, he had the kind of eloquence that gives point to his own saying,
+"Whose life lightens, his words thunder." Commenting in the latter part of
+his career to Lord Fitzmaurice upon the stress laid by Demosthenes upon
+action as the point of first importance in oratory, he said that he
+
+ thought another kind of action of more importance to an
+ orator, who would persuade people to follow his advice,
+ viz. such a course of action in the conduct of life, as
+ would impress them with an opinion of his integrity as
+ well as of his understanding; that, this opinion once
+ established, all the difficulties, delays, and
+ oppositions, usually occasioned by doubts and
+ suspicions, were prevented; and such a man, though a
+ very imperfect speaker, would almost always carry his
+ points against the most flourishing orator, who had not
+ the character of sincerity.
+
+In the next place, Franklin's rare knowledge and wisdom made him an
+invaluable counsellor for any deliberative gathering. He was the
+protagonist in the Pennsylvania Assembly of the Popular Party, in its
+contest with the Proprietary Party, and was for a brief time its Speaker.
+As soon as he returned from Europe, at the beginning of the Revolution, he
+was thrice honored by being elected to the Continental Congress, the
+Pennsylvania Assembly, and the Convention to frame a constitution for
+Pennsylvania. Besides appointing him Postmaster-General, Congress placed
+him upon many of its most important committees; the Assembly made him
+Chairman of its Committee of Safety, a post equivalent, for all practical
+purposes, to the executive headship of the Province; and the Convention
+made him its President. It is safe to say that, had there not been a
+Washington, even his extreme old age and physical infirmities would not
+have kept him from being the presiding officer of the Federal Convention of
+1787 and the first President of the United States. The intellect of
+Franklin was too solid to be easily imposed upon by mere glibness of
+speech. "Here comes the orator, with his flood of words and his drop of
+reason," remarks Poor Richard. Equally pointed is that other saying of his,
+"The worst wheel of the cart makes the most noise." But Franklin was fully
+alive to the splendid significance of human eloquence, when enlisted in the
+service of high-minded and far-seeing statesmanship. Speaking in a letter
+to Lord Stanhope of Lord Chatham's speech in support of his motion for the
+removal of the King's troops from Boston, he said, "Dr. F. is fill'd with
+admiration of that truly great Man. He has seen, in the course of Life,
+sometimes Eloquence without Wisdom, and often Wisdom without Eloquence; in
+the present Instance he sees both united; and both, as he thinks, in the
+highest Degree possible."
+
+When Franklin took his seat in the Assembly, William Franklin was elected
+its clerk in his place; for heredity as well as consanguinity was a feature
+of the Franklin system of patronage. Once elected to the Assembly, he
+acquired a degree of popularity and influence that rendered his re-election
+for many years almost a matter of course. "My election to this trust," he
+says in the _Autobiography_, "was repeated every year for ten years,
+without my ever asking any elector for his vote, or signifying, either
+directly or indirectly, any desire of being chosen." So eager were his
+constituents to confer the honor upon him that they kept on conferring it
+upon him year after year, even when he was abroad.[11] He proved himself
+eminently worthy of this confidence. By nature and training, he was a true
+democrat, profoundly conservative at the core, but keenly sensitive to
+every rational and wholesome appeal to his liberal or generous instincts.
+He loved law and order, stable institutions, and settled forms and
+tendencies, rooted in the soil of transmitted wisdom and experience. He was
+too much of an Englishman to have any sympathy with hasty changes or rash
+innovations. Much as he loved France he could never have been drawn into
+such a delirious outburst as the French Revolution. He loved liberty as
+Hampden loved it, as Chatham loved it, as Gladstone loved it. John Wilkes,
+though in some respects an ignoble, was in other respects an indubitable
+champion of English freedom; yet Franklin utterly failed to see in him even
+a case for the application of his reminder to his daughter that sweet and
+clear waters come through very dirty earth. His happy nature and his faith
+in individual thrift sometimes made him slow to believe that masses of men
+had as much cause for political discontent as they claimed, and for such
+mob violence, as attended the career of Wilkes, of whom he speaks in one of
+his letters to his son as "an outlaw and an exile, of bad personal
+character, not worth a farthing," it was impossible for his deep-seated
+respect for law and order to have any toleration; though he did express on
+one occasion the remarkable conviction that, if George the Third had had a
+bad private character, and John Wilkes a good one, the latter might have
+turned the former out of his kingdom.
+
+It is certain, however, that few men have ever detested more strongly than
+he did the baseness and meanness of arbitrary power. And he had little
+patience at the same time with conditions of any sort that rested upon mere
+precedent, or prescription. He welcomed every new triumph of science over
+inert matter, every fresh victory of truth over superstition, bigotry, or
+the unseeing eye, every salutary reform that vindicated the fitness of the
+human race for its destiny of unceasing self-advancement. His underlying
+instincts were firmly fixed in the ground, but his sympathies reached out
+on every side into the free air of expanding human hopes and aspirations.
+In his faith in the residuary wisdom and virtue of the mass of men, he is
+more like Jefferson than any of his Revolutionary compeers. "The People
+seldom continue long in the wrong, when it is nobody's Interest to mislead
+them," he wrote to Abel James. The tribute, it must be confessed, is a
+rather equivocal one, as it is always somebody's interest to mislead the
+People, but the sanguine spirit of the observation pervades all his
+relations to popular caprice or resentment. Less equivocal was his
+statement to Galloway: "The People do not indeed always see their Friends
+in the same favourable Light; they are sometimes mistaken, and sometimes
+misled; but sooner or later they come right again, and redouble their
+former Affection." Few were the public men of his age who looked otherwise
+than askance at universal suffrage, but he was not one of them.
+
+ Liberty, or freedom [he declared in his _Some Good Whig
+ Principles_], consists in having _an actual share_ in
+ the appointment of those who frame the laws, and who
+ are to be the guardians of every man's life, property,
+ and peace; for the _all_ of one man is as dear to him
+ as the _all_ of another; and the poor man has an
+ _equal_ right, but _more_ need, to have representatives
+ in the legislature than the rich one.
+
+For similar reasons he was opposed to entails, and favored the application
+of the just and equal law of gavelkind to the division of intestate
+estates.
+
+It was impossible for such a man as this not to ally himself with the
+popular cause, when he became a member of the Pennsylvania Assembly. At
+that time, the Proprietary Government of Pennsylvania had proved as odious
+to the people of the Province as the proprietary governments of South
+Carolina and the Jerseys had proved to the people of those Colonies. Almost
+from the time of the original settlement, the relations between the
+Assembly and the Penns had been attended by mutual bickerings and
+reproaches. First William Penn had scolded the Assembly in a high key, then
+his sons; and, in resolution after resolution, the Assembly had, in true
+British fashion, stubbornly asserted the liberties and privileges of their
+constituents, and given the Proprietary Government, under thinly veiled
+forms of parliamentary deference, a Roland for its every Oliver. The truth
+was that a Proprietary Government, uniting as it did governmental
+functions, dependent for their successful exercise upon the popular faith
+in the disinterestedness of those who exercised them, with the selfish
+concerns of a landlord incessantly at loggerheads with his vendees and
+tenants over purchase money and quitrents, was utterly incompatible with
+the dignity of real political rule,[12] and hopelessly repugnant to the
+free English spirit of the Pennsylvanians. Under such circumstances, there
+could be no such thing as a true commonwealth; nor anything much better
+than a feudal fief. Political sovereignty lost its aspect of detachment and
+legitimate authority in the eyes of the governed, and wore the appearance
+of a mere organization for the transaction of private business. Almost as a
+matter of course, the Proprietaries came to think and speak of the Province
+as if it were as much their personal property as one of their household
+chattels, refusing, as Franklin said, to give their assent to laws, unless
+some private advantage was obtained, some profit got or unequal exemption
+gained for their estate, or some privilege wrested from the people; and
+almost, as a matter of course, the disaffected people of the Province
+sullenly resented a situation so galling to their pride and self-respect.
+Franklin saw all this with his usual clearness. After conceding in his
+_Cool Thoughts_ that it was not unlikely that there were faults on both
+sides, "every glowing Coal being apt to inflame its Opposite," he expressed
+the opinion that the cause of the contentions was
+
+ radical, interwoven in the Constitution, and so become
+ of the very Nature, of Proprietary Governments. And [he
+ added] as some Physicians say, every Animal Body brings
+ into the World among its original Stamina the Seeds of
+ that Disease that shall finally produce its
+ Dissolution; so the Political Body of a Proprietary
+ Government, contains those convulsive Principles that
+ will at length destroy it.
+
+The Proprietary Government of Pennsylvania was bad enough in principle; it
+was made still worse by the unjust and greedy manner in which it was
+administered by Thomas and Richard Penn, who were the Proprietaries, when
+Franklin became a member of the Assembly. The vast estate of William Penn
+in Pennsylvania, consisting of some twenty-six million acres of land, held
+subject to the nominal obligation of the owner to pay to the King one fifth
+of such gold and silver as the Province might yield, descended upon the
+death of Penn to his sons John, Thomas and Richard, in the proportion of
+one half to John, as the eldest son, and in the proportion of one fourth
+each to Thomas and Richard. John died in 1746, after devising his one half
+share to Thomas; thus making Thomas the owner of three out of the four
+shares.[13] The political powers of the Proprietaries were exercised by a
+deputy-governor whose position was in the highest degree vexatious and
+perplexing. He held his office by appointment of the Proprietaries, who
+resided in England, and the mode in which he was to discharge his duties
+was prescribed by rigid "instructions," issued to him by them. His salary,
+however, was derived from the Assembly, which was rarely at peace with the
+Proprietary Government. If he obeyed his instructions, he ran the risk of
+losing his salary; if he disobeyed them, he was certain to lose his place.
+Incredible as it may now seem, the main duty imposed upon him by his
+instructions was that of vetoing every tax bill enacted by the Assembly
+which did not expressly exempt all the located, unimproved and unoccupied
+lands of the Proprietaries, and all the quitrents, fines and purchase money
+out at interest, to which they were entitled, that is to say, the greater
+part of their immense estate. This was the axis about which the bitter
+controversy between the Popular and Proprietary parties, in which Franklin
+acquired his political training and reputation, revolved like one of the
+lurid waterspouts with which a letter that his correspondent John Perkins
+received from him has been illustrated. The Assembly insisted that they
+should not be required to vote money for the support of the Proprietary
+Government, unless the proprietary estate bore its proper share of the
+common burden. The Governor did not dare to violate his instructions for
+fear of being removed by his masters, and of being sued besides on the bond
+by which he had bound himself not to violate them. At times, the feud was
+so intense and absorbing, that, like a pair of gamecocks, too intent on
+their own deadly encounter to hear an approaching footstep, the combatants
+almost lost sight of the fact that, under the shelter of their dissensions,
+the Indian was converting the frontiers of Pennsylvania into a charred and
+blood-stained wilderness. Occasionally the Assembly had to yield the point
+with a reservation asserting that its action was not to be taken as a
+precedent, and once, when England as well as America was feeling the shock
+of Braddock's defeat, the pressure of public opinion in England was
+sufficient to coerce the Proprietaries into adding five thousand pounds to
+the sum appropriated by the Assembly for the defence of the Province. But,
+as a general thing, there was little disposition on either side to
+compromise. The sharpness of the issue was well illustrated in the bill
+tendered by the Assembly to Governor Morris for his signature after
+Braddock's defeat. Both before, and immediately after that catastrophe, he
+had, in reliance upon the critical condition of the public safety,
+endeavored to drive the Assembly into providing for the defence of the
+Province without calling upon the proprietary estate for a contribution.
+The bill in question declared "that all estates, real and personal, were to
+be taxed, those of the proprietaries _not_ excepted." "His amendment," says
+Franklin in his brief way, "was, for _not_ read _only_; a small, but very
+material alteration."[14]
+
+This dependence of the Governor upon the Assembly for his salary and the
+dependence of the Assembly upon the Governor for the approval of its
+enactments brought about a traffic in legislation between them which was
+one of the most disgraceful features of the Proprietary regime; though it
+became so customary that even the most honorable Governor did not scruple
+to engage in it. This traffic is thus described by Franklin in his stirring
+"Preface to the Speech of Joseph Galloway, Esq.":
+
+ Ever since the Revenue of the Quit-rents first, and
+ after that the Revenue of Tavern-Licenses, were settled
+ irrevocably on our Proprietaries and Governors, they
+ have look'd on those Incomes as their proper Estate,
+ for which they were under no Obligations to the People:
+ And when they afterwards concurr'd in passing any
+ useful Laws, they considered them as so many Jobbs, for
+ which they ought to be particularly paid. Hence arose
+ the Custom of Presents twice a Year to the Governors,
+ at the close of each Session in which Laws were past,
+ given at the Time of Passing. They usually amounted to
+ a Thousand Pounds per Annum. But when the Governors and
+ Assemblies disagreed, so that Laws were not pass'd, the
+ Presents were withheld. When a Disposition to agree
+ ensu'd, there sometimes still remain'd some Diffidence.
+ The Governors would not pass the Laws that were wanted,
+ without being sure of the Money, even all that they
+ call'd their Arrears; nor the Assemblies give the Money
+ without being sure of the Laws. Thence the Necessity of
+ some private Conference, in which mutual Assurances of
+ good Faith might be receiv'd and given, that the
+ Transactions should go hand in hand.
+
+This system of barter prevailed even before Franklin became a member of the
+Assembly, and how fixed and ceremonious its forms sometimes were we can
+infer from what happened on one of the semi-annual market days during
+Governor Thomas' administration. Various bills were lying dormant in his
+hands. Accordingly the House ordered two of its members to call upon him
+and acquaint him that it had long "waited for his Result" on these bills,
+and desired to know when they might expect it. They returned and reported
+that the Governor was pleased to say that he had had the bills long under
+consideration, and "_waited the Result_" of the House. Then, after the
+House had resolved itself into a committee of the whole, for the purpose of
+taking the "Governor's support" into consideration, there was a further
+interchange of communications between the House and the Governor; the
+former reporting "some progress" to the Governor, and the Governor replying
+that, as he had received assurances of a "_good disposition_," on the part
+of the House, he thought it incumbent upon him to show _the like_ on his
+part by sending down the bills, which lay before him, without any
+amendment. The manifestation of a good disposition was not the same thing
+as an actual promise to approve the bills; so the wary assembly simply
+resolved that, on the passage of such bills as then lay before the
+Governor, and of the Naturalization Bill, and such other bills as might be
+presented to him during the pending session, there should be paid to him
+the sum of five hundred pounds; and that, on the passage of the same bills,
+there should be paid to him the further sum of one thousand pounds for the
+current year's support. Agreeably with this resolution, orders were drawn
+on the Treasurer and Trustees of the Loan-Office, and, when the Governor
+was informed of the fact, he appointed a time for passing the bills which
+was done with one hand, while he received the orders in the other.
+Thereupon with the utmost politeness he thanked the House for the fifteen
+hundred pounds as if it had been a free gift, and a mere mark of respect
+and affection. "_I thank you_, Gentlemen," he said, "for this _Instance_ of
+_your Regard_; which I am the more pleased with, as it gives an agreeable
+Prospect of _future Harmony_ between me and the Representatives of the
+People."
+
+Despicably enough, while this treaty was pending, the Penns had a written
+understanding with the Governor, secured by his bond, that they were to
+receive a share of all money thus obtained from the people whom they sought
+to load with the entire weight of taxation. Indeed, emboldened as Franklin
+said by the declining sense of shame, that always follows frequent
+repetitions of sinning, they later in Governor Denny's time had the
+effrontery to claim openly, in a written reply to a communication from the
+Assembly, with respect to their refusal to bear any part of the expenses
+entailed on the Province by the Indians, that the excess of these donatives
+over and above the salary of the Governor should belong to them. By the
+Constitution, they said, their consent was essential to the validity of the
+laws enacted by the People, and it would tend the better to facilitate the
+several matters, which had to be transacted with them, for the
+representatives of the People to show a regard to them and their interest.
+The Assembly hotly replied that they hoped that they would always be able
+to obtain needful laws from the goodness of their sovereign without going
+to the market for them to a subject. But the hope was a vain one, and to
+that market, directly or indirectly, the People of Pennsylvania still had
+to go, for some time to come. To use Franklin's language, there was no
+other market that they could go to for the commodity that they wanted.
+
+ Do not, my courteous Reader [he exclaims with fine
+ scorn in the "Preface to the Speech of Joseph Galloway,
+ Esq."] take Pet at our Proprietary Constitution, for
+ these our Bargain and Sale Proceedings in Legislation.
+ 'Tis a happy Country where Justice, and what was your
+ own before, can be had for Ready Money. 'Tis another
+ Addition to the Value of Money, and of Course another
+ Spur to Industry. Every Land is not so bless'd. There
+ are Countries where the princely Proprietor claims to
+ be Lord of all Property; where what is your own shall
+ not only be wrested from you, but the Money you give to
+ have it restor'd, shall be kept with it, and your
+ offering so much, being a Sign of your being too Rich,
+ you shall be plunder'd of every Thing that remain'd.
+ These Times are not come here yet: Your present
+ Proprietors have never been more unreasonable hitherto,
+ than barely to insist on your Fighting in Defence of
+ their Property, and paying the Expences yourselves; or
+ if their estates must, (ah! _must_) be tax'd towards
+ it, that the _best_ of their Lands shall be tax'd no
+ higher than the _worst_ of yours.
+
+Governor Hamilton, who succeeded Governor Thomas, so far departed from the
+vicious practice of buying and selling laws as to sign them without
+prepayment, but, when he observed that the Assembly was tardy in making
+payment, and yet asked him to give his assent to additional laws, before
+prior ones had been paid for, he stated his belief to it that as many
+useful laws had been enacted by him as by any of his predecessors in the
+same space of time, and added that, nevertheless, he had not understood
+that any allowance had been made to him for his support, as had been
+customary in the Province. The hint proved effective, the money was paid
+and the bills were approved.
+
+From the time that Franklin became a member of the Assembly until the time
+that the minor controversy between the Proprietary Party and the Popular
+Party in Pennsylvania was obscured by the larger controversy between the
+Crown and all the American Colonies, he was engaged in an almost
+uninterrupted struggle with the Proprietaries, first, for the annulment of
+their claim to exemption from taxation, and, secondly, for the displacement
+of their government by a Royal Government. If there was ever an interlude
+in this struggle, it was only because, in devising measures for the defence
+of the Province, a Proprietary Governor found it necessary, at some trying
+conjuncture, to rely upon the management of Franklin to quiet the Quakers,
+who constituted a majority of the Assembly and detested both war and the
+Proprietaries, or upon the general abilities and popularity of Franklin to
+strengthen his own feeble counsels. If there was any political tranquillity
+in the Province during this time, it was, to employ one of Franklin's own
+comparisons, only such tranquillity as exists in a naval engagement between
+two broadsides. On the one hand were ranged the official partisans and
+dependents of the Proprietary Government and other adherents of the kind,
+whose allegiance is likely to be won by the social prestige and political
+patronage of executive authority. To this faction, in the latter stages of
+the conflict, was added a large body of Presbyterians whose sectarian
+sympathies had been excited by the Scotch-Irish uprising against the
+Indians, of which we have previously spoken. On the other hand were ranged
+the Quakers, upon whom the burden of resisting the Proprietary
+encroachments upon the popular rights had mainly rested from the origin of
+the Province, and middle-class elements of the population whose views and
+sympathies were not highly colored by any special influences. The task of
+preparing resolutions, addresses and remonstrances, voicing the popular
+criticism of the Proprietaries, was mainly committed to Franklin by the
+Assembly. It was with him, too, as the ablest and most influential
+representative of the popular interest that the various Proprietary
+Governors usually dealt.
+
+We first find him high in favor with Governor Thomas and his Council at the
+time of the Association because of his activity, when still only Clerk of
+the Assembly, in providing for the defence of the Province and arousing a
+martial spirit in its people. This was the period when the Quaker found it
+necessary to help his conscience out a little with his wit, and when
+Franklin made good use of the principle that men will countenance many
+things with their backs that they will not countenance with their faces.
+The Quaker majority in the Assembly did not relish his intimacy at this
+time with the members of the Council who had so often trod on their
+punctilio about military expenditures, and it might have been pleased, he
+conjectured, if he had voluntarily resigned his clerkship; "but," he
+declares in the _Autobiography_, "they did not care to displace me on
+account merely of my zeal for the association, and they could not well give
+another reason."
+
+Governor Hamilton became so sick of the broils, in which he was involved by
+the Proprietary instructions, that he resigned. His successor was the
+Governor Morris whose father loved disputation so much that he encouraged
+his children to practise it when he was digesting his dinner. Franklin met
+him at New York when he was on his way to Boston, and Morris was on his way
+to Philadelphia to enter upon his duties as Governor. So ready for a war of
+words was the new Governor that, when Franklin returned from Boston to
+Philadelphia, he and the House had already come to blows, and the conflict
+never ceased as long as he remained Governor. In the conflict, Franklin
+was his chief antagonist. Whenever a speech or message of the Governor was
+to be answered, he was made a member of the Committee appointed to answer
+it, and by such committees he was invariably selected to draft the answer.
+"Our answers," he says, "as well as his messages, were often tart, and
+sometimes indecently abusive." But the Governor was at heart an amiable
+man, and Franklin, resolute as he was, when his teeth were fairly set, had
+no black blood in his veins. Though one might have imagined, he says, that
+he and the Governor could not meet without cutting throats, so little
+personal ill-will arose between them that they even often dined together.
+
+ One afternoon [he tells us in the _Autobiography_] in
+ the height of this public quarrel, we met in the
+ street. "Franklin," says he, "you must go home with me
+ and spend the evening; I am to have some company that
+ you will like"; and, taking me by the arm, he led me to
+ his house. In gay conversation over our wine, after
+ supper, he told us, jokingly, that he much admir'd the
+ idea of Sancho Panza, who, when it was proposed to give
+ him a government, requested it might be a government of
+ _blacks_, as then, if he could not agree with his
+ people, he might sell them. One of his friends, who sat
+ next to me, says, "Franklin, why do you continue to
+ side with these damn'd Quakers? Had you not better sell
+ them? The Proprietor would give you a good price." "The
+ Governor," says I, "has not yet _blacked_ them enough."
+ He, indeed, had laboured hard to blacken the Assembly
+ in all his messages, but they wip'd off his colouring
+ as fast as he laid it on, and plac'd it, in return,
+ thick upon his own face; so that, finding he was likely
+ to be negrofied himself, he, as well as Mr. Hamilton,
+ grew tir'd of the contest, and quitted the Government.
+
+All these disputes originated in the instructions given by the
+Proprietaries to their Governors not to approve any tax measure enacted by
+the Assembly that did not expressly exempt their estates; conduct which
+Franklin justly terms in the _Autobiography_ "incredible meanness."
+
+The ability of Governor Morris to keep on good terms with Franklin in spite
+of the perpetual wrangling between the Assembly and himself Franklin
+sometimes thought was due to the fact that the Governor was bred a lawyer
+and regarded him as simply the advocate of the Assembly and himself as
+simply the advocate of the Proprietaries. However this was, he sometimes
+called upon Franklin in a friendly way to advise with him on different
+points; and occasionally, though not often, Franklin tells us, took his
+advice. But when the miserable fugitives, who escaped from the _Aceldama_
+on the Monongahela, brought back to the settlements their awful tale of
+carnage and horror, and Dunbar and his rout were cravenly seeking the
+protection of those whom they should have protected, Governor Morris was
+only too glad to consult, and take the advice of, the strongest man on the
+American Continent, except the gallant Virginian, young in years, but from
+early responsibilities and hardships, as well as native wisdom and
+intrepidity, endowed with a calm judgment and tempered courage far beyond
+his years, whom Providence almost seemed to have taken under its direct
+guardianship for its future purposes on the day that Braddock fell. Later,
+when it appeared as if the Indians would carry desolation and death into
+the very bowels of Pennsylvania, the Governor was equally glad to place
+Franklin in charge of its Northwestern Frontier, and to thrust blank
+military commissions into his hands to be filled up by him as he pleased.
+And later still, when the desire of the Governor to consult with Franklin
+about the proper measures for preventing the desertion of the back counties
+of Pennsylvania had brought the latter home from the Northwestern Frontier,
+the Governor did not hesitate, in planning an expedition against Fort
+Duquesne, to offer Franklin a commission as general. If Franklin had
+accepted the offer, we are justified, we think, in assuming that he would
+have won at least as high a degree of credit as that which he accorded to
+Shirley. "For tho' Shirley," he tells us in the _Autobiography_, "was not a
+bred soldier, he was sensible and sagacious in himself, and attentive to
+good advice from others, capable of forming judicious plans, and quick and
+active in carrying them into execution." No mean summary of the military
+virtues of Franklin himself as a citizen soldier. But Franklin knew the
+limitations of his training too well to be allured by such a deceitful
+honor. There were few civil tasks to which he was not equal, but, when it
+came to being a military commander, he had the good sense to make an
+admission like that which Shirley made to him. When a banquet was given to
+Lord Loudon by the city of New York, Shirley was present, though the
+occasion was due to the fact that the command previously held by him had
+just been transferred to Loudon. Franklin noticed that he was sitting in a
+very low seat. "They have given you, sir, too low a seat," he said. "No
+matter, Mr. Franklin," replied Shirley, "I find _a low seat_ the easiest."
+When Governor Morris saw that, disputatious as he was, he was no match in
+that respect for the Assembly, he was succeeded by Governor Denny, who
+brought over with him from England the gold medal awarded by the Royal
+Society to Franklin for his electrical discoveries. This honor as well as
+the political experience of his predecessors was calculated to impress upon
+the Governor the importance of being on good terms with Franklin. At all
+events, when the medal was delivered by him to Franklin at a public dinner
+given to himself, after his arrival at Philadelphia, he added to the gift
+some very polite expressions of his esteem, and assured Franklin that he
+had long known him by reputation. After dinner, he left the diners with
+their wine, and took Franklin aside into another room, and told him that he
+had been advised by his friends in England to cultivate a friendship with
+him as the man who was best able to give him good advice, and to make his
+task easy. Much also was said by the Governor about the good disposition of
+the Proprietary towards the Province and the advantage that it would be to
+everyone and to Franklin particularly if the long opposition to the
+Proprietary was abandoned, and harmony between him and the people restored.
+No one, said the Governor, could be more serviceable in bringing this about
+than Franklin himself, who might depend upon his services being duly
+acknowledged and recompensed. "The drinkers," the _Autobiography_ goes on,
+"finding we did not return immediately to the table, sent us a decanter of
+Madeira, which the Governor made liberal use of, and in proportion became
+more profuse of his solicitations and promises."
+
+To these overtures Franklin replied in a proper strain of mingled
+independence and good feeling, and concluded by expressing the hope that
+the Governor had not brought with him the same unfortunate instructions as
+his predecessors. The only answer that the Governor ever gave to this
+inquiry was given when he settled down to the duties of his office. It then
+became plain enough that he was under exactly the same instructions as his
+predecessors; the old ulcer broke out afresh, and Franklin's pen was soon
+again prodding Proprietary selfishness. But through it all he contrived to
+maintain the same relations of personal amity with Governor Denny that he
+had maintained with Governor Morris. "Between us personally," he says, "no
+enmity arose; we were often together; he was a man of letters, had seen
+much of the world, and was very entertaining and pleasing in conversation."
+But the situation, so far as the Province was concerned, was too grievous
+to be longer borne without an appeal for relief to the Crown. The Assembly
+had enacted a bill, appropriating the sum of sixty thousand pounds for the
+King's use, ten thousand pounds of which were to be expended on Lord
+Loudon's orders, and the Governor, in compliance with his instructions, had
+refused to give it his approval. This brought things to a head, the House
+resolved to petition the King to override the instructions and Franklin was
+appointed its agent to go over to England and present the petition. His
+passage was engaged, his sea-stores were actually all on board, when Lord
+Loudon himself came over to Philadelphia for the express purpose of
+bringing about an accommodation between the jarring interests. The Governor
+and Franklin met him at his request, and opened their minds fully to him;
+Franklin revamping all the old popular arguments, so often urged by him,
+and the Governor pleading his instructions, the bond that he had given and
+the ruin that awaited him if he disregarded it. "Yet," says Franklin,
+"seemed not unwilling to hazard himself if Lord Loudon would advise it."
+This his Lordship did not choose to do, though Franklin once thought that
+he had nearly prevailed on him to do it; and finally he entreated Franklin
+to use his influence with the Assembly to induce it to yield, promising, if
+it did, to employ unsparingly the King's troops for the defence of the
+frontiers of Pennsylvania, but stating that, if it did not, those frontiers
+must remain exposed to hostile incursion. The result was that the packet,
+in which Franklin engaged passage, sailed off with his sea-stores, while
+the parties were palavering, and the Assembly, after entering a formal
+protest against the duress, under which it gave way, abandoned its bill,
+and enacted another with the hateful exemption in it which was promptly
+approved by the Governor.
+
+Franklin was now free to embark upon his voyage, whenever he could find a
+ship ready to sail, but, unfortunately for him, all the packets by which he
+could sail were at the beck of Lord Loudon, who was the most vacillating of
+human beings. When Franklin, before leaving Philadelphia, inquired of him
+the precise time at which a packet boat, that he said would be off soon,
+would sail, he replied: "I have given out that she is to sail on Saturday
+next; but I may let you know, _entre nous_, that if you are there by Monday
+morning, you will be in time, but do not delay longer." Because of
+detention at a ferry, Franklin did not reach New York before noon on
+Monday, but he was relieved, when he arrived, to be told that the packet
+would not sail until the next day. This was about the beginning of April.
+In point of fact, it was near the end of June when it got off. At the time
+of Franklin's arrival in New York, it was one of the two packets, that were
+being kept waiting in port for the dispatches, upon which his Lordship
+appeared to be always engaged. While thus held up, another packet arrived
+only to be placed under the same embargo. Each had a list of impatient
+passengers, and many letters and orders for insurance against war risks
+from American merchants, but, day after day, his Lordship, entirely
+unmindful of the impatience and anxiety that he was creating, sat
+continually at his desk, writing his interminable dispatches. Calling one
+morning to pay his respects, Franklin found in his ante-chamber Innis, a
+Philadelphia messenger, who had brought on a batch of letters to his
+Lordship from Governor Denny, and who told Franklin that he was to call the
+next day for his Lordship's answer to the Governor, and would then set off
+for Philadelphia at once. On the strength of this assurance, Franklin the
+same day placed some letters of his own for delivery in that city in Innis'
+hands. A fortnight afterwards, he met the messenger in the same
+ante-chamber. "So, you are soon return'd, Innis" he said. "_Return'd!_"
+replied Innis, "No, I am not _gone_ yet." "How so?" "I have called here by
+order every morning these two weeks past for his lordship's letter, and it
+is not yet ready." "Is it possible, when he is so great a writer? for I see
+him constantly at his escritoire." "Yes," says Innis, "but he is like St.
+George on the signs, _always on horseback, and never rides on_." Indeed, so
+purely rotatory was all his Lordship's epistolary energy, unremitting as it
+seemed to be, that one of the reasons given by William Pitt for
+subsequently removing him was that "_the minister never heard from him, and
+could not know what he was doing_." Finally, the three packets dropped down
+to Sandy Hook to join the British fleet there. Not knowing but that they
+might make off any day, their passengers thought it safest to board them
+before they dropped down. The consequence was that they found themselves
+anchored at Sandy Hook for about six weeks, "as idle as a painted ship upon
+a painted ocean," and driven to the necessity of consuming all their
+sea-stores and buying more. At length, when the fleet did weigh anchor,
+with his Lordship and all his army on board, bound for the reduction of
+Louisburg, the three packets were ordered to attend it in readiness to
+receive the dispatches which the General was still scribbling upon the
+element that was not more mutable than his own purposes. When Franklin had
+been five days out, his packet was finally released, and stood off beyond
+the reach of his Lordship's indefatigable pen, but the other two packets
+were still kept in tow by him all the way to Halifax, where, after
+exercising his men for some time in sham attacks on sham forts, he changed
+his mind about besieging Louisburg, and returned to New York with all his
+troops and the two packets and their passengers. In the meantime, the
+French and their savage friends had captured Fort George, and butchered
+many of the garrison after its capitulation. The captain of one of the two
+packets, that were brought back to New York, afterwards told Franklin in
+London that, when he had been detained a month by his Lordship, he
+requested his permission to heave his ship down and clear her bottom. He
+was asked how long that would require. He answered three days. His Lordship
+replied, "If you can do it in one day, I give leave; otherwise not; for
+you must certainly sail the day after tomorrow." So he never obtained
+leave, though detained afterwards, from day to day, during full three
+months. No wonder that an irate passenger, who represented himself as
+having suffered considerable pecuniary loss, swore after he finally reached
+London in Franklin's presence, that he would sue Lord Loudon for damages.
+
+As Oxenstiern's son was enjoined by his father to do, Franklin had gone out
+into the world and seen with what little wisdom it is ruled. "On the
+whole," he says in the _Autobiography_, "I wonder'd much how such a man
+came to be intrusted with so important a business as the conduct of a great
+army; but, having since seen more of the great world, and the means of
+obtaining, and motives for giving places, my wonder is diminished."
+
+The _Autobiography_ makes it evident enough that for Loudon Franklin came
+to entertain the heartiest contempt.[15] His Lordship's movements in 1757
+he stigmatized as frivolous, expensive and disgraceful to the nation beyond
+conception. He was responsible, Franklin thought, for the loss of Fort
+George, and for the foundering of a large part of the Carolina fleet,
+which, for lack of notice from him, remained anchored in the worm-infested
+waters of Charleston harbor for three months, after he had raised his
+embargo on the exportation of provisions. Nor does Franklin hesitate to
+charge that this embargo, while laid on the pretence of cutting off the
+enemy from supplies, was in reality laid for the purpose of beating down
+the price of provisions in the interest of the contractors, in whose
+profits, it was suspected, that Loudon had a share. Not only did his
+Lordship decline, on the shallow pretext that he did not wish to mix his
+accounts with those of his predecessors, to give Franklin the order that he
+had promised him for the payment of the balance, still due him on account
+of Braddock's expedition, though liquidated by his own audit, but, when
+Franklin urged the fact that he had charged no commission for his services,
+as a reason why he should be promptly paid, his Lordship cynically replied,
+"O, Sir, you must not think of persuading us that you are no gainer; we
+understand better those affairs, and know that everyone concerned in
+supplying the army finds means, in the doing it, to fill his own pockets."
+
+Franklin and his son arrived in London on July 27, 1757. Shortly after he
+had settled down in his lodgings, he called upon Dr. Fothergill, whose
+counsel he had been advised to obtain, and who thought that, before an
+application was made to the British Government, there should be an effort
+to reach an understanding with the Penns themselves. Then took place the
+interview between Franklin and Lord Granville, at which his Lordship, after
+some preliminary discourse, expressed this alarming opinion:
+
+ You Americans have wrong ideas of the nature of your
+ constitution; you contend that the King's instructions
+ to his governors are not laws, and think yourselves at
+ liberty to regard or disregard them at your own
+ discretion. But those instructions are not like the
+ pocket instructions given to a minister going abroad,
+ for regulating his conduct in some trifling point of
+ ceremony. They are first drawn up by judges learned in
+ the laws; they are then considered, debated, and
+ perhaps amended in Council, after which they are signed
+ by the king. They are then, so far as they relate to
+ you, the _law of the land_, for the King is the
+ LEGISLATOR OF THE COLONIES.
+
+The correctness of this opinion was combated by Franklin. He told his
+Lordship that this was new doctrine to him, and that he had always
+understood from the American charters that the colonial laws were to be
+enacted by the assemblies of the Colonies, and that, once enacted and
+assented to by the King, the King could not repeal or alter them, and that,
+as the colonial assemblies could not make laws for themselves without his
+assent, so he could not make laws for them without their assent. The great
+man's reply was as brief as a great man's reply is only too likely to be
+when his opinions are questioned by his inferiors. It was merely that
+Franklin was totally mistaken. Franklin did not think so, and, concerned
+for fear that Lord Granville might be but expressing the sentiment of the
+Court, he wrote down what had been said to him as soon as he returned to
+his lodgings. The utterance reminded him that some twenty years before a
+bill had been introduced into Parliament by the ministry of that time
+containing a clause, intended to make the King's instructions laws in the
+Colonies, but that the clause had been stricken out of it by the House of
+Commons. For this, he said, the Colonies adored the Commons, as their
+friends and the friends of liberty, until it afterwards seemed as if they
+had refused the point of sovereignty to the King only that they might
+reserve it for themselves.
+
+A meeting between the Proprietaries and Franklin was arranged by Doctor
+Fothergill. It assumed the form that such meetings are apt to assume, that
+is of mutual professions of an earnest desire to agree, repetition of the
+old antagonistic reasonings and a disagreement as stubborn as before.
+However, it was agreed that Franklin should reduce the complaints against
+the Proprietaries to writing, and that the Proprietaries were to consider
+them. When the paper was drawn, they submitted it to their solicitor,
+Ferdinand John Paris, who had represented them in the celebrated litigation
+between the Penns and the Lords Baltimore over the boundary line between
+Pennsylvania and Maryland, and had written all their papers and messages
+in their disputes with the Pennsylvania Assembly. "He was," says Franklin,
+"a proud, angry man, and as I had occasionally in the answers of the
+Assembly treated his papers with some severity, they being really weak in
+point of argument and haughty in expression, he had conceived a mortal
+enmity to me." With Paris, Franklin refused to discuss the points of his
+paper, and the Proprietaries then, on the advice of Paris, placed it in the
+hands of the Attorney- and Solicitor-Generals for their opinion and advice.
+By them no answer was given for nearly a year, though Franklin frequently
+called upon the Proprietaries for an answer only to be told that they had
+not yet received the opinion of their learned advisers. What the opinion
+was when it was finally rendered the Proprietaries did not let Franklin
+know, but instead addressed a long communication, drawn and signed by
+Paris, to the Assembly, reciting the contents of Franklin's paper,
+complaining of its lack of formality as rudeness, and justifying their
+conduct. They would be willing, they said, to compose the dispute, if the
+Assembly would send out _some person of candor_ to treat with them.
+Franklin supposed that the incivility imputed to him consisted in the fact
+that he had not addressed the Proprietaries by their assumed title of True
+and Absolute Proprietaries of the Province of Pennsylvania.
+
+The letter of the Proprietaries was not answered by the Assembly. While
+they were pretending to treat with Franklin, Governor Denny had been unable
+to withstand the pressure of his situation, and, at the request of Lord
+Loudon, had approved an act subjecting the estates of the Penns to
+taxation. When this Act was transmitted to England, the Proprietaries, upon
+the advice of Paris, petitioned the King to withhold his assent from it,
+and, when the petition came on for hearing, the parties were represented by
+counsel. On the one hand it was contended that the purpose of the Act was
+to impose an oppressive burden upon the Proprietary estates, and that the
+assessment under it would be so unequal because of the popular prejudice
+against the Penns that they would be ruined. To this it was replied that
+the Act was not conceived with any such purpose, and would not have any
+such effect, that the assessors were honest and discreet men under oath,
+and that any advantage that might inure to them individually from
+over-assessing the property of the Proprietaries would be too trifling to
+induce them to perjure themselves. It was also urged in opposition to the
+petition that the money, for which the Act provided, had been printed and
+issued, and was now in the hands of the inhabitants of the Province, and
+would be deprived of all value, to their great injury, if the Act did not
+receive the royal assent merely because of the selfish and groundless fears
+of the Proprietaries. At this point, Lord Mansfield, one of the counsel for
+the Proprietaries, led Franklin off into a room nearby, while the other
+lawyers were still pleading, and asked him if he was really of the opinion
+that the Proprietary estate would not be unfairly taxed if the Act was
+executed. "Certainly," said Franklin. "Then," said he, "you can have little
+objection to enter into an engagement to assure that point." "None at all,"
+replied Franklin. Paris was then called in, and, after some discussion, a
+paper, such as Lord Mansfield suggested, was drawn up and signed by
+Franklin and Mr. Charles, who was the agent of Pennsylvania for ordinary
+purposes, and the law was given the royal assent with the further
+engagement, upon the part of Franklin and Mr. Charles, that it should be
+amended in certain respects by subsequent legislation. This legislation,
+however, the Assembly afterwards declined to enact when a committee,
+appointed by it, upon which it was careful to place several close friends
+of the Proprietaries, brought in an unanimous report stating that the
+yearly tax levied before the order of the Council reached Pennsylvania had
+been imposed with perfect fairness as between the Proprietaries and the
+other tax-payers.
+
+In the most important respect, therefore, Franklin's mission to England had
+resulted in success. The principle was established by the Crown that the
+estate of the Proprietaries was subject to taxation equally with that of
+the humblest citizen of Pennsylvania; and the credit of the paper money,
+then scattered throughout the province, was saved. The Assembly rewarded
+its servant, when he returned to Pennsylvania, with its formal thanks and
+the sum of three thousand pounds. He responded in the happy terms which he
+always had at his command on occasions of this sort. "He made answer," says
+the official report, "that he was thankful to the House, for the very
+handsome and generous Allowance they had been pleased to make him for his
+Services; but that the Approbation of this House was, in his Estimation,
+far above every other kind of Recompense."
+
+The Proprietaries punished their servant, Governor Denny, by removing him
+and threatening him with suit for the breach of his bond, but it is a
+pleasure to be told in the _Autobiography_ that his position was such that
+he could despise their threats.
+
+While the duel was going on between the Proprietaries and the Assembly,
+Franklin had some significant things at times to say about it in his
+familiar letters. As far as we can see, his political course, during this
+period, was entirely candid and manly. He was on agreeable personal terms
+with all the colonial governors, he seems to have cherished an honest
+desire to be helpful to the Proprietaries, so far as their own illiberality
+and folly would allow him to be, and it is very plain that he was not
+without the feeling that the demands of the Popular Party itself were
+occasionally immoderate. He was quite willing for the sake of peace to
+concede anything except the essential points of the controversy, but when
+it came to these he was immovable as men of his type usually are when they
+realize that a claim upon them is too unjust or exorbitant even for their
+pacific temper.
+
+ I am much oblig'd to you for the favourable Light you
+ put me in, to our Proprietor, as mention'd in yours of
+ July 30 [he wrote to Peter Collinson in 1754], I know
+ not why he should imagine me not his Friend, since I
+ cannot recollect any one Act of mine that could
+ denominate me otherwise. On the contrary if to concur
+ with him, so far as my little Influence reach'd in all
+ his generous and benevolent Designs and Desires of
+ making his Province and People flourishing and happy be
+ any Mark of my Respect and Dutyful Regard to him, there
+ are many who would be ready to say I could not be
+ suppos'd deficient in such Respect. The Truth is I have
+ sought his _Interest_ more than his _Favour_; others
+ perhaps have sought both, and obtain'd at least the
+ latter. But in my Opinion great Men are not always best
+ serv'd by such as show on all Occasions a blind
+ Attachment to them: An Appearance of Impartiality in
+ general gives a Man sometimes much more Weight when he
+ would serve in particular instances.
+
+To the friend to whom these words were written Franklin was disposed to
+unbosom himself with unusual freedom, and, in the succeeding year, in
+another letter to Collinson, he used words which showed plainly enough that
+he thought that the Assembly too was at times inclined to indulge in more
+hair-splitting and testiness than was consistent with the public welfare.
+
+ You will see [he said] more of the same Trifling in
+ these Votes in both sides. I am heartily sick of our
+ present Situation; I like neither the Governor's
+ Conduct, nor the Assembly's; and having some Share in
+ the Confidence of both, I have endeavour'd to reconcile
+ 'em but in vain, and between 'em they make me very
+ uneasy. I was chosen last Year in my Absence and was
+ not at the Winter Sitting when the House sent home that
+ Address to the King, which I am afraid was both
+ ill-judg'd and ill-tim'd. If my being able now and then
+ to influence a good Measure did not keep up my Spirits
+ I should be ready to swear never to serve again as an
+ Assembly Man, since both Sides expect more from me than
+ they ought, and blame me sometimes for not doing what I
+ am not able to do, as well as for not preventing what
+ was not in my Power to prevent. The Assembly ride
+ restive; and the Governor tho' he spurs with both
+ heels, at the same time reins in with both hands, so
+ that the Publick Business can never move forward, and
+ he remains like St. George on the Sign, Always a
+ Horseback and never going on. Did you never hear this
+ old Catch?
+
+ _Their was a mad Man--He had a mad Wife,
+ And three mad Sons beside;
+ And they all got upon a mad Horse
+ And madly they did ride._
+
+ Tis a Compendium of our Proceedings and may save you
+ the Trouble of reading them.
+
+In a still later letter to the same correspondent, Franklin asserted that
+there was no reason for excluding Quakers from the House, since, though
+unwilling to fight themselves, they had been brought to unite in voting the
+sums necessary to enable the Province to defend itself. Then, after
+referring to the defamation, that was being heaped upon him by the
+Proprietary Party, in the place of the court paid to him when he had
+exerted himself to secure aids from the House for Braddock and Shirley, he
+said, "Let me know if you learn that any of their Slanders reach England. I
+abhor these Altercations and if I did not love the Country and the People
+would remove immediately into a more quiet Government, Connecticut, where I
+am also happy enough to have many Friends."
+
+However, there was too much fuel for the fire to die down. The claim of the
+Proprietaries to exemption from taxation was only the most aggravated
+result of their efforts, by their instructions to their Governors, to
+shape the legislation of the Province in accordance with their own personal
+aims and pecuniary interests instead of in the spirit of the royal charter,
+which gave to William Penn, and his heirs, and his, or their, deputies or
+lieutenants, free, full and absolute power, for the good and happy
+government of Pennsylvania, to make and enact any laws, according to their
+best discretion, by and with the advice, assent and approbation of the
+freemen of the said country, or of their delegates or deputies. In the
+report of the Committee of Aggrievances of the Assembly, drawn by Franklin,
+the case of the freemen of the Province against the Penns, which led to
+Franklin's first mission to England, is clearly stated. They are arraigned
+not only for seeking to exempt the bulk of their estate from the common
+burden of taxation, but also, apart from this, for stripping, by their
+instructions, their governors, and thereby the People themselves, of all
+real discretion in fixing by legislation the measure and manner in which,
+and the time at which, aids and supplies should be furnished for the
+defence of the Province. They had even, the report charged, prohibited
+their governors, by their instructions, from assenting to laws disposing of
+interest arising from the loan of bills of credit or money raised by excise
+taxes--forms of revenue to which the Proprietary estate did not contribute
+at all--unless the laws contained a clause giving their governors the right
+to negative a particular application of the sums. Another grievance was the
+issuance by the governor of commissions to provincial judges, to be held
+during the will and pleasure of the governors instead of during good
+behavior, as covenanted by William Penn--a practice which gave the
+Proprietaries control of the judicial as well as the executive Branch of
+the provincial government.
+
+For a time, after Franklin returned to Pennsylvania in 1762, there was
+something like peace between the Proprietaries and the people. When a
+nephew of Thomas Penn was appointed governor, the Assembly accepted him as
+a family pledge of restored good feeling.
+
+ The Assembly [Franklin wrote to Dr. Fothergill]
+ received a Governor of the Proprietary family with open
+ arms, addressed him with sincere expressions of
+ kindness and respect, opened their purses to them, and
+ presented him with six hundred pounds; made a Riot Act
+ and prepared a Militia Bill immediately, at his
+ instance, granted supplies, and did everything that he
+ requested, and promised themselves great happiness
+ under his administration.
+
+And no governor was ever so dependent upon the good will of the Assembly.
+It was during his administration that the Scotch-Irish inhabitants of the
+frontier, inflamed by Indian outrages, imbrued their hands in the blood of
+the Conestoga Indians, and, so far from being intimidated by the public
+proclamations issued by the Governor for their arrest and punishment,
+marched to the very threshold of Philadelphia itself with the purpose of
+destroying the Moravian Indians huddled there in terror of their lives. The
+whole Province outside of the City of Philadelphia was given over to
+lawlessness and disorder. In the contagious excitement of the hour, a
+considerable portion of its population even believed that the Quakers had
+gained the friendship of the Indians by presents, supplied them secretly
+with arms and ammunition, and engaged them to fall upon and kill the whites
+on the Pennsylvania frontier. Under these circumstances, the Governor
+simply did what Governor Morris and Governor Denny had been compelled to do
+before him, namely, call in the aid of the man who could in a letter to
+Peter Collinson truthfully sum up all that there was in the military
+demonstration which angered Thomas Penn so deeply with the simple
+utterance, "The People happen to love me." The whole story was told by
+Franklin to Dr. Fothergill in the letter from which we have just quoted.
+
+ More wonders! You know that I don't love the
+ Proprietary and that he does not love me. Our totally
+ different tempers forbid it. You might therefore expect
+ that the late new appointments of one of his family
+ would find me ready for opposition. And yet when his
+ nephew arrived, our Governor, I considered government
+ as government, and paid him all respect, gave him on
+ all occasions my best advice, promoted in the Assembly
+ a ready compliance with everything he proposed or
+ recommended, and when those daring rioters, encouraged
+ by general approbation of the populace, treated his
+ proclamation with contempt, I drew my pen in the cause;
+ wrote a pamphlet (that I have sent you) to render the
+ rioters unpopular; promoted an association to support
+ the authority of the Government and defend the Governor
+ by taking arms, signed it first myself, and was
+ followed by several hundreds, who took arms
+ accordingly. The Governor offered me the command of
+ them, but I chose to carry a musket and strengthen his
+ authority by setting an example of obedience to his
+ order. And would you think it, this proprietary
+ Governor did me the honour, in an alarm, to run to my
+ house at midnight, with his counsellors at his heels,
+ for advice, and made it his head-quarters for some
+ time. And within four and twenty hours, your old friend
+ was a common soldier, a counsellor, a kind of dictator,
+ an ambassador to the country mob, and on his returning
+ home, nobody again. All this has happened in a few
+ weeks.
+
+With the retirement of the backwoodsmen from Philadelphia to their homes,
+sprang up one of the angriest factional contests that Pennsylvania had ever
+known. Every malignant passion, political or sectarian, that lurked in the
+Province was excited into the highest degree of morbid life. The
+Presbyterians, the Churchmen, even some of the Quakers, acclaimed the
+Paxton Boys as instruments of a just vengeance, and they constituted a
+political force, which the Governor was swift to utilize for the purpose of
+strengthening his party. He dropped all efforts to apprehend the murderers
+of the Conestoga Indians, granted a private audience to the insurgents,
+and accused the Assembly of disloyalty, and of encroaching upon the
+prerogatives of the Crown, only because it had been presumptuous enough to
+make an appointment to a petty office in a bill tendered to him for his
+assent. It was during his administration, too, that the claim was made
+that, even if the Proprietary estate had been subjected to taxation by the
+Lords in Council, under the terms of one of the amendments, proposed by
+them, "_the best and most valuable_," of the Proprietary lands "should be
+tax'd no higher than the _worst and least valuable_ of the People's."
+
+When the conflict was reopened, the Assembly boldly brought it to an issue.
+One of its committees, with Franklin at its head, reported a series of
+resolutions censuring the proprietaries, condemning their rule as too weak
+to maintain its authority and repress disorder, and petitioning the King to
+take over the Government of the Province, after such compensation to the
+Proprietaries as was just. The Assembly then adjourned to sound the temper
+of their constituents, and their adjournment was the signal for a pamphlet
+war attended by such a hail of paper pellets as rarely marked any contest
+so early in the history of the American Colonies. Among the best of them
+was the pamphlet written by Franklin, and entitled _Cool Thoughts on the
+Present Situation of our Public Affairs_, which has already been mentioned,
+and which denounced in no uncertain terms the "insolent Tribunitial VETO,"
+with which the Proprietaries were in the habit of declaring that nothing
+should be done, unless their private interests in certain particulars were
+served.
+
+On May 14, 1764, the Assembly met again, and was soon deeply engaged in a
+debate as to whether an address should be sent to the King, praying the
+abolition of the Proprietary Government. Long did the debate last; Joseph
+Galloway making the principal argument in support of the proposition, and
+John Dickinson the principal one against it. When the vote was taken, the
+affirmative prevailed, but, as Isaac Norris, who had been a member of the
+body for thirty years, and its speaker for fifteen, was about to be bidden
+by it to sign the address, he stated that, since he did not approve it, and
+yet would have to sign it as speaker, he hoped that he might have time to
+draft his objections to it. A short recess ensued, and when the members
+convened again, Norris sent word that he was too sick to be present, and
+requested that another person should be chosen as speaker. The choice of
+the body then fell upon Franklin, who immediately signed the paper.
+
+The next sitting of the Assembly was not to be held until the succeeding
+October, and before that time the annual election for members of the
+Assembly was to take place. For the purpose of influencing public opinion,
+Dickinson, upon its adjournment, published his speech with a long preface
+by Dr. William Smith. Galloway followed suit by publishing his speech with
+a long preface by Franklin. This preface is one of Franklin's masterpieces,
+marked it is true by some quaint conceits and occasional relaxations of
+energy, but full of power and withering sarcasm. Preceded by such a lengthy
+and brilliant preface, Galloway must have felt that his speech had little
+more than the secondary value of an appendix. With the consummate capacity
+for pellucid statement, which was one of Franklin's most remarkable gifts,
+it narrated the manner in which the practice of buying legislation from the
+Proprietaries had been pursued. With equal force and ingenuity, it
+demonstrated that five out of the six amendments, proposed by the Lords in
+Council to the Act, approved by Governor Denny, did not justify the charge
+that the circumstances, in which they originated, involved any real
+injustice to the Proprietaries, and that the sixth, which forbade the
+tender to the Proprietaries of paper bills of fluctuating value, in payment
+of debts payable to them, under the terms of special contracts, in coin,
+if a measure of justice to them, would be also a measure of justice to
+other creditors in the same situation, who were not mentioned in the
+amendment.
+
+Referring to the universal practice in America of making such bills a legal
+tender and the fact that the bills in question would have been a legal
+tender as respects the members of the Assembly and their constituents as
+well as the Proprietaries, Franklin's preface glows like an incandescent
+furnace in these words:
+
+ But if he (the reader) can not on these Considerations,
+ quite excuse the Assembly, what will he think of those
+ _Honourable_ Proprietaries, who when Paper Money was
+ issued in their Colony for the Common Defence of their
+ vast Estates, with those of the People, and who must
+ therefore reap, at least, equal Advantages from those
+ Bills with the People, could nevertheless _wish_ to be
+ exempted from their Share of the unavoidable
+ Disadvantages. Is there upon Earth a Man besides, with
+ any Conception of what is honest, with any Notion of
+ Honor, with the least Tincture in his Veins of the
+ Gentleman, but would have blush'd at the Thought; but
+ would have rejected with Disdain such undue Preference,
+ if it had been offered him? Much less would he have
+ struggled for it, mov'd Heaven and Earth to obtain it,
+ resolv'd to ruin Thousands of his Tenants by a Repeal
+ of the Act, rather than miss of it, and enforce it
+ afterwards by an audaciously wicked Instruction,
+ forbidding Aids to his King, and exposing the Province
+ to Destruction, unless it was complied with. And
+ yet,--these are _Honourable Men_.... Those who study
+ Law and Justice, as a Science [he added in an indignant
+ note] have established it a Maxim in Equity, "Qui
+ sentit commodum, sentire debet et onus." And so
+ consistent is this with the _common_ Sense of Mankind,
+ that even our lowest untaught Coblers and Porters feel
+ the Force of it in their own Maxim, (which _they_ are
+ _honest enough_ never to dispute) "Touch Pot, touch
+ Penny."
+
+Other passages in the Preface were equally scorching. Replying to the
+charge of the Proprietaries that the Quaker Assembly, out of mere malice,
+because they had conscientiously quitted the Society of Friends for the
+Church, were wickedly determined to ruin them by throwing the entire burden
+of taxation on them, Franklin had this to say:
+
+ How foreign these Charges were from the Truth, need not
+ be told to any Man in _Pennsylvania_. And as the
+ Proprietors knew, that the Hundred Thousand Pounds of
+ paper money, struck for the defence of their enormous
+ Estates, with others, was actually issued, spread thro'
+ the Country, and in the Hands of Thousands of poor
+ People, who had given their Labor for it, how base,
+ cruel, and inhuman it was, to endeavour by a Repeal of
+ the Act, to strike the Money dead in those Hands at one
+ Blow, and reduce it all to Waste Paper, to the utter
+ Confusion of all Trade and Dealings, and the Ruin of
+ Multitudes, merely to avoid paying their own just
+ Tax!--Words may be wanting to express, but Minds will
+ easily conceive, and never without Abhorrence!
+
+But fierce as these attacks were, they were mild in comparison with the
+shower of stones hurled by Franklin at the Proprietaries in the Preface in
+one of those lapidary inscriptions which were so common in that age. The
+prefacer of Dickinson's Speech had inserted in his introduction a lapidary
+memorial of William Penn made up of tessellated bits of eulogy, extracted
+from the various addresses of the Assembly itself. This gave Franklin a
+fine opportunity to retort in a similar mosaic of phrases and to contrast
+the meanness of the sons with what the Assembly had said of the father.
+
+ That these Encomiums on the Father [he said] tho'
+ sincere, have occurr'd so frequently, was owing,
+ however, to two Causes; first, a vain Hope the
+ Assemblies entertain'd, that the Father's Example, and
+ the Honors done his Character, might influence the
+ Conduct of the Sons; secondly, for that in attempting
+ to compliment the Sons on their own Merits, there was
+ always found an extreme Scarcity of Matter. Hence _the
+ Father, the honored and honorable Father_, was so
+ often repeated, that the Sons themselves grew sick of
+ it; and have been heard to say to each other with
+ Disgust, when told that A, B, and C. were come to wait
+ upon them with Addresses on some public Occasion,
+ "_Then I suppose we shall hear more about our Father._"
+ So that, let me tell the Prefacer, who perhaps was
+ unacquainted with this Anecdote, that if he hop'd to
+ curry more Favor with the Family, by the Inscription he
+ has fram'd for that great Man's Monument, he may find
+ himself mistaken; for,--there is too much in it of _our
+ Father_.
+
+ If therefore, he would erect a Monument to the Sons,
+ the Votes of Assembly, which are of such Credit with
+ him, will furnish him with ample Materials for his
+ Inscription.
+
+ To save him Trouble, I will essay a Sketch for him, in
+ the Lapidary Style, tho' mostly in the Expressions, and
+ everywhere in the Sense and Spirit of the Assembly's
+ Resolves and Messages.
+
+ Be this a Memorial
+ Of T-- and R-- P--,
+ P-- of P,--
+ Who, with Estates immense,
+ Almost beyond Computation,
+ When their own Province,
+ And the whole _British_ Empire
+ Were engag'd in a bloody and most expensive War,
+ Begun for the Defence of those Estates,
+ Could yet meanly desire
+ To have those very Estates
+ Totally or Partially
+ Exempted from Taxation,
+ While their Fellow-Subjects all around them, Groan'd
+ Under the Universal Burthen.
+ To gain this Point,
+ They refus'd the necessary Laws
+ For the Defence of their People,
+ And suffer'd their Colony to welter in its Blood,
+ Rather than abate in the least
+ Of these their dishonest Pretensions.
+ The Privileges granted by their Father
+ Wisely and benevolently
+ To encourage the first Settlers of the Province,
+ They,
+ Foolishly and cruelly,
+ Taking Advantage of public Distress,
+ Have extorted from the Posterity of those Settlers;
+ And are daily endeavouring to reduce them
+ To the most abject Slavery:
+ Tho' to the Virtue and Industry of those People
+ In improving their Country,
+ They owe all that they possess and enjoy.
+ A striking Instance
+ Of human Depravity and Ingratitude;
+ And an irrefragable Proof,
+ That Wisdom and Goodness
+ Do not descend with an Inheritance;
+ But that ineffable Meanness
+ May be connected with unbounded Fortune.
+
+It may well be doubted whether any one had ever been subjected to such
+overwhelming lapidation as this since the time of the early Christian
+martyrs.
+
+There are many other deadly thrusts in the Preface, and nowhere else are
+the issues between the Proprietaries and the People so clearly presented,
+but the very completeness of the paper renders it too long for further
+quotation.
+
+Franklin, however, was by no means allowed to walk up and down the field,
+vainly challenging a champion to come out from the opposing host and
+contend with him. At his towering front the missiles of the Proprietary
+Party were mainly directed. Beneath one caricature of him were these lines:
+
+ "Fight dog, fight bear! You're all my friends:
+ By you I shall attain my ends,
+ For I can never be content
+ Till I have got the government.
+ But if from this attempt I fall,
+ Then let the Devil take you all!"
+
+Another writer strove in his lapidary zeal to fairly bury Franklin beneath
+a whole cairn of opprobrious accusations, consuming nine pages of printed
+matter in the effort to visit his political tergiversation, his greed for
+power, his immorality and other sins, with their proper deserts, and ending
+with this highly rhetorical apostrophe:
+
+ "Reader, behold this striking Instance of
+ Human Depravity and Ingratitude;
+ An irrefragable Proof
+ That neither the Capital services of _Friends_
+ Nor the attracting Favours of the Fair,
+ Can fix the Sincerity of a Man,
+ _Devoid of Principles_ and
+ Ineffably mean:
+ Whose ambition is
+ POWER,
+ And whose intention is
+ TYRANNY."
+
+The illegitimacy of William Franklin, of course, was freely used during the
+conflict as a means of paining and discrediting Franklin. In a pamphlet
+entitled, _What is sauce for a Goose is also Sauce for a Gander_, the
+writer asserted that the mother of William was a woman named Barbara, who
+worked in Franklin's house as a servant for ten pounds a year, that she
+remained in this position until her death and that Franklin then stole her
+to the grave in silence without pall, tomb or monument. A more refined
+spirit, which could not altogether free itself from the undertow of its
+admiration for such an extraordinary man, penned these lively lines
+entitled, "Inscription on a Curious Stove in the Form of An Urn, Contrived
+in such a Manner As To Make The Flame Descend Instead of Rising from the
+Fire, Invented by Dr. Franklin."
+
+ "Like a Newton sublimely he soared
+ To a summit before unattained,
+ New regions of science explored
+ And the palm of philosophy gained.
+
+ "With a spark which he caught from the skies
+ He displayed an unparalleled wonder,
+ And we saw with delight and surprise
+ That his rod could secure us from thunder.
+
+ "Oh! had he been wise to pursue
+ The track for his talents designed,
+ What a tribute of praise had been due
+ To the teacher and friend of mankind.
+
+ "But to covet political fame
+ Was in him a degrading ambition,
+ The spark that from Lucifer came
+ And kindled the blaze of sedition.
+
+ "Let candor then write on his urn,
+ Here lies the renowned inventor
+ Whose fame to the skies ought to burn
+ But inverted descends to the centre."
+
+The election began at nine o'clock in the morning on October 1, 1764.
+Franklin and Galloway headed the "Old Ticket," and Willing and Bryan the
+"New." The latter ticket was supported by the Dutch Calvinists, the
+Presbyterians and many of the Dutch Lutherans and Episcopalians; the former
+by the Quakers and Moravians and some of the McClenaghanites. So great was
+the concourse of voters that, until midnight, it took fifteen minutes for
+one of them to work his way from the end of the line of eager electors to
+the polling place. Excitement was at white heat, and, while the election
+was pending, hands were busy scattering squibs and campaign appeals in
+English and German among the crowd. Towards three the next morning, the
+new-ticket partisans moved that the polls be closed, but the motion was
+opposed by their old-ticket foes, because they wished to bring out a
+reserve of aged or lame retainers who could not stand long upon their feet.
+These messengers were dispatched to bring in such retainers from their
+homes in chairs and litters, and, when the new-ticket men saw the success,
+with which the old-ticket men were marshalling their recruits, they, too,
+began to scour the vicinage for votes, and so successful were the two
+parties in mobilizing their reserves that the polls did not close until
+three o'clock in the afternoon of the second day. Not until the third day
+were the some 3900 real and fraudulent votes cast counted; and, when the
+count was over, it was found that Franklin and Galloway had been defeated.
+"Franklin," said an eye-witness of the election, "died like a philosopher.
+But Mr. Galloway agonized in death like a mortal deist, who has no hopes of
+a future life."
+
+As for Franklin, his enemies had simply kicked him upstairs. A majority of
+the persons returned as elected belonged to his faction, and, despite the
+indignant eloquence of Dickinson, who declared him to be the most bitterly
+disliked man in Pennsylvania, the Assembly, by a vote of nineteen to
+eleven, selected him as the agent of the Province to go over to England,
+and assist Richard Jackson, its standing agent, in "representing,
+soliciting and transacting the affairs" of the Province for the ensuing
+year.
+
+The minority protested; and moved that its protest be spread upon the
+minutes, and, when this motion was denied, it published its remonstrance in
+the newspapers. This act provoked a pamphlet in reply from Franklin
+entitled _Remarks on a Late Protest_. Though shorter it is as good, as far
+as it goes, as the preface to Galloway's speech. He tosses the protestants
+and their reasons for believing him unfit for the agency on his horns with
+astonishing ease and strength, calls attention to the trifling majority of
+some twenty-five votes by which he was returned defeated, and chills the
+habit that we often indulge of lauding the political integrity and decorum
+of our American ancestors at our own expense by inveighing against the
+"many Perjuries procured among the wretched Rabble brought to swear
+themselves intitled to a Vote" and roundly saying to the protestants to
+their faces, "Your Artifices did not prevail everywhere; nor your double
+Tickets, and Whole Boxes of Forged Votes. A great Majority of the
+new-chosen Assembly were of the old Members, and remain uncorrupted."
+
+Apart from the reference to the illegitimacy of William Franklin, Franklin
+had passed through the heated contest with the Proprietaries without the
+slightest odor of fire upon his garments. With his hatred of contention, it
+is natural enough that he should have written to Collinson, when the pot of
+contention was boiling so fiercely in Pennsylvania in 1764: "The general
+Wish seems to be a King's Government. If that is not to be obtain'd, many
+talk of quitting the Province, and among them your old Friend, who is tired
+of these Contentions & longs for philosophic Ease and Leisure." But he did
+not overstate the case when he wrote to Samuel Rhoads in the succeeding
+year from London, "The Malice of our Adversaries I am well acquainted with,
+but hitherto it has been Harmless; all their Arrows shot against us, have
+been like those that Rabelais speaks of which were headed with Butter
+harden'd in the Sun."
+
+Franklin was a doughty antagonist when at bay, but he had few obdurate
+resentments, and was quick to see the redeeming virtues of even those who
+had wronged him. He assisted in the circulation of John Dickinson's famous
+Farmer's Letters, and curiously enough when Dickinson was the President of
+the State of Pennsylvania at the close of the Revolution, and the 130,000
+pounds which that State had agreed to pay for the vacant lots and
+unappropriated wilderness lands of the Penns was claimed to be an
+inadequate consideration by some of them, he gave to John Penn, the son of
+Thomas Penn, a letter of recommendation to "the Civilities and Friendship"
+of Dickinson.
+
+ I would beg leave to mention it to your Excellency's
+ Consideration [he said], whether it would not be
+ reputable for the Province, in the cooler Season of
+ Peace to reconsider that Act, and if the Allowance made
+ to the Family should be found inadequate, to regulate
+ it according to Equity, since it becomes a Virgin State
+ to be particularly careful of its Reputation, and to
+ guard itself not only against committing Injustice, but
+ against even the suspicion of it.
+
+But nothing better proves what a selfish cur Thomas Penn was than the fact
+that, more than twenty years after the election, of which we have been
+speaking, so magnanimous a man as Franklin could express this sober
+estimate of his conduct and character in a letter to Jan Ingenhousz:
+
+ In my own Judgment, when I consider that for near 80
+ Years, viz., from the Year 1700, William Penn and his
+ Sons receiv'd the Quit-rents which were originally
+ granted for the Support of Government, and yet refused
+ to support the Government, obliging the People to make
+ a fresh Provision for its Support all that Time, which
+ cost them vast Sums, as the most necessary Laws were
+ not to be obtain'd but at the Price of making such
+ Provision; when I consider the Meanness and cruel
+ Avarice of the late Proprietor, in refusing for several
+ Years of War, to consent to any Defence of the
+ Frontiers ravaged all the while by the Enemy, unless
+ his Estate should be exempted from paying any Part of
+ the Expence, not to mention other Atrocities too long
+ for this letter, I can not but think the Family well
+ off, and that it will be prudent in them to take the
+ Money and be quiet. William Penn, the First Proprietor,
+ Father of Thomas, the Husband of the present Dowager,
+ was a wise and good Man, and as honest to the People as
+ the extream Distress of his Circumstances would permit
+ him to be, but the said Thomas was a miserable Churl,
+ always intent upon Griping and Saving; and whatever
+ Good the Father may have done for the Province was
+ amply undone by the Mischief received from the Son, who
+ never did anything that had the Appearance of
+ Generosity or Public Spirit but what was extorted from
+ him by Solicitation and the Shame of Backwardness in
+ Benefits evidently incumbent on him to promote, and
+ which was done at last in the most ungracious manner
+ possible. The Lady's Complaints of not duly receiving
+ her Revenues from America are habitual; they were the
+ same during all the Time of my long Residence in
+ London, being then made by her Husband as Excuses for
+ the Meanness of his Housekeeping and his Deficiency in
+ Hospitality, tho' I knew at the same time that he was
+ then in full Receipt of vast Sums annually by the Sale
+ of Lands, Interest of Money, and Quit-rents. But
+ probably he might conceal this from his Lady to induce
+ greater Economy as it is known that he ordered no more
+ of his Income home than was absolutely necessary for
+ his Subsistence, but plac'd it at Interest in
+ Pennsylvania & the Jerseys, where he could have 6 and 7
+ per Cent, while Money bore no more than 5 per cent in
+ England. I us'd often to hear of those Complaints, and
+ laugh at them, perceiving clearly their Motive. They
+ serv'd him on other as well as on domestic Occasions.
+ You remember our Rector of St. Martin's Parish, Dr.
+ Saunders. He once went about, during a long and severe
+ Frost, soliciting charitable Contributions to purchase
+ Coals for poor Families. He came among others to me,
+ and I gave him something. It was but little, very
+ little, and yet it occasion'd him to remark, "You are
+ more bountiful on this Occasion than your wealthy
+ Proprietary, Mr. Penn, but he tells me he is distress'd
+ by not receiving his Incomes from America." The Incomes
+ of the family there must still be very great, for they
+ have a Number of Manors consisting of the best Lands,
+ which are preserved to them, and vast Sums at Interest
+ well secur'd by Mortgages; so that if the Dowager does
+ not receive her Proportion, there must be some Fault in
+ her Agents. You will perceive by the length of this
+ Article that I have been a little _echauffe_ by her
+ making the Complaints you mention to the Princess
+ Dowager of Lichtenstein at Vienna. The Lady herself is
+ good & amiable, and I should be glad to serve her in
+ anything just and reasonable; but I do not at present
+ see that I can do more than I have done.
+
+And Thomas Penn, too, like St. Sebastian, will never be drawn without
+_that_ arrow in _his_ side.
+
+When Franklin was appointed agent, the provincial treasury was empty, but
+so deeply aroused was public sentiment, in favor of the substitution of a
+royal for the proprietary government, that the merchants of Philadelphia in
+a few hours subscribed a sum of eleven hundred pounds, to defray his
+expenses. Of this amount, however, he refused to accept but five hundred
+pounds, and, after a trying passage of thirty days, he found himself again
+at No. 7 Craven Street.
+
+So far as the immediate object of his mission was concerned, it proved a
+failure. Before he left Pennsylvania, George Grenville, the Prime Minister
+of England, had called the agents of the American Colonies, resident at
+London, together and informed them that a debt of seventy-three millions
+sterling had been imposed upon England by the recent war, and that he
+proposed to ask Parliament to place a part of it upon the American
+Colonies. In the stream of events, which began with this proposal, the
+proprietary government in Pennsylvania and the royal governments in other
+American Colonies were alike destined to be swept away.
+
+After the arrival of Franklin in England, the local struggle in
+Pennsylvania was of too secondary importance to command serious attention;
+and, beyond a few meagre allusions to it, there is no mention made of it in
+his letters. The temper of the English Ministry was not friendly to such a
+revolutionary change as the abolition of the proprietary government, and
+Franklin, after he had been in England a few years, had too many matters of
+continental concern to look after to have any time left for a single phase
+of the general conflict between the Colonies and the mother country.
+
+Before passing to his share in this conflict, a word should be said about
+the Albany Congress, in which he was the guiding spirit. In 1754, when
+another war between England and France was feared, a Congress of
+Commissioners from the several Colonies was ordered by the Lords of Trade
+to be held at Albany. The object of the call was to bring about a
+conference between the Colonies and the Chiefs of the Six Nations as to the
+best means of defending their respective territories from invasion by the
+French. When the order reached Pennsylvania, Governor Hamilton communicated
+it to the Assembly, and requested that body to provide proper presents for
+the Indians, who were to assemble at Albany; and he named Franklin and
+Isaac Norris, the Speaker of the Assembly, as the Commissioners from
+Pennsylvania, to act in conjunction with Thomas Penn and Richard Peters,
+the Secretary of the Proprietary Government. The presents were provided,
+and the nominations confirmed by the Assembly, and Franklin and his
+colleagues arrived at Albany in the month of June, 1754.
+
+He brought his usual zeal to the movement. Before he left Philadelphia,
+with a view to allaying the jealousies, which existed between the different
+colonies, he published an article in his _Gazette_ pointing out the
+importance of unanimity, which was accompanied by a woodcut representing a
+snake severed into as many sections as there were colonies. Each section
+bore the first letter of the name of a colony, and beneath the whole, in
+capital letters, were the words, "Join or die." On his way to Albany, he
+drafted a plan of union, looking to the permanent defence of the colonies,
+which closely resembled a similar plan of union, put forward thirty-two
+years before by Daniel Coxe in a tract entitled _A Description of the
+English Province of Carolina_. The Congress was attended by Commissioners
+from all the Colonies except New Jersey, Virginia, the Carolinas and
+Georgia. One of its members was Thomas Hutchinson, of Massachusetts, who
+was to bring down on Franklin's head the most trying crisis in his career.
+James De Lancey, the Lieutenant-Governor of New York, was chosen to be its
+presiding officer. Mingled with the Commissioners and the inhabitants of
+Albany, as they walked its streets, were the representatives of the
+Iroquois, whose tribes had cherished an unappeasable hatred for the French
+ever since the fatal day when Frontenac had thrown in his fortunes with
+those of their traditional enemies, the Hurons. Much time had to be
+expended by the Commissioners in distributing among them the presents that
+they had brought for them, and in conducting with ceremonious and tedious
+formality the long powwows in which the Indian heart, if there was such a
+thing, so dearly delighted. When the assembly entered upon its
+deliberations, a committee of seven was appointed by it to consider the
+objects of the Congress, and it was composed of one commissioner from each
+colony; Franklin being the member from Pennsylvania, and Thomas Hutchinson
+the member from Massachusetts. After the Commissioners gathered at Albany,
+it was found that plans of union had been framed by other members of the
+Congress besides Franklin. All the plans were compared and considered by
+the committee, and Franklin's was adopted, amended and reported to the
+Congress, and was by it, after a long debate, approved, and recommended to
+the favorable consideration of Parliament and the King whose assent, it was
+conceded, was essential to its efficacy.
+
+It was a simple but comprehensive scheme of government. The several
+colonies were to remain independent except so far as they surrendered their
+autonomy for purposes of mutual defence; there were to be a
+President-General, appointed and paid by the King, who was to be the
+executive arm of the Union, and a Grand Council of forty-eight members,
+elected by the different Colonial Assemblies, which was to be its
+legislative organ. The first meeting of the Council was to be at
+Philadelphia[16]; it was to meet once a year or oftener, if there was need,
+at such times and places as it should fix on adjournment, or as should be
+fixed, in case of an emergency, by the call of the President-General, who
+was authorized to issue such a call, with the consent of seven members of
+the Council; the tenure of members of the Council was to be for three
+years, and, on the death or resignation of a member, the vacancy was to be
+filled by the Assembly of his colony at its next sitting; after the
+election of the first members of the Council, the representation of the
+colonies in it was to be in proportion to their respective contributions to
+the Treasury of the Union, but no colony was to be represented by more than
+seven nor less than two members; the Council was to have the power to
+choose its Speaker, and was to be neither dissolved, prorogued nor
+continued in session longer than six weeks at one time without its consent,
+or the special command of the Crown; its members were to be allowed for
+their services ten shillings sterling a day, whether in session or
+journeying to or from the place of meeting; twenty-five members were to
+constitute a quorum, provided that among this number was at least one
+member from a majority of the Colonies; the assent of the President General
+was to be essential to the validity of all acts of the Council, and it was
+to be his duty to see that they were carried into execution, and the
+President-General and Council were to negotiate all treaties with the
+Indians, declare war and make peace with them, regulate all trade with
+them, purchase for the Crown from them all lands sold by them, and not
+within the limits of the old Colonies; and make and govern new settlements
+on such lands until erected into formal colonies. They were also to enlist
+and pay soldiers, build forts and equip vessels for the defence of the
+Colonies, but were to have no power to impress men in any colony without
+the consent of its assembly; all military and naval officers of the Union
+were to be named by the President-General with the approval of the Council,
+and all civil officers of the Union were to be named by the Council with
+the approval of the President-General; in case of vacancies, resulting from
+death or removal, in any such offices, they were to be filled by the
+Governors of the Provinces in which they occurred until appointments could
+be made in the regular way; and the President-General and Council were also
+to have the power to appoint a General Treasurer for the Union and a Local
+Treasurer for the Union in each colony, when necessary. All funds were to
+be disbursed on the joint order of the President-General and the Council,
+except when sums had been previously appropriated for particular purposes,
+and the President-General had been specially authorized to draw upon them;
+the general accounts of the Union were to be each year communicated to the
+several Colonial Assemblies; and, for the limited purposes of the Union,
+the President-General and the Council were authorized to enact laws, and to
+levy general duties, imposts and taxes; the laws so enacted to be
+transmitted to the King in Council for his approbation, and, if not
+disapproved within three years, to remain in force. A final feature of the
+plan was the provision that each Colony might in a sudden emergency take
+measures for its own defence, and call upon the President-General and
+Council for reimbursement.
+
+The Albany plan of union was one of the direct lineal antecedents of the
+Federal Constitution. In other words, it was one of the really significant
+things in our earlier history that tended to foster the habit of union,
+without which that constitution could never have been adopted. But, when
+considered in the light of the jealousy with which the mother country then
+regarded the Colonies, and with which the Colonies regarded each other, it
+is not at all surprising that the plan recommended by it should have to
+come to nothing. "Its fate was singular," says Franklin in the
+_Autobiography_. "The assemblies did not adopt it, as they all thought
+there was too much _prerogative_ in it, and in England it was judg'd to
+have too much of the _democratic_." Even in Pennsylvania, though the
+Governor laid it before the Assembly with a handsome tribute to "the great
+clearness and strength of judgment," with which it had been drawn up, that
+body, when Franklin was absent, condemned it without giving it any serious
+consideration. In England it met with the disapproval of the Board of
+Trade, and "another scheme," to recur to the _Autobiography_, "was form'd,
+supposed to answer the same purpose better, whereby the governors of the
+provinces, with some members of their respective councils, were to meet and
+order the raising of troops, building of forts, etc., and to draw on the
+treasury of Great Britain for the expense, which was afterwards to be
+refunded by an act of Parliament laying a tax on America."
+
+The Albany plan was an eminently wise one, and Franklin was probably
+justified in forming the favorable view of it which he expressed in these
+words in the _Autobiography_:
+
+ The different and contrary reasons of dislike to my
+ plan makes me suspect that it was really the true
+ medium; and I am still of opinion it would have been
+ happy for both sides the water if it had been adopted.
+ The colonies, so united, would have been sufficiently
+ strong to have defended themselves; there would then
+ have been no need of troops from England; of course,
+ the subsequent pretence for taxing America, and the
+ bloody contest it occasioned, would have been avoided.
+ But such mistakes are not new; history is full of the
+ errors of states and princes.
+
+ "Look round the habitable world, how few
+ Know their own good, or, knowing it, pursue!"
+
+ Those who govern, having much business on their hands,
+ do not generally like to take the trouble of
+ considering and carrying into execution new projects.
+ The best public measures are therefore seldom _adopted
+ from previous wisdom, but forc'd by the occasion_.
+
+In the autumn of 1754, Franklin made a journey to Boston. There he met
+Shirley, and was apprised by him of the plan formed in England for the
+defence of the Colonies. This intelligence elicited three notable letters
+from him to Shirley in which he succinctly but luminously and vigorously
+stated his objections to the plan. In the first letter, he deprecated in
+brief but grave general terms a scheme of colonial administration, in which
+the people of the Colonies were to be excluded from all share in the choice
+of the Grand Council contemplated by the scheme, and were to be taxed by a
+Parliament in which they were to have no representation. Where heavy
+burdens are laid on the people, it had been found useful, he said, to make
+such burdens as much as possible their own acts. The people bear them
+better when they have, or think they have, some share in the direction;
+and, when any public measures are generally grievous, or even distasteful
+to the people, the wheels of government move more heavily.
+
+In the second letter, Franklin states what in his opinion the people of the
+Colonies were likely to say of the proposed plan, namely, that they were as
+loyal as any other subjects of the King; that there was no reason to doubt
+their readiness to grant such sums as they could for the defence of the
+Colonies; that they were likely to be better judges of their own military
+necessities than the remote English Parliament; that the governors, who
+came to the Colonies, often came merely to make their fortunes, and to
+return to England, were not always men of the best abilities or integrity,
+had little in common with the colonists, and might be inclined to lavish
+military expenditures for the sake of the profit to be derived from such
+expenditures by them for themselves and their friends and dependents; that
+members of colonial councils being appointed by the Crown, on the
+recommendation of colonial governors, and being often men of small estates,
+and dependent on such governors for place, were too subject to influence;
+that Parliament was likely to be misled by such governors and councils; and
+yet their combined influence would probably shield them against popular
+resentment; that it was deemed an unquestionable right of Englishmen not to
+be taxed but by their own consent, given through their representatives, and
+that the Colonies had no representation in Parliament; that to tax the
+people of the Colonies without such representation, and to exclude them
+altogether from the proposed plan was a reflection on their loyalty, or
+their patriotism, or their intelligence, and that to tax them without their
+consent, was, indeed, more like raising contributions in an enemy's country
+than the taxation of Englishmen. Such were some of the objections stated in
+this letter to the imposition of taxes on the Colonies by the British
+Parliament. There were others of a kindred nature, and still others, based
+upon the claim that the Colonies were already paying heavy secondary taxes
+to England. Taxes, paid by landholders and artificers in England, Franklin
+declared, entered into the prices paid in America for their products, and
+were therefore really taxes paid by America to Britain. The difference
+between the prices, paid by America for these products, and the cheaper
+prices, at which they could be bought in other countries, if America were
+allowed to trade with them, was also but a tax paid by America to Britain
+and, where the price was paid for goods which America could manufacture
+herself, if allowed by Great Britain to do so, the whole of it was but such
+a tax. Such a tax, too, was the difference between the price that America
+received for its own products in Britain, after the payment of duties, and
+the price that it could obtain in other countries, if allowed to trade with
+them. In fine, as America was not permitted to regulate its trade, and
+restrain the importation and consumption of British superfluities, its
+whole wealth ultimately found its way to Great Britain, and, if the
+inhabitants of Great Britain were enriched in consequence, and rendered
+better able to pay their taxes, that was nearly the same thing as if
+America itself was taxed. Of these kinds of indirect taxes America did not
+complain, but to pay direct taxes, without being consulted as to whether
+they should be laid, or as to how they should be applied, could not but
+seem harsh to Englishmen, who could not conceive that by hazarding their
+lives and fortunes in subduing and settling new countries, and in extending
+the dominion and increasing the commerce of the mother country, they had
+forfeited the native rights of Britons; which they thought that, on these
+accounts, might well be given to them, even if they had been before in a
+state of slavery. Another objection to the scheme, the letter asserted, was
+the likelihood that the Governors and Councillors, not being associated
+with any representatives of the people, to unite with them in their
+measures, and to render these measures palatable to the people, would
+become distrusted and odious; and thus would embitter the relations
+between governors and governed and bring about total confusion. The letter,
+short as it is, sums up almost all the main points of the more copious
+argument that was, in a few years, to be made with so much pathos as well
+as power by the Colonies against the resolve of the British Ministry to tax
+them without their consent.
+
+Franklin's third letter to Shirley is but the statement in embryo of the
+sagacious and enlarged views of the policy of Great Britain, with respect
+to the Colonies, which he subsequently expressed in so many impressive
+forms. The letter is, first of all, interesting as showing that the subject
+of promoting a closer union between Great Britain and her colonies by
+allowing the latter to be represented in Parliament had already been
+discussed by Shirley and Franklin in conversation. It is also an
+indication, for all that was said later about the submissive loyalty of the
+Colonies, that the sense of injustice and hardship worked by the repressive
+effects of the existing British restrictions on American commerce and
+manufactures was widely diffused in America. The proposal to allow America
+representatives in Parliament would, Franklin thought, be very acceptable
+to the Colonies, provided the presentation was a reasonable one in point of
+numbers, and provided all the old acts of Parliament, limiting the trade,
+or cramping the manufactures, of the Colonies, were, at the same time,
+repealed and the cis-Atlantic subjects of Great Britain put on the same
+footing of commercial and industrial freedom as its trans-Atlantic
+subjects, until a Parliament, in which both were represented, should deem
+it to be to the interest of the whole empire that some or all of the
+obnoxious laws should be revived. Franklin also was too much of a
+latter-day American not to believe that laws, which then seemed to the
+colonists to be unjust to them, would be acquiesced in more cheerfully by
+them, and be easier of execution, if approved by a Parliament in which they
+were represented. The letter ended with a series of original reflections,
+highly characteristic of the free play, which marked the mental operations
+of the writer in dealing with any subject, encumbered by short-sighted
+prejudices. Of what importance was it, he argued, whether manufacturers of
+iron lived at Birmingham or Sheffield, or both, since they were still
+within the bounds of Great Britain? Could the Goodwin Sands be laid dry by
+banks, and land, equal to a large county thereby gained to England, and
+presently filled with English inhabitants, would it be right to deprive
+such inhabitants of the common privileges enjoyed by other Englishmen, the
+right of vending their produce in the same ports, or of making their own
+shoes, because a merchant or a shoemaker, living on the old land, might
+fancy it more for his advantage to trade or make shoes for them? Would this
+be right even if the land was gained at the expense of the State? And would
+it seem less right if the charge and labor of gaining the additional
+territory to Great Britain had been borne by the settlers themselves?
+
+ Now I look on the colonies [Franklin continued] as so
+ many counties gained to Great Britain, and more
+ advantageous to it than if they had been gained out of
+ the seas around its coasts, and joined to its land: For
+ being in different climates, they afford greater
+ variety of produce, and being separated by the ocean,
+ they increase much more its shipping and seamen; and
+ since they are all included in the British Empire,
+ which has only extended itself by their means; and the
+ strength and wealth of the parts are the strength and
+ wealth of the whole; what imports it to the general
+ state, whether a merchant, a smith, or a hatter, grow
+ rich in Old or New England?
+
+To this question, of course, the nineteenth or twentieth century could only
+have had one answer; but the eighteenth, blinded by economic delusions, had
+many.
+
+In the opinion of Franklin, expressed in his letters to Peter Collinson,
+until the Albany plan of union, or something like it, was adopted, no
+American war would ever be carried on as it should be, and Indian affairs
+would continue to be mismanaged. But he was fair-minded and clear-sighted
+enough to see that, if some such plan was not adopted, the fault would lie
+with the Colonies rather than with Great Britain. In one of his letters to
+Peter Collinson, he declared that, in his opinion, it was not likely that
+any of them would agree to the plan, or even propose any amendments to it.
+
+ Every Body [he said] cries, a Union is absolutely
+ necessary; but when they come to the Manner and Form of
+ the Union, their weak Noddles are perfectly distracted.
+ So if ever there be an Union, it must be form'd at home
+ by the Ministry and Parliament. I doubt not but they
+ will make a good one, and I wish it may be done this
+ winter.
+
+The essential features of the Albany plan of union were all outlined by
+Franklin three or four years before the Albany Congress met, in a letter to
+James Parker, his New York partner. A union of the colonies, under existing
+conditions, was, he thought, impracticable. If a governor became impressed
+with the importance of such a union, and asked the other colonial governors
+to recommend it to their assemblies, the request came to nothing, either
+because the governors were often on ill terms with their assemblies, and
+were seldom the men who exercised the most influence over them, or because
+they threw cold water on the request for fear that the cost of such a union
+might make the people of their colonies less able or willing to give to
+them, or simply because they did not earnestly realize the necessity for
+it. Besides, under existing conditions, there was no one to back such a
+request or to answer objections to it. A better course would be to select
+half a dozen men of good understanding and address, and send them around,
+as ambassadors to the different colonies, to urge upon them the expediency
+of the union. It would be strange, indeed, Franklin thought, if the six
+Iroquois tribes of ignorant savages could be capable of forming a union
+which had lasted for ages, and yet ten or a dozen English colonies be
+incapable of forming a similar one. These views were elicited by a pamphlet
+on the importance of gaining and preserving the friendship of the Indians,
+which had been sent to Franklin by Parker, and they constitute a natural
+introduction to a brief review of the relations sustained by one of the
+most reasonable of the children of men to perhaps the most unreasonable of
+all the children of men, the Indian of the American forest.
+
+With the Indians, their habits, characteristics, polity and trade Franklin
+was very conversant. Repeatedly, during his lifetime, the frontiers of
+Pennsylvania were harried by the tomahawk and scalping-knife. In a letter,
+written a few months after Braddock's defeat to Richard Partridge, he
+mentions, for instance, that the savages had just surprised and cut off
+eight families near Shamokin, killing and scalping thirteen grown persons
+and kidnapping twelve children. In another letter to Peter Collinson,
+written the next year, he made this appalling summary of what, with the aid
+of the French, the revenge of the Delawares for the imposition practised
+upon them in the Walking Purchase was supposed to have cost the Province.
+"Some Hundreds of Lives lost, many Farms destroy'd and near L100,000 spent,
+yet," he added, "the Proprietor refuses to be taxed except for a trifling
+Part of his Estate." During the incursions of this period, the Indian
+war-parties pushed their outrages to a point only eighty miles from
+Philadelphia. A diarist, Thomas Lloyd, who accompanied Franklin on his
+expedition to Gnadenhutten, gives us this ghastly description of what they
+found there:
+
+ Here all round appears nothing but one continued scene
+ of horror and destruction. Where lately flourished a
+ happy and peaceful village, it is now all silent and
+ desolate; the houses burnt; the inhabitants butchered
+ in the most shocking manner; their mangled bodies, for
+ want of funerals, exposed to birds and beasts of prey;
+ and all kinds of mischief perpetrated that wanton
+ cruelty can invent.
+
+Not even a Rizpah left to brood over the scalpless forms, and to drive away
+the buzzard and the wild things of the forest! In this scene, and the
+pettier but similarly tragic scenes of death and havoc, furnished, from
+time to time, over a wide range of frontier territory, by lonely fields and
+cabins, upon which the tomahawk had ruthlessly descended, is to be found
+the psychology of the furious passions, which hurried the wretched
+Conestoga Indians out of existence, and of the outspoken or covert
+sympathy, which made a mockery of the attempt to bring their butchers to
+justice. Even men cooler than the Paxton Boys, hardened by revolting
+cruelties, not distinguishable from those inflicted by talon or tooth,
+except in their atrocious refinements of torture, and yet brought home in
+some form or other to almost every fireside in Pennsylvania, came to think
+of killing and mutilating an Indian with no more compunction than if he
+were a rattlesnake. James Parton mentions with a natural shudder the fact
+that Governor John Penn, after the retirement of the Paxton Boys from
+Philadelphia, offered the following bounties: For every captive male Indian
+of any hostile tribe one hundred and fifty dollars; for every female
+captive one hundred and thirty-eight dollars, for the scalp of a male
+Indian one hundred and thirty-four dollars, for the scalp of a female
+Indian fifty dollars. To Franklin himself, when on the Gnadenhutten
+expedition, fell the duty of instructing a Captain Vanetta, who was about
+to raise a company of foot-soldiers for the protection of upper Smithfield,
+while its inhabitants were looking after their corn, that forty dollars
+would be allowed and paid by the Provincial Government for each Indian
+scalp produced by one of his men with the proper attestations. How
+accustomed even Franklin became to the ever-repeated story of Indian
+barbarities, and to occasional reprisals by the whites, hardly less
+shocking, is revealed by a brief letter from him to Peter Collinson in
+1764, in which, with the dry conciseness of an old English chronicler, he
+reports the narratives of a British soldier, Owens, who had deserted to the
+Indians, and a white boy, whom Owens had brought back with him from
+captivity, together with five propitiatory Indian scalps, when he returned
+to his former allegiance.
+
+ The Account given by him and the Boy [wrote Franklin]
+ is, that they were with a Party of nine Indians, to
+ wit, 5 men, 2 Women, and 2 Children, coming down
+ Susquehanah to fetch Corn from their last Year's
+ Planting Place; that they went ashore and encamp'd at
+ Night and made a Fire by which they slept; that in the
+ Night Owens made the White Boy get up from among the
+ Indians, and go to the other side of the Fire; and then
+ taking up the Indians' Guns, he shot two of the Men
+ immediately, and with his Hatchet dispatch'd another
+ Man together with the Women and Children. Two men only
+ made their escape. Owens scalp'd the 5 grown Persons,
+ and bid the White Boy scalp the Children; but he
+ declin'd it, so they were left.
+
+Franklin, however, was not the man to say, as General Philip Sheridan was
+many years afterwards to be reputed to have said, that the only good Indian
+is a dead Indian. In the course of his varied life, he had many
+opportunities for becoming familiarly acquainted with the history and
+character of the Indians, and forming a just judgment as to how far their
+fiendish outbreaks were due to sheer animal ferocity, and how far to the
+provocation of ill-treatment by the whites; and he was too just not to know
+and declare that almost every war between the Indians and the whites in his
+time had been occasioned by some injustice of the latter towards the
+former. As far back as 1753, he and Isaac Norris, the Speaker of the
+Assembly, were appointed commissioners by it to unite with Richard Peters,
+the Secretary of the Proprietary Government, in negotiating a treaty with
+the western Indians at Carlisle, and the manner, in which this treaty was
+conducted, is told in the _Autobiography_ in his lively way. In 1756, he
+again served as a commissioner, this time with William Logan and Richard
+Peters, two members of the Governor's Council, and Joseph Fox, William
+Masters and John Hughes, three members of the Assembly, for the purpose of
+negotiating a treaty at Easton with Teedyuscung, the King of the Delawares.
+At this conference, Governor Denny himself was likewise present. In 1763,
+he was appointed one of the commissioners to expend the money appropriated
+by the Assembly for levying a military force to defend the Pennsylvania
+frontier against the Indians. The Albany Congress, as we have seen, brought
+him into direct personal contact with the Iroquois who, to a fell savagery
+only to be compared with that of the most ferocious beasts of the jungle,
+united a capacity for political cohesion and the rudiments of civilized
+life which gave them quite an exceptional standing in the history of the
+American Indian. By virtue of these circumstances, to say nothing of other
+sources of knowledge and information, Franklin obtained an insight, at once
+shrewd and profound, into everything that related to the American Indian,
+including the best methods by which his good will could be conciliated and
+his trade secured. The following remarks in his Canada Pamphlet give us a
+good idea of the mobility and special adaptation to his physical
+environment which made the Indian, in proportion to his numbers, the most
+formidable foe that the world has ever seen:
+
+ They go to war, as they call it, in small parties, from
+ fifty men down to five. Their hunting life has made
+ them acquainted with the whole country, and scarce any
+ part of it is impracticable to such a party. They can
+ travel thro' the woods even by night, and know how to
+ conceal their tracks. They pass easily between your
+ forts undiscovered; and privately approach the
+ settlements of your frontier inhabitants. They need no
+ convoys of provisions to follow them; for whether they
+ are shifting from place to place in the woods, or lying
+ in wait for an opportunity to strike a blow, every
+ thicket and every stream furnishes so small a number
+ with sufficient subsistence. When they have surpriz'd
+ separately, and murder'd and scalp'd a dozen families,
+ they are gone with inconceivable expedition through
+ unknown ways, and 'tis very rare that pursuers have any
+ chance of coming up with them. In short, long
+ experience has taught our planters, that they cannot
+ rely upon forts as a security against _Indians_: The
+ inhabitants of _Hackney_ might as well rely upon the
+ tower of _London_ to secure them against highwaymen and
+ housebreakers.
+
+This is the Indian seen from the point of view of the soldier and colonial
+administrator. He is fully as interesting, when considered by Franklin in a
+letter to Richard Jackson from the point of view of the philosopher:
+
+ They visit us frequently, and see the advantages that
+ arts, sciences, and compact societies procure us. They
+ are not deficient in natural understanding; and yet
+ they have never shown any inclination to change their
+ manner of life for ours, or to learn any of our arts.
+ When an Indian child has been brought up among us,
+ taught our language, and habituated to our customs,
+ yet, if he goes to see his relatives, and makes one
+ Indian ramble with them, there is no persuading him
+ ever to return. And that this is not natural to them
+ merely as Indians, but as men, is plain from this, that
+ when white persons, of either sex, have been taken
+ prisoners by the Indians, and lived a while with them,
+ though ransomed by their friends, and treated with all
+ imaginable tenderness to prevail with them to stay
+ among the English, yet in a short time they become
+ disgusted with our manner of life, and the care and
+ pains that are necessary to support it, and take the
+ first opportunity of escaping again into the woods,
+ from whence there is no redeeming them. One instance I
+ remember to have heard, where the person was brought
+ home to possess a good estate; but, finding some care
+ necessary to keep it together, he relinquished it to a
+ younger brother, reserving to himself nothing but a gun
+ and a match-coat, with which he took his way again into
+ the wilderness.
+
+ So that I am apt to imagine that close societies,
+ subsisting by labour and art, arose first not from
+ choice but from necessity, when numbers, being driven
+ by war from their hunting grounds, and prevented by
+ seas, or by other nations, from obtaining other hunting
+ grounds, were crowded together into some narrow
+ territories, which without labour could not afford them
+ food.
+
+A man had to be humorous, indeed, to see anything humorous in the American
+Indian, but Franklin's sense of the ludicrous was equal to even that
+supreme achievement. We have already referred to the image of hell that he
+saw in the nocturnal orgies of the drunken Indians at Carlisle. Prudently
+enough, they were not allowed by the Provincial Commissioners to have the
+rum that was in store for them until they had ratified the treaty entered
+into on that occasion; an artifice that doubtless proved quite as effective
+in hastening its consummation as the one adopted by Chaplain Beatty of
+distributing the rum before, instead of after, prayers, did in securing the
+punctual attendance of Franklin's soldiers at them. But diabolical as were
+the gestures and yells of the drink-crazed Indians, men and women, at
+Carlisle, Franklin contrived to bring away a facetious story from the
+conference for the _Autobiography_. The orator, who called on the
+Commissioners the next day, after the debauch, for the purpose of
+apologizing for the conduct of himself and his people,
+
+ laid it upon the rum; and then endeavoured to excuse
+ the rum by saying, "_The Great Spirit, who made all
+ things, made everything for some use, and whatever use
+ he design'd anything for, that use it should always be
+ put to. Now, when he made rum, he said 'Let this be for
+ the Indians to get drunk with'; and it must be so._"...
+ And indeed [adds Franklin] if it be the design of
+ Providence to extirpate these savages in order to make
+ room for cultivators of the earth, it seems not
+ improbable that rum may be the appointed means. It has
+ already annihilated all the tribes who formerly
+ inhabited the seacoast.
+
+There is another good Indian story in the letter from Franklin to Richard
+Jackson from which we have recently quoted. When everything had been
+settled at a conference between the Six Nations and some of the Colonies,
+and nothing remained to be gone through with but a mutual exchange of
+civilities, the English Commissioners told the Indians that they had in
+their country a college for the instruction of youth in the various
+languages, arts and sciences, and that, if the Indians were willing, they
+would take back with them a half-dozen of their brightest lads and bring
+them up in the best manner. The Indians, after weighing the proposal,
+replied that they remembered that some of their youths had formerly been
+educated at that college, but that it had been observed that for a long
+time, after they returned to their friends, they were absolutely good for
+nothing; being neither acquainted with the true methods of killing deer,
+catching beaver, or surprising an enemy. The proposition, however, they
+regarded as a mark of kindness and good will on the part of the English,
+which merited a grateful return, and therefore, if the English gentlemen
+would send a dozen or two of their children to Opondago, the Great Council
+would take care of their education, bring them up in what was really the
+best manner, and make men of them.[17]
+
+That the whites had much to answer for in their intercourse with the
+Indians Franklin saw clearly. The Canada Pamphlet speaks of the goods sold
+to them by French and English traders as loaded with all the impositions
+that fraud and knavery could contrive to enhance their value, and in one of
+Franklin's notes on the Albany plan of union he referred many Indian wars
+to cheating, practised by Indian traders on Indians, whom they had first
+made drunk. These traders he termed on another occasion, "the most vicious
+and abandoned Wretches of our Nation." "I do not believe we shall ever have
+a firm peace with the Indians," he wrote to Thomas Pownall in 1756, "till
+we have well drubbed them." This was the natural language of a man who had
+no toleration for wanton applications of force but did not shrink from
+applying it, when nothing else would answer. But no man could have been
+more fearless than he in denouncing outrages committed by the whites upon
+inoffensive Indians, or Indians of any sort, when not on the war path. "It
+grieves me," he wrote to Sir William Johnson in 1766, "to hear that our
+Frontier People are yet greater Barbarians than the Indians, and continue
+to murder them in time of peace."
+
+His views about the proper methods of controlling the Indians and securing
+their trade were worthy of his liberal and enlightened mind. Their
+friendship he deemed to be of the greatest consequence to the Colonies, and
+the best way to make sure of it, he thought, was to regulate trade between
+the whites and the Indians in such a way as to convince the latter that, as
+between France and England, the English goods were the best and cheapest,
+and the English merchants the most honorable, and to form a union between
+the Colonies strong enough to make the Indians feel that they could depend
+on it for protection against the French, or that they would suffer at its
+hands if they should break with it. The Indian trade, for which the
+colonists had sacrificed so much blood and treasure, was, he boldly
+reminded his auditors, in his famous examination before the House of
+Commons, not an American but a British interest, maintained with British
+manufactures for the profit of British merchants and manufacturers. In a
+letter to Cadwallader Colden, he even suggested that the Government should
+take it over, and furnish goods to the Indians at the cheapest prices,
+without regard to profit, as Massachusetts had done.
+
+Other suggestions of Franklin with respect to the conduct of the Indian
+trade were hardly less interesting. Pittsburg, he contended, after the
+restoration of peace in 1759, should be retained by the English, with a
+small tract of land about it for supplying the fort with provisions, and
+with sufficient hunting grounds in its vicinity for the peculiar needs of
+their Indian friends. A fort, and a small population of sober, orderly
+people there, he thought, would help to preserve the friendship of the
+Indians by bringing trade and the arts into close proximity to them, and
+would bridle them, if seduced from their allegiance by the French, or
+would, at least, stand in the gap, and be a shield to the other American
+frontiers.
+
+Another suggestion of his was that, in time of peace, parties should be
+allowed to issue from frontier garrisons on hunting expeditions, with or
+without Indians, and enjoy the profits of the peltry that they brought
+back. In this way, a body of wood-runners would be formed, well acquainted
+with the country and of great value in time of war as guides and scouts.
+Every Indian was a hunter, every Indian was a disciplined soldier. They
+hunted in precisely the same manner as they made war. The only difference
+was that in hunting they skulked, surprised and killed animals, and, in
+making war, men. It was just such soldiers that the colonies needed; for
+the European military discipline was of little use in the woods. These
+words were penned four or five years before the battle of the Monongahela
+confirmed so bloodily their truth. Franklin also thought that a number of
+sober, discreet smiths should be encouraged to reside among the Indians.
+The whole subsistence of Indians depended on their keeping their guns in
+order. They were a people that thought much of their temporal, but little
+of their spiritual interests, and, therefore, a smith was more likely to
+influence them than a Jesuit. In a letter to his son, he mentions that he
+had dined recently with Lord Shelburne, and had availed himself of the
+occasion to urge that a colony should be planted in the Illinois country
+for furnishing provisions to military garrisons more cheaply, clinching the
+hold of the English upon the country, and building up a strength which, in
+the event of a future war, might easily be poured down the Mississippi upon
+the lower country, and into the Bay of Mexico, to be used against Cuba or
+Mexico itself.
+
+The reader has already had brought to his attention the provisions of the
+Albany plan of union which were intended to vest in the government sketched
+by it the control of Indian treaties, trade and purchases.
+
+The ignorance of the Indian character, which prevailed in England, often,
+we may be sure, brought a smile to the face of Franklin. Among his writings
+are remarks made at the request of Lord Shelburne on a plan for regulating
+Indian affairs submitted to him by the latter. It is to be regretted that
+the circumstances of the case were such that it was impossible for Franklin
+to escape the restraints of official gravity even when he was assigning the
+rambling habits of the Indians as his reason for believing that an Indian
+chief would hardly be willing to reside permanently with one of the
+functionaries, who was to aid in carrying the plan into effect, or when he
+was giving the high value, that the Indian attached to personal liberty,
+and the low value, that he attached to personal property, as his reason for
+thinking that imprisonment for debt was scarcely consistent with aboriginal
+ideas of equity. The plan was of a piece with the suggestion attributed to
+Dean Tucker that the colonies should be protected from Indian incursions by
+clearing away the trees and bushes from a tract of land, a mile in width,
+at the back of the colonies. As Benjamin Vaughan said, this brilliant idea
+not only involved a first cost (not to mention the fact that trees and
+bushes grow again when cut down) of some L128,000 for every hundred miles
+but quite overlooked the fact that the Indians, like other people, knew the
+difference between day and night. He forgot, said Franklin, "that there is
+a night in every twenty-four hours."
+
+The distinction, which Franklin enjoyed in England, during his first
+mission to that country, was due to his philosophical and literary
+reputation, but his second mission to England and the colonial agencies,
+held by him while it lasted, afforded him an opportunity for playing a
+conspicuous part in the stirring transactions, which ushered in the
+American Revolution. Apart from all other considerations, his place in the
+history of these transactions will always be an extraordinary one because
+of the consummate wisdom and self-restraint exhibited by him in his
+relations to the controversy that finally ended in a fratricidal war
+between Great Britain and her colonies, which should never have been
+kindled. To the issues, involved in this controversy, he brought a vision
+as undimmed by political bigotry and false economic conceptions of colonial
+dependence as that of a British statesman of the present day. It is easy to
+believe that, if his counsels had been heeded, Great Britain and the
+communities, which make up the American Union, would now be connected by
+some close organic or federative tie. It is, at least, certain that no
+other Englishman on either side of the Atlantic saw as clearly as he did
+the true interests of both parties to the fatal conflict, or strove with
+such unerring sagacity and sober moderation of purpose to avert the breach
+between the two great branches of the English People. In no way can the
+extreme folly, which forced independence upon the colonies, be better
+measured than by contrasting the heated vehemence of Franklin's later
+feelings about the King and Parliament with his earlier sentiments towards
+the country that he did not cease to call "home" until to call it so would
+have been mockery. Devoted attachment to England, the land endeared to him
+by so many ties of family, intellectual sympathy and friendship, profound
+loyalty to the British Crown, deep-seated reverence for the laws,
+institutions and usages of the noble people, in whose inheritance of
+enlightened freedom he vainly insisted upon having his full share as an
+Englishman, were all characteristics of his, before the alienation of the
+colonies from Great Britain.[18]
+
+His earlier utterances breathe a spirit of ingrained loyalty to the British
+Crown. The French were "mischievous neighbors," France "that perfidious
+nation." "I congratulate you on the defeat of Jacobitism by your glorious
+Duke," he wrote to Strahan in 1746, after the Duke of Cumberland had earned
+his title of "The Butcher" at Culloden. "I pray God to preserve long to
+Great Britain the English Laws, Manners, Liberties, and Religion," was an
+exclamation seven years later in one of his letters to Richard Jackson.
+"Wise and good prince," "the best of Kings," "Your good King," are some of
+the terms in which he expressed his opinion of his royal master. In the
+light of later events, there is something little short of amusing about the
+horoscope which he framed of the reign of George the Third in a letter to
+Strahan a year or so before the passage of the Stamp Act. Replying to
+forebodings of Strahan, Franklin said of the Prince, whom he styled "Our
+virtuous young King":
+
+ On the contrary, I am of Opinion that his Virtue and
+ the Consciousness of his sincere Intentions to make his
+ People happy will give him Firmness and Steadiness in
+ his Measures and in the Support of the honest Friends
+ he has chosen to serve him; and when that Firmness is
+ fully perceiv'd, Faction will dissolve and be
+ dissipated like a Morning Fog before the rising Sun,
+ leaving the rest of the Day clear with a Sky serene and
+ cloudless. Such after a few of the first Years will be
+ the future course of his Majesty's Reign, which I
+ predict will be happy and truly glorious.
+
+In his letter to Polly about the French King and Queen, whom he had seen
+dining in state, which was written the year after the repeal of the Stamp
+Act, he declared, in his fear that he might seem to be too well pleased
+with them, that no Frenchman should go beyond him in thinking his own King
+and Queen, "the very best in the World, and the most amiable." The popular
+commotions in the succeeding year, with their watch cry of Wilkes and
+Liberty, seemed to him to indicate that some punishment was preparing for a
+people, who were ungratefully abusing the best Constitution and the best
+King that any nation was ever blessed with. As late as 1770, he wrote to
+Dr. Samuel Cooper, "Let us, therefore, hold fast our Loyalty to our King,
+who has the best Disposition towards us, and has a Family Interest in our
+Prosperity." Indeed, even two years later than this, he complacently wrote
+to his son, "The King, too, has lately been heard to speak of me with great
+regard." Strangely enough it was not until two years before the battle of
+Bunker Hill that he awoke sufficiently from his fool's paradise to write to
+his son, "Between you and I, the late Measures have been, I suspect, very
+much the King's own, and he has in some Cases a great Share of what his
+Friends call _Firmness_." Even then he hazarded the opinion that by
+painstaking and proper management the wrong impression of the colonists
+that George the Third had received might be removed. Down to this time so
+secretly had the King pursued the insidious system of corruption by which
+he kept his Parliamentary majority unmurmuringly subservient to his system
+of personal government, that Franklin does not appear to have even
+suspected that his was the master hand, or rather purse, which shaped all
+its proceedings against America. When the whole truth, however, was made
+manifest to Franklin, his awakening was correspondingly rude and
+unforgiving. How completely reversed became the current of all his feelings
+towards George the Third, after the Revolution began, we have already seen
+in some of our references to letters written by him to his English friends,
+in which the King, whom he once revered, was scored in terms of passionate
+reprobation.
+
+Tenacious, too, was the affection with which Franklin clung to England and
+the English people. Some years before the passage of the Stamp Act, he
+wrote to Lord Kames from London that he purposed to give form to the
+material that he had been gathering for his _Art of Virtue_ when he
+returned to his _other_ country, that is to say, America.
+
+ Of all the enviable Things England has [he wrote a few
+ years later to Polly], I envy it most its People. Why
+ should that petty Island, which compar'd to America, is
+ but like a stepping Stone in a Brook, scarce enough of
+ it above Water to keep one's Shoes dry; why, I say,
+ should that little Island enjoy in almost every
+ Neighbourhood, more sensible, virtuous, and elegant
+ Minds, than we can collect in ranging 100 Leagues of
+ our vast Forests?
+
+How eagerly even when he was in the New World he relished the observations
+of his friend Strahan on current English politics, we have already seen. We
+have also already seen how seriously he entertained even the thought of
+transferring his family for good to England. Indeed his intense loyalty to
+English King and People, together with his remoteness from the contagious
+excitement of the Colonies over the passage of the Stamp Act, caused him
+for a time, with a curious insensibility to the real state of public
+opinion in America, to lag far behind the revolutionary movement in that
+country. Not only, before he was fully aroused to the stern purpose of his
+fellow-countrymen to resist the collection of the stamp tax to the last
+extremity, did he recommend his friend John Hughes to the British Ministry
+as a stamp-tax collector, and send to his partner Hall a large quantity of
+paper for the use of the _Gazette_, of such dimensions as to secure a
+saving in stamps for its issues, but he wrote to Hughes in these terms
+besides:
+
+ If it (the Stamp Act) continues, your undertaking to
+ execute it may make you unpopular for a Time, but your
+ acting with Coolness and Steadiness, and with every
+ Circumstance in your Power of Favour to the People,
+ will by degrees reconcile them. In the meantime, a firm
+ Loyalty to the Crown & faithful Adherence to the
+ Government of this Nation, which it is the Safety as
+ well as Honour of the Colonies to be connected with,
+ will always be the wisest Course for you and I to take,
+ whatever may be the Madness of the Populace or their
+ blind Leaders, who can only bring themselves and
+ Country into Trouble and draw on greater Burthens by
+ Acts of Rebellious Tendency.
+
+The rashness of the Virginia Assembly in relation to the Stamp Act he
+thought simply amazing.
+
+Much better known is the letter that he wrote about the same time to
+Charles Thomson. After stating that he had done everything in his power to
+prevent the passage of the Stamp Act, he said:
+
+ But the Tide was too strong against us. The nation was
+ provoked by American Claims of Independence, and all
+ Parties joined in resolving by this act to settle the
+ point. We might as well have hindered the sun's
+ setting. That we could not do. But since 'tis down, my
+ Friend, and it may be long before it rises again, let
+ us make as good a night of it as we can. We may still
+ light candles. Frugality and Industry will go a great
+ way toward indemnifying us. Idleness and Pride tax with
+ a heavier hand than Kings and Parliaments; if we can
+ get rid of the former, we may easily bear the latter.
+
+Six months later, when the loud and fierce protest of his fellow-countrymen
+against the Stamp Act had reached his ear, and convinced him that they were
+more likely to light camp-fires than candles, he held a very different
+language. Asked, during his famous examination before the House of Commons,
+whether he thought that the people of America would submit to pay the Stamp
+Tax, if it were moderated, he replied, "No, never, unless compelled by
+force of arms." Public leaders, after all, to use Gladstone's happy image
+with regard to the orator, do little more than give back in rain what they
+receive in mist from the mass of men. But with the repeal of the Stamp Act,
+and part of the duties imposed upon America, Franklin would readily have
+lapsed in every respect into his old affectionate relations to England, if
+Parliament had not, by its unwise reservation of its right to tax America,
+fallen into the bad surgery, to use his own words, of leaving splinters in
+the wound that it had inflicted. It now seems strange enough that, after
+the turbulent outbreak in America, which preceded the repeal, he should
+have been willing to accept a post under the Duke of Grafton, and to remain
+in England for some time longer if not for the rest of his life; yet such
+is the fact. When he heard through a friend that the Duke had said that, if
+he chose rather to reside in England than to return to his office as Deputy
+Postmaster-General for America, it would not be the Duke's fault, if he was
+not well provided for, he declared in the polished phrases of a courtier
+that there was no nobleman, to whom he could from sincere respect for his
+great abilities and amiable qualities so cordially attach himself, or to
+whom he should so willingly be obliged for the provision mentioned, as to
+the Duke of Grafton, if his Grace should think that he could in any
+station, where he might be placed, be serviceable to him and to the public.
+To any one who knows what a profligate the Duke was, during the most
+scandalous part of his career, this language sounds not a little like the
+conventional phrases in which Franklin, during his mission to France,
+assured Crocco, the blackmailing emissary of the piratical emperor of
+Morocco that he had no doubt but that, as soon as the affairs of the United
+States were a little settled, they would manifest equally good dispositions
+as those of his master and take all the proper steps to cultivate and
+secure the friendship of a monarch, whose character, Franklin knew, they
+had long esteemed and respected.
+
+But in the same letter to his son, in which the declaration about the Duke
+of Grafton was recalled, Franklin made it clear that he was unwilling, by
+accepting office, to place himself in the power of any English Minister
+committed to the fatuous policy of taxing America. It was not until
+forbearance had ceased to be a virtue, and an American Whig could no longer
+hold an English office without reproach, that his innate conservatism of
+character yielded to the forces which were slowly but certainly rending the
+two countries apart. Three years after the repeal of the Stamp Act, which
+he dubbed "the mother of mischief," he wrote to Jean Baptiste Le Roy of the
+popular disturbances in Boston as "sudden, unpremeditated things, that
+happened only among a few of the lower sort." A month later, he wrote to
+Dr. Cooper:
+
+ I have been in constant Pain since I heard of Troops
+ assembling at Boston, lest the Madness of Mobs, or the
+ Insolence of Soldiers, or both, should, when too near
+ each other, occasion some Mischief difficult to be
+ prevented or repaired, and which might spread far and
+ wide. "I hope however," he added, "that Prudence will
+ predominate, and keep all quiet."
+
+A little later still, in another letter to the same correspondent, after
+saying that he could scarcely conceive a King of better dispositions, of
+more exemplary virtues, or more truly desirous of promoting the welfare of
+all his subjects than was George the Third, he further and truly said: "The
+Body of this People, too, is of a noble and generous Nature, loving and
+honouring the Spirit of Liberty, and hating arbitrary Power of all sorts.
+We have many, very many, friends among them."
+
+As late as the autumn of 1774 he was grieved to hear of mobs and violence
+and the pulling down of houses in America, which the friends of America in
+England could not justify, and which gave a great advantage to the enemies
+of America in that country. He was in perpetual anxiety, he wrote Thomas
+Cushing, lest the mad measures of mixing soldiers among a people whose
+minds were in such a state of irritation might be attended with some
+mischief, for an accidental quarrel, a personal insult, an imprudent order,
+an insolent execution of even a prudent one, or twenty other things might
+produce a tumult, unforeseen, and, therefore, impossible to be prevented,
+in which such a carnage might ensue as to make a breach that could never
+afterwards be healed. That the insults of Wedderburn, heaped upon Franklin
+in the Privy Council Chamber, under circumstances, calculated to make him
+feel as if all England were pillorying him, and his subsequent dismissal
+from the office of Deputy Postmaster-General for America, exerted some
+degree of corrosive influence upon his mind cannot be denied; but he still
+kept up his counsels of patience to his people upon the other side of the
+Atlantic until patience no longer had any meaning, and, when his last
+efforts, just before he left England for Independence Hall, to bring about
+a satisfactory adjustment of the quarrel between Great Britain and her
+colonies finally came to nothing, the tears that Priestley tells us wet his
+cheeks, as he was leaving England, were proof enough that even a nature,
+little given to weakness, might well grow faint at the thought of such a
+tragic separation as that of England and the thirteen colonies nurtured at
+her breast. But no one can read the life of Franklin without feeling that
+there never was a time when his heart was not wholly true to the just
+rights of America. In America, he might miss the companionship of the
+learned and distinguished friends from whose conversation he derived so
+much profit and pleasure in England and France. Only such a capital as
+London or Paris could fully gratify the social and intellectual wants of a
+man whose survey of human existence was so little subject to cramping
+restrictions of any kind. But it was the very breadth of Franklin's
+character which made him first of all an American, instinct with the free
+spirit of the New World, and faithful to the democratic institutions and
+ideals, which throve on its freshness and exemption from inherited
+complications. Over and over again, when he is abroad, he compares the
+economic and political conditions of his own country with those of foreign
+countries to the marked disadvantage of the latter. The painful
+impression, left upon his mind by the squalor and misery of the lower
+orders of the Irish people, is manifest enough in his correspondence.
+
+ Ireland is in itself [he declared in a letter to Thomas
+ Cushing] a poor Country, and Dublin a magnificent City;
+ but the appearances of general extreme poverty among
+ the lower people are amazing. They live in wretched
+ hovels of mud and straw, are clothed in rags, and
+ subsist chiefly on potatoes. Our New England farmers,
+ of the poorest sort, in regard to the Enjoyment of all
+ the Comforts of life, are princes when compared to
+ them. Such is the effect of the discouragements of
+ industry, the non-residence not only of pensioners, but
+ of many original landlords, who lease their lands in
+ gross to undertakers that rack the tenants and fleece
+ them skin and all to make estates to themselves, while
+ the first rents, as well as most of the pensions, are
+ spent out of the country. An English gentleman there
+ said to me, that by what he had heard of the good
+ grazing in North America, and by what he saw of the
+ plenty of flax-seed imported in Ireland from thence, he
+ could not understand why we did not rival Ireland in
+ the beef and butter trade to the West Indies, and share
+ with it in its linen trade. But he was satisfied when I
+ told him that I supposed the reason might be, _our
+ people eat beef and butter every day, and wear shirts
+ themselves_.
+
+ In short, the chief exports of Ireland seem to be
+ pinched off the backs and out of the bellies of the
+ miserable inhabitants.
+
+Darker and more forbidding still glooms the background of the joyous hours
+spent by Franklin in Ireland, Scotland and England in these painful words
+which he wrote to Dr. Joshua Babcock in the early part of 1772:
+
+ I have lately made a Tour thro' Ireland and Scotland.
+ In those Countries a small Part of the Society are
+ Landlords, great Noblemen, and Gentlemen, extreamly
+ opulent, living in the highest Affluence and
+ Magnificence: The Bulk of the People Tenants, extreamly
+ poor, living in the most sordid Wretchedness, in dirty
+ Hovels of Mud and Straw, and cloathed only in Rags.
+
+ I thought often of the Happiness of New England, where
+ every Man is a Freeholder, has a Vote in publick
+ Affairs, lives in a tidy, warm House, has plenty of
+ good Food and Fewel, with whole cloaths from Head to
+ Foot, the Manufacture perhaps of his own Family. Long
+ may they continue in this Situation! But if they should
+ ever envy the Trade of these Countries, I can put them
+ in a Way to obtain a Share of it. Let them with three
+ fourths of the People of Ireland live the Year round on
+ Potatoes and Buttermilk, without shirts, then may their
+ Merchants export Beef, Butter, and Linnen. Let them,
+ with the Generality of the Common People of Scotland,
+ go Barefoot, then may they make large exports in Shoes
+ and Stockings: And if they will be content to wear
+ Rags, like the Spinners and Weavers of England, they
+ may make Cloths and Stuffs for all Parts of the World.
+
+ Farther, if my Countrymen should ever wish for the
+ honour of having among them a gentry enormously
+ wealthy, let them sell their Farms & pay rack'd Rents;
+ the Scale of the Landlords will rise as that of the
+ Tenants is depress'd, who will soon become poor,
+ tattered, dirty, and abject in Spirit. Had I never been
+ in the American Colonies, but was to form my Judgment
+ of Civil Society by what I have lately seen, I should
+ never advise a Nation of Savages to admit of
+ Civilization: For I assure you, that, in the Possession
+ & Enjoyment of the various Comforts of Life, compar'd
+ to these People every Indian is a Gentleman: And the
+ Effect of this kind of Civil Society seems only to be,
+ the depressing Multitudes below the Savage State that a
+ few may be rais'd above it.
+
+America on the other hand, as Franklin pictured it, was the land of neither
+the very rich nor the very poor, but one in which "a general happy
+mediocrity" prevailed. It was not a Lubberland, nor a Pays de Cocagne,
+where the streets were paved with half-peck loaves, and the houses tiled
+with pancakes, and where the fowls flew about ready roasted, crying Come
+eat me! These were all wild imaginations. On the contrary, it was a land
+of labor, but also a land where multitudes of emigrants from foreign lands,
+who would never have emerged from poverty, if they had remained at home,
+had, with savings out of the wages, earned by them, after they arrived in
+America, acquired land, and, in a few years, become wealthy farmers. It was
+a land, too, where religious infidelity was unknown, and where all the
+means of education were plenteous, the general manners simple and pure, and
+the temptations to vice and folly fewer than in England.
+
+The contrast between political conditions in Great Britain and political
+conditions in America was in Franklin's opinion equally unfavorable to
+Great Britain. Loyal as he was to the King, attached as he was to the
+English people, he harbored a deep feeling of aversion and contempt for the
+Parliament which he did not realize was but the marionette of the King.
+When certain residents of Oxford, after being confined for some days in
+Newgate for corrupt practices, knelt before the Speaker of the House of
+Commons, and received his reprimand, Franklin wrote to Galloway:
+
+ The House could scarcely keep countenances, knowing as
+ they all do, that the practice is general. People say,
+ they mean nothing more than to _beat down the price_ by
+ a little discouragement of borough jobbing, now that
+ their own elections are all coming on. The price indeed
+ is grown exorbitant, no less than _four thousand
+ pounds_ for a member.
+
+In the same letter, a grim story is told of the callous levity with which
+the Parliamentary majority regarded its own debasement. It was founded upon
+a bill brought in by Beckford for preventing bribery and corruption at
+elections, which contained a clause obliging every member to swear, on his
+admission to the House, that he had not directly or indirectly given any
+bribe to any elector. This clause was so generally opposed as answering no
+end except that of inducing the members to perjure themselves that it was
+withdrawn. Commenting on the incident, Franklin said:
+
+ It was indeed a cruel contrivance of his, worse than
+ the gunpowder plot; for that was only to blow the
+ Parliament up to heaven, this to sink them all down to
+ ----. Mr. Thurlow opposed his bill by a long speech.
+ Beckford, in reply, gave a dry hit to the House, that
+ is repeated everywhere. "The honourable gentleman,"
+ says he, "in his learned discourse, gave us first one
+ definition of corruption, then he gave us another
+ definition of corruption, and I think he was about to
+ give us a third. Pray does that gentleman imagine
+ _there is any member of this House that does not_ KNOW
+ what corruption is?" which occasioned only a roar of
+ laughter, for they are so hardened in the practice,
+ that they are very little ashamed of it.
+
+Later Franklin wrote to Galloway that it was thought that near two million
+pounds would be spent in the Parliamentary election then pending, but that
+it was computed that the Crown had _two millions a year in places and
+pensions to dispose of_. On the same day, he wrote to his son, "In short,
+this whole venal nation is now at market, will be sold for about two
+millions, and might be bought out of the hands of the present bidders (if
+he would offer half a million more) by the very Devil himself." To Thomas
+Cushing he wrote that luxury brought most of the Commons as well as Lords
+to market, and that, if America would save for three or four years the
+money she spent in the fashions and fineries and fopperies of England, she
+might buy the whole Parliament, minister and all.
+
+Over against these depraved electoral conditions he was in the habit of
+placing the simpler and purer conditions of his native land. In most of the
+Colonies, he declared in his _Rise and Progress of the Differences between
+Great_ _Britain and her American Colonies_, there was no such thing as
+standing candidate for election. There was neither treating nor bribing. No
+man expressed the least inclination to be chosen. Instead of humble
+advertisements, entreating votes and interest, one saw before every new
+election requests of former members, acknowledging the honor done them by
+preceding elections, but setting forth their long service and attendance on
+the public business in that station, and praying that in consideration
+thereof some other person might be chosen in their room. After a
+dissolution, the same representatives might be and usually were re-elected
+without asking a vote or giving even a glass of cider to an elector. On the
+eve of his return to America in 1775, the contrast between the extreme
+corruption prevalent in the old rotten state and the glorious public
+virtue, so predominant in rising America, as he expressed it, assumed a
+still more aggravated form. After mentioning in his last letter to his
+friend Galloway the "Numberless and needless Places, enormous Salaries,
+Pensions, Perquisites, Bribes, groundless Quarrels, foolish Expeditions,
+false Accounts or no Accounts, Contracts and Jobbs," which in England
+devoured all revenue, and produced continual necessity in the midst of
+natural plenty, he said:
+
+ I apprehend, therefore, that to unite us intimately
+ will only be to corrupt and poison us also. It seems
+ like Mezentius's coupling and binding together the dead
+ and the living.
+
+ "Tormenti genus, et sanie taboque fluentes,
+ Complexu in misero, longa sic morte necabat."
+
+ However [he added with his readily re-awakened loyalty
+ to the mother country], I would try anything, and bear
+ anything that can be borne with Safety to our just
+ Liberties, rather than engage in a War with such near
+ relations, unless compelled to it by dire Necessity in
+ our own Defence.
+
+Nor was any American of Franklin's time more profoundly conscious than he
+of the growing power and splendid destiny of the Colonies. His familiarity
+with America was singularly minute and accurate. He had supped at its inns
+and sojourned in its homes, been delayed at its ferries and crippled on its
+roads. In one way or another, he had acquired a correct and searching
+insight into almost everything that related to its political, social and
+industrial life. His answers to the questions put to him during his famous
+examination before the House of Lords have been justly reputed to be among
+the most striking of all the proofs of ability that he ever gave, marked as
+they were by great wisdom and acuteness, marvellous conciseness as well as
+clearness of statement, invincible tact and dexterity. But in no respect
+are these answers more remarkable than in the knowledge that they display
+of colonial America in all its relations. Accompanying this knowledge, too,
+was unquestionably a powerful feeling of affection for the land of his
+birth which renders us more or less skeptical as to whether he was at all
+certain of himself on the different occasions when he expressed his
+willingness to die in some other land than his own.
+
+ I have indeed [he wrote to his son from England in
+ 1772] so many good kind Friends here, that I could
+ spend the Remainder of my Life among them with great
+ Pleasure, if it were not for my American connections, &
+ the indelible Affection I retain for that dear Country,
+ from which I have so long been in a State of Exile.
+
+At all times the tread of those coming millions of human beings, which the
+family fecundity of America made certain, sounded majestically in his ears.
+Referring to America in a letter to Lord Kames in the year after the repeal
+of the Stamp Act, he employed these significant words:
+
+ She may suffer at present under the arbitrary power of
+ this country; she may suffer for a while in a
+ separation from it; but these are temporary evils that
+ she will outgrow. Scotland and Ireland are differently
+ circumstanced. Confined by the sea, they can scarcely
+ increase in numbers, wealth and strength, so as to
+ overbalance England. But America, an immense territory,
+ favoured by Nature with all advantages of climate,
+ soil, great navigable rivers, and lakes, &c. must
+ become a great country, populous and mighty; and will,
+ in a less time than is generally conceived, be able to
+ shake off any shackles that may be imposed on her, and
+ perhaps place them on the imposers. In the mean time,
+ every act of oppression will sour their tempers, lessen
+ greatly, if not annihilate the profits of your commerce
+ with them, and hasten their final revolt; for the seeds
+ of liberty are universally found there, and nothing can
+ eradicate them.
+
+Even, if confined westward by the Mississippi and northward by the St.
+Lawrence and the Lakes, he thought that, in some centuries, the population
+of America would amount to one hundred millions of people.
+
+Such were the prepossessions brought by Franklin to the controversy between
+Great Britain and her colonies. In his view he was none the less an
+Englishman because he was an American, and, as the controversy gained in
+rancor, his dual allegiance to the two countries led to no little
+misconstruction. To an unknown correspondent he wrote several years after
+the repeal of the Stamp Act that he was becoming weary of talking and
+writing about the quarrel, "especially," he said, "as I do not find that I
+have gained any point, in either country, except that of rendering myself
+suspected by my impartiality; in England of being too much an American, and
+in America, of being too much an Englishman."
+
+His view of the legal tie between England and the Colonies was very simple.
+How, he wrote to William Franklin, the people of Boston could admit that
+the General Court of Massachusetts was subordinate to Parliament, and yet,
+in the same breath, deny the power of Parliament to enact laws for them, he
+could not understand; nor could he understand what bounds the Farmer's
+Letters set to the authority in Parliament, which they conceded, to
+"regulate the trade of the Colonies." It was difficult, he thought, to draw
+lines between duties for regulation and those for revenue; and, if
+Parliament was to be the judge, it seemed to him that the distinction would
+amount to little. Two years previously, however, when examined before the
+House of Commons; he had stated that, while the right of a Parliament in
+which the colonies were not represented to impose an internal tax upon them
+was generally denied in America, he had never heard any objection urged in
+America to duties laid by Parliament to regulate commerce; and, when he was
+asked whether there was any kind of difference between the two taxes to the
+colonies on which they might be laid, he had a prompt answer:
+
+ I think the difference is very great. An external tax
+ is a duty laid on commodities imported; that duty is
+ added to the first cost and other charges on the
+ commodity, and, when it is offered to sale, makes a
+ part of the price. If the people do not like it at that
+ price, they refuse it; they are not obliged to pay it.
+ But an internal tax is forced from the people without
+ their consent, if not laid by their own
+ representatives.
+
+And then, when asked immediately afterwards whether, if the external tax or
+duty was laid on the necessaries of life imported into Pennsylvania, that
+would not be the same thing in its effects as an internal tax, he doubtless
+filled the minds of his more insular auditors with astonishment by
+replying, "I do not know a single article imported into the Northern
+Colonies, but what they can either do without, or make themselves."
+
+Another neat answer in the examination was his answer when asked whether
+there was any kind of difference between a duty on the importation of goods
+and an excise on their consumption:
+
+ Yes, a very material one; an excise, for the reasons I
+ have just mentioned, they (the colonists) think you can
+ have no right to lay within their country. But the sea
+ is yours; you maintain, by your fleets, the safety of
+ navigation in it, and keep it clear of pirates; you may
+ have therefore a natural and equitable right to some
+ toll or duty on merchandizes carried through that part
+ of your dominions, towards defraying the expence you
+ are at in ships to maintain the safety of that
+ carriage.
+
+Finally he grew weary of the repeated effort to fix the reproach of
+inconsistency upon the colonies because of their acquiescence in
+Parliamentary regulation of their commerce; and, when asked whether
+Pennsylvania might not, by the same interpretation of her charter, object
+to external as well as internal taxation without representation, he
+replied:
+
+ They never have hitherto. Many arguments have been
+ lately used here to show them, that there is no
+ difference, and that, if you have no right to tax them
+ internally, you have none to tax them externally, or
+ make any other law to bind them. At present they do not
+ reason so; but in time they may possibly be convinced
+ by these arguments.
+
+Nearly ten years later, Franklin had in a conversation with Lord Chatham at
+his country seat a notable opportunity to say something further with
+respect to Parliamentary regulations of American commerce. On this
+occasion, the great English statesman, then earnestly engaged in a last
+effort to avert the approaching rupture, observed that the opinion
+prevailed in England that America aimed at setting up for itself as an
+independent state; or at least getting rid of the Navigation Acts; and
+Franklin assured him that, having more than once travelled almost from one
+end of the continent to the other, and kept a great variety of company,
+eating, drinking and conversing with them freely, he never had heard in any
+conversation from any person, drunk or sober, the least expression of a
+wish for a separation, or hint that such a thing would be advantageous to
+America. And, as to the Navigation Act, he said that the main material part
+of it, that of carrying on trade in British or Plantation bottoms,
+excluding foreign ships from colonial ports, and navigating with three
+fourths British seamen was as acceptable to America as it could be to
+Britain. Indeed, he declared, America was not even against regulations of
+the general commerce by Parliament, provided such regulations were _bona
+fide_ for the benefit of the whole empire, not for the small advantage of
+one part to the great injury of another, such as obliging American ships to
+call in England with their wine and fruit from Portugal or Spain, the
+restraints on American manufactures in the woollen and hat-making branches,
+the prohibiting of slitting-mills, steel-works and the like.
+
+In the opinion of Franklin, Great Britain and America were legally
+connected as England and Scotland were before the Union by having one
+common sovereign. He denied that the instructions of the King had the force
+of law in the Colonies, as Lord Granville had contended, or that the King
+and Parliament had any legislative authority over them. "Something," he
+told his son, "might be made of either of the extremes; that Parliament has
+a power to make _all laws_ for us, or that it has a power to make _no laws_
+for us; and I think the arguments for the latter more numerous and weighty
+than those for the former." The King with his Plantation Parliaments was,
+in his opinion, the sole legislator of his American subjects, and, in that
+capacity, was, and ought to be, free to exercise his own judgment,
+unrestrained and unlimited by the English Parliament.[19] That the
+Colonies were originally constituted distinct states and intended to be
+continued such, was clear to him, he wrote to Dr. Cooper, from a thorough
+consideration of their first charters and the whole conduct of the crown
+and nation towards them until the Restoration. Since that time Parliament
+had usurped an authority of making laws for them which before it had not,
+and America had for some time submitted to the usurpation partly through
+ignorance and inattention and partly from its weakness and inability to
+contend. He wished therefore that such expressions as "the supreme
+authority of Parliament," "the subordinacy of our Assemblies to the
+Parliament" and the like were no longer employed in the colonies. These
+opinions were formed at a time when he labored under the egregious error of
+supposing that, in spite of the wicked machinations of his Parliament, the
+King regarded his colonies with the eye of mild paternal favor; but they
+remained his opinions long after he ceased to be the cheat of this
+delusion.
+
+How far Franklin's idea of the legal bond between Great Britain and the
+Colonies was a correct one is a technical inquiry that we need not discuss;
+but his conception of the solidarity of interests which should exist
+between all parts of the British Empire was as generous and glowing as any
+federal rhapsodist of the present day could form. When he expounded it to
+Lord Chatham at Hayes, the latter in his grand way declared that it was a
+sound one, worthy of a great, benevolent and comprehensive mind. And such
+it was. The truth is that Franklin was an Imperialist, and the union which
+he saw was that of a vast English-speaking empire, made up of parts, held
+in harmony with each other not only by their common English heritage but
+also by a measure of self-government liberal enough to assure to each of
+them an intelligent and sympathetic administration of its particular
+interests. Until the colonial history of England began, all great empires,
+he told Lord Chatham, had crumbled first at their extremities, because
+
+ Countries remote from the Seat and Eye of Government
+ which therefore could not well understand their Affairs
+ for want of full and true Information, had never been
+ well governed but had been oppress'd by bad Governors,
+ on Presumption that Complaint was difficult to be made
+ and supported against them at such a distance.
+
+Had this process of disintegration not been invited in recent years by
+wrong politics (which would have Parliament to be omnipotent, though it
+ought not to be so unless it could at the same time be omniscient) they
+might have gone on extending their Western Empire, adding Province to
+Province, as far as the South Sea.
+
+ It has long appeared to me [he said in his _Tract
+ relative to the Affair of Hutchinson's Letters_], that
+ the only true British Politicks were those which aim'd
+ at the Good of the _Whole British Empire_, not that
+ which sought the Advantage of _one Part_ in the
+ Disadvantage of the others; therefore all Measures of
+ procuring Gain to the Mother Country arising from Loss
+ to her Colonies, and all of Gain to the Colonies
+ arising from or occasioning Loss to Britain, especially
+ where the Gain was small and the Loss great, every
+ Abridgment of the Power of the Mother Country, where
+ that Power was not prejudicial to the Liberties of the
+ Colonists, and every Diminution of the Privileges of
+ the Colonists, where they were not prejudicial to the
+ Welfare of the Mo. Country, I, in my own Mind,
+ condemned as improper, partial, unjust, and
+ mischievous; tending to create Dissensions, and weaken
+ that Union, on which the Strength, Solidity, and
+ Duration of the Empire greatly depended; and I opposed,
+ as far as my little Powers went, all Proceedings,
+ either here or in America, that in my Opinion had such
+ Tendency.
+
+But in no words of Franklin is his inspiring idea of British unity more
+strikingly expressed than in one of his letters to Lord Howe during the
+Revolutionary War.
+
+ Long did I endeavour, with unfeigned and unwearied Zeal
+ [was his touching language] to preserve from breaking
+ that fine and noble China Vase, the British Empire; for
+ I knew, that, being once broken, the separate Parts
+ could not retain even their Shares of the Strength and
+ Value that existed in the Whole, and that a perfect
+ Reunion of those Parts could scarce ever be hoped for.
+ Your Lordship may possibly remember the tears of Joy
+ that wet my Cheek, when, at your good Sister's in
+ London, you once gave me Expectations that a
+ Reconciliation might soon take place.
+
+That there was only one way in which the fair vase upon which his eye
+lingered so fondly and proudly could for certainty be preserved from
+irreparable ruin, namely, by admitting the colonies to representation in
+the British Parliament, Franklin saw with perfect clearness. Repeatedly the
+thought of such a union emerges from his correspondence only to be
+dismissed as impracticable. As far back as 1766, he wrote from London to
+Cadwallader Evans these pregnant words:
+
+ My private opinion concerning a union in Parliament
+ between the two countries is, that it would be best for
+ the whole. But I think it will never be done. For
+ though I believe, that, if we had no more
+ representatives than Scotland has, we should be
+ sufficiently strong in the House to prevent, as they do
+ for Scotland, anything ever passing to our
+ disadvantage; yet we are not able at present to furnish
+ and maintain such a number, and, when we are more able,
+ we shall be less willing than we are now. The
+ Parliament here do at present think too highly of
+ themselves to admit representatives from us, if we
+ should ask it; and, when they will be desirous of
+ granting it, we shall think too highly of ourselves to
+ accept of it. It would certainly contribute to the
+ strength of the whole, if Ireland and all the dominions
+ were united and consolidated under one common council
+ for general purposes, each retaining its particular
+ council or parliament for its domestic concerns. But
+ this should have been more early provided for. In the
+ infancy of our foreign establishments it was neglected,
+ or was not thought of. And now the affair is nearly in
+ the situation of Friar Bacon's project of making a
+ brazen wall round England for its eternal security. His
+ servant, Friar Bungey, slept while the brazen head,
+ which was to dictate how it might be done, said _Time
+ is_, and _Time was_. He only waked to hear it say,
+ _Time is past_. An explosion followed, that tumbled
+ their house about the conjuror's ears.
+
+In a subsequent letter to his son in 1768, Franklin again indulges the same
+day dream, and again reaches the conclusion that such a union would be the
+best for the whole, and that, though particular parts might find particular
+disadvantages in it, they would find greater advantages in the security
+arising to every part from the increased strength of the whole. But such a
+union, he concluded, was not likely to take place, while the nature of the
+existing relation was so little understood on both sides of the water, and
+sentiments concerning it remained so widely different.
+
+Nothing, therefore, remained for Franklin to do except to fall back upon
+this relation and to make the best of it, to insist that the only
+constitutional tie between England and the Colonies was the King, and that
+Parliament had no more right to tax America than to tax Hanover, though the
+legislative assemblies of the colonies would always be ready in the future
+as they had been in the past to honor the requisitions for pecuniary aids
+made upon them by the King, through his Secretary of State; to combat the
+political and economic dogmas and the national prejudices which stood in
+the way of the full recognition by England of the fact that her true
+interest was to be found in the liberal treatment of the Colonies; to warn
+the Colonies that their connection with England was attended with too many
+obligations and advantages to be hastily or prematurely forfeited by rash
+resentments, so long as there was any definite prospect of their appeal to
+English self-interest and good-feeling not proving in vain; and finally to
+couple the warning with the suggestion that they should unceasingly keep up
+the assertion of their just rights, and be prepared, all else failing, to
+maintain them with an unabated military spirit. It was not to be expected
+of a man so conservative and constant in nature, and bound to England by so
+many strong and endearing associations, that he should wage a solitary
+combat for American rights on English soil before he or any man had reason
+to know how bitterly the Stamp Act would be returned upon the head of
+Parliament by America, but never, after the temper of his countrymen in
+regard to it, was made manifest to him, were his elbows again out of touch
+with those of his compatriots in America. To their assistance and to the
+assistance as well of the great body of wise and generous Englishmen, who
+loved liberty too much at home to begrudge it to Englishmen in America, he
+brought his every resource, his scientific fame, his social gifts, his
+personal popularity, his knowledge of the world and the levers by which it
+is moved, the sane, searching mind, too full of light for bigotry,
+superstition, or confusion, the pen that enlisted satirical point as
+readily as grave dissertation in the service of instruction. It cannot be
+doubted that his exertions should be reckoned among the potent influences
+that secured the repeal of the Stamp Act. To Charles Thomson he wrote that
+he had reprinted everything from America that he thought might help their
+common cause. His examination before the House of Commons was published and
+had a great run. "You guessed aright," he wrote to Lord Kames with regard
+to the repeal, "in supposing that I would not be a _mute in that play_. I
+was extremely busy, attending Members of both Houses, informing,
+explaining, consulting, disputing, in a continual hurry from morning to
+night, till the affair was happily ended."
+
+Some years after the repeal of the Stamp Act, he wrote to Jane Mecom that,
+at the time of the repeal, the British Ministry were ready to hug him for
+the assistance that he had afforded them in bringing it about. From the
+time of the repeal until he returned to America in 1775, his one absorbing
+object was to create a better understanding between England and her
+colonies, and to avert the possibility of war between them. Among the
+things with which he had to contend in accomplishing his aims was the
+haughty spirit in which the English people were disposed to look down upon
+the colonists, and to resent any manifestation of independence upon their
+part as insolent. It was this spirit which made him feel that the assent of
+England would never be obtained to the representation of America in
+Parliament.
+
+ I am fully persuaded with you [he wrote to Lord Kames],
+ that a _Consolidating Union_, by a fair and equal
+ representation of all the parts of this Empire in
+ Parliament, is the only firm basis on which its
+ political grandeur and prosperity can be founded.
+ Ireland once wished it, but now rejects it. The time
+ has been, when the colonies might have been pleased
+ with it; they are now _indifferent_ about it; and if it
+ is much longer delayed, they too will _refuse it_. But
+ the pride of this people can not bear the thought of
+ it, and therefore it will be delayed. Every man in
+ England seems to consider himself as a piece of a
+ sovereign over America; seems to jostle himself into
+ the throne with the King, and talks of _our subjects in
+ the Colonies_.
+
+This was the sentiment of England in general. In the guard-room and
+barracks, it assumed at times the grosser form of such contempt as that
+which led General Clarke to believe as we have seen that the emasculation
+of all the male Americans would be little more than a holiday task for a
+handful of British grenadiers. Along with this haughty spirit went a crass
+ignorance of America and Americans which Franklin despaired of ever
+enlightening except by good-natured ridicule. An illustration of the manner
+in which he employed this agency is found in his letter to the Editor of a
+Newspaper. It had been claimed, he said, that factories in America were
+impossible because American sheep had but little wool, and the dearness of
+American labor rendered the profitable working of iron and other materials,
+except in some few coarse instances, impracticable.
+
+ Dear Sir [was his reply], do not let us suffer
+ ourselves to be amus'd with such groundless Objections.
+ The very Tails of the American Sheep are so laden with
+ Wooll, that each has a little Car or Waggon on four
+ little Wheels, to support & keep it from trailing on
+ the Ground. Would they caulk their Ships, would they
+ fill their Beds, would they even litter their Horses
+ with Wooll, if it were not both plenty and cheap? And
+ what signifies Dearness of Labour, when an English
+ shilling passes for five and Twenty? Their engaging 300
+ Silk Throwsters here in one Week, for New York, was
+ treated as a Fable, because, forsooth, they have "no
+ Silk there to throw." Those, who made this Objection,
+ perhaps did not know, that at the same time the Agents
+ from the King of Spain were at Quebec to contract for
+ 1000 Pieces of Cannon to be made there for the
+ Fortification of Mexico, and at New York engaging the
+ annual Supply of woven Floor-Carpets for their West
+ India Houses, other Agents from the Emperor of China
+ were at Boston treating about an Exchange of raw Silk
+ for Wooll, to be carried in Chinese Junks through the
+ Straits of Magellan.
+
+Another thing, with which Franklin had to contend, was the
+misrepresentations that the colonial governors were constantly making about
+American conditions. These misrepresentations were in keeping with the
+unworthy character of some of them and with the transitory relation that
+almost all of them bore to the Colonies, of which they were the executives.
+What the Americans truly thought of them is pointedly expressed in
+Franklin's _Causes of the American Discontents_.
+
+ They say then as to Governors [he declared], that they
+ are not like Princes whose posterity have an
+ inheritance in the Government of a nation, and
+ therefore an interest in its prosperity; they are
+ generally strangers to the Provinces they are sent to
+ govern, have no estate, natural connexion, or relation
+ there, to give them an affection for the country; that
+ they come only to make money as fast as they can; are
+ sometimes men of vicious characters and broken
+ fortunes, sent by a Minister merely to get them out of
+ the way; that as they intend staying in the country no
+ longer than their government continues, and purpose to
+ leave no family behind them, they are apt to be
+ regardless of the goodwill of the people, and care not
+ what is said or thought of them after they are gone.
+
+That such men were biased and untrustworthy witnesses touching American
+conditions goes without saying, but, when discontent became deeply
+implanted in the breasts of the colonists, their partisan and perverted
+reports to the English Government as to the state of America did much to
+mislead their masters. The burden of these reports as a rule was that the
+disaffected were few in numbers and persons of little consequence, that
+the colonists of property and social standing were satisfied, and inclined
+to submit to Parliamentary taxation, that it was impossible to establish
+manufacturing industries in America, and that, if Parliament would only
+steadily persist in the exercise of its legislative authority over America,
+the non-importation agreements and other defensive measures adopted by its
+people would be abandoned.
+
+But the most intractable of all the obstacles with which Franklin had to
+contend was the policy of commercial and industrial restriction, partly the
+result of economic purblindness, peculiar to the time, and partly the
+result of sheer selfishness, which England relentlessly pursued in her
+relations to the colonies. Every suggestion that this policy should be
+relaxed was met by its more extreme champions, such as George Grenville,
+with the statement that the Acts of Navigation were the very Palladium of
+England. On no account were the Colonies to be allowed to import wine, oil
+and fruit directly from Spain and Portugal, or to even import iron directly
+from foreign countries. Enlarged as was the understanding of Lord Chatham
+himself, it could not tolerate the thought that America should be permitted
+to convert any form of crude material into manufactured products. Every hat
+made in America, every shipload of emigrants that left the shores of
+England for America, was jealously regarded as signifying so much pecuniary
+loss to England. The colonists were to be mere _adscripti glebae_, mere
+tillers of the American soil for the purpose of wringing from it the price
+of the manufactured commodities, with which they were to be exclusively
+supplied by the factories and shops of the mother country. The idea that,
+in any other sense, the expanding numbers and wealth of America could inure
+to the benefit of England, was one that seemed to be wholly foreign to its
+consciousness. To this Little England Franklin steadfastly opposed his
+conception of an Imperial England, based upon the freedom of all its parts
+to contribute to the wealth and importance of the whole by the full
+enjoyment of all their peculiar natural gifts and advantages.
+
+ No one can more sincerely rejoice than I do [he wrote
+ to Lord Kames in 1760], on the reduction of Canada; and
+ this is not merely as I am a colonist, but as I am a
+ Briton. I have long been of opinion, that the
+ _foundations of the future grandeur and stability of
+ the British Empire lie in America_; and though, like
+ other foundations, they are low and little seen, they
+ are, nevertheless, broad and strong enough to support
+ the greatest political structure human wisdom ever yet
+ erected.
+
+These words, splendid as was the vision by which they were illumined, were
+but the utterance in another form of the thought that he had expressed nine
+years before in America in his essay on the _Increase of Mankind_. Speaking
+of the population of the colonies at that time he said:
+
+ This Million doubling, suppose but once in 25 years,
+ will, in another Century, be more than the People of
+ _England_, and the greatest Number of _Englishmen_ will
+ be on this Side the Water. What an Accession of Power
+ to the _British Empire_ by Sea as well as Land! What
+ Increase of Trade and Navigation! What Numbers of Ships
+ and Seamen! We have been here but little more than 100
+ years, and yet the Force of our Privateers in the late
+ War, united, was greater, both in Men and Guns, than
+ that of the whole _British_ Navy in Queen _Elizabeth's_
+ time.
+
+Indeed so fully possessed was he even as late as 1771 with the federative
+spirit, which has brought recruits from Canada and Australia to the side of
+England in recent wars that, after urging upon Thomas Cushing the
+importance of a well-disciplined militia being maintained by
+Massachusetts, for her protection against invasion by a foreign foe, he
+added, "And what a Glory would it be for us to send, on any trying
+Occasion, ready and effectual Aid to our Mother Country!" It is only by
+reading such words as these that we can begin to divine what the divulsion
+of England and America has really meant to the vast host of human beings
+throughout the world who speak the English tongue.
+
+To all the shallow sophistries or sottish errors, that tended to falsify
+his glorious dream of world-wide British unity, Franklin presented a
+merciless intellect. With regard to the intention of Parliament to tax the
+colonies, he had these pointed words to say in a letter to Peter Collinson
+in 1764: "What we get above a Subsistence we lay out with you for your
+Manufactures.
+
+"Therefore what you get from us in Taxes you must lose in Trade. The Cat
+can yield but her skin."
+
+Even more acute was his letter to the _Public Advertiser_ on a proposed Act
+to prevent emigration from England. Such an Act, he declared, was
+unnecessary, impracticable, impolitic and unjust. What is more, with an
+insight into the laws governing population, superior to that of any man of
+his time, he made his assertions good. To illustrate this claim in part, we
+need go no further than what he had to say about the necessity of the Act.
+
+ As long as the new situation shall be _far_ preferable
+ to the old [he said], the emigration may possibly
+ continue. But when many of those, who at home
+ interfered with others of the same rank (in the
+ competition for farms, shops, business, offices, and
+ other means of subsistence), are gradually withdrawn,
+ the inconvenience of that competition ceases; the
+ number remaining no longer half starve each other; they
+ find they can now subsist comfortably, and though
+ perhaps not quite so well as those who have left them,
+ yet, the inbred attachment to a native country is
+ sufficient to overbalance a moderate difference; and
+ thus the emigration ceases naturally. The waters of
+ the ocean may move in currents from one quarter of the
+ globe to another, as they happen in some places to be
+ accumulated, and in others diminished; but no law,
+ beyond the law of gravity, is necessary to prevent
+ their abandoning any coast entirely. Thus the different
+ degrees of happiness of different countries and
+ situations find, or rather make, their level by the
+ flowing of people from one to another; and where that
+ level is once found, the removals cease. Add to this,
+ that even a real deficiency of people in any country,
+ occasioned by a wasting war or pestilence, is speedily
+ supplied by earlier and more prolific marriages,
+ encouraged by the greater facility of obtaining the
+ means of subsistence. So that a country half
+ depopulated would soon be repeopled, till the means of
+ subsistence were equalled by the population. All
+ increase beyond that point must perish, or flow off
+ into more favourable situations. Such overflowings
+ there have been of mankind in all ages, or we should
+ not now have had so many nations. But to apprehend
+ absolute depopulation from that cause, and call for a
+ law to prevent it, is calling for a law to stop the
+ Thames, lest its waters, by what leave it daily at
+ Gravesend, should be quite exhausted.
+
+Twenty-three years before he had stated the same truths more sententiously
+in his essay on the _Increase of Mankind_.
+
+ In fine [he said in that essay] a Nation well regulated
+ is like a Polypus; take away a Limb, its Place is soon
+ supply'd; cut it in two, and each deficient Part shall
+ speedily grow out of the Part remaining. Thus if you
+ have Room and Subsistence enough, as you may by
+ dividing, make ten Polypes out of one, you may of one
+ make ten Nations, equally populous and powerful; or
+ rather increase a Nation ten fold in Numbers and
+ Strength.
+
+Franklin clearly saw that, with the increase of population in the colonies,
+the demand for British manufactures would increase _pari passu_, and that,
+with the increased demand for them, the population of Great Britain would
+increase, perhaps, tenfold. Much as he made of the economic conditions that
+tended to give a purely agricultural direction to the energies of America,
+he laughed to scorn the idea that America would always remain in a state of
+industrial subjection to England.
+
+ Only consider _the rate of our Increase_ [he wrote to
+ Peter Collinson, after stating that it was folly to
+ expect that America would always be supplied with cloth
+ by England] and tell me if you can increase your Wooll
+ in that Proportion, and where, in your little Island
+ you can feed the Sheep. Nature has put Bounds to your
+ Abilities, tho' none to your Desires. Britain would, if
+ she could, manufacture & trade for all the World;
+ England for all Britain;--London for all England;--and
+ every Londoner for all London. So selfish is the human
+ Mind! But 'tis well there is One above that rules these
+ Matters with a more equal Hand.
+
+The agency that Franklin held for Pennsylvania in the first instance, and
+the agencies that he afterwards held for Massachusetts, New Jersey and
+Georgia, too, afforded him a solid standing for influencing public opinion
+both in England and America. He was actually in England, and, at the same
+time, in incessant correspondence with the popular leaders in America. With
+the beginning of the agitation for the repeal of the Stamp Act he entered
+upon a course of political activity which added greatly, in another form,
+to the reputation already acquired by him as a man of science. For his
+services in securing the repeal, including the flood of light that his
+answers, when examined before the House of Commons, shed upon the points at
+issue between the two countries, he was repaid by the English Ministry with
+attentions which he describes by a term as strong as "caress." Even when
+the dust of the conflict had thickened, and popular sentiment in England
+had ranged itself more and more on the side of the King and Parliament,
+his advice was still eagerly sought by Chatham, Camden, Shelburne and Burke
+and other liberal and sagacious English statesmen, when they were vainly
+striving in opposition to restore sanity to the distracted counsels that
+were menacing the security of the Empire.[20] Those must have been proud
+moments for Franklin, when the elder Pitt, whom he had come to regard in
+the earlier stages of his maturer life in England as an "inaccessible,"
+received him as an honored guest under his roof at Hayes, or conferred with
+him at No. 7 Craven Street, or delivered him to the doorkeepers in the
+House of Lords, saying aloud, "This is Dr. Franklin, whom I would have
+admitted into the House." There have been few men who might not have envied
+the privilege of intimate communion with a man not greater, when he was
+making his country the mistress of the world, than, when decrepit, and in a
+hopeless minority, he rose in the House of Lords to plead with a voice,
+inspired not only by his own matchless eloquence but by all that was best
+in the history and temper of England for the removal of His Majesty's
+troops from the town of Boston. On the other side of the Atlantic, too, as
+the final catastrophe drew nearer, Franklin acquired a position, as the
+champion of the Colonies, which led Governor Hutchinson of Massachusetts to
+say of the memorable report, made by a committee to the town meeting, held
+in Boston on November 20, 1772, that "although at its first appearance it
+was considered as their own work, yet they had little more to do than to
+make the necessary alterations in the arrangement of materials prepared for
+them by their great director in England, whose counsels they obeyed, and in
+whose wisdom and dexterity they had an implicit faith."
+
+And with entire truth it can be said that, until war became inevitable,
+Franklin used his influence in both countries with the unwavering purpose
+of promoting the best interests of both. The representation of America in
+Parliament at that time he saw was impracticable, and it is hard to
+believe, though the imbecility of a government without a sanction had not
+yet been forced upon his attention by the Articles of Confederation, that
+so practical a man could have had much faith in the steady efficacy of mere
+requisitions for aids by the Crown on the colonial assemblies. But, within
+the limits set him by the insurmountable barriers of the hour, it can not
+be doubted, bold as such an assertion may be, that the wisest thing that
+both England and the Colonies could have done, if such an idea is
+conceivable, would have been to leave the controversy between them to his
+sole arbitration. The most striking tribute that can be paid to the wisdom
+and open-mindedness of Franklin is to say that, if this had been done, an
+accommodation would unquestionably have been reached with due regard to the
+honor, dignity and essential interests of both countries. His attitude in
+England was that of a loyal friend to both parties to the controversy, who,
+as he viewed it, had no cause for disagreement that a temperate and
+sensible man would not know how to readily remove. To the British public he
+addressed with numerous variations the following arguments: Notwithstanding
+the rapid increase of population in America, its area was so vast, and
+contained so much vacant land, that even such artisans as it had soon
+drifted into the possession and cultivation of land. The danger, therefore,
+of industrial competition between the two countries was very remote. The
+people of America, however, would multiply so rapidly that, in the course
+of a brief time, the demand for manufactures would increase to such an
+extent that Great Britain would be powerless alone to supply it. He had
+satisfied himself by an inspection of the cloth factories in Yorkshire
+that, with a population doubling as did that of America every twenty-five
+years, Great Britain would in the future be unable to keep the Americans
+clothed. It was not right that the interests of a particular class of
+British merchants, tradesmen or artificers should outweigh those of all the
+King's subjects in the Colonies. Iron was to be found everywhere in
+America, and beaver furs were the natural productions of that country;
+hats, nails and steel were wanted there as well as in England. It was of no
+importance to the common welfare of the empire whether a subject of the
+King got his living by making hats on one or the other side of the water,
+whether he grew rich on the Thames or the Ohio, in Edinburgh or Dublin. Yet
+the hatters of England had obtained an act in their own favor, restraining
+that manufacture in America in order to oblige the Americans to send their
+beaver to England to be manufactured, and to purchase back the hats loaded
+with the charges of a double transportation. In the same manner, had a few
+nail-makers and a still smaller body of steel-makers (perhaps there were
+not a half-dozen of these in England) been able to totally forbid by an Act
+of Parliament the erecting of slitting mills or steel-furnaces in America.
+All money made by America in trade, or derived by it from fisheries, the
+produce of the soil or commerce, finally centred in England; yet, though
+America was drained of all its specie in the purchase of English goods,
+often mere luxuries and superfluities, she was not even allowed to issue
+paper money, however carefully safeguarded, to take its place. The idea
+that the numerous and separate colonies might become dangerous to the
+mother country was visionary. They were so jealous of each other that they
+had been wholly unable to agree upon a union for their common defence or to
+unite in requesting the mother country to establish one for them. The truth
+was that they loved England much more than they loved each other. There
+remained among them so much respect, veneration and affection for Britain,
+that, if cultivated prudently, with kind usage, and tenderness for their
+privileges, they might be easily governed still for ages, without force, or
+any considerable expense. Parliament had no constitutional right to levy a
+direct tax of any kind on America. The King was the only bond between
+America and Great Britain. In the beginning, no claim had been made by
+Parliament of a right to even regulate American commerce, but the power had
+long been exercised by it without any objection on the part of the
+colonies, and could, at any rate, be reasonably defended on the ground that
+Great Britain was put to a great expense in policing the seas over which
+American commerce moved. If England felt that she could not rely upon the
+voluntary grants of America, to defray the charges imposed upon her by
+America, then the logical and proper thing to do before she levied direct
+taxes upon America was to provide for the representation of the Colonies in
+Parliament. Until that was done, if it was practicable to do it, she should
+confine herself to the old constitutional practice of requisitions for
+pecuniary aid, issued by the Secretary of State, at the instance of the
+Crown, to the Legislative Assemblies of America. These requisitions of a
+gracious King had been freely honored in the past. Indeed, the pecuniary
+burden of the wars, which had been carried on in America, though they were
+not of her kindling, had been borne by America in a larger proportion to
+her means than England. But to impose a stamp or tea duty upon America by
+Act of Parliament was simple madness. No taxes of that sort would ever be
+collected in America except such as were stained with blood. If Parliament,
+in which America was not represented, had the right to take from her a
+penny in a pound, what was there to hinder it from calling, whenever it
+pleased, for the other nineteen shillings and eleven pence? The only
+result of a continued attempt to tax America would be the complete loss of
+her respect and affection, and all the political and commercial advantages
+that accompanied them. It was a mistake to heed the statements of the
+Colonial Governors as to the limited extent of popular disaffection in
+America and the inability of the Colonies to dispense with English
+manufactures. Their dependence was such as to render them more eager to
+conciliate court than colonial favor. It was also a mistake to suppose that
+America could not either make or forego any articles whatsoever that she
+was in the habit of buying from England. Men would tax themselves as
+heavily to gratify their resentment as their pride. The Americans had
+resolved to wear no more mourning, and it was now totally out of fashion
+with near two millions of people. They had resolved to eat no more lamb,
+and not a joint of lamb had since been seen on any of their tables, but the
+lambs themselves were all alive with the prettiest of fleeces on their
+backs imaginable. Look, too, at the pitiful sum of eighty pounds which was
+all that the odious tea duty banned by America had produced in a year to
+defray the expense of some hundreds of thousands of pounds incurred by
+England in maintaining armed ships and soldiers to support the innumerable
+officeholders charged with the duty of enforcing the tax.
+
+The argument addressed by Franklin to America was equally earnest. The
+protection that England could afford her, the office of umpire that England
+could perform for her, in case of disputes between the Colonies, so that
+they could go on without interruption with their improvements, and increase
+their numbers, were the advantages that America enjoyed in her connection
+with England.
+
+ By the Exercise of prudent Moderation on her part,
+ mix'd with a little Kindness [Franklin wrote to Thomas
+ Cushing], and by a decent Behaviour on ours, excusing
+ where we can excuse from a Consideration of
+ Circumstances, and bearing a little with the
+ Infirmities of her Government, as we would with those
+ of an aged Parent,[21] tho' firmly asserting our
+ Privileges, and declaring that we mean at a proper time
+ to vindicate them, this advantageous Union may still be
+ long continued. We wish it, and we may endeavour it;
+ but God will order it as to His Wisdom shall seem most
+ suitable. The Friends of Liberty here, wish we may long
+ preserve it on our side the Water, that they may find
+ it there if adverse Events should destroy it here. They
+ are therefore anxious and afraid, lest we should hazard
+ it by premature Attempts in its favour. They think we
+ may risque much by violent Measures and that the Risque
+ is unnecessary, since a little Time must infallibly
+ bring us all we demand or desire, and bring it us in
+ Peace and Safety. I do not presume to advise. There are
+ many wiser men among you, and I hope you will be
+ directed by a still superior Wisdom.
+
+Every personal difference Franklin contended did not justify a quarrel nor
+did every act of oppression on the part of the mother country justify a
+war. The policy, which he laid down for the Colonies, was to exercise
+patience and forbearance, and to look to political changes in England and
+their own rapidly increasing numbers and wealth for the ultimate redress of
+their grievances, but, in the meantime, to reaffirm fearlessly their
+constitutional rights on every proper occasion. This policy is again and
+again recommended in his letters to his friends and political
+correspondents over-sea. Even before the Stamp Act was actually repealed,
+he wrote to Charles Thomson expressing the hope that, when that happened,
+the behavior of America would be so prudent, decent and grateful that their
+friends in England would have no reason to be ashamed, and their enemies in
+England, who had predicted that Parliamentary indulgence would only make
+them more insolent and ungovernable, would find themselves, and be found,
+false prophets. After the repeal of the Stamp Act, in a letter to Galloway,
+he expressed deep regret that the English merchants, who had helped to
+secure that result, and to communicate the knowledge of it, at their
+expense to America, should feel that the Americans had proved themselves
+ingrates, and he accordingly said that he hoped that some decent
+acknowledgments or thanks would be sent to these merchants by the colonial
+assemblies. When the idea of taxing America was subsequently revived, he
+wrote to the same correspondent that he knew not what to advise, but that
+they should all do their endeavors on both sides the water to lessen the
+present unpopularity of the American cause, conciliate the affections of
+the British towards them, increase by all possible means the number of
+their friends, and be careful not to weaken their hands, and strengthen
+their enemies, by rash proceedings on their side; the mischiefs of which
+were inconceivable. In a letter to the printer of the _Gazetteer_, signed
+"New England," he said: "I only hate calumniators and boutefeus on either
+side the water, who would for the little dirty purposes of faction, set
+brother against brother, turn friends into mortal enemies, and ruin an
+empire by dividing it." In a letter to Cadwallader Evans, in 1768, he even
+approved the idea that America should manufacture only such things as
+England neglected.
+
+These are but scant gleanings from the numerous letters in which, down to
+the very last, Franklin unweariedly repeated his counsels of self-restraint
+to his fellow-countrymen. Accompanying them was every word of good cheer
+that he thought might tend to make this self-restraint easier. Several
+times he assured his American correspondents that, in the debate with the
+mother country, America had the sympathy of all Europe. For a long time, he
+endeavored to allay the resentment of his countrymen, under the sting of
+parliamentary injustice, by voicing the delusion that the King did not
+share the sentiments of the corrupt legislature which, as a matter of fact,
+he was all the time corrupting for the purpose of fostering such
+sentiments. Every indication of a favorable disposition towards the
+Colonies upon the part of the English People, during the alternations of
+anxiety and confidence that his mind underwent with the rise and fall of
+English ministries, friendly or unfriendly to America, was promptly
+observed by him and reported to America. At times, it is plain enough that
+he thought a war it would be; yet as late as 1775, when he believed that
+the adverse ministry of that time was tottering, his sanguine nature
+reached the conclusion in a letter to James Bowdoin that the redoubled
+clamor of the trading, manufacturing and Whig interests in England would
+infallibly overthrow all the enemies of America, and produce an
+acknowledgment of her rights and satisfaction for her injuries. Parliament
+rarely gave him any occasion to speak of it except in terms of mingled
+amazement and indignation; but it is agreeable to remember that, in a
+letter in 1774 to Jane Mecom, he made grateful mention of "the generous and
+noble friends of America" in both houses, whose names, dear to the highest
+traditions of human genius and public spirit, should never be forgotten in
+any movement to reintegrate in some form the broken fragments of the china
+vase in which Franklin saw a symbol of the unity of the British Empire.
+
+Accompanying Franklin's counsels of patience, however, was also an
+unceasing warning to America not to alter for a moment her posture of
+resistance and protest. "If under all the Insults and Oppressions you are
+now exposed to," he told Dr. Cooper, "you can prudently, as you have lately
+done, continue quiet, avoiding Tumults, but still resolutely keeping up
+your Claim and asserting your Rights, you will finally establish them, and
+this military Cloud that now blusters over you will pass away, and do no
+more Harm than a Summer Thunder Shower." "The Colonies," he wrote
+subsequently to Robert Morris and Thomas Leach, "have Adversaries enow to
+their common Privileges: They should endeavour to agree among themselves,
+and avoid everything that may make ill-Blood and promote Divisions, which
+must weaken them in their common Defence." To Thomas Cushing he wrote that
+America should continue from time to time to assert its rights in
+occasional solemn resolves and other public acts, never yielding them up,
+and avoiding even the slightest expressions that seemed confirmatory of the
+claim that had been set up against them. As the end of it all became more
+and more obvious, his note of warning assumed an additional significance.
+In a letter to Thomas Cushing in 1773, he wrote:
+
+ But our great Security lies, I think, in our growing
+ Strength, both in Numbers and Wealth; that creates an
+ increasing Ability of assisting this Nation in its
+ Wars, which will make us more respectable, our
+ Friendship more valued, and our Enmity feared; thence
+ it will soon be thought proper to treat us not with
+ Justice only, but with Kindness, and thence we may
+ expect in a few Years a total Change of Measures with
+ regard to us; unless, by a Neglect of military
+ Discipline, we should lose all martial Spirit, and our
+ Western People become as tame as those in the Eastern
+ Dominions of Britain, when we may expect the same
+ Oppressions; for there is much Truth in the Italian
+ saying, _Make yourselves Sheep_, _and the Wolves will
+ eat you_.
+
+Indeed the almost miraculous way in which the population and wealth of
+America were increasing from year to year was one of the facts which
+entered most deeply into Franklin's calculation of the resources upon which
+she could rely not for the purpose of breaking away from the British
+connection but for the purpose of preventing it from being abused by
+England. No one saw more clearly than he that the day would come when some
+descendant, such as Gladstone, of one of his British contemporaries might
+well apostrophize America as a daughter that, at no very distant time,
+would, whether fairer or less fair, be unquestionably stronger than the
+mother.[22] To Thomas Cushing he wrote in 1773 that the longer England
+delayed the accommodation, which finally for her own sake she must obtain,
+the worse terms she might expect, since the inequality of power and
+importance that then subsisted between her and America was daily
+diminishing; while the latter's sense of her own rights and of England's
+injustice was continually increasing.
+
+Optimistic on the whole, however, as was Franklin's outlook during the
+interval of political strife which preceded the American Revolution,
+intently as he watched every ebb and flow of English feeling, while this
+period lasted, it is manifest that in its later stages he realized that the
+currents upon which he was being borne were steadily moving towards the
+jaws of the maelstrom. This is apparent enough in his perspicacious letter
+of May 15, 1771, to the Committee of Correspondence in Massachusetts.
+
+ I think one may clearly see, in the system of customs
+ to be exacted in America by act of Parliament, the
+ seeds sown of a total disunion of the two countries,
+ though, as yet, that event may be at a considerable
+ distance. The course and natural progress seems to be,
+ first, the appointment of needy men as officers, for
+ others do not care to leave England; then, their
+ necessities make them rapacious, their office makes
+ them proud and insolent, their insolence and rapacity
+ make them odious, and, being conscious that they are
+ hated, they become malicious; their malice urges them
+ to a continual abuse of the inhabitants in their
+ letters to administration, representing them as
+ disaffected and rebellious, and (to encourage the use
+ of severity), as weak, divided, timid, and cowardly.
+ Government believes all; thinks it necessary to support
+ and countenance its officers; their quarreling with the
+ people is deemed a mark and consequence of their
+ fidelity; they are therefore more highly rewarded, and
+ this makes their conduct still more insolent and
+ provoking.
+
+ The resentment of the people will, at times and on
+ particular incidents, burst into outrages and violence
+ upon such officers, and this naturally draws down
+ severity and acts of further oppression from hence. The
+ more the people are dissatisfied, the more rigor will
+ be thought necessary; severe punishments will be
+ inflicted to terrify; rights and privileges will be
+ abolished; greater force will then be required to
+ secure execution and submission; the expense will
+ become enormous; it will then be thought proper, by
+ fresh exactions, to make the people defray it; thence,
+ the British nation and government will become odious,
+ the subjection to it will be deemed no longer
+ tolerable; war ensues, and the bloody struggle will end
+ in absolute slavery to America, or ruin to Britain by
+ the loss of her colonies; the latter most probable,
+ from America's growing strength and magnitude.
+
+ But, as the whole empire must, in either case, be
+ greatly weakened, I cannot but wish to see much
+ patience and the utmost discretion in our general
+ conduct, that the fatal period may be postponed, and
+ that, whenever this catastrophe shall happen, it may
+ appear to all mankind that the fault has not been ours.
+
+Franklin's written comments upon the American controversy between the
+passage of the Stamp Act and his return to America in 1775 are usually
+marked by a sobriety and dignity of expression worthy of their wisdom. It
+is only at times that the strong character, habitually held in leash by
+innate prudence and severely disciplined self-control, breaks out into
+impatience. Naturally enough now and then he has a word of scorn for the
+graceless venality which made Westminster almost as much a market as
+Smithfield, and was, after all, the real thing that rendered England deaf
+to the warning "Time is" of Friar Bacon's brazen mouth-piece.
+
+ Many think the new Parliament will be for reversing the
+ late proceedings [he wrote to Galloway in 1774], but
+ that depends on the Court, on which every Parliament
+ seems to be dependent; so much so, that I begin to
+ think a Parliament here of little Use to the People:
+ For since a Parliament is always to do as a ministry
+ would have it, why should we not be govern'd by the
+ Ministry in the first Instance? They could afford to
+ govern us cheaper, the Parliament being a very
+ expensive Machine, that requires a vast deal of oiling
+ and greasing at the People's Charge; for they finally
+ pay all the enormous Salaries of Places, the Pensions,
+ and the Bribes, now by Custom become necessary to
+ induce the Members to vote according to their
+ Consciences.
+
+Franklin would have been more than human if he had not had a resentful word
+to say too, when, as the result of the refusal of the Americans to drink
+any tea, except such as was smuggled into America, free of the detested
+duty, by the commercial rivals of England, the East India Company could no
+longer meet its debts, let alone pay dividends and the annuity of four
+hundred thousand pounds, payable by it to the British Government, and
+bankruptcy was following bankruptcy like a series of falling bricks, and
+thousands of Spitalfield and Manchester weavers were starving, or
+subsisting upon charity. "Blessed Effects of Pride, Pique, and Passion in
+Government, which should have no Passions," was the caustic observation of
+Franklin in one of his letters to his son. Bitterness welled up again in
+his throat when, after he had been bayed by the Privy Council, and
+dismissed from his office, a special instruction was issued to the Governor
+of Massachusetts not to sign any warrant on the Treasury for the purpose of
+paying him any salary as the agent of Massachusetts or reimbursing him for
+any expenses incurred on her behalf.
+
+ The Injustice [he said in his _Tract Relative to the
+ Affair of Hutchinson's Letters_] of thus depriving the
+ People there of the Use of their own Money, to pay an
+ Agent acting in their Defence, while the Governor, with
+ a large Salary out of the Money extorted from them by
+ Act of Parliament, was enabled to pay plentifully
+ Maudit and Wedderburn to abuse and defame them and
+ their Agent, is so evident as to need no Comment. But
+ this they call GOVERNMENT!
+
+Indecent, however, as was the treatment accorded by the Privy Council to
+the man, who had striven so loyally, so zealously and so wisely to promote
+the greatness and glory of England, it hardly conveyed a ruder shock to his
+mind than that which it received later when he saw the plan for the
+settlement of the American Controversy drafted by Lord Chatham rejected by
+the House of Lords, with as much contempt he told Charles Thomson, "as they
+could have shown to a Ballad offered by a drunken Porter."
+
+ To hear so many of these _Hereditary_ Legislators [he
+ said in his _Account of Negotiations in London_],
+ declaiming so vehemently against, not the Adopting
+ merely, but even the _Consideration_ of a Proposal so
+ important in its Nature, offered by a Person of so
+ weighty a Character, one of the first Statesmen of the
+ Age, who had taken up this Country when in the lowest
+ Despondency, and conducted it to Victory and Glory,
+ thro' a War with two of the mightiest Kingdoms in
+ Europe; to hear them censuring his Plan, not only for
+ their own Misunderstandings of what was in it, but for
+ their Imaginations of what was not in it, which they
+ would not give themselves an Opportunity of rectifying
+ by a second Reading; to perceive the total Ignorance of
+ the Subject in some, the Prejudice and Passion of
+ others, and the wilful Perversion of Plain Truth in
+ several of the Ministers; and upon the whole to see it
+ so ignominiously rejected by so great a Majority, and
+ so hastily too, in Breach of all Decency, and prudent
+ Regard to the Character and Dignity of their Body, as a
+ third Part of the National Legislature, gave me an
+ exceeding mean Opinion of their Abilities, and made
+ their Claim of Sovereignty over three Millions of
+ Virtuous, sensible People in America seem the greatest
+ of Absurdities, since they appear'd to have scarce
+ Discretion enough to govern a Herd of Swine.
+ _Hereditary Legislators_! thought I. There would be
+ more Propriety, because less Hazard of Mischief, in
+ having (as in some University of Germany) _Hereditary
+ Professors of Mathematicks_.
+
+ Yet this is the Government [Franklin declared in the
+ letter to Charles Thomson, in which he used the simile
+ of the ballad and the drunken porter, and also referred
+ to equally rash conduct upon the part of the House of
+ Commons], by whose Supreme Authority, we are to have
+ our Throats cut, if we do not acknowledge, and whose
+ dictates we are implicitly to obey, while their conduct
+ hardly entitles them to Common Respect.
+
+But it was only after he had been shamelessly and publicly proscribed,
+under circumstances which gave him good reason to believe that he was but
+the vicarious victim of a People unfeelingly doomed to the cruel
+alternatives of fratricidal resistance or vassalage, that he gave way,
+though still engaged in a last effort to stave off the evil day of
+separation, to such reproachful or denunciatory utterances as these.
+Indeed, as it is a satisfaction to a stupid man to know that Homer
+sometimes nodded, and to a vicious man to know that the character of
+Washington is supposed to have been at last successfully fly-specked by
+some petty scandal-monger, so it ought to be a relief to a hasty man to
+know that Franklin was once on the point of succumbing entirely to a sudden
+flaw of anger. Goaded beyond endurance by the reflections, which he had
+just heard in the House of Lords on everything American, including American
+courage, honesty and intelligence, reflections as contemptuous, he said, as
+if his countrymen were the lowest of mankind, and almost of a different
+species from the English of Britain, he drew up a heated protest, as the
+agent of Massachusetts, demanding from Great Britain present satisfaction
+for the blockade of Boston, and stating that satisfaction for the proposed
+exclusion of Massachusetts from the Newfoundland and other fisheries, if
+carried into effect, would probably also some day be demanded. When he
+showed the paper to his friend, Thomas Walpole, a member of the House of
+Commons, Walpole, we are told by him, looked at it and him several times
+alternately, as if he apprehended him to be out of his senses. However,
+Franklin asked him to lay it before Lord Camden, which he undertook to do.
+When it came back to Franklin, it was with a note from Walpole telling him
+simply that it was thought that it might be attended with dangerous
+consequences to his person, and contribute to exasperate the nation. The
+caution that Franklin exhibited before permitting the protest to pass from
+his possession suggests the idea that, in writing it, he was merely seeking
+a safe vent for the mental ferment of the moment. It was doubtless well for
+him that the paper got no further; for it is painful to relate that the
+disposition was not wanting in England to construe some of his letters to
+Thomas Cushing as treasonable. In a letter to Cushing, he said that he was
+not conscious of any treasonable intention, but that, after the manner in
+which he had recently been treated in the matter of the Hutchinson letters,
+he was not to wonder if less than a small lump in his forehead was voted a
+horn. Six months later, he wrote to Galloway that it was thought by many
+that, if the British soldiers and the New Englanders should come to blows,
+he would probably be taken up; for the ministerial people affected
+everywhere to represent him as the cause of all the misunderstanding. We
+know nothing better calculated to show how hopeless it is for the lamb
+downstream to convince the wolf upstream that the water flowing by him was
+not muddied from below than the fact that, during the debate over Lord
+Chatham's conciliatory Plan, Lord Sandwich referred to Franklin as one of
+the bitterest and most mischievous enemies that England had ever known.
+That is to say, Franklin, the loyal Englishman who, in one of his early
+papers on electricity, could not even mention the King without adding, "God
+preserve him," who had shrunk in the beginning from the agitation against
+the Stamp Act as little less than treason, who had deprecated the Boston
+tea-party as lawless violence, and had, from first to last, condemned
+mob-license in every form in America as steadfastly as tyranny in England.
+
+The wonder is that he should not have reached the decision sooner than he
+did that there was nothing to be gained for his country by his longer
+sojourn in England. His intercourse, as an American agent with Lord
+Hillsborough, when Secretary of State for America and First Commissioner to
+the Board of Trade, was alone enough to bring him to such a decision.[23]
+As an Irishman, familiar with the repressive policy of England in Ireland,
+Hillsborough could not well approve of British restrictions upon American
+commerce and manufactures; but there his sympathy with America ceased.
+Franklin truly said that the agents of the Colonies in England were quite
+as useful to England as to the Colonies, since they had more than once by
+timely advice kept the English Government from making mistakes arising out
+of ignorance of special conditions peculiar to America. But this view was
+not shared by Hillsborough. He insisted that no agent from Massachusetts
+should be recognized in England, who was not appointed, from year to year,
+by the General Court of Massachusetts by an act, to which the Governor of
+that colony had given his assent. As the Governor was dependent for his
+appointment upon the British Ministry, and would hardly fail to name any
+one as agent, who might be selected by it, such a tenure was equivalent to
+vesting the selection of the agent in Hillsborough himself, whose wishes,
+when selected, the agent was not likely to oppose. Under such conditions,
+an agent would be of no value to the colony, Franklin declared, and, under
+such conditions, he further declared, he would not be willing himself to
+hold the post. "His Character is Conceit, Wrongheadedness, Obstinacy, and
+Passion." Such were the terms in which Franklin summed up the moral
+attributes of Hillsborough to Dr. Cooper, after he had vainly striven for
+several years to give the former some salutary conception of the importance
+of ascertaining the real sentiments and wants of America. The letter, in
+which these terms were employed, was accompanied by minutes of a spirited
+dialogue between Franklin and Hillsborough, which almost makes us regret
+that the former, among his other literary ventures, had not tested his
+qualifications as a playwright. The part of Hillsborough in the colloquy
+was to let Franklin fully know in language of mixed petulance and contempt
+that he declined to recognize him as an agent.
+
+ No such appointment shall be entered [he is minuted as
+ declaring]. When I came into the administration of
+ American affairs, I found them in great disorder. By
+ _my firmness_ they are now something mended; and, while
+ I have the honour to hold the seals, I shall continue
+ the same conduct, the same _firmness_. I think my duty
+ to the master I serve, and to the government of this
+ nation, requires it of me. If that conduct is not
+ approved, _they_ may take my office from me when they
+ please. I shall make them a bow, and thank them; I
+ shall resign with pleasure. That gentleman knows it,
+ (_pointing to Mr. Pownall_), but, while I continue in
+ it, I shall resolutely persevere in the same FIRMNESS.
+ (_Spoken with great warmth, and turning pale in his
+ discourse, as if he was angry at something or somebody
+ besides the agent, and of more consequence to
+ himself._)
+
+Then follows Franklin's reply:
+
+ B. F. (_Reaching out his hand for the paper, which his
+ Lordship returned to him_). I beg your Lordship's
+ pardon for taking up so much of your time. It is, I
+ believe, of no great importance whether the appointment
+ is acknowledged or not, for I have not the least
+ conception that an agent can _at present_ be of any use
+ to any of the colonies. I shall therefore give your
+ Lordship no further trouble. (Withdrew.)
+
+As the dialogue discloses, Hillsborough had quite enough enemies already to
+render it prudent for him to abstain from making another of a man who had
+declared in the letter, with which it was enclosed, that, if there was to
+be a war between them, he would do his best to defend himself, and annoy
+his adversary little, regarding the story of the Earthen Pot and Brazen
+Pitcher.
+
+ One encouragement I have [Franklin said in his letter],
+ the knowledge, that he is not a whit better lik'd by
+ his Colleagues in the Ministry, than he is by me, that
+ he can not probably continue where he is much longer,
+ and that he can scarce be succeeded by anybody, who
+ will not like me the better for his having been at
+ Variance with me.
+
+Later, Franklin wrote to Thomas Cushing:
+
+ This Man's Mandates have been treated with Disrespect
+ in America, his Letters have been criticis'd, his
+ Measures censur'd and despis'd; which has produced in
+ him a kind of settled Malice against the Colonies,
+ particularly ours, that would break out into greater
+ Violence if cooler Heads did not set some Bounds to it.
+ I have indeed good Reason to believe that his Conduct
+ is far from being approved by the King's other
+ Servants, and that he himself is so generally dislik'd
+ by them that it is not probable he will continue much
+ longer in his present Station, the general Wish here
+ being to recover (saving only the Dignity of
+ Government) the Good-Will of the Colonies, which there
+ is little reason to expect while they are under his
+ wild Administration. Their permitting so long his
+ Eccentricities (if I may use such an Expression) is
+ owing, I imagine, rather to the Difficulty of knowing
+ how to dispose of or what to do with a man of his
+ wrong-headed bustling Industry, who, it is apprehended,
+ may be more mischievous out of Administration than in
+ it, than to any kind of personal Regard for him.
+
+The Earthen Pot and the Brazen Pitcher _did_ collide, and, contrary to
+every physical law, it was not the Earthen Pot that suffered. Certain
+Americans, including Franklin himself, and certain Englishmen had applied
+to the Crown for a tract of land between the Alleghanies and the Ohio
+River, and their petition was referred to the Board of Trade of which
+Hillsborough was President. It asked for the right to settle two million,
+five hundred thousand acres. Hillsborough, who was secretly hostile to the
+grant, for the purpose of over-loading the application, deceitfully
+suggested that the applicants should ask for enough land to constitute a
+province; whereupon Franklin took him at his word and changed the acreage
+petitioned for to twenty-three million acres. When the report of the Lords
+Commissioners for Trade and Plantations, drafted by Hillsborough, was made,
+it opposed the grant.
+
+ If a vast territory [said His Majesty's Governor of
+ Georgia, in a letter to the Commissioners, which is
+ quoted in the Report], be granted to any set of
+ gentlemen, who really mean to people it, and actually
+ do so, it must draw and carry out a great number of
+ people from Great Britain; and I apprehend they will
+ soon become a kind of separate and independent people,
+ and who will set up for themselves; that they will soon
+ have manufactures of their own; that they will neither
+ take supplies from the mother country, nor from the
+ provinces, at the back of which they are settled; that,
+ being at a distance from the seat of government,
+ courts, magistrates, &c., &c., they will be out of the
+ reach and control of law and government; that it will
+ become a receptacle and kind of asylum for offenders,
+ who will fly from justice to such new country or
+ colony.
+
+To this report, which sought to confine America to practically the same
+limits as those fixed by the French, Franklin, with his knowledge of
+American conditions, and breadth of vision, made such a crushing reply
+that, when the report and the reply came before the Privy Council, the
+application for the grant, partly because of the strength of Franklin's
+reply, and, partly from dislike to Hillsborough, was approved. Mortified by
+this action, Hillsborough resigned his office, and was succeeded by Lord
+Dartmouth, the nobleman described by Cowper as "One who wears a coronet,
+and prays."
+
+In keeping with the deceit, practiced by Hillsborough, in endeavoring to
+give an extravagant turn to the Ohio petition, was his previous bearing
+towards Franklin after the interview with the latter, at which he paid such
+a fulsome tribute to his own firmness. During the year preceding the action
+of the Privy Council, Franklin had heard that Hillsborough had expressed
+himself about him in very angry terms, calling him a Republican, a
+factious, mischievous fellow, and the like. Nevertheless, a few weeks
+later, when he was in Ireland, Hillsborough pressed him so warmly to call
+upon him at his country-seat, upon his way to the North of Ireland, that he
+did so, and was detained there no less than four days, in the enjoyment of
+a hospitality so assiduous that his host, Franklin tells us, even put his
+oldest son, Lord Kilwarling, into his phaeton with him, to drive him a
+round of forty miles, that he might see the country, the seats,
+manufactures, etc., and moreover covered him with his own great coat lest
+he should take cold. Later, after both Franklin and Hillsborough had
+returned to London, the former called upon the latter repeatedly for the
+purpose of thanking him for his civilities in Ireland. On each day, he was
+told that his Lordship was not at home, although on two of them he had good
+reason to know the contrary. On the last of the two, which was one of his
+Lordship's levee days, the porter, seeing Franklin, came out and surlily
+chid the latter's coachman for opening the door of his coach before he had
+inquired whether his Lordship was at home. Then, turning to Franklin, he
+said, "My Lord is not at home." "I have never since been nigh him,"
+Franklin wrote to his son, "and we have only abused one another at a
+distance."
+
+During the year succeeding the action of the Privy Council, when Franklin
+was with his friend Lord Le Despencer at Oxford, Lord Hillsborough, upon
+being told by Lord Le Despencer, as they were descending the stairs in
+Queen's College, that Franklin was above, reascended them immediately, and,
+approaching Franklin in the pleasantest manner imaginable, said, "Dr.
+Franklin, I did not know till this Minute that you were here, and I am come
+back _to make you my Bow_! I am glad to see you at Oxford, and that you
+look so well," &c.
+
+ In Return for this Extravagance [Franklin said in a
+ letter to his son], I complimented him on his Son's
+ Performance in the Theatre, tho' indeed it was but
+ indifferent, so that Account was settled. For as People
+ say, when they are angry, _If he strikes me_, _I'll
+ strike him again_; I think sometimes it may be right to
+ say, _If he flatters me_, _I'll flatter him again_.
+ This is _Lex Talionis_, returning Offences in kind. His
+ Son however (Lord Fairford), is a valuable young Man,
+ and his Daughters, Ladys Mary and Charlotte, most
+ amiable young Women. My Quarrel is only with him, who,
+ of all the Men I ever met with, is surely the most
+ unequal in his Treatment of People, the most insincere,
+ and the most wrong-headed.
+
+Such was the man, to whom the oversight of American affairs was committed
+at a highly critical period in the relations of England and the Colonies.
+Speaking of Hillsborough's successor, Lord Dartmouth, Franklin said, "he is
+truly a good Man, and wishes sincerely a good Understanding with the
+Colonies, but does not seem to have Strength equal to his Wishes." This
+minister was wise enough to recognize the agents of the American colonies,
+including Franklin, again, despite the stand taken by Hillsborough against
+them. But, when Lord Chatham's conciliatory plan was so summarily rejected
+by the House of Lords, Dartmouth, though he had, when the motion was first
+made, suggested that it should be deliberately considered, was later swept
+along unresistingly by the majority. In his account of the incident,
+Franklin said, "I am the more particular in this, as it is a Trait of that
+Nobleman's Character, who from his Office is suppos'd to have so great a
+Share in American affairs, but who has in reality no Will or Judgment of
+his own, being with Dispositions for the best Measures, easily prevail'd
+with to join in the worst."
+
+But it is in the history of the Hutchinson letters that we find the most
+convincing proof of the hopelessness of Franklin's task in his endeavor to
+bring public opinion in England over to his generous views of her true
+interests. On one occasion, when speaking in terms of warm resentment of
+the conduct of the ministry in dispatching troops to Boston, he was to his
+great surprise, to use his own words, assured by a gentleman of character
+and distinction that the action of the ministry in this, and the other
+respects, obnoxious to America, had been brought about by some of the most
+reputable persons among the Americans themselves. He was skeptical, and the
+gentleman, whose name he never revealed, being desirous of establishing the
+truth of his statement to the satisfaction of both Franklin and Franklin's
+countrymen, called upon Franklin a few days afterwards, and exhibited to
+him letters from Lieutenant-Governor Hutchinson and Secretary Andrew Oliver
+of Massachusetts, and other residents of that colony which only too
+conclusively confirmed what had been said. The gentleman would not permit
+copies to be taken of the letters, but he delivered the originals to
+Franklin with the express understanding that they were not to be printed,
+that no copies were to be taken of them, that they were to be shown only
+to a few leading men in Massachusetts, and were to be carefully returned.
+Franklin transmitted them, subject to these conditions, to Thomas Cushing
+of the Committee of Correspondence at Boston. He did so, he tells us,
+because he thought that to shift the responsibility for the recent
+ministerial measures from England to America would tend to restore good
+feeling between the people of Massachusetts and England, and, moreover,
+because he felt that intelligence of such importance should not be withheld
+from the constituents whose agent he was. In his communication,
+accompanying the letters, Franklin stipulated that they were to be read
+only by the members of the Massachusetts Committee of Correspondence,
+Messrs. Bowdoin and Pitts of the Council, Drs. Chauncey, Cooper and
+Winthrop, and a few such other persons as Cushing might select; and were to
+be returned in a few months to him; but it is not true, as was afterwards
+alleged by his enemies, that his communication was attended by any effort
+to conceal his personal relations to the letters. A part of the
+communication is too good a specimen of the precision that Franklin always
+brought to the language of rebuke or condemnation not to be quoted at
+length.
+
+ As to the writers [he said], I can easily as well as
+ charitably conceive it possible, that a Man educated in
+ Prepossessions of the unbounded Authority of
+ Parliament, &c. may think unjustifiable every
+ Opposition even to its unconstitutional Exactions, and
+ imagine it their Duty to suppress, as much as in them
+ lies, such Opposition. But when I find them bartering
+ away the Liberties of their native Country for Posts,
+ and negociating for Salaries and Pensions extorted from
+ the People; and, conscious of the Odium these might be
+ attended with, calling for Troops to protect and secure
+ the Enjoyment of them: When I see them exciting
+ Jealousies in the Crown, and provoking it to Wrath
+ against so great a Part of its most faithful Subjects;
+ creating Enmities between the different Countries of
+ which the Empire consists; occasioning a great Expence
+ to the _Old_ Country for Suppressing or Preventing
+ imaginary Rebellions in the _New_, and to the new
+ Country for the Payment of needless Gratifications to
+ useless Officers and Enemies; I can not but doubt their
+ Sincerity even in the political Principles they
+ profess, and deem them mere Time-servers seeking their
+ own private Emolument, thro' any Quantity of Publick
+ Mischief; Betrayers of the Interest, not of their
+ native Country only, but of the Government they pretend
+ to serve, and of the whole English Empire.
+
+Later, after strong representations had been made to Franklin by Cushing
+that the letters could be put to no effective use, unless they could be
+retained or copied, Franklin obtained leave from the gentleman, who had
+entrusted them to him, to authorize Cushing to show them to any persons
+that he chose. The fact that the letters were in Boston was soon noised
+abroad, whereupon the Assembly required them to be laid before it, though
+under its promise that they would not be printed. An occasion or pretext
+for disregarding this promise soon arose, when copies were produced in the
+House by a member who was said to have received them from England. Then the
+Assembly adopted a series of indignant resolutions, declaring, among other
+things, that the authors of the letters were justly chargeable with the
+great corruption of morals, and all the confusion, misery and bloodshed
+which had been the natural effects of the introduction of troops into the
+Province, and that it was its bounden duty to pray that his Majesty would
+be pleased to remove Hutchinson and Oliver forever from the Government
+thereof. These resolutions were duly followed by a petition for the removal
+which was transmitted to Franklin and by him transmitted to Lord Dartmouth,
+who laid it before the King.
+
+When the news reached England that the letters had been published in
+Massachusetts, there was great curiosity to know who had transmitted them.
+Thomas Whately, a London banker, and the brother of William Whately, then
+deceased, to whom they were written, was suspected; he suspected John
+Temple, a former Governor of New Hampshire, who had had access to the
+papers of the decedent, and, his suspicions having been brought to the
+attention of Temple, the latter called upon him, denied all knowledge of
+the letters, and demanded a public exoneration. The written statement from
+Whately which followed was not satisfactory to Temple, and he challenged
+the former to a duel in which Whately was severely wounded. Up to this
+time, it was not known except to a few persons that Franklin had forwarded
+the letters to America; nor even for a time after the duel did he feel that
+it was incumbent upon him to tell the world that he had done so. But, when
+he heard that the duel would probably be renewed, as soon as Whately
+recovered his strength, he felt discharged from the obligation of silence
+that he had previously recognized to the person from whom he had received
+the letters, and published a communication in the _Public Advertiser_
+stating that it was impossible for Whately to have sent the letters to
+Boston, or for Temple to have purloined them from Whately, because they had
+never been in Whately's possession, and that he, Franklin alone, was the
+person who "obtained and transmitted to Boston the letters in
+question."[24]
+
+Franklin had put his head into the lion's jaws. While he was preparing for
+his return to America, for the purpose of attending to a matter arising out
+of the operations of the American Post-office Department, he received a
+notice from the Clerk of the Privy Council, informing him that the Lords of
+the Committee for Plantation Affairs would meet at the Cockpit on Tuesday,
+January 11, 1774, at noon, for the purpose of considering the petition for
+the removal of Hutchinson and Oliver, which had been referred to the
+Council by the King, and requiring him to be present. A similar notice was
+sent to Bollan, the London Agent of the Massachusetts Council. When the
+petition came on for hearing, at the request of Franklin, its consideration
+was postponed for some three weeks, so that he could retain counsel to face
+Alexander Wedderburn, the Solicitor-general, who had been retained by
+Israel Mauduit, the agent of the Governor and Lieutenant-Governor of
+Massachusetts.
+
+The counsel retained by Franklin were John Dunning, a former
+Solicitor-general, and subsequently Lord Ashburton, and John Lee, who later
+became the Solicitor-general under the administration of Charles James Fox.
+When the hearing did take place, it proved for every reason a memorable
+one. Edmund Burke could not recollect that so many Privy Councillors had
+ever attended a meeting of the Council before. There were no less than
+thirty-five in attendance. The Lord President Gower presided. In the
+audience, among other persons, were the Archbishop of Canterbury, Lord
+North, the Prime Minister, Lord Shelburne, Edmund Burke, Joseph Priestley,
+Jeremy Bentham, Arthur Lee, of Virginia, then a law student in London, who
+had been selected by the Legislature of Massachusetts to act as its agent,
+in the event of the absence or death of Franklin, Ralph Izard, of South
+Carolina, who had borne Temple's challenge to Thomas Whately, and Dr.
+Edward Bancroft, who was afterwards at Paris with Franklin. The hearing was
+opened by the reading of the letter written by Franklin to Lord Dartmouth,
+when transmitting the petition to him, the petition itself, the resolutions
+of the Massachusetts Assembly and the letters upon which they were based.
+In Franklin's opinion, Dunning and Lee in their pleas "acquitted
+themselves very handsomely." Dunning's points, Burke thought, were "well
+and ably put." The appeal of the Massachusetts Assembly, Dunning argued was
+to the wisdom and goodness of his Majesty; they were asking a favor, not
+demanding justice. As they had no impeachment to make, so they had no
+evidence to offer. Of similar tenor was the address of John Lee. The reply
+of Wedderburn was pointed and brilliant, and as rabid as if he had been
+summing up against an ordinary criminal at an ordinary assize.
+
+ The letters, could not have come to Dr. Franklin [he
+ argued], by fair means. The writers did not give them
+ to him; nor yet did the deceased correspondent, who,
+ from our intimacy, would otherwise have told me of it.
+ Nothing, then, will acquit Dr. Franklin of the charge
+ of obtaining them by fraudulent or corrupt means, for
+ the most malignant of purposes, unless he stole them
+ from the person who stole them. This argument is
+ irrefragable. I hope, my lords, you will mark and brand
+ the man, for the honor of this country, of Europe, and
+ of mankind. Private correspondence has hitherto been
+ held sacred in times of the greatest party rage, not
+ only in politics but religion.... He has forfeited all
+ the respect of societies and of men [the orator went
+ on]. Into what companies will he hereafter go with an
+ unembarrassed face, or the honest intrepidity of
+ virtue? Men will watch him with a jealous eye; they
+ will hide their papers from him, and lock up their
+ escritoirs. He will henceforth esteem it a libel to be
+ called a _man of letters_; _homo TRIUM literarum_!
+ [_Trium litterarum homo_, a man of three letters, was a
+ fur, or thief]. But [continued Wedderburn], he not only
+ took away the letters from one brother; but kept
+ himself concealed till he nearly occasioned the murder
+ of the other. It is impossible to read his account,
+ expressive of the coolest and most deliberate malice,
+ without horror. Amidst these tragical events, of one
+ person nearly murdered, of another answerable for the
+ issue, of a worthy governor hurt in his dearest
+ interests, the fate of America in suspense; here is a
+ man, who, with the utmost insensibility of remorse,
+ stands up and avows himself the author of all. I can
+ compare it only to Zanga, in Dr. Young's _Revenge_:
+
+ "Know then 'twas--I;
+ I forged the letter, I disposed the picture;
+ I hated, I despised, and I destroy."
+
+ I ask, my Lords, whether the revengeful temper
+ attributed by poetic fiction only, to the bloody
+ African, is not surpassed by the coolness and apathy of
+ the wily American?
+
+More than one bystander has recorded the impressions left upon his mind by
+this savage philippic.
+
+ I was not more astonished [Jeremy Bentham tells us] at
+ the brilliancy of his lightning, than astounded at the
+ thunder that accompanied it. As he stood, the cushion
+ lay on the council table before him; his station was
+ between the seats of two of the members, on the side of
+ the right hand of the Lord President. I would not for
+ double the greatest fee the orator could on that
+ occasion have received, been in the place of that
+ cushion; the ear was stunned at every blow.
+
+"At the sallies of his sarcastic wit," Priestley declares, "all the members
+of the Council, the President himself not excepted, frequently laughed
+outright. No person belonging to the Council behaved with decent gravity,
+except Lord North, who, coming late, took his stand behind the chair
+opposite to me." Burke spoke of the attack on "Poor Dr. Franklin" as
+"beyond all bounds and decency," and the language, used by Lord Shelburne,
+in describing it to Lord Chatham, was hardly, if any, less emphatic. "The
+behavior of the Judges," he said, "exceeded, as was agreed on all hands,
+that of any committee of elections." Dunning's rejoinder to Wedderburn was
+wholly ineffective. His voice, always thick, was, from illness, feebler and
+huskier than usual even in his first address, and, exhausted as he was by
+standing for three hours in a room, in which no one was allowed to sit but
+the Privy Councillors themselves, who were supposed on such occasions to be
+the immediate representatives of the King, his second address was hardly
+audible. Lee was equally ineffective. Wedderburn's speech, therefore, which
+from a purely forensic point of view was really a masterpiece, was left to
+assert its full effect, to become the sensation of every Club in London,
+and to win the plaudit of every bigoted or unreflecting Englishman. "All
+men," Fox said, "tossed up their hats and clapped their hands in boundless
+delight at it."
+
+What of Franklin during the malignant assault? The apartment, in which the
+hearing took place, was a small one. At one end, was an open fireplace,
+with a recess on each side of it. The Council table stretched from a point
+near this fireplace to the other end of the room. The Lord President sat at
+its head, and the other councillors were ranged in seats down its sides.
+Such spectators as had been able to secure the highly-prized privilege of
+being present remained standing throughout the session. In the chimney
+recess to the left of the President, stood Franklin with Burke and
+Priestley nearby. The dialectical ability and skill, which made his
+examination before the House of Commons so famous, he now had no
+opportunity to display; and unfailing fortitude was all that he could
+oppose to the outrage for which he had been singled out. With that,
+however, his uncommon strength of character abundantly supplied him.
+
+ The Doctor was dressed in a full dress suit of spotted
+ Manchester velvet [Dr. Edward Bancroft wrote years
+ afterwards to William Temple Franklin], and stood
+ _conspicuously erect_, without the smallest movement of
+ any part of his body. The muscles of his face had been
+ previously composed, so as to afford a placid, tranquil
+ expression of countenance, and he did not suffer the
+ slightest alteration of it to appear during the
+ continuance of the speech, in which he was so harshly
+ and improperly treated. In short, to quote the words
+ which he employed concerning himself on another
+ occasion, he kept "his countenance as immovable as if
+ his features had been made of wood."
+
+ Alone, in the recess on the left hand of the president,
+ stood Benjamin Franklin [is the account of Bentham], in
+ such position as not to be visible from the situation
+ of the president, remaining the whole time like a rock,
+ in the same posture, his head resting on his left hand;
+ and in that attitude abiding the pelting of the
+ pitiless storm.
+
+Nothing but Jedburgh justice, of course, was to be expected from such a
+Committee in such a case, represented by such an advocate. Its report,
+dated the same day as its sitting, and as likely as not drafted beforehand,
+found that the letters had been surreptitiously obtained, and contained
+"nothing reprehensible"; that the petition was based on resolutions, formed
+on false and erroneous allegations; and was groundless, vexatious and
+scandalous; and calculated only for the seditious purpose of keeping up a
+spirit of clamor and discontent in the province; and that nothing had been
+laid before the Committee which did, or could, in their opinion, in any
+manner, or in any degree, impeach the honor, integrity, or conduct of the
+Governor or Lieutenant-Governor. Wherefore, the Lords of the Committee were
+humbly of the opinion that the petition ought to be dismissed. This
+recommendation was approved by the King, and an order was issued by him
+that the petition be dismissed, as answering the character imputed to it by
+the Committee. Nor did vengeance stop here. On the second day, after the
+Committee rose, Franklin was handed a communication from the
+Postmaster-General, informing him in brief terms that the King had "found
+it necessary" to dismiss him from the office of Deputy Postmaster-General
+in America.
+
+In reporting the manner in which he had been affronted by the Privy Council
+to his Massachusetts constituents, Franklin used language in keeping with
+the sober spirit in which he had striven from the beginning to bring about
+an understanding between England and her Colonies.
+
+ What I feel on my own account [he said], is half lost
+ in what I feel for the public. When I see, that all
+ petitions and complaints of grievances are so odious to
+ government, that even the mere pipe which conveys them
+ becomes obnoxious, I am at a loss to know how peace and
+ union are to be maintained or restored between the
+ different parts of the empire. Grievances cannot be
+ redressed unless they are known; and they cannot be
+ known but through complaints and petitions. If these
+ are deemed affronts, and the messengers punished as
+ offenders, who will henceforth send petitions? And who
+ will deliver them? It has been thought a dangerous
+ thing in any state to stop up the vent of griefs. Wise
+ governments have therefore generally received petitions
+ with some indulgence, even when but slightly founded.
+ Those, who think themselves injured by their rulers,
+ are sometimes, by a mild and prudent answer, convinced
+ of their error. But where complaining is a crime, hope
+ becomes despair.
+
+His fellow-Americans were not so self-restrained. The American Post Office
+was shunned by its former patrons, and letters were delivered largely by
+private agencies, effigies of Wedderburn and Hutchinson were carried about
+the streets of Philadelphia, and, at night, were burnt, we are told, by
+Joseph Reed, "with the usual ceremonies, amidst the acclamations of the
+multitude." "Nothing can exceed," the same narrator adds, "the veneration
+in which Dr. Franklin is now held, but the detestation we have of his
+enemies." Wedderburn, who had complained in his speech of the attention
+paid by the press to the movements of Franklin, as though he were a great
+diplomatic character, had more occasion than ever to sneer at his public
+prominence. Hutchinson was compelled to resign his office, and to retire
+from execration in America to a slender pension and obscurity in England.
+Even in England, Horace Walpole stayed the pen, to which we are indebted
+for so many charming letters, long enough to write:
+
+ "Sarcastic Sawney, swol'n with spite and prate,
+ On silent Franklin poured his venal hate,
+ The calm philosopher, without reply,
+ Withdrew, and gave his country liberty."[25]
+
+Lord John Russell has said that it is "impossible to justify the conduct of
+Franklin" in the matter of the Hutchinson letters, and from time to time
+the same idea has been more or less hesitatingly advanced by others. Its
+justice, we confess, has never been apparent to us. That the letters did
+pass into the possession of Franklin, under the circumstances stated by
+him, which certainly do not reflect in any manner upon his honor, can
+hardly be doubted, unless mere suspicion is to give the lie to a life of
+uniform integrity. The mode, in which they were transmitted to America,
+under the restrictions imposed by him, was attended with so little regard
+to secrecy, so far as his connection with them was concerned, that Dr.
+Cooper wrote to him, "I can not, however, but admire your honest openness
+in this affair, and noble negligence of any inconveniences that might arise
+to yourself in this essential service to our injured country." It was not
+until the letters had been printed in America, contrary to his engagement
+with the gentleman, who had handed them to him, that he expressed the wish
+to Dr. Cooper that the fact of his having sent them should be kept secret,
+and not then until his inclinations on the subject were pointedly sounded
+by Dr. Cooper. As soon as they threatened to cause bloodshed, which he had
+a chance to avert, he made his connection with them public, and assumed the
+full responsibility for his act. Moreover, he truly said of the letters,
+when he assumed this responsibility in his communication to the _Public
+Advertiser_, "They were not of the nature of _private_ letters between
+friends. They were written by public officers to persons in public
+stations, on public affairs, and intended to procure public measures; they
+were therefore handed to other public persons, who might be influenced by
+them to produce those measures." Little can be added to this convincing
+statement. If a political agent of England in Boston had, under the same
+circumstances, come into possession of letters from English officials in
+England to Cushing or Dr. Cooper, revealing a deliberate intent on the
+part of the writers to initiate measures aimed at the just prerogatives of
+the Crown or Parliament, who would have thought the worse of him if he had
+transmitted them to King or Parliament? Were letters designed to help along
+the introduction of a military force into Boston for the purpose of
+abridging the political liberties of its people entitled to any higher
+degree of privacy? The accusation that Franklin had violated the confidence
+of private correspondence came with but poor grace, to say the least, from
+a Government which made a practice of breaking the seals of letters, and of
+no letters oftener than of those of Franklin, entrusted to its care.
+Indeed, not only were the seals of Franklin's letters frequently broken,
+and the letters read, but, in some instances, the letters were permanently
+retained by the English Government.
+
+It was the fashion in England for a long time to ascribe the intense
+resentment felt by Franklin against England, after war broke out between
+that country and the colonies, to the indignity to which he was subjected
+by the Privy Council, and his dismission from office. The statement is not
+supported by the facts. That these circumstances made a deep impression
+upon his mind is undeniable, but it was really not until he found himself
+in America in 1775 that he gave himself up to the conclusion that nothing
+was to be gained by his remaining longer in England. After his removal from
+office, he still counselled his correspondents in America to adhere to a
+policy of patience and self-restraint, and in a letter to Thomas Cushing
+and others, written only a few days after the hearing at the Cockpit, he
+termed the destruction of the tea at Boston an unwarrantable destruction of
+private property and "an Act of violent Injustice." To all the efforts of
+Lord Chatham and his high-minded associates, after this hearing, to bring
+about a reconciliation between England and America, he lent the full weight
+of his advice and experience. And, when some of the members of the British
+Ministry, after it, ashamed to deal with him directly, covertly opened up
+an interchange of proposals with him through David Barclay, Dr. Fothergill
+and Lord Howe, in regard to the terms upon which a reconciliation might
+still be reached, he entered into the negotiations with a spirit singularly
+free from personal bitterness. There are few things more pathetic in the
+history of sundered ties than the account that Priestley has given us of
+the last days that Franklin spent in England in 1775. "A great part of the
+day above-mentioned that we spent together," Priestley tells us, "he was
+looking over a number of American newspapers, directing me what to extract
+from them for the English ones; and in reading them, he was frequently not
+able to proceed for the tears literally running down his cheeks." These,
+however, were not womanish tears, but rather such iron tears as ran down
+Pluto's cheeks. Never was there a time after the heart of America was laid
+bare to Franklin by the remonstrance against the Stamp Act when he was not
+unflinchingly prepared, if the painful necessity was forced upon him, to
+unite with his countrymen in defying the armed power of England. As the
+fateful issue of the protracted controversy approached nearer and nearer,
+his language became bolder and bolder.
+
+ The eyes of all Christendom [he wrote to James Bowdoin
+ a few days before he left England in 1775], are now
+ upon us, and our honour as a people is become a matter
+ of the utmost consequence to be taken care of. If we
+ tamely give up our rights in this contest, a century to
+ come will not restore us in the opinion of the world;
+ we shall be stamped with the character of dastards,
+ poltrons and fools; and be despised and trampled upon,
+ not by this haughty, insolent nation only, but by all
+ mankind. Present inconveniences are, therefore, to be
+ borne with fortitude, and better times expected.
+
+ "Informes hyemes reducit
+ Jupiter; idem
+ Summovet. Non si male nunc, et olim
+ Sic erit."[26]
+
+When he reached the shores of his native land, it was to hear that, while
+he was at sea, the battles of Lexington and Concord had been fought, and
+that the veins of the two countries, which he had striven so hard to keep
+closed, were already open and running.[27]
+
+From that day, Franklin took his place with Washington, the Adamses,
+Jefferson and Patrick Henry as an inflexible champion of armed resistance
+to England. If he humored the more timid patriots, who were disposed to
+make still further appeals to English generosity, it was not because he
+shared their fallacious hopes but because he did not wish one column of the
+revolutionary movement to get too far in advance of the other. At this
+period of his life, his reputation was already very great. The English
+Tories believed or affected to believe that he was the father of all the
+mischief responsible for the American crisis. The English Whigs leaned upon
+his advice and assistance as those of a man who had the welfare of the
+entire British Empire deeply at heart. How he was regarded at home, is well
+illustrated in what General Nathanael Greene and Abigail Adams had to say
+of him when he subsequently visited Washington's head-quarters during the
+siege of Boston as a member of the Committee appointed by Congress to
+confer with Washington and delegates from the New England Colonies as to
+the best plan for raising, maintaining and disciplining the continental
+army. Recalling an occasion at this time, when Franklin had been brought
+under his observation, Greene wrote, "During the whole evening, I viewed
+that very great man with silent admiration." The language of Abigail Adams
+was not less intense.
+
+ I had the pleasure of dining with Dr. Franklin [she
+ said], and of admiring him, whose character from my
+ infancy I had been taught to venerate. I found him
+ social but not talkative; and, when he spoke, something
+ useful dropped from his tongue. He was grave, yet
+ pleasant and affable. You know I make some pretensions
+ to physiognomy, and I thought I could read in his
+ countenance the virtues of his heart, among which,
+ patriotism shone in its full lustre: and with that is
+ blended every virtue of a Christian.
+
+Those were dramatic hours when highly wrought feelings readily ran into
+hyperbole; nor had any Madame Helvetius come along yet with her "Helas!
+Franklin," and disordered skirts.
+
+The reputation, which called forth these tributes, brought Franklin at once
+to the very forefront of the American Revolution, when he arrived at
+Philadelphia. The morning after his arrival, he, Thomas Willing and James
+Wilson, were elected by the Assembly of Pennsylvania as additional deputies
+to the Continental Congress that was to meet in Philadelphia in a few days,
+and he was re-elected to Congress at every succeeding election until his
+departure for France. By the first Congress, he was appointed Chairman of a
+Committee to devise a postal system for America; and when this Committee
+recommended the appointment of a Postmaster-General and various postal
+subordinates, and the establishment of a line of posts from Falmouth (now
+Portland) in Maine to Savannah, with as many cross posts as the
+Postmaster-General might think fit, Franklin was elected by Congress the
+Postmaster-General for the first year. He was also appointed by Congress
+one of the members of a committee to draw up a declaration, to be published
+by Washington when he took command of the American army, but the paper
+drafted by him does not appear to have ever been presented by him to
+Congress. At any rate, it adds nothing to his literary reputation, and is
+disfigured by one of the unseasonable _facetiae_ into which he had a way of
+wandering at times on grave occasions, after he found his feet again in the
+easy slippers of his old American environment.
+
+Franklin also made some wise suggestions to Congress with respect to the
+best method of preventing the depreciation of the paper money issued by it.
+His first suggestion was that the bills should bear interest. This
+suggestion was rejected. His next was that, instead of the issuance of any
+more paper money, what had already been issued should be borrowed back upon
+interest. His last was that the interest should be paid in hard money, but
+both of the latter suggestions, though approved by Congress, were approved
+too late to accomplish their objects. After due tenderness had been
+exhibited by him to John Dickinson and the other members of Congress, who
+still clung to the hope of a reconciliation with England, Franklin brought
+forward a plan for the permanent union and efficient government of the
+Colonies. Under this plan each colony was to retain its internal
+independence, but its external relations, especially as respected
+resistance to the measures of the English Ministry, were committed to an
+annually-elected Congress. The supreme executive authority of the union was
+to be vested in a council of twelve, to be elected by the Congress.
+Ireland, Canada, the West Indies, Bermuda, Nova Scotia and Florida as well
+as the thirteen colonies within the present limits of the United States,
+were to be invited to join the confederacy. The union was to last until
+British oppression ceased, and reparation was made to the Colonies for the
+injuries inflicted upon them; which, of course, under the circumstances,
+meant until the Greek Calends. The plan was referred to a committee, but it
+was never acted upon by the House; being too bold a project to suit the
+cautious scruples of John Dickinson and the other moderate members of the
+Continental Congress, who dreaded the effect of a project of union upon the
+mind of the King, while the petition of Congress to him was pending. Among
+other important committees upon which Franklin served, when a member of the
+first Continental Congress, was one to investigate the sources of
+saltpetre; another to treat with the Indians; another to look after the
+engraving and printing of the continental paper money; another to consider
+Lord North's conciliatory resolution; another on salt and lead; and still
+another to report a plan for regulating and protecting the commerce of the
+Colonies. At the next session of the Congress, he was equally active. Among
+the things in which we find him engaged at this session, are the
+arrangement of a system of posts and expresses for the rapid transmission
+of dispatches; the establishment of a line of packets between America and
+Europe; an effort to promote the circulation of the continental money; and
+the preparation of instructions for the American generals. It was at this
+session of Congress, too, that Thomas Lynch, of South Carolina, Benjamin
+Harrison, of Virginia, and himself were appointed the committee to visit
+Washington's camp before Boston. The journey to Boston consumed thirteen
+days, and the conference, which followed with the American
+Commander-in-Chief and the delegates from the New England Colonies,
+resulted in many judicious conclusions with regard to the organization of
+the American army, and the conduct of the war, and, moreover, was an
+additional assurance to Washington and New England that, in the military
+operations before Boston, they could count upon the support of all America.
+It is obvious enough from writings, found among the papers of Franklin in
+his handwriting, that months before the Declaration of Independence was
+signed he was fully ready to renounce all allegiance to Great Britain. When
+the more conservative members of Congress so far yielded to their fears as
+to adopt, with the aid of some of the members from New England, a
+declaration that independence was not their aim, Franklin approved a plan
+then formed by Samuel Adams of bringing at least all the New England
+provinces together in a confederacy. "If you succeed," he said to Adams, "I
+will cast in my lot among you." This was six months before the adoption of
+the Declaration of Independence. Franklin also served with John Jay and
+Thomas Jefferson upon a committee to interview a mysterious foreigner who
+had repeatedly expressed a desire to make a confidential communication to
+Congress. The stranger, who possessed a military bearing and spoke with a
+French accent, assured the committee that his most Christian Majesty, the
+King of France, had heard with pleasure of the exertions made by the
+American Colonies in defence of their rights and privileges, wished them
+success, and would, when necessary, manifest in a more open manner his
+friendly sentiments towards them. But, as often as he was asked by the
+committee for his authority for conveying such flattering assurances, he
+contented himself with drawing his hand across his throat, and saying,
+"Gentlemen, I shall take care of my head."
+
+When the report of this committee was made to Congress, a motion on the
+strength of it to send envoys to France was defeated, but later a
+committee composed of Benjamin Harrison, John Dickinson, Thomas Johnson,
+John Jay and Franklin was appointed "to correspond secretly with friends in
+Great Britain, Ireland, and other parts of the world." The duties of this
+committee were mainly discharged by Franklin, who had, as we have seen,
+contracted many durable friendships abroad with men whose aid might mean
+much to America. To Charles W. F. Dumas, a native of Switzerland, residing
+at The Hague, he wrote, asking him to sound secretly the ambassadors of the
+different Powers, other than Great Britain, there for the purpose of
+ascertaining whether any of their courts were inclined to aid the Colonies
+or to form alliances with them, to let the mercantile world know that
+America was prepared to pay very high prices for arms, gunpowder and
+saltpetre, to send to America two engineer officers qualified to direct
+siege operations, construct forts and field-works and command artillery,
+and to receive and forward all letters that passed between the committee
+and its friends and agents abroad. A draft for one hundred pounds sterling
+accompanied the letter, together with an assurance from the committee that
+Dumas' services would be "considered and honorably rewarded by Congress." A
+similar letter was sent to Arthur Lee in London, accompanied by a
+remittance of two hundred pounds as his compensation. By the same ship went
+a letter from Franklin to Don Gabriel de Bourbon of Spain, in which, after
+thanking the Prince for the copy which he had sent him of the handsome
+Sallust, printed several years before at the royal press at Madrid,
+Franklin cleverly leads the attention of the Prince on to the consideration
+of a rising state which seemed likely soon to act a part of some importance
+on the stage of human affairs, and to furnish materials for a future
+Sallust. This letter, in which literary sympathy, the high-bred courtesy of
+a Spanish hidalgo and political address are mingled with the happiest
+effect, is a good example of what it meant to America to have such a man as
+Franklin as her world-interpreter. These letters were all entrusted to the
+care of a special messenger, Thomas Story. Soon after he left America, M.
+Penet, a merchant of Nantes, sailed for France with a contract from the
+committee for furnishing arms, ammunition and clothing to the American army
+and various letters from Franklin to friends of his in France, including
+his devoted pupil, Dr. Dubourg. Subsequently, before a reply had been
+received to any of the letters written by Franklin on its behalf, the
+committee decided to send an agent to Paris duly empowered to treat with
+the French King. Silas Deane, a Yale graduate, and a man, who might have
+left an unblemished reputation as an American patriot behind him, if Arthur
+Lee had not hounded him out of France and America into England, was
+selected for this mission. He was selected, Adams is so unkind as to
+intimate, because he was a Congressman who had lost his seat in Congress.
+For him Franklin drew up a letter of instruction, fixing the character that
+he was to assume, that of a merchant, when he reached France, mentioning
+the persons friendly to America with whom he was to establish a familiar
+intercourse, and prescribing the manner in which he was to approach M. de
+Vergennes, the French Minister, for the purpose of soliciting the
+friendship and assistance of France.
+
+Another important call was made upon the services of Franklin, when with
+Samuel Chase and Charles Carroll of Carrollton, as his colleagues, he was
+appointed by Congress to visit Canada, and to endeavor to rescue our
+affairs in that country from the lamentable condition of confusion and
+distress into which they had fallen. Quebec had been assaulted by
+Montgomery and Arnold, and had repelled the assault, Montgomery being
+killed and Arnold wounded in the attempt, and the American army was
+wasting away in the face of the intense cold, hunger and the small-pox. For
+the Continental paper money the Canadians had come to entertain a supreme
+contempt, and their attitude towards the Americans, with whom they had so
+often been at war in their earlier history, was in every respect that of
+distrust and aversion. With the committee went John Carroll, the brother of
+Charles Carroll of Carrollton, who had been educated for the priesthood in
+France, and spoke its language with perfect fluency. It was thought at the
+time that for the Commission to take with it to Catholic and French Canada
+such a companion was a masterly stroke of policy. The powers, with which
+the Commission were clothed, were of a plenary description; to admit Canada
+into the union of the Colonies, when brought over to the American cause by
+the appeals of the Commissioners, and to admit it with a republican form of
+government, to settle disputes between the civil and military authorities
+in Canada, and to exercise an extraordinary degree of authority in one form
+or another with respect to the military forces of America there. They were
+even to take steps to establish a newspaper in Canada to help along the
+American propaganda.
+
+Of all the episodes in the life of Franklin, this is the one upon which the
+reader dwells with the least satisfaction. He was entirely too old for the
+fatigues and hardships of the long April journey of five hundred miles from
+Philadelphia to New York, and up the Hudson, and over Lakes George and
+Champlain, and across the country at the head of Lake Champlain to
+Montreal. The distance between Philadelphia and New York was covered by the
+party in two days, the journey up the Hudson to Albany was made in a sloop,
+engaged for them by Lord Stirling, and from Albany to the country seat of
+General Philip Schuyler at Saratoga, thirty-two miles from Albany, they
+were conveyed over deep roads in a large country-wagon furnished by the
+General. Here it was that Franklin, debilitated by the exposure and shocks,
+to which his frame had been subjected, began to apprehend that he had
+undertaken a fatigue which, at his time of life, might prove too much for
+him, and sat down to write to some of his friends by way of farewell. After
+a few days' rest at Saratoga, the party, preceded by General Schuyler, went
+forward to Lake George. Though it was the middle of April, the lakes of
+that country were still covered with ice, and the roads with six inches of
+snow. After two days and a half of further travel, the southern end of the
+lake was reached. So encumbered with ice was it that the batteau, equipped
+with an awning for a cabin, with which General Schuyler had provided the
+party, took about thirty-six hours to traverse the thirty-six miles between
+the southern extremity of the lake and its northern. Then came the portage
+over the neck of land between Lake George and Lake Champlain, and the
+re-embarkation, after a delay of five days, on the waters of the latter
+lake. The portage was effected by placing the batteau on wheels and yoking
+it up to a string of oxen. Three days and a half more brought the party to
+St. John's, near the head of Lake Champlain, after a strenuous struggle
+with baffling ice and head winds. Another day's journey in _caleches_
+brought them to Montreal where they were received by Arnold and a concourse
+of officers and citizens, and saluted with military honors.
+
+It is enough to say that the Commissioners found American credit in Canada
+sunk to the lowest point. Even the express, sent by them from St. John's to
+tell Arnold of their arrival at that point, was held at a ferry for the
+ferriage charge until a friend, who was passing, changed an American paper
+dollar for him into silver; nor would the _caleches_ have come for the
+Commissioners if this friend had not engaged to pay the hire. Military
+defeat, violated contracts, discredited paper money and the anticipated
+coming of a British force overhung like a bank of nimbus cloud the entire
+horizon of American hopes in Canada. The Commissioners could not borrow
+money either upon the public or upon their own private credit. In a letter
+to Congress after they had been in Canada a week, they declared that, if
+money could not be had to support the American army in Canada with honor,
+so as to be respected instead of being hated by the people, it was their
+firm and unanimous opinion that it would be better to immediately withdraw
+it. With his usual public spirit, Franklin advanced on the credit of
+Congress to Arnold and other servants of Congress three hundred and
+fifty-three pounds in gold out of his own pocket--a loan which proved of
+great service in procuring provisions for the American army at a time of
+dire necessity. Two days after the letter of the Commissioners to Congress
+was written, news came to Montreal that a British fleet, full of troops,
+had reached Quebec, and landed a force, which had routed the small American
+army there. The decision was at once reached that there was nothing for the
+American forces to do but to retire to St. John's, and to prepare to resist
+at that point the advance of the British. This decision was acted upon at
+once, and the next morning Franklin, attended by John Carroll, set out on
+his return to Philadelphia; leaving his fellow-commissioners to oversee the
+retreat to St. John's and the establishment of defensive works at that
+point. With the assistance of General Schuyler, he and his companion passed
+safely down the lakes to Albany, and from Albany, after they had again
+enjoyed the General's hospitality, they were conveyed by his chariot to New
+York. Here Franklin wrote to his fellow-commissioners that he grew daily
+more feeble, and thought that he could hardly have got along so far but for
+Mr. Carroll's friendly assistance and tender care of him. Some symptoms of
+the gout, he further said, had appeared, which made him believe that his
+indisposition had been a smothered fit of that disorder, which his
+constitution wanted strength to form completely. But, with the reappearance
+of his old malady, came back the wit which, indeed, seems to have
+languished but little at any time under the rigors of his arduous mission.
+After congratulating Samuel Chase and Charles Carroll upon the recent
+capture of a British prize, loaded with seventy-five tons of gunpowder and
+a thousand carbines with bayonets, he further wrote: "The German
+Auxiliaries are certainly coming. It is our Business to prevent their
+Returning."
+
+In the early part of June, Franklin was again in Philadelphia after an
+absence of about ten weeks. A little later the Declaration of Independence
+was reported to Congress by the committee, consisting of Thomas Jefferson,
+John Adams, Robert R. Livingston, Roger Sherman and himself, which had been
+elected by Congress to draft it, and after a debate, during which John
+Adams won only less reputation in defending, than Jefferson in writing, it,
+was adopted and given to the world, whose political opinions it was to
+influence so profoundly. Owing to a serious attack of the gout, Franklin
+had no hand in its preparation beyond suggesting a few verbal alterations.
+His part, however, in the adoption of the Articles of Confederation was
+more active. To the plan of allowing the thirteen States to vote on all
+questions by States, and of giving to each State, without reference to
+population or wealth, a single vote, he was strongly opposed; so much so
+that he even thought at one time of counselling Pennsylvania not to enter
+into the union if the plan was adopted. He hotly declared that a
+confederation upon such iniquitous terms would not last long. But we know
+from what Jefferson tells us that he also had his humorous fling at it. "At
+the time of the union of England and Scotland," he said, "the Duke of
+Argyle was most violently opposed to that measure, and among other things
+predicted that, as the whale had swallowed Jonah, so Scotland would be
+swallowed by England." "However," added Franklin, "when Lord Bute came into
+the government, he soon brought into its administration so many of his
+countrymen that it was found, in event, that Jonah had swallowed the
+whale."
+
+About the same time, Franklin, Jefferson and John Adams were appointed a
+committee by Congress to hit upon a device for the seal of the Confederacy.
+No more congenial task could possibly have been set for Franklin, whose
+ingenuity always revelled in conceits of this kind. A device, based upon
+the drowning of Pharaoh, and accompanied by the motto, "Rebellion to
+tyrants is obedience to God," was suggested by him, and was made by the
+Committee, together with the Eye of Providence in a radiant triangle, the
+motto, _E Pluribus Unum_, and other elaborate features a part of its
+recommendation. As soon as Franklin was safely out of the country in
+France, Congress, perhaps not forgetting his story of John Thompson, the
+hatter, rejected as too redundant the entire complicated design except the
+_E Pluribus Unum_ and the Eye of Providence.
+
+In the summer of 1776, Franklin also endeavored to carry out in another
+form his idea of preventing the Hessians from returning to their own
+country by assisting in distributing among them tobacco wrapped in copies
+of an address offering in the name of Congress a tract of land to every
+soldier who should desert the British service. Congress could not see why,
+if these hirelings were to be sold, they should not do the selling
+themselves instead of their Princes.
+
+It was in the summer of 1776, too, that Franklin, John Adams and Edward
+Rutledge, of South Carolina, were elected a committee by Congress to call
+upon Lord Howe at Staten Island for the purpose of ascertaining whether he
+had any authority to negotiate a treaty of peace, and, if so, of learning
+what that authority was, and of receiving such propositions as he should
+think fit to make. Lord Howe was at the time the Admiral of the King's
+naval forces in America and joint commissioner with his brother General
+William Howe to grant pardons to such of the American rebels as should be
+ready to renew their allegiance to the King. On his arrival in July, 1776,
+at Sandy Hook, he had taken steps to distribute throughout the Colonies a
+declaration explaining the nature of the commission committed to his
+brother and himself. At the same time, he had written a letter to Franklin
+indicating his earnest desire to be instrumental in restoring peace between
+England and America. The same carrier delivered a copy of the declaration
+to Congress and the letter to Franklin. Both the declaration and the letter
+were given rude rebuffs. Congress ordered the declaration to be inserted in
+the newspapers so that, as it said, the few, who still remained suspended
+by a hope, founded either in the justice or moderation of their late King,
+might now at length be convinced that the valor alone of their country was
+to save its liberties. Franklin, after obtaining the permission of
+Congress, sent a reply to Lord Howe's letter by the hand of Colonel Palfrey
+of the American army. It is one of the best letters that he ever wrote, and
+told Lord Howe such blunt truths, and gave him such candid advice that,
+after reading it with surprise repeatedly flitting over his face, Lord Howe
+remarked to Colonel Palfrey with a gentleness as honorable to his amiable
+character as to that of Franklin that his old friend had expressed himself
+very warmly. Then subsequently had followed the disaster on Long Island,
+and the arrival of General Sullivan on parole at Philadelphia with a verbal
+message from Lord Howe to Congress, stating that he would like to confer
+with some of its members as private individuals though he could not yet
+treat with Congress itself. The result was the appointment of the committee
+to call upon him at Staten Island. The conference between the committee
+and Lord Howe took place at a house on that island and came to nothing. The
+committee had no authority to do anything except to receive proposals from
+Lord Howe, who really had no seasonable proposition to make, and Lord Howe
+had no authority to do anything except to grant pardons to persons who were
+not conscious of having committed any offence. When he stated in polite
+terms that he could not confer with the members of the committee as a
+committee of Congress but only as gentlemen of great ability and influence
+in the colonies, Adams declared in his emphatic way that he was willing to
+consider himself for a few moments in any character which would be
+agreeable to his Lordship except that of a British subject. "Mr. Adams,"
+gravely observed Lord Howe, "is a decided character." All three of the
+Commissioners one by one made it clear to Lord Howe that the colonies were
+irrevocably committed to Independence. There was, therefore, nothing for
+him to do except to say in the end, "I am sorry, gentlemen, that you have
+had the trouble of coming so far to so little purpose." Minutes of this
+interesting conference were jotted down by Henry Strachey, Lord Howe's
+Secretary, and he has recorded two highly characteristic utterances of
+Franklin on the occasion. Such, Lord Howe declared, were his feelings
+towards America, on account of the honor conferred upon his family, by its
+recognition of the services rendered to it by his eldest brother (Viscount
+Howe), that, if America should fall, he would feel and lament it like the
+loss of a brother. Franklin's answer to this generous outburst is thus
+recorded by Strachey. "Dr. Franklin (with an easy air, a collected
+countenance, a bow, a smile, and all that _naivete_ which sometimes
+appeared in his conversation and often in his writings), My Lord, we will
+use our utmost endeavors to save your Lordship that mortification." Later,
+when Lord Howe assured Franklin that it was the commerce, the strength,
+the men of America rather than her money that Great Britain wanted,
+Franklin, ever alive to the military advantage possessed by the Colonies in
+the amazing capacity for reproduction of their people, replied, "Ay, My
+Lord, we have in America a pretty considerable manufactory of men."
+Strachey supposed that he meant to convey by this remark the impression
+that the American army was a large one, but Lord Howe knew Franklin's turn
+of mind better, and penciled on the margin of Strachey's manuscript, "No;
+their increasing population."
+
+Lord Howe seems to have borne himself on this occasion in every respect
+like a gallant gentleman. When the three members of Congress reached the
+shore opposite to Staten Island, after the journey from Philadelphia, which
+Adams had made on horseback, and Franklin and Rutledge in chairs, they
+found a barge from him awaiting them with an officer in it as a hostage for
+their safe return from the island. Adams suggested that the hostage should
+be dispensed with, and his colleagues, he tells us in his grandiose way,
+"exulted in the proposition and agreed to it instantly." The fact was
+communicated to the officer, who bowed his assent, and re-embarked with the
+Americans. When Lord Howe saw the barge approaching the beach of the
+island, he walked down to meet it, and the Hessian regiment, which attended
+him, was drawn up in two lines facing each other. Upon seeing that the
+officer, whom he had sent over to the Jersey shore, had returned, Lord Howe
+exclaimed, "Gentlemen, you make me a very high compliment, and you may
+depend upon it I will consider it as the most sacred of things." When the
+party landed, he shook hands very cordially with Franklin, and, after being
+introduced to Adams and Rutledge, conducted the three between the two files
+of Hessians to the house where the conference was to take place; all four
+chatting pleasantly together as they walked along. Adams, who was far too
+intense an American not to hate savagely a Hessian, fresh from the
+cattle-pen of his Prince, described these soldiers as "looking fierce as
+ten Furies, and making all the grimaces, and gestures, and motions of their
+muskets with bayonets fixed, which, I suppose, military etiquette requires,
+but which we neither understood nor regarded." The house, which was to be
+the scene of the conference, was dilapidated and dirty from military use,
+but the apartment, into which the Americans were ushered, had been hung
+with moss and branches by Lord Howe with such refinement of taste that
+Adams subsequently pronounced it "not only wholesome, but romantically
+elegant." After reaching it, the whole party, including the colonel of the
+Hessian regiment, sat down to a collation "of good claret, good bread, cold
+ham, tongues, and mutton." When the repast was over, the colonel withdrew,
+the table was cleared and the fruitless conference began.
+
+Nor was the activity of Franklin after his return from England limited to
+his duties as a member of Congress. If he fell asleep at times, when
+questions were under discussion by that body, it might well have been
+because he had no other time to sleep. Shortly after his return, he was
+elected Chairman of the Pennsylvania Committee of Safety, which was charged
+with the duty of arming and defending the Province, and of issuing bills of
+credit to defray the expense. In this office, he proved quite as fertile in
+expedients as he had done at the time of the Association years before. In
+the course of a year, the Delaware was effectively protected by forts and
+batteries and by a marine _chevaux-de-frise_, planned by Franklin himself;
+so much so that, when a British fleet attempted several years later to
+ascend the river, its progress was blocked for two months. Other features
+of the defensive plans adopted by the committee were row-galleys, fully
+armed and manned, of which Josiah Quincy spoke in a letter to Washington as
+"Dr. Franklin's row-galleys."
+
+ In the morning at six [Franklin wrote to Priestley], I
+ am at the Committee of Safety, appointed by the
+ Assembly to put the Province in a state of defence;
+ which committee holds till near nine, when I am at the
+ Congress, and that sits till after four in the
+ afternoon. Both these bodies proceed with the greatest
+ unanimity, and their meetings are well attended. It
+ will scarce be credited in Britain, that men can be as
+ diligent with us from zeal for the public good, as with
+ you for thousands per annum. Such is the difference
+ between uncorrupted new states, and corrupted old ones.
+
+To the period when the Committee of Safety was holding its sessions belongs
+a story which William Temple Franklin tells us of his grandfather. Some of
+the more intolerant Pennsylvanians asked the Committee to call upon the
+Episcopal clergy to refrain from prayers for the King.
+
+ The measure [said Franklin, who always preserved his
+ sense of proportion] is quite unnecessary; for the
+ Episcopal clergy, to my certain knowledge, have been
+ constantly praying, these twenty years, that "_God
+ would give to the king and his council wisdom_"; and we
+ all know that not the least notice has ever been taken
+ of that prayer.
+
+While a member of Congress and the Committee of Safety, Franklin was also
+elected a member of the Pennsylvania Assembly, but, as the members of that
+body were still required before taking their seats to pledge their
+allegiance to the King, he was unwilling to actually take his seat. The
+Assembly was under the dominion of John Dickinson, the leader of the
+Proprietary Party, and was very reluctant to break finally with the Crown.
+Nevertheless, it re-elected Franklin to Congress, though he alone of the
+nine delegates, elected from Pennsylvania to that body, was unhesitatingly
+in favor of independence. This position of isolation he was not condemned
+to occupy long. At a subsequent election, the party in Pennsylvania, which
+shared Franklin's views, obtained the upper hand, followed the lead of
+Congress in repudiating all authority derived from the King and declared
+the Proprietary Government dissolved. For a time, there was no government
+of any kind in Pennsylvania for even the most elementary needs of society.
+The result, however, was an impressive illustration of the fact that all
+government is by no means on paper, for, at a later period of his life,
+Franklin told Sir Samuel Romilly that, while this anarchical condition
+lasted, order was perfectly preserved in every part of Pennsylvania, and
+that no man, who should have attempted to take advantage of the situation,
+for the purpose of evading the payment of a debt, could have endured the
+contempt with which he would have been visited.
+
+The first step towards the restoration of civil government was taken by the
+Committee of Safety. It advised the people of Pennsylvania to elect
+delegates to a conference; they responded by doing so, and the delegates
+met at Philadelphia, sat five days, renounced allegiance to the King, took
+an oath of obedience to Congress and issued a call to the people to elect
+delegates to meet in convention and to form a constitution. At the
+election, which ensued, Franklin was one of the eight delegates elected
+from Philadelphia, and, when the convention met, he was unanimously chosen
+its President. On account of his duties as a member of Congress, his
+attendance upon the sessions of the convention was irregular, but it was
+regular enough to exert a marked influence over the proceedings of the
+body. In one respect, that is in the adoption of a single legislative
+chamber, the constitution framed by the convention bore the unmistakable
+impress of his peculiar political ideas.[28]
+
+A few weeks after the Declaration of Independence was adopted, Franklin
+received a long letter from Dubourg addressed to "My Dear Master," which
+justified at least the inference that Vergennes leaned towards the cause of
+the Colonies. Encouraged by this letter, Congress elected three envoys to
+represent America in France: Benjamin Franklin, Thomas Jefferson and Silas
+Deane. Deane was already in France. Jefferson was compelled by the ill
+health of his wife to decline, and Arthur Lee, then in London, was elected
+in his stead.
+
+After a voyage of thirty days in the _Reprisal_, commanded by Captain
+Wickes, a small war-vessel in the service of Congress, Franklin reached
+Quiberon Bay. Thence he proceeded by land to Nantes and from Nantes to
+Paris. After his arrival at Paris, he lodged at the Hotel d'Hambourg, in
+the Rue de l'Universite, until he found a home in the house at Passy placed
+at his disposal by M. Donatien LeRay de Chaumont. For a time, he courted
+retirement, but, as France was drawn more and more closely into concert
+with the American rebels, his activity became more and more open, until the
+surrender of Burgoyne at Saratoga induced that country to abandon the
+policy of connivance and secret assistance, which it had pursued behind the
+screen, supplied by the commercial adventures of Caron de Beaumarchais,
+even before Franklin landed in Europe, and to enter into the treaty of
+alliance with the United States which made Adams, Lee and himself our fully
+acknowledged representatives at the French Court. The circumstances, under
+which the news of Burgoyne's capitulation was communicated to Franklin and
+his colleagues, constitute one of the most thrilling moments in history.
+The messenger, who conveyed it, was Jonathan Loring Austin, a young New
+Englander, and the Secretary of the Massachusetts Board of War; and he was
+sent in a swift vessel for the very purpose by the State of Massachusetts.
+"Whatever in thy wise providence thou seest best to do with the young man,
+we beseech thee most fervently, at all events, to preserve the packet," is
+the tactless petition that Dr. Cooper is said to have addressed to Heaven
+on the Sunday before Austin sailed. The rumor of his coming preceded his
+arrival at Passy, and, when his chaise was heard in the court of the Hotel
+de Chaumont, Deane, Arthur and William Lee, Ralph Izard, Dr. Bancroft,
+Beaumarchais and Franklin went out to meet him. "Sir," said Franklin, "_is_
+Philadelphia taken?" "Yes, sir," replied Austin. At this Franklin clasped
+his hands and turned as if to go back into the house. "But, sir," said
+Austin, "I have greater news than that. General Burgoyne and his whole army
+are prisoners of war!" The night of American adversity was now for the
+first time lit up by a real augury of dawn, and the treaties of amity and
+commerce and alliance between France and the United States, in the existing
+state of French feeling, followed almost as a matter of course.
+
+When, weak from his long voyage, Franklin started out on the journey from
+the seashore to Paris, which led him at one point through the forest haunts
+of a bloodthirsty gang of robbers, he was seventy years of age. "Yet," he
+could truly declare some ten years later to George Whatley, "had I gone at
+seventy, it would have cut off twelve of the most active years of my life,
+employed too in matters of the greatest importance." These were indeed
+years of precious service to his country and of a fame for himself as
+resplendent as any in modern history which lacks the lustre of military
+glory. What Washington was to America in the field, Franklin was to her in
+the foreign relations upon which it may well be doubted whether the success
+of her arms did not at times depend. To obtain material aid in the form of
+money and munitions of war, soldiers and fleets from the one powerful
+country in Europe, which manifested a disposition to side actively with
+America, was the cardinal object of American policy after the outbreak of
+the Revolution, and rarely has any man ever been more richly qualified for
+the accomplishment of any object than was Franklin for the accomplishment
+of this. In the first place, his liberal and sympathetic nature, with its
+unrivalled capacity for assimilating foreign usages and habits of thought
+and feeling, slid without the slightest friction into every recess of its
+French environment. This was a fact of supreme importance in the case of a
+people so distinctive in point of race and temperament, and so irredeemably
+wedded to their own national prepossessions and prejudices as the French.
+Doubtless, Franklin was too wise a man not to have courted French favor, in
+a social sense, to some extent as a matter of political policy. Then, too,
+there is every reason to know that he was sincerely grateful to France for
+the benefits which she showered upon his country and himself. But it was
+mainly the spell of La Belle France herself, with her cordial appeal to his
+delight in existence, which finally produced the state of mutual affection
+that enabled him to say with truth that he loved the French and that they
+loved him. What this meant to our cause we can easily divine when we
+remember how wholly some of the colleagues of Franklin failed to recommend
+themselves to the good will of the people, whose good will it was of the
+utmost concern to America that they should conciliate, or to abstain from
+untimely dissensions. The exact reverse of what Franklin said of himself
+might be said of them. They disliked the French People, and the French
+People disliked them.[29] More than once it required all the management of
+Franklin to placate feelings that they had aroused in Vergennes, the French
+Minister, by lack of tact or good judgment. On one occasion, after being
+lectured by Adams, on the subject of the American paper money, held by
+citizens of France, Vergennes wrote to Franklin that nothing could be less
+analogous than the language of Adams to the alliance subsisting between his
+Majesty and the United States. In the same letter, he asked Franklin to lay
+the whole correspondence between Adams and himself before Congress, adding
+that his Majesty flattered himself that that Assembly, inspired with
+principles different from those which Mr. Adams had discovered, would
+convince his Majesty that they knew how to prize those marks of favor which
+the King had constantly shown to the United States. No choice was left to
+Franklin except to comply with the request and to do what he could to
+satisfy Vergennes that the sentiments of Congress and of Americans
+generally were very different from those of Adams. But unfortunately,
+before the correspondence between Adams and Vergennes could reach Congress,
+Adams had again, by his officious conduct in another particular, elicited a
+sharp rebuke from Vergennes. This correspondence, too, Vergennes requested
+Franklin to lay before Congress, which Franklin did with comments not more
+severe than the occasion called for, but which the pride of Adams, already
+deeply infected with the jealousy of Franklin, which he shared with Arthur
+Lee, so far as his manlier and wholesomer nature allowed, never fully
+forgave. "He," Vergennes said of Adams, in a letter to La Luzerne,
+"possesses a rigidity, a pedantry, an arrogance and a vanity which render
+him unfit to treat political questions."
+
+After peace was restored between Great Britain and the United States, the
+strictures of Adams upon Vergennes and France became so imprudent and
+outspoken that Franklin wrote to Robert Morris:
+
+ I hope the ravings of a certain mischievous madman here
+ against France and its ministers, which I hear of every
+ day, will not be regarded in America, so as to diminish
+ in the least the happy union that has hitherto
+ subsisted between the two nations, and which is indeed
+ the solid foundation of our present importance in
+ Europe.
+
+Four months later, Franklin, to use his own words, hazarded a mortal enmity
+by making this communication to Robert R. Livingston:
+
+ I ought not, however, to conceal from you, that one of
+ my Colleagues is of a very different Opinion from me in
+ these Matters. He thinks the French Minister one of the
+ greatest Enemies of our Country, that he would have
+ straitned our Boundaries, to prevent the Growth of our
+ People; contracted our Fishery, to obstruct the
+ Increase of our Seamen; and retained the Royalists
+ among us, to keep us divided; that he privately opposes
+ all our Negociations with foreign Courts, and afforded
+ us, during the War, the Assistance we receiv'd, only to
+ keep it alive, that we might be so much the more
+ weaken'd by it; that to think of Gratitude to France is
+ the greatest of Follies, and that to be influenc'd by
+ it would ruin us. He makes no Secret of his having
+ these Opinions, expresses them publicly, sometimes in
+ presence of English Ministers, and speaks of hundreds
+ of Instances which he could produce in Proof of them.
+
+All this Franklin believed to be
+
+ as imaginary as I know his Fancies to be, that Count de
+ V. and myself are continually plotting against him, and
+ employing the News-Writers of Europe to depreciate his
+ Character, &c. But as Shakespear says, "Trifles light
+ as Air, &c." I am persuaded, however, that he means
+ well for his Country, is always an honest Man, often a
+ wise one, but sometimes, and in some things, absolutely
+ out of his senses.
+
+A clever and just flash of characterization but for the usual inability of
+Franklin to refer abnormal conduct to anything short of dementia.[30] In
+the latter part of the same year, Franklin again had occasion to write to
+Robert Morris,
+
+ My Apprehension that the Union between France and our
+ States might be diminished by Accounts from hence, was
+ occasioned by the extravagant and violent Language held
+ here by a Public Person, in public Company, which had
+ that Tendency; and it was natural for me to think his
+ Letters might hold the same Language, in which I was
+ right; for I have since had Letters from Boston
+ informing me of it. Luckily here, and I hope there, it
+ is imputed to the true Cause, a Disorder in the Brain,
+ which, tho' not constant, has its Fits too frequent.
+
+Apart from more general considerations, as Franklin was, at the very time
+that Adams was holding this kind of discourse, soliciting more money from
+Vergennes for the United States, it was natural enough that he should fear
+the tendency of such ungrateful and provoking language to chill the
+liberality of the French Minister. It is agreeable, however, to recollect
+that in the succeeding year the able, upright and patriotic statesman, who
+had to such a conspicuous degree the defects of his virtues, was so far
+restored to reason, that Franklin could write to William Temple Franklin
+that he had walked to Auteuil on Saturday to dine with Mr. A. &c., with
+whom he went on comfortably.
+
+As to how far Arthur Lee succeeded in ingratiating himself with Vergennes,
+the correspondence of that Minister with the French Minister in America
+enables us to judge without difficulty. In one letter, he wrote that he had
+too good an opinion of the intelligence and wisdom of the members of
+Congress and of all true patriots to suppose that they would allow
+themselves to be led astray by the representations of a man (Lee) whose
+character they ought to know.
+
+ As to Dr. Franklin [he continued], his conduct leaves
+ nothing for Congress to desire. It is as zealous and
+ patriotic, as it is wise and circumspect; and you may
+ affirm with assurance, on all occasions where you think
+ proper, that the method he pursues is much more
+ efficacious than it would be if he were to assume a
+ tone of importunity in multiplying his demands, and
+ above all in supporting them by menaces, to which we
+ should neither give credence nor value, and which would
+ only tend to render him personally disagreeable.
+
+The writer might as well have added "as is Arthur Lee." In another letter,
+Vergennes stated that the four millions more that France had decided to
+grant Dr. Franklin would convince Congress that they had "no occasion to
+employ the false policy of Mr. Izard and Mr. Lee to procure succors."[31]
+
+For very different reasons, even Jay, with his admirable character, did not
+achieve any success in dealing with the French people beyond the kind of
+success which the French themselves damn with the phrase _succes d'estime_.
+The complaint that M. Grand made of him, when he was in Spain, "that he
+always appeared very much buttoned up," was hardly less applicable to him
+when he was transferred to Paris as one of our Peace Commissioners. "Mr.
+Jay," diarizes Adams, "likes Frenchmen as little as Mr. Lee and Mr. Izard
+did. He says they are not a moral people; they know not what it is; he
+don't like any Frenchman; the Marquis de Lafayette is clever, but he is a
+Frenchman."
+
+John Laurens, too, when he came over to Paris to solicit money for the
+American army, _beau sabreur_ as he was, handled the French as awkwardly as
+the rest. "He was indefatigable, while he staid," Franklin wrote to
+William Carmichael, "and took true Pains, but he _brusqu'd_ the Ministers
+too much, and I found after he was gone that he had thereby given more
+Offence than I could have imagin'd." The truth is that, until the watchful
+detachment of Adams and Jay from their foreign environment became of some
+service to the United States in helping to assure to them the full fruits
+of their victory in the final shuffle of diplomacy over the Treaty of
+Peace, Franklin after the return of Silas Deane to America was the only one
+of our diplomatic representatives who can be said to have earned his salt
+in France.[32] The rest, so far from promoting the objects of the French
+mission, did much to jeopard its success. The United States could well have
+afforded to keep them all at home and to pay them double the amount of the
+salaries which were wasted upon them abroad. They either could not rise
+above the limitations and prejudices of foreigners in dealing with a people
+peculiarly tenacious of their own national views and characteristics, or
+were too lacking in diplomatic instinct and _savoir faire_ to hold their
+own grating idiosyncracies of temper and disposition in check, when it was
+of the highest importance to their country that they should do so; or they
+were so restive under the pre-eminence of Franklin as to be unable to
+control the envy and ill-feeling, which harassed his peace, and tended to
+discredit the cause, in which they were engaged. Congress did not do many
+wise things in regard to our interests in France during the Revolution, but
+undoubtedly it did one, when it finally brought the discord of its envoys
+in that country to an end by declining to accept the resignation of
+Franklin and appointing him the sole Ambassador of the United States at
+Paris.[33] Under no circumstances, does his success in obtaining succor
+for America from France stand out so clearly as when contrasted with the
+futile missions of Arthur Lee, William Lee, Ralph Izard, Francis Dana and
+John Jay to other courts than that of France. So far from obtaining any
+material aid for the United States from the countries, to which they were
+accredited, and should never have been sent,[34] they had to fall back upon
+Franklin himself for their own subsistence; though it is only fair to them
+to say that some of them were allowed by these countries too little freedom
+of approach to make an impression of any kind upon them, good or otherwise.
+For the bad feeling entertained by Adams, Lee and Izard towards Franklin
+there is no valid reason for holding Franklin responsible. It is plain that
+he did not lack the inclination to be on friendly terms with Adams; and
+there is no evidence that he in any way provoked the malice which he
+suffered at the hands of Arthur Lee, or the passionate animosity which he
+excited in Ralph Izard. As late as 1780, after the return of Adams to
+Europe as a peace commissioner, Franklin wrote to William Carmichael that
+Adams and himself lived on good terms with each other, though the former,
+he added, had never communicated anything of his business to him, and he
+had made no inquiries of him. If Franklin did not live on good terms with
+Arthur Lee, it was because no one, unless it were Adams, or Ralph Izard,
+when drawn to Lee by common jealousy of Franklin, could live on good terms
+with a man whose character was so hopelessly soured and perverted by
+suspicion and spleen. It was doubtless with entire truth that Franklin in a
+letter to William Carmichael, in which he termed Lee the most malicious
+enemy that he ever had, declared that there was not the smallest cause for
+his enmity. It had been inspired in England, as it had been revived in
+France, simply by the brooding desire of Lee to displace Franklin. In 1771,
+he made it plain in a letter from England to Samuel Adams that Franklin, in
+his opinion, was not too good to be the instrument of Lord Hillsborough's
+treachery in pretending that all designs against the charter of
+Massachusetts had been laid aside.
+
+ The possession of a profitable office at will, the
+ having a son in a high post at pleasure, the grand
+ purpose of his residence here being to effect a change
+ in the government of Pennsylvania, for which
+ administration must be cultivated and courted [Lee
+ wrote], are circumstances which, joined with the
+ temporizing conduct he has always held in American
+ affairs, preclude every rational hope that, in an open
+ contest between an oppressive administration and a free
+ people, Dr. Franklin can be a faithful advocate for the
+ latter.
+
+In another letter he intimated a suspicion that Dr. Franklin had been
+"bribed to betray his trust." The motive for such communications is made
+clear enough by still another letter that he sent over to Boston stating
+that, while Dr. Franklin frequently assured him that he would sail for
+Philadelphia in a few weeks, he believed he would not quit them till he
+was gathered to his fathers.[35] The insidious calumnies that Lee sowed in
+Massachusetts, when he was coveting Franklin's agency for that colony, were
+only too effective for a time in creating even in the minds of such men as
+Samuel Adams, John Adams, and Josiah Quincy an impression unfavorable to
+Franklin's fidelity to the American cause. How little based on any real
+misgivings as to the character of the man, whose place he craved, were the
+innuendoes and accusations of Lee, may be inferred from his statement at
+the time of the Privy Council outrage that Franklin bore the assaults of
+Wedderburn "with a firmness and equanimity which conscious integrity can
+inspire." In a letter to Lord Shelburne in 1776, he even spoke of Franklin
+as "our _Pater Patriae_."
+
+In France, the same sense of having a young man's revenue withered out by
+tedious expectation led to similar misrepresentations and intrigue. This
+time, the object was to bring about the transfer of Franklin from France,
+where the jealousy of Lee was incessantly inflamed by his great reputation
+and influence, to some other post, and the appointment of Lee himself as
+his successor. If the change had not been such as to foreshadow utter ruin
+to American interests in France, the letters that Arthur Lee wrote to his
+brother Richard Henry Lee in the prosecution of these aims would be little
+less than ludicrous. "My idea of adapting characters and places is this,"
+he said in one letter, "Dr. F. to Vienna, as the first, most respectable,
+and quiet; Mr. Deane to Holland.... France remains the centre of political
+activity, and here, therefore, I should choose to be employed." There was
+but one way, he said in another letter to his brother, of bringing to an
+end the neglect, dissipation, and private schemes, which he saw in every
+department of the American Mission at Paris, and that was the plan he had
+before suggested of appointing the Dr. _honoris causa_ to Vienna, Mr. Deane
+to Holland, and Mr. Jennings to Madrid, and of leaving him (Lee) at Paris.
+To Samuel Adams he wrote that he had been at the several courts of Spain,
+Vienna and Berlin, and found that of France to be the great wheel that
+moved them all. He would, therefore, be much obliged to Adams for
+remembering that he should prefer being at the court of France.
+
+Lee was a man of considerable ability, though his incurable defects of
+disposition and temper almost wholly deprived him of the profitable use of
+it, and he was from first to last, when in Europe, loyal to the American
+cause. But, if there ever was a person born under the malignant sign,
+Scorpio, it was he. He was
+
+ "More peevish, cross and splenetic
+ Than dog distract or monkey sick."
+
+In the course of his suspicious, jealous and quarrelsome life he appears to
+have inflicted a venomous sting upon almost every human being that ever
+crossed the path of his inordinate and intriguing ambition. In the monopoly
+of intelligence and public virtue that he arrogated to himself he was not
+unlike the French woman who was credited by Franklin with the assertion
+that she met with nobody but herself that was always in the right. With a
+few exceptions, no prominent American in France, when he was in that
+country, escaped his insidious defamation. Silas Deane was the accomplice
+of Beaumarchais in his effort to make the United States pay for free gifts
+of the French King. Franklin was a cunning rogue ever on the watch to line
+the pockets of his grandnephew, Jonathan Williams; indeed Lee did not
+scruple to term him "the father of corruption"; every day gave him fresh
+reasons for suspecting William Carmichael; John Paul Jones was merely the
+captain of "a cruising job of Chaumont and Dr. Franklin." And so on with
+the other contemporaries, whose character he did his best to tarnish with
+the breath of calumny, ever actuated as he was by the sinister,
+backward-spelling disposition which
+
+ "Never gives to truth and virtue that
+ Which simpleness and merit purchaseth."
+
+What both Lee and Adams could not forgive in Franklin was the fact that,
+though there were three American envoys at Paris, the French Ministry and
+People would have it that there was only one, "_le digne Franklin_,"[36]
+"_le plus grand philosophe du siecle_," "_l'honneur de l'Amerique, et de
+l'humanite_." The wounded sense of self-importance, awakened by this fact,
+assumed in Adams, except in his more extravagant moments, no worse form
+than that of quickened self-assertion, or the charge that Franklin was
+grown too inert, from years and physical infirmities, to conduct the
+routine business of the mission with the proper degree of order and system,
+or was too susceptible to social and academic flattery to keep a vigilant
+eye upon the more selfish side of French policy. But in the case of Lee,
+lacerated vanity not only led him along finally to the conclusion that
+Deane and Franklin were both rascals, but early convinced him that all
+their transactions, even the simplest, where he was concerned, were shaped
+by a desire to slight or affront him, or to deprive him of his just
+privileges and standing as one of the Commissioners. He had hardly been in
+France a year before his perverse pen was lecturing and scolding Franklin
+as if he were one of the most arbitrary and inconsiderate of men instead of
+one of the most reasonable and considerate. At first, Franklin did not
+reply to such letters, but his failure to reply simply supplied Lee with
+another excuse for scolding. At last, Lee, after taxing him with tardiness
+in settling the accounts of the Commissioners, and with keeping him in the
+dark about the mission on which M. Gerard had been sent to America,
+expressed the hope that he would not treat this letter from him as he had
+many others with the indignity of not answering it.
+
+ It is true [said Franklin], that I have omitted
+ answering some of your Letters, particularly your angry
+ ones, in which you, with very magisterial Airs,
+ school'd and documented me, as if I had been one of
+ your Domestics. I saw in the strongest Light the
+ Importance of our living in decent Civility towards
+ each other, while our great Affairs were depending
+ here. I saw your jealous, suspicious, malignant and
+ quarrelsome Temper, which was daily manifesting itself
+ against Mr. Deane, and almost every other Person you
+ had any Concern with: I therefore pass'd your Affronts
+ in Silence; did not answer but burnt your angry
+ Letters, and received you when I next saw you with the
+ same Civility as if you had never wrote them.
+
+These words are taken from a letter in which Franklin replied in detail to
+all the grievances vented in Lee's letter. On the day before, he had
+written a curter reply which gives us a good idea of what his anger was at
+flood-tide.
+
+ It is true [this reply began], I have omitted answering
+ some of your Letters. I do not like to answer angry
+ Letters. I hate Disputes. I am old, can not have long
+ to live, have much to do and no time for Altercation.
+ If I have often receiv'd and borne your Magisterial
+ Snubbings and Rebukes without Reply, ascribe it to the
+ right Causes, my Concern for the Honour & Success of
+ our Mission, which would be hurt by our Quarrelling, my
+ Love of Peace, my Respect for your good Qualities, and
+ my Pity of your Sick Mind, which is forever tormenting
+ itself, with its Jealousies, Suspicions & Fancies that
+ others mean you ill, wrong you, or fail in Respect for
+ you. If you do not cure yourself of this Temper it will
+ end in Insanity, of which it is the Symptomatick
+ Forerunner, as I have seen in several Instances. God
+ preserve you from so terrible an Evil: and for his sake
+ pray suffer me to live in quiet.
+
+The petition was not heeded. Cut off by his impracticable temper and the
+dis-esteem of the French Ministry from any participation in the more
+important transactions of the Mission, the industrious malice of Lee found
+employment in accusations of peculation against the other agents of the
+United States in France and in petty refinements over the proper methods of
+keeping the accounts and papers of the Commissioners. Everything that he
+touched threw out thorns and exuded acrid juices. Franklin might well have
+said of him what he said of his brother, William Lee, that he was not only
+a disputatious but a very artful man. He pursued Deane with such plausible
+misrepresentations, when the latter sought justice at the hands of
+Congress, that the unhappy man was finally hurried, to use Franklin's
+phrase, into joining his friend, Arnold. How he harried Jonathan Williams,
+we have already seen. So well understood was his litigious, malevolent
+temper that, when the State of Virginia desired to purchase arms and
+military stores in France, several merchants refused to have any dealings
+with him, and one firm dealt with him only to be involved in the usual web
+of fine-spun suspicion and controversy.
+
+ I hope, however [wrote Franklin to Patrick Henry, at
+ the time Governor of Virginia, who had solicited
+ Franklin's assistance in the matter], that you will at
+ length be provided with what you want, which I think
+ you might have been long since, if the Affair had not
+ been in Hands, which Men of Honour and Candour here are
+ generally averse to dealing with, as not caring to
+ hazard Quarrels and Abuses in the settlement of their
+ Accounts.
+
+He dared not meddle, he said, with the dispute in which Lee was engaged,
+"being charg'd by the Congress to endeavour at maintaining a good
+Understanding with their other Servants," which was, "indeed, a hard task
+with some of them," he declared.
+
+As his acquaintance with Lee and his brother, William Lee, extended,
+Franklin became more and more wary in dealing with them. This was
+illustrated in his attitude towards the papers of Thomas Morris, the
+brother of Robert Morris, and the Commercial Agent of the United States at
+Nantes. When this gentleman, who, according to one of his contemporaries,
+"turned out the greatest drunkard the world ever produced," had duly paid
+the forfeit of his bibulous life, William Lee, with the aid of an order
+from the French Ministry, secured possession of all his papers, public and
+private, and, when on the eve of setting out for Germany, placed the trunk
+containing them sealed in the custody of Franklin. The key, Franklin told
+him, he would rather have in the keeping of Arthur Lee. A correspondence
+followed between Franklin and John Ross, who had obtained an order from
+Congress for the delivery of the trunk to him. If it had been Pandora's
+box, Franklin could not have undertaken the delivery of the papers in a
+more gingerly manner.
+
+ I am glad [he wrote to Ross], an Order is come for
+ delivering them to you. But as the Dispute about them
+ may hereafter be continued, and Papers suspected to be
+ embezzled by somebody; and as I have sign'd a terrible
+ long Receipt for the Trunk, of which I have no copy,
+ and only remember that it appear'd to be constructed
+ with all the Circumspection of the Writers Motto, _Non
+ incautus futuri_ and that it fill'd a Half Sheet so
+ full there was scarce Room for the Names of the four
+ Evidences he requir'd to witness it; I beg you will not
+ expect me to send it to you at Nantes but appoint who
+ you please to receive it for you here. For I think I
+ must deliver it before Witnesses, who may certify the
+ State of the Seals; nothing being more likely than that
+ Seals on a Trunk may rub off in the Carriage on so long
+ a Journey; and then I should be expos'd to the Artful
+ Suggestions of some who do not love me, & whom I
+ conceive to be of very malignant Dispositions.
+
+Afterwards, when Arthur Lee informed Franklin that, unless he was furnished
+with money by him, he would have to give up the thought of proceeding to
+Spain, Franklin replied dryly: "As I can not furnish the Expence, and there
+is not, in my Opinion, any Likelihood at Present of your being received at
+that Court, I think your Resolution of returning forthwith to America is
+both wise and honest." And, even when he supposed that he was finally rid
+of the gad-fly, which had annoyed him so long, and that Lee was off for
+America, with his poisoned ink-well and busy pen, Franklin took pains that
+he should not have everything his own way, though a thousand leagues
+distant. "There are some Americans returning hence," he wrote to Samuel
+Cooper, "with whom our people should be upon their guard, as carrying with
+them a spirit of enmity to this country. Not being liked here themselves,
+they dislike the people; for the same reason, indeed, they ought to
+dislike all that know them."
+
+Three days later, he wrote to Joseph Reed, of Pennsylvania, a letter in
+which, after denying a false statement made about the writer by Lee, he
+said, "He proposes, I understand, to settle in your Government. I caution
+you to beware of him; for, in sowing Suspicions and Jealousies, in creating
+Misunderstandings and Quarrels among friends, in Malice, Subtilty, and
+indefatigable industry, he has I think no equal." A few days later, he
+wrote to William Carmichael, "Messrs. Lee and Izard are gone to L'Orient,
+in order to embark in the _Alliance_ together, but they did not travel
+together from hence. No soul regrets their departure. They separately came
+to take leave of me, very respectfully offering their services to carry any
+dispatches, etc."
+
+But gone the gad-fly was not yet. After Lee reached L'Orient, the officers
+and men of the _Alliance_ refused to weigh anchor until certain claims of
+theirs to wages and prize money were complied with, and, while John Paul
+Jones, their captain, was away at Paris, engaged in an effort to hasten the
+payment of the prize-money, Captain Peter Landais, acting under the advice
+of Arthur Lee and Commodore Gillon, took possession of the ship and sailed
+off for America. As soon as the news of the mutiny came to Franklin, he
+suspected that Arthur Lee was at the bottom of it.
+
+ I have no doubt [he wrote to Samuel Wharton, in regard
+ to Landais] that your suspicion of his Adviser is well
+ founded. That Genius must either find or make a Quarrel
+ wherever he is. The only excuse for him that his
+ Conduct will admit of, is his being at times out of his
+ Senses. This I always allow, and am persuaded that if
+ some of the many Enemies he provokes do not kill him
+ sooner he will die in a madhouse.
+
+The sequel of this high-handed proceeding afforded Franklin another
+opportunity to question Lee's mental soundness. The _Alliance_ was not long
+out before Landais exhibited such flightiness that its passengers deposed
+him, and placed the ship in command of its first lieutenant. Commenting on
+the incident, Franklin wrote to Samuel Cooper:
+
+ Dr. Lee's accusation of Capt. Landais for Insanity was
+ probably well founded; as in my Opinion would have been
+ the same Accusation, if it had been brought by Landais
+ against Lee; For tho' neither of them are permanently
+ mad, they are both so at times; and the Insanity of the
+ Latter is the most Mischievous.
+
+How truly high-handed the rape of the _Alliance_ was, will be realized,
+when the reader is told that at the time Landais had been deprived of the
+captaincy of the _Alliance_, upon the charge of gross misconduct in the
+glorious engagement between the _Serapis_ and the _Bon Homme Richard_, and
+was looking forward to a court-martial in America upon specifications
+involving a capital offence; that he had abandoned the ship, and that
+Jones, who had won imperishable honor and renown in the conflict between
+the _Serapis_ and the _Bon Homme Richard_, had been placed in command of
+her by Franklin, and had been in command of her for eight months; and that
+Franklin had in a letter to Landais sternly refused to restore her to him.
+
+Of William Lee, Franklin had, as we have just seen, very much the same
+opinion that he had of Arthur Lee. When he talked to Franklin of nominating
+Jonathan Williams, his grandnephew, and Mr. Lloyd in the place of Thomas
+Morris and himself as the Commercial Agents of the United States at Nantes,
+Franklin wrote to Williams: "I question whether there be Flesh enough upon
+the Bone for two to pick. I doubt its being worth your while to accept of
+it. I did not thank him for mentioning you because I do not wish to be much
+oblig'd to him and less to be a little oblig'd."
+
+Not long after this, Franklin had less cause to think well of William Lee
+than ever. Upon representations being made by Ralph Izard and him to the
+three Commissioners, Arthur Lee, Deane and Franklin, that, though they had
+been appointed Ministers to the courts of Berlin, Vienna and Florence by
+Congress, no provision for their expenses had reached them, the three
+Commissioners asked what sums they would require. William Lee replied that
+he could not exactly compute in advance what he would need, but that, if he
+was empowered to draw upon the banker of the Commissioners, he would
+certainly only draw from time to time for such sums as were absolutely
+necessary; and that it was therefore a matter of little importance at what
+amount the credit was fixed. "It would however look handsome &
+confidential," he said, "if the sum were two Thousand Louis." Thereupon,
+Franklin tells us, the Commissioners "did frankly but unwarily give the
+Orders." Soon afterwards, Deane and Franklin were informed that William Lee
+and Izard had gone directly to the banker of the Commissioners, and drawn
+out the whole amount of the credit, and had deposited it to their own
+account exclusively. After that, even an order from Congress, empowering
+William Lee and Izard to draw upon the Commissioners for their expenses at
+foreign courts, was unavailing to open Franklin's purse strings. Doubtless,
+he wrote with calm irony to the Committee on Foreign Affairs at home,
+Congress, when it passed its resolution, intended to supply the
+Commissioners with funds for meeting the drafts of William Lee and Izard.
+And, to make things still worse for the disappointed beneficiaries of the
+resolution, he further said: "I could have no intention to distress them,
+because I must know it is out of my Power, as their private Fortunes and
+Credit will enable them at all times to pay their own Expences."
+
+Arthur Lee had taken good care to protect himself against any such
+afterclaps. In a formal letter to him, refusing to accede to his suggestion
+that no orders should be drawn upon the banker of the Commissioners, unless
+signed by all three of the Commissioners, Franklin told him flatly that he
+did not choose to be obliged to ask Mr. Lee's consent, whenever he might
+have occasion to draw for his subsistence, as that assent could not be
+expected from any necessity of a reciprocal compliance on Mr. Franklin's
+part, Mr. Lee having secured his subsistence by taking into his own
+disposition 185,000 livres, and his brother, by a deception on the
+Commissioners, 48,000.
+
+Ralph Izard, of South Carolina, was very closely linked with Arthur Lee in
+Franklin's mind. Though appointed by Congress Commissioner to the court of
+the Grand Duke of Tuscany at Florence, this court refused to receive him
+for fear of offending England, and he remained in Paris during the entire
+period of his appointment. In a letter to James Lovell, Franklin stated
+that he had made it a constant rule to answer no angry, affronting or
+abusive letters, of which he had received many, and long ones, from Mr. Lee
+and Mr. Izard. The hostility of Izard to Franklin, due in the main to the
+same causes as Arthur Lee's, was whetted partly by the fact that he was not
+consulted, when the treaty of alliance was entered into between the
+American Commissioners and France, and partly by the fact that Franklin
+refused to honor some of his pecuniary applications. In a letter from Passy
+to Francis Hopkinson, Franklin, as we have seen, said that he deserved
+Izard's enmity because he might have avoided it by paying him a compliment
+which he neglected, but elsewhere in his correspondence he rests this
+enmity upon substantially the same grounds as that of Arthur Lee. When
+Izard assailed him, because he had not conferred with him in relation to
+the treaty of alliance, Franklin replied that he would give his letter a
+full answer when he had the honor of seeing him. "But," he said, "I must
+submit to remain some days under the Opinion you appear to have form'd not
+only of my poor Understanding in the general Interests of America, but of
+my Defects in Sincerity, Politeness & Attention to your Instructions."
+
+It is doubtful whether a letter in which, in reply to an application for
+money, he reminded Izard of the latter's own pecuniary independence, was
+ever sent; but part of it is too pointed not to bear quotation. After
+dwelling upon the many calls upon the funds in the hands of the
+Commissioners, it goes on in these words:
+
+ In this Situation of our Affairs, we hope you will not
+ insist on our giving you a farther Credit with our
+ Banker, with whom we are daily in danger of having no
+ farther Credit ourselves. It is not a Year since you
+ received from us the sum of Two Thousand Guineas, which
+ you thought necessary on Acct of your being to set
+ out immediately for Florence. You have not incurr'd the
+ Expence of that Journey. You are a Gentleman of
+ Fortune. You did not come to France with any Dependence
+ on being maintained here with your Family at the
+ Expence of the United States, in the Time of their
+ Distress, and without rendering them the equivalent
+ Service they expected.
+
+Izard seems to have had the kind of temper that heats as readily as iron
+but cools off as slowly as a footbrick, wrapped up in flannels.[37]
+Speaking of the indignity, to which Franklin had been subjected in his
+sight before the Privy Council, he said: "When Dr. Franklin was so
+unmercifully bespattered by Wedderburn, I sat upon thorns; and had it been
+me that was so grossly insulted, I should instantly have repelled the
+attack, in defiance of every consequence." It is not unlikely that he would
+have been as good as his word, so prompt was the second, who had borne the
+challenge from Temple to Whately, to give free play to his irascible and
+imperious nature. But Graydon is our authority for the statement, too, that
+as long as four years after Izard had returned in the _Alliance_ from
+France to the United States, the name of Franklin could not be mentioned in
+his presence without hurrying him into a state of excitement.
+
+Altogether, our readers will agree with us, we are sure, in thinking that
+few things in our national history are calculated to leave a more painful
+impression upon the mind than the conduct of some of the men, who were
+supposed to represent the United States abroad, while Franklin, in spite of
+the jarring discords, of which he was the innocent author, was manfully
+struggling with the responsibilities which belonged in part to others, but
+never really rested upon any but his own old shoulders (as he termed them).
+By character and temperament, in some instances, they were conspicuously
+unfitted for the delicate tasks of diplomacy, and were too raw and rigidly
+set in their personal and national prejudices besides ever to succeed in
+repressing their dislike for the French. There can be no doubt, Jay aside,
+that they would have quarrelled with each other as rancorously as they did
+with Franklin but for the cohesion created by their common jealousy of him.
+How indefensible their attitude towards him was becomes all the more
+apparent when we recollect that rarely has any man ever been endowed with a
+mind or nature better fitted to disarm malice than those of Franklin. It is
+a hard judgment, not to be formed without due allowance for the extent to
+which the testimony of history is always suborned by the glamour of a
+great reputation, but it is nevertheless, we believe, only a just judgment,
+to declare that Franklin spoke the simple truth when he wrote to William
+Carmichael, "Lee and Izard are open, and, so far, honourable Enemies; the
+Adams, if Enemies, are more covered. I never did any of them the least
+Injury, and can conceive no other Source of their Malice but Envy." The
+excessive respect, shown him in France by all ranks of people, he said in
+the same letter, and the little notice taken of them, was a mortifying
+circumstance, but it was what he could neither prevent nor remedy.
+
+This "excessive respect," or justly deserved fame, as the biographer of
+Franklin might call it, was another thing which contributed to Franklin's
+brilliant success at the Court of France. When he arrived in that country,
+he was no stranger there. His two previous visits to it had made him well
+acquainted with Turgot, Quesnay, Dupont de Nemours, the elder Mirabeau,
+Dubourg and Morellet and the other members of the group, known as the
+Physiocrats, whose speculative passion for Agriculture was one of the
+active intellectual forces of the time. His literary and scientific
+attainments had likewise won him the favor of other famous Frenchmen. These
+are facts of no slight importance, when we recall the extent to which the
+currents of French thought, on the eve of the French Revolution, were fed
+and directed by men of letters and philosophers. When Franklin found
+himself in France, for the third time, he was a member of the Royal Society
+at London and the Royal Academy of Sciences at Paris, and had been honored
+with academic degrees not only by Yale, Harvard and William and Mary in his
+own country, but by Oxford in England and St. Andrews in Scotland.[38] An
+edition of his scientific works had been translated into French by his
+friend Dubourg, and his _Way to Wealth_ had been translated into the same
+language, and distributed broadcast by bishops and cures among the members
+of their flocks as incentives to industry and frugality. It was in France,
+too, that D'Alibard had verified the sublime hypothesis of Franklin by
+drawing down the lightning from the clouds. Moreover, before he left
+England at the end of his second mission to that country, his activity and
+prominence in resisting the arbitrary measures of the British Ministry had
+made his political influence and standing thoroughly familiar to the French
+Cabinet, which had for many years kept a close watch upon every movement or
+event that portended a revolt of the American Colonies. Along with these
+solid claims to the attention and respect of the French people were certain
+other circumstances that strongly tended to heighten the fame of Franklin.
+It was the era when the modern Press was beginning to assert its new-born
+power, and the fur cap, one of the badges of the mediaeval printer, that he
+wore, was hardly necessary to remind the newspapers of that day, with all
+their facilities for rouging public reputation by artful and persistent
+publicity, that Franklin was first of all a printer. It was also the era
+when the idea of the universal brotherhood of men of all classes and races
+made an uncommonly strong appeal to democratic and humanitarian impulses.
+Such an age could readily enough regard a man like Franklin as a true
+citizen of the world, a veritable friend of man and a torch-bearer of the
+new social and political freedom. It was also the era when it was the mode
+to indulge dreams of primitive beatitude and idyllic simplicity, and around
+no figure could such dreams more naturally gather than that of the
+venerable and celebrated man, whose thin white hair, worn straight without
+wig or powder, plain dress and frank, direct speech seemed to make him the
+ideal exemplar of a state of society devoid of monarch, aristocrat or
+hierarch.[39]
+
+That Franklin, when he came to Paris, as the representative of a country,
+which was not only at war with the hereditary enemy of France, but had
+fearlessly avowed general political sentiments, that France herself was
+eager to avow, should, with his fame, simple manners and social charm, have
+excited for a time the surpassing enthusiasm which he did is not
+surprising; for what the French ardently admire they usually festoon with
+fireworks and crown with flowers; but that this enthusiasm should have
+continued, so far as we can see, wholly unabated for nine years, is a
+surprising thing, indeed, when we recollect how inclined the fickle
+populace of every country is to beat in its hour of inevitable reaction the
+idol before which it has prostrated itself in its hour of infatuation.
+While in France, Franklin was not simply the mode, he was the rage. Learned
+men from every part of Europe thought a visit to Paris quite incomplete, if
+it did not include a call upon him. Even the Emperor Joseph, "a King by
+trade," as he once termed himself, intrigued to meet him _incognito_. Among
+the many letters that he received from individuals, distinguished or
+obscure, who sought to flatter him or to draw upon his wisdom or treasured
+knowledge, was Robespierre--then a young advocate at Arras--who sent him a
+copy of his argument in defence of the lightning rod before the Council of
+Artois, and Marat who, true enough to his future, was investigating the
+physical laws of heat and flame. In the letter to Franklin, by which the
+copy of his argument was accompanied, Robespierre spoke of Franklin as "a
+man whose least merit is to be the most illustrious _savant_ of the world."
+To have a Franklin stove in its fireplace, with a portrait of Franklin on
+the wall above it, grew to be a common feature of the home of the wealthier
+householder in Paris. His spectacles, his marten fur cap, his brown coat,
+his bamboo cane became objects of general imitation. Canes and snuff-boxes
+were carried _a la Franklin_. Portraits, busts and medallions of him were
+multiplied without stint. Among the busts were some in Sevres china, set in
+blue stones with gold borders, and among the medallions were innumerable
+ones made of clay dug at Passy.
+
+ The clay medallion of me [Franklin wrote to Sarah
+ Bache] you say you gave to Mr. Hopkinson was the first
+ of the kind made in France. A variety of others have
+ been made since of different sizes; some to be set in
+ the lids of snuff-boxes, and some so small as to be
+ worn in rings; and the numbers sold are incredible.
+ These, with the pictures, busts, and prints (of which
+ copies upon copies are spread everywhere) have made
+ your father's face as well known as that of the moon,
+ so that he durst not do anything that would oblige him
+ to run away, as his phiz would discover him wherever he
+ should venture to show it.
+
+It was computed that some two hundred different kinds of representations of
+his face were turned out to be set in rings, watches, snuff-boxes,
+bracelets, looking-glasses and other chattels. One print of him is said to
+have made the fortune of the engraver. Particularly striking is the
+testimony of John Adams to the fame of Franklin when in France, which is
+part of the remarkable letter published by him in the _Boston Patriot_ on
+May 11, 1811, in answer to Franklin's strictures on his conduct in France:
+
+ His reputation was more universal than that of Leibnitz
+ or Newton, Frederick or Voltaire; and his character
+ more beloved and esteemed than any or all of them....
+ His name was familiar to government and people, to
+ kings, courtiers, nobility, clergy, and philosophers,
+ as well as plebeians, to such a degree that there was
+ scarcely a peasant or a citizen, a _valet de chambre_,
+ coachman or footman, a lady's chambermaid, or a
+ scullion in a kitchen, who was not familiar with it,
+ and who did not consider him as a friend to human kind.
+ When they spoke of him, they seemed to think he was to
+ restore the golden age.
+
+To the pen of Adams we are also indebted for an account of the first public
+meeting between Voltaire and Franklin, which also testified with such
+dramatic _eclat_ to the place occupied by Franklin in the hearts of the
+French people. This was at the hall of the Academy of Science in Paris.
+
+ Voltaire and Franklin were both present, and there
+ presently arose a general cry that M. Voltaire and M.
+ Franklin should be introduced to each other. This was
+ done, and they bowed and spoke to each other. This was
+ no satisfaction; there must be something more. Neither
+ of our philosophers seemed to divine what was wished or
+ expected; they, however, took each other by the hand.
+ But this was not enough; the clamor continued, until
+ the explanation came out. "_Il faut s'embrasser, a la
+ Francaise._" The two aged actors upon this great
+ theatre of philosophy and frivolity then embraced each
+ other, by hugging one another in their arms, and
+ kissing each other's cheeks, and then the tumult
+ subsided. And the cry immediately spread through the
+ whole kingdom, and, I suppose, over all Europe, _"Qu'il
+ etait charmant de voir embrasser Solon et Sophocle!"_
+
+A few weeks later Voltaire was dead, and, in the fall of the same year, his
+Apotheosis was celebrated by the Lodge of Nine Sisters--a Freemason's Lodge
+in Paris. An account of this memorable occasion was subsequently published
+by the officers of the Lodge. Madame Denis, the niece of Voltaire, and the
+Marchioness of Villette, whom he called his _Belle et Bonne_, and under
+whose roof he died, were present. After various addresses and strains of
+orchestral music, a clap of thunder was heard. Then
+
+ the sepulchral pyramid disappeared, great light
+ succeeded the gloom which had prevailed till now, an
+ agreeable symphony sounded in the place of the mournful
+ music, and an immense picture of the apotheosis of
+ Voltaire was disclosed. The picture represented
+ Corneille, Racine and Moliere above Voltaire as he
+ leaves his tomb. Truth and Beneficence present him to
+ them. Envy pulls at his shroud, in the wish to hold him
+ back, but is driven away by Minerva. Higher up may be
+ seen Fame, publishing the triumph of Voltaire.
+
+Crowns were then laid upon the heads of La Dixmerie, the orator, Gauget,
+the painter, and Franklin, who lifted them from their heads and laid them
+at the feet of Voltaire's image.
+
+Madame Campan in her _Memoirs_ mentions another occasion on which the most
+beautiful of three hundred women was designated to place a crown of laurel
+on Franklin's head, and to kiss him on each cheek.
+
+Add to all these evidences of popular admiration and affection the intimate
+footing maintained by Franklin in so many French homes, and we begin to
+understand how powerfully his public and social standing helped to swell
+the resistless tide of sympathy and enthusiasm which bore down all
+opposition to the French alliance.
+
+But far more than to his mere congeniality with the social spirit of the
+French People, or to his literary and scientific fame, or to his kinship
+with all the liberal tendencies of the eighteenth century in America and
+Europe, was the success of Franklin at the French court due to those
+general attributes of mind and character which he brought to every exigency
+of his private or public life: his good sense, his good feeling, his
+perfect equipoise, his tact, his reasonableness, his kindly humor. It was
+these things which, above everything else, enabled him to surmount all the
+trying difficulties of his situation, and to give to the world the most
+imposing example of fruitful pecuniary solicitation that it has ever known.
+The firm hold that he obtained upon the esteem and good will of Vergennes,
+"that just and good man" he terms him in one of his letters, was but the
+merited reward of personal qualities which invite, secure and retain esteem
+and good will under all human conditions. Vergennes, who held the keys of
+the French money-chest, and directed the policies of France, respected,
+trusted and liked Franklin, because Franklin, at any rate, duly recognized
+and acknowledged the generous motives which had, in part, inspired French
+intervention in the American contest, because he exhibited a considerate
+appreciation of the sacrifices which it cost France, still bleeding from
+her last struggle with Great Britain, to make such large and repeated loans
+to the United States, and because his tactful and discreet applications
+for pecuniary assistance for his country were never marked by disgusting
+importunity or thinly veiled menaces. How true this is we have already
+seen; and its truth is still further confirmed by the testimony of
+Franklin's successor, Jefferson, who, when asked in Paris, whether he
+replaced Franklin, was in the habit of replying, "No one can replace him,
+sir; I am only his successor." After stating the circumstances, including
+his own association with Franklin at Paris, which had convinced him that
+the charge of subservience to France, made against Franklin, had not a
+shadow of foundation, Jefferson pays this impressive tribute to him:
+
+ He possessed the confidence of that Government in the
+ highest degree, insomuch, that it may truly be said,
+ that they were more under his influence than he under
+ theirs. The fact is, that his temper was so amiable and
+ conciliatory, his conduct so rational, never urging
+ impossibilities, or even things unreasonably
+ inconvenient to them, in short, so moderate and
+ attentive to _their_ difficulties as well as our own,
+ that what his enemies called subserviency, I saw was
+ only that reasonable disposition, which, sensible that
+ advantages are not all to be on one side, yielding what
+ is just and liberal, is the more certain of obtaining
+ liberality and justice. Mutual confidence produces, of
+ course, mutual influence, and this was all which
+ subsisted between Dr. Franklin and the government of
+ France.
+
+To Jefferson we are also indebted for the statement that, when he was in
+France, there appeared to him more respect and veneration attached to the
+character of Franklin than to that of any other person in the same country,
+foreign or native.
+
+The volume of multifarious tasks performed by Franklin in France was
+immense. The most valuable service rendered by him to the United States was
+in obtaining from the French King the pecuniary aids which helped Congress
+to defray the expenses of the Revolutionary War. It has been truly said
+that he, and not Robert Morris, was the real financier of the Revolution.
+Until the triumph of the patriot cause was assured, he was the only one of
+the American envoys in Europe whose pecuniary solicitations met with any
+material success. Sometimes even such sums as were obtained by others
+outside of France were more attributable to his indirect influence than to
+their own direct efforts. No matter upon whom Congress might recklessly
+draw drafts, they were certain to come around to the aged negotiator, who
+appeared to be able to secure money from France even when France had no
+money for herself. He might be told that a loan which he had just procured
+from Vergennes was positively the last that France could make, and, yet,
+when he was compelled by desperation at home to give another reluctant rub
+to his magic lamp, there always stood the French servitor with his chest of
+gold. The aggregate amount of the loans and gifts made by France to the
+United States was on February 21, 1783, little short of forty-three
+millions of francs. It was these loans and gifts, transformed into
+munitions of war and military supplies, which again and again infused
+reviving life into the fainting bosom of his country, and enabled her
+soldiers to turn an undaunted face to her foes. How a man of Franklin's
+years could have borne up under such frightful anxieties as those imposed
+upon him by the pecuniary demands of Congress and her other foreign envoys,
+to say nothing of additional burdens, it is difficult to understand. In the
+second year after his arrival in France, when drafts began to pour in on
+him from Congress, he reminded it that the envoys had not undertaken to do
+more than to honor its bills for interest on certain specified sums; and
+this reminder was frequently repeated. It might as well have been syllabled
+to the winds. Though most of the limited cargoes of tobacco and other
+products remitted by Congress as a basis of credit fell into the hands of
+the ever-watchful British cruisers, almost every ship brought over bills
+upon the envoys or large orders for clothing, arms and ammunition. At one
+time, they had notice that bills for interest had been drawn on them to the
+amount of two million and a half, when they did not have a fifth of that
+sum on deposit with their banker. In a letter to the Committee on Foreign
+Affairs in 1779, Franklin, who was really our sole envoy for the purpose of
+paying such bills, enumerates the great quantities of clothing, arms,
+ammunition and naval stores, which the envoys had sent over to America, the
+heavy drafts paid by them that Congress had drawn in favor of officers
+returning to France, or of other persons, the outlays of the envoys for the
+benefit of American prisoners, the amounts advanced by them to other agents
+of the United States, the freight charges paid by them and the sums
+expended by them in fitting out Captain Conygham and the _Raleigh_,
+_Alfred_, _Boston_, _Providence_, _Alliance_, _Ranger_ and other frigates.
+"And now," he concluded, "the Drafts of the Treasurer of the Loans coming
+very fast upon me, the Anxiety I have suffered, and the Distress of Mind
+lest I should not be able to pay them, has for a long time been very great
+indeed." This was but one of the earlier crises in the financial experience
+which led Franklin to say that his seemed to be the Gibeonite task of
+drawing water for all the congregation of Israel. The point of the
+observation becomes still more manifest when the reader is told that drafts
+were also frequently drawn on Franklin by the European agents of the
+Committee of Commerce of Congress, and that even the foreign agents of
+individual States of the Union, finding that no American abroad but he
+seemed to have any credit, applied to him for assistance in effecting loans
+for their principals. Indeed, one agent of the United States, a Mr.
+Bingham, did not scruple, without authority from Congress, or any other
+source, to notify Franklin that the _Deane_ and the _General Gates_ had
+just arrived at Martinique and were in need of overhauling and provisions,
+and that he would have to draw upon him for the expense. This was too much
+even for Franklin's patience, and, when Mr. Bingham's bills were returned
+protested, that gentleman loudly complained that his credit had been
+effectually ruined. And, as the necessities of Congress became greater and
+greater, it almost wholly ceased to recognize that there were any
+limitations upon its right to draw upon Franklin, or that there was even
+any reason why it should notify him that such drafts were drawn. It simply
+drew, hit or miss. For pursuing this course in regard to him, there was at
+least the excuse that, no matter how freely it drew upon him, he somehow
+contrived to preserve the credit of Congress unstained. But Congress had no
+such excuse for drawing bills in this reckless manner, as it did too often,
+upon John Jay, Henry Laurens or John Adams. It is a laughable fact that,
+when some of its bills drawn upon Henry Laurens reached Europe, the drawee,
+who had never arrived in Holland, the country to which he was accredited,
+at all, was a prisoner in the Tower. As none of the other envoys, upon whom
+Congress drew, had any resource but to beg Franklin to pay the drafts,
+these drafts might as well have been drawn upon him in the first instance.
+No wonder that, with this accumulation of responsibility upon his
+shoulders, Franklin should have written to John Jay in Spain in these
+terms:
+
+ But the little Success that has attended your late
+ applications for money mortified me exceedingly; and
+ the Storm of Bills, which I found coming upon us both
+ has terrified and vexed me to such a Degree, that I
+ have been deprived of Sleep, and so much indispos'd by
+ continual anxiety, as to be render'd almost incapable
+ of writing.
+
+This very letter, however, bears witness to his remarkable aptitude for
+dunning without incurring its odious penalties. Overcoming his almost
+invincible reluctance, he said, he had made another application to the
+French Court for more money, and had been told to make himself easy as he
+would be assisted with what was necessary. Indeed, so generous was its
+conduct on this occasion that, when Franklin, in part payment for the loan,
+proposed that Congress should provision the French army in America with
+produce demanded from the States, his Majesty declined the proposal, saying
+that to furnish his army with such a large quantity of provisions as it
+needed might straiten Congress. "You will not wonder at my loving this good
+prince," Franklin concluded.
+
+Amid all the cruel embarrassments of his situation, however, he never
+abated one jot of heart or hope, nor for one moment lost sight of the
+imperial future which he so clearly foresaw for the country that was adding
+sixty thousand children to her numbers annually. In this same letter, he
+let Jay know that in his opinion no amount of present distress should
+induce the United States to make the concessions to Spain that she was
+disposed to hold out as the price of her assistance. "Poor as we are," his
+indomitable spirit declared, "yet, as I know we shall be rich, I would
+rather agree with them to buy at a great Price the whole of their Right on
+the Mississippi, than sell a Drop of its waters. A Neighbour might as well
+ask me to sell my Street Door." Loyal, too, to Congress he remained from
+first to last. The worst that he was willing to say in a letter to Thomas
+Ruston of its rash conduct in flooding the world with bills that for all it
+knew might never be paid was a quiet, "That body Is, as you suppose, not
+well skill'd in Financing."
+
+Less than two months after his letter to Jay, we find him again appealing
+to Vergennes for pecuniary aid with which to enable Congress to co-operate
+with the French forces in America, and, a few weeks later, when the
+vitality of the American cause was at its lowest point, he again takes up,
+on fresh calls from Congress, the same tedious refrain. The letter written
+by him to Vergennes on this occasion is one of his supplicatory
+masterpieces. He lays before the French Minister evidence that the spirit
+of the United States is unbroken, and that the recent success of the
+British in Carolina was chiefly due to the lack of the necessary means for
+"furnishing, marching, and paying the Expence of Troops sufficient to
+defend that Province." He tells him that Lafayette had written that it was
+impossible to conceive, without seeing it, the distress that the troops had
+suffered for want of clothing; and that Washington, too, had written to him
+that the situation of the United States made one of two things essential to
+them, a peace, or the most vigorous aid of their allies, particularly in
+the article of money. For the aid, so necessary in the present conjuncture,
+he said, they could rely on France alone, and the continuance of the King's
+goodness towards them. And then he concluded with these affecting but not
+altogether artless words:
+
+ I am grown old. I feel myself much enfeebled by my late
+ long Illness, and it is probable I shall not long have
+ any more Concern in these Affairs. I therefore take
+ this Occasion to express my Opinion to your Excellency,
+ that the present Conjuncture is critical; that there is
+ some Danger lest the Congress should lose its Influence
+ over the people, if it is found unable to procure the
+ Aids that are wanted; and that the whole System of the
+ New Governt in America may thereby be shaken; that, if
+ the English are suffer'd once to recover that Country,
+ such an Opportunity of effectual Separation as the
+ present may not occur again in the Course of Ages; and
+ that the Possession of those fertile and extensive
+ Regions, and that vast Sea Coast, will afford them so
+ Broad a Basis for future Greatness, by the rapid growth
+ of their Commerce, and Breed of Seamen and Soldiers, as
+ will enable them to become the _Terror of Europe_, and
+ to exercise with impunity that Insolence, which is so
+ natural to their Nation, and which will increase
+ enormously with the Increase of their Power.
+
+Hard upon the heels of this letter came a letter from John Adams, inquiring
+whether Franklin could furnish funds for paying bills to the amount of ten
+thousand pounds sterling which had been drawn by Congress on Adams.
+Franklin replied by saying that he had not yet received a positive answer
+to his last appeal for aid to the French King, but that he had, however,
+two of the Christian Graces, Faith and Hope, though his faith was only that
+of which the Apostle speaks--the evidence of things not seen. In truth, he
+declared, he did not see at that time how so many bills drawn at random on
+the Ministers of Congress in France, Spain and Holland were to be paid. But
+all bills drawn upon them by Congress should be accepted at any risk; and
+he would accordingly do his best, and, if those endeavors failed, he was
+ready to break, run away or go to prison with Adams, as it should please
+God. His endeavors were successful, so startlingly successful that
+Vergennes informed him that his Majesty, to give the States a signal proof
+of his friendship, had resolved to grant them the sum of six millions, not
+as a loan, but as a free gift. But the announcement was accompanied by the
+significant statement that, as the supplies previously purchased in France
+by the United States, were supposed to be of bad quality, the Ministers
+would themselves take care of the purchase, with part of the gift, of such
+articles as were urgently needed in America, and the balance, remaining
+after these purchases, was to be drawn for by General Washington upon M.
+d'Harvelay, Garde du Tresor Royal. "There was no room to dispute on this
+point," Franklin wrote to Samuel Huntington, "every donor having the right
+of qualifying his gifts with such terms as he thinks proper"; but the
+restrictions upon the gift would seem, after all, to have been waived.
+Shortly after the six millions was promised, Colonel Laurens, who was
+supposed by Washington to be peculiarly competent to state the needs of the
+American army, arrived in France, and to him Franklin delegated the task of
+making purchases for Congress with part of the sum. Franklin was already
+supporting Adams, Dana, Jay and Carmichael on the proceeds of his
+persuasive approaches to the French King, and, at best, the arrival of
+Laurens would have meant little except another ministerial mouth to feed.
+Unfortunately, however, it signified much more to Franklin's peace. Before
+returning to America, with two millions and a half of the six millions,
+Laurens made such free use of the remainder that Franklin, unable to meet
+bills, with which he was threatened, was compelled to write to Adams not to
+accept any more bills that were expected to be paid by him without notice
+to him, and to Jay that, if the bills drawn upon him some months before
+could not be paid by him, they would have to go to protest. "For," Franklin
+said, "it will not be in my Power to help you. And I see that nothing will
+cure the Congress of this Madness of Drawing upon the Pump at Aldgate, but
+such a Proof that its Well has a Bottom."
+
+To make things worse, though Congress continued to draw bills upon Franklin
+after the gift of the six millions, it deprived him of the ability to use
+that fund by forbidding any portion of it to be used without its order.
+Franklin by prompt action did succeed in intercepting a part of the six
+millions, which Laurens had taken to Holland, and which was about to follow
+him to America. Speaking of this in a letter to William Jackson, who had
+come over with Laurens, and was very angry with Franklin for detaining the
+amount, Franklin wrote, "I see, that nobody cares how much I am distressed,
+provided they can carry their own Points. I must, therefore, take what care
+I can of mine, theirs and mine being equally intended for the Service of
+the Public." It would have been well for Jackson if he had let the matter
+rest there, but he did not, and had the temerity to write to Franklin a
+saucy letter to which he replied in these terms:
+
+ These Superior Airs you give yourself, young Gentleman,
+ of Reproof to me, and Reminding me of my Duty do not
+ become you, whose special Department and Employ in
+ Public Affairs, of which you are so vain, is but of
+ yesterday, and would never have existed but by my
+ Concurrence, and would have ended in Disgrace if I had
+ not supported your enormous Purchases by accepting your
+ Drafts. The charging me with want of oeconomy is
+ particularly improper in _you_, when the only Instance
+ you know of it is my having indiscreetly comply'd with
+ your Demand in advancing you 120 Louis for the Expence
+ of your Journey to Paris and when the only Instance I
+ know of your oeconomizing Money is your sending me
+ three Expresses, one after another, on the same Day,
+ all the way from Holland to Paris, each with a Letter
+ saying the same thing to the same purpose.
+
+One of the transactions, mentioned in this correspondence, is a good
+illustration of the pecuniary "afterclaps," to use Franklin's term, to
+which Franklin was frequently subjected. He had agreed to pay for goods for
+the United States to the amount of fifteen thousand pounds. Instead of the
+purchases amounting to fifteen thousand pounds, they amounted to fifty
+thousand, and he persistently refused to pay for them. Jackson then hurried
+express to him, urged that the goods were bought by order of Colonel
+Laurens, that they were on shipboard, and that, if Franklin did not pay for
+them, they would have to be relanded and returned, or sold; which would be
+a disgrace, he insisted, to the United States. In the end, Franklin
+accepted the bills for the whole amount, and applied to the French Ministry
+for the money with which to pay for them. The application was a
+particularly disagreeable one to him, not only because all the fiscal
+calculations of the French Government for the year had been completed, but
+because no part of the purchase price of the goods would be expended in
+France. At first, the grant was absolutely refused, but at length Franklin
+obtained it, and hoped that the difficulty was over. It was not.
+Afterwards, the officers of the ship decided that she was overloaded, and
+the goods were transferred to two other ships, whose owners required
+Franklin to either buy the ships, or to pay them a freight bill nearly
+equal to the value of the ships. This whole transaction was bad enough, but
+William Jackson at least had the grace to notify Franklin that the bills in
+this instance were about to descend upon him before their descent. This, we
+know from a mildly reproachful letter, written by Franklin to John Paul
+Jones, a Mr. Moylan was not kind enough to do when he drew upon Franklin
+for nearly one hundred thousand livres for supplies ordered by Jones for
+the _Ariel_.
+
+These are but typical instances of the financial complications in which
+Franklin was involved from time to time while he was drawing water for all
+the congregation of Israel. Long after their date, bills were still making
+his life miserable.
+
+ This serves chiefly to acquaint you [he wrote on one
+ occasion to John Adams] that I will endeavour to pay
+ the Bills that have been presented to you drawn on Mr.
+ Laurens. But you terrify me, by acquainting me that
+ there are yet a great number behind. It is hard that I
+ never had any information sent me of the Sums drawn, a
+ Line of Order to pay, nor a Syllable of Approbation for
+ having paid any of the Bills drawn on Mr. Laurens, Mr.
+ Jay or yourself.
+
+To John Jay about the same time he wrote, "The cursed Bills, as you justly
+term them, do us infinite Prejudice." In a letter to John Adams, he speaks
+of "the dreaded Drafts." At times it looked as if the stream of French
+bounty was at last exhausted. "With the million mentioned," he wrote to
+John Adams in substantially the same terms as he had written to Robert
+Morris two days before, "I can continue paying to the end of February, and
+then, if I get no more I must shut up shop." This was in January, 1782,
+when France, in addition to assisting the United States with a fleet and
+army, had advanced great additional sums to them since the beginning of the
+preceding year. At this time, for very shame Franklin could scarcely pluck
+up courage enough to make another pecuniary application to the French
+Ministry. In giving in a letter to John Jay his reasons for not holding out
+the hope of pecuniary relief to him, he said, "I had weary'd this friendly
+& generous Court with often repeated after-clap Demands, occasioned by
+these unadvised (as well as ill advis'd) & therefore unexpected Drafts, and
+was ashamed to show my Face to the Minister." In the same letter, Franklin
+also said: "We have been assisted with near 20 Millions since the Beginning
+of last Year, besides a Fleet and Army; and yet I am oblig'd to worry
+[them] with my Solicitations for more, which makes us appear insatiable."
+
+But the most interesting passage in this letter is the following: "You
+mention my Proposing to repay the Sum you want in America. I had try'd that
+last year. I drew a Bill on Congress for a considerable Sum to be advanced
+me here, and paid in provisions for the French Troops. My Bill was not
+honoured!" Worst of all, when Bills from Congress still showered upon him,
+after its promise that no more bills would be drawn on him subsequent to a
+fixed date, he began to suspect that the drawing was still going on, and
+that the bills were antedated. To no American was the heedless reliance of
+Congress upon the generosity of France more mortifying than to him. He
+repeatedly suggested the obligation of his own country to look more to
+self-help and less to the aid of her friendly and generous ally, and, at
+times, in his characteristic way, he would demonstrate arithmetically how
+easy it would be for the United States to support the burden of the war
+themselves if they would only keep down the spirit of luxury and
+extravagance at home, and cease to buy so many foreign gewgaws and
+superfluities and so much tea. "In my opinion, the surest way to obtain
+liberal aid from others is vigorously to help ourselves," he wrote to
+Robert R. Livingston. "It is absurd," he said later in another letter to
+Robert Morris, "the pretending to be lovers of liberty while they (the
+American people) grudge paying for the defence of it." He was generously
+prompt always also to ascribe any temporary interruption to the flow of
+French subsidy to the pressing necessities of France herself. Full, too,
+always he was of simple-hearted gratitude to France for the princely help
+that she had given to the American cause. No one knew better than he that
+this help originated partly in selfish policy, and was continued partly
+because it had been extended too liberally already to be easily
+discontinued. "Those, who have begun to assist us," he shrewdly observed to
+Jay, when counselling him that every first favor obtained from Spain was
+_tant de gagne_, "are more likely to continue than to decline." Every
+appeal that he ever made in his life to liberality in any form took the
+bias of self-interest duly into account. But he was merely true to his
+settled principle that human character is an amalgam of both unselfish and
+selfish motives, when, realizing that the aid rendered by France to the
+United States originated partly in the glow of a generous enthusiasm for
+the cause of human liberty and fraternity, he wrote to Robert R. Livingston
+on August 12, 1782, a letter in which, after stating that the whole amount
+of the indebtedness, then due by the United States to France, amounted to
+eighteen million livres, exclusive of the Holland loan guaranteed by the
+King of France, he said:
+
+ In reading it [a statement of the account] you will
+ discover several fresh marks of the King's goodness
+ towards us, amounting to the value of near two
+ millions. These, added to the free gifts before made to
+ us at different times, form an object of at least
+ twelve millions, for which no returns but that of
+ gratitude and friendship are expected. These, I hope,
+ may be everlasting.
+
+In a subsequent letter to Vergennes, Franklin referred to the King as our
+"Friend and Father." But naturally enough deep-seated gratitude found its
+most impressive utterance when the long and bloody war was at an end, the
+independence of the United States fully established and Franklin ready, as
+he wrote to Robert R. Livingston, to say with old Simeon, "Now lettest thou
+thy servant depart in peace, for mine eyes have seen thy salvation."
+
+ May I beg the favour of you, Sir [he wrote to
+ Vergennes, when he was soon to leave France forever],
+ to express respectfully for me to his Majesty, the deep
+ Sense I have of all the inestimable Benefits his
+ Goodness has conferr'd on my Country; a Sentiment that
+ it will be the Business of the little Remainder of Life
+ now left me, to impress equally on the Minds of all my
+ Countrymen. My sincere Prayers are, that God may shower
+ down his Blessings on the King, the Queen, their
+ children, and all the royal Family to the latest
+ Generations!
+
+It would be irksome to detail all the loans obtained by Franklin from the
+French King, and all the terrifying drafts drawn upon him. Profuse from
+first to last as were the bills, which he was called upon to pay, he
+appears to have met them all, with a few exceptions, whether drawn upon
+Adams, Jay, Laurens or himself. Nor, when an extortioner attempted to
+perpetrate an outrage upon the United States, did he fail to oppose him
+with a wit quite as keen as his and with a spirit far more resolute. Such
+a skinflint seems to have been De Neufville, of Amsterdam, who offered on
+one occasion to borrow money for the United States, provided that their
+representatives hypothecated to his firm, in the name of the whole Congress
+of the Thirteen United States, as security for the loan, all the lands,
+cities, territories and possessions of the said Thirteen States, present or
+prospective. After mercilessly analyzing in a letter to John Adams the
+unconscionable covenants by which this tremendous hypothecation was to be
+accompanied, Franklin ended with these observations:
+
+ By this time, I fancy, your Excellency is satisfy'd,
+ that I was wrong in supposing J. de Neufville as much a
+ Jew as any in Jerusalem (a reference to what he had
+ said in a former letter) since Jacob was not content
+ with any per cents, but took the whole of his Brother
+ Esau's Birthright, & his Posterity did the same by the
+ Cananites, & cut their Throats into the Bargain; which,
+ in my Conscience, I do not think M. J. de Neufville has
+ the least Inclination to do by us,--while he can get
+ anything by our being alive.
+
+The immediate occasion for this letter was the refusal of De Neufville to
+allow the goods which had bred trouble between Franklin and William Jackson
+to be delivered to the agents of the United States until a claim for
+damages that he had preferred against the United States was satisfied. "We
+have, you observe" Franklin had written in an earlier letter to John Adams,
+"our Hands in the Lyon's Mouth; but if Mr. N. is a Lyon, I am a Bear, and I
+think I can hug & gripe him till he lets go our Hands." And he was as good
+as his word, and let De Neufville know that, if he did not deliver the
+goods, the bills drawn by him on Franklin for the price, though accepted,
+would not be paid. A few days later, in another letter to Adams with
+respect to the same matter, Franklin said in regard to a proposal of
+settlement made by De Neufville, "I think that the less we have to do with
+that Shark the better; his jaws are too strong, his teeth too many and his
+appetite immensely voracious." Before the episode was ended, De Neufville
+was only too glad to dispatch his son to Paris to beseech the bear to relax
+his hug.
+
+There was still another reason why the arrival of bills from America should
+be feared by Franklin. They were drawn in three sets each, and there was
+constant danger, as the sets came in at different times, of the same bill
+being paid more than once. In fact, repeated efforts were fraudulently made
+to palm off duplicates and triplicates as firsts upon Franklin. To shut off
+frauds, the minutest inspection of the bills, as they were presented for
+payment, was indispensable, and, for this task, Franklin, Congress having
+wholly ignored his request for a secretary, had no one to help him but
+Temple and the French clerk at fifty louis a year. The task was rendered
+especially laborious by the fact that a host of the bills was drawn by
+Congress in very small amounts for the payment of interest abroad.
+
+Far less tedious, of course, but still burdensome enough, was the labor of
+copying the dispatches that left Franklin's hands. At one time, the
+Atlantic was so alive with British cruisers that a dispatch on its way to
+Congress from France had almost as little chance of escape as a jettisoned
+dog in a shark-infested sea.
+
+ Adams [stated one of the letters in 1777 of our envoys
+ in France], by whom we wrote early this summer, was
+ taken on this coast, having sunk his dispatches. We
+ hear that Hammond shared the same fate on your coast.
+ Johnson, by whom we wrote in September, was taken going
+ out of the channel, and poor Captain Wickes (of the
+ _Reprisal_) who sailed at the same time, and had
+ duplicates, we just now hear foundered near
+ Newfoundland, every man perishing but the cook.
+
+It was a batch of papers tossed into the ocean, and snatched up by a nimble
+British sailor, before they sank, that first apprised the British Ministry
+of the treaty for an alliance hatching between Holland and the United
+States, and led Great Britain to declare war promptly against Holland. With
+such perilous conditions to face, Franklin's dispatches were sometimes
+copied as often as seven times. Besides the copy retained by him, and the
+copy sent to Congress, other copies were later sent to Congress by the next
+ships leaving France for the United States.
+
+Another most onerous function imposed upon Franklin, until the appointment
+of Thomas Barclay, a merchant, as Consul-General to France, was that of
+purchasing supplies for Congress and fitting out ships. Special provision
+for this function should, of course, have been made by Congress, so as to
+leave him free to give his attention to what he termed his political
+duties, but it was not until after he had repeatedly begged Congress to
+relieve him from it that Congress first appointed for that purpose Colonel
+Palfrey, who was lost at sea, on his way over to France, and then Barclay.
+In the meantime, Franklin had suffered infinite annoyance in the
+performance of duties for which he had no time, and insisted that he had no
+knowledge or training. Writing to Jonathan Williams about the dispatch of
+certain goods to America, he said:
+
+ At this Distance from the Ports, and unacquainted as I
+ am with such Affairs, I know not what to advise about
+ getting either that Cloathing or the small Arms and
+ Powder at L'Orient or the Cloth of Mr. Ross transported
+ to America; and yet everybody writes to me for Orders,
+ or Advice, or Opinion, or Approbation, which is like
+ calling upon a blind Man to judge of Colours.
+
+Writing later to Williams about the same matter, when it had assumed a
+still more vexatious aspect, he peremptorily turned down a project laid
+before him by Williams, saying with an ebullition of impatience quite
+unlike the ordinary tenor of his even temper, "I have been too long in hot
+Water, plagu'd almost to Death with the Passions, Vagaries, and ill Humours
+and Madnesses of other People. I must have a little Repose."
+
+Another office performed by Franklin, though no special commission for the
+purpose was ever issued to him by Congress, was that of a Judge in
+Admiralty. A large quantity of blank commissions for privateers having been
+sent to him by Congress shortly after his arrival in France, he delivered
+them to cruisers, fitted out in the ports of France, and manned by
+smugglers, who knew every creek and cove on the English coast which they
+had so often visited by night as well, to use a simile employed by one of
+Franklin's correspondents, as they knew the corners of their beds. The
+alarm and loss created by these privateers was no mean offset to the
+destructive efficiency of the British cruisers. One privateer, the _Black
+Prince_, took in the course of three months more than thirty sail. Such was
+the apprehension excited by the depredations of American privateers that
+the seacoasts of England were kept in a constant state of panic, and the
+premium rate on marine insurance was largely enhanced. As prizes were
+brought into French harbors, the papers seized in them were examined by
+Franklin for the purpose of passing upon their legality and the liability
+of the prizes to sale. It was also under the patronage of Franklin and
+Deane that the _Reprisal_, the first American ship to fire a gun or capture
+a prize in European waters, the _Lexington_, a sloop-of-war, of fourteen
+guns, fitted out by Congress, and commanded by Captain Johnson, the
+_Dolphin_, a cutter of ten guns, purchased by our envoys from M. de
+Chaumont, and the _Surprise_, a cutter, commanded by the doughty Captain
+Gustavus Conyngham, inflicted such injury upon English commerce, including
+the capture of the Lisbon packet by Captain Wickes, that the French
+Ministry was compelled to heed the remonstrances of Lord Stormont, the
+English Minister, so far as to make a deceitful show, in one form or
+another, of vindicating the outraged neutrality of France. But, when the
+flimsiest ruses were allowed by the French Ministry to circumvent its
+interdiction of the abuse of its ports by American ships, with prizes in
+tow, and Captain Conyngham and his crew, after passing a few days in luxury
+in a French prison, found means in some unaccountable manner to escape,
+just as two English men-of-war were coming over to ask that they be
+delivered to them as pirates, there was little fear anywhere along the
+French coast, or in the breasts of our envoys, that any sternly vigorous
+embargo was likely to be laid upon the privateering activities of the
+United States by anything except the naval energy of England itself.
+
+At this time, Franklin was eager to retaliate the destruction and suffering
+wantonly inflicted upon some of the defenceless seacoast towns of America
+by the British. He, therefore, advised Congress to put three frigates into
+the very best fighting trim, and to send them, loaded with tobacco, as if
+they were common merchantmen, to Nantes or Bordeaux, but with instructions,
+when they reached the one or the other port, to make off suddenly for some
+unsuspecting British port, pounce upon the vessels in its harbor, levy
+contributions, burn, plunder and get away before any harm could be done to
+them by a counterstroke.
+
+ The burning or plundering of Liverpool or Glasgow [he
+ said] would do us more essential service than a million
+ of treasure and much blood spent on the continent. It
+ would raise our reputation to the highest pitch, and
+ lessen in the same degree that of the enemy. We are
+ confident it is practicable, and with very little
+ danger.
+
+In a letter to Lafayette, too, Franklin stated that the coasts of England
+and Scotland were extremely open and defenceless, and that there were many
+rich towns in those countries near the sea "which 4 or 5000 Men, landing
+unexpectedly, might easily surprize and destroy, or exact from them a heavy
+Contribution taking a part in ready Money and Hostages for the rest." He
+even calculated in livres the amounts that might be demanded of Bristol,
+Bath, Liverpool, Lancaster and other English towns.
+
+But the most eventful thing that Franklin ever did in relation to American
+activity on the sea was to invite John Paul Jones to take command of a fine
+frigate that the envoys had ordered from Holland, but had been compelled by
+the vigilance of Great Britain to turn over to France, when but partially
+built. While at Brest, Jones received a confidential note from Franklin
+telling him that the King had asked the loan of him to the French navy for
+a while, and wished him to take command of the frigate. "She is at
+present," he said, "the property of the King; but, as there is no war yet
+declared, you will have the commission and flag of the United States, and
+act under their orders and laws." The frigate, however, was far from being
+completed, and the thought of a stranger being placed in command of her was
+highly irritating to French naval officers with a mind to promotion.
+Chafing under the delay and uncertainty, occasioned by these circumstances,
+Jones, whose remarkable literary facility, despite his lack of education,
+is at least one illustration of the truth of Dogberry's saying that reading
+and writing come by nature, wrote impatient appeals to the French Minister,
+Franklin, the members of the Royal Family and the King himself.
+
+While in this humor, his eye happened to fall upon a maxim in one of Poor
+Richard's Almanacs, "If you would have your business done, go; if not,
+send." He heeded the suggestion, proceeded to Versailles and secured an
+order for the purchase of the forty-gun ship, which, in honor of his
+monitor, he called the _Bon Homme Richard_. What she did, old as she was,
+with her heroic commander, and her medley crew of Americans, Irish,
+English, Scotch, French, Portuguese, Maltese and Malay sailors, before she
+relaxed her dying clutch upon the _Serapis_, and sank, immortalized by a
+splendid victory, to the bottom of the ocean, there is no need for the
+biographer of Franklin to tell. It is enough to say that for Franklin Jones
+ever entertained a feeling little short of passionate reverence. "The
+letter which I had the honor to receive from your Excellency to-day ...
+would make a coward brave," was his reply to one of Franklin's wise and
+humane letters of instruction. This letter is evidence enough that Franklin
+was not so incensed by the ruthless conduct at times of the British in
+America as to be lost to the clemency of his own abstract views about the
+proper limits of warfare.
+
+ Altho' [he said] the English have wantonly burnt many
+ defenceless Towns in America, you are not to follow
+ this Example, unless where a Reasonable Ransom is
+ refused; in which Case, your own generous feelings, as
+ well as this Instruction, will induce you to give
+ timely Notice of your Intention, that sick and ancient
+ Persons, Women and Children, may be first removed.
+
+The relief of American prisoners in England was another thing which
+continually taxed the attention of Franklin during the Revolutionary War.
+"I was sick, and in prison, and ye visited me not," was a reproach that no
+one of them could justly address to him. His nature was a truly
+compassionate one, and, in few respects, does it show to greater advantage
+than in his unceasing efforts to secure the exchange of his unhappy
+countrymen, confined at Portsmouth and Plymouth, or, that failing, to
+provide them with all the pecuniary succor in his power, in addition to
+that so generously extended to them by many kind hearts in England.[40] In
+his friend, David Hartley, a man, whose peaceful and humane instincts even
+the vilest passions of war could not efface, he had an agent in a position
+to reach the ear of the English Ministry for the purpose of promoting the
+exchange of prisoners. For different reasons, the task was a painfully slow
+one. In the beginning, all American prisoners were committed to prison upon
+the charge of high treason, a charge entirely inconsistent with the idea of
+exchange. Besides, England was reluctant to relinquish the advantage that
+she had, until the treaty of alliance between France and America was
+consummated, in the fact that American ships had nowhere to confine their
+prisoners except under their own hatches. They tried to meet this
+difficulty by releasing English prisoners on parole on their each promising
+that they would secure the release of an American prisoner, but the English
+Admiralty, after some hesitation, finally refused to surrender a single
+American prisoner in exchange for such paroled Englishmen. Commenting upon
+this fact, along with another incident, Franklin wrote to James Lovell,
+"There is no gaining anything upon these Barbarians by Advances of Civility
+or Humanity." At last, however, several cartels were agreed upon, and he
+enjoyed the great happiness of seeing some hundred or so American captives
+brought over to France and released. He was still, however, to incur a
+great disappointment when, owing to the fear on the part of Holland of
+provoking English resentment, the five hundred prisoners, transferred to
+Holland by John Paul Jones, after his engagement with the _Serapis_, had to
+be exchanged for French instead of American prisoners. The French Ministry
+promised to make this disappointment good by advancing to Franklin an equal
+number of English prisoners taken by French ships, but the English
+Ministry promptly met this promise by refusing to exchange American
+prisoners for any English prisoners except such as had been captured by
+American ships. It was also a great disappointment to Franklin that he
+could not induce the English Ministry to give its assent to a formal
+proposition from him that prisoners, taken by either country, should be
+immediately released upon the understanding that an equal number of
+prisoners held by the other should also be released. The high-minded
+conduct of Hartley, inspired in part by the hope that lenient treatment of
+American prisoners might help to re-unite the two countries, was all the
+more admirable, when contrasted with the harsh words, in which Franklin
+sometimes in his letters to him inveighed against the English King,
+Parliament and People. It is inconceivable that even Hartley would not have
+gradually wearied of well-doing, if his perfect knowledge of Franklin's
+benevolent nature had not taught him how to make liberal allowances for his
+friend's occasional gusts of indignation.
+
+This indignation was usually visited upon the English King and Ministry,
+but upon one occasion it was visited upon the English people as well.
+
+ It is now impossible [he wrote to Hartley] to persuade
+ our people, as I long endeavoured, that the war was
+ merely ministerial, and that the nation bore still a
+ good will to us. The infinite number of addresses
+ printed in your gazettes, all approving this conduct of
+ your government towards us, and encouraging our
+ destruction by every possible means, the great majority
+ in Parliament constantly manifesting the same
+ sentiments, and the popular public rejoicings on
+ occasion of any news of the slaughter of an innocent
+ and virtuous people, fighting only in defence of their
+ just rights; these, together with the recommendations
+ of the same measures by even your celebrated moralists
+ and divines, in their writings and sermons, that are
+ cited approved and applauded in your great national
+ assemblies; all join in convincing us, that you are no
+ longer the magnanimous and enlightened nation, we once
+ esteemed you, and that you are unfit and unworthy to
+ govern us, as not being able to govern your own
+ passions.
+
+Indeed, in this letter Franklin even told Hartley that, if the resentment
+of the English people did not speedily fall on their ministry, the future
+inhabitants of America would detest the name of Englishman as much as the
+children in Holland did those of Alva and Spaniard. But, scold as he might
+England and her rulers, he deeply appreciated the magnanimity of the good
+man, who even took pains to see that sums placed in his hands by Franklin
+were duly applied to the relief of the prisoners for whose liberty he
+strove so disinterestedly. Referring in one of his letters to Hartley to
+two little bills of exchange that he had sent to him for this purpose, he
+said, "Permit me to repeat my thankful Acknowledgments for the very humane
+and kind part you have acted in this Affair. If I thought it necessary I
+would pray God to bless you for it. But I know he will do it without my
+Prayers."
+
+Correspondingly stern was the rebuke of Franklin for the heartless knave,
+Thomas Digges, equal even to the theft of an obolus placed upon the closed
+eyelids of a dead man as the price of his ferriage across the Styx--who
+drew upon Franklin in midwinter for four hundred and ninety-five pounds
+sterling for the relief of the American prisoners, and converted all but
+about thirty pounds of the sum to his own personal use. "We have no Name in
+our Language," said Franklin in a letter to William Hodgson, "for such
+atrocious Wickedness. If such a Fellow is not damn'd, it is not worth while
+to keep a Devil."
+
+Besides Hartley, to say nothing of this William Hodgson, a merchant, who
+performed offices for Franklin similar to those of Hartley, there was
+another Englishman whose humanity with regard to American prisoners
+elicited the grateful acknowledgments of Franklin. This was Thomas Wren, a
+Presbyterian minister at Portsmouth, who was untiring in soliciting
+contributions from his Christian brethren in England, and applying the sums
+thus obtained by him, as well as the weekly allowances sent to him by
+Franklin, to the wants of American prisoners in Forton Prison. "I think
+some public Notice," Franklin wrote to Robert R. Livingston, "should be
+taken of this good Man. I wish the Congress would enable me to make him a
+Present, and that some of our Universities would confer upon him the Degree
+of Doctor." The suggestion bore fruit, Congress sent Wren a vote of thanks,
+and the degree of Doctor in Divinity was conferred upon him by Princeton
+College. He, too, did not need the prayers of Franklin to receive the
+blessings reserved for the few rare spirits who can hear the voice of the
+God of Mercy even above the tumult of his battling children.
+
+There were many other engrossing claims of a public or quasi-public nature
+upon Franklin's attention in France. In the earlier stages of the
+Revolutionary War, he was fairly besieged by foreign officers eager to
+share in its peril and glory. Several of those recommended by him to
+Congress--such as Steuben--gave a good account of themselves in America,
+but the number of those, who had no special title to his recommendation,
+was so great, that his ingenuity and sense of humor were severely strained
+to evade them or laugh them off.
+
+ You can have no Conception [he wrote to a friend] how I
+ am harass'd. All my Friends are sought out and teiz'd
+ to teize me. Great officers of all Ranks, in all
+ Departments; Ladies, great and small, besides professed
+ Sollicitors, worry me from Morning to Night. The Noise
+ of every Coach now that enters my Court terrifies me. I
+ am afraid to accept an Invitation to dine abroad, being
+ almost sure of meeting with some Officer or Officer's
+ Friend, who, as soon as I am put in a good Humour by a
+ Glass or two of Champaign, begins his Attack upon me.
+ Luckily I do not often in my sleep dream myself in
+ these vexatious Situations, or I should be afraid of
+ what are now my only Hours of Comfort. If, therefore,
+ you have the least remaining Kindness for me, if you
+ would not help to drive me out of France, for God's
+ sake, my dear friend, let this your 23rd Application be
+ your last.
+
+The friend to whom this letter was written was a Frenchman, and the lecture
+that Franklin read to him in it on the easy-going habits of his countrymen
+in giving recommendations is also worthy of quotation:
+
+ Permit me to mention to you [he said] that, in my
+ Opinion, the natural complaisance of this country often
+ carries People too far in the Article of
+ _Recommendations_. You give them with too much Facility
+ to Persons of whose real Characters you know nothing,
+ and sometimes at the request of others of whom you know
+ as little. Frequently, if a man has no useful Talents,
+ is good for nothing and burdensome to his Relations, or
+ is indiscreet, Profligate, and extravagant, they are
+ glad to get rid of him by sending him to the other end
+ of the World; and for that purpose scruple not to
+ recommend him to those that they wish should recommend
+ him to others, as "_un bon sujet, plein de merite_,"
+ &c. &c. In consequence of my crediting such
+ Recommendations, my own are out of Credit, and I can
+ not advise anybody to have the least Dependence on
+ them. If, after knowing this, you persist in desiring
+ my Recommendation for this Person, who is known neither
+ to _me_ nor to _you_, I will give it, tho', as I said
+ before, I ought to refuse it.
+
+The subject was one that repeatedly awakened his humorous instincts.
+
+ You can have no conception of the Arts and Interest
+ made use of to recommend and engage us to recommend
+ very indifferent persons [he wrote to James Lovell].
+ The importunity is boundless. The Numbers we refuse
+ incredible: which if you knew you would applaud us for,
+ and on that Account excuse the few we have been
+ prevail'd on to introduce to you. But, as somebody
+ says,
+
+ "Poets lose half the Praise they would have got,
+ Were it but known what they discreetly blot."
+
+The extent to which Silas Deane yielded to the solicitations of eager
+candidates abroad for military honor was one of the things that helped to
+destroy his standing with Congress. A second letter was written by Franklin
+to Lovell in which he had a word of extenuation for Deane's weakness in
+this respect.
+
+ I, who am upon the spot [he said] and know the infinite
+ Difficulty of resisting the powerful Solicitations here
+ of great Men, who if disoblig'd might have it in their
+ Power to obstruct the Supplies he was then obtaining,
+ do not wonder, that, being a Stranger to the People,
+ and unacquainted with the Language, he was at first
+ prevail'd on to make some such Agreements, when all
+ were recommended, as they always are, as _officiers
+ experimentes_, _braves comme leurs epees_, _pleins de
+ Courage, de Talents, et de Zele pour notre Cause_, &c.
+ &c. in short, mere Cesars, each of whom would have been
+ an invaluable Acquisition to America.
+
+Franklin even had the temerity to draft this _jeu d'esprit_ to suit the
+character of the more extreme class of applications made to him for
+military employment, and it was actually used at times according to William
+Temple Franklin.
+
+ The bearer of this, who is going to America, presses me
+ to give him a Letter of Recommendation, tho' I know
+ nothing of him, not even his Name. This may seem
+ extraordinary, but I assure you it is not uncommon
+ here. Sometimes, indeed one unknown Person brings
+ another equally unknown, to recommend him; and
+ sometimes they recommend one another! As to this
+ Gentleman, I must refer you to himself for his
+ Character and Merits, with which he is certainly better
+ acquainted than I can possibly be. I recommend him
+ however to those Civilities, which every Stranger, of
+ whom one knows no Harm, has a Right to; and I request
+ you will do him all the good Offices, and show him all
+ the Favour that, on further Acquaintance, you shall
+ find him to deserve.
+
+An ill-balanced man might have fretted himself into an angry outbreak or a
+state of physical decline under the exasperation of such importunities, but
+none of the petty annoyances of Franklin's position were too rough to
+withstand the smoothing effect of his unctuous humor. It was like the oil
+that he was in the habit of carrying around with him in the hollow joint of
+a bamboo cane during the period of his life when he was testing the
+tranquillizing effect of oil upon ruffled water.
+
+At times, however, the unreasonableness of some of the applicants was too
+much even for Rabelais in his easy chair.
+
+ First [he wrote to a M. Lith], you desired to have
+ Means procur'd for you of taking a Voyage to America
+ "_avec surete_"; which is not possible, as the Dangers
+ of the Sea subsist always, and at present there is the
+ additional Danger of being taken by the English. Then
+ you desire that this may be _sans trop grandes
+ Depenses_, which is not intelligible enough to be
+ answer'd, because, not knowing your Ability of bearing
+ expences, one can not judge what may be _trop grandes_.
+ Lastly, you desire Letters of Address to the Congress
+ and to General Washington; which it is not reasonable
+ to ask of one who knows no more of you, than that your
+ name is Lith, and that you live at Bayreuth.
+
+Another applicant, who thirsted for military renown, was one, Louis
+Givanetti Pellion, "ci-devant Garde du Corps de S. M. le Roi de Sardaigne,
+aujourd'hui Controlleur de la Cour de S. Mo susdite." "I know how," this
+gentleman wrote, "to accommodate myself to all climates, manners,
+circumstances, and times. I am passionately fond of travel, I love to see
+the great world, its armies and navies. Neither cards, nor wine nor women
+have any influence over me; but a ship, an army, long voyages, all these
+are Paradise to me."
+
+It was also Franklin's lot to receive many letters of inquiry about the New
+World from individuals in Europe, who were thinking of migrating to America
+for peaceable purposes. What of its climate, its trade, its people, its
+laws? These were some of the questions relating to the New Eldorado which
+these individuals wished answered. To all who questioned him about the
+opportunities held out by America, when he did not simply refer the
+questioners to Crevecoeur's "Letters from an American Farmer," his
+answers were substantially the same. The emigrants to America would find a
+good climate, good air, good soil, good government, good laws and liberty
+there, but no Lotus Land. One Reuben Harvey wrote to him from Cork that
+about one hundred poor Irish tradesmen and husbandmen desired to settle in
+America. Franklin replied sententiously, "They will go to a Country where
+People do not Export their Beef and Linnen to import Claret, while the Poor
+at home live on Potatoes and wear Rags. Indeed America has not Beef and
+Linnen sufficient for Exportation because every man there, even the
+poorest, eats Beef and wears a Shirt."
+
+Numerous letters came to him from authors inviting his literary criticism,
+or asking him to accord to them the honor of permitting them to dedicate
+their works to him. Allamand, the Warden of the forests and waters of the
+Island of Corsica, wished to know from him what canals there were in
+America. None, he replied, unless a short water-way, cut, it was said, in a
+single night across a loop formed by a long bend in Duck Creek, in the
+State of Delaware, could be called such. Projectors of all kinds solicited
+his views about their several projects, sane or crack-brained. Sheer
+beggars, as we have already seen, were likewise among his correspondents.
+One, La Baronne de Randerath, tells him that she has been advised by the
+doctors to take her husband to Aix, and, as her justification for
+requesting a loan from Franklin for the purpose, she mentions that her
+husband and Franklin are both Masons, though members of different lodges.
+Another letter requests him to exercise his influence with the Minister of
+Marine in behalf of the writer, a sea captain, who wishes to be discharged
+from the King's service. Dartmouth College, Brown University, Princeton
+College and Dickinson College all appealed to him for his aid in their
+efforts to secure money or other gifts abroad. In a word, he was not only
+world-famous but paid fully all the minor as well as major penalties of
+world-fame.
+
+How curdled by the animosities of the Revolutionary War was the milk of
+human kindness even in such an amiable breast as that of Franklin, we have
+already had reason enough to know. His nature yielded slowly to the intense
+feelings, aroused by the long conflict between Great Britain and her
+Colonies, but it was equally slow to part with them when once inflamed. The
+most notable thing about his attitude towards Great Britain, after the
+first effusion of American blood at Lexington, was the inexorable firmness
+with which he repelled all advances upon the part of England that fell
+short of the recognition of American Independence. When the English
+Ministry fully realized that Great Britain was not waging war against a few
+rebellious malcontents but against a whole people in arms, overture after
+overture was informally made to Franklin by one English emissary or
+another, in the effort to dissolve the alliance between France and the
+United States, and to restore, as far as possible, the old connection
+between Great Britain and America. Among the first of these emissaries was
+Franklin's good friend, James Hutton. Franklin received him with the most
+affectionate kindness, but a letter, which he wrote to Hutton, after Hutton
+had returned to England, showed how entirely fruitless the journey of the
+latter had been. A peace, Franklin said, England might undoubtedly obtain
+by dropping all her pretensions to govern America, but, if she did not,
+with the peace, recover the affections of the American people, it would be
+neither a lasting nor a profitable one. To recover the respect and
+affection of America, England must tread back the steps that she had taken
+and disgrace the American advisers and promoters of the war, with all those
+who had inflamed the nation against America by their malicious writings;
+and all the ministers and generals who had prosecuted the war with such
+inhumanity. A little generosity, in the way of territorial concessions
+added to the counsels of necessity, would have a happy effect. For
+instance, Franklin said, if England would have a real friendly as well as
+able ally in America, and avoid all occasions of future discord, which
+would otherwise be continually arising along its American frontiers, it
+might throw in Canada, Nova Scotia and the Floridas.
+
+Hutton was succeeded by William Pulteney, a member of Parliament. All of
+his propositions were predicated upon the continued dependence of America.
+Every proposition, Franklin let him know, which implied the voluntary
+return of America to dependence on Great Britain was out of the question.
+The proper course for Great Britain, in his judgment, was to acknowledge
+the independence of the United States, and to enter into such a treaty of
+peace, friendship and commerce with them as France itself had formed. The
+concluding words of Franklin's letter were hardly necessary to convince
+Pulteney of the hopelessness of his task. "May God at last," they ran,
+"grant that Wisdom to your national Councils, which he seems long to have
+deny'd them, and which only sincere, just, and humane Intentions can merit
+or expect." Ten days before this letter was written, the American envoys
+had been presented to the French King. Then followed David Hartley and Mr.
+George Hammond, the father of the George Hammond, who, many years
+afterwards, became Minister Plenipotentiary from England to the United
+States. When they arrived at Paris, it was only to find that the treaty of
+alliance between France and the United States had already been signed, and
+to learn soon afterwards that one of its clauses obliged the United States
+to make common cause with France, in case England declared war against her.
+How authentic were the credentials of the next emissary it is impossible to
+say, but Franklin was entirely confident that he came over to France under
+the direct patronage of George III. The circumstances were these. One
+morning, a lengthy letter was thrown into a window of Franklin's residence
+at Passy, written in English, dated at Brussels, and signed Charles de
+Weissenstein. The letter conjured Franklin in the name of the Just and
+Omniscient God, before whom all must soon appear, and by his hopes of
+future fame, to consider if some expedient could not be devised for ending
+the desolation of America and preventing the war imminent in Europe. It
+then declared that France would certainly at last betray America, and
+suggested a plan for the union of England and America. Under the plan,
+among other things, judges of the American courts were to be named by the
+King, and to hold their offices for life, and were to bear titles either as
+peers of America, or otherwise, as should be decided by his Majesty; there
+were to be septennial sessions of Congress, or more frequent ones, if his
+Majesty should think fit to call Congress together oftener, but all its
+proceedings were to be transmitted to the British Parliament, without whose
+consent no money was ever to be granted by Congress, or any separate State
+of America to the Crown; the chief offices of the American civil list were
+to be named in the plan, and the compensation attached to them was to be
+paid by America; the naval and military forces of the Union were to be
+under the direction of his Majesty, but the British Parliament was to fix
+their extent, and vote the sums necessary for their maintenance. It was
+also proposed by the letter that, to protect Franklin, Washington, Adams,
+Hancock and other leaders of the American Revolution from the personal
+enmity in England, by which their talents might otherwise be kept down,
+they were to have offices or pensions for life at their option. The promise
+was also made that, in case his Majesty, or his successors, should ever
+create American peers, then those persons, or their descendants, were to be
+among the first peers created, if they desired. Moreover, _Mr._ Washington
+was to have immediately a brevet of lieutenant-general, and all the honors
+and precedence incident thereto, but was not to assume or bear any command
+without a special warrant, or letter of service for that purpose, from the
+King.
+
+The writer further asked for a personal interview with Franklin for the
+purpose of discussing the details of the project, or, he stated, if that
+was not practicable, he would be in a certain part of the Cathedral of
+Notre Dame on a certain day at noon precisely, with a rose in his hat, to
+receive a written answer from Franklin which he would transmit directly to
+the King himself. Franklin laid the letter before his colleagues, and it
+was agreed that it should be answered by him, and that both it and the
+answer should be laid before Vergennes, and that the answer should be sent
+or kept back as Vergennes believed best. The French Minister decided that
+it had best not be sent. At the hour fixed for the interview, however, an
+agent of the French police was on hand, and he reported that a gentleman,
+whose name he afterwards ascertained to be an Irish one by tracking him to
+his hotel, did appear at the appointed time, and, finding no one to meet
+him, wandered about the Cathedral, looking at the altars and pictures, but
+never losing sight of the place suggested for the tryst, and often
+returning to it, and gazing anxiously about him as if he expected some one.
+The scornful tone of the letter, drafted by Franklin, which is not unlike
+one of the scolding speeches, with which the Homeric heroes expressed their
+opinions of each other, leaves little room for doubt that he truly believed
+himself to be assailing no less a person than the bigoted King himself.
+After some savage thrusts, which remind us of those aimed by Hamlet at
+Polonius behind the arras, he bursts out into these exclamatory words:
+
+ This proposition of delivering ourselves, bound and
+ gagged, ready for hanging, without even a right to
+ complain, and without a friend to be found afterwards
+ among all mankind you would have us embrace upon the
+ faith of an act of Parliament! Good God! An act of your
+ Parliament! This demonstrates that you do not yet know
+ us, and that you fancy we do not know you; but it is
+ not merely this flimsy faith, that we are to act upon;
+ you offer us _hope_, the hope of PLACES, PENSIONS, and
+ PEERAGES. These, judging from yourselves, you think are
+ motives irresistible. This offer to corrupt us, Sir, is
+ with me your credential, and convinces me that you are
+ not a private volunteer in your application. It bears
+ the stamp of British court character. It is even the
+ signature of your King.
+
+The next bearer of the olive branch, who came over to Paris, came under
+very different auspices. This was William Jones, afterwards Sir William
+Jones, who was at the time affianced to Anna Maria Shipley. He did not come
+as the representative of the King or his Ministers, but as the
+representative of the generous and patriotic Englishmen, who had cherished
+the same dream of world-wide British unity as Franklin himself, and whose
+sacrifices in behalf of their fellow-Englishmen in America should be
+almost as gratefully remembered by us as the Continental soldiers who
+perished at Monmouth or Camden. Draping his thoughts with academic terms,
+he submitted a paper to Dr. Franklin entitled _A Fragment from Polybius_ in
+which England, France, the United States and Franklin are given names
+borrowed from antiquity, and various suggestions are made for the
+settlement of the existing controversy between Great Britain and America.
+England becomes Athens, France, Caria, America, the Islands, and Franklin,
+Eleutherion; and Jones himself is masked as an Athenian lawyer.
+
+ This I _know_ [observes the latter-day Athenian] and
+ positively pronounce, that, while Athens is Athens, her
+ proud but brave citizens will never _expressly_
+ recognize the independence of the Islands; their
+ resources are, no doubt, exhaustible, but will not be
+ exhausted in the lives of us and of our children. In
+ this resolution all parties agree.
+
+There should be, the writer suggested, "a perfect coordination between
+Athens and the Thirteen United Islands, they considering her not as a
+parent, whom they must obey, but as an elder sister, whom they can not help
+loving, and to whom they shall give pre-eminence of honor and co-equality
+of power." Other suggestions were that the new constitutions of the Islands
+should remain intact, but that, on every occasion, requiring acts for the
+general good, there should be an assembly of deputies from the Senate of
+Athens, and the Congress of the Islands, who should fairly adjust the whole
+business, and settle the ratio of the contributions on both sides; that
+this committee should consist of fifty Islanders and fifty Athenians, or of
+a smaller number chosen by them, and that, if it was thought necessary, and
+found convenient, a proportionate number of Athenian citizens should have
+seats, and the power of debating and voting on questions of common concern
+in the great assembly of the Islands, and a proportionable number of
+Islanders should sit with the like power in the Assembly at Athens. The
+whole reminds the reader of the classical fictions to which the first
+Parliamentary reporters were driven by press censorship. The paper, drafted
+by Jones, was little more than a mere literary exercise, prompted by
+ingenuous enthusiasm, but we may be sure that it kindled in Franklin very
+different feelings from those aroused in him by the insidious appeal of
+Charles de Weissenstein.
+
+The shortcomings, which Franklin is supposed by his enemies to have
+exhibited in France with respect to the duties of his post, require but
+little attention. Apart from a lack of clerical neatness and system, such
+as might more justly be imputed as a serious reproach to a book-keeper or
+clerk, they rest upon evidence easily perverted by enmity or jealousy.[41]
+Adams had no little to say about Franklin's love of ease and tranquillity,
+the social and academic distractions, to which he was subject, and the
+extent to which his time was consumed by curious visitors. It is a
+sufficient answer to all such disparagement to declare that he successfully
+dispatched an enormous amount of public business with but very little aid,
+and unflinchingly bore a load of responsibility only less weighty than that
+of Washington; that no spy, such as obtained secret access to the papers of
+Silas Deane and Arthur Lee for the purposes of the British Government, ever
+abstracted any valuable information from his papers; and that his position
+in the polite and learned world, and the popular curiosity, excited by his
+fame, were among the things which tended most effectually to recommend him
+to the favor of the French People and Ministry. The effort was also made by
+John Adams to create the impression that Franklin was unduly subservient to
+the influence of France, and that, but for the superior firmness of John
+Jay and himself, the United States would not have concluded a peace with
+England on terms anything like so favorable as those actually obtained from
+her.
+
+In what respects Franklin can be truly said to have been servile to French
+influence, it is impossible to see. If by this is meant that he did not
+share the prejudices of Adams and Jay against the French people, did not
+harbor their keen distrust of the motives of the French ministry and did
+not feel as free as they to ignore the proprieties, arising out of the
+profound obligations of America to France, the reflection is just enough.
+Neither Adams nor Jay ever succeeded in making himself sufficiently
+acceptable to the French people or ministry, or obtained sufficient
+benefits from them for his countrymen, to feel any sense of personal
+indebtedness to them, or to be inclined to show any unusual degree of
+consideration to them. This was true of Jay, if for no other reason,
+because his intercourse with them was but limited in point of time.
+Franklin, on the other hand, was the idol of the French people, and
+received from Vergennes as decisive proofs of confidence as one individual
+can confer upon another. No one could have been in a better position than
+he was to know that the French alliance was hardly more the fruit of
+selfish policy upon the part of the French ministry, or of a desire upon
+its part to avenge historic injuries, than of the generous sensibility of
+the French people to the liberal and democratic impulses, which were
+hurrying them on to the fiercest outbreak of uncalculating enthusiasm that
+the world has ever seen. He had never entered the cabinet of the French
+Minister to sue for pecuniary aid without coming away with a fresh cordial
+for the drooping energies of his people. That upright and able minister, he
+wrote to Samuel Huntington, on one occasion, had never promised him
+anything which he did not punctually perform.[42] No matter how dark were
+the thick clouds that enveloped the fate of his country, no matter how
+acute was the pecuniary distress of France herself, there was always
+another million at the bottom of the stocking of the French tax-payer for
+the land of freedom and opportunity. Franklin had even known what it was to
+beg for a loan from the French King and to receive it as a gracious gift.
+He would have been fashioned of ignoble materials, indeed, if he had been
+too quick, in seeking the selfish advantage of his country, to forget the
+extraordinary magnanimity of her ally, and to suspect a disposition upon
+her part to deprive the United States of the just rewards of the triumph,
+which they might never have achieved but for her. And he, at any rate, with
+his strong sense of justice, was not likely to commit himself with
+unhesitating alacrity to a coldblooded scramble for concessions from
+England to America which took no account of the fact that France not only
+had the interests of America, but also her own necessities to consult, and
+that it was as essential to her interests that America should not make
+peace with England before she did, as it was to the interests of America
+that France should not make peace with England before America did. In the
+Treaty of Alliance, France had assumed no obligation to the United States
+except that of continuing to wage war against England until their
+independence was acknowledged, and of not concluding any peace with England
+that did not include them. She had never bound herself to secure to America
+the right of fishery on the Newfoundland Banks, or to oppose every
+restriction upon the extension of her western boundaries. In the course of
+the war, there was a time when the situation of America was so desperate
+that Vergennes was, with perfect fidelity to the American cause, brought to
+the conclusion that the Thirteen States might well afford to surrender a
+part of their territory to England as the price of independence; and this
+was a conclusion to which any honest American mind might have been brought
+under the circumstances. And, even after this crisis had passed, and
+negotiations for peace were pending between Great Britain and the Allies,
+it is not surprising that he should not have foreseen that he would ever
+have occasion to say, as he did after England and America came to terms,
+that England had bought rather than made a peace, but should have thought
+that England might still hold out stubbornly enough to cause even America
+to feel that she could be reasonably expected by France to forego more than
+one minor expectation to make certain of her independence. There was also
+the fact, which could hardly escape the attention of a man so deferential
+to the authority of his principals as Franklin always was, that Congress
+had positively instructed its Commissioners to make the most candid and
+confidential communications upon all subjects to the minister of its
+generous ally, the King of France, to undertake nothing in the negotiations
+for peace or a truce without the knowledge and concurrence of the Minister
+and King, and ultimately to govern themselves by their advice and opinion.
+
+And there was also the fact that Franklin had always had such marked
+success in influencing the conclusions of Vergennes, that he might well
+have confided in his ability to bring the French minister over to any
+reasonable views that he might form about the results that America had the
+right to expect from the Peace; particularly as Vergennes had long been
+possessed with a haunting fear that America might be detached from her
+alliance with France.
+
+In the light of all these circumstances, it is not strange that Franklin
+should have been reluctant, in the first instance, to unite with Adams and
+Jay in signing the preliminary treaty of peace with England without
+previously consulting with Vergennes; for that is the only tangible
+foundation for the claim that he was too submissive to the selfish designs
+of France; and there is no substantial evidence that any real point was
+gained by America by the act, or that it awakened any feeling in Vergennes
+profounder than the passing disappointment, born of realized distrust and
+affronted pride, which led him to write to M. de la Luzerne, the French
+Minister to the United States, immediately after it as follows:
+
+ I think it proper that the most influential members of
+ Congress should be informed of the very irregular
+ conduct of their Commissioners in regard to us. You may
+ speak of it not in the tone of complaint. I accuse no
+ person; I blame no one, not even Dr. Franklin. He has
+ yielded too easily to the bias of his colleagues, who
+ do not pretend to recognize the rules of courtesy in
+ regard to us. All their attentions have been taken up
+ by the English whom they have met in Paris. If we may
+ judge of the future from what has passed here under our
+ eyes, we shall be but poorly paid for all that we have
+ done for the United States, and for securing to them a
+ national existence.
+
+When we recollect how faithfully France had rejected every effort upon the
+part of England to treat for peace with her separately, and insisted that
+the treaty of peace between England and France, on the one hand, and the
+treaty of peace between England and the United States, on the other, should
+go hand in hand, how entirely Vergennes had refrained from inquiring into
+the course of the pending negotiations between England and our
+commissioners, which resulted in the signing of the preliminary treaty of
+peace between England and the United States; and how singularly limited was
+the measure of concession that France asked for herself from England, these
+words cannot be read by any true American without a highly painful
+impression.
+
+When Franklin appealed, after the peace, to both Adams and Jay to deny the
+statement, current in America, that he had not stood up stoutly for
+American rights, when the peace was being concluded, Jay complied with
+unreserved emphasis, and Adams with a reluctant note which rendered his
+testimony but the stronger. The truth is that, if Franklin's conduct during
+the peace negotiations was not admirable in every respect, it was only
+because he found that he could not decline to unite with his colleagues in
+violating the instruction of Congress without breaking with them and
+hazarding discord that might be fatal to the interests of his country. He
+did not, of course, believe that France, after the enormous sacrifices that
+she had made for American independence, was engaged in a treacherous effort
+to shackle the growth of the United States. He could not readily have
+entertained such a totally ungrounded suspicion as that which led Jay, when
+he learnt that De Rayneval was going over to London to have an interview
+with Shelburne, to leap to the conclusion that it was for the purpose of
+confounding American aspirations, and to inform Shelburne that now was the
+time for England to outbid France for the favor of America by executing at
+once preliminary articles of peace, conceding to America the points about
+which she was most concerned. The overture was a bold one, but if it had
+not been accepted in the manner that it was, and had been communicated by
+Shelburne to Vergennes, it might have been attended by consequences
+inimical to the Alliance which even the personal influence of Franklin
+might not have been able to prevent. Franklin was too prudent to risk
+rashly the support of an ally, from which the United States still found it
+necessary to borrow money, even after their independence was acknowledged,
+and too grateful to risk lightly the friendship of an ally which had not
+only aided the United States with soldiers, ships and money to secure their
+independence, but had repeatedly declined to treat with England except on
+the basis of American independence. His inclination naturally and properly
+enough was to maintain with Vergennes until the last the frank and intimate
+relations that he had always maintained with him; to avoid everything that
+might have the least savor of faithlessness or sharp practice in the
+opinion of our ally, and to rely upon our growing importance and the
+ordinary appeals of argument and persuasion for a peace at once fair and
+just to both the United States and France. But never once from the time
+that he wrote to Lord Shelburne the brief letter, that initiated the
+negotiations for peace between England and the United States, until the day
+that he threw himself, after the consummation of peace, into the arms of
+the Duc de la Rochefoucauld, saying, "My friend! Could I have hoped at my
+age to enjoy such a happiness," was he animated by any purpose except that
+of securing for his countrymen the most generous terms that he could. It is
+by no means improbable that, if he had been our sole negotiator, he would
+not only have obtained for us all that was secured by his
+Fellow-Commissioners and himself but Canada besides, and would, moreover,
+have saved the United States the reproach that justly attached to them
+because of the precipitate signature of the preliminary articles of peace.
+As we have already seen, the acquisition of Canada by the United States
+was something that he had definitely in mind even before the negotiations
+for peace began, and, when they did begin, this was one of the things that
+he specified in a memorandum that he gave to Oswald, the British envoy, as
+concessions that it was advisable for England to make, and we also know
+from the correspondence of Oswald that it was a topic to which his
+conversation frequently turned. With such address did he ply Oswald upon
+this point that the latter went so far as to say that it might be conceded.
+To compass it, he was even willing to agree that the Loyalists should be
+compensated by the United States for their losses; which was the point upon
+which the English Ministry was most earnestly bent, and the one which
+aroused in him feelings of the deepest antagonism. What a trifling
+recompense the compensation of the Loyalists would have been for such an
+addition to our national domain as Canada we hardly need say; nor need we
+dilate upon the far-sighted statesmanship which so surely foresaw what
+futurity held in store for a country which, as late as 1760, had been
+gravely proposed to be exchanged with France for the Island of Guadeloupe.
+It is to be regretted by the United States, if the present happy lot of
+Canada is to be the subject of regret at all, that the desire of Franklin
+to secure Canada for them was not more urgently seconded by Adams and Jay.
+The former was enthusiastically resolved, as was but proper, to secure for
+New England the right to fish on the Newfoundland Banks, and the latter was
+especially eager, as any statesman with the slightest glow of imagination
+might well have been, to remove every obstacle in our pathway westward.
+Neither appears to have been zealously alive to the considerations, which
+led Franklin to cast a covetous eye upon Canada, and to make it one of the
+primary objects of his efforts to promote the interests of America during
+the peace negotiations. On the other hand, Franklin was not less impressed
+than they were with the importance of our North Eastern Fisheries and our
+Western Destiny; and was quite as stiff as they in maintaining our rights
+with respect to them. Moreover, when the insistence of the English Ministry
+upon compensation for the Loyalists threatened to be the only rock, upon
+which the negotiations were likely to split, it was his suggestiveness
+which relieved the situation by proposing, as an offset to the losses of
+the Loyalists, the payment by England of the pecuniary losses wantonly
+inflicted by her upon the inhabitants of such towns as Fairfield and
+Norfolk on our Atlantic seaboard. After this timely counter-claim, a
+compromise was soon reached, under which it was agreed that the Loyalists
+should be referred to the justice of the individual States with a favorable
+recommendation from the Commissioners. This was but a diplomatic way of
+disposing of the proposition adversely without seeming to do so, for
+Shelburne as well as the American Commissioners must have realized that the
+recommendation was the only form of indemnity that the Loyalists were
+likely to obtain.
+
+Friendly as Franklin was to the French Court, it was only where some treaty
+stipulation was involved, or some definite rule of courtesy was to be
+observed, that he recognized the right of France to influence the course of
+the negotiations between England and the American Commissioners. He knew as
+well as Adams and Jay that French policy, partly because of considerations,
+peculiar to France herself, and partly because of obligations, that France
+owed to Spain, differed in some very material respects from American
+policy. But he entertained the belief, and justly entertained the belief,
+that this was no reason why Vergennes should necessarily be moved by the
+settled, perfidious purpose of arresting an agreement between England and
+America until the negotiations between England and France and Spain had
+gone too far for the United States to be any longer in the position to
+insist effectively upon their fishery and boundary claims. The disposition
+of the French Minister to contemplate contingencies, in which concessions
+would have to be made by America, was in Franklin's judgment "due to the
+moderation of the minister and to his desire of removing every obstacle to
+speedy negotiations for peace"; and there is no real reason to believe that
+he was not right. It is quite true that Marbois, when he was the French
+Secretary of Legation in the United States, in his famous letter to
+Vergennes, which the English were at pains to bring to the notice of John
+Jay, suggested to Vergennes that he should let the Americans know that
+their pretensions to the Newfoundland fisheries were not well founded, and
+that the French King did not mean to support them; but, as Vergennes wrote
+to M. de la Luzerne, the successor of Gerard, the opinion of Marbois was
+not necessarily that of the King, and, moreover the views of his letter had
+not been followed. When Franklin made his suggestion to Oswald in respect
+to Canada, he did not bring it to the knowledge of Vergennes. In the very
+commencement of the negotiations between England and the United States, he
+let it be known to Grenville, the envoy of Charles James Fox, that, when
+Great Britain acknowledged the independence of America, the treaty, that
+America had made with France for gaining it, ended, and no conventional tie
+remained between America and France but that of the treaty of commerce
+which England, too, might establish between America and herself, if she
+pleased. Indeed, Vergennes himself clearly recognized the right of the
+American Commissioners to make the best terms that they could for
+themselves in the matter of the fisheries, the western boundaries or any
+other object of American policy.
+
+ We are [he wrote Luzerne on April 9, 1782], and shall
+ always be, disposed to consent that the American
+ plenipotentiaries in Europe should treat according to
+ their instructions directly and without our
+ intervention with those of the Court of London, while
+ we on our side shall treat in the same way, provided
+ that the two negotiations continue at the same rate,
+ and that the two treaties shall be signed the same day,
+ and shall not be good the one without the other.
+
+The hesitation of Franklin about executing the preliminary articles of
+peace between England and the United States was not due to any doubt as to
+the technical right of the American Commissioners to sign it, aside from
+the instruction of Congress that they were not to take any important step
+without the advice of the French Ministry. He hesitated to sign it because
+he was subject to this instruction, and also because he felt that for the
+Commissioners to sign such a treaty, without taking Vergennes into their
+confidence, was hardly compatible with the scrupulous deference due to such
+a timely, generous and powerful ally as France had proved herself to be and
+might be again. His reason for disregarding the instruction of Congress,
+and uniting with his colleagues in signing the articles doubtless was that
+he deemed it unwise, in any view of the case, not to subordinate his own
+judgment, after full discussion, to that of the majority of the Commission
+in a case where, if the French Minister were acting in bad faith, it was
+but proper that his bad faith should be anticipated, and where, if he were
+acting in good faith, his resentment was not likely to be more serious than
+that which is usually visited upon a mere breach of diplomatic decorum. The
+execution of the articles was expressly made subject to the proviso that
+they were to have no force, if England did not reach an understanding with
+France also. Without such a proviso, the action of our Commissioners, of
+course, would have merited the contempt of the world. With it, Franklin was
+left free to say, disingenuously it must be confessed, to Vergennes that,
+in signing the articles, the Commissioners had at the most been guilty of
+neglecting a point of _bienseance_. No one knew better than he that no such
+soothing pretence could be set up by Adams and Jay, and that, even as
+respected himself, though the extent of his offence consisted, as Vergennes
+truly divined, in yielding to the bias of his colleagues, he had been drawn
+into a position in which it was impossible for him to separate himself
+wholly from either the motives or the moral responsibilities of his
+colleagues. In transmitting with them to Congress a copy of the articles,
+he united with them in this statement:
+
+ As we had reason to imagine that the Articles
+ respecting the boundaries, the refugees and fisheries,
+ did not correspond with the policy of this court, we
+ did not communicate the preliminaries to the Minister
+ until after they were signed, and not even then the
+ separate Article. We hope that these considerations
+ will excuse our having so far deviated from the spirit
+ of our instructions. The Count de Vergennes, on
+ perusing the Articles, appeared surprised, but not
+ displeased, at their being so favorable to us.
+
+The separate article was one fixing the northern boundary of West Florida,
+in case Great Britain, at the conclusion of the war, should recover, or be
+put in possession of, that Province. In reply to a letter from Robert R.
+Livingston, disapproving the manner, in which the articles had been signed,
+Franklin said that they had done what appeared to all of them best at the
+time, and, if they had done wrong, the Congress would do right, after
+hearing them, to censure them. The nomination by Congress of five persons
+to the service, he further said, seemed to mark that they had some
+dependence on their joint judgment, since one alone could have made a
+treaty by direction of the French Ministry, as well as twenty. But there
+can be no doubt that the individual views of Franklin about the aims of the
+French Court, in relation to the United States, are to be found not in the
+letter of the Commissioners to Congress, but in his own words in this same
+reply to Livingston:
+
+ I will only add [he said] that, with respect to myself,
+ neither the Letter from M. de Marbois, handed us thro'
+ the British Negociators (a suspicious Channel) nor the
+ Conversations respecting the Fishery, the Boundaries,
+ the Royalists, &c., recommending Moderation in our
+ Demands, are of Weight sufficient in my Mind to fix an
+ Opinion, that this Court wish'd to restrain us in
+ obtaining any Degree of Advantage we could prevail on
+ our Enemies to accord; since those Discourses are
+ fairly resolvable, by supposing a very natural
+ Apprehension, that we, relying too much on the Ability
+ of France to continue the War in our favour, and supply
+ us constantly with Money, might insist on more
+ Advantages than the English would be willing to grant,
+ and thereby lose the Opportunity of making Peace, so
+ necessary to all our friends.
+
+It is impossible, however, to believe that Franklin could have taken such a
+step except with grave misgivings as to its effect on the mind of
+Vergennes. This is shown by the reserve which he, as well as his
+fellow-commissioners, maintained towards Vergennes, while the preliminary
+articles were being matured.
+
+ According to the injunctions of Congress [Vergennes
+ wrote to Luzerne], they should have done nothing
+ without our participation. I have pointed out to you,
+ Sir, that the King would not have sought to interest
+ himself in the negotiations, save in so far as his
+ offices might be necessary to his friends. The American
+ Commissioners will not say that I have sought to
+ intervene in their business, still less that I have
+ wearied them by my curiosity. They have kept themselves
+ carefully out of my way.
+
+It must have taxed even the nice judgment of Franklin to calculate
+precisely the degree of resentment that the act of the Commissioners would
+excite. He took the precaution of sending a copy of the articles to
+Vergennes the day after they were signed. His receipt of them was followed
+by an ominous silence. Some days later, Franklin called upon Vergennes, and
+the latter took pains to let him perceive that the signing of the articles
+had little in it which could be agreeable to the King, and Franklin
+advanced such excuses for his colleagues and himself as the case permitted.
+According to Vergennes, the conversation was amicable, but for a time it
+did not efface the impression that his mind had received. A week or so
+later, when Franklin proposed to send the preliminary articles to America
+by a ship, for which an English passport had been provided, and was
+soliciting a loan of twenty millions of francs from France, Vergennes gave
+him a bad quarter of an hour.
+
+ I am at a loss sir [he said] to explain your conduct,
+ and that of your colleagues on this occasion. You have
+ concluded your preliminary articles without any
+ communication between us, although the instructions
+ from Congress prescribe that nothing shall be done
+ without the participation of the King. You are about to
+ hold out a certain hope of peace to America, without
+ even informing yourself on the state of the negotiation
+ on our part. You are wise and discreet, sir; you
+ perfectly understand what is due to propriety; you have
+ all your life performed your duties. I pray you to
+ consider how you propose to fulfill those, which are
+ due to the King! I am not desirous of enlarging these
+ reflections; I commit them to your own integrity. When
+ you shall be pleased to relieve my uncertainty, I will
+ entreat the King to enable me to answer your demands.
+
+The reply of Franklin was almost abject.
+
+ Nothing [he said] has been agreed in the preliminaries
+ contrary to the interests of France; and no peace is to
+ take place between us and England, till you have
+ concluded yours. Your observation is, however,
+ apparently just, that, in not consulting you before
+ they were signed, we have been guilty of neglecting a
+ point of _bienseance_. But, as this was not from want
+ of respect for the King, whom we all love and honour,
+ we hope it will be excused, and that the great work,
+ which has hitherto been so happily conducted, is so
+ nearly brought to perfection, and is so glorious to his
+ reign, will not be ruined by a single indiscretion of
+ ours. And certainly the whole edifice sinks to the
+ ground immediately, if you refuse on that account to
+ give us any further assistance.
+
+Again, unpromising as the conditions were, there was no resisting the voice
+of the seductive mendicant. France did not lend the twenty millions of
+francs to the United States because she did not have that much to lend; but
+she did lend six. If any loss of dignity or self-respect was suffered on
+this occasion it was not by her.
+
+The definitive treaty of peace between Great Britain and the United States
+was signed at Paris on September 3, 1783, and was ratified a few months
+later by both the contracting powers. Several weeks after it was signed,
+Franklin again tendered his resignation to Congress, but it was not
+accepted until March 7, 1785. Three days later, Jefferson, who had been in
+France ever since August, 1784, for the purpose of co-operating with
+Franklin and Adams in the negotiation of commercial treaties with England
+and other European countries, was appointed the American plenipotentiary at
+the Court of Versailles in the place of Franklin.
+
+Shortly after the return of Franklin to Philadelphia, he was elected
+President of the Executive Council of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania,
+and, in 1787, he was elected a member of the convention which adopted the
+Federal Constitution. There was only one man in the United States whose
+claims to the Presidency of the Convention could possibly be deemed
+paramount to his; and that was Washington. The nomination of Washington to
+the position was to have been made by him, but the weather on the day,
+fixed for it, was too bad to permit him at his advanced age, and in his
+infirm condition, to venture abroad. The honor of making the nomination,
+therefore, fell to Robert Morris, another member of the Pennsylvania
+delegation. It was thought becoming and graceful in Pennsylvania, Madison
+tells us, to pass by her own distinguished citizen as President, and to
+take the lead in giving that pre-eminence to the late Commander-in-Chief of
+the American Army, which the country felt to be his due.[43] At the next
+session of the Convention, Franklin was present, and thereafter he attended
+its sessions regularly for five hours each day for more than four months.
+His stone made it impossible for him to stand long upon his feet, and, when
+he participated on any important occasion in the discussions of the body,
+it was his habit to reduce his thoughts to writing, and to have them read
+to the body by one of his colleagues, usually James Wilson. Copies of these
+speeches were made by Madison from the original manuscripts for his reports
+of the debates of the Convention, and, unlike the speeches of the other
+leading members of the Assembly, the speeches of Franklin have consequently
+come down to us in their entirety. Of his general course in the Convention,
+it is enough to say that it was strongly marked by liberalism, faith in the
+popular intelligence and virtue, and the aversion to arbitrary power which
+was always such a prominent feature of his conduct in every relation. He
+had a quick eye to the abuses of authority, and it is probable that, if he
+had been a younger man, when the Convention met, and had lived until the
+clash between the Federalists and the Republicans arose, he would have been
+a Republican. Inane idealism, lack of energy and resolution did not belong
+to his character, but, to say nothing more, what he had seen of the
+workings of monarchical and aristocratic institutions, during the long
+dispute between England and her colonies, was not calculated to prejudice
+him in their favor.[44]
+
+The compensation that should be paid to the Chief Magistrate of the Union
+was the first topic to which he formally addressed himself as a member of
+the Convention. In his opinion, no pecuniary compensation should be paid to
+him. The argument that he pursued in support of his proposition was one
+that he had often made with respect to the Government of Great Britain.
+
+ Sir [he said] there are two Passions which have a
+ powerful Influence in the Affairs of Men. These are
+ _Ambition and Avarice_; the Love of Power and the Love
+ of Money. Separately, each of these has great Force in
+ prompting Men to Action; but when united in View of the
+ same Object, they have in many Minds the most violent
+ Effects. Place before the Eyes of such Men a Post of
+ _Honour_, that shall at the same time be a Place of
+ _Profit_, and they will move Heaven and Earth to obtain
+ it. The vast Number of such Places it is that renders
+ the British Government so tempestuous. The Struggles
+ for them are the true source of all those Factions
+ which are perpetually dividing the Nation, distracting
+ its Councils, hurrying it sometimes into fruitless and
+ mischievous Wars, and often compelling a Submission to
+ dishonorable Terms of Peace.
+
+The argument, of course, fell upon deaf ears. It really presupposes a
+numerous class, at once sufficiently free from pecuniary anxieties to give
+its exclusive attention to public duties, and sufficiently qualified to
+discharge them with the requisite degree of success. Such a class was not
+to be found in America, at any rate, and, even if it was, it would have
+been invidious in the eyes of a democratic community to limit the enjoyment
+of public office to it. The subsequent history of the Republic showed that,
+in the beginning of our national existence, even moderate salaries did not
+suffice to keep some of the ablest men in the United States from declining
+or resigning federal office. The long journeys and the bad roads and
+taverns of that day were probably responsible for this state of things. In
+the first thirty years after the adoption of the Federal Constitution, no
+less than one hundred and ten seats in the United States Senate were
+resigned, and Washington experienced great difficulty in inducing lawyers
+to accept positions even on the Supreme Bench of the United States. It is a
+remarkable fact that, during the first thirty years after the adoption of
+the Federal Constitution, ten persons either declined to serve as associate
+justices of the Supreme Court, or resigned the office. It is a still more
+remarkable fact that both Jay and Ellsworth resigned as Chief Justice after
+brief terms of office. There was, however, undoubtedly an element of
+expediency in the views of Franklin, for it is no uncommon thing in the
+United States to see the supervisory functions of certain offices,
+connected with the educational or eleemosynary systems of the country, more
+efficiently and faithfully exercised, when exercised without pay by men, in
+whom public spirit or philanthropic zeal is highly developed, than they
+would be, if exercised by the very different kind of men who would be
+attracted to them, if salaried.
+
+In connection with another question, the extent to which the superior
+wealth and population of the larger states were to be represented in
+Congress, it was the fortune of Franklin to exert a powerful and decisive
+influence. The debate over this question was so protracted and heated, the
+smaller States demanding equal representation with the larger in both
+Houses of Congress, and the larger repelling the claim as utterly
+unreasonable and unjust, that it looked, at one time, as if the Convention
+would break up like a ship lodged on a fatal rock. Then it was that
+Franklin found out to his surprise that his colleagues did not set the same
+value as himself upon the harmonizing influence of prayer. Not only was his
+suggestion that the proceedings of the Convention be opened each day with
+it rejected, but the controversy became more acrimonious than ever; John
+Dickinson, one of the members from Delaware, who always had a way of
+chafing in harness, even declaring that rather than be deprived of an
+equality of representation in the Legislature he would prefer to be a
+foreign subject. At this point, Franklin came forward with a proposition of
+compromise, accompanied by one of his happy illustrations.
+
+ The diversity of opinion [he said] turns on two points.
+ If a proportional representation take place, the small
+ States contend that their liberties will be in danger.
+ If an equality of votes is to be put into its place,
+ the larger States say their money will be in danger.
+ When a broad table is to be made, and the edges of the
+ planks do not fit, the artist takes a little from both,
+ and makes a good joint.
+
+He then proposed that all the States should have an equal number of
+delegates in Congress, and that on all questions affecting the authority or
+sovereignty of a State, or, when appointments and confirmations were under
+consideration, every State should have an equal vote, but that on bills to
+raise or expend money every State should have a vote proportioned to its
+population. This compromise did not meet with the favor of the smaller
+States. Under the lead of Dickinson, they still contended for unvarying
+equality between them and the larger States. At length, a committee was
+appointed to consider the matter, and to report a compromise, and Franklin
+was one of its members. It came back with a plan, proposed by his
+constructive intellect, namely, that, in the Senate, every State should
+have equal representation, but that, in the other House, every State should
+have a representation proportioned to its population; and that bills to
+raise or expend money should originate in the other House. The report of
+the committee was adopted, and no device of the Constitution has, in
+practice, more strikingly vindicated the wisdom of the brain by which it
+was conceived than that hit upon by Franklin for disarming the jealousy and
+fears of the smaller States represented in the Convention.
+
+He approved the proposed article making the presidential term of office
+seven years, and declaring its incumbent ineligible for a second term. The
+sagacity of this conclusion has been confirmed by experience. There was
+nothing degrading, Franklin thought, in the idea of the magistrate
+returning to the mass of the people; for in free governments rulers are the
+servants, and the people are their superiors and sovereigns. The same
+popular bias manifested itself when the proposition was made to limit the
+suffrage to freeholders. "It is of great consequence," he said, "that we
+should not depress the virtue and public spirit of our common people, of
+which they displayed a great deal during the war, and which contributed
+principally to the favorable issue of it." The British statute, setting
+forth the danger of tumultuous meetings, and, under that pretext, narrowing
+the right of suffrage to persons having freeholds of a certain value, was
+soon followed, he added, by another, subjecting the people, who had no
+votes, to peculiar labors and hardships. Some days later, Madison informs
+us, he expressed his dislike to everything that tended to debase the spirit
+of the common people. If honesty was often the companion of wealth, and, if
+poverty was exposed to peculiar temptations, it was not less true, he
+declared, that the possession of property increased the desire for more
+property. Some of the greatest rogues he was ever acquainted with were the
+richest rogues. They should remember the character which the Scriptures
+require in rulers, that they should be men hating covetousness. The
+Constitution would be much read and attended in Europe, and, if it should
+betray a great partiality to the rich, would not only cost them the esteem
+of the most liberal and enlightened men there, but discourage the common
+people from removing to America.
+
+He strongly favored the clause giving Congress the power to impeach the
+President. When the head of the government cannot be lawfully called to
+account, the people have no recourse, he said, against oppression but
+revolution and assassination. These, it should be recollected, were the
+utterances of a man who was from age too near the end of political ambition
+to be possibly influenced by demagogic designs of any sort. Franklin also
+opposed the idea of conferring an absolute veto upon the President, and the
+requirement of fourteen years' residence as a condition of citizenship.
+Four years he believed to be enough. He approved the article making an
+overt act essential to the crime of treason, and exacting the evidence of
+two witnesses to establish the overt act.
+
+He also forcibly expressed his views with regard to the respective powers
+with which the two Houses of Congress should be invested. When the
+Convention was drawing to a close, he urged its members in a tactful and
+persuasive speech to lay aside their individual disappointments, and to
+give their work to the world with the stamp of unanimity. As is well known,
+when the last members were signing, he looked towards the President's
+chair, at the back of which there was a representation of a rising sun,
+and, after observing to some of his associates near him that painters had
+found it difficult in their art to distinguish a rising from a setting sun,
+he concluded with this exultant peroration: "I have often and often, in the
+course of the session, and the vicissitudes of my hopes and fears as to its
+issue, looked at that behind the President, without being able to tell
+whether it was rising or setting: but now, at length, I have the happiness
+to know, that it is a rising and not a setting sun." And a rising sun,
+indeed, it was, starting out upon its splendid circuit like the sun in the
+lines of Charles Lamb, "with all his fires and travelling glories round
+him."
+
+The opinions of Franklin with regard to general political topics are always
+acute and interesting, and, unlike the opinions of most great men, even the
+greatest, are rarely, if ever, flecked by the errors of his time. In some
+quarters, there has been a disposition to reproach him with being an
+advocate of what since his day has come to be known in the United States as
+rag or fiat money. The reproach loses sight of the fact that the currency
+problems, with which he had to deal, did not turn upon the true respective
+functions of paper and real money, under conditions that permit their
+application to their several natural and proper uses. No such conditions
+existed in America during the colonial period or the Revolutionary War.
+There was no California, Alaska, Nevada, or Colorado then. "Gold and
+Silver," Franklin said in 1767, in his _Remarks and Facts Concerning
+American Paper Money_, "are not the Produce of _North-America_, which has
+no Mines."
+
+Every civilized community, unless it is to be remanded to mere barter, must
+have some kind of convenient medium for the exchange of commodities and
+the payment of debts, even though it be no better than wampum or tobacco.
+Paper money, whether it bore interest or not, and whether it was a legal
+tender or not, was, unsupported by any real provision for its redemption, a
+dangerous currency for America, in her early history, as it is for any
+country, whatever its state of maturity; but she had no choice. It was
+either that or something not even as good on the whole for monetary
+purposes. Not only were there no gold or silver mines in North America, but
+the balance of trade between the Colonies and Great Britain was so greatly
+in favor of the latter country that even such gold and silver coin, as
+found its way to them, was at once drawn off to her.
+
+ However fit [bitterly declared Franklin in the
+ pamphlet, to which we have just referred], a particular
+ Thing may be for a particular Purpose, wherever that
+ Thing is not to be had, or not to be had in sufficient
+ Plenty, it becomes necessary to use something else, the
+ fittest that can be got, in lieu of it.
+
+In America, this undoubtedly was a paper currency, even though issued as
+real, and not representative, money. At times, in the history of the
+Colonies, it worked much pecuniary loss and debasement of morals, but,
+makeshift as it was, it was the best makeshift that the situation of the
+Colonies allowed; and, when New England petitioned for the Act of
+Parliament, depriving it of the legal-tender quality within her limits, it
+was only, Franklin contended, because the close intercourse between the
+four provinces, of which she was constituted, and the large supply of hard
+money, derived by her from her whale and cod fisheries, took the sting out
+of the act. But, when the act was afterwards extended to the other
+colonies, it became a real grievance, and, as such, was stated by Franklin,
+in his examination before the House of Commons, to be one of the causes,
+which had lessened the respect of the Colonies for Parliament. "It seems
+hard therefore," he said in the paper just mentioned, "to draw all their
+real Money from them, and then refuse them the poor Privilege of using
+Paper instead of it." In the same essay, the circumstances, in which the
+need for a paper currency in the Colonies originated, are stated in his
+perspicuous manner: "The Truth is, that the Balance of their Trade with
+Britain being generally against them, the Gold and Silver is drawn out to
+pay that Balance; and then the Necessity of some Medium of Trade has
+induced the making of Paper Money, which could not be carried away."
+
+In his capacity as colonial agent, Franklin earnestly strove to secure the
+repeal of the British legislation, forbidding the use of paper money in the
+Colonies as a legal tender, and he even enlisted for this purpose the aid
+of a large body of London merchants, engaged in the American trade, but his
+efforts met with slight success. Some of the members of the Board of Trade,
+who had united in recommending the restraint upon colonial paper money,
+were, it was said, at the time in the state of mind of Soame Jenyns, who
+had laughingly declared, when he was asked as a member of the Board to
+concur in some measure, "I have no kind of objection to it, provided we
+have heretofore signed nothing to the contrary."[45] Worse still, Grenville
+threw out the chilling suggestion in the House of Commons that Great
+Britain should make the paper money for the Colonies, issue it upon loan
+there, take the interest and apply it as Parliament might think
+proper.[46] This suggestion, and the interest excited by it led to a letter
+from Franklin to Galloway in which he said that he was not for applying
+again very soon for a repeal of the restraining act. "I am afraid," he
+remarked, "an ill use will be made of it. The plan of our adversaries is to
+render Assemblies in America useless; and to have a revenue independent of
+their grants, for all the purposes of their defence, and supporting
+governments among them."
+
+These comments were followed by the suggestion that the Pennsylvania
+Assembly might be petitioned by the more prominent citizens of Pennsylvania
+to authorize a moderate emission of paper money, though without the
+legal-tender feature; the petition to be accompanied by a mutual engagement
+upon the part of the petitioners to take the money in all business
+transactions at rates fixed by law. Or, perhaps, Franklin said, a bank
+might be established that would meet the currency needs of the community.
+In any event, should the scarcity of money continue, they would rely more
+upon their own industrial resources, to the detriment of the British
+merchant, and by keeping in Pennsylvania the real cash, that came into it,
+would, in time, have a quantity sufficient for all their occasions. The
+same thought, tinged with a trace of resentment, emerges in one of his
+letters to Lord Kames:
+
+ As I think a scarcity of money will work with our other
+ present motives for lessening our fond extravagance in
+ the use of the superfluous manufactures of this
+ country, which unkindly grudges us the enjoyment of
+ common rights, and will tend to lead us naturally into
+ industry and frugality, I am grown more indifferent
+ about the repeal of the act, and, if my countrymen will
+ be advised by me, we shall never ask it again.[47]
+
+The relations sustained by Franklin to the Continental paper currency we
+have already seen. There was an apparent element of inconsistency in his
+suggestion that it should bear interest; for interest-bearing bills, he had
+contended in his _Remarks and Facts Concerning American Paper Money_, were
+objectionable as currency, because it was tedious to calculate interest on
+one of them, as often as it changed hands, and also because a distinct
+advantage was to be gained by hoarding them.
+
+The Continental bills depreciated so rapidly that in 1777 the price of a
+bushel of salt at Baltimore was nine pounds. Three years later, the price
+of a yard of cassimere in America was $300, and of a yard of jean and habit
+cloth $60. Inflated as the bills were, Franklin with his cheerful habit of
+mind was not at a loss to say a good word for them. There was some
+advantage to the general public, at any rate, he wrote to Stephen Sayre, in
+the facility with which taxes could be paid off with the depreciated
+paper. Congress, he wrote to Dr. Cooper, had blundered in not earlier
+adopting his suggestion that the interest on the bills should be paid in
+real money.
+
+ The _only Remedy_ now [he said] seems to be a
+ Diminution of the Quantity by a vigourous Taxation, of
+ great nominal Sums, which the People are more able to
+ pay, in proportion to the Quantity and diminished
+ Value; and the _only Consolation_ under the Evil is,
+ that the Publick Debt is proportionably diminish'd with
+ the Depreciation; and this by a kind of imperceptible
+ Tax, everyone having paid a Part of it in the Fall of
+ Value that took place between his receiving and Paying
+ such Sums as pass'd thro' his hands.
+
+In this same letter, Franklin declared that it was a mystery to foreign
+politicians how America had been able to continue a war for four years
+without money, and how it could pay with paper that had no previously fixed
+fund appropriated specifically to redeem it. "This Currency, as we manage
+it," he said, "is a wonderful Machine. It performs its Office when we issue
+it; it pays and clothes Troops, and provides Victuals and Ammunition; and
+when we are obliged to issue a Quantity excessive, it pays itself off by
+Depreciation." The paper he subsequently wrote to Thomas Ruston had really
+operated as a tax, and was perhaps the most equal of all taxes, since it
+depreciated in the hands of holders of money, and thereby taxed them in
+proportion to the sums they held and the time they held them, which
+generally was in proportion to men's wealth.
+
+All this, of course, was but making the best of a _pis-aller_. Franklin in
+a sense held a brief for paper money all his life, because, during almost
+his whole life, his country had to put up with paper money, whether she
+wanted to do so or not. When the Revolutionary War was over, he could be
+less of an advocate, and more of a judge with respect to such money; and
+the change is neatly illustrated in the words that he wrote from
+Philadelphia to the Duc de la Rochefoucauld in 1787. "Paper money in
+moderate quantities has been found beneficial; when more than the occasions
+of commerce require, it depreciated and was mischievous; and the populace
+are apt to demand more than is necessary."
+
+To see at once how quickly Franklin could evade the danger, lurking in the
+proposition, urged by John Adams upon Vergennes, that the subjects of King
+Louis were as fairly amenable to the will of Congress, in reducing the
+value of paper money in their hands to one part in forty, as the Americans
+themselves, and yet how perfectly Franklin understood the workings of a
+depreciated paper currency, we need but turn to a letter from him to M. Le
+Veillard dated Feb. 17, 1788.
+
+ Where there is a free government [he said in this
+ letter] and the people make their own laws by their
+ representatives, I see no injustice in their obliging
+ one another to take their own paper money. It is no
+ more so than compelling a man by law to take his own
+ note. But it is unjust to pay strangers with such money
+ against their will. The making of paper money with such
+ a sanction is however a folly, since, although you may
+ by law oblige a citizen to take it for his goods, you
+ cannot fix his prices; and his liberty of rating them
+ as he pleases, which is the same thing as setting what
+ value he pleases on your money, defeats your sanction.
+
+Franklin was a free-trader, but his opinions with regard to import duties
+are sometimes streaked with Protectionist reasoning. All the natural
+leanings of such a broad-minded man were, it almost goes without saying, in
+favor of unrestricted commerce. His general attitude towards commercial
+restrictions was emphatically expressed in one of his letters to Peter
+Collinson from which we have already quoted.
+
+ In time perhaps [he said] Mankind may be wise enough to
+ let Trade take its own Course, find its own Channels,
+ and regulate its own Proportions, etc. At present, most
+ of the Edicts of Princes, Placaerts, Laws & Ordinances
+ of Kingdoms & States for that purpose, prove political
+ Blunders. The Advantages they produce not being
+ _general_ for the Commonwealth; but _particular_, to
+ private Persons or Bodies in the State who procur'd
+ them, and _at the Expence of the rest of the People_.
+
+Many years later, he wrote to Benjamin Vaughan, "The making England
+entirely a free port would have been the wisest step ever taken for its
+advantage." In recent years, his _Wail of a Protected Manufacturer_ has
+been reprinted and widely circulated in England by the opponents of the
+Fair Trade movement:
+
+ Suppose a country, X, which has three
+ industries--cloth, silk, iron--and supplies three other
+ countries--A, B, and C--therewith, wishes to increase
+ the sale and raise the price of cloth in favour of its
+ cloth-makers.
+
+ To that end X prohibits the importation of cloth from
+ A.
+
+ In retaliation A prohibits silks coming from X.
+
+ The workers in silk complain of the decline in their
+ trade.
+
+ To satisfy them X excludes silk from B.
+
+ B, to retaliate, shuts out iron and hardware against X.
+
+ Then the makers of iron and hardware cry out that their
+ trades are being ruined.
+
+ So X closes its doors against iron and hardware from C.
+
+ In return C refuses to take cloth from X.
+
+ Who is the gainer by all these prohibitions?
+
+ Answer
+
+ All the four countries have diminished their common
+ fund of the enjoyments and conveniences of life.
+
+The open ports of the United States, after the conclusion of the American
+Revolution, were a source of keen gratification to Franklin. They had
+brought in, he thought, a vast plenty of foreign goods, and occasioned a
+demand for domestic produce; so that America enjoyed the double advantage
+of buying what they consumed cheap, and of selling what they could spare
+dear.
+
+The following views in a letter from him to Jared Eliot, as far back as the
+year 1747, sound like a recent tariff reform speech in Congress:
+
+ First, I imagine that the Five Per Cent Duty on Goods
+ imported from your Neighbouring Governments, tho' paid
+ at first Hand by the Importer, will not upon the whole
+ come out of his Pocket, but be paid in Fact by the
+ Consumer; for the Importer will be sure to sell his
+ Goods as much dearer as to reimburse himself; so that
+ it is only another Mode of Taxing your own People tho'
+ perhaps meant to raise Money on your Neighbours.
+
+But then follows what a free trader, using Franklin's own coarse phrase,
+might call "spitting in the soup." "Yet, if you can make some of the Goods,
+heretofore imported, among yourselves, the advanc'd price of five per cent
+may encourage your own Manufacture, and in time make the Importation of
+such Articles unnecessary, which will be an Advantage."
+
+In another place, he employed language in harmony with the importance that
+the Protectionist assigns to his favorite system as a means of building up
+local markets for the produce of the farmer.[48] It may be truly said,
+however, as has already been hinted, that Franklin was never more friendly
+to the principle of international free trade than in the latter years of
+his life. In his letter to Le Veillard of Feb. 17, 1788, he used language
+which demonstrates that he was still convinced that import duties are paid
+by the consumer, and in an earlier letter to Robert R. Livingston in 1783
+he said that he felt inclined to believe that a State, which left all her
+ports open to all the world, upon equal terms, would, by that means, have
+foreign commodities cheaper, sell its own productions dearer and be on the
+whole the most prosperous.
+
+For export duties, he had a fierce contempt. "To lay duties on a commodity
+exported, which our neighbours want," he wrote to James Lovell in 1778, "is
+a knavish attempt to get something for nothing. The statesman who first
+invented it had the genius of a pickpocket, and would have been a
+pickpocket if fortune had suitably placed him."
+
+How thoroughly Franklin understood the principles, which regulate the ebb
+and flow of population, we have had occasion to note.
+
+With equal intelligence, he laid bare the pauperizing effect of aid
+injudiciously extended to the poor in too generous a measure. Commenting in
+his essay on the Laboring Poor on the liberal provision, made for indigence
+in England, he said:
+
+ I fear the giving mankind a dependance on anything for
+ support, in age or sickness, besides industry and
+ frugality during youth and health, tends to flatter our
+ natural indolence, to encourage idleness and
+ prodigality, and thereby to promote and increase
+ poverty, the very evil it was intended to cure; thus
+ multiplying beggars instead of diminishing them.
+
+In his essay, Franklin makes the interesting statement that the condition
+of the poor in England was by far the best in Europe; "for that," he adds,
+"except in England and her American colonies, there is not in any country
+of the known world, not even in Scotland or Ireland, a provision by law to
+enforce a support of the poor. Everywhere else necessity reduces to
+beggary." The whole essay is a highly ingenious argument to the effect that
+it is a misconception to think of a rich man as the sole possessor of his
+wealth, and that in one way or another the laboring poor have the usufruct
+of the entire clear income of all the property owners in the community.
+Nobody knew better than Poor Richard that no help is worth speaking of save
+that which promotes self-help.
+
+ The support of the poor [he wrote to Richard Jackson]
+ should not be by maintaining them in idleness, but by
+ employing them in some kind of labour suited to their
+ abilities of body, as I am informed begins to be of
+ late the practice in many parts of England, where
+ workhouses are erected for that purpose. If these were
+ general, I should think the poor would be more careful,
+ and work voluntarily to lay up something for themselves
+ against a rainy day, rather than run the risk of being
+ obliged to work at the pleasure of others for a bare
+ subsistence, and that too under confinement.
+
+For Agriculture, Franklin always had an appreciative word. "Agriculture,"
+he observed in a letter to Cadwallader Evans, "is truly _productive of new
+wealth_; manufacturers only change forms, and, whatever value they give to
+the materials they work upon, they in the meantime consume an equal value
+in provisions, &c."
+
+His other observations on Agriculture are worthy of being read for the
+light that they cast on his own character, if for no other reason. It is,
+he declared, in a letter to Jonathan Shipley, "the most useful, the most
+independent, and therefore the noblest of Employments." Another remark of
+his in his _Positions to be Examined, Concerning National Wealth_ is that
+there seemed to him but three ways for a nation to acquire wealth:
+
+ The first is by _war_, as the Romans did, in plundering
+ their conquered neighbors. This is _robbery_. The
+ second by _commerce_, which is _generally_ cheating.
+ The third by _agriculture_, the only _honest way_,
+ wherein man receives a real increase of the seed
+ thrown into the ground, in a kind of continual miracle,
+ wrought by the hand of God in his favour, as a reward
+ for his innocent life and his virtuous industry.
+
+The same spirit gives life to the following observations too in his essay
+on "The Internal State of America": "The Agriculture and Fisheries of the
+United States are the great Sources of our Encreasing Wealth. He that puts
+a Seed into the Earth is recompens'd, perhaps, by receiving twenty out of
+it; and he who draws a Fish out of our Waters, draws up a Piece of Silver."
+
+In Franklin's time as now there was a feeling that the farmer did not
+receive his full share of the blessings of organized society. In his _Price
+of Corn, and Management of the Poor_, he makes a farmer say, "I am one of
+that class of people, that feeds you all, and at present is abused by you
+all. In short I am a _farmer_."
+
+Franklin's views about punishment were also conspicuously worthy of his
+kind heart and sound sense. His letter to Benjamin Vaughan on the Criminal
+Laws is one of his best essays, and merited the honor conferred on it by
+Samuel Romilly, when he added it in the form of an appendix to his own
+observations on _Dr. Madan's Thoughts on Executive Justice_. In the course
+of his feeling exposures of existing fallacies with respect to the
+philosophy of punishment, Franklin, who did not scruple to say that there
+would be less crime, if there were no criminal laws, asked these searching
+questions:
+
+ I see, in the last Newspaper from London, that a Woman
+ is capitally convicted at the Old Bailey, for privately
+ stealing out of a Shop some Gauze, value 14 Shillings
+ and three pence; is there any Proportion between the
+ Injury done by a Theft, value 14/3, and the Punishment
+ of a human Creature, by Death, on a Gibbet? Might not
+ that Woman, by her Labour, have made the Reparation
+ ordain'd by God, in paying fourfold? Is not all
+ Punishment inflicted beyond the Merit of the Offence,
+ so much Punishment of Innocence? In this light, how
+ vast is the annual Quantity of not only _injured_, but
+ _suffering_ Innocence, in almost all the civilized
+ States of Europe!
+
+That Franklin was opposed to imprisonment for debt it is hardly necessary
+to say. His sense of humor, if nothing else, was sufficient to point out to
+him the absurdity of depriving a debtor of all means of earning money until
+he earned enough to satisfy his creditors. John Baynes, in his Journal,
+informs us that, in a conversation with him, Franklin expressed his
+disapprobation of "this usage" in very strong terms. He said he could not
+compare any sum of money with imprisonment--they were not commensurable
+quantities.
+
+Both slavery and the slave trade were held by Franklin in just reprobation,
+but his views on these subjects, it must be confessed, would be weightier,
+if he had not trafficked at one time in slaves himself. As it is, he
+occupies somewhat the same equivocal position as that which inspired Thomas
+Moore to pen the blackguard lines in which he pictured the American
+slaveholding patriot as dreaming of Freedom in his bondmaid's arms.[49] The
+economic truth, however, of what he had to say about Slave Labor in his
+essay on "The Increase of Mankind" is undeniable.
+
+ Tis an ill-grounded Opinion [he declared] that by the
+ Labour of slaves, _America_ may possibly vie in
+ Cheapness of Manufactures with _Britain_. The Labour of
+ Slaves here can never be so cheap here as the Labour of
+ working Men is in _Britain_. Anyone may compute it.
+ Interest of Money is in the Colonies from 6 to 10 per
+ Cent. Slaves one with another cost 30L Sterling per
+ Head. Reckon then the Interest of the first Purchase of
+ a Slave, the Insurance or Risque on his Life, his
+ Cloathing and Diet, Expences in his Sickness and Loss
+ of Time, Loss by his Neglect of Business (Neglect is
+ natural to the Man who is not to be benefited by his
+ own Care or Diligence), Expence of a Driver to keep him
+ at Work, and his Pilfering from Time to Time, almost
+ every Slave being _by Nature_ a Thief, and compare the
+ whole Amount with the Wages of a Manufacturer of Iron
+ or Wool in _England_, you will see that Labour is much
+ cheaper there than it ever can be by Negroes here.
+
+In this essay, the introduction of slaves is enumerated as one of the
+causes that diminish the growth of white population.
+
+ The Negroes brought into the _English_ Sugar _Islands_
+ [he says] have greatly diminish'd the Whites there; the
+ Poor are by this Means deprived of Employment, while a
+ few Families acquire vast Estates; which they spend on
+ Foreign Luxuries, and educating their Children in the
+ Habit of those Luxuries; the same Income is needed for
+ the Support of one that might have maintain'd 100. The
+ Whites who have Slaves, not labouring, are enfeebled,
+ and therefore not so generally prolific; the Slaves
+ being work'd too hard, and ill fed, their Constitutions
+ are broken, and the Deaths among them are more than the
+ Births; so that a continual Supply is needed from
+ _Africa_. The Northern Colonies, having few Slaves,
+ increase in Whites. Slaves also pejorate the Families
+ that use them; the white Children become proud,
+ disgusted with Labour, and being educated in Idleness,
+ are rendered unfit to get a Living by Industry.[50]
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[10] There is no evidence that, while he was a member of the Pennsylvania
+Assembly, Franklin ever had occasion, as every member of an American State
+legislature is likely to have, to deal with a bill for the extermination of
+hawks and owls; but a skeleton sketch by his hand of his services as an
+assemblyman shows that he shared the fate of the ordinary member of an
+American State legislature in having a bill relating to dogs referred to a
+Committee of which he was a member.
+
+[11] Franklin, though in no sense a time server, rarely got out of touch
+with the majority simply because he always saw things as the best
+collective intelligence of the community is likely to see them--only a
+little sooner and more clearly. "Friend Joseph," one Quaker is said to have
+asked of an acquaintance, "didst thee ever know Dr. Franklin to be in a
+minority?"
+
+[12] "I believe it will in time be clearly seen by all thinking People that
+the Government and Property of a Province should not be in the same family.
+Tis too much weight in one scale." Letter from Franklin to Israel
+Pemberton, Mar. 19, 1759.
+
+[13] In 1768, the revenues of the Proprietaries from their Pennsylvania
+estates were estimated by Joseph Galloway to be not much short of one
+hundred thousand pounds.
+
+[14] "The shocking news of the strange, unprecedented and ignominious
+defeat of General Braddock," William Franklin said, "had no more effect
+upon Governor Morris than the miracles of Moses had on the heart of
+Pharaoh."
+
+[15] Franklin's first impressions of Lord Loudon were very different from
+his later ones. In a letter to Strahan from New York, dated July 27, 1756,
+he said: "I have had the honour of several conferences with him on our
+American affairs, and am extremely pleased with him. I think there can not
+be a fitter person for the service he is engaged in."
+
+[16] In connection with this feature of the proposed Plan of Union,
+Franklin gives us some interesting facts in regard to the distances that
+could be made in a day's journey in America in 1754. Philadelphia, he said,
+was named as the place for the first meeting of the Grand Council because
+it was central, and accessible by high roads, which were for the most part
+so good that forty or fifty miles a day might very well be, and frequently
+were, travelled over them. It could also be reached under very favorable
+conditions by water. In summer the passage from Charleston to Philadelphia
+often did not consume more than a week. Two or three days were required for
+the passage from Rhode Island to New York, through the Sound, and the
+distance between New York and Philadelphia could be covered in two days by
+stage-boats and wheel-carriages that set out every other day. The transit
+from Charleston to Philadelphia could be facilitated by the use of the
+Chesapeake Bay. But, if all the members of the Grand Council were to set
+out for Philadelphia on horseback, the most distant ones, those from New
+Hampshire and South Carolina, could probably arrive at their destination in
+fifteen or twenty days.
+
+[17] Another good Indian story is told by Franklin in his _Remarks
+Concerning the Savages of North America_: "A Swedish Minister, having
+assembled the chiefs of the Susquehanah Indians, made a Sermon to them,
+acquainting them with the principal historical Facts on which our Religion
+is founded; such as the Fall of our First Parents by eating an Apple, the
+coming of Christ to repair the Mischief, his Miracles and Suffering, &c.
+When he had finished, an Indian Orator stood up to thank him. 'What you
+have told us,' says he, 'is all very good. It is indeed bad to eat Apples.
+It is better to make them all into Cyder. We are much oblig'd by your
+kindness in coming so far, to tell us these Things which you have heard
+from your Mothers. In return, I will tell you some of those we have heard
+from ours. In the Beginning, our Fathers had only the Flesh of Animals, to
+subsist on; and if their Hunting was unsuccessful, they were starving. Two
+of our young Hunters, having kill'd a Deer, made a Fire in the Woods to
+broil some Part of it. When they were about to satisfy their Hunger, they
+beheld a beautiful young Woman descend from the Clouds, and seat herself on
+that Hill, which you see yonder among the blue Mountains. They said to each
+other, it is a Spirit that has smelt our broiling Venison, and wishes to
+eat of it; let us offer some to her. They presented her with the Tongue;
+she was pleas'd with the Taste of it, and said, "Your kindness shall be
+rewarded; come to this Place after thirteen Moons, and you shall find
+something that will be of great Benefit in nourishing you and your children
+to the latest Generations." They did so, and, to their surprise, found
+Plants they had never seen before; but which, from that ancient time, have
+been constantly cultivated among us, to our great Advantage. Where her
+right Hand had touched the Ground, they found Maize; where her left hand
+had touch'd it, they found Kidney-Beans, and where her Back side had sat on
+it they found Tobacco.' The good Missionary, disgusted with this idle Tale,
+said: 'What I delivered to you were sacred Truths; but what you tell me is
+mere Fable, Fiction, and Falsehood.' The Indian, offended, reply'd, 'My
+brother, it seems your Friends have not done you Justice in your Education;
+they have not well instructed you in the Rules of common Civility. You saw
+that we, who understand and practise those Rules, believ'd all your
+stories; why do you refuse to believe ours?'"
+
+[18] When asked in the course of his examination before the House of
+Commons what the temper of America towards Great Britain was before the
+year 1763, Franklin made this reply: "The best in the world. They submitted
+willingly to the government of the Crown, and paid, in all their courts,
+obedience to acts of parliament. Numerous as the people are in the several
+provinces, they cost you nothing in forts, citadels, garrisons, or armies,
+to keep them in subjection. They were governed by this country at the
+expence only of a little pen, ink and paper. They were led by a thread.
+They had not only a respect, but an affection for Great-Britain; for its
+laws, its customs and manners, and even a fondness for its fashions, that
+greatly increased the commerce. Natives of Britain were always treated with
+particular regard; to be an Old England man was, of itself, a character of
+some respect, and gave a kind of rank among us."
+
+How little colored by the exigencies of the moment these words were is made
+apparent in a letter from Franklin to Francis Maseres after the
+independence of the Colonies had been acknowledged by England. "The true
+_loyalists_ were the people of America, against whom they (the Tories)
+acted. No people were ever known more truly loyal, and universally so, to
+their sovereigns. The Protestant succession in the House of Hanover was
+their idol. Not a Jacobite was to be found from one end of the Colonies to
+the other. They were affectionate to the people of England, zealous and
+forward to assist in her wars, by voluntary contributions of men and money,
+even beyond their proportion. The King and Parliament had frequently
+acknowledged this by public messages, resolutions, and reimbursements. But
+they were equally fond of what they esteemed their rights; and, if they
+resisted when those were attacked, it was a resistance in favour of a
+British constitution, which every Englishman might share in enjoying, who
+should come to live among them; it was resisting arbitrary impositions,
+that were contrary to common right and to their fundamental constitutions,
+and to constant ancient usage. It was indeed a resistance in favour of the
+liberties of England, which might have been endangered by success in the
+attempt against ours; and therefore a great man in your Parliament did not
+scruple to declare, he _rejoiced that America had resisted_. I, for the
+same reason, may add this very resistance to the other instances of their
+loyalty."
+
+[19] The view that Franklin took of the constitutional tie between Great
+Britain and America was expressed in many different forms. One of the
+concisest is to be found in a letter to his grandnephew Jonathan Williams,
+dated Feb. 12, 1786, and, therefore, written after the tie, whatever its
+exact nature was, had become a subject for the historian rather than the
+politician. Speaking of a controversy in which Williams had been involved,
+he says: "It seems to me that instead of discussing _When_ we ceas'd to be
+British Subjects you should have deny'd our _ever having been such_. We
+were Subjects to the King of G. Britain, as were also the Irish, the Jersey
+and Guernsey People and the Hanoverians, but we were American Subjects as
+they were Irish, Jersey and Hanoverian Subjects. None are British Subjects
+but those under the Parliament of Britain."
+
+[20] "Your medallion is in good company; it is placed with those of Lord
+Chatham, Lord Camden, Marquis of Rockingham, Sir George Saville, and some
+others, who honoured me with a show of friendly regard, when in England."
+
+(Letter from Franklin to Geo. Whatley, May 18, 1787.)
+
+[21] This idea is advanced also in _The Mother Country_, _A Song_, which
+Jared Sparks thought was probably written by Franklin about the time of the
+Stamp Act or a little later:
+
+ "We have an old mother that peevish is grown;
+ She snubs us like children that scarce walk alone;
+ She forgets we're grown up and have sense of our own;
+ Which nobody can deny, deny,
+ Which nobody can deny.
+
+ If we don't obey orders, whatever the case,
+ She frowns, and she chides and she loses all pati-
+ Ence, and sometimes she hits us a slap in the face,
+ Which nobody can deny, etc.
+
+ Her orders so odd are, we often suspect
+ That age has impaired her sound intellect.
+ But still an old mother should have due respect,
+ Which nobody can deny, etc.
+
+ Let's bear with her humors as well as we can;
+ But why should we bear the abuse of her man?
+ When servants make mischief, they earn the rattan,
+ Which nobody should deny, etc.
+
+ Know too, ye bad neighbours, who aim to divide
+ The sons from the mother, that still she's our pride;
+ And if ye attack her we're all of her side,
+ Which nobody can deny, etc.
+
+ We'll join in her lawsuits, to baffle all those,
+ Who, to get what she has, will be often her foes;
+ For we know it must all be our own, when she goes,
+ Which nobody can deny, deny,
+ Which nobody can deny."
+
+
+[22] "But there can hardly be a doubt, as between the America and the
+England of the future, that the daughter, at some no very distant time,
+will, whether fairer or less fair, be unquestionably yet stronger than the
+mother.
+
+ "'O matre forti filia fortior.'"
+
+ _Kin Beyond Sea_, by William E. Gladstone.
+
+[23] Jared Sparks hardly overstates the case when he asserts that the
+policy and acts of Lord Hillsborough contributed more, perhaps, than those
+of any other man towards increasing the discontents which led to the
+separation of the Colonies from Great Britain.
+
+[24] On Jan. 28, 1820, John Adams stated in a letter to Dr. Hosack, of New
+York, that Temple had told him in Holland that he had communicated the
+Hutchinson letters to Dr. Franklin, though "I swear to you," he said to
+Adams, "that I did not procure them in the manner represented."
+
+[25] Worldly success has rarely been less effective in gilding an unworthy
+character than it was in the case of Wedderburn. American indignation over
+his tirade against Franklin, indecent as it was under the circumstances,
+would seem to be somewhat overdone, when we remember the professional
+license allowed from time immemorial to the pleas of lawyers. It is enough
+to say that we can safely leave his English contemporaries to take care of
+his forbidding reputation. The searing irons of two of the most ferocious
+satirists of literary history have left ineffaceable scars upon his
+forehead. In the _Rosciad_ Churchill lifted the veil from the future in
+these terms:
+
+ "To mischief train'd, e'en from his mother's womb,
+ Grown old in fraud, tho. yet in manhood's bloom,
+ Adopting arts, by which gay villains rise,
+ And reach the heights, which honest men despise."
+
+"In vain," Junius wrote to the Duke of Grafton, some ten years later,
+"would our gracious sovereign have looked round him for another character
+as consummate as yours. Lord Mansfield shrinks from his principles; Charles
+Fox is yet in blossom; and as for Mr. Wedderburn, there is something about
+him which even treachery can not trust." But the "gracious sovereign," to
+whom Wedderburn, afterwards Lord Rosslyn, sold his Whig principles, when
+they had reached just the right stage of merchantable maturity, was equally
+hard upon him. "When he died," Lord Brougham tells us, "after a few hours'
+illness, the intelligence was brought to the King, who, with a
+circumspection abundantly characteristic, asked the bearer of it if he was
+quite _sure_ of the fact, as Lord Rosslyn had not been ailing before; and,
+upon being assured that a sudden attack of gout in the stomach had really
+ended the days of his late servant and once assiduous courtier, his majesty
+was graciously pleased to exclaim: 'Then he has not left a worse man behind
+him.'"
+
+[26] It is hard to think of a man, whose life was so essentially urban as
+that of Franklin, becoming a backwoodsman, but such he was ready to become,
+if necessary. In his _Hints for a Reply to the Protests of Certain Members
+of the House of Lords against the Repeal of the Stamp Act_, he uses this
+resolute language: "I can only Judge of others by myself. I have some
+little property in America. I will freely spend nineteen shillings in the
+pound to defend my right of giving or refusing the other shilling, and,
+after all, if I can not defend that right, I can retire cheerfully with my
+little family into the boundless woods of America, which are sure to afford
+freedom and subsistence to any man who can bait a hook or pull a trigger."
+
+[27] In 1780, Franklin wrote from Passy to Georgiana Shipley: "I am
+unhappily an Enemy, yet I think there has been enough of Blood spilt, and I
+wish what is left in the Veins of that once lov'd People, may be spared by
+a Peace solid and everlasting."
+
+[28] Franklin's three political hobbies were gratuitous public service, a
+plural executive and a single legislature. Through his influence, the
+second and third of these two ideas were engrafted upon the Revolutionary
+Constitution of the State of Pennsylvania, and were later ably defended by
+him, when assailed. The manner in which he illustrated his opposition to a
+bi-cameral legislature is well-known. "Has not," he said, "the famous
+political Fable of the Snake, with two Heads and one Body, some useful
+Instruction contained in it? She was going to a Brook to drink, and in her
+Way was to pass thro' a Hedge, a Twig of which opposed her direct course;
+one Head chose to go on the right side of the Twig, the other on the left;
+so that time was spent in the Contest, and, before the Decision was
+completed, the poor Snake died with thirst." As far as carrying the idea of
+gratuitous public service into execution was concerned, Franklin, of
+course, might as well have attempted to grow pineapples in the squares of
+Philadelphia.
+
+[29] In his Diary John Adams states shortly after his arrival in France
+that it was said among other things that Arthur Lee had given offence by an
+unhappy disposition, and by indiscreet speeches before servants and others
+concerning the French nation and government--despising and cursing them.
+
+[30] Deprived of its epigrammatic form, this estimate does not differ so
+very greatly from that of Jefferson a few years later: "He is vain,
+irritable and a bad calculator of the force and probable effects of the
+motives which govern men. This is all the ill which can possibly be said of
+him. He is as disinterested as the being who made him; he is profound in
+his views and accurate in his judgment, except when a knowledge of the
+world is necessary to form a judgment. He is so amiable, that I pronounce
+you will love him if ever you become acquainted with him. He would be, as
+he was, a great man in Congress."
+
+[31] On Oct. 29, 1778, Vergennes finally wrote to Gerard, the French
+Minister at Philadelphia, that his fear of Lee and of _ses entours_ made
+the communication of state secrets to him impossible, and he instructed
+Gerard to inform Congress that Lee's conduct had "created the highest
+disgust" in the courts of France and Spain. It is doubtful whether any man
+of the same degree of parts, courage and patriotic constancy as Arthur Lee
+was ever more irredeemably condemned by the general verdict of his
+contemporaries or posterity. It would be a profitless task to bring
+together the most notable of these judgments. Jefferson summed up most of
+them in a few words: "Dr. Lee," he said, "was his (Franklin's) principal
+calumniator, a man of much malignity, who, besides enlisting his whole
+family in the same hostility, was enabled, as the agent of Massachusetts
+with the British Government, to infuse it into that State with considerable
+effect. Mr. Izard, the Doctor's enemy also, but from a pecuniary
+transaction, never countenanced these charges against him. Mr. Jay, Silas
+Deane, Mr. Laurens, his colleagues also, ever maintained towards him
+unlimited confidence and respect." Silas Deane, the most efficient envoy
+except Franklin sent abroad by Congress during the Revolution, derived a
+degree of unaffected pleasure from the respect felt for Franklin in France
+that contrasts most favorably with the base jealousy of Arthur Lee and the
+ignoble jealousy of John Adams. After telling how the French populace on a
+certain occasion showed Franklin a measure of deference seldom paid to
+their first princes of the blood, he says: "When he attended the operas and
+plays, similar honors were paid him, and I confess I felt a joy and pride
+which was pure and honest, though not disinterested, for I considered it an
+honor to be known to be an American and his acquaintance."
+
+[32] John Adams admits in his Diary that Deane was "active, diligent,
+subtle and successful, having accomplished the great purpose of his mission
+to advantage." After the recall of Deane from France, Franklin wrote of him
+to Henry Laurens: "Having lived intimately with him now fifteen months, the
+greatest part of the time in the same House, and been a constant witness of
+his public Conduct, I can not omit giving this Testimony, tho. unasked, in
+his Behalf, that I esteem him a faithful, active, and able Minister, who,
+to my Knowledge, has done in various ways great and important Service to
+his Country, whose Interests I wish may always, by every one in her employ,
+be as much and as effectually promoted." On other occasions, Franklin spoke
+in equally laudatory terms of the abilities and services of Deane. But when
+Deane, soured by the persistent malevolence of Arthur Lee and the injustice
+of Congress, was weak enough to fall away from "the glorious cause,"
+Franklin gave him up. "I see no place for him but England," he wrote to
+Robert Morris. "He continues, however, to sit croaking at Ghent chagrined,
+discontented, and dispirited." Franklin, however, was too nice a judge of
+conduct, and of the balanced considerations, which have to be taken into
+account in passing upon it, not to refer later to Deane as "poor, unhappy
+Deane,"--language such as he would have been the last man in the world to
+use with regard to a perfidious scoundrel like Benedict Arnold.
+
+[33] The Diary of John Adams shows that shortly after he arrived in France
+Franklin took pains to lay before him the lamentable situation created by
+the impracticable tempers of the Lees and Izard. It would have been well
+for the reputation of Adams if this conversation had resulted in a thorough
+understanding between Franklin and himself, but the bias that he brought to
+France as a member of the Adams-Lee faction in Congress and the inability
+of his egotistical, jealous, suspicious and bustling, though honorable and
+fearless, nature, to reconcile itself to the overshadowing fame and
+influence of Franklin at the French Court drew him into working relations
+with Lee and Izard, which abundantly verified all that Franklin had said to
+him about them. "There are two men in the world," he declares in his Diary,
+"who are men of honor and integrity, I believe, but whose prejudices and
+violent tempers would raise quarrels in the Elysian fields, if not in
+Heaven." At times the vanity of Adams--easily mortified, easily elated as
+all vanity is--was humbled by some fresh proof of the dwarfing prominence
+of Franklin. "Neither Lee nor myself is looked upon of much consequence,"
+he observes in his Diary. On another occasion, when Arthur Lee suggested
+that the papers of the mission should be kept in a room in his own house,
+Adams objected for the reason, among others, that nine tenths of the public
+letters would ever be carried where Dr. Franklin was. These were but
+temporary reactions. When down, the vanity of Adams was soon on its legs
+again. The reminder given by Vergennes to the officious, tactless
+reasonings and strictures, to which he was subjected by Adams, that
+Franklin was the sole American plenipotentiary in France, and the steps
+that the latter was compelled to take, both by the request of Vergennes and
+his own sense of the peril, that such injudicious conduct on the part of
+Adams signified to the American cause, to smooth over the rupture, sent
+Adams off to Holland in a resentful but subdued state of mind. But his
+success in negotiating a loan in Holland and the prospect of engaging in a
+matter of such supreme importance as the final negotiations for peace
+lifted him up to giddy heights of intoxicated self-importance again.
+Referring to the loan in his Diary, he says: "The compliment of _Monsieur_,
+_Vous etes le Washington de la negociation_ (Sir, you are the Washington of
+the negotiation) was repeated to me by more than one person.... A few of
+these compliments would kill Franklin if they should come to his ears." His
+observations in his Diary on Jay and Franklin, when he came over to France
+to participate with them in the final negotiations for peace, are equally
+characteristic. "Between two as subtle spirits as any in this world, the
+one malicious, the other, I think honest, I shall have a delicate, a nice,
+a critical part to act. Franklin's cunning will be to divide us; to this
+end he will provoke, he will insinuate, he will intrigue, he will
+manoeuvre. My curiosity will at least be employed in observing his
+invention and his artifice."
+
+[34] "I think," said Franklin in a letter to Charles W. F. Dumas, in 1778,
+"that a young State like a young Virgin, should modestly stay at home, &
+wait the Application of Suitors for an Alliance with her; and not run about
+offering her Amity to all the World; and hazarding their Refusal." "Our
+Virgin," he added a line or so later, "is a jolly one; and tho. at present
+not very rich, Will in time be a great Fortune."
+
+[35] Franklin was entirely cognizant of the motive by which Lee was
+influenced. Referring in a letter to Thomas Cushing, dated July 7, 1773, to
+censure with which he had been visited for supposed neglect in not sending
+earlier intelligence to Massachusetts of certain English measures affecting
+her welfare, he said, "This Censure, tho. grievous, does not so much
+surprize me, as I apprehended from the Beginning, that between the Friends
+of an old Agent, my Predecessor, who thought himself hardly us'd in his
+Dismission, and those of a young one impatient for the Succession, my
+situation was not likely to be a very comfortable one, as my Faults could
+scarce pass unobserved."
+
+[36] On one occasion this expression gave rise to an incident that is worth
+recalling. We tell it as it is told by Parton. A large cake was sent to the
+apartment in which the envoys were assembled, bearing this inscription: _Le
+digne Franklin_--the worthy Franklin. Upon reading the inscription, Mr.
+Deane said: "As usual, Doctor, we have to thank you for our accommodation,
+and to appropriate your present to our joint use." "Not at all," said
+Franklin, "this must be intended for all the Commissioners; only these
+French people can not write English. They mean no doubt, Lee, Deane,
+Franklin." "That might answer," remarked the magnanimous Lee, "but we know
+that whenever they remember us at all they always put you first."
+
+[37] "It must," Adams says in his letter to the Boston _Patriot_ of Aug.
+21, 1811, with the whiff of bombast that is wafted to us from so many of
+his vigorous and vivid utterances, "suffice to say that Mr. Izard, with a
+fund of honor, integrity, candor and benevolence in his character, which
+must render him eternally estimable in the sight of all moral and social
+beings, was, nevertheless, the most passionate, and in his passions the
+most violent and unbridled in his expressions, of any man I ever knew."
+
+[38] In the latter part of his life, it must have severely taxed the memory
+of Franklin to recollect all the honors paid to him by educational
+institutions and learned societies of one kind or another. The honorary
+degree of Master of Arts was conferred on him in July, 1753, by Harvard
+College, and in September of the same year by Yale College. In April, 1756,
+the degree of Master of Arts was bestowed on him by William and Mary
+College. In 1759, he received the degree of Doctor in Laws from the
+University of St. Andrews, and in 1762, he was made a Doctor of Civil Laws
+by the University of Oxford. At various times in his life, he was elected
+an Honorary Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh, an Honorary Fellow of
+the Philosophical Society of Edinburgh, a member of the Royal Society of
+London, one of the eight foreign associates of the Royal Academy of
+Sciences at Paris, an honorary member of the Medical Society of London, the
+first foreign associate of the Royal Society of Medicine at Paris, and a
+member of other learned societies or academies at Padua, Turin, Orleans,
+Madrid, Rotterdam, Goettingen and elsewhere.
+
+[39] "It would be difficult," says Count Segur, "to describe the eagerness
+and delight with which the American envoys, the agents of a people in a
+state of insurrection against their monarch, were received in France, in
+the bosom of an ancient monarchy. Nothing could be more striking than the
+contrast between the luxury of our capital, the elegance of our fashions,
+the magnificence of Versailles, the still brilliant remains of the
+monarchical pride of Louis XIV., and the polished and superb dignity of our
+nobility on the one hand, and, on the other hand, the almost rustic
+apparel, the plain but firm demeanor, the free and direct language of the
+envoys, whose antique simplicity of dress and appearance seemed to have
+introduced within our walls, in the midst of the effeminate and servile
+refinement of the eighteenth century, some sages contemporary with Plato,
+or republicans of the age of Cato and of Fabius. This unexpected apparition
+produced upon us a greater effect in consequence of its novelty, and of its
+occurring precisely at the period when literature and philosophy had
+circulated amongst us an unusual desire for reforms, a disposition to
+encourage innovations, and the seeds of an ardent attachment to liberty."
+
+[40] Compassion, it must be confessed, was not the only motive that made
+Franklin so eager to secure the freedom of his imprisoned countrymen. "If
+we once had our Prisoners from England," he wrote to M. de Sartine on Feb.
+13, 1780, "several other privateers would immediately be manned with them."
+
+[41] A Commissioner, Thomas Barclay, was appointed by Congress to audit the
+accounts of all the servants of the United States who had been entrusted
+with the expenditure of money in Europe during the Revolutionary War. "I
+rendered to him," said Franklin in a letter to Cyrus Griffin, the President
+of Congress, dated Nov. 29, 1788, "all my accounts, which he examined, and
+stated methodically. By this statement he found a balance due me on the 4th
+of May, 1785, of 7,533 livres, 19 sols, 3 den., which I accordingly
+received of the Congress banker; the difference between my statement and
+his being only seven sols, which by mistake I had overcharged;--about three
+pence half penny sterling."
+
+[42] The dogged steadfastness with which Vergennes pursued his task of
+humbling the pride and power of England through her rebellious colonies was
+in keeping with the main point of what Choiseul had said about him as the
+French Ambassador at Constantinople: "The Count de Vergennes has something
+to say against whatever is proposed to him, but he never finds any
+difficulty in carrying out his instructions. Were we to order him to send
+us the Vizier's head, he would write that it was dangerous, but the head
+would come." The levity of Maurepas, as President of the Council of State,
+and the grave diligence of Vergennes, as Minister for Foreign Affairs, led
+D'Aranda to say of them, "I chat with M. de Maurepas, I negotiate with M.
+de Vergennes."
+
+[43] In a letter to William Carmichael in 1788, after saying that he
+presumed that there would not be a vote against the election of Washington
+to the Presidency, Jefferson added: "It is more doubtful who will be
+Vice-President. The age of Dr. Franklin, and the doubt whether he would
+accept it, are the only circumstances that admit a question, but that he
+would be the man." Some twenty-two years afterwards, he wrote to Col.
+William Duane that he believed that a greater or better character than
+Franklin had rarely existed.
+
+[44] Optimist and thorough-going democrat as Franklin was, Shays' Rebellion
+and the heated conflict of opposing principles, concomitant with the
+adoption of the Federal Constitution, set up a slight current of reaction
+in his sanguine nature. On May 25, 1789, he wrote to Charles Carroll of
+Carrollton: "We have been guarding against an evil that old States are most
+liable to, _excess of power_, in the rulers; but our present danger seems
+to be _defect of obedience_ in the subjects." Some six months later, in his
+_Queries and Remarks respecting Alterations in the Constitution of
+Pennsylvania_, he quoted the advice of the prophet, "Stand in the old ways,
+view the ancient Paths, consider them well, and be not among those that are
+given to Change." But in this instance Franklin was really invoking the
+spirit of conservatism in aid of liberalism; for the occasion for the
+Biblical reference was the suggestion that the Pennsylvania Assembly should
+no longer consist of a single chamber but of an Upper House based on
+property and a Lower House based on population.
+
+[45] This remark brings up in a timely way another member of the Board of
+Trade, Lord Clare, whose habits were such as to aid us in understanding why
+the Board did not always retain a clear recollection of its past
+transactions. Speaking of an interview with him, Franklin wrote to his son:
+"He gave me a great deal of flummery; saying, that though at my Examination
+(before the House of Commons) I answered some of his questions a little
+pertly, yet he liked me, from that day, for the spirit I showed in defence
+of my country; and at parting, after we had drank a bottle and a half of
+claret each, he hugged and kissed me, protesting he never in his life met
+with a man he was so much in love with."
+
+[46] The story told by Franklin of a running colloquy between George
+Grenville, who had on one occasion, as usual, been denouncing the Americans
+as rebels and Colonel Onslow, a warm friend of America, is good enough to
+be related. After recalling the Roman practice of sending a commission to a
+disaffected province for the purpose of investigating the causes of its
+discontent, Onslow declared his willingness, if the House of Commons should
+think fit to appoint them, to go over to America _with that honorable
+gentleman_. "Upon this there was a great laugh, which continued some time,
+and was rather increased by Mr. Grenville's asking, 'Will the gentleman
+engage, that I shall be safe there? Can I be assured that I shall be
+allowed to come back again to make the report?' As soon as the laugh was so
+far subsided, as that Mr. Onslow could be heard again, he added: 'I can not
+absolutely engage for the honorable gentleman's safe return, but if he goes
+thither upon this service, I am strongly of opinion the _event_ will
+contribute greatly to the future quiet of both countries.' On which the
+laugh was renewed and redoubled."
+
+[47] The principal features of a plan for the issuance of a stable colonial
+currency proposed by Franklin and Governor Pownall to the British Ministry,
+in 1764, 1765 and 1766 were these: bills of credit to a certain amount were
+to be printed in England for the use of the Colonies; and a loan office was
+to be established in each colony, empowered to issue the bills, take
+security for their payment and receive payment of them. They were to be
+paid in full in ten years, and were to bear interest at the rate of five
+per centum per annum; and one tenth of the principal was to be paid each
+year with the proper proportion of interest. They were to be a legal
+tender.
+
+[48] "Here in England," Franklin wrote to Humphrey Marshall on Apr. 22,
+1771, "it is well known and understood, that whenever a Manufacture is
+established which employs a Number of Hands, it raises the Value of Lands
+in the neighbouring Country all around it; partly by the greater Demand
+near at hand for the produce of the Land; and partly from the Plenty of
+Money drawn by the Manufacturers to that part of the Country. It seems
+therefore the Interest of all our Farmers and Owners of Lands, to encourage
+our Young Manufactures in preference to foreign ones imported among us from
+distant Countries."
+
+[49]
+
+ The patriot, fresh from Freedom's Councils come,
+ Now pleas'd retires to lash his slaves at home;
+ Or woo, perhaps, some black Aspasia's charms,
+ And dream of freedom in his bondsmaid's arms.
+
+ To Thomas Hume, Esq., M.D.
+ From the City of Washington.
+
+[50] By his will Franklin released his son-in-law from the payment of a
+bond for L2172, 5s, with the request that he would immediately after the
+death of the testator set free "his negro man Bob."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+Franklin as a Man of Science
+
+
+Franklin, as we have said, was primarily a man of action. If we do not
+always think of him as deeply involved in what Goethe calls "being's ocean,
+action's storm," it is only because he moved from appointed task to
+appointed task with such frictionless self-command and ease. But,
+throughout his life, his mind was quick to make excursions into the domain
+of philosophical speculation and experiment, whenever business cares or
+political responsibilities allowed it to do so. Poor Richard would seem to
+have little in common with Prometheus, but Prometheus, if Condorcet is to
+be believed, as well as Poor Richard, Franklin was; to say nothing of other
+transmigrations. That his interest in natural phenomena began at a very
+early age, is disclosed by his _Journal of a Voyage from London to
+Philadelphia_ in 1726, when he was in his twenty-first year. Throughout the
+course of this voyage, his faculties were intently concentrated upon all
+the marvels of the sea and its setting. With sedulous minuteness, he
+registers the state of the winds each day, and records the impression made
+on him by every object with a secret at its heart, to be plucked out by an
+inquisitive mind. A lunar rainbow, an eclipse of the sun, which darkened
+ten twelfths of his disk, an eclipse of the moon, which spread over six
+digits of her surface, dolphins in their bright mail of mixed green, silver
+and gold, a shark moving around the ship in a slow, majestic manner, and
+attended by an obsequious retinue of pilot fish, schools of harried flying
+fish, groups of young crabs, clinging to seaweeds, with indented leaves
+about three quarters of an inch long, and small yellow berries filled with
+nothing but wind, a white, tropical bird, said never to be seen further
+north than latitude 40, and marked by short wings and a single tail
+feather, other birds, too near the western continent not to be Americans,
+are among the things that the open-eyed and thoughtful youth jotted down in
+his Journal in terms that plainly enough indicated not only the eager
+curiosity but the exactitude of a future man of science. As almost always,
+the child was but the father of the man. Upon each of his subsequent six
+voyages across the Atlantic, Franklin exhibited the same, though severer,
+and more practised, vigilance in observing everything that the ocean,
+including the instruments of commerce afloat on it, have for a penetrating
+and suggestive intelligence. How essentially he was a man of science, is
+demonstrated by the fact that, whenever he was on the element, where alone
+he could hope for exemption from the political demands of his countrymen,
+his intellect turned at once with ardor to the study of Nature. Old and
+feeble as he was, he wrote no less than three valuable dissertations on his
+last voyage across the Atlantic, one on the causes and cure of smoky
+chimneys, one on his smoke-consuming stove, and a third, distinguished by
+an extraordinary wealth of knowledge and observation, on the construction,
+equipment and provisioning of ships, and the winds, currents and
+temperature of the sea; which was accompanied by valuable thermometric
+tables, based upon observations made by him during three of his
+transatlantic voyages. The maritime essay was written with the closest
+regard to detail, and contains such a mass of information and luminous
+comment as has rarely been condensed into the same space. It makes up some
+thirty-four quarto pages of Smyth's edition of Franklin's works, exclusive
+of the thermometric notes. The other two essays occupy some forty-nine
+pages more. All three are elucidated by numerous explanatory charts and
+illustrations, and are marked by the mastery of scientific principles,
+which no mere artificer or artisan could have displayed in discussing such
+topics; but, at the same time, they could not have been more intensely
+practical, as respects minutiae of construction, if Franklin had been a
+professional sailor, mason or stove-maker. The maritime observations range
+from the Chinese method of dividing the hulls of vessels into separate
+compartments, which is now regarded as one of the most efficient devices
+for securing the safety of ocean greyhounds, to an inquiry into the reason
+why fowls served up at sea are usually too tough to be readily masticated
+and the best means of dishing soup on a rolling and pitching vessel.
+
+After his return in his youth from London to Philadelphia, Franklin was for
+a long time too much immersed in business and civic projects to give much
+attention to natural phenomena. "Why does the flame of a candle tend upward
+in a spire?", "whence comes the dew, that stands on the outside of a
+tankard that has cold water in it in the summer time?", are among the few
+questions of a scientific nature that he appears to have framed for the
+discussions of the Junto; and they are elementary enough. But with the
+coming of pecuniary ease, the natural bent of his mind soon asserted
+itself. While in Boston in 1746, he happened to see some electrical
+experiments performed by a Dr. Spence, who had recently arrived from
+Scotland. They were clumsily conducted, but crude as they were, they filled
+his mind with mixed sensations of surprise and delight; so much so that,
+when, shortly after his return to Philadelphia from Boston, the Library
+Company found itself the owner of a glass tube, for the production of
+electricity by friction, given to it by Peter Collinson, then a Fellow of
+the Royal Society of London, with instructions for its use, he eagerly
+availed himself of Collinson's generosity to repeat the experiments that he
+had witnessed at Boston, and, by continuous practice, became very expert in
+making them as well as others. Indeed, his house was soon overrun to such
+an extent with eager visitors that he was compelled in self-defence to
+relieve it of its congestion by supplying some of his friends with similar
+tubes blown at the Philadelphia glass-house. One of these friends was his
+ingenious neighbor, Kinnersley, who chanced at the time to be out of
+business. Franklin advised him to exhibit the experiments for profit, and
+followed up the advice by preparing two lectures for him, in which the
+details of the experiments were clearly set forth. Kinnersley himself
+employed skilled workmen to make the necessary electrical apparatus for
+him, modelled upon the rough agencies designed by Franklin for himself, and
+used in his own exhibitions. The lectures, when delivered by him in
+Philadelphia, were so well attended that he made a tour of all the chief
+towns of the Colonies with a considerable degree of pecuniary success. Some
+years later, similar instructions given by Franklin to Domien, a Greek
+priest, proved so useful to him on a long tramp that he wrote to his
+benefactor that he had lived eight hundred miles upon electricity, and that
+it had been meat, drink and clothing to him. When Franklin last heard from
+him, he was contemplating a journey from Havana to Vera Cruz, thence
+through Mexico to Acapulco, on its western coast, and from Acapulco to
+Manila, and from Manila through China, India, Persia and Turkey to his home
+in Transylvania; all with electricity as his main _viaticum_.
+
+Franklin's own experiments fortunately ended in something better than
+vagabondage, however respectable or profitable. Grateful to Collinson for
+his timely gifts, he wrote to him several letters, laying before him the
+results of the Philadelphia experiments. Collinson procured for these
+letters the privilege of being read before the Royal Society, where they
+did not excite enough notice to be printed among its Transactions. Another
+letter, one to Kinnersley, in which Franklin propounded the identity of
+lightning and electricity, he sent to Dr. Mitchell, an acquaintance of his,
+and also a member of the Royal Society, who replied by telling him that it
+had been read before the Society, but had been laughed at by the
+connoisseurs. Then it was that the happy obstetric suggestion of Dr.
+Fothergill that the letters were of too much value to be stifled led
+Collinson to gather them together for publication by Cave in the
+_Gentleman's Magazine_. They were not published in this magazine, but Cave
+did bring them out in pamphlet form with a preface by Dr. Fothergill. The
+event showed that he and the general public had more acumen than the sages
+of the Royal Society, for the letters, when subsequently published in a
+quarto volume, with additions by Franklin, ran through five editions,
+without the cost of a penny to Cave for copyright. It was from France,
+however, that they first received the full meed of prompt approbation that
+they deserved. A copy of them happened to fall into the hands of Buffon,
+who prevailed upon D'Alibard to translate them into French. Their
+publication in that language provoked an attack upon them by the Abbe
+Nollet, Preceptor in Natural Philosophy to the Royal Family, and the author
+of a popular theory of Electricity. At first, the Abbe could not believe
+that America was capable of producing such letters, and insisted that they
+must have been fabricated at Paris for the purpose of discrediting his
+system. In fact, he even doubted whether there was such a person as
+Franklin, but, afterwards, being convinced upon that point, he published a
+volume of letters, mainly addressed to Franklin, in which he defended his
+own theory, and denied the accuracy of Franklin's experiments and
+conclusions. Le Roy, of the Royal Academy of Sciences, rejoined on behalf
+of Franklin, who had decided to let the truth be its own champion, and
+easily refuted the Abbe. The papers could not have asked for a better
+advertisement than this controversy. They were further translated into the
+Italian, German and Latin languages, and Franklin's theory of electricity
+was so generally adopted by the learned men of Europe, in preference to
+that of the Abbe, that the latter lived, Franklin tells us, to see himself
+the last of his sect, except Monsieur B. of Paris, his _eleve_ and
+immediate disciple. It is surprising that even the solitary _eleve_ should
+have been left clinging to his master; for, in the meantime, the most
+momentous experiment, suggested by Franklin in his letters, had been
+performed, substantially in the manner outlined by him, with brilliant
+success, by D'Alibard, on a hill at Marly-la-Ville, where a pointed rod of
+iron, forty feet high, and planted on an electric stand, had been erected
+for the purpose of carrying it into execution. When a thundercloud passed
+over the rod on May 10, 1752, between 2 and 3 o'clock in the afternoon, the
+persons, set by D'Alibard to watch it, had drawn near "and attracted from
+it sparks of fire, perceiving the same kind of commotions as in the common
+electrical experiments." A week later, the fire and crackling sound,
+elicited by M. de Lor from a rod, erected at his house in Paris on a cake
+of resin, and electrified by a cloud between 4 and 5 o'clock in the
+afternoon, told the same story. He had previously performed what he called
+the "Philadelphia experiments" in the presence of Louis XV., who seems to
+have been as much delighted with them as if they had been a new mistress.
+In a short time, they became so popular that we are told by Franklin that
+"all the curious of Paris flocked to see them." One of the results of the
+fame acquired by him in France was a letter written by Dr. Wright, an
+English physician, then in Paris, to a member of the Royal Society,
+apprising the latter of the excitement that the experiments had created in
+France, and expressing his astonishment that Franklin's papers had been so
+little noticed in England. Quickened by Dr. Wright's words, the Society
+reconsidered the letters which had been read before them, and caused an
+abstract of them and the other letters on electricity, sent to England by
+Franklin, to be printed among its Transactions. Afterwards, when several
+members of the Society had themselves drawn down lightning from the clouds,
+it elected Franklin a member, and, in view of the fact that the honor had
+not been sought by him, voted that he "was not to pay anything"; which
+meant that he was to be liable for neither admission fee nor annual dues,
+and was even to receive his copy of the Transactions of the Society free of
+charge. Nor did it stop here. It also awarded to Franklin, for the year
+1753, the Copley gold medal, accompanied by an address, in which Lord
+Macclesfield, its President, endeavored to make full amends to him for its
+belated recognition of the value of his discoveries.
+
+The suggestion by Franklin, which led to the experiments of D'Alibard and
+De Lor, is as matter-of-fact as a cooking recipe.
+
+ To determine the question [he said in a letter to Peter
+ Collinson] whether the clouds that contain lightning
+ are electrified or not, I would propose an experiment
+ to be try'd where it may be done conveniently. On the
+ top of some high tower or steeple, place a kind of
+ centry box,... big enough to contain a man and an
+ electrical stand. From the middle of the stand let an
+ iron rod rise and pass bending out of the door, and
+ then upright 20 or 30 feet, pointed very sharp at the
+ end. If the electrical stand be kept clean and dry, a
+ man standing on it when such clouds are passing low,
+ might be electrified and afford sparks, the rod drawing
+ fire to him from a cloud. If any danger to the man
+ should be apprehended (though I think there would be
+ none), let him stand on the floor of his box, and now
+ and then bring near to the rod the loop of a wire that
+ has one end fastened to the leads, he holding it by a
+ wax handle; so the sparks, if the rod is electrified,
+ will strike from the rod to the wire, and not affect
+ him.
+
+Before the news of the success achieved by D'Alibard and De Lor reached
+Franklin, he himself had conducted a similar experiment "though made in a
+different and more easy manner." This experiment has become one of the
+veriest commonplaces of physical science. It was performed, when a thunder
+gust was coming on, in a field near Philadelphia, with such simple
+materials as a silk kite, topped off with a foot or more of sharp pointed
+wire, and controlled by a twine string, equipped with a key for casting off
+the electric sparks, and ending in a silk ribbon to secure the safety of
+the hand that held it. The whole construction is set out in a letter
+written to Collinson by Franklin shortly after the incident, in which, with
+his usual modesty, the latter describes the kite as if he had had nothing
+to do with it. Something like the feelings of Sir Isaac Newton, when the
+falling apple brought to his ear the real music of the spheres, must have
+been those of Franklin, when the loose filaments of twine bristled up
+stiffly, as if stirred by some violated instinct of wild freedom, and the
+stream of sparks from the key told him that he was right in supposing that
+the mysterious and appalling agency, which had for centuries been
+associated in the human mind with the resistless wrath of Omnipotence, was
+but the same subtle fluid that had so often lit up his electrical apparatus
+with its playful corruscations.
+
+The letters to Collinson contained another suggestion almost equally
+pregnant. Speaking of the power of pointed conductors to draw off
+electricity noiselessly and harmlessly, Franklin asked,
+
+ May not the knowledge of this power of points be of use
+ to mankind, in preserving houses, churches, ships, &c.
+ from the stroke of lightning, by directing us to fix on
+ the highest parts of those edifices, upright rods of
+ iron made sharp as a needle, and gilt to prevent
+ rusting, and from the foot of those rods a wire down
+ the outside of the building into the ground, or down
+ round one of the shrouds of a ship, and down her side
+ till it reaches the water? Would not these pointed rods
+ probably draw the electrical fire silently out of a
+ cloud before it came nigh enough to strike, and thereby
+ secure us from that most sudden and terrible mischief?
+
+The suggestion was but slowly adopted, not in Europe, indeed, at all, until
+the efficacy of the lightning rod in protecting buildings had been
+generally recognized in America. In time, however, the device came into use
+both in Great Britain and on the Continent; Voltaire being one of the first
+persons in Geneva to erect one, and, wherever it was erected, it helped to
+confirm the fame of Franklin by its silent effect upon the human
+imagination. In recent years, the lightning rod, once in almost universal
+use in America, has fallen into neglect, but the explanation of this fact
+is to be found not in any just doubts about its utility, when properly
+constructed, affixed and grounded, but in the growth of fire insurance, and
+the inutility, or danger, of such rods, if carelessly set in place.[51]
+
+The domestication of lightning and the invention of the lightning rod were
+the two things to which Franklin was principally indebted for his brilliant
+reputation as a philosopher. At this day, the application of electricity to
+common uses is so familiar to us that it is hard, without a little
+reflection, to realize how well calculated his electrical achievements
+were to send a thrill of astonishment and awe through the human mind. Of
+all the manifestations of the physical world, lightning with its
+inscrutable, swift, and all but irresistible, stroke, followed by the
+sublime detonations of thunder, is the one most suggestive of supernatural
+influence exerted by an all-powerful deity. The mythological dreams of the
+Greeks, the visions of the Old Testament, the simple emotions of the savage
+had all paid their homage of dread to the fearful force--like a madman
+pitilessly destructive, and yet like a madman diverted from its rage by the
+barest trifle--which had clothed Jove with the greater part of his
+grandeur, licked up even the water that was in the trench about the altar,
+built by Elijah in the name of the Lord, and filled the breast of the
+Indian with superstitious terror. Discovery, that laid bare the real nature
+and destructive limits of this force, could not fail to excite an
+extraordinary degree of attention everywhere. It was the singular fortune
+of Franklin, though a practical, sober-minded denizen of the earth, if ever
+man was, to have enjoyed in his day a reputation not unlike that of a
+divinity of the upper ether.[52] It so happens that the atmosphere was, in
+one way or another, the home of all the scientific problems which engaged
+his interest most deeply. His philosophical Pegasus, so little akin to the
+humble brute bestrid by Poor Richard, was "a beast for Perseus--pure air
+and fire"; and especially, it is needless to say, was this true of his
+relations to the lightning. When the fact became known throughout the
+civilized world that human ingenuity had succeeded in even snaring it,
+Franklin was exalted for a time to a seat on Olympus. All the literature
+of the period, as well as that of a much later period, bears out the
+statement that rarely has any single, peaceful incident ever so fired the
+human imagination.[53] For many years, the natural background for a
+portrait of Franklin might have been a bank of cloud lit up by the
+incessant play of summer lightning. _Eripuit coelo fulmen sceptrumque
+tyrannis_, was but the mightiest of the electrical discharges that flattery
+poured upon him. Turn where we may to the poetry of the latter half of the
+eighteenth century, and of the earlier part of the nineteenth, whether
+epigram or otherwise, we are likely to come upon some imprint left upon the
+thought of those periods by the subjugation of lightning.
+
+The interest of Franklin in electrical science was but another sequel of
+the world-wide avidity with which learned men had recently turned to the
+study of that subject. One of them, Grey, had pursued a series of
+experiments for the purpose of determining the relative conductivity of
+various substances, another, Du Fay, had erroneously classified electricity
+as resinous and vitreous, and the perfected Leyden Jar particularly had
+given a new momentum to the progress of electrical investigation. Into this
+movement, after witnessing Dr. Spence's awkward experiments at Boston,
+Franklin threw himself with the utmost enthusiasm, and his discovery of
+the identity of lightning and electricity and his lightning-rod conception
+were but the chief fruits of this enthusiasm. Between the _Autobiography_
+and his letters, we are at no loss to follow closely the steps by which he
+reached all the results which have given him such a high position as an
+electrical investigator. "I purchased all Dr. Spence's apparatus ..." he
+tells us in the _Autobiography_, "and I proceeded in my electrical
+experiments with great alacrity." How keen this alacrity became, after he
+had been rubbing for a time the glass tube, sent over to Philadelphia by
+Collinson, may be seen in what he wrote to Collinson himself on March 28,
+1747:
+
+ For my own part, I never was before engaged in any
+ study that so totally engrossed my attention and my
+ time as this has lately done; for what with making
+ experiments when I can be alone, and repeating them to
+ my Friends and Acquaintance, who, from the novelty of
+ the thing, come continually in crouds to see them, I
+ have, during some months past, had little leisure for
+ anything else.
+
+The result of this experimentation was the various letters to Collinson and
+others that constitute Franklin's highest claim to distinction as a man of
+science. By following them in their chronological order, the reader can
+trace with little difficulty the genesis of each of his more valuable
+conclusions touching electricity. They are distinguished by remarkable
+simplicity and force of reasoning and by a clearness of statement as
+transparent as crystal. Moreover, they are even enlivened at times by
+gleams of fancy or humor. In a word they indisputably merit the judgment
+that Sir Humphry Davy, no mean judge of style as well as scientific truth,
+passes upon them:
+
+ The style and manner of his publication on electricity
+ are almost as worthy of admiration as the doctrine it
+ contains. He has endeavoured to remove all mystery and
+ obscurity from the subject. He has written equally for
+ the uninitiated and the philosopher; and he has
+ rendered his details amusing as well as perspicuous,
+ elegant as well as simple. Science appears in his
+ language in a dress wonderfully decorous, the best
+ adapted to display her native loveliness. He has in no
+ instance exhibited that false dignity, by which
+ philosophy is kept aloof from common applications; and
+ he has sought rather to make her a useful inmate and
+ servant in the common habitations of man, than to
+ preserve her merely as an object of admiration in
+ temples and palaces.
+
+While recalling these words, it is not amiss to recall, too, what Lord
+Brougham had to say about the agencies with which Franklin conducted his
+experiments.
+
+ He could make an experiment [said Brougham] with less
+ apparatus and conduct his experimental inquiry to a
+ discovery with more ordinary materials than any other
+ philosopher we ever saw. With an old key, a silk
+ thread, some sealing wax and a sheet of paper he
+ discovered the identity of lightning and electricity.
+
+The truth of these observations is strikingly instanced in a story told of
+Franklin in Pettigrew's _Life of Lettsom_. When Henry Smeathman was
+insisting that the flight of birds is on inclined planes, and that they
+could not fly at all, but would simply float with the wind, if they were
+not heavier than the air, Franklin launched half a sheet of paper obliquely
+into the air, observing, as he watched its course, that that was an evident
+proof of the propriety of Smeathman's doctrines.
+
+In a letter to Collinson, dated July 11, 1747, Franklin communicated to him
+the earliest results of his experimental use of the glass tube that
+Collinson had sent over to Philadelphia. The first phenomenon, which fixed
+his attention, was the wonderful effect of pointed bodies in drawing off
+the electrical fire. This was the lightning rod in its protoplasmal stage.
+The manner in which he described the experiment, by which this particular
+truth was demonstrated, is a good specimen of his remarkable faculty for
+simple and clear statement:
+
+ Place an iron shot of three or four inches diameter on
+ the mouth of a clean dry glass bottle. By a fine silken
+ thread from the ceiling, right over the mouth of the
+ bottle, suspend a small cork ball, about the bigness of
+ a marble; the thread of such a length, as that the cork
+ ball may rest against the side of the shot. Electrify
+ the shot, and the ball will be repelled to the distance
+ of four or five inches, more or less, according to the
+ quantity of Electricity. When in this state, if you
+ present to the shot the point of a long slender sharp
+ bodkin, at six or eight inches distance, the repellency
+ is instantly destroy'd, and the cork flies to the shot.
+ A blunt body must be brought within an inch, and draw a
+ spark, to produce the same effect. To prove that the
+ electrical fire is _drawn off_ by the point, if you
+ take the blade of the bodkin out of the wooden handle,
+ and fix it in a stick of sealing wax, and then present
+ it at the distance aforesaid, or if you bring it very
+ near, no such effect follows; but sliding one finger
+ along the wax till you touch the blade, and the ball
+ flies to the shot immediately. If you present the point
+ in the dark, you will see, sometimes at a foot
+ distance, and more, a light gather upon it, like that
+ of a firefly, or glowworm; the less sharp the point,
+ the nearer you must bring it to observe the light; and,
+ at whatever distance you see the light, you may draw
+ off the electrical fire, and destroy the repellency. If
+ a cork ball so suspended be repelled by the tube, and a
+ point be presented quick to it, tho' at a considerable
+ distance, 'tis surprizing to see how suddenly it flies
+ back to the tube. Points of wood will do near as well
+ as those of iron, provided the wood is not dry; but
+ perfectly dry wood will no more conduct electricity
+ than sealing-wax.
+
+The repellency between the ball and the shot was likewise destroyed,
+Franklin stated, 1, by sifting fine sand on it; this did it gradually, 2,
+by breathing on it, 3, by making a smoke about it from burning wood, and 4,
+by candlelight, even though the candle was at a foot distance; these did
+it suddenly.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The same result was also produced, he found, by the light of a bright coal
+from a wood fire, or the light of red-hot iron; but not at so great a
+distance. Such was not the effect, however, he said, of smoke from dry
+resin dropped on hot iron. It was merely attracted by both shot and cork
+ball, forming proportionable atmospheres round them, making them look
+beautifully, somewhat like some of the figures in Burnet's or Whiston's
+_Theory of the Earth_.
+
+Franklin also noted the fact that, unlike fire-light, sunlight, when thrown
+on both cork and shot, did not impair the repellency between them in the
+least.
+
+In the same letter, guided by the belief that he had formed that
+electricity is not created by friction but, except when accumulated or
+depleted by special causes, is equally diffused through material substances
+generally, he also reached the conclusion that electrical discharges are
+due to circuits set up by substances that offer little resistance to the
+transit of the electrical current between bodies charged with more than the
+ordinary quantity of electrical energy and bodies not in that condition. In
+other words, electricity is always alert to restore its equilibrium when
+lost, and, if accumulated beyond its normal measure in one body, seeks with
+violent eagerness, as soon as a favorable medium of transmission is
+presented to it, to pass on its surplus of electrical energy to another
+body less amply supplied.
+
+These conceptions, too, which lie at the very foundations of modern
+electrical science, are illustrated by Franklin with extraordinary
+simplicity and clearness as follows:
+
+ 1. A person standing on wax, and rubbing the tube, and
+ another person on wax drawing the fire, they will both
+ of them, (provided they do not stand so as to touch one
+ another) appear to be electrised, to a person standing
+ on the floor; that is, he will perceive a spark on
+ approaching each of them with his knuckle.
+
+ 2. But, if the persons on wax touch one another during
+ the exciting of the tube, neither of them will appear
+ to be electrised.
+
+ 3. If they touch one another after exciting the tube,
+ and drawing the fire as aforesaid, there will be a
+ stronger spark between them, than was between either of
+ them and the person on the floor.
+
+ 4. After such strong spark, neither of them discover
+ any electricity.
+
+ These appearances we attempt to account for thus: We
+ suppose, as aforesaid, that electrical fire is a common
+ element, of which every one of the three persons above
+ mentioned has his equal share, before any operation is
+ begun with the tube. A, who stands on wax and rubs the
+ tube, collects the electrical fire from himself into
+ the glass; and his communication with the common stock
+ being cut off by the wax, his body is not again
+ immediately supply'd. B, (who stands on wax likewise)
+ passing his knuckle along near the tube, receives the
+ fire which was collected by the glass from A; and his
+ communication with the common stock being likewise cut
+ off, he retains the additional quantity received. To C,
+ standing on the floor, both appear to be electrised:
+ for he having only the middle quantity of electrical
+ fire, receives a spark upon approaching B, who has an
+ over quantity; but gives one to A, who has an under
+ quantity. If A and B approach to touch each other, the
+ spark is stronger, because the difference between them
+ is greater: After such touch there is no spark between
+ either of them and C, because the electrical fire in
+ all is reduced to the original equality. If they touch
+ while electrising, the equality is never destroy'd, the
+ fire only circulating. Hence have arisen some new terms
+ among us: We say, B, (and bodies like circumstanced) is
+ electrised _positively_; A, _negatively_. Or rather, B
+ is electrised _plus_; A, _minus_. And we daily in our
+ experiments electrise bodies _plus_ or _minus_, as we
+ think proper. To electrise _plus_ or _minus_, no more
+ needs to be known than this, that the parts of the tube
+ or sphere that are rubbed, do, in the instant of the
+ friction, attract the electrical fire, and therefore
+ take it from the thing rubbing: The same parts
+ immediately, as the friction upon them ceases, are
+ disposed to give the fire they have received, to
+ anybody that has less. Thus you may circulate it, as
+ Mr. _Watson_ has shown; you may also accumulate or
+ subtract it upon, or from anybody, as you connect that
+ body with the rubber or with the receiver, the
+ communication with the common stock being cut off.
+
+The same letter recounts some of the tricks that Franklin and his
+fellow-experimenters were in the habit of making their new plaything
+perform. They fired spirits, lit candles just blown out, mimicked
+lightning, produced sparks with the touch of the finger, on the human hand
+or face, and gave electrical kisses. Other feats consisted in animating an
+artificial spider in such a way as to keep him oscillating in a very
+lifelike and entertaining manner between two wires, and lighting up the
+gilding on the covers of a book with a brilliant flash. This letter also
+shows that the provincial philosophers had already made improvements in the
+usual electrical methods. They had found that it was better to fill the
+phial with granulated lead than with water because of the superior facility
+with which the former could be warmed, and kept warm and dry in a damp
+place. They rubbed their tubes with buckskin, and, by observing certain
+precautions, such as never sullying the tubes by handling them, and keeping
+them in tight, close-fitting cases of pasteboard, lined with flannel,
+increased their efficiency. Their spheres for charging phials with
+electricity were mounted on iron axes with a small handle on one end, with
+which they could be set revolving like a common grindstone. It was in this
+same letter that Franklin with his usual generosity was careful to state
+that the power of pointed bodies to throw off as well as draw off the
+electrical fire was a discovery of his friend Hopkinson, and that the
+revolving sphere used by them was the invention of his friend Syng. About a
+month later, Franklin wrote to Collinson that, in the course of further
+experiments, he had observed several phenomena which made him distrust some
+of his former conclusions. "If there is no other use discover'd of
+Electricity," he said, "this however is something considerable, that it may
+_help to make a vain man humble_."
+
+Another letter from Franklin to Collinson, written about two weeks later,
+communicated to him some valuable observations upon "M. Muschenbroeck's
+wonderful bottle"--the Leyden Jar. This bottle was a mere ordinary bottle,
+with a common cork in its neck, into which a common wire had been inserted.
+He wrote that, at the same time that the wire and the top of the bottle
+were electrised positively or plus, the bottom of the bottle was electrised
+negatively or minus, in exact proportion; the consequence was that,
+whatever quantity of electrical fire was thrown in at the top, an equal
+quantity went out at the bottom until, if the process was kept up long
+enough, the point was reached in the operation, when no more could be
+thrown into the upper part of the bottle, because no more could be drawn
+out of the lower part. If the attempt was made to throw more in, the fire
+was spewed back through the wire, or flew out in loud cracks through the
+sides of the bottle.
+
+He also noted that an equilibrium could not be restored in the bottle by
+inward communication or contact of the parts, but only by a communication,
+formed without the bottle between its top and bottom.
+
+He also noted that no electrical fire could be thrown into the top of the
+bottle, when none could get out at its bottom, either because the bottom
+was too thick, or because it stood on some non-conducting material, and
+likewise that, when the bottle was electrified, but little of the
+electrical fire could be drawn from the top by touching the wire, unless
+an equal quantity could at the same time get in at the bottom.
+
+ So wonderfully [he adds] are these two states of
+ electricity, the _plus_ and _minus_, combined and
+ balanced in this miraculous bottle! situated and
+ related to each in a manner that I can by no means
+ comprehend! If it were possible that a bottle should in
+ one part contain a quantity of air strongly comprest,
+ and in another part a perfect vacuum, we know the
+ equilibrium would be instantly restored _within_. But
+ here we have a bottle containing at the same time a
+ _plenum_ of electrical fire, and a _vacuum_ of the same
+ fire; and yet the equilibrium cannot be restored
+ between them but by a communication without! though the
+ _plenum_ presses violently to expand, and the hungry
+ vacuum seems to attract as violently in order to be
+ filled.
+
+The letter concludes with an elaborate statement of the experiments by
+which the correctness of its conclusions could be established.
+
+Franklin's next discovery communicated to Collinson in a letter dated the
+succeeding year was that, when the bottle was electrified, the electric
+fluid resided in the glass itself of the bottle. The manner in which he
+proved this fact is a good example of his inductive thoroughness.
+
+ Purposing [he said] to analyze the electrified bottle,
+ in order to find wherein its strength lay, we placed it
+ on glass, and drew out the cork and wire, which for
+ that purpose had been loosely put in. Then taking the
+ bottle in one hand, and bringing a finger of the other
+ near its mouth, a strong spark came from the water, and
+ the shock was as violent as if the wire had remained in
+ it, which shewed that the force did not lie in the
+ wire. Then, to find if it resided in the water, being
+ crouded into and condensed in it, as confin'd by the
+ glass, which had been our former opinion, we
+ electrified the bottle again, and, placing it on glass,
+ drew out the wire and cork as before; then, taking up
+ the bottle, we decanted all its water into an empty
+ bottle, which likewise stood on glass; and taking up
+ that other bottle, we expected, if the force resided in
+ the water, to find a shock from it; but there was
+ none. We judged then, that it must either be lost in
+ decanting, or remain in the first bottle. The latter we
+ found to be true; for that bottle on trial gave the
+ shock, though filled up as it stood with fresh
+ unelectrified water from a teapot.
+
+By a similar course of experimentation with sash glass and lead plates, he
+also demonstrated that the form of the glass in the bottle was immaterial,
+that the power resided in the glass as glass, and that the non-electrics in
+contact served only like the armature of a loadstone to unite the force of
+the several parts, and to bring them at once to any point desired; it being
+the property of a non-electric that the whole body instantly receives or
+gives what electric fire is given to, or taken from, anyone of its parts.
+These experiments suggested the idea of intensifying the application of
+electrical forces by grouping numerous electrical centres.
+
+ We made [he said] what we called an _electrical
+ battery_, consisting of eleven panes of large
+ sash-glass, arm'd with thin leaden plates, pasted on
+ each side, placed vertically, and supported at two
+ inches distance on silk cords, with thick hooks of
+ leaden wire, one from each side, standing upright,
+ distant from each other, and convenient communications
+ of wire and chain, from the giving side of one pane, to
+ the receiving side of the other; that so the whole
+ might be charged together, and with the same labour as
+ one single pane; and another contrivance to bring the
+ giving sides, after charging, in contact with one long
+ wire, and the receivers with another, which two long
+ wires would give the force of all the plates of glass
+ at once through the body of any animal forming the
+ circle with them. The plates may also be discharged
+ separately, or any number together that is required.
+
+When the idea of the electrical battery was formed by him, Franklin was not
+aware that Smeaton and Bains had previously assembled panes of glass for
+the purpose of giving an electrical shock.
+
+At the time that this letter was written, Franklin had added to his
+electrical exploits that of electrifying a mezzotint of the King in such a
+manner that, if anyone attempted to take the crown off his head, he would
+receive a "terrible blow."
+
+ If the picture were highly charged [he said], the
+ consequence might perhaps be as fatal as that of high
+ treason.
+
+ The operator [he continues], who holds the picture by
+ the upper end, where the inside of the frame is not
+ gilt, to prevent its falling, feels nothing of the
+ shock, and may touch the face of the picture without
+ danger, which he pretends is a test of his loyalty. If
+ a ring of persons take the shock among them, the
+ experiment is called _The Conspirators_.
+
+Another far more significant exploit was the application of electrical
+energy in such a way as to set an electrical Jack revolving with such force
+and swiftness as to carry a spitted fowl around before a fire with a motion
+fit for roasting.
+
+This wheel was driven by an electrical battery, but Franklin also devised
+what he called a self-moving wheel that was, by a different electrical
+method, revolved with so much force and rapidity that he thought that it
+might be used for the ringing of chimes and the movement of light-made
+orreries. And after observing that a thin glass bubble, about an inch in
+diameter, weighing only six grains, being half filled with water, partly
+gilt on the outside, and furnished with a wire hook, gave, when
+electrified, as great a shock as a man can well bear, Franklin exclaims,
+"How great must be the quantity (of electrical fire) in this small portion
+of glass! It seems as if it were of its very substance and essence. Perhaps
+if that due quantity of electrical fire so obstinately retained by glass,
+could be separated from it, it would no longer be glass; it might lose its
+transparency, or its brittleness, or its elasticity."
+
+This letter also reaches the conclusion that bodies, having less than the
+common quantity of electricity, repel each other, as well as those that
+have none.
+
+It concludes with a lively paragraph:
+
+ Chagrined a little that we have been hitherto able to
+ produce nothing in this way of use to mankind; and the
+ hot weather coming on, when electrical experiments are
+ not so agreeable, it is proposed to put an end to them
+ for this season, somewhat humorously, in a party of
+ pleasure on the banks of _Skuylkil_. Spirits, at the
+ same time, are to be fired by a spark sent from side to
+ side through the river, without any other conductor
+ than the water; an experiment which we some time since
+ performed, to the amazement of many. A turkey is to be
+ killed for our dinner by the _electrical shock_, and
+ roasted by the _electrical jack_, before a fire kindled
+ by the _electrified bottle_; when the healths of all
+ the famous electricians in _England_, _Holland_,
+ _France_ and _Germany_ are to be drank in _electrified
+ bumpers_, under the discharge of guns from the
+ _electrical_ battery.
+
+An electrified bumper, a note to the letter explained, was a small thin
+glass tumbler, nearly filled with wine, and charged, which, when brought to
+the lips of a person, gave him a shock, if he was close-shaved, and did not
+breathe on the liquor. Another note states that the biggest animal that the
+experimenters had yet killed was a hen.
+
+A later letter to Collinson on the phenomena of thunder-gusts takes
+Franklin away from the Leyden Jar of the laboratory to the stupendous
+batteries of the outer universe--from the point of a bodkin to the lofty
+natural or artificial objects, upon which lightning descends from the
+illimitable sky. "As electrified clouds pass over a country," he remarks,
+"high hills and high trees, lofty towers, spires, masts of ships, chimneys,
+&c., as so many prominencies and points, draw the electrical fire, and the
+whole cloud discharges there." From this observation to the lightning rod
+was but a short step.
+
+Another letter to Collinson in the succeeding year brings us to the
+lightning rod in principle if not in name. Speaking of what a sea captain
+had said of luminous objects, which had settled on the spintles at the
+topmast heads of his ship before an electrical shock, and burned like very
+large torches, he says:
+
+ According to my opinion, the electrical fire was then
+ drawing off, as by points, from the cloud; the
+ largeness of the flame betokening the great quantity of
+ electricity in the cloud: and had there been a good
+ wire communication from the spintle heads to the sea,
+ that could have conducted more freely than tarred
+ ropes, or masts of turpentine wood, I imagine there
+ would either have been no stroke; or, if a stroke, the
+ wire would have conducted it all into the sea without
+ damage to the ship.
+
+In the same letter, there is an adumbration of his grandest experiment,
+when he speaks of the flash from two of his jars as "our mimic lightning."
+
+This letter also shows that with electricity Franklin had frequently
+imparted polarity to needles and reversed it at pleasure. Wilson, at
+London, he said, had failed to produce these results because he had tried
+it on too large masses and with too small force. The letter also evidences
+the fact that he had employed the electric spark for the practical purpose
+of firing gunpowder.
+
+Another letter to Collinson dated July 29, 1750, is accompanied by an
+additional paper on the properties and effects of the Electrical Matter. It
+acknowledges the debt that Franklin owed to Collinson for the glass tube
+and the instructions which attended it, and to the Proprietary for the
+generous present of a complete electrical apparatus which "that bountiful
+benefactor to our library," as he calls him, had made to it. The telegraph,
+the Marconi tower, the telephone, the electric bulb, the electric
+automobile and the trolley car rise up before us when we read this
+observation in the paper that accompanied the letter: "The beneficial uses
+of this electric fluid in the creation, we are not yet well acquainted
+with, though doubtless such there are, and those very considerable." The
+paper is the most important that Franklin ever wrote on electricity;
+containing as it does the two suggestions which, when carried into
+execution, made his name famous throughout the world, that is to say, his
+suggestion, already quoted by us at length, that houses, churches and ships
+might be protected by upright rods of iron, and his suggestion, already
+quoted by us, too, as to how the identity of lightning and electricity
+could be established. The point of the bodkin and the electrified shot and
+ball, and the mimic brightness, agility and fury of the lurking fire in the
+wonderful bottle had led, step by step, to two of the most splendid
+conceptions in the early history of electrical science.[54]
+
+With the discovery that electricity and lightning were the same thing, the
+real achievements of Franklin in the province of electricity came to an
+end. But he still continued his electrical experiments with undiminished
+ardor. We find him on one occasion prostrating with a single shock six
+persons who were so obliging as to lend themselves to the pursuit of
+scientific truth. Twice he was the victim of his own inadvertence. Speaking
+of one of these occasions, in a letter to a friend in Boston, he said:
+
+ The flash was very great, and the crack as loud as a
+ pistol; yet, my senses being instantly gone, I neither
+ saw the one nor heard the other; nor did I feel the
+ stroke on my hand, though I afterwards found it raised
+ a round swelling where the fire entered, as big as half
+ a pistol-bullet; by which you may judge of the
+ quickness of the electrical fire, which by this
+ instance seems to be greater than that of sound, light,
+ or animal sensation.... I then felt what I know not how
+ well to describe; a universal blow throughout my whole
+ body from head to foot, which seemed within as well as
+ without; after which the first thing I took notice of
+ was a violent quick shaking of my body, which gradually
+ remitting, my sense as gradually returned, and then I
+ thought the bottles must be discharged, but could not
+ conceive how, till at last I perceived the chain in my
+ hand, and recollected what I had been about to do. That
+ part of my hand and fingers, which held the chain, was
+ left white, as though the blood had been driven out,
+ and remained so eight or ten minutes after, feeling
+ like dead flesh; and I had a numbness in my arms and
+ the back of my neck, which continued till the next
+ morning, but wore off. Nothing remains now of this
+ shock, but a soreness in my breast-bone, which feels as
+ if it had been bruised. I did not fall, but suppose I
+ should have been knocked down, if I had received the
+ stroke in my head. The whole was over in less than a
+ minute.
+
+On the second occasion, while making ready to give a healing shock to a
+paralytic, he received a charge through his own head. He did not see the
+flash, hear the report or feel the stroke.
+
+ When my Senses returned [he told Jan Ingenhousz], I
+ found myself on the Floor. I got up, not knowing how
+ that had happened. I then again attempted to discharge
+ the Jars; but one of the Company told me they were
+ already discharg'd, which I could not at first
+ believe, but on Trial found it true. They told me they
+ had not felt it, but they saw I was knock'd down by it,
+ which had greatly surprised them. On recollecting
+ myself, and examining my Situation, I found the Case
+ clear. A small swelling rose on the Top of my Head,
+ which continued sore for some Days; but I do not
+ remember any other Effect good or bad.
+
+One of Franklin's contemporaries, Professor Richmann, of St. Petersburg,
+did not fare so well; for a stroke of the lightning that he had allured
+from the clouds brought his life to an end. Priestley, however, seems to
+have regarded such a death as a form of euthanasia. At any rate, in
+speaking of this martyr of science in his _History of Electricity_ he terms
+him "the justly envied Richmann."
+
+After Franklin learned how to impound lightning, his intercourse with
+electricity was more familiar than ever.
+
+ In September, 1752 [he wrote to Collinson], I erected
+ an iron rod to draw the lightning down into my house,
+ in order to make some experiments on it, with two bells
+ to give notice when the rod should be electrify'd: a
+ contrivance obvious to every electrician.
+
+ I found the bells rang sometimes when there was no
+ lightning or thunder, but only a dark cloud over the
+ rod; that sometimes, after a flash of lightning, they
+ would suddenly stop; and, at other times, when they had
+ not rang before, they would, after a flash, suddenly
+ begin to ring; that the electricity was sometimes very
+ faint, so that, when a small spark was obtain'd,
+ another could not be got for some time after; at other
+ times the sparks would follow extremely quick, and once
+ I had a continual stream from bell to bell, the size of
+ a crow quill: Even during the same gust there were
+ considerable variations.
+
+ In the winter following I conceived an experiment, to
+ try whether the clouds were electrify'd _positively_ or
+ _negatively_.
+
+The result of these experiments, conducted with Franklin's usual
+painstaking completeness, was the conclusion on his part that
+thunder-clouds are, as a rule, in a negatively electrical state, and that,
+therefore, generally speaking, they do not discharge electricity upon the
+earth, but receive it from the earth. For the most part, he said, "_tis the
+earth that strikes into the clouds, and not the clouds that strike into the
+earth_."
+
+The thoroughness with which he addressed himself to the study of
+electricity was very marked. His investigation was as searching and minute
+as that of an anatomist engaged in the dissection of nervous tissue. Under
+his hands, the bare Leyden Jar became a teeming storehouse of instruction
+and amusement. He collected electricity from common objects by friction, he
+brought it down from the sky, he sought its properties in amber, in the
+tourmaline stone, in the body of the torpedo; he thought that he discerned
+it in the radiance of the Aurora Borealis. He put it through all its
+vagaries, juggled with it, teased it, cowed it until it confessed its
+kinship with the tempestuous heavens. He tested its destructive effects
+upon hens and turkeys, its therapeutic value to paralytic patients, its
+efficacy as a corrective of tough meat. He even, it is said, charged the
+railing under his windows with it to repel loafers standing about his front
+door. And, in his relations to electricity, as to everything else, his
+purposes were always those of practical utility. In one of his papers, he
+admits that he cannot tell why points possess the power of drawing off the
+electrical fire;
+
+ nor is it of much importance to us [he adds] to know
+ the manner in which nature executes her laws. 'Tis
+ enough if we know the laws themselves. 'Tis of real use
+ to know that china left in the air unsupported will
+ fall and break; but _how_ it comes to fall, and _why_
+ it breaks, are matters of speculation. 'Tis a pleasure
+ indeed to know them, but we can preserve our china
+ without it.
+
+He anticipated, or, in some instances, all but anticipated, several of the
+more important discoveries of modern electrical science. He knew that,
+when a number of Leyden jars are connected up under certain conditions, the
+extent, to which each jar can be charged from a given source, varies
+inversely as the number of jars. For a time, he was puzzled by the fact
+that the light of a candle, or of a fire-coal, or of red-hot iron, would
+destroy the repellency between his electrified ball and shot, but that the
+light of the sun would not. But it was not long before he hit upon this
+ingenious explanation:
+
+ This different Effect probably did not arise from any
+ difference in the light, but rather from the particles
+ separated from the candle, being first attracted and
+ then repelled, carrying off the electric matter with
+ them; and from the rarefying the air, between the
+ glowing coal or red-hot iron, and the electrised shot,
+ through which rarefied air the electric fluid could
+ more readily pass.
+
+Referring to what Franklin had to say about the action of sunlight in this
+connection, Arthur Schuster, in his _Some Remarkable Passages in the
+Writings of Benjamin Franklin_, observes: "Had Franklin used a clean piece
+of zinc instead of iron shot he might have anticipated Hertz's discovery of
+the action of strong light on the discharge of gases."
+
+In the course of one of his experiments with an electrified can, Franklin
+reached the conclusion that a cork, which he had lowered into the can, was
+not attracted to its internal surface, as it would have been to its
+external, because the mutual repulsion of the two inner opposite sides of
+the can might prevent the accumulation of an electrical atmosphere upon
+them. From the same experiment, the genius of Henry Cavendish deduced his
+law that electrical repulsion varies inversely as the square of the
+distance between the charges.
+
+Instead of declining, it can truly be said that the reputation of Franklin
+as an electrical investigator and writer has increased with the progress
+of electrical science. "We shall, I am sure," remarks Professor J. J.
+Thomson in his _Electricity and Matter_, "be struck by the similarity
+between some of the views which we are led to take by the results of the
+most recent researches, with those enunciated by Franklin in the very
+infancy of the subject." Nor should we omit a tribute of Dr. William
+Garnett, in his _Heroes of Science_, in regard to the statements in
+Franklin's first letters to Collinson. "They are," he says, "perfectly
+consistent with the views held by Cavendish and by Clerk Maxwell, and,
+though the phraseology is not that of modern text-books, the statements
+themselves can hardly be improved upon to-day."
+
+If Franklin achieved a higher degree of success in the electrical than in
+any other scientific field, it was partly, at any rate, because he never
+again had the opportunity to give such continuous attention to scientific
+pursuits. To him this was at times a source of very great disappointment.
+In one of his letters to Beccaria, dated Sept. 21, 1768, he tells the
+latter that, preoccupied as he was, he had constantly cherished the hope of
+returning home, where he could find leisure to resume the philosophical
+studies that he had shamefully put off from time to time. In a letter, some
+eleven years later, from Paris, to the same correspondent, he said that he
+was then prevented by similar distractions from pursuing those studies in
+which he always found the highest satisfaction, and that he was grown so
+old as hardly to hope for a return of the leisure and tranquillity, so
+necessary for philosophical disquisitions. To Sir Joseph Banks he was
+inspired some years later, by recent astronomical discoveries, made under
+the patronage of the Royal Society, to write: "I begin to be almost sorry I
+was born so soon, since I cannot have the happiness of knowing what will be
+known 100 years hence," Indeed, to him, leisure, whether only the seclusion
+of a thirty-day voyage across the Atlantic, or the final cessation of
+public life, was but another term for recurrence to his scientific
+predilections. When he received his leave from Congress to return home from
+Paris, he wrote joyously to Ingenhousz: "I shall now be free of Politicks
+for the Rest of my Life. Welcome again my dear Philosophical Amusements."
+There was, to use his own expression, still too much flesh on his bones for
+his countrymen to allow him any time except for political experiments; but,
+for proof of the eager interest that he felt in science, and of the
+prominent position, that he occupied in the scientific world of America,
+until the last, we need go no further than the fact that, when he died, the
+meetings of the American Philosophical Society had, for some time, been
+held at his home in Philadelphia.
+
+How far Franklin might have added to his reputation as a man of science, if
+he had not become engrossed by political duties and cares, is mere matter
+of surmise. But there can be no doubt that he was eminently fitted in many
+respects for scientific inquiry. The scientific temperament he possessed in
+the very highest degree. He loved the truth too much to allow the workings
+of human weakness in himself or others to deface its fair features. In
+reporting to Collinson the electrical achievements, which crowned him with
+such just renown, he almost invariably spoke of them as if they were the
+joint achievements of a group of collaborators, of whom he was but one. The
+generous alacrity, with which he credits to his friends Hopkinson,
+Kinnersley, or Syng exclusively special discoveries or inventions, made by
+them, shows conclusively enough how little this was true. There is no
+reason to believe that his letters to Collinson on electricity would ever
+have been published but for the unsolicited initiative of Dr. Fothergill
+and Collinson; or that they would ever have been translated into French but
+for the spontaneous persuasion that Buffon brought to bear upon D'Alibard.
+In a letter to Collinson, after expressing distrust of an hypothesis,
+advanced by him in former letters to the same correspondent, he declares
+that he is ashamed to have expressed himself in so positive a manner.
+Indeed, he said, he must request Collinson not to expose those letters, or,
+if he communicated them to any of his friends, at least to conceal the name
+of the author. His attitude towards his scientific triumphs was, when not
+that of entire self-effacement, always that of unaffected humility.
+
+ I am indebted for your preceding letter [he wrote in
+ his forty-seventh year to John Perkins] but business
+ sometimes obliges one to postpone philosophical
+ amusements. Whatever I have wrote of that kind, are
+ really, as they are entitled, but _Conjectures_ and
+ _Suppositions_; which ought always to give place, when
+ careful observation militates against them. I own I
+ have too strong a penchant to the building of
+ hypotheses; they indulge my natural indolence: I wish I
+ had more of your patience and accuracy in making
+ observations, on which, alone, true philosophy can be
+ founded.
+
+Equally candid and noble are other observations in a subsequent letter to
+the same correspondent. Referring to certain objections, made by Perkins to
+his theory of water spouts, he observed:
+
+ Nothing certainly can be more improving to a Searcher
+ into Nature, than Objections judiciously made to his
+ Opinions, taken up perhaps too hastily: For such
+ Objections oblige him to re-study the Point, consider
+ every Circumstance carefully, compare Facts, make
+ Experiments, weigh Arguments, and be slow in drawing
+ Conclusions. And hence a sure Advantage results; for he
+ either confirms a Truth, before too lightly supported;
+ or discovers an Error, and receives Instruction from
+ the Objector.
+
+ In this View I consider the Objections and Remarks you
+ sent me, and thank you for them sincerely.
+
+When he found that he was in error, it cost him no struggle to recant. For
+a while he believed the sea to be the grand source of lightning, and built
+up an imposing fabric of conclusions upon the belief; but he did not
+hesitate afterwards to admit that he had embraced this opinion too hastily.
+The same thing is true of the opinion that he held for a time, that the
+progress of a ship westward, across the Atlantic, is retarded by the
+diurnal motion of the earth. He supposed that the melting brought about by
+the action of lightning was a cold fusion until holes burnt in a floor by
+portions of a molten bell wire convinced him that this was not so.
+
+ I was too easily led into that error [he said] by
+ accounts given even in philosophical books, and from
+ remote ages downwards, of melting money in purses,
+ swords in scabbards, etc. without burning the
+ inflammable matters that were so near those melted
+ metals. But men are, in general, such careless
+ observers, that a philosopher can not be too much on
+ his guard in crediting their relations of things
+ extraordinary, and should never build an hypothesis on
+ anything but clear facts and experiments, or it will be
+ in danger of soon falling, as this does, like a house
+ of cards.
+
+In one of his letters to Collinson, he declared that, even though future
+discoveries should prove that certain conjectures of his were not wholly
+right, yet they ought in the meantime to be of some use by stirring up the
+curious to make more experiments and occasion more exact disquisitions.
+Following out the same thought in another letter to Collinson he concluded:
+"You are at liberty to communicate this paper to whom you please; it being
+of more importance that knowledge should increase, than that your friend
+should be thought an accurate philosopher." In a letter to John Lining, in
+which he described the experiment from which Cavendish deduced the law of
+which we have spoken, he observed:
+
+ I find a frank acknowledgement of one's ignorance is
+ not only the easiest way to get rid of a dificulty, but
+ the likeliest way to obtain information, and therefore
+ I practise it: I think it an honest policy. Those who
+ affect to be thought to know everything, and so
+ undertake to explain everything often remain long
+ ignorant of many things that others could and would
+ instruct them in, if they appeared less conceited.
+
+The fact is that Franklin had such a keen sense of the dignity and
+invincibility of truth that he could not be induced to enter into any
+personal controversy about it. His feelings with regard to such
+controversies are pointedly expressed in the _Autobiography_ in connection
+with the attack made by the Abbe Nollet upon his electrical experiments.
+
+ I once purpos'd [he said] answering the abbe, and
+ actually began the answer; but, on consideration that
+ my writings contain'd a description of experiments
+ which anyone might repeat and verify, and if not to be
+ verifi'd, could not be defended; or of observations
+ offer'd as conjectures, and not delivered dogmatically,
+ therefore not laying me under any obligation to defend
+ them; and reflecting that a dispute between two
+ persons, writing in different languages, might be
+ lengthened greatly by mistranslations, and thence
+ misconceptions of one another's meaning, much of one of
+ the abbe's letters being founded on an error in the
+ translation, I concluded to let my papers shift for
+ themselves, believing it was better to spend what time
+ I could spare from public business in making new
+ experiments, than in disputing about those already
+ made.
+
+But in this instance, too, after all, he acted upon the principle, stated
+in one of his letters to Cadwallader Colden, that he who removes a
+prejudice, or an error from our minds contributes to their beauty, as he
+would do to that of our faces who should clear them of a wart or a wen. He
+went through his experiments again, and satisfied himself that the Abbe had
+not shaken his positions. At one time, when he was hesitating as to whether
+he should reply to him, he heard that D'Alibard was preparing to do so.
+"Perhaps," he wrote to his friend, James Bowdoin, "it may then appear
+unnecessary for me to do anything farther in it. And will not one's vanity
+be more gratified in seeing one's adversary confuted by a disciple, than
+even by one's self?" When Wilson published a pamphlet, contending that
+lightning rods should be blunt rather than pointed, he simply observed, "I
+have not answered it, being averse to Disputes."
+
+Not only his temperament but his general mental attitude was instinctively
+scientific. As we have seen, while Whitefield's other auditors were
+standing mute and spellbound, he was carefully computing the distance that
+the words of the orator would carry. As we have also seen, when his
+soldiers were cutting down the giant pines at Gnadenhutten, he had his
+watch out, deep in his observation of the time that it took them to fell a
+tree. When his friend, Small, complained of deafness, he wrote to him that
+he had found by an experiment at midnight that, by putting his thumb and
+fingers behind his ear, and pressing it out and enlarging it as it were
+with the hollow of his hand, he could hear the tick of a watch at the
+distance of forty-five feet which was barely audible at a distance of
+twenty feet without these aids. Even in his relations to the simplest
+concerns of life, he had always the eye of a man of science to weight,
+measure, dimension and distance. If anyone wishes to see how easily he
+reduced everything to its scientific principles, let him read Franklin's
+letter to Oliver Neave, who thought that it was too late in life for him to
+learn to swim. With the confidence bred by a proper sense of the specific
+gravity of the human body as compared with that of water, Franklin said,
+there was no reason why a human being should not swim at the first trial.
+If Neave would only wade out into a body of water, until it came up to his
+breast and by a cast of his hand sink an egg to the bottom, between him and
+the shore, where it would be visible, but could not be reached except by
+diving, and then endeavor to recover it, he would be surprised to find what
+a buoyant thing water was.
+
+Franklin also had all the inquisitiveness of a born philosopher. The winds,
+the birds, the fish, the celestial phenomena brought to his attention on
+his first voyage from England, the sluggish movement of his ship on his
+voyage to England in 1757, the temperature and movement of the Gulf Stream,
+the social and religious characteristics of the Moravians, Indian traits
+and habits, the still flies in their bath of Madeira wine--all excited his
+insatiable curiosity, and started him off on interesting trains of
+observation or reflection.
+
+He was in the 78th year of his age, when, in the sight of fifty thousand
+people, one of the balloons recently invented by the Montgolfiers, and
+inflated with gas, produced by pouring oil of vitriol on iron filings,
+ascended from the Champs de Mars, shining brightly in the sun during the
+first stages of its ascent, then dwindling until it appeared scarcely
+larger than an orange, and then melting away in the clouds that had never
+before been invaded by such a visitant. But so fresh still was his interest
+in every triumph of human ingenuity, that it required a long letter to Sir
+Joseph Banks, the President of the Royal Society, supplemented by two
+postscripts, to disburthen his mind of the sensations and thoughts excited
+by the thrilling spectacle. Mingled in this letter with many precise
+details of size, weight and distance are the speculations of the Parisians
+with respect to the practical uses to which the toy might be put. Some
+believed that, now that men might be supported in the air, nothing was
+wanted but some light handy instruments to give and direct motion. Others
+believed that a running footman, or a horse, slung and suspended under such
+a globe, so as to diminish the weight of their feet on the ground to
+perhaps eight or ten pounds, might, with a fair wind, run in a straight
+line across country as fast as that wind, and over hedges, ditches and even
+waters. Still other fantasies were that in time such globes might be kept
+anchored in the air for the purpose of preserving game, or converting water
+into ice; or might be turned to pecuniary profit as a means of giving
+recreation-seekers a chance, at an altitude of a mile, to see far below
+them a vast stretch of the terrestrial surface. Already, said Franklin, one
+philosopher, M. Pilatre de Rozier, had applied to the Academy for the
+privilege of ascending in a larger Montgolfier in order to make certain
+scientific experiments. The peasants at Gonesse, however, who had seen the
+balloon, cut adrift on the Champs de Mars, fall to the earth, had regarded
+it with very different feelings from the citizens of Paris. Frightened, and
+conceiving from its bounding a little, when it touched the ground, that
+there was some living animal in it, they had attacked it with stones and
+knives, so that it was much mangled.
+
+With a subsequent letter to Dr. Price, Franklin enclosed a small balloon,
+which his grandson had filled with inflammable air the night before, and
+which, after mounting to the ceiling of Franklin's chamber, had remained
+rolling about there for some time. "If a Man," this letter suggestively
+asks, "should go up with one of the large ones, might there not be some
+mechanical Contrivance to compress the Globe at pleasure; and thereby
+incline it to descend, and let it expand when he inclines to rise again?"
+The same eager curiosity about the balloon was manifested by Franklin in
+many other later letters. Another great one, he informed Banks, had gone up
+from Versailles. It was supposed to have been inflated with air, heated by
+burning straw, and to have risen about two hundred toises; but did not
+continue long at that height, and, after being wafted in a horizontal
+direction by the wind, descended gently, as the air in it grew cooler. "So
+vast a Bulk," said Franklin, "when it began to rise so majestically in the
+Air, struck the Spectators with Surprise and Admiration. The Basket
+contain'd a Sheep, a Duck & a Cock, who except the Cock receiv'd no hurt by
+the fall." Another balloon of about five feet in diameter, the same letter
+stated, had been sent up about one o'clock in the morning with a large
+lanthorn under it by the Duke de Crillon at an entertainment, given by him,
+during the preceding week, in the Bois de Boulogne in honor of the birth of
+two Spanish princes. These were but a few of many recent ascensions. Most
+interesting of all, however, a new balloon, designed by Messieurs Charles
+and Robert, who were men of science and mechanical dexterity, was to carry
+up a man.
+
+Another balloon, described by Franklin in one of his letters to Banks, was
+open at the bottom, and was fed with heated air from a grate, fixed in the
+middle of the opening, which was kept replenished with faggots and sheaves
+of straw by men, posted in a wicker gallery, attached to the outside of the
+lower part of the structure. By regulating the amount of fire in the grate,
+the balloon could be given an upward or downward direction at pleasure.
+
+It was thought, Franklin said, that a balloon of this type, because of the
+rapidity and small expense, with which it could be inflated, might be made
+useful for military purposes.
+
+Still another balloon described by Franklin in the same letter was one
+which was to be first filled with "permanently elastic inflammable air,"
+and then closed. It was twenty-six feet in diameter, and made of gores of
+red and white silk, which presented a beautiful appearance. There was a
+very handsome triumphal car, to be suspended from it, in which two
+brothers, the Messrs. Robert, were to ascend with a table for convenience
+in jotting down their thermometric and other observations. There was no
+telling, Franklin declared, how far aeronautic improvements might be
+pushed. A few months before, the idea of witches riding through the air on
+a broomstick, and that of philosophers upon a bag of smoke would have
+appeared equally impossible and ridiculous. The machines, however, he
+believed, would always be subject to be driven by the winds, though perhaps
+mechanic art might find easy means of giving them progressive motion in a
+calm, and of slanting them a little in the wind. English philosophy was too
+bashful, and should be more emulous in this field of competition. If, in
+France, they did a foolish thing, they were the first to laugh at it
+themselves, and were almost as much pleased with a _bon mot_ or a good
+_chanson_, that ridiculed well the disappointment of the project, as they
+might have been with its success.
+
+The experiment might be attended with important consequences that no one
+could foresee.
+
+ Beings of a frank and--nature far superior to ours [the
+ letter continued] have not disdained to amuse
+ themselves with making and launching balloons,
+ otherwise we should never have enjoyed the light of
+ those glorious objects that rule our day and night, nor
+ have had the pleasure of riding round the sun ourselves
+ upon the balloon we now inhabit.
+
+In due course, the Messrs. Robert, accompanied by M. Charles, a professor
+of experimental philosophy, and an enthusiastic student of aeronautics,
+made their perilous venture, which was likewise fully chronicled by
+Franklin. The spectators, he said, were infinite, crowding about the
+Tuileries, on the quays and bridges, in the fields and streets, and at the
+windows, and on the roofs, of houses. The device of stimulating flagging
+ascent by dropping sand bags from the car was one of the features of this
+incident, and so was the device of protecting the envelope of the balloon
+from rupture by covering it with a net, as well as that of lowering it by
+letting a part of its contents escape through a valve controlled by a
+cord.
+
+ Between one and two o'clock [Franklin's narrative
+ states] all eyes were gratified with seeing it rise
+ majestically from among the trees, and ascend gradually
+ above the buildings, a most beautiful spectacle. When
+ it was about two hundred feet high, the brave
+ adventurers held out and waved a little white pennant,
+ on both sides their car, to salute the spectators who
+ returned loud claps of applause.
+
+When Franklin last saw the vanishing form of this balloon, it appeared no
+bigger than a walnut. The experiment proved a most prosperous one. From
+first to last the aerial navigators retained perfect command of their
+air-ship, descending, when they pleased, by letting some of the air in it
+escape, and rising, when they pleased, by discharging sand; and at one time
+skimming over a field so low as to be able to talk to some laborers.
+Pleased as Franklin was with the experiment, he wrote to Henry Laurens that
+he yet feared that the machine would hardly become a common carriage in his
+time, though, being the easiest of all _voitures_, it would be extremely
+convenient to him, now that his malady forbade him the use of the old ones
+over a pavement. The idea, however, was such an agreeable one to him that,
+when he returned to Philadelphia, he wrote to his friend Jean Baptiste Le
+Roy that he sometimes wished that he had brought a balloon from France with
+him sufficiently large to raise him from the ground, and to permit him,
+without discomfort from his stone, to be led around in his novel conveyance
+by a string, attached to it, and held by an attendant on foot.
+
+On the whole, it appeared to Franklin that the invention of the balloon was
+a thing of great importance.
+
+ Convincing sovereigns of the Folly of Wars [he wrote to
+ Ingenhousz] may perhaps be one Effect of it; since it
+ will be impracticable for the most potent of them to
+ guard his Dominions. Five thousand Balloons, capable of
+ raising two Men each could not cost more than Five
+ Ships of the Line; and where is the Prince who can
+ afford so to cover his Country with Troops for its
+ Defence, as that Ten Thousand Men descending from the
+ Clouds might not in many places do an infinite deal of
+ mischief, before a Force could be brought together to
+ repel them?
+
+But nothing happened in Franklin's time, nor has happened since, to warrant
+the belief that human flying-devices of any sort will ever be free enough
+from danger to human life to be a really useful vehicle of transportation
+in times of peace. So far their principal value has been during war, when
+human safety has little to choose between the earth and the sky, but it is
+fair to say that Franklin would have loathed war even more deeply than he
+did, if he could have lived to see them in the form of aeroplane or
+dirigible, making their way through the air like winged monsters of the
+antediluvian past, and dropping devilish agencies of death and desolation
+upon helpless innocence, and the fairest monuments of human industry and
+art. Poor M. Pilatre de Rozier, whom we have already mentioned, and who was
+no less a person than the Professor of Chemistry, at the Athenee Royale, of
+which he was the founder, fell with a companion, from an altitude of one
+thousand toises to the rocky coast near Boulogne-sur-Mer, and was, as well
+as his companion, dashed to pieces. Since his time the discharioted
+Phaetons, who have fallen from the upper levels of the atmosphere, even
+when not engaged in war, with the same fearful result, have been numerous
+enough to constitute a ghastly necrology. Nor, it would appear, was the
+peril under the conditions of aerial navigation in its earliest stages
+limited to the aeronaut himself. In dissuading Ingenhousz from attempting a
+balloon experiment, Franklin said that it was a serious thing to draw out
+from their affairs all the inhabitants of a great city and its environs,
+and that a disappointment made them angry. At Bordeaux lately, a person,
+who pretended to send up a balloon, and had received money from many
+people, not being able to make it rise, the populace were so exasperated
+that they pulled down his house, and had like to have killed him. Anyone,
+who has ever heard the execrations hurled at the head of a baseball umpire
+in the United States, when one of his decisions has failed to command
+general assent, will experience no difficulty, we are sure, in
+understanding the force of the impulse that provoked this outbreak of
+Gallic excitement.
+
+The enthusiasm, aroused in Franklin by the balloon, is not more noticeable
+than his brooding desire to find some practical use for it. The visionary
+speculation, which seeks to take the moon in its teeth, was no part of his
+character. He grew no orchids in the air. To use his homely words in a
+letter to Charles Thomson, he made no shoes for feet that he had never
+measured. Every conclusion, every hypothesis had to be built upon a basis
+of patient observation and gradual induction; every invention or discovery
+had to have some useful application.
+
+At an earlier period than that of the discovery of the balloon, his
+inquisitive spirit had led him to the study of marsh-gas and the pacifying
+effect of oil upon troubled waters. In 1764, he had reason to believe that
+a friend of his had succeeded in igniting the surface of a river in New
+Jersey, after stirring up the mud beneath it, but his scientific friends in
+England found it difficult to believe that he had not been imposed upon;
+and the Royal Society withheld from publication among its Transactions a
+paper on the experiment, written by Dr. Finley, the President of Princeton
+College, and read before it. Franklin twice tried it in England without
+success, and he prosecuted his investigation with such energy and
+persistency that he finally contracted an intermittent fever by bending
+over the stagnant water of a deep ditch, and inhaling its foul breath, or,
+as would now be said, by being bitten by a mosquito hovering about it.
+
+In 1757, when on one of the ships, bound on Lord Loudon's fool's errand to
+Louisburg, he observed that the water in the wake of two of them was
+remarkably smooth, while that in the wake of the others was ruffled by the
+wind, which was blowing freshly, and, when he spoke of the circumstance to
+his captain, the latter answered somewhat contemptuously, as if to a person
+ignorant of what everybody else knew, "The cooks have, I suppose, been just
+emptying their greasy water through the scuppers, which has greased the
+sides of those ships a little." The incident, and what he had read in Pliny
+about the practice among the seamen of Pliny's time of calming rough seas
+with oil, made him resolve to test the matter by experiment at the first
+opportunity. This intention was afterwards strengthened, when he was again
+at sea in 1762, by the "wonderful quietness" of oil, resting on the surface
+of an agitated bed of water in the glass lamp swinging in his cabin, and by
+the supposition of an old sea captain that the phenomenon was in keeping
+with the practice, pursued by the Bermudians, of putting oil on water, when
+they would strike fish. By the same captain, he was told that he had heard
+that fishermen at Lisbon were in the habit of emptying a bottle or two of
+oil on the sea, when the breakers on the bar at that port were running too
+high for their boats to cross it in safety. From another person, he learnt
+that, when divers in the Mediterranean needed more light for their
+business, they spewed out from their mouths now and then a small quantity
+of oil, which, rising to the surface, smoothed out its refracting waves.
+This additional information supplied his curiosity with still further fuel.
+It all ended in his dropping a little oil from a cruet on a large pond at
+Clapham. The fluid spread with surprising swiftness over the surface, on
+which it had fallen; but he found that he had made the mistake of dropping
+it on the leeward, instead of the windward, side of the pond. When this
+mistake was repaired, and a teaspoonful of oil was poured on its windward
+side, where the waves were in an incipient state, and the oil could not be
+driven back on the shore, an instant calmness diffused itself over a space
+several yards square, which extended gradually until it reached the lee
+side of the pond, making all that quarter of it, perhaps half an acre, as
+smooth as a looking-glass. After this, he took with him, whenever he went
+into the country, a little oil, in the upper hollow joint of his bamboo
+cane for the purpose of repeating his experiment, whenever he had a chance
+to do so, and, when he did repeat it, it was usually with success.
+
+Far from being so successful, however, was the experiment when, on a
+blustering, unpleasant day, he attempted, with the co-operation of Sir
+Joseph Banks and other friends, to still the surf on a shore at Portsmouth
+with oil poured continually on the sea, at some distance away, through a
+hole, somewhat bigger than a goose quill, in the cork of a large stone
+bottle, though the effusion did flatten out a considerable tract of the sea
+to such an extent that a wherry, making for Portsmouth, seemed to turn into
+that tract of choice, and to use it from end to end as a piece of turnpike
+road. All this is described by Franklin in a letter to William Brownrigg,
+dated November 7, 1773, in which he cited some other illustrations of the
+allaying effect of oil on waves besides those that we have mentioned, and
+developed the philosophy of the subject with that incomparable clarity of
+his, not unlike the action of oil itself in subduing refractions of light.
+
+ Now I imagine [he says] that the wind, blowing over
+ water thus covered with a film of oil, can not easily
+ _catch_ upon it, so as to raise the first wrinkles, but
+ slides over it, and leaves it smooth as it finds it. It
+ moves a little the oil indeed, which being between it
+ and the water, serves it to slide with, and prevents
+ friction, as oil does between those parts of a machine
+ that would otherwise rub hard together. Hence the oil
+ dropped on the windward side of a pond proceeds
+ gradually to leeward, as may be seen by the smoothness
+ it carries with it, quite to the opposite side. For the
+ wind being thus prevented from raising the first
+ wrinkles, that I call the elements of waves, cannot
+ produce waves, which are to be made by continually
+ acting upon, and enlarging those elements, and thus the
+ whole pond is calmed.
+
+And the water in which the Bermudian struck his fish is not more limpid
+than these observations suggested by the Portsmouth experiment:
+
+ I conceive, that the operation of oil on water is,
+ first, to prevent the raising of new waves by the wind;
+ and, secondly, to prevent its pushing those before
+ raised with such force, and consequently their
+ continuance of the same repeated height, as they would
+ have done, if their surface were not oiled. But oil
+ will not prevent waves being raised by another power,
+ by a stone, for instance, falling into a still pool;
+ for they then rise by the mechanical impulse of the
+ stone, which the greasiness on the surrounding water
+ cannot lessen or prevent, as it can prevent the winds
+ catching the surface and raising it into waves. Now
+ waves once raised, whether by the wind or any other
+ power, have the same mechanical operation, by which
+ they continue to rise and fall, as a _pendulum_ will
+ continue to swing a long time after the force ceases to
+ act by which the motion was first produced; that motion
+ will, however, cease in time; but time is necessary.
+ Therefore, though oil spread on an agitated sea may
+ weaken the push of the wind on those waves whose
+ surfaces are covered by it, and so, by receiving less
+ fresh impulse, they may gradually subside; yet a
+ considerable time, or a distance through which they
+ will take time to move, may be necessary to make the
+ effect sensible on any shore in a diminution of the
+ surf; for we know, that, when wind ceases suddenly, the
+ waves it has raised do not as suddenly subside, but
+ settle gradually, and are not quite down till after the
+ wind has ceased. So, though we should, by oiling them,
+ take off the effect of wind on waves already raised, it
+ is not to be expected that those waves should be
+ instantly levelled. The motion they have received will,
+ for some time, continue; and, if the shore is not far
+ distant, they arrive there so soon, that their effect
+ upon it will not be visibly diminished.
+
+Nor was it on Clapham Pond and at Portsmouth alone that Franklin, when in
+England, tested the tranquillizing properties of oil. He performed the same
+experiment on Derwentwater and a small pond near the house of John Smeaton,
+the celebrated engineer, at Austhorpe Lodge; and also on a large sheet of
+water at the head of the Green Park. And the idea that there was something
+almost supernatural about his quick insight and fertility of conception, of
+which we find more than one trace in the utterances of his contemporaries,
+is suggested in an interesting manner in the account left to us by the Abbe
+Morellet of one of these experiments, which he witnessed when Colonel
+Barre, Dr. Hawkesworth, David Garrick, Franklin and himself happened to be
+guests of Lord Shelburne at Wycombe in 1772.
+
+ It is true [the Abbe says] it was not upon the waves of
+ the sea but upon those of a little stream which flowed
+ through the park at Wycombe. A fresh breeze was
+ ruffling the water. Franklin ascended a couple of
+ hundred paces from the place where we stood, and
+ simulating the grimaces of a sorcerer, he shook three
+ times upon the stream a cane which he carried in his
+ hand. Directly the waves diminished and soon the
+ surface was smooth as a mirror.
+
+On one occasion, William Small wrote to him from Birmingham that Matthew
+Boulton had "astonished the rural philosophers exceedingly by calming the
+waves _a la Franklin_."
+
+Struck, when travelling on a canal in Holland, with the statement of a
+boatman that their boat was going slow because the season had been a dry
+one, and the water in the canal was not as deep as usual, Franklin, by
+experiment with a trough and a little boat borrowed for the purpose,
+established the fact that the friction caused by the displacement by a
+moving boat of shallow water is measurably greater than that caused by the
+displacement by such a boat of deeper water. Under like conditions in other
+respects, the difference, he concluded, in a distance of four leagues, was
+the difference between five and four hours.
+
+A conversation with Captain Folger, of Nantucket, produced far more
+important consequences. Influenced by what the captain told him of the
+knowledge that the Nantucket whalers had acquired of the retarding effect
+of the Gulf Stream upon navigation, Franklin induced him to plat for him
+the dimensions, course and swiftness of the stream, and to give him written
+directions as to how ships, bound from the Newfoundland Banks to New York,
+might avoid it, and at the same time keep clear of certain dangerous banks
+and shoals. The immediate object of Franklin was to procure information for
+the English Post Office that would enable the mail packets between England
+and America to shorten their voyages. At his instance, Captain Folger's
+drawing was engraved on the old chart of the Atlantic at Mount and Page's,
+Tower Hill, and copies of it were distributed among the captains of the
+Falmouth packets. Ever afterwards the Gulf Stream was a favorite field of
+investigation to him, when at sea, and its phenomena were mastered by him
+with remarkable thoroughness. It was generated, he conjectured, by the
+great accumulation of water on the eastern coast of America created by the
+trade winds which constantly blew there. He found that it was always warmer
+than the sea on each side of it, and that it did not sparkle at night; and
+he assigned to its influence the tornadoes, waterspouts and fogs by which
+its flow was attended.
+
+Franklin also possessed to a striking degree the inventive capacity which
+is such a valuable qualification for experimental philosophy. We have
+already seen how ready his mechanical skill was in supplying printing
+deficiencies. Speaking of the pulse glasses, made by Nairne, in which water
+could be brought to the boiling point with the heat of the hand, he tells
+us:
+
+ I plac'd one of his glasses, with the elevated end
+ against this hole (a hole that he had opened through
+ the wainscot in the seat of his window for the access
+ of outside air); and the bubbles from the other end,
+ which was in a warmer situation, were continually
+ passing day and night, to the no small surprize of even
+ philosophical spectators.
+
+As he sat in his library at Philadelphia, in his last years, he was
+surrounded by various objects conceived by his own ingenuity. The seat of
+his chair became a step-ladder, when reversed, and to its arm was fastened
+a fan that he could work with a slight motion of his foot. Against his
+bookcase rested "the long arm" with which he lifted down the books on its
+upper shelves. The hours, minutes and seconds were told for him by a clock,
+of his own invention, with only three wheels and two pinions, in which even
+James Ferguson, mathematician as he was, had to confess that he experienced
+difficulty in making improvements. The very bifocal glasses, now in such
+general use, that he wore were a triumph of his own quick wit. Describing
+this invention of his in a letter to George Whatley, he said:
+
+ I therefore had formerly two Pair of Spectacles, which
+ I shifted occasionally, as in travelling I sometimes
+ read, and often wanted to regard the Prospects. Finding
+ this Change troublesome, and not always sufficiently
+ ready, I had the Glasses cut, and half of each kind
+ associated in the same Circle.... By this means, as I
+ wear my Spectacles constantly, I have only to move my
+ Eyes up or down, as I want to see distinctly far or
+ near, the proper Glasses being always ready. This I
+ find more particularly convenient since my being in
+ France, the Glasses that serve me best at Table to see
+ what I eat, not being the best to see the Faces of
+ those on the other Side of the Table who speak to me;
+ and when one's Ears are not well accustomed to the
+ Sounds of a Language, a Sight of the Movements in the
+ Features of him that speaks helps to explain; so that I
+ understand French better by the help of my Spectacles.
+
+The shrinking that a mahogany box, given to him in England, underwent, when
+subjected to the atmospheric conditions of America, suggested a hygrometer
+to him which Nairne afterwards constructed in accordance with his
+plans.[55]
+
+His mind seems to have had no torpid moments, except, perhaps, when some
+Congressional orator was speaking. When, in early life, he had nothing else
+better to do, he would address himself to making magic squares and circles
+as intricate as Rosamond's walk. "He took it into his head," James Logan
+wrote to Collinson, "to think of _magical squares_, in which he outdid
+Frenicle himself, who published above eighty pages in folio on that subject
+alone." Not willing to be outdone even by Stifelius, Franklin drew a square
+of such extraordinary numerical properties that not only did the numbers on
+all the rows and diagonals on its face total 2056, but the sum of the
+numbers on every group of 16 smaller squares on its face, when revealed
+through a hole in a piece of paper, moved backwards and forwards over its
+face, equalled precisely 2056 too. He likewise drew a
+
+ magick circle, consisting of 8 concentric circles, and
+ 8 radial rows, filled with a series of numbers, from 12
+ to 75, inclusive, so disposed as that the numbers of
+ each circle or each radial row, being added to the
+ central number 12, they made exactly 360, the number of
+ degrees in a circle; and this circle had, moreover, all
+ the properties of the square of 8.
+
+Both of these conceits were duly forwarded to Collinson and, with regard to
+the square of 16, Franklin wrote to him playfully that he made no question
+but that he would readily allow that it was the most magically magical of
+any magic square ever made by any magician. From the terms of this letter,
+it is plain that the practical intellect of Franklin was a little ashamed
+of these feats as but _difficiles nugae_, but his misgivings were somewhat
+soothed by the suggestion of Logan that they might not be altogether
+useless if they produced by practice an habitual readiness and exactness in
+mathematical disquisitions.
+
+Hardly more profitable than the magic squares but indicative, too, of the
+same mental initiative, was the scheme formed by Franklin for a new
+alphabet and a reformed mode of spelling. In the new alphabet, the first
+effort was to arrange the letters in what was supposed to be a more natural
+order than that of the old alphabet by beginning with the simple sounds
+framed by the breath with no or very little help from the tongue, teeth
+and lips, and proceeding gradually forward from sounds, produced at the
+back of the mouth, to the sound produced by closing the lips, that is _m_.
+The _c_ of the old alphabet was omitted, _k_ being left to supply its hard
+sound, and _s_ its soft, and _k_ being also left to supply the place of
+_q_, and with an _s_ added, the place of _x_. _W_ as well as _q_ and _x_
+was also dismissed from service, the vowel _u_, sounded as _oo_, being
+relied upon to perform its function. _Y_ also went by the board, _i_ taking
+its place, where used singly, and two vowels, where used as a diphthong.
+_J_ was superseded by an entirely new symbol, shaped something like a small
+_h_, and sounded as _ish_, when used singly, but subserving various other
+offices, when conjoined with _d_, _t_ and _z_. As a whole, the new alphabet
+was so systematized that the sound of any letter, vowel or consonant was
+always the same, wherever it occurred, or whatever its alphabetical
+collocation. Nor did the new alphabet contain any silent letters, or fail
+to provide a letter for every distinct sound in the language. The
+difference between short and long vowels was compassed by a single vowel
+where short, and a double one, where long. For illustration, "mend"
+remained "mend" and "did," "did," but "remained" reappeared as "remeened,"
+and "deed" as "diid." Typographical obstacles prevent us from bringing to
+the eye of the reader a specimen of the reformed alphabet and spelling as
+they looked on a printed page. They, of course, issued from the mind of
+Franklin as stillborn as his reformed Episcopal Prayer Book. His only
+proselytes appear to have been Polly, who even wrote a letter to him in the
+strange forms, and his loving sister, Jane, who was delighted to have
+another language with which to express her affection for him. Our world is
+one in which some things are made but others make themselves, and, however
+arbitrary their character, will not allow themselves to be made over, even
+at the behest of such merciless rationalism as that of Franklin.
+
+In the latter part of Franklin's life, Noah Webster, the lexicographer,
+also formed a scheme for the reform of the alphabet, and Franklin had the
+pleasure of writing to him, "Our Ideas are so nearly similar, that I make
+no doubt of our easily agreeing on the Plan." Several years later, Webster,
+in his _Dissertations on the English Language_, stated that Franklin had
+compiled a dictionary, based upon his own reformatory system, and procured
+the types for printing it, but, finding himself too old to prosecute his
+design, had offered both manuscript and types to him. "Whether this
+project, so deeply interesting to this country," Webster said, "will ever
+be effected; or whether it will be defeated by insolence and prejudice,
+remains for my countrymen to determine."
+
+Another thing upon which the ingenuity of Franklin was brought to bear, as
+the reader has already been told, was the Armonica. In his letter to
+Beccaria, extolling its merits, he describes it with a wealth of detail,
+not only thoroughly in keeping with his knack for mechanics, but showing
+that to music as to everything else, that won the favor of his intellect,
+he brought the ken of a man of science. The letter concludes with a dulcet
+compliment, which harmonizes well with its subject: "In honour of your
+musical language (the Italian), I have borrowed from it the name of this
+instrument, calling it the Armonica." In one of his papers, he drew up
+instructions for the proper use of the instrument which nothing but the
+most intimate familiarity with its operation could have rendered possible.
+
+Admiration has often been expended upon the acuteness with which Franklin,
+in a letter to Lord Kames, accounted for the pleasure afforded by the old
+Scotch tunes, as compared with the pleasure afforded by the difficult music
+of his day, which, he said, was of the same nature as that awakened by the
+feats of tumblers and rope-dancers. The reason was this. The old Scotch
+melodies were composed by the minstrels of former days, to be played on the
+harp, accompanied by the voice. The harp was strung with wire (which gives
+a sound of long continuance) and had no contrivance like that in the modern
+harpsichord, by which the sound of the preceding note could be stopped, the
+moment a succeeding note began. To avoid _actual_ discord, it was therefore
+necessary that the succeeding emphatic note should be a chord with the
+preceding, as their sounds must exist at the same time. Hence arose that
+beauty in those tones that had so long pleased, and would please forever,
+though men scarce knew why.
+
+The most useful invention of Franklin was what came to be known as the
+Franklin stove. With modifications, it is still in use, and the essay
+written on it by Franklin, entitled _An Account of the New-invented
+Pennsylvanian Fireplaces_, is one of the best illustrations of the capacity
+of his scientific genius to adapt itself to the hardest and barest offices
+that human comfort and convenience could impose upon it with a nicety and
+accuracy of trained insight and touch worthy of the cleverest journeyman, a
+command of scientific principles to be expected only of a professional
+student, and a gift of clear, lively expression which reminds us of the
+remark of Stella that Dean Swift could write agreeably even about a
+broomstick. The principle upon which the Franklin stove was constructed was
+that of making the heat from its open fireplace, after first ascending to
+its top, descend in such a manner at its back, before passing off into the
+chimney, as to diffuse by radiation through the room, in which it stood, a
+large part of its warmth. The essay enumerates the different methods of
+heating rooms then in use: the great, open, smoky chimney-place, that the
+unremitting labor of one man could scarce keep supplied with fuel, and that
+gave out little more heat for human warmth than a fire outdoors; this
+chimney-place reduced to a smaller size with jambs, and free, to a great
+extent from the reproach of smokiness, yet, with its contraction setting up
+strong currents of whistling and howling air, which reminded Franklin of
+the Spanish proverb,
+
+ "If the Wind blows on you thro' a Hole,
+ Make your Will, and take Care of your Soul";
+
+the expensive and intricate French fireplaces with hollow backs, hearths
+and jambs of iron; the Holland stove, which shut off the sight of the fire,
+and could not conveniently be used for any purposes except those of warmth;
+the German stove which was subject to very much the same disadvantages as
+the Holland stove; and charcoal fires in pots which emitted disagreeable
+and dangerous fumes and were used chiefly in the shops of handicraftsmen.
+From the shortcomings of all these methods of heating rooms, the Franklin
+stove, its inventor contended, was exempt. It diffused heat equally
+throughout a whole room; if you sat in an apartment warmed by it, you were
+not scorched before, while you were frozen behind; nor were you exposed to
+the drafts from which so many women, particularly, got colds in the head,
+rheums and defluxions that fell upon their jaws and gums, and destroyed
+early many a fine set of teeth in the northern colonies, and from which so
+many persons of both sexes contracted coughs, catarrhs, toothaches, fevers,
+pleurisies and other diseases. It kept a sick room supplied with a fresh
+and yet properly tempered flow of pure air. It conserved heat. It
+economized fuel. With it, Franklin said, he could make his room twice as
+warm as it used to be with a quarter of the wood that he used to consume.
+If you burned candles near it, they did not flare and run off into tallow
+as in the case of ordinary fireplaces with their excessive drafts. It
+corrected most smoky chimneys. It prevented all kinds of chimneys from
+fouling, and if they fouled made them less likely to fire, and, if they
+fired, made the fire easier to repress. A flame could be speedily kindled
+in it with the help of the shutter or trap-bellows that went along with
+it. A fire could be readily extinguished in it, or could be so secured in
+it that not one spark could fly out of it to do any damage. A room once
+warmed remained warm all night. "With all these Conveniences," concludes
+Franklin, "you do not lose the pleasing Sight nor Use of the Fire, as in
+the Dutch Stoves, but may boil the Tea-Kettle, warm the Flat-Irons, heat
+Heaters, keep warm a Dish of Victuals by setting it on the Top, &c. &c."
+
+Some years after the publication of this essay, Franklin devised an
+improvement in the open chimney-place which tended to abate drafts and
+check the escape of heat up the chimney by contracting the chimney opening,
+bringing its breast down to within three feet of the hearth, and placing an
+iron frame just under this breast, with grooves on each side of the frame,
+in which an iron plate could be slid backwards and forwards at pleasure,
+for the purpose of cutting off the mouth of the chimney entirely from the
+chimney itself, when there was no fire on the hearth, or of leaving a space
+of not more than two inches for the escape of smoke between the further
+edge of the plate and the back of the chimney-mouth. This improved
+chimney-place was described by Franklin in letters to Alexander Dick and
+James Bowdoin. The letter to Bowdoin seems to leave little to be said on
+the subject of chimneys. It indicates that Franklin had subjected them to a
+scrutiny hardly less close than that which he had fixed upon the Leyden
+Jar. In connection with the currents and reverse currents, set up in them
+in summer by the relations of inequality, which the air in them sustains,
+at different hours of the day and night, to the outside temperature, he
+suggests that joints of meat might keep for a week or more during the
+hottest weather in chimney-openings, if well wrapt three or four fold in
+wet linen cloths, sprinkled once a day with water to prevent evaporation.
+Butter and milk in vessels and bottles covered with wet cloths might, he
+thought, be preserved in the same way. And he even thought, too, that the
+movements of air in chimneys might, with the aid of smoke-jack vanes, be
+applied to some mechanical purposes, where a small but pretty constant
+power only was needed. To appreciate how patiently and exhaustively
+Franklin was in the habit of pursuing every course of observation or
+reflection opened up by his scientific propensities, the whole of this
+letter, which had much more to say on the subject of chimneys than we have
+mentioned, should be read.
+
+At a later period of his life, Franklin describes to Turgot what he called
+his new stove. The novel feature of this consisted of an aerial syphon by
+which the smoke from the fireplace of the stove was first drawn upwards
+through the longer leg of the syphon, and then downwards through its
+shorter leg, and over burning coals, by which it was kindled into flame and
+consumed.
+
+The ingenuity of Franklin was also exerted very successfully in the
+rectification of smoky chimneys. In his essay on the causes and cure of
+such chimneys, written on his last ocean voyage, he resolved the causes
+into no less than nine heads, and stated with his accustomed perspicuity
+and precision the remedy for each cause. In his time, the art of properly
+carrying off smoke through chimneys was but imperfectly understood by
+ordinary builders and mechanics, and it was of too humble a nature to tempt
+discussion by such men of science as were capable of clearly expounding the
+physical principles upon which it rested. It was not strange, therefore,
+that Franklin, who deemed nothing, that was useful, to be beneath the
+dignity of philosophy, should have acquired in his time the reputation of
+being a kind of "universal smoke doctor" and should have been occasionally
+consulted by friends of his, such as Lord Kames, about refractory chimneys.
+The only smoky chimney, that seems to have completely baffled his
+investigation, recalls in a way the philosopher, who thought that he had
+discovered a new planet, but afterwards found that what he saw was only a
+fly in the end of his telescope. After exhausting every scientific resource
+in an effort to ascertain why the chimney in the country-house of one of
+his English friends smoked, Franklin was obliged to own the impotence for
+once of his skill; but, subsequently, his friend, who made no pretensions
+to the character of a fumist, climbed to the top of the funnel of his
+chimney by a ladder, and, on peering down into it, found that it had been
+filled by nesting birds with twigs and straw, cemented with clay, and lined
+with feathers.
+
+Nor was the attention given by Franklin to ventilation by any means
+confined to chimneys. Air vitiated by human respiration also came in for a
+share of it. Describing an experiment by which he demonstrated the manner
+in which air affected in this way is purified, Alexander Small said:
+
+ The Doctor confirmed this by the following experiment.
+ He breathed gently through a tube into a deep glass
+ mug, so as to impregnate all the air in the mug with
+ this quality. He then put a lighted bougie into the
+ mug; and upon touching the air therein the flame was
+ instantly extinguished; by frequently repeating the
+ operation, the bougie gradually preserved its light
+ longer in the mug, so as in a short time to retain it
+ to the bottom of it; the air having totally lost the
+ bad quality it had contracted from the breath blown
+ into it.
+
+Franklin became deeply interested in the brilliant course of investigation
+pursued by Priestley with respect to gases, and several penetrating glances
+of his into the relations of carbonic acid gas to vegetation have come down
+to us. Observing on a visit to Priestley the luxuriance of some mint
+growing in noxious air, he suggested to Priestley that "the air is mended
+by taking something from it, and not by adding to it." He hoped, he said in
+a letter to Priestley, that the nutriment derived by vegetation from
+carbonic acid gas would give some check to the rage of destroying trees
+that grew near houses, which had accompanied recent improvements in
+gardening from an opinion of their being unwholesome.
+
+Just as he was consulted about the best methods of protecting St. Paul's
+Cathedral and the arsenals at Purfleet from lightning, so he was also
+consulted by the British Government as to the best method for ventilating
+the House of Commons. "The personal atmosphere surrounding the members," he
+thought, "might be carried off by making outlets in perpendicular parts of
+the seats, through which the air might be drawn off by ventilators, so
+placed, as to accomplish this without admitting any by the same channels."
+The experiment might be tried upon some of our City Councilmen. Principles
+of ventilation, expounded by Franklin, were also utilized by the Messrs.
+Adam of the Adelphi, in the construction of the large room built by them
+for the meetings of the Society for the Encouragement of Arts. We also find
+him suggesting openings, close to the ceilings of rooms, and communicating
+with flues, constructed alongside of chimney flues, as effective means for
+ventilating rooms.
+
+With all his primary and secondary gifts for scientific research, it is
+difficult to believe that, if Franklin had not been diverted from it by
+engrossing political cares, he would have added both to his special
+reputation as a student of electricity and to his general reputation as a
+man of science. As it was, his civic activity and popular leadership in
+Pennsylvania, his several agencies abroad, his participation in the
+American Revolution, his career as Minister to France, and his official
+duties, after his return, made such imperious demands upon his time that he
+had little or no leisure left for scientific pursuits. This picture of his
+situation which he presented in a letter to Ingenhousz, when he was in
+France, was more or less true of almost every part of his life after he
+became famous:
+
+ Besides being harass'd with too much Business, I am
+ expos'd to numberless Visits, some of Kindness and
+ Civility, many of mere idle Curiosity, from Strangers
+ of America & of different Parts of Europe, as well as
+ the Inhabitants of the Provinces who come to Paris.
+ These devour my Hours, and break my Attention, and at
+ Night I often find myself fatigu'd without having done
+ anything. Celebrity may for a while flatter one's
+ Vanity, but its Effects are troublesome. I have begun
+ to write two or three Things, which I wish to finish
+ before I die; but I sometimes doubt the possibility.
+
+Some of the reflections of Franklin on scientific subjects, such as his
+early letters to Cadwallader Colden with regard to "perspirants and
+absorbents" are, to use his own expression in one of them, too plainly
+_ultra crepidam_ to have any value. Of others, we might fairly say that his
+knowledge of the topics which he handled in them was hardly deep enough to
+deserve any praise more confident than that which he allowed himself when
+writing to Cadwallader Colden in 1751 of the Philadelphia Experiments.
+"So," he said to Colden in this letter, "we are got beyond the skill of
+_Rabelais's_ devils of two years old, who, he humorously says, had only
+learnt to thunder and lighten a little round the head of a cabbage." All
+the same, even aside from his electrical experiments, Franklin acquired no
+little fame as a philosopher, made more than one fruitful suggestion to
+fellow-workers of his in the domain of science and contributed many useful
+observations to the general fund of scientific thought.
+
+Apparently his views on medical topics were held in very considerable
+respect. In 1777, he was elected a member of the Royal Medical Society of
+Paris, and in 1787 an honorary member of the Medical Society of London.
+Many works on medical subjects were dedicated to him by their authors. He
+was one of the commission which exposed the imposture of Mesmer. There are
+few things that give us a better idea of the extraordinary celebrity
+enjoyed by him than the wide currency obtained by a spurious opinion of
+his, ascribing great merit to tobacco ashes as a remedy for dropsy. It won
+such an extensive circulation, and brought down on his head such a flood of
+questions from physicians and others, that he was compelled to deny flatly
+the truth of the story. One person, Lord Cadross, afterwards the Earl of
+Buchan, firmly believed that he would have perished at the hands of a
+professional physician, who wished to blister him, when he was afflicted
+with a fever, if Franklin had not dissented from the treatment. Franklin
+probably deserved no higher credit for his dissent on this occasion than
+that of sharing the opinion of Sir John Pringle, who was convinced that,
+out of every one hundred fevers, ninety-two cured themselves. So far as we
+can see, there is nothing in the works of Franklin to warrant the belief
+that he possessed any uncommon degree of medical knowledge, though he was
+full of curiosity with regard to medicine as with regard to every other
+branch of human learning. In one of his letters to Colden, written in his
+fortieth year, he expressed the hope that future experiment would confirm
+the idea that the yaws could be cured by tar-water. In a later letter to
+Colden, he expressed his pleasure at hearing more instances of the success
+of the poke-weed "in the Cure of that horrible Evil to the human Body, a
+Cancer." At his suggestion, a young physician, with the aid of Sanctorius'
+balance, tested alternately each hour, for eight hours, the amount of the
+perspiration from his body, when naked, and when warmly clad, and found
+that it was almost as great during the hours when he was naked. By his
+investigations into the malady known in his time popularly as "the dry
+bellyache," and learnedly as the "_colica Pictonum_," he conferred a real
+benefit upon medical science. His views upon the subject received the honor
+of being incorporated with due acknowledgments into Dr. John Hunter's essay
+on the _Dry Bellyache of the Tropics_. Summarily speaking they were that
+the complaint was a form of lead poisoning.
+
+ I have long been of opinion [he wrote to Dr.
+ Cadwallader Evans in 1768] that that distemper proceeds
+ always from a metallic cause only; observing that it
+ affects, among tradesmen, those that use lead, however
+ different their trades,--as glaziers, letter-founders,
+ plumbers, potters, white-lead makers, and painters;...
+ although the worms of stills ought to be of pure tin,
+ they are often made of pewter, which has a great
+ mixture in it of lead.
+
+The year before this letter was written, Franklin had found on reading a
+pamphlet, containing the names and vocations of the persons, who had been
+cured of the colic at Charite, a Parisian hospital, that all of them had
+followed trades, which handle lead in some form or other. On going over the
+vocations, he was at first puzzled to understand why there should be any
+stonecutters or soldiers among the sufferers, but his perplexity was
+cleared up by a physician at the hospital, who informed him that
+stonecutters frequently used melted lead for fixing the ends of iron
+balustrades in stone, and that the soldiers had been employed as laborers
+by painters, when grinding colors. These facts were long afterwards
+communicated by Franklin to Benjamin Vaughan in a letter, in which he cited
+other incidents, interesting partly because they corroborated his theory,
+and partly because they are additional proofs of his vigilance and patience
+in collecting facts, before advancing an hypothesis, as well as of a
+memory, which retained every instructive circumstance imparted to it by eye
+or ear as imperishably as hardening cement retains the impression of a
+dog's foot. When he was a boy at Boston, Franklin said, it was discovered
+that New England rum, which had produced the dry bellyache and paralyzed
+the limbs in North Carolina, had been made by distilleries with leaden
+still-heads and worms. Later, when he was in London, he had been warned by
+an old workman at Palmer's printing-house, as well as by an obscure pain in
+his own hands, that it was a dangerous practice to handle a heated case of
+types. About the same time, a letter-founder in the same close at Palmer's,
+in a conversation with him, ascribed the existence of the ailment among his
+workmen to the fact that some of them were slovenly enough to go to their
+meals with unwashed hands that had come into contact with molten lead. He
+had also observed in Derbyshire that the smoke from lead furnaces was
+pernicious to grass and other vegetables, and in America had often observed
+that streaks on shingle roofs, made by white lead, washed from balusters or
+dormer window frames, were always entirely free from moss. He had also been
+told of a case where this colic had afflicted a whole family, and was
+supposed to be due to the corrosive effect of the acid in leaves, shed upon
+the roof, from which the family derived the supply of rain water, upon
+which it relied for drink.
+
+More important still than the insight that Franklin obtained into the
+Painter's Colic was the insight which he obtained into the salutary effect
+of the custom which is now almost universal, except in the homes of the
+ignorant and squalid, of sleeping at night in rooms with the windows up.
+This custom, as well as the outdoor regimen, which has proved of such
+signal value in the treatment of tuberculosis, originated in hygienic
+conceptions identical with those steadfastly inculcated by him. His
+opinions with regard to colds and the benefits of pure air were expressed
+at many different times, and in many different forms, but nowhere so
+conveniently for the purposes of quotation as in a letter which he wrote to
+Dr. Benjamin Rush in 1773.
+
+ I hope [he said in this letter] that after having
+ discovered the benefit of fresh and cool air applied to
+ the sick, people will begin to suspect that possibly it
+ may do no harm to the well. I have not seen Dr.
+ Cullen's book, but am glad to hear that he speaks of
+ catarrhs or colds by contagion. I have long been
+ satisfied from observation, that besides the general
+ colds now termed _influenzas_ (which may possibly
+ spread by contagion, as well as by a particular quality
+ of the air), people often catch cold from one another
+ when shut up together in close rooms, coaches, &c., and
+ when sitting near and conversing so as to breathe in
+ each other's transpiration; the disorder being in a
+ certain state. I think, too, that it is the frouzy,
+ corrupt air from animal substances, and the perspired
+ matter from our bodies, which being long confined in
+ beds not lately used, and clothes not lately worn, and
+ books long shut up in close rooms, obtains that kind of
+ putridity, which occasions the colds observed upon
+ sleeping in, wearing, and turning over such bedclothes,
+ or books, and not their coldness or dampness. From
+ these causes, but more from too full living, with too
+ little exercise, proceed in my opinion most of the
+ disorders, which for about one hundred and fifty years
+ past the English have called _colds_.
+
+ As to Dr. Cullen's cold or catarrh _a frigore_, I
+ question whether such an one ever existed. Travelling
+ in our severe winters, I have suffered cold sometimes
+ to an extremity only short of freezing, but this did
+ not make me _catch cold_. And, for moisture, I have
+ been in the river every evening two or three hours for
+ a fortnight together, when one could suppose I might
+ imbibe enough of it to _take cold_ if humidity could
+ give it; but no such effect ever followed. Boys never
+ get cold by swimming. Nor are people at sea, or who
+ live at Bermudas, or St. Helena, small islands, where
+ the air must be ever moist from the dashing and
+ breaking of waves against their rocks on all sides,
+ more subject to colds than those who inhabit part of a
+ continent where the air is driest. Dampness may indeed
+ assist in producing putridity and those miasmata which
+ infect us with the disorder we call a cold; but of
+ itself can never by a little addition of moisture hurt
+ a body filled with watery fluids from head to foot.
+
+Franklin's belief that colds and overeating often went hand in hand also
+found expression in one of his letters to Polly Stevenson. When sending
+her an account of some seamen, who had experienced considerable relief from
+thirst by wearing clothes kept constantly wet with salt water, he said, "I
+need not point out to you an Observation in favour of our Doctrine, that
+you will make on reading this Paper, that, _having little to eat_, these
+poor People in wet Clothes Day and Night _caught no cold_." In every, or in
+practically every, case, he seems to have referred colds to what he rather
+vaguely calls a siziness and thickness of the blood, resulting from checked
+perspiration, produced by different agencies, including a gross diet.
+
+ Thus [he says in his _Notes and Hints for Writing a
+ Paper Concerning what is called Catching Cold_], People
+ in Rooms heated by a Multitude of People, find their
+ own Bodies heated; thence the quantity of perspirable
+ Matter is increased that should be discharged, but the
+ Air, not being changed, grows so full of the same
+ Matter, that it will receive no more. So the Body must
+ retain it. The Consequence is, the next Day, perhaps
+ sooner, a slight putrid Fever comes on, with all the
+ Marks of what we call a Cold, and the Disorder is
+ suppos'd to be got by coming out of a warm Room,
+ whereas it was really taken while in that Room.
+
+He did not shrink from any of the consequences of his reasoning about colds
+however extreme.
+
+ Be so kind as to tell me at your leisure [he wrote to
+ Barbeu Dubourg], whether in France, you have a general
+ Belief that moist Air, and cold Air, and damp Shirts or
+ Sheets, and wet Floors, and Beds that have not lately
+ been used, and Clothes that have not been lately worn,
+ and going out of a warm Room into the Air, and leaving
+ off a long-worn Wastecoat, and wearing leaky Shoes, and
+ sitting near an Open Window, or Door, or in a Coach
+ with both Glasses down, are all or any of them capable
+ of giving the Distemper we call _a Cold_, and you _a
+ Rheum, or Catarrh_? Or are these merely _English_
+ ideas?
+
+His views on the wholesomeness of fresh air were far in advance of the
+general intelligence of his time, and were expressed in spirited terms.
+After stating in a letter to Jean Baptiste Le Roy that he had become
+convinced that the idea that perspiration is checked by cold was an error
+as well as the idea that rheum is occasioned by cold, he added:
+
+ But as this is Heresy here, and perhaps may be so with
+ you, I only whisper it, and expect you will keep my
+ Secret. Our Physicians have begun to discover that
+ fresh Air is good for People in the Small-pox & other
+ Fevers. I hope in time they will find out that it does
+ no harm to People in Health.
+
+At times his language on what he called _aerophobia_ grew highly animated.
+
+ What Caution against Air [he said in a letter to Thomas
+ Percival], what stopping of Crevices, what wrapping up
+ in warm Clothes, what shutting of Doors and Windows!
+ even in the midst of Summer! Many London Families go
+ out once a day to take the Air; three or four Persons
+ in a Coach, one perhaps Sick; these go three or four
+ Miles, or as many Turns in Hide Park, with the Glasses
+ both up close, all breathing over & over again the same
+ Air they brought out of Town with them in the Coach
+ with the least change possible, and render'd worse and
+ worse every moment. And this they call _taking the
+ Air_.
+
+Indeed, there is at times something just a little ludicrous in the
+uncompromising fervor with which Franklin insisted upon his proposition. It
+seemed strange he said, in the letter from which we have just quoted, that
+a man whose body was composed in great part of moist fluids, whose blood
+and juices were so watery, and who could swallow quantities of water and
+small beer daily without inconvenience, should fancy that a little more or
+less moisture in the air should be of such importance; but we abound in
+absurdity and inconsistency.
+
+It is a delightful account that John Adams gives us of a night which he
+spent in the same bed with Franklin at New Brunswick, on their way to the
+conference with Lord Howe:
+
+ The chamber [Adams tells us] was little larger than the
+ bed, without a chimney, and with only one small window.
+ The window was open, and I, who was an invalid, and
+ afraid of the air in the night, shut it close. "Oh!"
+ says Franklin, "don't shut the window, we shall be
+ suffocated." I answered I was afraid of the evening
+ air. Dr. Franklin replied, "The air within this chamber
+ will soon be, and indeed is now, worse than that
+ without doors. Come, open the window and come to bed,
+ and I will convince you. I believe you are not
+ acquainted with my theory of colds." Opening the window
+ and leaping into bed, I said I had read his letters to
+ Dr. Cooper, in which he had advanced that nobody ever
+ got cold by going into a cold church or any other cold
+ air, but the theory was so little consistent with my
+ experience, that I thought it a paradox. However, I had
+ so much curiosity to hear his reasons, that I would run
+ the risk of a cold. The Doctor then began a harangue
+ upon air and cold, and respiration and perspiration,
+ with which I was so much amused that I soon fell
+ asleep, and left him and his philosophy together; but I
+ believe they were equally sound and insensible within a
+ few minutes after me, for the last words I heard were
+ pronounced as if he was more than half asleep. I
+ remember little of the lecture, except that the human
+ body, by respiration and perspiration, destroys a
+ gallon of air in a minute; that two such persons as we
+ were now in that chamber would consume all the air in
+ it in an hour or two; that by breathing over again the
+ matter thrown off by the lungs and the skin, we should
+ imbibe the real cause of colds, not from abroad, but
+ from within.
+
+At times Franklin merely gave hints to brother philosophers and left them
+to run the hints down. For instance, he suggested to M. De Saussure, of
+Geneva, who succeeded in ascending Mont Blanc, the idea of ascertaining
+the lateral attraction of the Jura Mountains for the purpose of discovering
+the mean density of the earth upon the Newtonian theory of gravitation.
+This was subsequently done with complete success by Nevil Maskelyne on Mt.
+Schehallion in Perthshire. To Ingenhousz he suggested the idea of "hanging
+a weight on a spiral spring, to discover if bodies gravitated differently
+to the earth during the conjunctions of the sun and moon, compared with
+other times."
+
+He gave very close study to the philosophy of waterspouts and whirlwinds
+and came to the conclusion that they were generated by the same causes, and
+were of the same nature, "the only Difference between them being, that the
+one passes over Land, the other over Water." He was the first person to
+discover that northeast storms did not begin in the northeast at all. The
+manner in which he did it is another good illustration of his quickness in
+noting the significance of every fact by which his attention was
+challenged. He desired to observe a lunar eclipse at nine o'clock in the
+evening at Philadelphia, but his efforts were frustrated by a northeast
+storm, which lasted for a night and a day, and did much damage all along
+the Atlantic coast. To his surprise he afterwards learnt from the Boston
+newspapers that the eclipse had been visible there, and, upon writing to
+his brother for particulars, was informed by him that it had been over for
+an hour when the storm set in at Boston; though it was apparently fair to
+assume that the storm began sooner at Boston than at Philadelphia. This
+information and further inquiry satisfied him that northeast storms
+commence southward and work their way to the northeast at the rate of a
+hundred miles an hour. When we read the words in which he stated his theory
+of such storms, we begin to understand what Sir Humphry Davy meant in
+saying that science appeared in Franklin's language in a dress wonderfully
+decorous, and best adapted to display her native loveliness.
+
+ Suppose [he said to Jared Eliot] a great tract of
+ country, land and sea, to wit, Florida and the Bay of
+ Mexico, to have clear weather for several days, and to
+ be heated by the sun, and its air thereby exceedingly
+ rarefied. Suppose the country northeastward, as
+ Pennsylvania, New England, Nova Scotia, and
+ Newfoundland, to be at the same time covered with
+ clouds, and its air chilled and condensed. The rarefied
+ air being lighter must rise, and the denser air next to
+ it will press into its place; that will be followed by
+ the next denser air, that by the next, and so on. Thus,
+ when I have a fire in my chimney, there is a current of
+ air constantly flowing from the door to the chimney;
+ but the beginning of the motion was at the chimney,
+ where the air being rarefied by the fire rising, its
+ place was supplied by the cooler air that was next to
+ it, and the place of that by the next, and so on to the
+ door. So the water in a long sluice or mill-race, being
+ stopped by a gate, is at rest like the air in a calm;
+ but as soon as you open the gate at one end to let it
+ out, the water next the gate begins first to move, that
+ which is next to it follows; and so, though the water
+ proceeds forward to the gate, the motion which began
+ there runs backward, if one may so speak, to the upper
+ end of the race, where the water is last in motion.
+
+It may be truly said of every province of scientific research into which
+Franklin ventured that he brought to it a bold and original spirit of
+speculation which gave it new interest and meaning. Even when he was not
+the first to kindle a light, he had a happy and effective way of trimming
+it anew and freshening its radiance. To Collinson he wrote on one occasion,
+"But I must own I am much in the _Dark_ about _Light_." But noonday is not
+more luminous than what he had to say on the subject in this letter.
+
+ May not all the Phaenomena of Light [he asked] be more
+ conveniently solved, by supposing universal Space
+ filled with a subtle elastic Fluid, which, when at
+ rest, is not visible, but whose Vibrations affect that
+ fine Sense the Eye, as those of Air do the grosser
+ Organs of the Ear? We do not, in the Case of Sound,
+ imagine that any sonorous Particles are thrown off from
+ a Bell, for Instance, and fly in strait Lines to the
+ Ear; why must we believe that luminous Particles leave
+ the Sun and proceed to the Eye? Some Diamonds, if
+ rubbed, shine in the Dark, without losing any Part of
+ their Matter. I can make an Electrical Spark as big as
+ the Flame of a Candle, much brighter, and, therefore,
+ visible farther, yet this is without Fuel; and, I am
+ persuaded no part of the Electric Fluid flies off in
+ such Case to distant Places, but all goes directly, and
+ is to be found in the Place to which I destine it. May
+ not different Degrees of Vibration of the
+ above-mentioned Universal Medium occasion the
+ Appearances of different Colours? I think the Electric
+ Fluid is always the same; yet I find that weaker and
+ stronger Sparks differ in apparent Colour; some white,
+ blue, purple, red; the strongest, White; weak ones,
+ red. Thus different Degrees of Vibration given to the
+ Air produce the 7 different Sounds in Music, analagous
+ to the 7 Colours, yet the Medium, Air, is the same.
+
+"Universal Space, as far as we know of it," he declared in his _Loose
+Thoughts on a Universal Fluid_, "seems to be filled with a subtil Fluid,
+whose Motion, or Vibration is called Light." And he then proceeds to found
+on this statement a series of speculations marked by too high a degree of
+temerity to have much scientific value. One sentiment in the paper,
+however, is well worth recalling as showing how clearly its author had
+grasped the conservation of matter. "The Power of Man relative to Matter,"
+he observed, "seems limited to the dividing it, or mixing the various kinds
+of it, or changing its Form and Appearance by different Compositions of it;
+but does not extend to the making or creating of new Matter, or
+annihilating the old."
+
+The Science of Palaeontology was in its infancy during the lifetime of
+Franklin. Many years before Cuvier gave the name of mastodon to the
+prehistoric beast, whose fossil remains had been brought to sight from time
+to time in different parts of the world, George Croghan, the Indian trader,
+sent to Franklin a box of tusks and grinders, which had been found near the
+Ohio, and which he supposed to be parts of a dismembered elephant. In his
+reply of thanks, Franklin observed that the tusks were nearly of the same
+form and texture as those of the African and Asiatic elephant. "But the
+grinders differ," he added, "being full of knobs, like the grinders of a
+carnivorous animal; when those of the elephant, who eats only vegetables,
+are almost smooth. But then we know of no other animal with tusks like an
+elephant, to whom such grinders might belong." The fact that, while
+elephants inhabited hot countries only, fragments such as those sent to him
+by Croghan were found in climates like those of the Ohio Territory and
+Siberia, looked, Franklin concluded, "as if the earth had anciently been in
+another position, and the climates differently placed from what they are at
+present." Contrasting the observations of this letter with the paper read
+long afterwards by Thomas Jefferson before the American Philosophical
+Society on the bones of a large prehistoric quadruped resembling the sloth,
+William B. Scott, the American palaeontologist, remarks:
+
+ Franklin's opinions are nearer to our present beliefs
+ than were Jefferson's, written nearly forty years
+ later. Of course, we now know that Franklin was
+ mistaken in supposing that such bones were found only
+ in what is now Kentucky and in Peru, and his comparison
+ of the teeth of the mastodon with the "grinders of a
+ carnivorous animal" is not very happy, but the
+ inferences are remarkably sound, when we consider the
+ state of geological knowledge in 1767.
+
+In a letter to Antoine Court de Gebelin, the author of the _Monde
+Primitif_, Franklin gave him a valuable caution, in relation to apparent
+linguistic variations. Strangers, who learnt the language of an Indian
+nation, he said, finding no orthography, formed each his own orthography
+according to the usual sounds given to the letters in his own language.
+Thus the same words of the Mohawk language, written by an English, a French
+and a German interpreter, often differed very much in the spelling.
+
+Franklin's letters to Herschel, Maskelyne, Rittenhouse, Humphrey Marshall
+and James Bowdoin reveal a keen interest in astronomy, but this is not one
+of the fields from which he came off _cum laude_. Gratifying to the pride
+of an American, however, is an observation which he made to William
+Herschel, when the latter sent to him for the American Philosophical
+Society a catalogue of one thousand new nebulae and star-clusters and stated
+at the same time that he had discovered two satellites, which revolved
+about the Georgian planet. In congratulating him on the discovery, Franklin
+said:
+
+ You have wonderfully extended the Power of human
+ Vision, and are daily making us Acquainted with Regions
+ of the Universe totally unknown to mankind in former
+ Ages. Had Fortune plac'd you in this part of America,
+ your Progress in these Discoveries might have been
+ still more rapid, as from the more frequent clearness
+ of our Air, we have near one Third more in the year of
+ good observing Days than there are in England.
+
+The production of cold by evaporation was another subject which enlisted
+the eager interest of Franklin. In co-operation with Dr. Hadley, the
+Professor of Chemistry at Cambridge, England, he was so successful in
+covering a ball with ice by wetting it from time to time with ether, and
+blowing upon the ether with a bellows, that he could write to John Lining
+in these words: "From this experiment one may see the possibility of
+freezing a man to death on a warm summer's day, if he were to stand in a
+passage through which the wind blew briskly, and to be wet frequently with
+ether, a spirit that is more inflammable than brandy, or common spirits of
+wine."
+
+Geology was in its infancy during Franklin's time, but he hazarded some
+conjectures about the formation of the earth that are perhaps not less
+trustworthy than those advanced by riper geologists. In the letter, in
+which these conjectures were communicated to the Abbe Soulavie, he said:
+
+ Part of the high county of Derby being probably as much
+ above the level of the sea, as the coal mines of
+ Whitehaven were below it, seemed a proof that there had
+ been a great _bouleversement_ in the surface of that
+ Island (Great Britain), some part of it having been
+ depressed under the sea, and other parts which had been
+ under it being raised above it.... Such changes in the
+ superficial parts of the globe [he continued] seemed to
+ me unlikely to happen if the earth were solid to the
+ centre. I therefore imagined that the internal parts
+ might be a fluid more dense, and of greater specific
+ gravity than any of the solids we are acquainted with;
+ which therefore might swim in or upon that fluid. Thus
+ the surface of the globe would be a shell, capable of
+ being broken and disordered by the violent movements of
+ the fluid on which it rested.
+
+The letter contains other speculations equally bold:
+
+ It has long been a supposition of mine that the iron
+ contained in the substance of this globe, has made it
+ capable of becoming as it is a great magnet. That the
+ fluid of magnetism exists perhaps in all space; so that
+ there is a magnetical North and South of the universe
+ as well as of this globe, and that if it were possible
+ for a man to fly from star to star, he might govern his
+ course by the compass. That it was by the power of this
+ general magnetism this globe became a particular
+ magnet. In soft or hot iron the fluid of magnetism is
+ naturally diffused equally; when within the influence
+ of the magnet, it is drawn to one end of the Iron, made
+ denser there, and rare at the other, while the iron
+ continues soft and hot, it is only a temporary magnet:
+ If it cools or grows hard in that situation, it becomes
+ a permanent one, the magnetic fluid not easily resuming
+ its equilibrium. Perhaps it may be owing to the
+ permanent magnetism of this globe, which it had not at
+ first, that its axis is at present kept parallel to
+ itself, and not liable to the changes it formerly
+ suffered, which occasioned the rupture of its shell,
+ the submersions and emersions of its lands and the
+ confusion of its seasons.
+
+It was probably, Franklin thought, different relations between the earth
+and its axis in the past that caused much of Europe, including the
+mountains of Passy, on which he lived, and which were composed of limestone
+rock and sea shells, to be abandoned by the sea, and to change its ancient
+climate, which seemed, he said, to have been a hot one.
+
+The physical convulsions to which the earth had been subject in the past
+were, however, in his opinion beneficent.
+
+ Had [he said in a letter to Sir John Pringle] the
+ different strata of clay, gravel, marble, coals,
+ limestone, sand, minerals, &c., continued to lie level,
+ one under the other, as they may be supposed to have
+ done before these convulsions, we should have had the
+ use only of a few of the uppermost of the strata, the
+ others lying too deep and too difficult to be come at;
+ but the shell of the earth being broke, and the
+ fragments thrown into this oblique position, the
+ disjointed ends of a great number of strata of
+ different kinds are brought up to-day, and a great
+ variety of useful materials put into our power, which
+ would otherwise have remained eternally concealed from
+ us. So that what has been usually looked upon as a
+ _ruin_ suffered by this part of the universe, was, in
+ reality, only a preparation or means of rendering the
+ earth more fit for use, more capable of being to
+ mankind a convenient and comfortable habitation.
+
+The scientific conjectures of Franklin may not always have been sound, but
+they are invariably so readable that we experience no difficulty in
+understanding why the Abbe Raynal should have preferred his fictions to
+other men's truths.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[51] The lightning rod in its origin encountered the same religious
+misgivings as inoculation and insurance and many other ideas which have
+promoted human progress and happiness. The Rev. Thomas Prince at the time
+of the Lisbon earthquake thought that the more lightning rods there were
+the greater was the danger that the earth might become perilously
+surcharged with electricity. "In Boston," he said, "are more erected than
+anywhere else in New England; and Boston seems to be more dreadfully
+shaken. Oh! there is no getting out of the Mighty Hand of God! If we think
+to avoid it in the Air we can not in the Earth. Yea, it may grow more
+fatal."
+
+[52] The lines under the portrait of Franklin by Cochin do not hesitate to
+exalt him above the most powerful forces of Nature and the authority of the
+Gods:
+
+ "C'est l'honneur et l'appui du nouvel hemisphere,
+ Les flots de l'Ocean s'abaissent a sa voix;
+ Il reprime ou dirige a son gre le tonnerre.
+ Qui desarme les dieux peut-il craindre les rois?"
+
+[53] "With Franklin grasp the lightning's fiery wing," is a line in Thomas
+Campbell's _Pleasures of Hope_. In his _Age of Bronze_, Byron asks in one
+place why the Atlantic should "gird a tyrant's grave"
+
+ "While Franklin's quiet memory climbs to heaven,
+ Calming the lightning which he thence hath riven."
+
+And in another place in the same poem he speaks of
+
+ "Stoic Franklin's energetic shade,
+ Robed in the lightnings which his hand allayed."
+
+Crabbe in his tribute to "Divine Philosophy" in the _Library_ exclaims,
+
+ "'Tis hers the lightning from the clouds to call,
+ And teach the fiery mischief where to fall."
+
+[54] The inductive process by which Franklin arrived at the identity of
+lightning and electricity was set forth in one of his letters to John
+Lining, of Charleston, dated March 18, 1755. The minutes kept by him of his
+experiments and observations, contained, he said, the following entry:
+
+"November 7, 1749. Electrical fluid agrees with lightning in these
+particulars. 1. Giving light. 2. Colour of the light. 3. Crooked direction.
+4. Swift motion. 5. Being conducted by metals. 6. Crack or noise in
+exploding. 7. Subsisting in water or ice. 8. Rending bodies it passes
+through. 9. Destroying animals. 10. Melting metals. 11. Firing inflammable
+substances. 12. Sulphureous smell. The electric fluid is attracted by
+points. We do not know whether this property is in lightning. But since
+they agree in all particulars wherein we can already compare them, is it
+not probable they agree likewise in this? Let the Experiment be made."
+
+[55] The standing of Franklin as an inventor would be better established if
+he had not been so resolute in his unwillingness to take out patents upon
+his inventions. Besides the various inventions mentioned by us in the text,
+he was the father of other valuable mechanical conceptions. The first hint
+of the art of engraving upon earthenware appears to have originated with
+him. Moved by his constant desire to inculcate moral truths, he suggested
+about 1753 to a correspondent the idea of engraving from copper plates on
+square chimney tiles "moral prints"; "which," to use his words, "being
+about our Chimneys, and constantly in the Eyes of Children when by the
+Fireside, might give Parents an Opportunity, in explaining them, to impress
+moral Sentiments."
+
+He also appears to have anticipated the Argand burner. A description has
+come down to us of a lamp devised by him which, with only three small
+wicks, had a lustre equal to six candles. It was fitted with a pipe that
+supplied fresh and cool air to its lights. If Franklin did not invent, he
+was the first to communicate to his friend, Mr. Viny, the wheel
+manufacturer at Tenderden, Kent, the art of flexing timber used in making
+wheels for vehicles. But of few things did Franklin take a gloomier view
+than the fate of the inventor as his observations in a letter to John
+Lining, dated March 18, 1755, demonstrate. "One would not," he said, "of
+all faculties or qualities of the mind, wish, for a friend, or a child,
+that he should have that of invention. For his attempts to benefit mankind
+in that way, however well imagined, if they do not succeed, expose him,
+though very unjustly, to general ridicule and contempt; and, if they do
+succeed, to envy, robbery, and abuse."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+Franklin as a Writer
+
+
+Franklin, as Hume truly said, was the first great man of letters, for whom
+Great Britain was beholden to America, and, among his writings, are some
+that will always remain classics. But it is a mistake to think of him as in
+any sense a professional author. He was entirely accurate when he declared
+in the _Autobiography_ that prose-writing had been of great use to him in
+the course of his life and a principal means of his advancement; but always
+to him a pen was but an implement of action. When it had accomplished its
+purpose, he threw it aside as a farmer discards a worn-out plowshare, or a
+horse casts a shoe.[56] There is nothing in his writings or his utterances
+to show that he ever regarded himself as a literary man, or ever harbored a
+thought of permanent literary fame. The only productions of his pen, which
+suggest the sandpaper and varnish of a professional writer, are his
+Bagatelles, such as _The Craven Street Gazette_ and _The Ephemera_,
+composed for the amusement of his friends; and, in writing them, the idea
+of permanency was as completely absent from his mind as it was from that
+of the Duke of Crillon, when he sent up his balloon in honor of the two
+Spanish princes. The greater part of his writings were composed in haste,
+and published anonymously, and without revision. And, when once published,
+if they did not remain dispersed and neglected, it was only because their
+merits were too great for them not to be snatched from the "abhorred abyss
+of blank oblivion" by some disciple or friend of his, who had more regard
+for posterity than he had. So far as we are aware, no edition of his
+scientific essays or other writings was ever in the slightest degree
+prompted by any personal concern or request of his. As soon as the didactic
+purpose of the earlier chapters of the _Autobiography_ had been gratified
+by the composition of those chapters, it was only by incessant proddings
+and importunities that he could be induced to bring his narrative down to
+as late a period as he did. When Lord Kames expressed a desire to have all
+his publications, the only ones on which he could lay his hands were the
+_Observations Concerning the Increase of Mankind_, _Peopling of Countries,
+etc._, the _Account of the New-invented Pennsylvanian Fireplaces_, and some
+little magazine sketches. He had had, he wrote Lord Kames, daily
+expectations of procuring some of his performances from a friend to whom he
+had formerly sent them, when the author was in America, but this friend had
+at length told him that he could not find them. "Very mortifying this to an
+author," said Franklin, "that his works should so soon be lost!" When
+Jefferson called upon him, during his last days, he placed in the former's
+hands the valuable manuscript of his negotiations with Lord Howe, and it
+was not until he had twice told Jefferson to keep it, in reply to
+statements by Jefferson that he would return it, after reading it, that the
+recipient could realize that the intention was to turn over the manuscript
+to him absolutely. In a letter to Vaughan, he mentions that, after writing
+a parable, probably that on Brotherly Love, he laid it aside and had not
+seen it for thirty years, when a lady, a few days before, furnished him
+with a copy that she had preserved.
+
+The indifference of Franklin to literary reputation is all the more
+remarkable in view of the clearness with which he foresaw the increased
+patronage that the future had in store for English authors. "I assure you,"
+he wrote on one occasion to Hume, "it often gives me pleasure to reflect,
+how greatly the _audience_ (if I may so term it) of a good English writer
+will, in another century or two, be increased by the increase of English
+people in our colonies." Twenty-four years later, he had already lived long
+enough to see his prescience in this respect to no little extent verified.
+
+ By the way [he wrote to William Strahan], the rapid
+ Growth and extension of the English language in
+ America, must become greatly Advantageous to the
+ book-sellers, and holders of Copy-Rights in England. A
+ vast audience is assembling there for English Authors
+ ancient, present, and future, our People doubling every
+ twenty Years; and this will demand large and of course
+ profitable Impressions of your most valuable Books. I
+ would, therefore, if I possessed such rights, entail
+ them, if such a thing be practicable, upon my
+ Posterity; for their Worth will be continually
+ augmenting.
+
+This grave advice was followed by the jolly laugh that was never long
+absent from the intercourse between Franklin and Strahan. "This," Franklin
+said, "may look a little like Advice, and yet I have drank no _Madeira_
+these Ten Months."
+
+The manner in which Franklin acquired the elements of his literary
+education is one of the inspiring things in the history of knowledge. At
+the age of ten, as we have seen, he was done forever with all schools
+except those of self-education and experience; but he had one of those
+minds that simply will not be denied knowledge. Even while he was pouring
+tallow into his father's moulds, he was reading the _Pilgrim's Progress_,
+Burton's _Historical Collections_, "small chapmen's books, and cheap, 40 or
+50 in all," Plutarch's _Lives_, Defoe's _Essay on Projects_ and Cotton
+Mather's _Essay upon the Good that is to be Devised and Designed by those
+who desire to answer the Great end of Life, and to do Good while they
+Live_; all books full of wholesome and stimulating food for a hungry mind.
+Happily for him, his propensity for reading found ampler scope when his
+father bound him over as an apprentice to James Franklin. Here he had
+access to better books.
+
+ An acquaintance with the apprentices of book-sellers
+ [he tells us in the _Autobiography_] enabled me
+ sometimes to borrow a small one, which I was careful to
+ return soon and clean. Often I sat up in my room
+ reading the greatest part of the night, when the book
+ was borrowed in the evening and to be returned early in
+ the morning, lest it should be missed or wanted.
+
+This clandestine use of what did not belong to him or to his obliging young
+friends was an illicit enjoyment; but was one of those offences, we may be
+sure, for which the Recording Angel has an expunging tear. More legitimate
+was the use that he made of the volumes lent to him by Mr. Matthew Adams,
+who had a pretty collection of books, and who frequented the
+printing-house, took notice of him and invited him to his library, and very
+kindly lent him such books as he chose to read. As we have seen, it was not
+long before Benjamin struck a bargain with his brother, by which the
+obligation of the latter to board him was commuted into a fixed weekly sum,
+which, though only half what had been previously paid by James for his
+weekly board, proved large enough to afford the boy a fund for buying books
+with. Not only under this arrangement did he contrive to save for this
+purpose one half of the sum allowed him by James but also to secure an
+additional margin of time for reading.
+
+ My brother and the rest [Franklin tells us in the
+ _Autobiography_] going from the printing-house to their
+ meals, I remained there alone, and, despatching
+ presently my light repast, which often was no more than
+ a bisket or a slice of bread, a handful of raisins or a
+ tart from the pastry-cook's, and a glass of water, had
+ the rest of the time till their return for study, in
+ which I made the greater progress, from that greater
+ clearness of head and quicker apprehension which
+ usually attend temperance in eating and drinking.
+
+Then it was that he read Locke's _Essay on Human Understanding_ and the
+_Art of Thinking_ by "Messrs. du Port Royal." To the same period belongs
+his provoking dalliance with the Socratic method of reasoning.
+
+From reading the works of others to what Sir Fopling Flutter called "the
+natural sprouts" of one's own brain is always but a short step for a clever
+and ambitious boy. Franklin's first literary ventures were metrical ones,
+the lispings that filled the mind of his uncle Benjamin with such glowing
+anticipations, and "some little pieces" which excited the commercial
+instincts of James Franklin to the point of putting Benjamin to composing
+occasional ballads. The subject of one ballad, _The Light House Tragedy_,
+was the death by drowning of Captain Worthilake and his two daughters;
+another ballad was a sailor's song on the taking of Teach (or Blackbeard),
+the flagitious pirate. The opinion of these ballads held by Franklin is
+probably just enough, if we may judge by his subsequent irruptions into the
+province of Poetry.
+
+ They were wretched stuff, in the Grub-Street-ballad
+ style [he says in the _Autobiography_], and when they
+ were printed he (James Franklin) sent me about the town
+ to sell them. The first sold wonderfully, the event
+ being recent, having made a great noise. This
+ flattered my vanity; but my father discouraged me by
+ ridiculing my performances, and telling me verse-makers
+ were generally beggars. So I escaped being a poet, most
+ probably a very bad one.
+
+From the doggerel, thus condemned by the hard head of Josiah, Benjamin
+turned to prose. Believing that in oral discussion with his friend Collins
+on the qualifications of women for learning, he had been borne down rather
+by the fluency than the logic of his antagonist, he reduced his arguments
+to writing, copied them in a fair hand and sent them to Collins. He
+replied, and Franklin rejoined, and no less than three or four letters had
+been addressed by each of the friends to the other when the correspondence
+happened to fall under the eye of Josiah. Again the son had reason to be
+thankful for the candid discernment of the father, for Josiah pointed out
+to him that, while he had the advantage of Collins in correct spelling and
+pointing (thanks to the printing-house) he fell far short of Collins in
+elegance of expression, method and perspicuity, all of which he illustrated
+by references to the correspondence.
+
+The son realized the justice of the father's criticisms, and resolved to
+amend his faults. The means to which he resorted he has laid before us in
+the _Autobiography_:
+
+ About this time [he says] I met with an odd volume of
+ the _Spectator_. It was the third. I had never before
+ seen any of them. I bought it, read it over and over,
+ and was much delighted with it. I thought the writing
+ excellent, and wished, if possible, to imitate it. With
+ this view I took some of the papers, and, making short
+ hints of the sentiment in each sentence, laid them by a
+ few days, and then, without looking at the book, try'd
+ to compleat the papers again, by expressing each hinted
+ sentiment at length, and as fully as it had been
+ expressed before, in any suitable words that should
+ come to hand. Then I compared my _Spectator_ with the
+ original, discovered some of my faults, and corrected
+ them. But I found I wanted a stock of words, or a
+ readiness in recollecting and using them, which I
+ thought I should have acquired before that time if I
+ had gone on making verses; since the continual occasion
+ for words of the same import, but of different length,
+ to suit the measure, or of different sound for the
+ rhyme, would have laid me under a constant necessity of
+ searching for variety, and also have tended to fix that
+ variety in my mind, and make me master of it. Therefore
+ I took some of the tales, and turned them into verse;
+ and, after a time, when I had pretty well forgotten the
+ prose, turned them back again. I also sometimes jumbled
+ my collection of hints into confusion, and after some
+ weeks endeavoured to reduce them into the best order,
+ before I began to form the full sentences and compleat
+ the paper. This was to teach me method in the
+ arrangement of thoughts. By comparing my work
+ afterwards with the original, I discovered many faults
+ and amended them; but I sometimes had the pleasure of
+ fancying that, in certain particulars of small import,
+ I had been lucky enough to improve the method of the
+ language, and this encouraged me to think I might
+ possibly in time come to be a tolerable English writer,
+ of which I was extreamly ambitious. My time for these
+ exercises and for reading was at night, after work or
+ before it began in the morning, or on Sundays, when I
+ contrived to be in the printing-house alone, evading as
+ much as I could the common attendance on public worship
+ which my father used to exact of me when I was under
+ his care, and which indeed I still thought a duty,
+ though I could not, as it seemed to me, afford time to
+ practise it.
+
+The next step in Benjamin's literary development was when he contrived to
+disguise his handwriting and thrust the first of his Silence Dogood letters
+under the door of his brother's printing-house; and we can readily imagine
+what his feelings were when the group of contributors to the _Courant_, who
+frequented the place, read it and commented on it, in his hearing, and
+afforded him what he terms in the _Autobiography_ the exquisite pleasure
+of finding that it met with their approbation; and that in their different
+guesses at the author none were named but men of some character in the town
+for learning and ingenuity. Encouraged by his success, he wrote and
+communicated to the _Courant_ in the same furtive way the other letters in
+the Silence Dogood series, keeping his secret, he tells us, until his small
+fund of sense for such performances was pretty well exhausted, when he
+disclosed his authorship, only to arouse the jealousy of the churlish
+brother, who, alone of the _Courant_ circle, failed to regard him with
+augmented respect. If there was no extrinsic evidence to fix the authorship
+of the Dogood letters, their intrinsic characteristics, incipient as they
+are, would be enough to disclose the hand of Franklin. The good dame, who
+finally succumbed to the rhetoric of her reverend master and protector,
+after he had made several fruitless attempts on the more topping part of
+her sex, bears very much the same family lineaments as the Anthony Afterwit
+and Alice Addertongue of the _Pennsylvania Gazette_. Deprived of her good
+husband by inexorable death, when her sun was in its meridian altitude, she
+proceeds to gratify her natural inclination for observing and reproving the
+faults of others, and to open up her mind in a way that leaves us little
+room for doubt as to who the lively, free-spirited and free-spoken boy was
+that she concealed beneath her petticoats. "A hearty Lover of the Clergy
+and all good Men, and a mortal Enemy to arbitrary Government & unlimited
+Power," she was, she assures us in one letter, besides being courteous and
+affable, good-humored (unless first provoked) and handsome, and sometimes
+witty. In her next paper, she tells us that she had from her youth been
+indefatigably studious to gain and treasure up in her mind all useful and
+desirable knowledge, especially such as tends to improve the mind and
+enlarge the understanding. With this frontispiece, she, from time to time,
+delivers her views on various topics with glib vivacity, set off by Latin
+quotations. In one letter, she falls asleep in her usual place of
+retirement under the Great Apple Tree, and is transported in a dream to the
+Temple of Learning (Harvard College), which we can only hope was not quite
+so bad as it appeared to be when seen through the distorting medium of her
+slumbers. Describing the concourse of outgoing students, she says, "SOME I
+perceiv'd took to Merchandizing, others to Travelling, some to one Thing,
+some to another, and some to Nothing; and many of them from henceforth, for
+want of Patrimony, liv'd as poor as church Mice, being unable to dig, and
+asham'd to beg, and to live by their Wits it was impossible." In another
+letter, Silence unsparingly lashes the existing system of female education.
+"Their Youth," she says, borrowing the words of an "ingenious writer," is
+spent to teach them to stitch and sow, or make Baubles. "They are taught to
+read indeed and perhaps to write their Names, or so; and that is the Heigth
+of a Womans Education."
+
+In another letter, she holds up hoop-petticoats to laughter. If a number of
+them, she declared, were well mounted on Noddle's Island, they would look
+more like engines of war for bombarding the town than ornaments of the fair
+sex; and she concludes by asking her sex, "whether they, who pay no Rates
+or Taxes, ought to take up more Room in the King's Highway, than the Men,
+who yearly contribute to the Support of the Government."
+
+Another letter makes unmerciful fun of an Elegy upon the much Lamented
+Death of Mrs. Mehitebell Kitel, the wife of Mr. John Kitel, of Salem etc.
+
+Two lines,
+
+ "Come let us mourn, for we have lost a
+ Wife, a Daughter, and a Sister,"
+
+affords Silence an opportunity for some merry satire. Contrasting these
+lines with Dr. Watts'
+
+ "GUNSTON the Just, the Generous, and the Young,"
+
+she says:
+
+ The latter (Watts) only mentions three Qualifications
+ of _one_ Person who was deceased, which therefore could
+ raise Grief and Compassion but for _One_. Whereas the
+ former, (_our most excellent Poet_) gives his Reader a
+ Sort of an Idea of the Death of _Three Persons_, viz.
+
+ --a Wife, a Daughter, and a Sister,
+
+ which is _Three Times_ as great a Loss as the Death of
+ _One_, and consequently must raise _Three Times_ as
+ much Grief and Compassion in the Reader.
+
+It was a pity, Silence added, that such an excellent piece should not be
+dignified with a particular name. Seeing that it could not justly be called
+either _Epic_, _Saphhic_, _Lyric_ or _Pindaric_, nor any other name yet
+invented, she presumed it might (in honour and remembrance of the dead) be
+called the Kitelic.
+
+The next letter on freedom of speech was, or purported to be, an extract
+from the _London Journal_, and is written in such a totally masculine
+spirit that the reader might well have exclaimed like Hugh Evans in the
+_Merry Wives of Windsor_: "I like not when a 'oman has a great peard; I spy
+a great peard under her muffler." This is one of its masculine sentiments:
+"Who ever would overthrow the Liberty of a Nation, must begin by subduing
+the Freeness of Speech; a _Thing_ Terrible to Publick Traytors."
+
+And this is another, phrased very much as Grover Cleveland might have
+phrased it. "The Administration of Government is nothing else but the
+Attendance of the _Trustees of the People_ upon the Interest and Affairs of
+the People."
+
+The next letter inveighs against hypocritical pretenders to religion. It
+had for some time, Silence says, been a question with her whether a
+commonwealth suffers more by hypocritical pretenders to religion, or by the
+openly profane; but she is inclined to think that the hypocrite is the most
+dangerous person of the two, especially if he sustains a post in the
+Government, and his conduct is considered as it regards the public. The
+local application of these remarks to Boston at the time could be left to
+take care of itself.
+
+The next letter gives us another peep under Silence's petticoats, for it
+advances a plan for the insurance of widows, worked out with actuarial
+precision, and bearing the unmistakable earmarks of the projecting spirit
+of the founder of the Junto. "For my own Part," Silence ends, "I have
+nothing left to live on, but Contentment and a few Cows; and tho' I cannot
+expect to be reliev'd by this Project, yet it would be no small
+Satisfaction to me to See it put in Practice for the Benefit of Others."
+
+The next letter contains a missive from Margaret After cast, a forlorn
+Virgin, well stricken in years and repentance, to Silence, in which the
+writer, prompted by the provision for widows proposed by Silence, begs her
+to form a project also for the relief of "all those penitent Mortals of the
+fair Sex, that are like to be punish'd with their Virginity until old Age,
+for the Pride and Insolence of their Youth."
+
+The next letter is a clever discourse on drunkenness. It hints at the truth
+that Franklin afterwards insisted upon in the "Dialogue between Horatio and
+Philocles" that we must stint sensual pleasure to really enjoy it, and sets
+forth a vocabulary of cant terms for intoxication similar to that
+subsequently published by him in the _Pennsylvania Gazette_.
+
+The next letter is on the forbidding subject of night-walkers. The
+familiarity that it exhibits with the peripatetic side of Boston Common
+after dark at that day makes it a little difficult for us to understand why
+Franklin should ever have had occasion to tell us in the _Autobiography_,
+as he does, how on his second voyage from Boston to New York, a grave,
+sensible, matronlike Quakeress rescued him from the clutches of two young
+women, who afterwards proved to be a couple of thievish strumpets.
+
+The final letter in the series is on the danger of religious zeal, if
+immoderate.
+
+We have referred to these letters at some length, not only because they are
+not too immature to be even now read with pleasure for their wit and humor,
+but because they help to give us a still more faithful idea of the
+rebellious youth of Franklin, which, if it had not been so full of scornful
+protest against the whole system of New England Puritanism, might have
+shaded off, with the chastening effects of time, into too passive a type of
+liberalism for such a career as his.
+
+From the Dogood letters Benjamin passed as we have seen to the editorship
+of the _Courant_ and to the gibes at the Boston clergy and magistracy,
+which ended in his ignominious flight from that city. But never was there a
+time in his youth, however restive under the check-rein, when his love of
+books was not the chief resource of his life. When on his return from
+Boston to Philadelphia, after receiving his father's blessing, it was the
+fact that he had a great many books with him which led Governor Burnet of
+New York to send for him, and to show him his large library, and to
+discourse with him at considerable length about books and authors. He had
+previously begun to have "some acquaintance among the young people" of
+Philadelphia "that were lovers of reading," and subsequently came those
+academic strolls with Osborne, Watson and Ralph through the woods along the
+Schuylkill. And later even London, with all its tumult and dissipation,
+could not long extinguish his thirst for the sweet, cool wells of human
+thought and sentiment from which the soul of a gifted boy drinks with such
+passionate eagerness. Circulating libraries were unknown at that time, but
+he agreed on reasonable terms with Wilcox, a bookseller, with an immense
+collection of second-hand books, whose shop was next door to his place of
+lodging in Little Britain, that he might take home and read and return any
+of his wares. We have already quoted the passages in the _Autobiography_ in
+which he tells us that, during the eighteen months that he was in London in
+his youth, he spent little upon himself except in seeing plays, and for
+books; and that he read considerably.
+
+The _Dissertation on Liberty and Necessity, Pleasure and Pain_, which he
+wrote while in London, of little value as it was in itself, yet also aided
+in confirming his literary tendencies; for it arrested the attention of
+Lyons, the author of _The Infallibility of Human Judgment_, who introduced
+him to Bernard Mandeville, the author of the _Fable of the Bees_, "a most
+facetious, entertaining companion," and Dr. Henry Pemberton, the author of
+_A View of Sir I. Newton's Philosophy_.
+
+The love of reading, thus acquired by Franklin in early life, never
+deserted him, and was afterwards strengthened by his own ever-increasing
+library, which, before his death, became so large that he had to build a
+spacious room for its reception at his home in Philadelphia, the books
+owned by the other members of the Junto, the extensive library of James
+Logan at Stenton, and the collections of the Philadelphia Library Company.
+Even when his private business was too exacting to allow him time for any
+other form of recreation, he still found time for reading, including the
+acquirement of several modern languages, and the consequence was that, when
+he began to write in earnest, he was well supplied with all the materials
+for literary workmanship.
+
+While Franklin never became a professional writer, he was very scrupulous
+about the typographical dress of what he wrote and not a little of a
+purist in his choice of words. Nor does he seem to have been less averse
+than authors usually are to editorial mutilation. Among his letters is one
+to Woodfall, the printer of Junius' Letters, asking him to take care that
+the compositor observed "strictly the Italicking, Capitalling and Pointing"
+of the copy enclosed with the letter. Referring in a letter to William
+Franklin to a reprint in the _London Chronicle_ of his "Edict by the King
+of Prussia," he said:
+
+ It is reprinted in the _Chronicle_, where you will see
+ it, but stripped of all the capitaling and italicing,
+ that intimate the allusions and mark the emphasis of
+ written discourses, to bring them as near as possible
+ to those spoken: printing such a piece all in one even
+ small character, seems to me like repeating one of
+ Whitefield's sermons in the monotony of a schoolboy.
+
+On another occasion he was led by the alterations made in the text of one
+of his papers to write to William Franklin in these terms: "The editor of
+that paper, one Jones, seems a Grenvillian, or is very cautious, as you
+will see by his corrections and omissions. He has drawn the teeth and pared
+the nails of my paper, so that it can neither scratch nor bite."
+
+Among the many delightful letters of Franklin is one that he wrote in his
+extreme old age to Noah Webster, acknowledging the receipt of a copy of the
+latter's _Dissertations on the English Language_, and applauding his zeal
+for preserving the purity of the English language both in its expressions
+and pronunciation; and in correcting the popular errors into which several
+of the States were continually falling with respect to both. In this
+letter, the writer again takes occasion to reprobate the use in New England
+of the word "improved" in the sense of "employed." The word in that
+signification appears to have been decidedly obnoxious to him, for he had
+previously banned it in a letter to Jared Eliot. Among the ludicrous
+instances that he gave in his letter to Webster of its use in its perverted
+sense was an obituary statement to the effect that a certain deceased
+country gentleman had been for more than thirty years _improved_ as a
+justice of the peace. He also found, he said, that, during his absence in
+France, several newfangled words had been introduced into the parliamentary
+vocabulary of America, such as the verb formed from the substantive
+"Notice," as "_I should not have NOTICED this, were it not that the
+Gentleman_, &c.," the verb formed from the substantive "Advocate," as "_the
+Gentleman who ADVOCATES or has ADVOCATED that Motion_, &c.," and the verb
+formed from the substantive "progress," the most awkward and abominable of
+the three, as "_the committee, having PROGRESSED resolved to adjourn_." He
+also found that the word "opposed," though not a new word, was used in a
+new manner, as "_the Gentlemen who are OPPOSED to this Measure_." From
+these verbal criticisims he passed to the advantages that had inured to the
+French language from obtaining the universal currency in Europe previously
+enjoyed by Latin. It was perhaps, he thought, owing to the fact that
+Voltaire's treatise on Toleration was written in French that it had exerted
+so sudden and so great an effect on the bigotry of Europe as almost
+entirely to disarm it. The English language bid fair to occupy a place only
+second to that of the French, and the effort therefore should be to relieve
+it still more of all the difficulties, however small, which discouraged its
+more general diffusion. A book, ill-printed, or a pronunciation in
+speaking, not well articulated, would render a sentence unintelligible,
+which from a clear print, or a distinct speaker, would have been
+immediately comprehended.
+
+Instead of diminishing, however, the obstacles to the extension of the
+English language, Franklin declared, had increased. The practice, for
+illustration, of beginning all substantives with a capital letter, which
+had done so much to promote intelligibility, had been laid aside. And so,
+from the same fondness for an even and uniform appearance, had been the
+practice of italicizing important words, or words which should be
+emphasized when read. Another innovation was the use of the short round s
+instead of the long one which had formerly served so well to distinguish a
+word readily by its varied aspect. Certainly the omission of these
+prominent letters made the line appear more even, but it rendered it less
+immediately legible; as the paring all men's noses might smooth and level
+their faces, but would render their physiognomies less distinguishable. All
+these, Franklin said, were improvements backwards, and classed with them
+too should be the modern fancy that gray printing--read with difficulty by
+old eyes--unless in a very strong light and with good glasses, was more
+beautiful than black. A comparison between a volume of the _Gentleman's
+Magazine_, printed between the years 1731 and 1740, and one printed in the
+last ten years would demonstrate the contrary. Lord Chesterfield pleasantly
+remarked this difference to Faulkener, the printer of the _Dublin Journal_,
+when he was vainly making encomiums on his own paper as the most complete
+of any in the world. "But, Mr. Faulkener," said my Lord, "don't you think
+it might be still farther improved by using Paper and Ink not quite so near
+of a Colour"? Another point in favor of clear and distinct printing was
+that it afforded the eye, when it was being read aloud, an opportunity to
+take a look forward in time to supply the voice with the proper modulations
+for coming words. But, if words were obscurely printed or disguised by
+omitting the capitals and the long s, or otherwise, the reader was apt to
+modulate wrong, and, finding that he had done so, would be obliged to go
+back, and begin the sentence again, with a loss of pleasure to his
+hearers.
+
+Two features, however, of the old system of printing did not meet with the
+approval of Franklin. It was absurd to place the interrogation point at the
+end of a sentence where it is not descried until it is too late for the
+inflection of interrogation to be given. The practice of the Spanish of
+putting this point at the beginning of the sentence was more sensible. The
+same reasoning was applicable to the practice of putting the stage
+direction "aside" at the end of a sentence.
+
+Nice, however, as were the prejudices of Franklin with respect to the use
+of words, some of his own did not escape the vigilant purism of Hume, who,
+notwithstanding his admiration for Franklin, as the first great man of
+letters produced by America, was, where fastidious diction was concerned,
+not unlike John Randolph of Roanoke, whose exquisite fidelity to correct
+English impelled him even on his death-bed, when asked whether he _lay_
+easily, to reply with marked emphasis, "I _lie_ as easily as a dying man
+can." After reading Franklin's Canada pamphlet and essay on Population,
+Hume took exception to several of his expressions; as is shown by one of
+the latter's letters to him.
+
+ I thank you [wrote Franklin] for your friendly
+ admonition relating to some unusual words in the
+ pamphlet. It will be of service to me. The "_pejorate_"
+ and the "_colonize_," since they are not in common use
+ here, I give up as bad; for certainly in writings
+ intended for persuasion and for general information,
+ one can not be too clear; and every expression in the
+ least obscure is a fault. The "_unshakeable_" too,
+ though clear, I give up as rather low. The introducing
+ new words, where we are already possessed of old ones
+ sufficiently expressive, I confess must be generally
+ wrong, as it tends to change the language; yet, at the
+ same time, I can not but wish the usage of our tongue
+ permitted making new words, when we want them, by
+ composition of old ones whose meanings are already well
+ understood. The German allows of it, and it is a
+ common practice with their writers. Many of our
+ present English words were originally so made; and many
+ of the Latin words. In point of clearness, such
+ compound words would have the advantage of any we can
+ borrow from the ancient or from foreign languages. For
+ instance, the word _inaccessible_, though long in use
+ among us, is not yet, I dare say, so universally
+ understood by our people, as the word _uncomeatable_
+ would immediately be, which we are not allowed to
+ write. But I hope with you, that we shall always in
+ America make the best English of this Island our
+ standard, and I believe it will be so.
+
+Franklin has left behind him his own conception of what constitutes a good
+piece of writing.
+
+ To be good [he says] it ought to have a tendency to
+ benefit the reader, by improving his virtue or his
+ knowledge. But, not regarding the intention of the
+ author, the method should be just; that is, it should
+ proceed regularly from things known to things unknown,
+ distinctly and clearly without confusion. The words
+ used should be the most expressive that the language
+ affords, provided that they are the most generally
+ understood. Nothing should be expressed in two words
+ that can be as well expressed in one; that is, no
+ synonymes should be used, or very rarely, but the whole
+ should be as short as possible, consistent with
+ clearness; the words should be so placed as to be
+ agreable to the ear in reading; summarily it should be
+ smooth, clear and short, for the contrary qualities are
+ displeasing.
+
+Though entirely familiar, as we know from one of his letters, with the fate
+that befell Gil Blas, when he was so imprudent as to comply with the
+invitation of his master, the Archbishop, Franklin did not shrink from the
+peril of telling Benjamin Vaughan at his request what the faults of his
+writings were; and the terms in which he performed this delicate and
+hazardous office were suggested in part at least by his own methods of
+composition.
+
+ Your language [he told Vaughan] seems to me to be good
+ and pure, and your sentiments generally just; but your
+ style of composition wants perspicuity, and this I
+ think owing principally to a neglect of method. What I
+ would therefore recommend to you is, that, before you
+ sit down to write on any subject, you would spend some
+ days in considering it, putting down at the same time,
+ in short hints, every thought which occurs to you as
+ proper to make a part of your intended piece. When you
+ have thus obtained a collection of the thoughts,
+ examine them carefully with this view, to find which of
+ them is properest to be presented _first_ to the mind
+ of the reader that he, being possessed of that, may the
+ more easily understand it, and be better disposed to
+ receive what you intend for the _second_; and thus I
+ would have you put a figure before each thought, to
+ mark its future place in your composition. For so,
+ every preceding proposition preparing the mind for that
+ which is to follow, and the reader often anticipating
+ it, he proceeds with ease, and pleasure, and
+ approbation, as seeming continually to meet with his
+ own thoughts. In this mode you have a better chance for
+ a perfect production; because the mind attending first
+ to the sentiments alone, next to the method alone, each
+ part is likely to be better performed, and I think too
+ in less time.
+
+The writings of Franklin as a whole were true to his literary ideals, for
+they are, as a rule, smooth, clear and short; and the paper of preliminary
+hints that he drew up for the composition of the _Autobiography_ was in
+accord with his advice to Vaughan in regard to the value of such aids to
+perspicuity. His familiar letters, agreeable as they are, bear evidence at
+times of haste and lack of revision, and even his more informal writings,
+other than letters, occasionally betray a certain sort of carelessness of
+construction and expression. This is conspicuously true of the
+_Autobiography_, and, indeed, it is one of the merits of that work, so
+perfectly is it in keeping with its easy, meandering narrative. But,
+generally speaking, the compositions of Franklin are fully in harmony with
+his best standards of literary accomplishment. They are flowing and
+euphonious, moving with a steady, smooth and sometimes powerful, current
+from things known to things unknown, distinctly and lucidly without
+confusion. They are as clear as a trout stream. If one of his sentences is
+read a second time, it is not for his meaning, but merely for a renewal of
+the gratification that the mind derives from a thought presented free from
+the slightest trace of intercepting obscurity. They are so concise that the
+endeavor to make an abstract of one of them is likely to result in a
+sacrifice of brevity. But smoothness, clearness, and brevity, are far from
+being the only merits of Franklin's writings. He was not richly endowed
+with imagination; though he was by no means destitute of that sovereign
+faculty; placid and sober as the ordinary operations of his mind were. But
+Fancy, the graceful sister of Imagination, Invention, Wit and Humor, and
+remarkable powers of statement and reasoning, all, except humor in its more
+wayward moods, under the complete sway of a sound judgment, gave life and
+strength to almost all that he wrote. His similes and metaphors are often
+strikingly original and apt; never more so than when they light up with a
+sudden flash the dark core of some abstruse scientific problem. A vivacity
+of spirits that nothing could long depress, accompanied by a quick but
+kindly sense of the ludicrous rises like bubbles of mellow wine to the
+surface of his intimate letters, and other lighter compositions; and, when
+associated with conceptions lured from the bright heaven of invention, and
+elaborated with the utmost finish, as in the case of his Bagatelles,
+imparts to his productions a quality that does not belong to any but the
+best creations of literary genius. It is interesting to note how even the
+most intractable subject, the new-invented Pennsylvania fireplace, smoky
+chimneys, interest calculations become suffused with some sort of
+intellectual charm, born of absolute transparency of speech, if nothing
+else, as soon as they pass through the luminous and tapestried cells of
+his spacious mind. That mind, indeed, like all minds of the same
+comprehensive character, in which the balance has not been lost between the
+subjective and objective faculties, was prone to see everything in large
+pictorial outlines. Fable, epilogue, parable, a story that was not so much
+the jest of a moment as the wisdom of all time, a historical incident, that
+pointed some grave moral, or enforced some invaluable truth, came naturally
+to his mind as they might well do to the minds of all men who are
+creed-founders, or teachers, in any sense, on a large scale, of the mass of
+men, as he was. How naturally such methods of instruction belonged to him
+is well illustrated in the story told of him by John Adams. One evening, at
+a social gathering, shortly before he left England, at the close of his
+second mission to that country, a gentleman expressed the opinion that
+writers like AEsop and La Fontaine had exhausted the resources of fable.
+Franklin, so far from concurring with this view, declared that many new and
+instructive fables could still be invented, and, when asked whether he
+could think of one, replied that, if he was furnished with pen and paper,
+he would produce one forthwith. The pen and paper were handed to him, and,
+in a few minutes, he summed up the existing relations between England and
+America in this fable:
+
+ Once upon a time, an eagle, scaling round a farmer's
+ barn, and espying a hare, darted down upon him like a
+ sunbeam, seized him in his claws, and remounted with
+ him in the air. He soon found that he had a creature of
+ more courage and strength than a hare; for which,
+ notwithstanding the keenness of his eyesight, he had
+ mistaken a cat. The snarling and scrambling of the prey
+ was very inconvenient; and, what was worse, she had
+ disengaged herself from his talons, grasped his body
+ with her four limbs, so as to stop his breath, and
+ seized fast hold of his throat with her teeth. "Pray,"
+ said the eagle, "let go your hold, and I will release
+ you." "Very fine," said the cat, "I have no fancy to
+ fall from this height, and be crushed to death. You
+ have taken me up, and you shall stoop, and let me
+ down." The eagle thought it necessary to stoop
+ accordingly.
+
+In the course of the preceding pages, we have had occasion to refer at
+considerable length to not a few of Franklin's writings, but by no means to
+all. Among the best of his published pamphlets, is the one entitled _The
+Interest of Great Britain considered with regard to her Colonies and the
+Acquisitions of Canada and Guadaloupe_. Remarkable as it may now seem, when
+the peace of 1763 between Great Britain and France was approaching, there
+was some division of opinion in the former country as to whether she should
+insist upon the cession by France to her of Canada or Guadeloupe, then one
+of the rich sugar islands of the West Indies; and the object of this
+pamphlet was to establish the superior claims of Canada. It is written with
+great lucidity and force of argument, and is especially valuable for its
+revelations of the extent to which the acquisition of Canada by England was
+opposed in England for fear that it would tend to augment the power and
+precipitate the independence of the American Colonies. Richard Jackson is
+alleged to have had a share in its composition, exactly what Benjamin
+Vaughan was unable to say after a careful investigation before the
+publication of his edition of Franklin's writings in 1779. For our part, we
+find it difficult to believe that he could have had any considerable share
+in its production. Internal evidences of authorship are undoubtedly
+misleading, but it is hard to read this paper, so similar to Franklin's
+other pamphlets in point of peculiarities of diction and method without
+exclaiming, "St. Dunstan or the Devil!" Its intimate, nay perfect,
+familiarity with Indian habits and characteristics could not well have been
+possessed by anyone who had never personally mixed with the Indians, and
+formed his knowledge of them from his own and other first-hand information.
+The arguments, too, employed in the pamphlet to allay English jealousy of
+colonial aggrandizement, are the same that are found scattered through
+Franklin's other writings. There is also the fact that the authorship of
+the paper is referred to in the paper itself throughout in the first person
+singular. There is also the fact that in the same letter to Hume, in which
+Franklin disclaims the authorship of the _Historical Review_, he told him,
+in reply to one of his criticisms, that he gave up as rather low the word
+"unshakeable," used in the Canada pamphlet, but said nothing to indicate
+that the pamphlet was not wholly his own. More conclusive are the words in
+the paper of hints upon which the composition of the _Autobiography_ was
+based. "_Canada delenda est_. My Pamphlet. Its reception and effect."
+Certainly a man, whose relations to his own productions were always marked
+by an uncommon degree of modesty, if not of indifference, and whose
+generosity in awarding due credit to the labors of others was one of his
+most striking and laudable qualities, was scarcely the man to have used
+such words as these about a pamphlet, mainly or largely the work of another
+hand. There is besides the fact that in the Franklin collection of the
+Pennsylvania Historical Society there is a copy of the pamphlet indorsed in
+the handwriting of Franklin as presented "to the Rev. Dr. Mayhew, from his
+humble servt, the Author."
+
+In view of these circumstances we should say that the probabilities
+decidedly are that the connection of Jackson with the pamphlet, whatever it
+may have been, was of a purely subordinate character.
+
+The papers, written by Franklin from time to time during the controversy
+between Great Britain and her Colonies, before the sword grew too impatient
+to remain in its scabbard, such as his letters to the _London Chronicle_
+and the _London Public Advertiser_, his Answers to Strahan's _Queries
+respecting American Affairs_, his essay on _Toleration in Old England and
+New England_, his _Tract relative to the Affair of Hutchinson's Letters_,
+and his _Account of Negotiations in London for effecting a Reconciliation
+between Great Britain and the American Colonies_ were, taken as a whole,
+pamphleteering or narration of a very interesting and effective order. The
+substance of the majority of them is found in his Examination before the
+House of Commons, as the quintessence of most that is best in _Poor
+Richard's Almanac_ is found in Father Abraham's Speech. They are written,
+as a rule, in a singularly clear and readable style, present with unusual
+skill and cogency all the points of the colonial argument, and display the
+insight of an almost faultlessly honest and sane intelligence into the true
+obligations and interests of the mother country and her disaffected
+children. Among these graver productions, Franklin also contributed to the
+American controversy, in addition to the humorous letter to the press, in
+which he held up to English ignorance of America, as one of the finest
+spectacles in nature, the grand leap of the whale, in his chase of the cod
+up Niagara Falls, two papers worthy of the satirical genius of Swift. One
+is his _Edict by the King of Prussia_ and the other is his _Rules by Which
+a Great Empire May be Reduced to a Small One_. In the first piece,
+Frederick the Great is gravely credited with an edict, in which, after
+reciting that Great Britain was colonized in the beginning by subjects of
+his renowned ducal ancestors, led by Hengist, Horsa, Hella, Uff, Cerdicus,
+Ida and others, he proceeds to impose _seriatim_ upon the English
+descendants of these German colonists in terms, exactly like those employed
+by the prohibitory and restrictive statutes of Great Britain, bearing upon
+the commerce and industry of America, all the disabilities and burdens
+under which America labored. The parallel is sustained with unbroken spirit
+and the happiest irony from beginning to end. After all the manacles by
+which the freedom of America was restrained have been duly fastened by the
+arbitrary mandates of the edict upon Great Britain herself, it concludes
+with these words:
+
+ We flatter ourselves, that these our royal regulations
+ and commands will be thought just and reasonable by our
+ much-favoured colonists in England; the said
+ regulations being copied from their statutes of 10 and
+ 11 William III. c. 10, 5 Geo. II. c. 22, 23 Geo. II. c.
+ 29, 4 Geo. I. c. 11, and from other equitable laws made
+ by their parliaments; or from instructions given by
+ their Princes; or from resolutions of both Houses,
+ entered into for the good government of their _own
+ colonies in Ireland and America_.
+
+The second paper commences in this manner:
+
+"An ancient Sage boasted, that, tho' he could not fiddle, he knew how to
+make a _great city_ of a _little one_. The science that I, a modern
+simpleton, am about to communicate, is the very reverse." Then, assuming as
+a postulate that a great empire, like a great cake, is most easily
+diminished at the edges, the paper goes on to point out one by one as the
+best means for reducing such an empire to a small one the very British
+policies and abuses that were then producing incurable disaffection in the
+mind of America, and menacing the power and prestige of Great Britain
+herself. These two papers, though clothed in forms that belong to
+literature rather than to politics, assert the whole case of the Colonies
+against Great Britain almost, if not altogether, as fully as the
+Declaration of Independence afterwards did. They have in every respect the
+polished completeness given by Franklin to all the productions of his pen
+that called for the exercise of true literary art, and deserve to be
+included in any separate publication of the best creations of his literary
+genius. They both met with the popular favor that they merited. The Rules
+was read with such eagerness that it was reprinted in the _Public
+Advertiser_ at the request of many individuals and some associations of
+individuals, and this notwithstanding the fact that it had been copied in
+several other newspapers and _The Gentleman's Magazine_. So great was the
+demand for the issue of the _Advertiser_, in which the Edict appeared,
+that, the day after its appearance, Franklin's clerk could obtain but two
+copies of it, though he endeavored to obtain more both at the office of the
+_Advertiser_ and elsewhere. Its authorship being unknown except to a few of
+the writer's friends, he had the pleasure besides, he tells us, of hearing
+it spoken of in the highest terms as the keenest and severest piece that
+had been published in London for a long time. Lord Mansfield, he was
+informed, said of it that it was very able and artful indeed, and would do
+mischief by giving in England a bad impression of the measures of
+government, and in the Colonies by encouraging them in their contumacy.
+Among the persons taken in by its apparent genuineness was Paul Whitehead.
+
+ I was down at Lord Le Despencer's [Franklin wrote to
+ William Franklin] when the post brought that day's
+ papers. Mr. Whitehead was there, too, (Paul Whitehead,
+ the author of _Manners_,) who runs early through all
+ the papers, and tells the company what he finds
+ remarkable. He had them in another room, and we were
+ chatting in the breakfast parlour, when he came running
+ in to us, out of breath, with the paper in his hand.
+ Here! says he, here's news for ye! _Here's the King of
+ Prussia, claiming a right to this kingdom!_ All stared,
+ and I as much as anybody; and he went on to read it.
+ When he had read two or three paragraphs, a gentleman
+ present said, _Damn his impudence, I dare say, we shall
+ hear by next post that he is upon his march with one
+ hundred thousand men to back this._ Whitehead who is
+ very shrewd, soon after began to smoke it, and looking
+ in my face said, _I'll be hanged if this is not some of
+ your American jokes upon us._ The reading went on, and
+ ended with abundance of laughing, and a general verdict
+ that it was a fair hit; and the piece was cut out of
+ the paper and preserved in My Lord's collection.
+
+There are some humorous passages in other contributions made by Franklin,
+in one assumed character or another, to the American controversy. The
+dialogue as well as the fable was, as the reader is aware, one of his
+striking methods of arresting popular attention when he wished to make an
+impression upon the popular mind. In an anonymous letter to the _Public
+Advertiser_, he undertook to defend Dr. Franklin from the charge of
+ingratitude to the Ministry, which had, it was alleged, given him the Post
+Office of America, offered him a post of five hundred a year in the Salt
+Office, if he would relinquish the interests of his country and made his
+son a colonial governor. As it was a settled point in government in England
+that every man had his price, it was plain, the letter declared, that the
+English Ministers were bunglers in their business, and had not given him
+enough. Their Master had as much reason to be angry with them as Rodrigue
+in the play with his apothecary for not effectually poisoning Pandolpho,
+and they must probably make use of the Apothecary's Justification, as urged
+in the following colloquy:
+
+ SCENE IV. _Rodrigue_ and _Fell_, the Apothecary
+
+ _Rodrigue._ You promised to have this Pandolpho upon
+ his Bier in less than a Week; 'tis more than a Month
+ since, and he still walks and stares me in the face.
+
+ _Fell._ True and yet I have done my best Endeavours. In
+ various ways I have given the Miscreant as much Poison
+ as would have kill'd an Elephant. He has swallow'd Dose
+ after Dose; far from hurting him, he seems the better
+ for it. He hath a wonderfully strong Constitution. I
+ find I can not kill him but by cutting his Throat, and
+ that, as I take it, is not my Business.
+
+ _Rodrigue._ Then it must be mine.
+
+Another letter, signed "A Londoner," illustrates the difficulty which the
+sober good-sense of Franklin, always disposed to reduce things to their
+material terms, experienced in understanding the recklessness with which
+the British Government was hazarding the commercial value of the colonies.
+
+ To us in the Way of Trade comes now, and has long come
+ [he said] all the superlucration arising from their
+ Labours. But will our reviling them as Cheats,
+ Hypocrites, Scoundrels, Traitors, Cowards, Tyrants,
+ &c., &c., according to the present Court Mode in all
+ our Papers, make them more our Friends, more fond of
+ our Merchandise? Did ever any Tradesmen succeed, who
+ attempted to drub Customers into his Shop? And will
+ honest JOHN BULL, the Farmer, be long satisfied with
+ Servants, that before his Face attempt to kill his
+ _Plow Horses?_
+
+In his eager desire to influence public sentiment in England in behalf of
+the Colonies, Franklin even devised and distributed a rude copper plate
+engraving, visualizing the woful condition to which Great Britain would be
+reduced, if she persisted in her harsh and unwise conduct towards her
+colonies. Many impressions of this engraving were struck off at his request
+on the cards which he occasionally used in writing his notes, and the
+design he also had printed for circulation on half sheets of paper with an
+explanation and a moral of his composition. The details of the
+illustration, which are all duly elucidated in the explanation, are those
+of abject and irredeemable ruin. The limbs of Britannia, duly labelled
+Virginia, Pennsylvania, New York and New England respectively, lie
+scattered about her, and she herself, with her eyes and arm stumps,
+uplifted to Heaven, is seen sliding off the globe, with a streamer
+inscribed _Date Obolum Bellisario_ thrown across all that remains of her
+legs. Her shield, which she is unable to handle, lies useless by her side.
+The leg, labelled New England, has been transfixed by her lance. The hand
+of the arm, labelled Pennsylvania, has released its grasp upon a small
+spray of laurel. The English oak has lost its crown, and stands a bare
+trunk with briars and thorns at its feet, and a single dry branch sticks
+out from its side. In the background are Britannia's ships with brooms at
+their topmastheads denoting that they are for sale. The moral of the whole
+was that the Thames and the Ohio, Edinburgh and Dublin were all one, and
+that invidious discriminations in favor of one part of the Empire to the
+prejudice of the rest could not fail to be attended with the most
+disastrous consequences to the whole State.
+
+Nothing produced by Franklin between the date of his return from his second
+mission to England and his departure from America for France needs to be
+noticed. The two or three papers from his pen, which belong to this period,
+are distinctly below his ordinary standards of composition. Nor are any of
+the graver writings composed by him during the remainder of his life with
+some exceptions very noteworthy. In one, his comparison of Great Britain
+and the United States in regard to the basis of credit in the two
+countries, he presented with no little ability the proposition that, by
+reason of general industry, frugality, ability, prudence and virtue,
+America was a much safer debtor than Britain; to say nothing of the
+satisfaction that generous minds were bound to feel in reflecting that by
+loans to America they were opposing tyranny, and aiding the cause of
+liberty, which was the cause of all mankind. The object of this paper was
+to forward the loan of two millions of pounds sterling that the United
+States were desirous of procuring abroad. Unfortunately, the matter was one
+not to be settled by argument but by the Bourse, which has a barometric
+reasoning of its own. In another paper, thrown into the form of a
+catechism, Franklin, by a series of clever questions and answers, brings to
+the attention of the world the fact that it would take one hundred and
+forty-eight years, one hundred and nine days and twenty-two hours for a
+man to count the English national debt, though he counted at the rate of
+one hundred shillings per minute, during twelve hours of each day. That the
+shillings, making up this enormous sum, would weigh sixty-one millions,
+seven hundred and fifty-two thousand, four hundred and seventy-six Troy
+pounds, that it would take three hundred and fourteen ships, of one hundred
+tons each, or thirty-one thousand, four hundred and fifty-two carts to move
+them, and that, if laid close together in a straight line, they would
+stretch more than twice around the circumference of the earth, are other
+facts elicited by the questions of the catechism. It concludes in this
+manner:
+
+ Q. When will government be able to pay the principal?
+
+ A. When there is more money in England's treasury than
+ there is in all Europe.
+
+ Q. And when will that be?
+
+ A. Never.
+
+This was very ingenious and clever, and has been imitated a hundred times
+over since by _ad captandum_ statisticians, but it needed an interest
+default on the part of John Bull to make it effective.
+
+Franklin's conceit in the Edict that Saxony was as much the mother country
+of England as England was of America was, it must be admitted, made to do
+rather more than its share of service. It reappeared in his _Vindication
+and Offer from Congress to Parliament_, when, in repelling the charge that
+America was ungrateful to England, he said that there was much more reason
+for retorting that charge on Britain which not only never contributed any
+aid, nor afforded, by an exclusive commerce, any advantages, to Saxony,
+_her_ mother country, but no longer since than the last war, without the
+least provocation, subsidized the King of Prussia, while he ravaged that
+mother country, and carried fire and sword into its capital, the fine City
+of Dresden.
+
+The same conceit also reappeared a second time in the _Dialogue between
+Britain, France, Spain, Holland, Saxony and America_, which he wrote soon
+after he arrived in France as one of our envoys. In this lively dialogue,
+Britain beseeches Spain, France and Holland successively not to supply
+America with arms. Spain reminds her of her intervention in behalf of the
+Dutch, and expresses surprise at her impudence. France reminds her of her
+intervention in behalf of the Huguenots, and tells her that she must be a
+little silly, and Holland ends by informing her defiantly that, with the
+prospect of a good market for brimstone, she, Holland, would make no
+scruple of even sending her ships to Hell, and supplying the Devil with it.
+America then takes a hand, and denounces Britain as a bloodthirsty bully,
+to which Britain replies as quickly as her choking rage will permit by
+denouncing America as a wicked--Whig-Presbyterian--serpent. To this America
+rejoins with the statement that she will not surrender her liberty and
+property but with her life, and some additional statements which cause
+Britain to exclaim: "You impudent b--h! Am not I your Mother Country? Is
+that not a sufficient Title to your Respect and Obedience?" At this point
+Saxony, for the first time breaks in:
+
+ "_Mother Country!_ Hah, hah, he! What Respect have
+ _you_ the front to claim as a Mother Country? You know
+ that _I_ am _your_ Mother Country, and yet you pay me
+ none. Nay, it is but the other day, that you hired
+ Ruffians to rob me on the Highway, and burn my House.
+ For shame! Hide your Face and hold your Tongue. If you
+ continue this Conduct, you will make yourself the
+ Contempt of Europe!"
+
+This is too much for even the assurance of the dauntless termagant who,
+before the American war was over, was to be engaged in conflict at one time
+with every one of the other parties to the dialogue except Saxony.
+
+ "O Lord," she exclaims in despair, "where are my
+ friends?" The question does not remain long unanswered.
+
+ "_France, Spain, Holland, and Saxony, all together_.
+ Friends! Believe us, you have none, nor ever will have
+ any, 'till you mend your Manners. How can we, who are
+ your Neighbours, have any regard for you, or expect any
+ Equity from you, should your Power increase, when we
+ see how basely and unjustly you have us'd both _your
+ own Mother--and your own Children_?"
+
+With such rollicking fun, did Franklin, beguile his Gibeonite tasks.
+
+A letter of information to those who would remove to America, an essay on
+the _Elective Franchises enjoyed by the Small Boroughs in England_, the
+three essays on Smoky Chimneys, the New Stove, and Maritime Topics, _The
+Retort Courteous_, in which some pithy reasons were given why Americans
+were slow in paying their old debts to British merchants, the _Observations
+Relative to the Intentions of the Original Founders of the Academy in
+Philadelphia_, the _Address of the Pennsylvania Society for Promoting the
+Abolition of Slavery and the Relief of Free Negroes Unlawfully Held in
+Bondage_, the _Plan for Improving the Condition of the Free Blacks_, the
+essay on _The Internal State of America_ and the paper on _Good Whig
+Principles_ make up the bulk of the graver pamphlets and papers written by
+Franklin between the beginning of his mission to France and his death.
+Some, if not all, of them have already come in for our attention, and most
+of them invite no special comment. All, like everything that he wrote, even
+the _marginalia_ on the books that he read, have some kind of salt in them
+that keeps them sweet, assert itself as time will.
+
+Other serious papers of Franklin, not inspired by political motives, belong
+to an earlier date, and, with the exception of those, to which we have more
+than barely referred in previous chapters of this book, call for a word of
+comment. Two, _The Hints for Those that would be Rich_ and the _Advice to a
+Young Tradesman_ are merely echoes of _Poor Richard's Almanac_ but are good
+examples of the teachings that make Franklin the most effective of all
+propagandists. "He that loses 5s. not only loses that Sum, but all the
+Advantage that might be made by turning it in Dealing, which, by the time
+that a young Man becomes old, amounts to a comfortable Bag of Money." This
+is a typical sentence taken from the Hints. After reading such a discourse
+as the _Advice to a Young Tradesman_, it is easy enough to see why it was
+that pecuniary truisms took on new life when vitalized by the mind of
+Franklin. Money he tells the young tradesman is of the prolific, generating
+nature. "He that kills a breeding sow, destroys all her offspring to the
+thousandth generation. He that murders a crown, destroys all that it might
+have produced, even scores of pounds." The young novice is also told that
+the most trifling actions that affect a man's credit are to be regarded.
+"The sound of your hammer at five in the morning, or nine at night, heard
+by a creditor, makes him easy six months longer; but, if he sees you at a
+billiard-table, or hears your voice at a tavern, when you should be at
+work, he sends for his money the next day." The paper ends with this
+pointed sermon:
+
+ In short, the way to wealth, if you desire it, is as
+ plain as the way to market. It depends chiefly on two
+ words, _industry_ and _frugality_; that is, waste
+ neither _time_ nor _money_, but make the best use of
+ both. Without industry and frugality nothing will do,
+ and with them everything. He that gets all he can
+ honestly, and saves all he gets (necessary expenses
+ excepted) will certainly become _rich_, if that Being
+ who governs the world, to whom all should look for a
+ blessing on their honest endeavours, doth not, in his
+ wise providence, otherwise determine.
+
+Scattered through the works of Franklin are various miscellaneous
+productions of no slight literary value. The _Parable against Persecution_
+was an ancient conception, old, we are told by Jeremy Taylor in his
+_Liberty of Prophesying_, as the Jews' Books. Franklin never claimed more
+credit for it, as he stated in a letter to Vaughan, "than what related to
+the style, and the addition of the concluding threatening and promise."
+These qualifications, however, leave him quite a different measure of
+credit from that of an artist who merely touches up a portrait by another
+hand, as a perusal of the parable will satisfy any reader. The incident,
+upon which the story turns, is the reception by Abraham into his tent of a
+stranger who fails to bless God at meat. Abraham expels him from the tent
+with blows for not worshipping the most high God, Creator of Heaven and
+Earth; only to be rebuked by the Almighty in these impressive words: "Have
+I borne with him these hundred and ninety and eight years, and nourished
+him, and cloathed him, notwithstanding his rebellion against me; and
+couldst not thou, who art thyself a sinner, bear with him one night?"
+
+Only less felicitous was Franklin's _Parable on Brotherly Love_. Simeon,
+Levi and Judah are successively denied by their brother Reuben the use of
+an axe which he had bought of the Ishmaelite merchants, and which he highly
+prized. Therefore, they buy axes themselves from the Ishmaelites, and, as
+luck will have it, while Reuben is hewing timber on the river bank, his axe
+slips into the water and is lost. Reuben then applies to each of his three
+brothers in turn for the use of their axes. Simeon reminds him of his
+selfishness, and flatly refuses. Levi reproaches him, but adds that he will
+be better than he, and will lend his axe to him. Reuben, however, is too
+ashamed to accept it. Judah, seeing the grief and shame in his countenance,
+anticipates the request and exclaims, "My brother, I know thy loss; but why
+should it trouble thee? Lo, have I not an axe that will serve both thee
+and me!" And then the lovely parable continues in these words:
+
+ And Reuben fell on his neck, and kissed him, with
+ tears, saying, "Thy kindness is great, but thy goodness
+ in forgiving me is greater. Thou art indeed my brother,
+ and whilst I live, will I surely love thee."
+
+ And Judah said, "Let us also love our other brethren:
+ behold, are we not all of one blood?" And Joseph saw
+ these things, and reported them to his father Jacob.
+
+ And Jacob said, "Reuben did wrong, but he repented.
+ Simeon also did wrong; and Levi was not altogether
+ blameless. But the heart of Judah is princely. Judah
+ hath the soul of a king. His father's children shall
+ bow down before him, and he shall rule over his
+ brethren."
+
+The papers contributed by Franklin to the _Busy-Body_ and the _Pennsylvania
+Gazette_ clearly indicate the influence of Addison and Steele. The
+Ridentius and Eugenius of the second issue, Ridentius, the wight, who gave
+himself an hour's diversion on the cock of a man's hat, the heels of his
+shoes or on one of his unguarded expressions or personal defects, Eugenius
+who preferred to make himself a public jest rather than be at the pains of
+seeing his friend in confusion, pale phantoms though they be, are palpably
+imitations of the Spectator and Tatler. So are the Cato of the third issue
+of the _Busy-Body_, whose countenance revealed habits of virtue that made
+one forget his homespun linen and seven days' beard, and the Cretico of the
+same issue, the "sowre Philosopher" who commanded nothing better from his
+dependents than the submissive deportment, which was like the worship paid
+by the Indians to the Devil.
+
+Unlike these characters, the Patience of the fourth issue of the
+_Busy-Body_ is a real creature of flesh and blood. She writes to the
+Busy-Body for advice, informing him that she is a single woman, and keeps a
+shop in the town for her livelihood, and has a certain neighbor, who is
+really agreeable company enough, and has for some time been an intimate of
+hers, but who, of late, has tried her out of all patience by her frequent
+and long visits. She cannot do a thing in the world but this friend must
+know all about it, and her friend has besides two children just big enough
+to run about and do petty mischief, who accompany their mother on her
+visits and put things in the shop out of sorts; so that the writer has all
+the trouble and pesterment of children without the pleasure--of calling
+them her own.
+
+ Pray, Sir [concludes the unhappy Patience], tell me
+ what I shall do; and talk a little against such
+ unreasonable Visiting in your next Paper; tho' I would
+ not have her affronted with me for a great Deal, for
+ sincerely I love her and her Children, as well, I
+ think, as a Neighbour can, and she buys a great many
+ Things in a Year at my Shop. But I would beg her to
+ consider that she uses me unmercifully, Tho' I believe
+ it is only for want of Thought. But I have twenty
+ Things more to tell you besides all this: There is a
+ handsome Gentleman, that has a Mind (I don't question)
+ to make love to me, but he can't get the least
+ Opportunity to--O dear! here she comes again; I must
+ conclude, yours, &c.
+
+This letter is made the subject of some sensible comments by the
+_Busy-Body_ on the importance of remembering the words of the Wise Man,
+"Withdraw thy Foot from the House of thy Neighbour, lest he grow weary of
+thee, and so hate thee." Later the same caution was to be conveyed in Poor
+Richard's, "Fish and Visitors smell after three days." The paper ends with
+the approval by the _Busy-Body_ of the Turkish practice of admonishing
+guests that it is time for them to go, without actually asking them to do
+so, by having a chafing dish with the grateful incense of smoking aloes
+rising from it brought into the room and applied to their beards.
+
+Even more lifelike than Patience are Anthony Afterwit, Celia Single, Mr.
+and Mrs. Careless and Alice Addertongue, the figures brought to our eye by
+the _Pennsylvania Gazette_. Indeed, Addison himself would have had no
+occasion to be ashamed of them, if they had been figments of his own fancy.
+In his letter to the editor of the _Gazette_, Anthony Afterwit told him
+that about the time that he first addressed his spouse her father let it be
+known that, if she married a man of his liking, he would give two hundred
+pounds with her on the day of marriage, and that he had made some fine
+plans, and had even, in some measure, neglected his business on the
+strength of this assurance, but that, when the old gentleman saw that the
+writer was pretty well engaged, he, without assigning any reason, grew very
+angry, forbade him the house and told his daughter that, if she married
+him, he would not give her a farthing. However (as the father foresaw), he
+stole a wedding, and took his wife to his house, where they were not in
+quite so poor a condition as the couple described in the Scotch song who
+had
+
+ "Neither Pot nor Pan,
+ But four bare Legs together,"
+
+for he had a house tolerably furnished for an ordinary man. His wife,
+however, was strongly inclined to be a gentlewoman. His old-fashioned
+looking-glass was one day broke, "_No Mortal could tell which way_," she
+said, and was succeeded by a large fashionable one. This in turn led to
+another table more suitable to such a glass, and the new table to some very
+handsome chairs. Thus, by degrees, he found all his old furniture stored up
+in the garret and everything below altered for the better.
+
+Then, on one pretext or another, came along a tea-table with all its
+appurtenances of china and silver, a maid, a clock, and a pacing mare, for
+which he paid twenty pounds. The result was that, receiving a very severe
+dun, which mentioned the next court, he began in earnest to project relief.
+His dear having gone over the river the preceding Monday to see a relation,
+and stay a fortnight, because she could not bear the heat of the town, he
+took his turn at alterations. He dismissed the maid, bag and baggage; he
+sold the pacing mare, and bought a good milch cow with three pounds of the
+money; he disposed of the tea-table, and put a spinning wheel in its place;
+he stuffed nine empty tea canisters with flax, and with some of the money,
+derived from the sale of the tea-furniture, he bought a set of knitting
+needles; "for to tell you a truth, which I would have go no farther," added
+honest Anthony, "_I begin to want stockings_." The stately clock he
+transformed into an hour glass, by which he had gained a good round sum,
+and one of the pieces of the old looking-glass, squared and framed,
+supplied the place of the old one. In short, the face of things was quite
+changed, and he had paid his debts and found money in his pocket. His good
+dame was expected home next Friday, and, if she could conform with his new
+scheme of living, they would be the happiest couple, perhaps, in the
+Province, and, by the blessings of God, might soon be in thriving
+circumstances. He had reserved the great glass for her, and he would allow
+her, when she came in, to be taken suddenly ill with the _headache_, the
+_stomachache_, the fainting fits, or whatever other disorder she might
+think more proper, and she might retire to bed as soon as she pleased, but,
+if he did not find her in perfect health, both of body and mind, the next
+morning, away would go the aforesaid great glass, with several other
+trinkets, to the _vendue_ that very day.
+
+That the wife of Anthony did succumb to the situation, we know, for it was
+an unfortunate reference to her that caused Celia Single to write her
+letter to the editor of the _Gazette_. During the morning of the preceding
+Wednesday, she said, she happened to be in at Mrs. Careless', when the
+husband of that lady returned from market, and showed his wife some balls
+of thread which he had bought. "My Dear," says he, "I like mightily these
+Stockings, which I yesterday saw Neighbour Afterwit knitting for her
+Husband, of Thread of her own Spinning. I should be glad to have some such
+stockins myself: I understand that your Maid Mary is a very good Knitter,
+and seeing this Thread in Market, I have bought it, that the Girl may make
+a Pair or two for me." Then, according to Celia, there took place in her
+presence a dialogue between husband and wife so animated that, knowing as
+she did that a man and his wife are apt to quarrel more violently, when
+before strangers, than when by themselves, she got up and went out hastily.
+She was glad, however, to understand from Mary, who came to her of an
+errand in the evening, that the couple dined together pretty peaceably (the
+balls of thread, that had caused the difference, being thrown into the
+kitchen fire).
+
+The story, beginning with the reply of Mrs. Careless to the offensive
+suggestion of Mr. Careless, is too good not to be reproduced in full.
+
+ Mrs. Careless was just then at the Glass, dressing her
+ Head, and turning about with the Pins in her Mouth,
+ "Lord, Child," says she, "are you crazy? What Time has
+ Mary to knit? Who must do the Work, I wonder, if you
+ set her to Knitting?" "Perhaps, my Dear," says he, "you
+ have a mind to knit 'em yourself; I remember, when I
+ courted you, I once heard you say, that you had learn'd
+ to knit of your Mother." "I knit Stockins for you!"
+ says she; "not I truly! There are poor Women enough in
+ Town, that can knit; if you please, you may employ
+ them." "Well, but my Dear," says he, "you know _a penny
+ sav'd is a penny got_, A pin a day is a groat a year,
+ every little makes a muckle, and there is neither Sin
+ nor Shame in Knitting a pair of Stockins; why should
+ you express such a mighty Aversion to it? As to _poor_
+ Women, you know we are not People of Quality, we have
+ no Income to maintain us but what arises from my
+ Labour and Industry: Methinks you should not be at all
+ displeas'd, if you have an Opportunity to get something
+ as well as myself."
+
+ "I wonder," says she, "how you can propose such a thing
+ to me; did not you always tell me you would maintain me
+ like a Gentlewoman? If I had married Captain ----, he
+ would have scorn'd even to mention Knitting of
+ Stockins." "Prithee," says he, (a little nettled,)
+ "what do you tell me of your Captains? If you could
+ have had him, I suppose you would, or perhaps you did
+ not very well like him. If I did promise to maintain
+ you like a Gentlewoman, I suppose 'tis time enough for
+ that, when you know how to behave like one; Meanwhile
+ 'tis your Duty to help make me able. How long, d'ye
+ think, I can maintain you at your present Rate of
+ Living?" "Pray," says she, (somewhat fiercely, and
+ dashing the Puff into the Powder-box,) "don't use me
+ after this Manner, for I assure you I won't bear it.
+ This is the Fruit of your poison Newspapers; there
+ shall come no more here, I promise you." "Bless us,"
+ says he, "what an unaccountable thing is this? Must a
+ Tradesman's Daughter, and the Wife of a Tradesman,
+ necessarily and instantly be a Gentlewoman? You had no
+ Portion; I am forc'd to work for a Living; you are too
+ great to do the like; there's the Door, go and live
+ upon your Estate, if you can find it; in short, I don't
+ desire to be troubled w'ye."
+
+And then it was that Celia Single gathered up her skirts and left.
+
+The letter from Alice Addertongue to the editor of the _Gazette_ is exactly
+in the manner of the _School for Scandal_, written many years later. She is
+a young girl of about thirty-five, she says, and lives at present with her
+mother. Like the Emperor, who, if a day passed over his head, during which
+he had conferred no benefit on any man, was in the habit of saying, _Diem
+perdidi_, _I have lost a Day_, she would make use of the same expression,
+were it possible for a day to pass over her head, during which she had
+failed to scandalize someone; a misfortune, thanks be praised, that had not
+befallen her these dozen years.
+
+ My mother, good Woman, and I [the forked tongue plays
+ precisely as it might have done in the mouth of Lady
+ Sneerwell] have heretofore differ'd upon this Account.
+ She argu'd, that Scandal spoilt all good Conversation;
+ and I insisted, that without it there would be no such
+ Thing. Our Disputes once rose so high, that we parted
+ Tea-Tables, and I concluded to entertain my
+ Acquaintance in the Kitchin. The first Day of this
+ Separation we both drank Tea at the same Time, but she
+ with her Visitors in the Parlor. She would not hear of
+ the least Objection to anyone's Character, but began a
+ new sort of Discourse in some queer philosophical
+ Manner as this; "I am mightily pleas'd sometimes," says
+ she, "when I observe and consider, that the World is
+ not so bad as People out of humour imagine it to be.
+ There is something amiable, some good Quality or other,
+ in everybody. If we were only to speak of People that
+ are least respected, there is such a one is very
+ dutiful to her Father, and methinks has a fine Set of
+ Teeth; such a one is very respectful to her Husband;
+ such a one is very kind to her poor Neighbours, and
+ besides has a very handsome Shape; such a one is always
+ ready to serve a Friend, and in my opinion there is not
+ a Woman in Town that has a more agreable Air and Gait."
+ This fine kind of Talk, which lasted near half an Hour,
+ she concluded by saying, "I do not doubt but everyone
+ of you have made the like Observations, and I should be
+ glad to have the Conversation continu'd upon this
+ Subject." Just at that Juncture I peep'd in at the
+ Door, and never in my Life before saw such a Set of
+ simple vacant Countenances. They looked somehow neither
+ glad, nor sorry, nor angry, nor pleas'd, nor
+ indifferent, nor attentive; but (excuse the Simile)
+ like so many blue wooden images of Rie Doe. I in the
+ Kitchin had already begun a ridiculous Story of Mr.
+ ----'s Intrigue with his Maid, and his Wife's Behaviour
+ upon the Discovery; at some Passages we laugh'd
+ heartily, and one of the gravest of Mama's Company,
+ without making any Answer to her Discourse, got up _to
+ go and see what the Girls were so merry about_: She was
+ follow'd by a Second, and shortly by a Third, till at
+ last the old Gentlewoman found herself quite alone,
+ and, being convinc'd that her Project was
+ impracticable, came herself and finish'd her Tea with
+ us; ever since which _Saul also has been among the
+ Prophets_, and our Disputes lie dormant.
+
+It was in the _Pennsylvania Gazette_, too, that Franklin published his
+"Dialogue between Philocles and Horatio," in which Philocles twice meets
+Horatio in the fields, and, in accents full of persuasive blandishment,
+diverts his feet from the pursuit of sensual pleasure into paths of
+contentment and peace. In the first dialogue, the moralist takes as his
+thesis the proposition that self-denial is not only the most reasonable but
+the most pleasant thing in the world. In the second, he holds up to Horatio
+the constant and durable happiness, so unlike the chequered, fleeting
+pleasures of Sense, which springs from acts of humanity, friendship,
+generosity and benevolence. One maxim in the last dialogue is worth many of
+the sayings of Poor Richard: "The Foundation of all Virtue and Happiness is
+Thinking rightly."
+
+Other papers from the hand of Franklin that appeared in the _Gazette_ were
+_A Witch Trial at Mount Holly_, _An Apology for Printers_, _A Meditation on
+a Quart Mugg_, _Shavers and Trimmers_, and _Exporting of Felons to the
+Colonies_.
+
+In the "Witch Trial at Mount Holly," Franklin describes in a highly
+humorous manner the results of the ordeals to which a man and a woman,
+accused by a man and a woman of witchcraft, were subjected. One of these
+ordeals consisted in weighing the accused in scales against a Bible for the
+purpose of seeing whether it would prove too heavy for them.
+
+ Then [the facetious narrative relates] came out of the
+ House a grave, tall Man carrying the Holy Writ before
+ the supposed Wizard etc., (as solemely as the
+ Sword-Bearer of London before the Lord Mayor) the
+ Wizard was first put in the Scale, and over him was
+ read a Chapter out of the Books of Moses, and then the
+ Bible was put in the other Scale, (which, being kept
+ down before) was immediately let go; but, to the great
+ surprize of the Spectators, Flesh and Bones came down
+ plump, and outweighed that great good Book by
+ abundance. After the same Manner the others were
+ served, and their Lumps of Mortality severally were too
+ heavy for Moses and all the Prophets and Apostles.
+
+This ordeal was followed by the Trial by Water. Both accused and accusers
+were stripped, except that the women were not deprived of their shifts,
+bound hand and foot and let down into the water by ropes from the side of a
+barge. The rest is thus told:
+
+ The accused man being thin and spare with some
+ Difficulty began to sink at last; but the rest, every
+ one of them, swam very light upon the Water. A Sailor
+ in the Flat jump'd out upon the Back of the Man accused
+ thinking to drive him down to the Bottom; but the
+ Person bound, without any Help, came up some time
+ before the other. The Woman Accuser being told that she
+ did not sink, would be duck'd a second Time; when she
+ swam again as light as before. Upon which she declared,
+ That she believed the Accused had bewitched her to make
+ her so light, and that she would be duck'd again a
+ Hundred Times but she would duck the Devil out of her.
+ The Accused Man, being surpriz'd at his own swimming,
+ was not so confident of his Innocence as before, but
+ said, "If I am a Witch, it is more than I know." The
+ more thinking Part of the Spectators were of Opinion
+ that any Person so bound and placed in the Water
+ (unless they were mere Skin and Bones) would swim, till
+ their breath was gone, and their Lungs fill'd with
+ Water. But it being the general Belief of the Populace
+ that the Women's Shifts and the Garters with which they
+ were bound help'd to support them, it is said they are
+ to be tried again the next Warm Weather, naked.
+
+In the "Apology for Printers," Franklin defends his guild with much point
+and good sense, in terms modern enough to be fully applicable to
+newspapers at the present time. It was inspired by the resentment which his
+advertisement relating to Sea Hens and Black Gowns excited, and, though
+written in a half-humorous style, states the difficulties of an editor,
+between his duty to publish everything, and the certainty of private
+resentment, if he does, with about as much felicity of presentation as they
+are ever likely to be stated. Among the various solid reasons, set forth in
+formal numerical sequence, that he gave, by way of mitigation, for
+publishing the advertisement, he mentioned these, too:
+
+"6. That I got Five Shillings by it.
+
+"7. That none who are angry with me would have given me so much to let it
+alone."
+
+In answer to the accusation that printers sometimes printed vicious or
+silly things not worth reading, he charged the fact up to the vicious taste
+of the public itself. He had known, he said, a very numerous impression of
+Robin Hood's songs to go off in the Province at 2 s. per book in less than
+a twelvemonth, when a small quantity of David's Psalms (an excellent
+version) had lain upon his hands about twice that long.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In the "Meditation on a Quart Mugg" Franklin begins with the exclamation,
+"WRETCHED, miserable, and unhappy Mug!" and traces with mock sympathy all
+the misfortunes of its ignoble and squalid career from the time that it is
+first forced into the company of boisterous sots, who lay all their
+nonsense, noise, profane swearing, cursing and quarrelling on it, though it
+speaks not a word, until the inevitable hour when it is broken into pieces,
+and finds its way for the most part back to Mother Earth. The paper is only
+a trifle, but a trifle fashioned with no little skill to hit the fancy of
+an age that, as Franklin's "Drunkard's Vocabulary" (also published in the
+_Gazette_) shows, had innumerable cant terms for the condition for which
+the mug was held to such an unjust responsibility.
+
+The paper on "Shavers and Trimmers" is not so happy and well sustained, but
+its classifications of the different species of persons, answering these
+descriptions, is not without humor. One sentence in it, when Franklin
+speaks of the species of Shavers and Trimmers, who "cover (what is called
+by an eminent Preacher) _their poor Dust_ in tinsel Cloaths and gaudy
+Plumes of Feathers," reads like a paragraph in the _Courant_. "A competent
+Share of religious Horror thrown into the Countenance," he says, "with
+proper Distortions of the Face, and the Addition of a lank Head of Hair, or
+a long Wig and Band, commands a most profound Respect to Insolence and
+Ignorance."
+
+The paper on the "Exporting of Felons to the Colonies" is marked by the
+grim, biting irony of Swift, but was no severer than the practice of
+setting British criminals at large in America deserved. Such tender
+parental concern, Franklin said, called aloud for due returns of gratitude
+and duty, and he suggested that these returns should assume the form of
+rattlesnakes, "Felons-convict from the Beginning of the World." In the
+spring of the year, when they first crept out of their holes, they were
+feeble, heavy, slow and easily taken, and, if a small bounty was allowed
+per head, some thousands might be collected annually, and transported to
+Britain. There he proposed that they should be carefully distributed in St.
+James' Park, in the Spring Gardens, and other pleasure resorts about
+London, and in the gardens of all the nobility and gentry throughout the
+nation, but particularly in the gardens of the Prime Ministers, the Lords
+of Trade and Members of Parliament; for to them they were most particularly
+obliged. Such a paper, it is needless to say, was better calculated for its
+purpose than a thousand appeals of the ordinary type would have been.
+
+The speech of Polly Baker is one of the most famous of Franklin's _jeux
+d'esprit_. The introduction to it states that it was delivered when she
+was prosecuted for the fifth time for having a bastard child, and with such
+effect that the court decided not to punish her; indeed with such effect
+that one of her judges even married her the next day, and in time had
+fifteen children by her. The perfectly ingenuous manner in which the
+traverser refuses to admit that she has committed any offence whatever and
+insists that, in default of honorable suitors, she has but dutifully,
+though irregularly, complied with the first and great command of nature and
+nature's God--increase and multiply--is undoubtedly, coarse as it is, a
+stroke of art, but the performance is too gross for modern scruples.
+
+More decorous reading is the fictitious discourse by a Spanish Jesuit on
+the "Meanes of disposing the Enemie to Peace," which Franklin, during his
+first mission to England, contributed to the _London Chronicle_ for the
+purpose of rousing the English people to a sense of the artifices, that
+were being employed by the French to build up a party in England for peace
+at any price. In the introduction to the discourse, it is stated that it
+was taken from a book containing a number of discourses, addressed by the
+Jesuit to the King of Spain in 1629, and that nothing was needed to render
+it _apropos_ to the existing situation of England except the substitution
+of France for Spain. The discourse points out in detail, with shrewd
+insight into all the selfish and timid impulses, by which a society is
+corrupted or enervated, when cunningly practised upon, the different
+classes in the country of the enemy that could be manipulated in one way or
+another until no sound but that of Peace, Peace, Peace would be heard from
+any quarter.
+
+_The Craven Street Gazette_, written in mock court language, and replete
+with the subtle suggestions of household intimacy, is one of the most
+exquisite triumphs of Franklin's wit and fancy.
+
+ This morning [it begins], Queen Margaret, accompanied
+ by her first maid of honour, Miss Franklin, (Sally
+ Franklin) set out for Rochester. Immediately on their
+ departure, the whole street was in tears--from a heavy
+ shower of rain. It is whispered, that the new family
+ administration which took place on her Majesty's
+ departure, promises, like all other new
+ administrations, to govern much better than the old
+ one.
+
+ We hear, that the great person (so called from his
+ enormous size), of a certain family in a certain
+ street, is grievously affected at the late changes, and
+ could hardly be comforted this morning, though the new
+ ministry promised him a roasted shoulder of mutton and
+ potatoes for his dinner.
+
+ It is said, that the same great person intended to pay
+ his respects to another great personage this day, at
+ St. James's, it being coronation-day; hoping thereby a
+ little to amuse his grief; but was prevented by an
+ accident, Queen Margaret, or her maid of honour having
+ carried off the key of the drawers, so that the lady of
+ the bed-chamber could not come at a laced shirt for his
+ Highness. Great clamours were made on this occasion
+ against her Majesty.
+
+And so the _Gazette_ goes on, gay and graceful as the play of sunshine on
+the surface of a dimpled sea, from incident to incident that took place
+during the absence of Queen Margaret (Mrs. Stevenson) and Miss Franklin,
+investing each with a ceremonious dignity and importance that never descend
+to buffoonery.
+
+These are some of the occurrences chronicled as taking place on the first
+Sunday after the departure of the Queen. Walking up and down in his room we
+might observe was one of Franklin's ways of taking exercise.
+
+ Lord and Lady Hewson walked after dinner to Kensington,
+ to pay their duty to the Dowager, and Dr. Fatsides made
+ four hundred and sixty-nine turns in his dining-room,
+ as the exact distance of a visit to the lovely Lady
+ Barwell, whom he did not find at home; so there was no
+ struggle for and against a kiss, and he sat down to
+ dream in the easy-chair that he had it without any
+ trouble.
+
+And these are some of the observations made under the date of the
+succeeding Tuesday.
+
+ It is remark'd, that the Skies have wept every Day in
+ Craven Street, the Absence of the Queen.
+
+ The Publick may be assured that this Morning a certain
+ _great_ Personage was asked very complaisantly by the
+ Mistress of the Household, if he would chuse to have
+ the Blade-Bone of Saturday's Mutton that had been kept
+ for his Dinner to-day _broil'd_ or _cold_. _He answer'd
+ gravely, If there is any Flesh on it, it may be
+ broil'd; if not, it may as well be cold._ Orders were
+ accordingly given for Broiling it. But when it came to
+ Table, there was indeed so very little Flesh, or rather
+ none, (Puss having din'd on it yesterday after
+ Nanny)[57] that if our new Administration had been as
+ good Oeconomists as they would be thought, the Expence
+ of Broiling might well have been saved to the Publick,
+ and carried to the Sinking Fund. It is assured the
+ _great_ Person bears all with infinite Patience. But
+ the Nation is astonish'd at the insolent Presumption,
+ that dares treat so much Mildness in so cruel a manner!
+
+Under the same date is made the announcement that at six o'clock, that
+afternoon, news had come by the post that her Majesty arrived safely at
+Rochester on Saturday night. "The Bells," the _Gazette_ adds, "immediately
+rang--for Candles to illuminate the Parlour, the Court went into Cribbidge,
+and the Evening concluded with every other Demonstration of Joy." This is
+followed by a letter to the _Gazette_ from a person signing himself
+"Indignation," who says that he makes no doubt of the truth of the
+statement that a certain great person is half-starved on the blade-bone of
+a sheep by a set of the most careless, worthless, thoughtless,
+inconsiderate, corrupt, ignorant, blundering, foolish, crafty & knavish
+ministers that ever got into a house and pretended to govern a family and
+provide a dinner. "Alas for the poor old England of Craven Street!" this
+correspondent exclaims, "If they continue in Power another Week, the Nation
+will be ruined. Undone, totally undone, if I and my Friends are not
+appointed to succeed them."
+
+This letter is accompanied by another signed, "A Hater of Scandal," which
+takes "Indignation" to task, and declares that the writer believes that,
+even if the Angel Gabriel would condescend to be their minister, and
+provide their dinners, he would scarcely escape newspaper defamation from a
+gang of hungry, ever-restless, discontented and malicious scribblers. It
+was a piece of justice, he declared, that the publisher of the _Gazette_
+owed to their righteous administration to undeceive the public on this
+occasion by assuring them of the fact, which is that there was provided and
+actually smoking on the table under his royal nose at the same instant as
+the blade-bone as fine a piece of ribs of beef roasted as ever knife was
+put into, with potatoes, horse-radish, pickled walnuts &c. which his
+Highness might have eaten, if so he had pleased to do.
+
+Along with the political intelligence and the letters the _Gazette_ also
+contains these notices and stock quotations:
+
+ MARRIAGES, none since our last--but Puss begins to go a
+ Courting.
+
+ DEATHS, In the back Closet and elsewhere, many poor
+ Mice.
+
+ STOCKS Biscuit--very low. Buckwheat & Indian Meal--both
+ sour. Tea, lowering daily--in the Canister. Wine, shut.
+
+The _Petition of the Letter Z_ was a humorous offshoot of Franklin's
+Reformed Alphabet. In a formal complaint after the manner of a bill in
+chancery, to the worshipful Isaac Bickerstaff, Esquire, Censor-General, Z
+complains that his claims to respect are as good as those of the other
+letters of the Alphabet, but that he had not only been placed at its tail,
+when he had as much right as any of his companions to be at its head, but
+by the injustice of his enemies had been totally excluded from the word
+WISE and his place filled by a little hissing, crooked, serpentine,
+venomous letter, called S, though it must be evident to his worship and to
+all the world that W, I, S, E does not spell _Wize_ but _Wise_. The
+petition ends with the prayer that, in consideration of his long-suffering
+and patience, the petitioner may be placed at the head of the Alphabet, and
+that S may be turned out of the word _wise_, and the Petitioner employed
+instead of him.
+
+Z did not make out his case, for at the foot of the petition is appended
+this order: "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, and remember his
+own small usefulness, and the little occasion there is for him in the
+Republic of Letters, since S whom he so despises can so well serve instead
+of him."
+
+Some of the liveliest of the lighter papers of Franklin were written during
+the course of his French Mission. His inimitable _Journey to the Elysian
+Fields_ and _Conte_ have already received our attention in an earlier
+chapter. Among the others was _The Sale of the Hessians_, _The Supplement
+to the Boston Independent Chronicle_, _The Ephemera_, _The Whistle_, his
+letter to the Abbe de la Roche, communicating to him the _petite chanson a
+boire_ that he had written forty years before, his letter to the Abbe
+Morellet on wine, the _Dialogue between him and the Gout_, _The Handsome
+and Deformed Leg_ and _The Economical Project_. If there was nothing else
+to support the claim of Franklin to the authorship of _The Sale of the
+Hessians_, the difficulty of abridging it would be one proof. Its humor is
+as trenchant as that of Frederick the Great in levying the same toll upon
+these hirelings, when passing through his dominions on their way to
+America, pursuant to the mercenary engagements between their German masters
+and George III., as that levied by him upon other cattle. The paper is
+thrown into the form of a letter from the Count De Schaumbergh to the Baron
+Hohendorf, commanding the Hessian troops in America. It begins as follows:
+
+ MONSIEUR DE BARON:--On my return from Naples, I
+ received at Rome your letter of the 27th December of
+ last year. I have learned with unspeakable pleasure the
+ courage our troops exhibited at Trenton, and you cannot
+ imagine my joy on being told that of the 1,950 Hessians
+ engaged in the fight, but 345 escaped. There were just
+ 1,605 men killed, and I can not sufficiently commend
+ your prudence in sending an exact list of the dead to
+ my minister in London. This precaution was the more
+ necessary, as the report sent to the English Ministry
+ does not give but 1,455 dead. This would make 483,450
+ florins instead of 643,500 which I am entitled to
+ demand under our convention. You will comprehend the
+ prejudice which such an error would work in my
+ finances, and I do not doubt you will take the
+ necessary pains to prove that Lord North's list is
+ false and yours correct.
+
+This is another paragraph:
+
+ I am about to send to you some new recruits. Don't
+ economize them. Remember glory before all things. Glory
+ is true wealth. There is nothing degrades the soldier
+ like the love of money. He must care only for honour
+ and reputation, but this reputation must be acquired in
+ the midst of dangers. A battle gained without costing
+ the conqueror any blood is an inglorious success, while
+ the conquered cover themselves with glory by perishing
+ with their arms in their hands. Do you remember that of
+ the 300 Lacedaemonians who defended the defile of
+ Thermopylae, not one returned? How happy should I be
+ could I say the same of my brave Hessians!
+
+ It is true that their King, Leonidas, perished with
+ them: but things have changed, and it is no longer the
+ custom for princes of the empire to go and fight in
+ America for a cause with which they have no concern.
+
+The Baron is further commended for sending back to Europe that Dr. Crumerus
+who was so successful in curing dysentery, and is told that it is better
+that the Hessians should burst in their barracks than fly in a battle, and
+tarnish the glory of the Count's arms.
+
+ Besides [the Count continues], you know that they pay
+ me as killed for all who die from disease, and I don't
+ get a farthing for runaways. My trip to Italy, which
+ has cost me enormously, makes it desirable that there
+ should be a great mortality among them. You will
+ therefore promise promotion to all who expose
+ themselves; you will exhort them to seek glory in the
+ midst of dangers; you will say to Major Maundorff that
+ I am not at all content with his saving the 345 men who
+ escaped the massacre of Trenton. Through the whole
+ campaign he has not had ten men killed in consequence
+ of his orders. Finally, let it be your principal object
+ to prolong the war and avoid a decisive engagement on
+ either side, for I have made arrangements for a grand
+ Italian opera, and I do not wish to be obliged to give
+ it up. Meantime I pray God, my dear Baron de Hohendorf,
+ to have you in his holy and gracious keeping.
+
+The _Supplement to the Boston Independent Chronicle_ is distinguished by
+the same sort of cool, dry mocking verisimilitude. Captain Gerrish, of the
+New England Militia, is supposed to write a letter in which he says that
+the members of a recent expedition against the Indians were struck with
+horror to find among the packages of peltry captured by them eight large
+ones containing scalps of their unhappy country-folks taken in the last
+three years by the Seneca Indians from the heads of inhabitants of the
+frontiers of New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania and Virginia, and sent by
+them as a present to Colonel Haldimand, the Governor of Canada; to be
+forwarded by him to England. The scalps, Captain Gerrish asserts, were
+accompanied by a curious letter to the Governor from one, James Craufurd.
+Then is set forth this letter which describes with the minuteness of a
+mercantile invoice the contents of each of the eight packages of scalps,
+some of Congress soldiers, some of farmers surprised in their houses at
+night, some of farmers killed in their houses by day, some of farmers
+killed in the fields, some of women, some of boys, some of girls and some
+of little infants ripped from the womb. The contents of several of the
+packages are described as mixed lots. The letter also fully explains the
+Indian triumphal marks painted upon the different scalps, which were all
+cured, dried and stretched like the pelts of the otter or beaver on hoops.
+The black circle denoted that the victim had perished at night, the little
+red foot that he had died in defence of his life and family, the little
+yellow flame that he had been tortured at the stake. The hair braided in
+the Indian fashion meant that the victim was a mother, other tokens that
+the victim was a boy or a girl. A band fixed to the hoop of one of the
+scalps signified that the head to which it had been attached was that of a
+rebel clergyman. Many gruesome tokens are explained in the same systematic
+and businesslike manner. Along with several other passages from a speech of
+Conejogatchie in Council, the letter also communicates one in which the
+speaker declares that his people wished the scalps to be sent across the
+water to the great King that he might regard them and be refreshed. In
+concluding his own letter, Captain Gerrish states that Lieutenant
+Fitzgerald would have undertaken to convey the scalps to England and to
+hang them all up some dark night on the trees in St. James' Park, where
+they could be seen from the King and Queen's Palaces in the morning. But
+this proposal, the _Chronicle_ says, was not approved in Boston. It was
+proposed instead to make the scalps up in decent little packets, and to
+seal and direct them; one to the King containing a sample of every kind
+for his museum, one to the Queen, with some of women and children; the rest
+to be distributed among both Houses of Parliament, and a double quantity to
+be given to the Bishops. The relations of the _Chronicle_ to this
+production were, of course, as purely fictitious as every other part of it.
+Associated with the performance, as another publication in the _Chronicle_,
+is a fictitious letter, too, from Paul Jones to Sir Joseph Yorke, the
+English Ambassador to Holland, in which he defends himself with
+considerable spirit from the charge of being a pirate, and reminds Sir
+Joseph of the freebooting principles upon which England was waging war
+against America. When he read this letter, Horace Walpole wrote to the
+Countess of Ossory, "Have you seen in the papers an excellent letter of
+Paul Jones to Sir Joseph Yorke? Elle nous dit bien des verites! I doubt
+poor Sir Joseph cannot answer them! Dr. Franklin himself, I should think,
+was the author. It is certainly written by a first-rate pen, and not by a
+common man of war."
+
+_The Ephemera_ was addressed to Madame Brillon, and is one of the most
+justly famous of all Franklin's writings. In a letter to William
+Carmichael, he states that the thought was partly taken from a little piece
+of some unknown writer, which he had met with fifty years before in a
+newspaper. Another proof, we might say in passing, how little disposed
+Franklin was to borrow from Richard Jackson, or any one else without due
+acknowledgment.
+
+So dependent is every part of this paper for its effect upon the whole that
+to quote only a portion of it would be as futile as an effort to divide a
+bubble without destroying it. These are the precise words in full of this
+bewitching little production:
+
+ You may remember, my dear friend, that when we lately
+ spent that happy day in the delightful garden and sweet
+ society of the Moulin Joly, I stopt a little in one of
+ our walks, and staid some time behind the company. We
+ had been shown numberless skeletons of a kind of little
+ fly, called an ephemera, whose successive generations,
+ we were told, were bred and expired within the day. I
+ happened to see a living company of them on a leaf, who
+ appeared to be engaged in conversation. You know I
+ understand all the inferior animal tongues; my too
+ great application to the study of them is the best
+ excuse I can give for the little progress I have made
+ in your charming language. I listened through curiosity
+ to the discourse of these little creatures; but as
+ they, in their national vivacity, spoke three or four
+ together, I could make but little of their
+ conversation. I found, however, by some broken
+ expressions that I heard now and then, they were
+ disputing warmly on the merit of two foreign musicians,
+ one a _cousin_, the other a _moscheto_; in which
+ dispute they spent their time, seemingly as regardless
+ of the shortness of life as if they had been sure of
+ living a month. Happy people! thought I, you are
+ certainly under a wise, just, and mild government,
+ since you have no public grievances to complain of, nor
+ any subject of contention but the perfections and
+ imperfections of foreign music. I turned my head from
+ them to an old grey-headed one, who was single on
+ another leaf, and talking to himself. Being amused with
+ his soliloquy, I put it down in writing, in hopes it
+ will likewise amuse her to whom I am so much indebted
+ for the most pleasing of all amusements, her delicious
+ company and heavenly harmony.
+
+ It was [said he] the opinion of learned philosophers of
+ our race, who lived and flourished long before my time,
+ that this vast world, the Moulin Joly, could not itself
+ subsist more than eighteen hours; and I think there was
+ some foundation for that opinion, since, by the
+ apparent motion of the great luminary that gives life
+ to all nature, and which in my time has evidently
+ declined considerably towards the ocean at the end of
+ our earth, it must then finish its course, be
+ extinguished in the waters that surround us, and leave
+ the world in cold and darkness, necessarily producing
+ universal death and destruction. I have lived seven of
+ those hours, a great age, being no less than four
+ hundred and twenty minutes of time. How very few of us
+ continue so long! I have seen generations born,
+ flourish, and expire. My present friends are the
+ children and grandchildren of the friends of my youth,
+ who _are now_, alas, no more! And I must soon follow
+ them; for, by the course of nature, though still in
+ health, I cannot expect to live above seven or eight
+ minutes longer. What now avails all my toil and labor,
+ in amassing honey-dew on this leaf, which I cannot live
+ to enjoy! What the political struggles I have been
+ engaged in, for the good of my compatriot inhabitants
+ of this bush, or my philosophical studies for the
+ benefit of our race in general! for, in politics, what
+ can laws do without morals? Our present race of
+ ephemerae will in a course of minutes become corrupt,
+ like those of other and older bushes, and consequently
+ as wretched. And in philosophy how small our progress!
+ Alas! art is long, and life is short! My friends would
+ comfort me with the idea of a name, they say, I shall
+ leave behind me; and they tell me I have lived long
+ enough to nature and to glory. But what will fame be to
+ an ephemera who no longer exists? And what will become
+ of all history in the eighteenth hour, when the world
+ itself, even the whole Moulin Joly, shall come to its
+ end, and be buried in universal ruin?
+
+ To me, after all my eager pursuits, no solid pleasures
+ now remain, but the reflection of a long life spent in
+ meaning well, the sensible conversation of a few good
+ lady ephemerae, and now and then a kind smile and a tune
+ from the ever amiable _Brillante_.
+
+_The Whistle_, too, was addressed to Madame Brillon and is also one of the
+most celebrated of Franklin's bagatelles, but is scarcely equal, we think,
+to the best of them.
+
+In his opinion, Franklin said, they might all draw more good from the world
+than they did if they would take care not to give too much for whistles.
+With this foreword, he tells his story. When a child of seven years of age,
+his friends on a holiday filled his pocket with coppers, and, being charmed
+with the sound of a whistle that he met by the way in the hands of another
+boy, he voluntarily offered, and gave all his money for one. He then came
+home, and went whistling all over the house, much pleased with his whistle,
+but disturbing the entire family. But his brothers and sisters told him
+that he had given four times as much for the whistle as it was worth, put
+him in mind of what good things he might have bought with the rest of the
+money and laughed at him so much for his folly that he cried with vexation.
+The lesson, however, was of use to him, so that often, when he was tempted
+to buy some unnecessary thing, he said to himself, "_Don't give too much
+for the whistle_," and he saved his money. And so, when he grew up, came
+into the world and observed the actions of men, he thought he met with
+many, very many who gave too much for the whistle.
+
+He then mentions who some of these men were, the man ambitious of court
+favor, the man covetous of political popularity, the miser, the slave of
+pleasure, the devotee of fashion, the beautiful, sweet-tempered girl,
+married to an ill-natured brute of a husband, and, after the mention of
+each, comes the running comment, "This man gives too much for his whistle,"
+or its equivalent.
+
+ Yet [Franklin concludes], I ought to have charity for
+ these unhappy people, when I consider, that, with all
+ this wisdom of which I am boasting, there are certain
+ things in the world so tempting, for example, the
+ apples of King John, which happily are not to be
+ bought; for if they were put to sale by auction, I
+ might very easily be led to ruin myself in the
+ purchase, and find that I had once more given too much
+ for the _whistle_.
+
+The reader has already had occasion to know what kind of fruit these apples
+of King John were, and in whose orchard they grew.
+
+To realize what an indifferent poet Franklin was, and yet at the same time
+what a master of prose, one has but to first read his _petite chanson a
+boire_ beginning,
+
+ "Fair Venus calls; her voice obey,"
+
+and then his letter to the Abbe Morellet on wine. The letter was written to
+repay the Abbe for some of his excellent drinking songs.
+
+ "In vino veritas," said the sage, [is the way Franklin
+ begins]. Before Noah, when men had nothing but water to
+ drink, they could not find the truth, so they went
+ astray, and became abominably wicked, and were justly
+ exterminated by the water that they were fond of
+ drinking. Good man Noah, seeing that this bad drink had
+ been the death of all his contemporaries, contracted an
+ aversion to it, and God to quench his thirst, created
+ the vine, and revealed to him the art of making wine.
+ With its aid, Noah discovered many and many a truth,
+ and, since his time, the word "divine" has been in use,
+ meaning originally to discover by means of wine....
+ Since that time, too, all excellent things, even
+ deities themselves, have been called divine or
+ divinities.
+
+ Men speak of the conversion of water into wine at the
+ marriage of Cana as a miracle. But this change is
+ worked every day by the goodness of God under our eyes.
+ Witness the water, that falls from the skies upon our
+ vineyards, and then passes into the roots of the vines
+ to be converted into wine, a constant proof that God
+ loves us, and that he is pleased to see us happy. The
+ miracle in question was performed merely to hasten the
+ operation on an occasion of sudden need that made it
+ indispensable.
+
+ It is true that God has also taught men how to reduce
+ wine to water; but what kind of water? Why
+ _l'eau-de-vie_.
+
+Franklin then begs his Christian brother to be kindly and beneficent like
+God and not to spoil his good work. When he saw his table companion pour
+wine into his glass he should not hasten to pour water into it. Why should
+he desire to drown the truth? His neighbor was likely to know better what
+suited him than he. Perhaps he does not like water, perhaps he wishes only
+a few drops of it out of complaisance to the fashion of the day, perhaps
+he does not wish another to see how little he puts in his glass. Water
+then should be offered only to children; it was a false and annoying form
+of politeness to do otherwise. This the writer told the Abbe as a man of
+the world, and he would end as he had begun, like a good Christian, by
+making one very important religious observation suggested by the Holy
+Scriptures. While the Apostle Paul had gravely advised Timothy to put wine
+into his water for his health, not one of the Apostles, nor any of the Holy
+Fathers, had ever advised anyone to put water into wine.
+
+The "Dialogue between Franklin and the Gout" owes its value not so much to
+its humor as to the knowledge that it incidentally affords us of the
+personal habits of the former and his intimacy with Madame Helvetius and
+Madame Brillon. Along with the reproaches and twinges of pain which evoke
+repeated Ehs! and Ohs! from Franklin, as the colloquy proceeds, the Gout
+contrives to communicate to us no little information on these subjects in
+terms in which physiology, hygiene and gallantry are each made to do duty.
+He tells Franklin that he, the Gout, very well knows that the quantity of
+meat and drink proper for a man, who takes a reasonable degree of exercise,
+is too much for another who never takes any. If his, Franklin's, situation
+in life is a sedentary one, his amusements and recreations at least should
+be active. He ought to walk or ride, or, if the weather prevents that, play
+at billiards. But, instead of gaining an appetite for breakfast by salutary
+exercise, he amuses himself with books, pamphlets or newspapers, which
+commonly are not worth the reading. Yet he eats an inordinate breakfast,
+four dishes of tea, with cream, and one or two buttered toasts, with slices
+of hung beef, which the Gout fancies are not things the most easily
+digested. Immediately afterwards he sits down to write at his desk or
+converse with persons who apply to him on business. Thus the time passes
+till one without any kind of bodily exercise. This might be pardoned out
+of regard, as Franklin said, for his sedentary condition, but what is his
+practice after dinner? Walking in the beautiful gardens of those friends
+with whom he had dined would be the choice of men of sense. His was to be
+fixed down to chess, where he was found engaged for two or three hours!
+This was his perpetual recreation, which was the least eligible of any for
+a sedentary man, because, instead of accelerating the motion of the fluids,
+the rigid attention it required helped to retard the circulation and
+obstruct internal secretions. Wrapped in the speculations of this wretched
+game, he destroyed his constitution. What could be expected from such a
+course of living but a body replete with stagnant humours, ready to fall a
+prey to all kinds of dangerous maladies, if he, the Gout, did not
+occasionally bring him relief by agitating those humors, and so purifying
+or dissipating them. If it was in some nook or alley in Paris deprived of
+walks that Franklin played awhile at chess after dinner, this might be
+excusable, but the same taste prevailed with him in Paris, at Auteuil
+Montmartre or Sanois, places where there were the finest, gardens and
+walks, a pure air, beautiful women and most agreeable and instructive
+conversation; all of which he might enjoy by frequenting the walks. At this
+point, Franklin, after some more prolonged Ehs! and Ohs!, manages to remind
+the Gout that it is not fair to say that he takes no exercise when he does
+so very often in going out to dine and returning in his carriage; but this
+statement the Gout brushes brusquely aside. That of all imaginable
+exercises, he asserts, is the most slight and insignificant, if Franklin
+alludes to the motion of a carriage suspended on springs. By observing the
+degree of heat obtained by different kinds of motion, we may form an
+estimate of the quantity of exercise given by each. Thus, for example, if
+Franklin should turn out to walk in winter with cold feet, in an hour's
+time he would be in a glow all over; if he should ride on horseback, the
+same effect would scarcely be perceived by four hours' round trotting,
+but, if he should loll in a carriage, such as he had mentioned, he might
+travel all day, and gladly enter the last inn to warm his feet by a
+fire.[58] Providence has appointed few to roll in carriages, while it has
+given to all a pair of legs, which are machines infinitely more commodious
+and serviceable. He should observe, when he walked, that all his weight was
+alternately thrown from one leg to the other; this occasions a great
+pressure upon the vessels of the foot, and repels their contents. When
+relieved by the weight being thrown on the other foot, the vessels of the
+first are allowed to replenish, and, by a return of this weight, this
+repulsion again succeeds; thus accelerating the circulation of the blood,
+with the result that the cheeks are ruddy and the health established.
+
+ Behold [the Gout is then artfully made to say], your
+ fair friend at Auteuil (Madame Helvetius); a lady who
+ received from bounteous nature more really useful
+ science, than half a dozen such pretenders to
+ philosophy as you have been able to extract from all
+ your books. When she honours you with a visit, it is on
+ foot. She walks all hours of the day, and leaves
+ indolence, and its concomitant maladies, to be endured
+ by her horses. In this see at once the preservative of
+ her health and personal charms.
+
+Nor does the Gout go off before he is with equal art made to say a
+flattering word about the Brillons.
+
+ You know [he declares], M. Brillon's gardens, and what
+ fine walks they contain; you know the handsome flight
+ of an hundred steps, which lead from the terrace above
+ to the lawn below. You have been in the practice of
+ visiting this amiable family twice a week, after
+ dinner, and it is a maxim of your own, that "a man may
+ take as much exercise in walking a mile, up and down
+ stairs, as in ten on level ground." What an opportunity
+ was here for you to have had exercise in both these
+ ways. Did you embrace it, and how often?
+
+Franklin is bound to admit that he cannot immediately answer the question,
+and the Gout answers it for him. "Not once," he says, and then goes on to
+chide Franklin with the fact that, during the summer, he is in the habit of
+going to M. Brillon's at six o'clock and contenting himself with the view
+from his terrace, tea and the chess-board, though the charming lady, with
+her lovely children and friends, are eager to walk with him, and entertain
+him with their agreeable conversation.
+
+A little more interchange of conversation and poor Franklin in despair
+asks, "What then would you have me do with my carriage?" and the Gout
+replies, "Burn it if you choose; you would at least get heat out of it once
+in this way." In the end, Franklin promises that, if his persecutor will
+only leave him, he will never more play at chess, but will take exercise
+daily, and live temperately--a promise the Gout tells him that, with a few
+months of good health, "will be forgotten like the forms of last year's
+clouds."
+
+"The Handsome and Deformed Leg" divides the world into two classes, the
+happy, who fix their eyes on the bright side of things and enjoy
+everything, and the unhappy, who fix their eyes on the dark side of things,
+and criticise everything; and thereby render themselves completely odious.
+An old philosophical friend of his, Franklin said, carefully avoided any
+intimacy with the latter class of people. He had, like other philosophers,
+a thermometer to show him the heat of the weather, and a barometer to mark
+when it was likely to prove good or bad; but, there being no instrument
+invented to discern at first sight whether a person had their unpleasant
+disposition, he, for that purpose, made use of his legs, one of which was
+remarkably handsome, and the other, by some accident, crooked and deformed.
+If a stranger, at the first interview, regarded his ugly leg more than his
+handsome one, he doubted him. If he spoke of it and took no notice of the
+handsome leg, that was sufficient to determine this philosopher to have no
+further acquaintance with him.
+
+ Everybody [concludes Franklin] has not this two-legged
+ Instrument, but every one with a little Attention, may
+ observe Signs of that carping, fault-finding
+ Disposition, & take the same Resolution of avoiding the
+ Acquaintance of those infected with it. I therefore
+ advise those critical, querulous, discontented, unhappy
+ People, that if they wish to be respected and belov'd
+ by others, & happy in themselves they should _leave off
+ looking at the ugly leg_.
+
+"The Economical Project" is a happy combination of humor and prudential
+instruction, and was written about the time when the Quinquet lamp was an
+object of general public curiosity. An inquiry having been started on one
+occasion in his presence, Franklin says, as to whether its brightness was
+not offset by its lavish consumption of oil, he went home, and to bed,
+three or four hours after midnight, with his head full of the subject. At
+about six in the morning, he was awakened by a noise, and was surprised to
+find his room full of light. At first, he imagined that he was surrounded
+by a number of Quinquet lamps, but, on rubbing his eyes, he perceived that
+the light came in at the windows, and, when he got up and looked out to see
+what caused it, he saw the sun just rising above the horizon. His servant
+had forgotten the preceding evening to close the shutters. Looking at his
+watch, and finding that it was but six o'clock, and still thinking it
+something extraordinary that the sun should rise so early, he consulted an
+almanac, and ascertained that it was just the hour for sunrise on that day,
+and, moreover, he learned from the almanac that the sun would rise still
+earlier every day till towards the end of June. His readers, he was sure,
+would be as much astonished as he was when they heard that the sun rises so
+early, and especially when he assured them that it gives light as soon as
+it rises. He was convinced of this. He was certain of his fact. One could
+not be more certain of any fact. On repeating his observation the three
+following mornings, he found always precisely the same result.
+
+Yet when he spoke of the matter it was to incredulous countenances. One
+auditor, a learned natural philosopher, assured him that he must certainly
+be mistaken as to the light coming into his room, for, it being well known
+that there could be no light abroad at that hour, it followed that none
+could enter from without, and that, of consequence, his open windows,
+instead of letting in the light, must have only served to let out the
+darkness. This philosopher, Franklin confessed, puzzled him a little, but
+subsequent observation confirmed him in his first opinion. On the strength
+of these facts, Franklin enters upon a series of elaborate calculations to
+demonstrate that, between the 20th of March and 20th of September, the
+Parisians, because of their habit of preferring candlelight in the evening
+to sunlight in the morning, had consumed sixty-four millions and fifty
+thousand pounds of candles, which, at an average price of thirty sols per
+pound, made ninety-six millions and seventy-five thousand livres tournois.
+An immense sum! that the City of Paris might save every year by the economy
+of using sunshine instead of candles; to say nothing of the period of the
+year during which the days are shorter. This computation is succeeded by a
+number of suggestions as to the different means by which such of the
+Parisians as did not amend their hours upon learning from this paper that
+it is daylight when the sun rises could be induced to reform their habits.
+
+For his discovery, Franklin further said that he demanded neither place,
+pension, exclusive privilege nor any other reward whatever. He was looking
+only to the honor of it. He would not deny, when he was assailed by little,
+envious minds, that the ancients knew that the sun rises at certain hours.
+They too possibly had almanacs, but it does not follow that they knew that
+it gives light as soon as it rises. That was what he claimed as his
+discovery. It was certainly unknown to the moderns, at least to the
+Parisians; which to prove he need use but one plain, simple argument. It
+was impossible that a people as well-instructed, judicious and prudent as
+any in the world, all professing to be lovers of economy, and subject to
+onerous taxation, should have lived so long by the smoky, unwholesome and
+enormously expensive light of candles, if they had really known that they
+might have as much pure light of the sun for nothing.
+
+_A Letter from China_ in which a sailor, who had passed some time in that
+country, is made to narrate in a simple, bald way what he saw and
+experienced while there, is worth reading, if only because of the evidence
+that it furnishes that almost every trifle from Franklin's pen has a
+certain literary quality. One sentence in the letter at any rate possesses
+the true Franklin flavor; that in which the wanderer states that in China
+stealing, robbing and housebreaking are punished severely, but that
+cheating is free there in everything, as cheating in horses is among
+gentlemen in England.
+
+Other humorous or satirical compositions from the hand of Franklin belong
+to the period between his return from the French mission and his death.
+
+His letter to the _Pennsylvania Gazette_ on the _Abuse of the Press_,
+deprecates in a familiar and jocular way the scurrilous license which
+marked the newspaper controversies of the time. After recalling insulting
+epithets heaped upon other public servants, he mentions that he, too, the
+unanimous choice as President of the Council and Assembly of Pennsylvania,
+had been denounced as "_An old Rogue_," who had given his assent to the
+Federal Constitution merely to avoid the refunding of money that he had
+purloined from the United States.
+
+ There is--indeed [the letter ends], a good deal of
+ manifest _Inconsistency_ in all this, and yet a
+ Stranger, seeing it in your own Prints, tho' he does
+ not believe it all, may probably believe enough of it
+ to conclude, that Pennsylvania is peopled by a Set of
+ the most unprincipled, wicked, rascally and quarrelsome
+ Scoundrels upon the Face of the Globe. I have
+ sometimes, indeed, suspected that those Papers are the
+ Manufacture of foreign Enemies among you, who write
+ with a view of disgracing your Country, and making you
+ appear contemptible and detestable all the World over;
+ but then I wonder at the Indiscretion of your Printers
+ in publishing such Writings! There is, however, one of
+ your _Inconsistencies_ that consoles me a little, which
+ is, that tho' _living_, you give one another the
+ characters of Devils; _dead_, you are all Angels! It is
+ delightful, when any of you die, to read what good
+ Husbands, good Fathers, good Friends, good Citizens,
+ and good Christians you were, concluding with a Scrap
+ of Poetry that places you, with certainty, every one in
+ Heaven. So that I think Pennsylvania a good country _to
+ dye in_, though a very bad one to _live in_.
+
+The _Comparison of the Conduct of the Ancient Jews and of the
+Anti-Federalists in the United States of America_ belongs to the same
+category as _Plain Truth_ rather than to the class of writings which
+Franklin termed "Bagatelles." The parallel, however, between the jealousy,
+worked upon by insidious men, pretending public good, but with nothing
+really in view except private interest, which led the Israelites to oppose
+the establishment of the New Constitution, after the flight from Egypt, and
+the hostility of the Anti-Federalists to the work of the Convention of
+1787, is pursued with such cleverness as to lift it out of the province of
+the ordinary newspaper essay. There is an unwonted strain of solemnity in
+its last sentences.
+
+ To conclude [Franklin declares], I beg I may not be
+ understood to infer, that our General Convention was
+ divinely inspired, when it form'd the new federal
+ Constitution, merely because that Constitution has been
+ unreasonably and vehemently opposed; yet I must own I
+ have so much Faith in the general Government of the
+ world by _Providence_, that I can hardly conceive a
+ Transaction of such momentous Importance to the Welfare
+ of Millions now existing, and to exist in the Posterity
+ of a great Nation, should be suffered to pass without
+ being in some degree influenc'd, guided, and governed
+ by that omnipotent, omnipresent and beneficent Ruler,
+ in whom all inferior Spirits live, and move, and have
+ their Being.
+
+Of the _Account of the Supremest Court of Judicature in Pennsylvania, viz.,
+the Court of the Press_, in which Franklin suggested that formal cognizance
+should be taken of the Cudgel as well as of the Liberty of the Press, we
+have already said enough.
+
+The pretended speech of Sidi Mehemet Ibrahim, a member of the Divan of
+Algiers against the Petition of the Erika or Purists, asking that Piracy
+and Slavery be abolished, was written by him on the eve of his death, and
+is one of his best satirical thrusts. It was a parody on a speech that had
+been lately delivered in Congress in defence of negro slavery by Mr.
+Jackson of Georgia, and its wit consists in the art with which it
+appositely urges in justification of the Algerian practice of plundering
+and enslaving Christians all the considerations urged by Jackson in his
+plea for African slavery. In his letter, conveying Sidi's speech to the
+_Federal Gazette_, Franklin states that it might be found in Martin's
+Account of the former's consulship, anno 1687, and we are told that this
+statement caused many persons to apply to bookstores and libraries for
+Martin's supposed work. Then, as now, there could be no better means for
+determining how matter-of-fact a person was than to test his sense of humor
+with one of Franklin's facetious cheats.
+
+The exact time at which the _Petition of the Left Hand to those who have
+the Superintendency of Education_ was written is unknown. Its _motif_ is
+not unlike that of the _Petition of the Letter Z_. It complains that from
+infancy the petitioner had been led to consider her sister as a being of
+more elevated rank. She had been suffered to grow up without the least
+instruction while nothing was spared in the education of the latter, who
+had had masters to teach her writing, drawing, music and other
+accomplishments. If by chance the Petitioner touched a pencil, a pen or a
+needle, she was bitterly rebuked, and more than once had been beaten for
+being awkward and wanting a graceful manner.
+
+ But conceive not Sirs [says the left hand further],
+ that my complaints are instigated merely by vanity. No;
+ my uneasiness is occasioned by an object much more
+ serious. It is the practice in our family, that the
+ whole business of providing for its subsistence falls
+ upon my sister and myself. If any indisposition should
+ attack my sister,--and I mention it in confidence upon
+ this occasion, that she is subject to the gout, the
+ rheumatism, and cramp, without making mention of other
+ accidents,--what would be the fate of our poor family?
+ Must not the regret of our parents be excessive, at
+ having placed so great a difference between sisters who
+ are so perfectly equal? Alas! we must perish from
+ distress; for it would not be in my power even to
+ scrawl a suppliant petition for relief, having been
+ obliged to employ the hand of another in transcribing
+ the request which I have now the honour to prefer to
+ you.
+
+One of the essays of Franklin is an essay which he termed a "bagatelle,"
+but which is of a different cast from most of his papers bearing that
+designation. This is the essay on the _Morals of Chess_. As a mere literary
+production, it possesses remarkable merit, but it is more valuable still
+for the singular union of wisdom and benevolence found in all of the
+writer's precepts relating to the conduct of life. It is only upon the
+contracted face of an ordinary chess-board that the sagacious reflections
+and salutary counsels of this paper are based, but many of them are quite
+extensive enough in their application to be suitable for the morals of the
+wider chess-board on which men and women themselves are the pawns, and the
+universal currents of human nature and human existence the players. By
+playing at chess, Franklin thought, we may learn foresight, circumspection,
+caution and hopefulness. When playing it, if the agreement is that the
+rules of the game shall be strictly observed, they should be strictly
+observed by both parties. If the agreement is that they shall not be
+strictly observed, one party should claim no indulgence for himself that he
+is not willing to grant to his adversary. No false move should ever be made
+by a player to extricate himself from a difficulty or to gain an advantage.
+There can be no pleasure in playing with a person once detected in such an
+unfair practice. If your adversary is long in playing, you should not hurry
+him, or express any uneasiness at his delay, nor sing, nor whistle, nor
+look at your watch, nor take up a book to read, nor tap with your feet on
+the floor, or with your fingers on the table, nor do anything that may
+disturb his attention. For all these things displease, and they do not show
+your skill in playing but your craftiness or your rudeness.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+You should not endeavor to amuse and deceive your adversary by pretending
+to have made bad moves in order to render him confident and careless and
+inattentive to your schemes. This is fraud and deceit, not skill. If you
+gain the victory, you should not give way to exultation or insult, nor show
+too much pleasure. On the contrary, you should endeavor to console your
+adversary, and soothe his wounded pride by every sort of civil expression
+that may be used with truth, such as, "You understand the game better than
+I, but you are a little inattentive," or "You play too fast," or "You had
+the best of the game, but something happened to divert your thoughts, and
+that turned it in my favour." If you are simply a spectator, you should
+observe the most perfect silence; for, if you give advice, you offend both
+parties, him, against whom you give it, because it may cause the loss of
+his game, him, in whose favour you give it, because though it be good, and
+he follows it, he loses the pleasure he might have had, if you had
+permitted him to think until it had occurred to himself.
+
+And thus this essay, so full of wholesome, kind advice from a counsellor,
+who loved men none the less because he knew all their failings and foibles
+as well as virtues, continues a little longer, until the reader, already
+won over to its perfect rectitude of sentiment and purpose, entirely
+forgets how obvious are all the truisms of its stating that he has so often
+offended. The measure of self-abnegation, suggested by the conclusion of
+the essay, is, we fear, rather too exacting for the tug of chess-board
+selfishness upon the weaker side of human nature. If it is agreed that the
+rules of the game are not to be rigorously enforced, then, says Franklin,
+moderate your desire of victory over your adversary, and be pleased with
+one over yourself. Do not snatch eagerly at every advantage offered by his
+unskilfulness or inattention, but point out to him kindly that by such a
+move he places or leaves a piece in danger and unsupported; or that by
+another he will put his king in a perilous situation &c. "By this generous
+civility (so opposite to the unfairness above forbidden) you may, indeed,
+happen to lose the game to your opponent," the close of the essay declares,
+"but you will win what is better, his esteem, his respect, and his
+affection, together with the silent approbation and goodwill of impartial
+spectators."
+
+We shall not linger upon the letters of Franklin. The substance of them has
+already been worked into this book too freely for that. It is sufficient to
+say that they are among the very best in the English language. It would be
+idle to compare them with those of Gray, Horace Walpole, Cowper, Byron or
+Fitzgerald, the acknowledged masters of that form of composition. Franklin
+was not a conscious man of letters at all, and is not to be judged by such
+academic standards. If he was, we might say that Cowper aerated with a
+little of Walpole most nearly, though, after all, but remotely, suggests a
+true conception of what Franklin was as a letter-writer. Few men were ever
+saner than Cowper was during his really lucid intervals; but then Cowper
+was not a man of business, a statesman or a philosopher, and the elixir of
+Walpole's gaiety differs from that of Franklin's as a stimulant of the
+wine-shop differs from fresh air and sunshine. The official and
+semi-official letters of Franklin contain some of the most solid and
+sagacious of his reflections and observations on political topics. His
+familiar letters to his kinsfolk and friends often run out into thoughts
+upon the management of our individual lives and our relations to the
+visible and invisible universe which are likely to be a part of the
+currency of human wisdom as long as human society lasts. And almost all of
+his known letters have value enough to make us feel, when still another of
+the thousands written by him happens to be reclaimed from loss, as Reuben
+in his parable might have felt, if he had recovered his precious axe.
+
+Among the cleverest of his letters was his familiar one to his daughter on
+the Order of the Cincinnati. If his advice had been asked, he said, he
+perhaps would not have objected to their wearing their ribbon and badge
+themselves, if they derived pleasure from such trivial things, but he
+certainly should have objected to the idea of making the honor hereditary.
+And this was the amusing and original way in which he presented his views
+on the subject:
+
+ For Honour, worthily obtain'd (as for Example that of
+ our Officers), is in its Nature a _personal_ Thing, and
+ incommunicable to any but those who had some Share in
+ obtaining it. Thus among the Chinese, the most ancient,
+ and from long Experience the wisest of Nations, honour
+ does not _descend_, but _ascends_. If a man from his
+ Learning, his Wisdom, or his Valour, is promoted by the
+ Emperor to the Rank of Mandarin, his Parents are
+ immediately entitled to all the same Ceremonies of
+ Respect from the People, that are establish'd as due to
+ the Mandarin himself; on the supposition that it must
+ have been owing to the Education, Instruction, and good
+ Example afforded him by his Parents, that he was
+ rendered capable of serving the Publick.
+
+ This _ascending_ Honour is therefore useful to the
+ State, as it encourages Parents to give their Children
+ a good and virtuous Education. But the _descending
+ Honour_, to Posterity who could have no Share in
+ obtaining it, is not only groundless and absurd, but
+ often hurtful to that Posterity, since it is apt to
+ make them proud, disdaining to be employ'd in useful
+ Arts, and thence falling into Poverty, and all the
+ Meannesses, Servility, and Wretchedness attending it;
+ which is the present case with much of what is called
+ the _Noblesse_ in Europe. Or if to keep up the Dignity
+ of the Family, Estates are entailed entire on the
+ Eldest male heir, another Pest to Industry and
+ Improvement of the Country is introduc'd, which will be
+ followed by all the odious mixture of pride and
+ Beggary, and idleness, that have half depopulated [and
+ _decultivated_] Spain; occasioning continual Extinction
+ of Families by the Discouragements of Marriage [and
+ neglect in the improvement of estates].
+
+ I wish, therefore, that the Cincinnati, if they must go
+ on with their Project, would direct the Badges of their
+ Order to be worn by their Parents, instead of handing
+ them down to their Children. It would be a good
+ Precedent, and might have good Effects. It would also
+ be a kind of Obedience to the Fourth Commandment, in
+ which God enjoins us to honour our Father and Mother,
+ but has nowhere directed us to honour our Children. And
+ certainly no mode of honouring those immediate Authors
+ of our Being can be more effectual, than that of doing
+ praiseworthy Actions, which reflect Honour on those who
+ gave us our Education; or more becoming, than that of
+ manifesting, by some public Expression or Token, that
+ it is to their Instruction and Example we ascribe the
+ Merit of those Actions.
+
+ But the Absurdity of _descending Honours_ is not a mere
+ Matter of philosophical Opinion; it is capable of
+ mathematical Demonstration. A Man's Son, for instance,
+ is but half of his Family, the other half belonging to
+ the Family of his Wife. His Son, too, marrying into
+ another Family, his Share in the Grandson is but a
+ fourth; in the Great Grandson, by the same Process, it
+ is but an Eighth; in the next Generation a Sixteenth;
+ the next a Thirty-second; the next a Sixty-fourth; the
+ next an Hundred and Twenty-eighth; the next a Two
+ hundred and Fifty-sixth; and the next a Five hundred
+ and twelfth; thus in nine Generations, which will not
+ require more than 300 years (no very great Antiquity
+ for a Family), our present Chevalier of the Order of
+ Cincinnatus's Share in the then existing Knight, will
+ be but a 512th part; which, allowing the present
+ certain Fidelity of American Wives to be insur'd down
+ through all those Nine Generations, is so small a
+ Consideration, that methinks no reasonable Man would
+ hazard for the sake of it the disagreeable
+ Consequences of the Jealousy, Envy, and Ill will of his
+ Countrymen.
+
+ Let us go back with our Calculation from this young
+ Noble, the 512th part of the present Knight, thro' his
+ nine Generations, till we return to the year of the
+ Institution. He must have had a Father and Mother, they
+ are two. Each of them had a Father and Mother, they are
+ four. Those of the next preceding Generation will be
+ eight, the next Sixteen, the next thirty-two, the next
+ sixty-four, the next one hundred and Twenty-eight, the
+ next Two hundred and fifty-six, and the ninth in this
+ Retrocession Five hundred and twelve, who must be now
+ existing, and all contribute their Proportion of this
+ future _Chevalier de Cincinnatus_. These, with the
+ rest, make together as follows:
+
+ 2
+ 4
+ 8
+ 16
+ 32
+ 64
+ 128
+ 256
+ 512
+ ----
+ 1022
+
+ One Thousand and Twenty-two Men and Women, contributors
+ to the formation of one Knight. And if we are to have a
+ Thousand of these future Knights, there must be now and
+ hereafter existing One Million and Twenty-two Thousand
+ Fathers and Mothers, who are to contribute to their
+ Production, unless a Part of the Number are employ'd in
+ making more Knights than One. Let us strike off then
+ the 22,000, on the Supposition of this double Employ,
+ and then consider whether, after a reasonable
+ Estimation of the Number of Rogues, and Fools, and
+ Royalists and Scoundrels and Prostitutes, that are
+ mix'd with, and help to make up necessarily their
+ Million of Predecessors, Posterity will have much
+ reason to boast of the noble Blood of the then existing
+ Set of Chevaliers de Cincinnatus. [The future
+ genealogists, too, of these Chevaliers, in proving the
+ lineal descent of their honour through so many
+ generations (even supposing honour capable in its
+ nature of descending), will only prove the small share
+ of this honour, which can be justly claimed by any one
+ of them; since the above simple process in arithmetic
+ makes it quite plain and clear that, in proportion as
+ the antiquity of the family shall augment, the right to
+ the honour of the ancestor will diminish; and a few
+ generations more would reduce it to something so small
+ as to be very near an absolute nullity.] I hope,
+ therefore, that the Order will drop this part of their
+ project, and content themselves, as the Knights of the
+ Garter, Bath, Thistle, St. Louis, and other Orders of
+ Europe do, with a Life Enjoyment of their little Badge
+ and Ribband, and let the Distinction die with those who
+ have merited it. This I imagine will give no offence.
+ For my own part, I shall think it a Convenience, when I
+ go into a Company where there may be Faces unknown to
+ me, if I discover, by this Badge, the Persons who merit
+ some particular Expression of my Respect; and it will
+ save modest Virtue the Trouble of calling for our
+ Regard, by awkward roundabout Intimations of having
+ been heretofore employ'd in the Continental Service.
+
+ The Gentleman, who made the Voyage to France to provide
+ the Ribands and Medals, has executed his Commission. To
+ me they seem tolerably done; but all such Things are
+ criticis'd. Some find Fault with the Latin, as wanting
+ classic Elegance and Correctness; and, since our Nine
+ Universities were not able to furnish better Latin, it
+ was pity, they say, that the Mottos had not been in
+ English. Others object to the Title, as not properly
+ assumable by any but Gen. Washington, [and a few
+ others] who serv'd without Pay. Others object to the
+ _Bald Eagle_ as looking too much like a _Dindon_, or
+ Turkey. For my own Part, I wish the Bald Eagle had not
+ been chosen as the Representative of our Country; he is
+ a Bird of bad moral Character; he does not get his
+ living honestly; you may have seen him perch'd on some
+ dead Tree, near the River where, too lazy to fish for
+ himself, he watches the Labour of the Fishing-Hawk;
+ and, when that diligent Bird has at length taken a
+ Fish, and is bearing it to his Nest for the support of
+ his Mate and young ones, the Bald Eagle pursues him,
+ and takes it from him. With all this Injustice he is
+ never in good Case; but, like those among Men who live
+ by Sharping and Robbing, he is generally poor, and
+ often very lousy. Besides, he is a rank Coward; the
+ little _King Bird_, not bigger than a Sparrow, attacks
+ him boldly and drives him out of the District. He is
+ therefore by no means a proper emblem for the brave and
+ honest Cincinnati of America, who have driven all the
+ _King-birds_ from our Country; though exactly fit for
+ that Order of Knights, which the French call
+ _Chevaliers d'Industrie_.
+
+ I am, on this account, not displeas'd that the Figure
+ is not known as a Bald Eagle, but looks more like a
+ Turk'y. For in Truth, the Turk'y is in comparison a
+ much more respectable Bird, and withal a true original
+ Native of America. Eagles have been found in all
+ Countries, but the Turk'y was peculiar to ours; the
+ first of the Species seen in Europe being brought to
+ France by the Jesuits from Canada, and serv'd up at the
+ Wedding Table of Charles the Ninth. He is, [though a
+ little vain and silly, it is true, but not the worse
+ emblem for that,] a Bird of Courage, and would not
+ hesitate to attack a Grenadier of the British Guards,
+ who should presume to invade his Farm Yard with a _red_
+ Coat on.
+
+Nor need we dwell longer either upon Franklin as a poet. Considered
+seriously as such, he was undoubtedly one of the kind, that, as Horace
+says, neither Gods nor men can endure. But he should not be seriously
+regarded as a poet at all. We should bring no severer judgment, to his
+couplets than was brought to them by the plowmen and frontiersmen, who kept
+_Poor Richard's Almanac_ suspended over their mantelpieces; and his
+anacreontics should be read, as they were sung, after the edge of criticism
+has been dulled by a bottle or so. It is only fair to Poor Richard,
+however, to say that no one had a poorer opinion of his gifts as a poet
+than himself. "I know as thee," he says in one of his prefaces, "that I am
+no _Poet born_: and it is a Trade I never learnt, nor indeed could learn.
+_If I make Verses, 'tis in Spight of Nature and my Stars, I write._" In
+another preface, after honoring his friend Taylor, of Ephemerides fame,
+with a considerable number of lines, he exclaims: "Souse down into Prose
+again, my Muse; for Poetry's no more thy Element, than Air is that of the
+Flying-Fish." And we need go no further than one of Franklin's lively
+letters to Polly, at which we have already glanced, to satisfy ourselves
+that he placed quite as low an estimate on his verses as Poor Richard did
+on his. Speaking of the Muse, which he mentioned in his letter as having
+visited him that morning, he observes in his light-hearted way:
+
+ This Muse appear'd to be no Housewife. I suppose few of
+ them are. She was _drest_ (if the Expression is
+ allowable) in an _Undress_, a kind of slatternly
+ _Negligee_, neither neat nor clean, nor well made; and
+ she has given the same sort of Dress to my Piece. On
+ reviewing it, I would have reform'd the lines and made
+ them all of a Length, as I am told Lines ought to be;
+ but I find I can't lengthen the short ones without
+ stretching them on the Rack, and I think it would be
+ equally cruel to cut off any Part of the long ones.
+ Besides the Superfluity of _these_ makes up for the
+ Deficiency of _those_; and so, from a Principle of
+ Justice, I leave them at full Length, that I may give
+ you, at least in one Sense of the Word, _good Measure_.
+
+Of all the productions of Franklin, the _Autobiography_ and _Poor Richard's
+Almanac_, are those upon which his literary fame will chiefly rest. Of the
+former, we have already said too much to say much more about it. It is the
+only thing written by Franklin that can properly be called a book, and even
+it is marked by the brevity which he regarded as one of the essentials of
+good writing. If he did not write other books, it was not, so far as we can
+see, because, as has been charged, he lacked constructive capacity, but
+rather because, when he resorted to the pen, he did it not for literary
+celebrity, but for practical purposes of the hour, best subserved by brief
+essays or papers. It is true that in writing the early chapters of the
+_Autobiography_, which brought his life down to the year 1730, he was not
+exactly writing for the moment, but, still, the motive by which he was
+actuated was a purely practical one. "They were written to my Son," he said
+in a letter to Matthew Carey, "and intended only as Information to my
+Family." Even in the later chapters, which brought his life down to his
+fiftieth year, he still had a similar incentive to literary effort, highly
+congenial with the general bent of his character, that is to say, the
+opportunity that they afforded him to point to his business success as an
+example of what might be accomplished by frugality and industry. "What is
+to follow," he wrote to the Duc de la Rochefoucauld, "will be of more
+important Transactions: But it seems to me that what is done will be of
+more general Use to young Readers; as exemplifying strongly the Effects of
+prudent and imprudent Conduct in the Commencement of a Life of Business."
+Two days later, he wrote to Benjamin Vaughan from Philadelphia that he was
+diligently employed in writing the _Autobiography_, to which his
+persuasions had not a little contributed.
+
+ To shorten the work [he said], as well as for other
+ reasons, I omit all facts and transactions, that may
+ not have a tendency to benefit the young reader, by
+ showing him from my example, and my success in emerging
+ from poverty, and acquiring some degree of wealth,
+ power, and reputation, the advantages of certain modes
+ of conduct which I observed, and of avoiding the errors
+ which were prejudicial to me.
+
+To the limited nature of the inducements to the composition of the
+_Autobiography_, disclosed by these letters, it was due that the interest
+of Franklin in the subsequent continuation of the work was too languid for
+the completion of the whole plan of the _Autobiography_, as intimated in
+the Hints which he gives of its intended scope, notwithstanding the urgent
+appeals which his friends never ceased to make to him to complete it.
+
+If one of the effects of the fearless self-arraignment of the
+_Autobiography_ has been to lower the standing of Franklin in some respects
+with posterity, we should remember the unselfish motive, which induced him
+to turn his youthful errors to the profit of others, and also the fact that
+he had his own misgivings about the bearing upon his reputation of such
+outspoken self-exposure, and submitted the propriety of publishing the
+_Autobiography_ unreservedly to the judgment of friends who were certainly
+competent judges in every regard of what the moral sense of their time
+would approve.
+
+ I am not without my Doubts concerning the Memoirs,
+ whether it would be proper to publish them, or not, at
+ least during my Life time [he wrote to the Duc de la
+ Rochefoucauld], and I am persuaded there are many
+ Things that would, in Case of Publication, be best
+ omitted; I therefore request it most earnestly of you,
+ my dear Friend, that you would examine them carefully &
+ critically, with M. Le Veillard, and give me your
+ candid & friendly Advice thereupon, as soon as you can
+ conveniently.
+
+Later, he wrote to Benjamin Vaughan from Philadelphia that he had, of late,
+been so interrupted by extreme pain, which obliged him to have recourse to
+opium, that, between the effects of both, he had but little time, in which
+he could write anything, but that his grandson was copying what was done,
+which would be sent to Vaughan for his opinion by the next vessel; for he
+found it a difficult task to speak decently and properly of one's own
+conduct, and felt the want of a judicious friend to encourage him in
+scratching out. The next time that Franklin wrote to Vaughan it was when
+opium alone could render existence tolerable to him, but in the interim, he
+had happily discovered that he could dictate even when he could not write.
+
+ What is already done [he said] I now send you, with an
+ earnest request that you and my good friend Dr. Price
+ [later in the letter he calls him "my dear Dr. Price"]
+ would be so good as to take the trouble of reading it,
+ critically examining it, and giving me your candid
+ opinion whether I had best publish or suppress it; and
+ if the first, then what parts had better be expunged or
+ altered. I shall rely upon your opinions, for I am now
+ grown so old and feeble in mind, as well as body, that
+ I can not place any confidence in my own judgment.
+
+Of the same tenor was a still later letter to M. Le Veillard, in which
+Franklin expressed the hope that Le Veillard would, with the Duc de la
+Rochefoucauld, read the Memoirs over carefully, examine them critically and
+send him his friendly, candid opinion of the parts that he would advise him
+to correct or expunge, in case he should think that the work was generally
+proper to be published, but, if he judged otherwise, that he would inform
+him of that fact, too, as soon as possible, and prevent him from incurring
+further trouble in the endeavor to finish the work. The world has reason to
+be thankful that the fate of the _Autobiography_ should thus have been left
+to the decision of men who, even if they had not lived in the eighteenth
+century, would have been robust enough, in point of intelligence and
+morals, to believe that the youthful _errata_ laid bare in that book were
+more than atoned for by the manly and generous aims that inspired it.
+
+Of the _Autobiography_ it is enough now to say that it is one of the few
+books which have arrested and permanently riveted the attention of the
+whole civilized world. Commenting in it on the copy of _Pilgrim's
+Progress_, "in Dutch, finely printed on good paper, with copper cuts,"
+which the drunken Dutchman, whom he drew up by the shock-pate from the
+waters of New York Bay, on his first journey to Philadelphia, handed to him
+to dry, Franklin says: "I have since found that it has been translated into
+most of the languages of Europe, and suppose it has been more generally
+read than any other book, except perhaps the Bible." The _Autobiography_ is
+hardly less popular. It, too, has been translated into most of the
+languages of Europe, and has been printed and reprinted until it is one of
+the most widely-read books in existence. Such it is likely to remain
+always, not simply because it was written by a very famous man, who
+possessed, to an extraordinary degree, the power of impressing his thoughts
+and fancies on the hearts and imagination of the human race, but because it
+tells a story of self-conquest and self-promotion full of warning, guidance
+and hope for every human being, who wishes to make the best of his own
+opportunities and powers. As a mere composition, dressed though it is like
+the poetic Muse described by Franklin in his letter to Polly "in a kind of
+slatternly Negligee," it is one of the masterpieces of literature. Its very
+careless loquacity is but suggestive of a mind overflowing with its own
+profusion of experience and reflection. There is no better test of the
+extent, to which a writer has proved himself equal to the highest
+possibilities of his art, than to ask how readily his conceptions can be
+pictured; for the mind of a great writer is but a gallery hung with such
+pictures as the painter reduces to material form and color. Tried by this
+test, the universal popularity of the _Autobiography_ can be readily
+understood. The Book of Genesis, the plays of Shakespeare, _Pilgrim's
+Progress_, the novels of Sir Walter Scott, are not more easily illustrated
+than are the incidents depicted to the life in its early chapters. Some of
+them wear a hard and coarse aspect as if they had been struck off from
+ruder plates than any belonging to the present state of the art of
+engraving, but this is only another proof of the fidelity of Franklin to
+his eighteenth century background. We might as well quarrel with the
+squalor and sluttishess of Hogarth's scenes.
+
+_Poor Richard's Almanac_, including the "Way to Wealth," or Father
+Abraham's Speech is Franklin's other master-work. One would hardly look to
+almanac-making for a classic contribution to letters, but it is not
+extravagant to say that Poor Richard is one of the most lifelike figures in
+the literature of the world. Nestor, Falstaff, Don Quixote, Robinson
+Crusoe, Sir Roger de Coverley, Captain Dugald Dalgetty and Colonel Newcome
+are not more distinctly delineated, or rather we should say are not more
+manifest to the eye and palpable to the touch. To the people of
+Pennsylvania, its tradesmen, its farmers, even its rude borderers, he was a
+personage fully as real as the colonial governor at Philadelphia, and far
+more popular. Thousands of its inhabitants never turned over the pages of
+any other book except those of the Bible. And finally the wise sayings of
+Poor Richard, in the form of the "Way to Wealth," applicable as they were
+to the primal and universal conditions of human existence everywhere,
+became known from the Thames to the Ganges. The middle of the eighteenth
+century was the heyday of almanac-making, and the best proof of the durable
+stuff, of which _Poor Richard's Almanac_ was woven, is the utter oblivion
+that has overtaken all his competitors except those who are preserved in
+his pages like flies in amber. The prefaces of _Poor Richard_, the
+proverbial maxims with which his almanacs are bestrewn, the compendious
+speech on which these maxims are finally strung like bright beads, have
+survived, because they were adapted, with consummate art, to the simple
+habits and mental wants of the rude audience, to which they were addressed.
+For upwards of thirty years, Poor Richard, with a distinctness and
+consistency of character as perfect as those of Santa Claus, made his
+annual bow to the People of Pennsylvania, and served up to their delighted
+palates his highly seasoned _ollapodrida_ of mock astrology, homely wisdom
+and coarse jollity in prose and verse. Sometimes the humor is mere horse
+laughter. But always the shrewd, worldly-wise, merry-tempered old philomath
+and stargazer hits the fancy of his readers with unerring accuracy between
+wind and water. His weather predictions and prognostications of planetary
+conjunctions are just serious enough for unlettered rustics whose minds
+have been partially but not wholly disabused of the belief that rain comes
+with the change of the moon. His proverbs are the proverbs of men whose
+lives are too meagre and straitened to permit them to forget his saying
+that if you will not hear Reason she'll surely rap your knuckles. His humor
+is the humor of men whose grave, weather-beaten features do not relax into
+a smile or grin except under the compelling influence of some broad joke or
+ridiculous spectacle. Just as the most successful inventor is the one who
+invents the device that has the widest application to material uses, so the
+most successful writer is the one who conceives the thoughts that have the
+widest application to the moral and intellectual needs of mankind. The
+thoughts that Poor Richard conceived or adopted are such thoughts; for what
+he taught was full of significance to every man who desires to obtain a
+correct insight into the moral and economic laws that govern the world for
+the purpose of winning its favor; which means all men except those who
+either prey on the world or merely drift along with its current.
+
+In the Prefaces to his _Almanac_, Poor Richard manages to keep both his
+wife Bridget and himself close to the footlights. In the first preface, he
+says that, if he were to declare that he wrote almanacs with no other view
+than of the public good, he should not be sincere.
+
+ The plain Truth of the Matter is [he confesses], I am
+ excessive poor, and my Wife, good Woman, is, I tell
+ her, excessive proud; she cannot bear, she says, to sit
+ spinning in her Shift of Tow, while I do nothing but
+ gaze at the Stars; and has threatned more than once to
+ burn all my Books and Rattling-Traps (as she calls my
+ Instruments) if I do not make some profitable Use of
+ them for the Good of my Family.
+
+In the preface of the succeeding year he announces that the patronage of
+his readers the year before had made his circumstances much easier. His
+wife had been enabled to get a pot of her own, and was no longer obliged to
+borrow one from a neighbor; nor had they ever since been without something
+of their own to put in it. She had also got a pair of shoes, two new
+shifts, and a new, warm petticoat, and for his part he had bought a
+second-hand coat, so good that he was no longer ashamed to go to town or be
+seen there. These things had rendered Bridget's temper so much more pacific
+than it used to be that he might say that he had slept more, and more
+quietly within the last year than in the three foregoing years put
+together.
+
+In a later preface, he declares that, if the generous purchaser of his
+labors could see how often his fi-pence helped to light up the comfortable
+fire, line the pot, fill the cup and make glad the heart of a poor man and
+an honest good old woman, he would not think his money ill laid out, though
+the almanac of his Friend and Servant, R. Saunders, were one half blank
+paper.
+
+A year later, Mistress Saunders avails herself of the fact that her good
+man had set out the week before for Potowmack to visit an old stargazer of
+his acquaintance, and to see about a little place for the couple to settle,
+and end their days on, to scratch out the preface to the copy of the
+almanac for that year which he had left behind him for the press, because
+it had undertaken to let the world know that she, who had already been held
+out in former prefaces as proud and loud and the possessor of a new
+petticoat, had lately, forsooth, taken a fancy to drink a little tea now
+and then. Upon looking over the months, she saw that he had put in
+abundance of foul weather this year, and therefore she had scattered here
+and there, where she could find room, some fair, pleasant sunshiny days for
+the good women to dry their clothes in. If what she promised did not come
+to pass, she would at any rate have shown her goodwill.
+
+In the next preface, referring to the impression that the great yearly
+demand for his almanac had made him so rich that he should call himself
+Poor Dick no longer, and pretending that he and the printer were different
+persons, Poor Richard says:
+
+ When I first begun to publish, the Printer made a fair
+ Agreement with me for my copies, by Virtue of which he
+ runs _away with_ the greatest Part of the
+ Profit--However much good may't do him; I do not grudge
+ it him; he is a Man I have a great Regard for, and I
+ wish his Profit ten times greater than it is. For I am,
+ dear Reader, his as well as thy
+
+_Affectionate Friend_,
+R. SAUNDERS.
+
+But the five pence came in too rapidly for the almanac-maker to persist in
+putting up a poor mouth of this kind. In his twelfth year, after frankly
+admitting that he had labored not for the benefit of the public but for the
+benefit of his own dear self, not forgetting in the meantime his gracious
+consort and Duchess, the peaceful, quiet, silent Lady Bridget, he states
+that, whether his labors had been of any service to the public or not, he
+must acknowledge that they had been of service to him.
+
+It was by such personal touches as these that Poor Richard made Bridget and
+himself as familiar to his patrons as the signs of the Zodiac. Astrology
+itself was, of course, too good a subject for keen ridicule to be spared.
+Formerly, Poor Richard declares in one preface, no prince would make war or
+peace, nor any general fight a battle without first consulting an
+astrologer, who examined the aspects and configurations of the heavenly
+bodies, and marked the lucky hour. But "now," he goes on, "the noble art
+(more shame to the age we live in) is dwindled into contempt; the Great
+neglect us, Empires make Leagues, and Parliaments Laws without advising
+with us; and scarce any other use is made of our learned labours than to
+find the best time of cutting corns or gelding Pigs."
+
+In many sly ways, Poor Richard let his readers know that his forecasts are
+not to be accepted too seriously. It is no wonder, he says in his fifth
+preface, that, among the multitude of astrological predictions, some few
+should fail; for, without any defect in the art itself, 'tis well known
+that a small error, a single wrong figure overseen in a calculation, may
+occasion great mistakes, but, however the almanac-makers might miss it in
+other things, he believed it would be generally allowed that they always
+hit the day of the month, and that, he supposed, was esteemed one of the
+most useful things in an almanac. In another issue of the almanac, he
+indulges in a great variety of confident predictions as to the year 1739.
+The crabs will go sidelong and the rope-makers backwards, the belly will
+wag before, and another part of the body, which we shall not name, but he
+does, will sit down first, Mercury will so confound the speech of people
+that, when a Pennsylvanian will wish to say panther, he will say _painter_,
+and, when a New Yorker will attempt to say _this_, he will say _diss_, and
+the people of New England and Cape May will not be able to say _cow_ for
+their lives, but will be forced to say _keow_ by a certain involuntary
+twist in the root of their tongues. As for Connecticut men and Marylanders,
+they will not be able to open their mouths but _sir_ shall be the first or
+last syllable they will pronounce, and sometimes both.
+
+Some of his other predictions are that the stone blind will see but very
+little, the deaf will hear but poorly and the dumb will not speak very
+plain, while whole flocks, herds and droves of sheep, swine and oxen, cocks
+and hens, ducks and drakes, geese and ganders will go to pot, but the
+mortality will not be altogether so great among cats, dogs and horses. As
+for age, it will be incurable because of the years past, and, towards the
+fall, some people will be seized with an unaccountable inclination to eat
+their own ears. But the worst disease of all will be a certain most horrid,
+dreadful, malignant, catching, perverse and odious malady, almost
+epidemical, insomuch that many will run mad upon it. "I quake for very
+Fear," exclaims Poor Richard, "when I think on't; for I assure you very few
+will escape this Disease, which is called by the learned Albumazar
+_Lacko'mony_."
+
+That the orange trees in Greenland will go near to fare the worse for the
+cold, that oats will be a great help to horses and that there will not be
+much more bacon than swine, are still other prophecies hazarded by the
+astrologer.
+
+In another preface, he declares that he has gone into retirement, and that
+it is time for an old man such as he is to think of preparing for his Great
+Remove. Then follow these impatient statements:
+
+ The perpetual Teasing of both Neighbours and Strangers,
+ to calculate Nativities, give Judgments on Schemes,
+ erect Figures, discover Thieves, detect Horse-Stealers,
+ describe the Route of Run-a-ways and stray'd Cattle;
+ the Croud of Visitors with a 1000 trifling Questions;
+ _will my Ship return Safe?_ _Will my Mare win the
+ Race?_ _Will her next Colt be a Pacer?_ _When will my
+ Wife die?_ _Who shall be my Husband, and HOW LONG
+ first?_ _When is the best time to cut Hair, trim Locks
+ or sow Sallad?_ These and the like Impertinences I have
+ now neither Taste nor Leisure for. I have had enough of
+ 'em. All that these angry Folks can say, will never
+ provoke me to tell them where I live. I would eat my
+ Nails first.
+
+At times the horse laughter is even slightly flavored with the
+stercoraceous smell of the stable.
+
+ Ignorant Men [says Poor Richard in his seventh preface]
+ wonder how we Astrologers foretell the Weather so
+ exactly, unless we deal with the old black Devil. Alas!
+ 'tis as easy as.... For Instance; the Stargazer peeps
+ at the heavens thro' a long Glass: He sees perhaps
+ TAURUS, or the Great Bull, in a mighty Chafe, stamping
+ on the Floor of his House, swinging his Tail about,
+ stretching out his Neck, and opening wide his Mouth.
+ 'Tis natural from these Appearances to judge that this
+ furious Bull is puffing, blowing and roaring. Distance
+ being consider'd and Time allow'd for all this to come
+ down, there you have Wind and Thunder. He spies perhaps
+ VIRGO (or the Virgin;) she turns her Head round as it
+ were to see if anybody observ'd her; then crouching
+ down gently, with her Hands on her Knees, she looks
+ wistfully for a while right forward. He judges rightly
+ what she's about: And having calculated the Distance
+ and allow'd Time for its Falling, finds that next
+ Spring we shall have a fine _April_ shower.
+
+In his preface for 1754, Poor Richard advances the proposition that the
+first astrologers were honest husbandmen, and he proceeds to prove it
+partly by the names of the Zodiacal signs, which were related for the most
+part, he asserts, to rural affairs. The Ram, the Bull, the Twins, the Crab,
+the Lion, the Wench, the Balance, the Scorpion, the Archer, the Goat, the
+Waterbearer, the Fish, one by one he tells them off in the course of his
+demonstration, making his own comments on their several meanings as he goes
+along. The Lion and the Wench, he says, were intended by the Ancients to
+mark the summer months and dog days when those creatures were most
+mischievous. The Balance, one of the autumnal signs, was intended by them
+to mark out the time for weighing and selling the summer's produce, or for
+holding courts of justice in which they might plague themselves and their
+neighbors. The Scorpion, with the sting in his tail, certainly denoted the
+paying of costs. The Goat accompanies the short days and long nights of
+winter, to show the season of mirth, feasting and jollity; for what could
+Capricorn mean but dancing or cutting of capers? Lastly came Pisces, or the
+two Shads, to signify the approaching return of those fish up the rivers.
+"Make your Wears, hawl your Seins, Catch 'em and pickle 'em, my Friends,"
+advised Poor Richard "they are excellent Relishars of Old Cyder."
+
+But Poor Richard's prefaces are not altogether made up of hearty, hilarious
+jests and loud guffaws. The raillery, with which he plies his rival
+philomath, Titan Leeds, would be as admirable as any humor in his writings,
+if it were not borrowed so manifestly from Dean Swift's ridicule of
+Partridge, the almanac-maker. In his very first preface in 1733, he says
+that he would have published an almanac many years before had he not been
+restrained by his regard for his good friend and fellow-student, Mr. Titan
+Leeds, whose interest he was extremely unwilling to hurt.
+
+ But this Obstacle (I am far from speaking it with
+ Pleasure) [declares Poor Richard] is soon to be removed,
+ since inexorable Death, who was never known to respect
+ Merit, has already prepared the mortal Dart, the fatal
+ Sister has already extended her destroying Shears, and
+ that ingenious Man must soon be taken from us. He dies,
+ by my Calculation made at his Request, on Oct. 17, 1733.
+ 3 h. 29 m. P.M. at the very instant of the conjunction
+ of Sun and Mercury. By his own Calculation he will
+ survive till the 26th of the same Month. This small
+ Difference between us we have disputed whenever we have
+ met these 9 Years past; but at length he is inclinable
+ to agree with my Judgment: Which of us is most exact, a
+ little Time will now determine. As therefore these
+ Provinces may not longer expect to see any of his
+ Performances after this Year, I think myself free to
+ take up the Task, and request a share of the publick
+ Encouragement.
+
+To these assertions Leeds returned a hot answer in his American Almanac for
+the succeeding year. Notwithstanding the false prediction of the writer,
+who proposed to succeed him in the writing of almanacs, he had, he said, by
+the mercy of God lived to write a diary for the year 1734 and to publish
+the folly and ignorance of the presumptuous author, whom he did not
+scruple, in the rising tide of his wrath, to term "a Fool and a Lyar" and
+"a conceited Scribler." This, of course, was just what Poor Richard was
+calculating on. In his next preface, he is at his very best.
+
+ In the Preface to my last Almanack [he says], I
+ foretold the Death of my dear old Friend and
+ Fellow-Student, the learned and ingenious Mr. _Titan
+ Leeds_, which was to be on the 17th of _October_, 1733,
+ 3 h. 29 m. P.M. at the very Instant of the conjunction of Sun and
+ Mercury. By his own Calculation he was to survive
+ till the 26th of the same Month, and expire in the Time
+ of the Eclipse, near 11 o'clock A.M. At which of these
+ Times he died, or whether he be really yet dead, I can
+ not at this present Writing positively assure my
+ Readers; forasmuch as a Disorder in my own Family
+ demanded my Presence, and would not permit me as I had
+ intended, to be with him in his last Moments, to
+ receive his last Embrace, to close his Eyes, and do the
+ Duty of a Friend in performing the last Offices to the
+ Departed. Therefore it is that I can not positively
+ affirm whether he be dead or not; for the Stars only
+ show to the Skilful, what will happen in the natural
+ and universal Chain of Causes and Effects; but 'tis
+ well known, that the Events which would otherwise
+ certainly happen at certain Times in the Course of
+ Nature are sometimes set aside or postpon'd for wise
+ and good Reasons by the immediate particular
+ Dispositions of Providence; which particular
+ Dispositions the Stars can by no Means discover or
+ foreshow. There is however (and I can not speak it
+ without Sorrow) there is the strongest Probability that
+ my dear Friend is no more; for there appears in his
+ Name, as I am assured, an Almanack for the year 1734,
+ in which I am treated in a very gross and unhandsome
+ Manner; in which I am called _a false Predicter_, _an
+ Ignorant_, _a conceited Scribler_, _a Fool_, _and a
+ Lyar_. Mr. Leeds was too well bred to use any Man so
+ indecently and so scurrilously, and moreover his Esteem
+ and Affection for me was extraordinary: So that it is
+ to be feared that Pamphlet may be only a Contrivance of
+ somebody or other, who hopes perhaps to sell two or
+ three Years Almanacks still, by the sole Force and
+ Virtue of Mr. _Leed's_ Name; but certainly, to put
+ Words into the Mouth of a Gentleman and a Man of
+ Letters, against his Friend, which the meanest and
+ most scandalous of the People might be asham'd to utter
+ even in a drunken Quarrel, is an unpardonable Injury to
+ his Memory, and an Imposition upon the Publick.
+
+ Mr. _Leeds_ was not only profoundly skilful in the
+ useful Science he profess'd, but he was a Man of
+ _exemplary_ Sobriety, a most _sincere Friend_, and an
+ _exact Performer of his Word_. These valuable
+ Qualifications, with many others so much endear'd him
+ to me, that although it should be so, that, contrary to
+ all Probability, contrary to my Prediction and his own,
+ he might possibly be yet alive, yet my Loss of Honour
+ as a Prognosticator, can not afford me so much
+ Mortification, as his Life, Health and Safety would
+ give me Joy and Satisfaction.
+
+By these observations, the burden was again imposed upon Titan Leeds of
+demonstrating that he was still alive, and accordingly in his next preface
+his indignant shade did not fail to take notice of them.
+
+But, with the succeeding revolution of the earth about the sun, Poor
+Richard was at his sport again.
+
+ Whatever may be the Musick of the Spheres [he said],
+ how great soever the Harmony of the Stars, 'tis certain
+ there is no Harmony among the Stargazers; but they are
+ perpetually growling and snarling at one another like
+ strange Curs, or like some Men at their Wives: I had
+ resolved to keep the Peace on my own part, and affront
+ none of them; and I shall persist in that Resolution:
+ But having receiv'd much Abuse from _Titan Leeds_
+ deceas'd (_Titan Leeds_ when living would not have us'd
+ me so!) I say, having receiv'd much Abuse from the
+ Ghost of _Titan Leeds_, who pretends to be still
+ living, and to write Almanacks in Spight of me and my
+ Predictions, I can not help saying, that tho' I take it
+ patiently, I take it very unkindly. And whatever he may
+ pretend, 'tis undoubtedly true that he is really
+ defunct and dead. First because the Stars are seldom
+ disappointed, never but in the Case of wise Men,
+ _sapiens dominabitur astris_, and they foreshow'd his
+ Death at the Time I predicted it. Secondly, 'Twas
+ requisite and necessary he should die punctually at
+ that Time, for the Honour of Astrology, the Art
+ professed both by him and his Father before him.
+ Thirdly, 'Tis plain to every one that reads his two
+ last Almanacks (for 1734 and 35) that they are not
+ written with that _Life_ his Performances use to be
+ written with; the Wit is low and flat, the little Hints
+ dull and spiritless, nothing smart in them but
+ _Hudibras's Verses_ against Astrology at the Heads of
+ the Months in the last, which no Astrologer but a _dead
+ one_ would have inserted, and no man _living_ would or
+ could write such Stuff as the rest.
+
+In a later preface, Poor Richard complains that certain ill-willers of his,
+despited at the great reputation that he had gained by exactly predicting
+another man's death, had endeavored to deprive him of it all at once in the
+most effective manner by reporting that he himself was never alive. It was
+not civil treatment, he said, to endeavor to deprive him of his very being,
+and to reduce him to a non-entity in the opinion of the public; but, so
+long as he knew himself to walk about, eat, drink and sleep, he was
+satisfied that there was really such a man as he was, whatever they might
+say to the contrary. As his printer seemed as unwilling to father his
+offspring as he was to lose the credit of them, to clear him entirely as
+well as to vindicate his own honor he made this public and serious
+declaration, which he desired might be believed, to wit, that what he had
+written theretofore and did now write neither had been nor was written by
+any other man or men, person or persons whatsoever. Those who were not
+satisfied with this must needs be very unreasonable.
+
+To cap the climax of all this fun, Poor Richard finally published, in one
+of his prefaces, a letter, alleged by him to have been written to him by
+Titan Leeds from the other world, which stated that the writer was grieved
+at the aspersions cast on Poor Richard by avaricious publishers of
+almanacs, who envied his success, and pretended that the writer remained
+alive many years after the hour predicted for his death by Poor Richard,
+and certified that he, Titan Leeds, did die presently at that hour with a
+variation only of 5 m. 53 sec.; which must be allowed to be no great matter
+in such cases. Nay more, in this letter Titan Leeds was made to predict
+that another Pennsylvania philomath and competitor of Poor Richard, one
+John Jerman would be openly reconciled to the Church of Rome, and give all
+his goods and chattels to the Chapel, being perverted by a certain country
+schoolmaster.
+
+In a former year, Poor Richard had already charged Jerman with making such
+flexible prophecies as "Snow here or in New England," "Rain here or in
+South Carolina," "Cold to the Northward," "Warm to the Southward." If he
+were to adopt that method, he said, he would not be so likely to have his
+mistakes detected, but he did not consider that it would be of any service
+to anybody to know what weather it was 1000 miles off, and therefore he
+always set down positively what weather his reader would have, be he where
+he might be at the time. All he modestly desired was only the favorable
+allowance of a day or two before and a day or two after the precise day
+against which the weather was set.
+
+On another previous occasion, Poor Richard had made his readers a promise
+about Jerman which he does not seem to have ever redeemed. "When my Brother
+J-m-n," he said, "erected a Scheme to know which was best for his sick
+Horse, to sup a new-laid Egg, or a little Broth, he found that the Stars
+plainly gave their Verdict for Broth, and the Horse having sup'd his
+Broth;--Now, what do you think became of that Horse? You shall know in my
+next."
+
+When the prediction of Titan Leeds from beyond the grave that Jerman would
+apostatize was duly published, the latter resented it; and, in his Almanac
+for the year 1742, Poor Richard felt it necessary to say a word about the
+matter himself.
+
+ My last Adversary [he declared] is J. J--n, Philomat.,
+ who _declares and protests_ (in his preface, 1741) that
+ the _false Prophecy put in my Almanack, concerning him,
+ the Year before, is altogether_ false and untrue: _and
+ that I am one of Baal's false Prophets_. This _false,
+ false Prophecy_ he speaks of, related to his
+ Reconciliation with the Church of Rome; which,
+ notwithstanding his Declaring and Protesting, is, I
+ fear, too true. Two Things in his elegiac Verses
+ confirm me in this Suspicion. He calls the first of
+ _November_ by the name of _All Hallows Day_. Reader;
+ does not this smell of Popery? Does it in the least
+ savour of the pure Language of Friends? But the
+ plainest Thing is; his Adoration of Saints, which he
+ confesses to be his Practice, in these Words, page 4.
+
+ "When any Trouble did me befal,
+ To my dear _Mary_ then I would call."
+
+ Did he think the whole World were so stupid as not to
+ take Notice of this? So ignorant as not to know, that
+ all Catholicks pay the highest Regard to the _Virgin
+ Mary_? Ah! Friend _John_, we must allow you to be a
+ _Poet_, but you are certainly no Protestant. I could
+ heartily wish your Religion were as good as your
+ Verses.
+
+Mingled with the other contents of _Poor Richard's Almanac_ were pointed
+maxims and sayings worthy of Lord John Russell's happy definition of a
+proverb "the wit of one and the wisdom of many," and at times first- or
+second-hand verses also.
+
+Among the best of the latter are the following:
+
+ When Robin now three days had married been,
+ And all his friends and neighbours gave him joy,
+ This question of his wife he asked then,
+ Why till her marriage day she proved so coy?
+ Indeed said he, 'twas well thou didst not yield,
+ For doubtless then my purpose was to leave thee:
+ O, sir, I once before was so beguil'd,
+ And was resolved the next should not deceive me.
+
+
+Poetry for December, 1734
+
+By Mrs. Bridget Saunders, my Dutchess in answer to the December verses of
+last year.
+
+ He that for the sake of drink neglects his trade,
+ And spends each night in taverns till 'tis late,
+ And rises when the sun is four hours high,
+ And ne'er regards his starving family,
+ God in his mercy may do much to save him
+ But, woe to the poor wife, whose lot is to have him.
+
+ * * * *
+
+ Time eateth all things, could old poets say.
+ But times are chang'd, our times _drink_ all away
+
+ * * * *
+
+ Old Batchelor would have a wife that's wise,
+ Fair, rich and young a maiden for his bed;
+ Not proud, nor churlish, but of faultless size
+ A country housewife in the city bred.
+ He's a nice fool and long in vain hath staid;
+ He should bespeak her, there's none ready made.
+
+And this is Poor Richard's version of how Cupid and Campaspe played for
+kisses:
+
+ My love and I for kisses play'd,
+ She would keep stakes, I was content,
+ But when I won, she would be paid,
+ This made me ask her what she meant:
+ Quoth she, since you are in the wrangling vein
+ Here take your kisses, give me mine again.
+
+The first preface to _Poor Richard's Almanac_ appeared in the issue for
+1733. In 1758, the proverbs and sayings, scattered through the preceding
+issues of the publication, were assembled in the _Way to Wealth_ or _Father
+Abraham's Speech_. Even John Bach McMaster in his brief, though admirable,
+work on Franklin as a man of letters found that he could not abridge this
+renowned production; so we offer no apology for inserting it here in its
+entirety:
+
+ COURTEOUS READER
+
+ I have heard that nothing gives an Author so great
+ Pleasure, as to find his Works respectfully quoted by
+ other learned Authors. This Pleasure I have seldom
+ enjoyed; for tho' I have been, if I may say it without
+ Vanity, an _eminent Author_ of Almanacks annually now a
+ full Quarter of a Century, my Brother Authors in the
+ same Way, for what Reason I know not, have ever been
+ very sparing in their Applauses, and no other Author
+ has taken the least Notice of me, so that did not my
+ Writings produce me some solid _Pudding_, the great
+ Deficiency of _Praise_ would have quite discouraged me.
+
+ I concluded at length, that the People were the best
+ Judges of my Merit; for they buy my Works; and besides,
+ in my Rambles, where I am not personally known, I have
+ frequently heard one or other of my Adages repeated,
+ with, _as Poor Richard says_, at the End on 't; this
+ gave me some Satisfaction, as it showed not only that
+ my Instructions were regarded, but discovered likewise
+ some Respect for my Authority; and I own, that to
+ encourage the Practice of remembering and repeating
+ those wise Sentences, I have sometimes _quoted myself_
+ with great Gravity.
+
+ Judge, then how much I must have been gratified by an
+ Incident I am going to relate to you. I stopt my Horse
+ lately where a great Number of People were collected at
+ a Vendue of Merchant Goods. The Hour of Sale not being
+ come, they were conversing on the Badness of the Times
+ and one of the Company call'd to a plain clean old Man,
+ with white Locks, "Pray, Father Abraham, what think you
+ of the Times? Won't these heavy Taxes quite ruin the
+ Country? How shall we be ever able to pay them? What
+ would you advise us to?" Father _Abraham_ stood up, and
+ reply'd, "If you'd have my Advice, I'll give it you in
+ short, for _A Word to the Wise is enough_, and _many
+ Words won't fill a Bushel_, as _Poor Richard_ says."
+ They join'd in desiring him to speak his Mind, and
+ gathering round him, he proceeded as follows;
+
+ "Friends," says he, "and Neighbours, the Taxes are
+ indeed very heavy, and if those laid on by the
+ Government were the only Ones we had to pay, we might
+ more easily discharge them; but we have many others,
+ and much more grievous to some of us. We are taxed
+ twice as much by our _Idleness_, three times as much by
+ our Pride, and four times as much by our _Folly_; and
+ from these Taxes the Commissioners cannot ease or
+ deliver us by allowing an Abatement. However let us
+ hearken to good Advice, and something may be done for
+ us; _God helps them that help themselves_, as _Poor
+ Richard_ says, in his Almanack of 1733.
+
+ "It would be thought a hard Government that should tax
+ its People one-tenth Part of their _Time_, to be
+ employed in its Service. But _Idleness_ taxes many of
+ us much more, if we reckon all that is spent in
+ absolute _Sloth_, or doing of nothing, with that which
+ is spent in idle Employments or Amusements, that amount
+ to nothing. _Sloth_, by bringing on Diseases,
+ absolutely shortens Life. _Sloth, like Rust, consumes
+ faster than Labour wears; while the used Key is always
+ bright_ as _Poor Richard_ says. _But dost thou love
+ Life, then do not squander Time, for that's the stuff
+ Life is made of_, as _Poor Richard_ says. How much more
+ than is necessary do we spend in sleep, forgetting that
+ _The sleeping Fox catches no Poultry_, and that _There
+ will be sleeping enough in the Grave_, as _Poor
+ Richard_ says.
+
+ "_If Time be of all Things the most precious, wasting
+ Time must be_, as _Poor Richard_ says, _the greatest
+ Prodigality_; since, as he elsewhere tells us, _Lost
+ Time is never found again; and what we call Time
+ enough, always proves little enough_: Let us then be up
+ and doing, and doing to the Purpose; so by Diligence
+ shall we do more with less Perplexity. _Sloth makes all
+ Things difficult, but Industry all easy_, as _Poor
+ Richard_ says; and _He that riseth late must trot all
+ Day, and shall scarce overtake his Business at Night_;
+ while _Laziness travels so slowly, that Poverty soon
+ overtakes him_, as we read in _Poor Richard_, who adds,
+ _Drive thy Business, let not that drive thee_; and
+ _Early to Bed, and early to rise, makes a Man healthy,
+ wealthy, and wise_.
+
+ "So what signifies _wishing_ and _hoping_ for better
+ Times. We may make these Times better, if we bestir
+ ourselves. _Industry need not wish_, as _Poor Richard_
+ says, _and he that lives upon Hope will die fasting_.
+ _There are no Gains without Pains; then Help Hands, for
+ I have no Lands_, or if I have, they are smartly taxed.
+ And, as _Poor Richard_ likewise observes, _He that hath
+ a Trade hath an Estate; and he that hath a Calling,
+ hath an Office of Profit_ and Honour; but then the
+ _Trade_ must be worked at, and the _Calling_ well
+ followed, or neither the _Estate_ nor the _Office_ will
+ enable us to pay our Taxes. If we are industrious, we
+ shall never starve; for, as _Poor Richard_ says, _At
+ the working Man's House Hunger looks in, but dares not
+ enter_. Nor will the Bailiff or the Constable enter,
+ for _Industry pays Debts, while Despair encreaseth
+ them_, says _Poor Richard_. What though you have found
+ no Treasure, nor has any rich Relation left you a
+ Legacy, _Diligence is the Mother of Goodluck_ as _Poor
+ Richard_ says _and God gives all Things to Industry_.
+ _Then plough deep, while Sluggards sleep, and you shall
+ have Corn to sell and to keep_, says _Poor Dick_. Work
+ while it is called To-day, for you know not how much
+ you may be hindered To-morrow, which makes _Poor
+ Richard_ say, _One to-day is worth two To-morrows_, and
+ farther, _Have you somewhat to do To-morrow, do it
+ To-day_. If you were a Servant, would you not be
+ ashamed that a good Master should catch you idle? Are
+ you then your own Master, _be ashamed to catch yourself
+ idle_, as _Poor Dick_ says. When there is so much to be
+ done for yourself, your Family, your Country, and your
+ gracious King, be up by Peep of Day; _Let not the Sun
+ look down and say, Inglorious here he lies_. Handle
+ your Tools without Mittens; remember that _The Cat in
+ Gloves catches no Mice_, as _Poor Richard_ says. 'Tis
+ true there is much to be done, and perhaps you are
+ weak-handed, but stick to it steadily; and you will see
+ great Effects, for _Constant Dropping wears away
+ Stones_, and by _Diligence and Patience the Mouse ate
+ in two the Cable_; and _Little Strokes fell great
+ Oaks_, as _Poor Richard_ says in his Almanack, the Year
+ I cannot just now remember.
+
+ "Methinks I hear some of you say, _Must a Man afford
+ himself no Leisure?_ I will tell thee, my friend, what
+ _Poor Richard_ says, _Employ thy Time well, if thou
+ meanest to gain Leisure; and, since thou are not sure
+ of a Minute, throw not away an Hour_. Leisure is Time
+ for doing something useful; this Leisure the diligent
+ Man will obtain, but the lazy Man never; so that, as
+ _Poor Richard_ says _A Life of Leisure and a Life of
+ Laziness are two Things_. Do you imagine that Sloth
+ will afford you more Comfort than Labour? No, for as
+ _Poor Richard_ says, _Trouble springs from Idleness,
+ and grievous Toil from needless Ease. Many without
+ Labour, would live by their Wits only, but they break
+ for want of Stock._ Whereas Industry gives Comfort, and
+ Plenty, and Respect: _Fly Pleasures, and they'll follow
+ you_. _The diligent Spinner has a large Shift; and now
+ I have a Sheep and a Cow, everybody bids me good
+ Morrow_; all which is well said by _Poor Richard_.
+
+ "But with our Industry, we must likewise be _steady_,
+ _settled_, and _careful_, and oversee our own Affairs
+ _with our own Eyes_, and not trust too much to others;
+ for, as _Poor Richard_ says
+
+ _I never saw an oft-removed Tree,
+ Nor yet an oft-removed Family,
+ That throve so well as those that settled be._
+
+ And again, _Three Removes is as bad as a Fire_; and
+ again, _Keep thy Shop, and thy Shop will keep thee_;
+ and again, _If you would have your Business done, go;
+ if not, send_, and again,
+
+ _He that by the Plough would thrive,
+ Himself must either hold or drive._
+
+ And again, _The Eye of a Master will do more Work than
+ both his Hands_; and again, _Want of Care does us more
+ Damage than Want of Knowledge_; and again, _Not to
+ oversee Workmen, is to leave them your Purse open_.
+ Trusting too much to others' Care is the Ruin of many;
+ for, as the Almanack says, _In the Affairs of this
+ World, Men are saved, not by Faith, but by the Want of
+ it_; but a Man's own Care is profitable; for, saith
+ _Poor Dick_, _Learning is to the Studious_, and _Riches
+ to the Careful_, as well as _Power to the Bold, and
+ Heaven to the Virtuous_, And farther, _If you would
+ have a faithful Servant, and one that you like, serve
+ yourself_. And again, he adviseth to Circumspection and
+ Care, even in the smallest Matters, because sometimes
+ _A little Neglect may breed great Mischief_; adding,
+ _for want of a Nail the Shoe was lost; for want of a
+ Shoe the Horse was lost; and for want of a Horse the
+ Rider was lost, being overtaken and slain by the Enemy;
+ all for want of Care about a Horse-shoe Nail_.
+
+ "So much for Industry, my Friends, and Attention to
+ one's own Business; but to these we must add
+ _Frugality_, if we would make our _Industry_ more
+ certainly successful. A Man may, if he knows not how to
+ save as he gets, _keep his Nose all his Life to the
+ Grindstone_, and die not worth a Groat at last. A _fat
+ Kitchen makes a lean Will_, as _Poor Richard_ says; and
+
+ _Many Estates are spent in the Getting,_
+ _Since Women for Tea forsook Spinning and Knitting,_
+ _And Men for Punch forsook Hewing and Splitting._
+
+ _If you would be wealthy_, says he, in another
+ Almanack, _think of Saving as well as of Getting: The
+ Indies have not made Spain rich, because her Outgoes
+ are greater than her Incomes_.
+
+ "Away then with your expensive Follies, and you will
+ not then have so much Cause to complain of hard Times,
+ heavy Taxes, and chargeable Families; for, as _Poor
+ Dick_ says,
+
+ Women and Wine, Game and Deceit,
+ Make the Wealth small and the Wants great.
+
+ And farther, _What maintains one Vice, would bring up
+ two Children_. You may think perhaps, that a _little_
+ Tea, or a _little_ Punch now and then, Diet a _little_
+ more costly, Clothes, a _little_ finer, and a _little_
+ Entertainment now and then, can be no _great_ Matter;
+ but remember what _Poor Richard_ says, _Many a Little
+ makes a Mickle_; and farther, _Beware of little
+ Expences; A small Leak will sink a great Ship_; and
+ again, _Who Dainties love, shall Beggars prove_; and
+ moreover, _Fools make Feasts, and wise Men eat them_.
+
+ "Here you are all got together at this Vendue of
+ _Fineries_ and _Knicknacks_. You call them _Goods_; but
+ if you do not take Care, they will prove _Evils_ to
+ some of you. You expect they will be sold _Cheap_, and
+ perhaps they may for less than they cost; but if you
+ have no Occasion for them, they must be _dear_ to you.
+ Remember what _Poor Richard_ says; _Buy what thou hast
+ no Need of, and ere long thou shalt sell thy
+ Necessaries_. And again, _At a great Pennyworth pause a
+ while_: He means, that perhaps the Cheapness is
+ _apparent_ only, and not _Real_; or the bargain by
+ straitening thee in thy Business, may do thee more Harm
+ than Good. For in another Place he says, _Many have
+ been ruined by buying good Pennyworths._ Again, _Poor
+ Richard_ says, _'tis foolish to lay out Money in a
+ Purchase of Repentance_; and yet this Folly is
+ practised every Day at Vendues, for want of minding the
+ Almanack. _Wise Men_, as _Poor Dick_ says, _learn by
+ others Harms, Fools scarcely by their own_; but _felix
+ quem faciunt aliena pericula cautum_. Many a one, for
+ the Sake of Finery on the Back, have gone with a hungry
+ Belly, and half-starved their Families. _Silks and
+ Sattins, Scarlet and Velvets_, as _Poor Richard_ says,
+ _put out the Kitchen Fire_.
+
+ "These are not the _Necessaries of Life_; they can
+ scarcely be called the _Conveniences_; and yet only
+ because they look pretty, how many _want_ to _have_
+ them! The _artificial_ Wants of Mankind thus become
+ more numerous than the _Natural_; and, as _Poor Dick_
+ says, _for one poor Person, there are an hundred
+ indigent_. By these, and other Extravagancies, the
+ Genteel are reduced to poverty, and forced to borrow of
+ those whom they formerly despised, but who through
+ Industry and Frugality have maintained their Standing;
+ in which Case it appears plainly, that _A Ploughman on
+ his Legs is higher than a Gentleman on his Knees_, as
+ _Poor Richard_ says. Perhaps they have had a small
+ Estate left them, which they knew not the Getting of;
+ they think, _'tis Day, and will never be Night_; that a
+ little to be spent out of so much, is not worth
+ minding; _a Child and a Fool_, as _Poor Richard_ says,
+ _imagine Twenty shillings and Twenty Years can never be
+ spent_ but, _always taking out of the Meal-tub, and
+ never putting in, soon comes to the Bottom_; as _Poor
+ Dick_ says, _When the Well's dry, they know the Worth
+ of Water_. But this they might have known before, if
+ they had taken his Advice; _If you would know the Value
+ of Money, go and try to borrow some; for, he that goes
+ a borrowing goes a sorrowing_; and indeed so does he
+ that lends to such People, when he goes _to get it in
+ again_. _Poor Dick_ farther advises, and says,
+
+ _Fond Pride of Dress is sure a very Curse;_
+ _E'er Fancy you consult, consult your Purse._
+
+ And again, _Pride is as loud a Beggar as Want, and a
+ great deal more saucy_. When you have bought one fine
+ Thing, you must buy ten more, that your Appearance may
+ be all of a Piece; but _Poor Dick_ says, '_Tis easier
+ to suppress the first Desire, than to satisfy all that
+ follow it_. And 'tis as truly Folly for the Poor to ape
+ the Rich, as for the Frog to swell, in order to equal
+ the ox.
+
+ _Great Estates may venture more,_
+ _But little Boats should keep near Shore._
+
+ 'Tis, however, a Folly soon punished; for _Pride that
+ dines on Vanity, sups on Contempt_, as _Poor Richard_
+ says. And in another Place, _Pride breakfasted with
+ Plenty, dined with Poverty, and supped with Infamy_.
+ And after all, of what Use is this _Pride of
+ Appearance_, for which so much is risked so much is
+ suffered? It cannot promote Health, or ease Pain; it
+ makes no Increase of Merit in the Person, it creates
+ Envy, it hastens Misfortune.
+
+ _What is a Butterfly? At best_
+ _He's but a Caterpillar drest_
+ _The gaudy Fop's his Picture just,_
+
+ as _Poor Richard_ says.
+
+ "But what Madness must it be to _run in Debt_ for these
+ Superfluities! We are offered, by the Terms of this
+ Vendue, _Six Months' Credit_; and that perhaps has
+ induced some of us to attend it, because we cannot
+ spare the ready Money, and hope now to be fine without
+ it. But, ah, think what you do when you run in Debt;
+ _you give to another Power over your Liberty_. If you
+ cannot pay at the Time, you will be ashamed to see your
+ Creditor; you will be in Fear when you speak to him;
+ you will make poor pitiful sneaking Excuses, and by
+ Degrees come to lose your Veracity, and sink into base
+ downright lying; for, as _Poor Richard_ says _The
+ second Vice is Lying, the first is running in Debt_.
+ And again, to the same Purpose, _Lying rides upon
+ Debt's Back_. Whereas a free-born _Englishman_ ought
+ not to be ashamed or afraid to see or speak to any Man
+ living. But Poverty often deprives a Man of all Spirit
+ and Virtue: _'Tis hard for an empty Bag to stand
+ upright_, as _Poor Richard_ truly says.
+
+ "What would you think of that Prince, or that
+ Government, who should issue an Edict forbidding you to
+ dress like a Gentleman or a Gentlewoman, on Pain of
+ Imprisonment or Servitude? Would you not say, that you
+ were free, have a Right to dress as you please, and
+ that such an Edict would be a Breach of your
+ Privileges, and such a Government tyrannical? And yet
+ you are about to put yourself under that Tyranny, when
+ you run in Debt for such Dress! Your Creditor has
+ Authority, at his Pleasure to deprive you of your
+ Liberty, by confining you in Goal for Life, or to sell
+ you for a Servant, if you should not be able to pay
+ him! When you have got your Bargain, you may, perhaps,
+ think little of Payment; but _Creditors_, _Poor
+ Richard_ tells us, _have better Memories than Debtors_;
+ _and_ in another Place says, _Creditors are a
+ superstitious Sect, great Observers of set Days and
+ Times_. The Day comes round before you are aware, and
+ the Demand is made before you are prepared to satisfy
+ it, Or if you bear your Debt in Mind, the Term which at
+ first seemes so long, will, as it lessens, appear
+ extreamly short. _Time_ will seem to have added Wings
+ to his Heels as well as Shoulders. _Those have a short
+ Lent_, saith _Poor Richard_, _who owe Money to be paid
+ at Easter_. Then since, as he says, _The Borrower is a
+ Slave to the Lender, and the Debtor to the Creditor_,
+ disdain the Chain, preserve your Freedom; and maintain
+ your Independency; Be _industrious_ and _free_; be
+ _frugal_ and _free_. At present, perhaps, you may think
+ yourself in thriving Circumstances, and that you can
+ bear a little Extravagance without Injury; but,
+
+ _For Age and Want, save while you may;_
+ _No Morning Sun lasts a whole Day._
+
+ as _Poor Richard_ says. Gain may be temporary and
+ uncertain, but ever while you live, Expence is constant
+ and certain; and _'tis easier to build two Chimnies,
+ than to keep one in Fuel_, as _Poor Richard_ says. So,
+ _Rather go to Bed supperless than rise in Debt_.
+
+ _Get what you can, and what you get hold;_
+ _'Tis the Stone that will turn all your lead into Gold,_
+
+ as _Poor Richard_ says. And when you have got the
+ Philosopher's Stone, sure you will no longer complain
+ of bad Times, or the Difficulty of paying Taxes.
+
+ "This Doctrine, my Friends, is _Reason_ and _Wisdom_;
+ but after all, do not depend too much upon your own
+ _Industry_, and _Frugality_, and _Prudence_, though
+ excellent Things, for they may all be blasted without
+ the Blessing of Heaven; and therefore, ask that
+ Blessing humbly, and be not uncharitable to those that
+ at present seem to want it, but comfort and help them.
+ Remember, _Job_ suffered, and was afterwards
+ prosperous.
+
+ "And now to conclude, _Experience keeps a dear School,
+ but Fools will learn in no other, and scarce in that_;
+ for it is true, _we may give Advice, but we cannot give
+ Conduct_, as _Poor Richard_ says: However, remember
+ this, _They that won't be counselled, can't be helped_,
+ as _Poor Richard_ says: and farther, That, _if you will
+ not hear Reason, she'll surely rap your Knuckles_."
+
+ Thus the old Gentleman ended his Harangue. The People
+ heard it and approved the Doctrine, and immediately
+ practised the contrary, just as if it had been a common
+ Sermon; for the Vendue opened, and they began to buy
+ extravagantly, notwithstanding, his Cautions and their
+ own Fear of Taxes. I found the good Man had thoroughly
+ studied my Almanacks, and digested all I had dropt on
+ these Topicks during the Course of Five and twenty
+ Years. The frequent Mention he made of me must have
+ tired any one else, but my Vanity was wonderfully
+ delighted with it, though I was conscious that not a
+ tenth Part of the Wisdom was my own, which he ascribed
+ to me, but rather the _Gleanings_ I had made of the
+ Sense of all Ages and Nations. However, I resolved to
+ be the better for the Echo of it; and though I had at
+ first determined to buy Stuff for a new Coat, I went
+ away resolved to wear my old One a little longer.
+ _Reader_, if thou wilt do the same, thy Profit will be
+ as great as mine, _I am, as ever, thine to serve thee_,
+
+ RICHARD SAUNDERS.
+
+Imperfect as this chapter is, it is adequate enough, we hope, to make the
+reader feel that Sydney Smith was not altogether insensible to natural
+obligations when he told his daughter that he would disinherit her, if she
+did not admire everything written by Franklin.
+
+
+SUMMARY
+
+Such was Benjamin Franklin, as mirrored for the most part in his own
+written and oral utterances. Whether his fame is measured by what he
+actually accomplished, or by the impression that he made upon his
+contemporaries, or by the influence that he still exercises over the human
+mind, he was a truly great man.[59] Not simply because he was one of the
+principal actors in a revolutionary movement destined to establish in the
+free air of the Western World on lasting foundations, and on a scale of
+moral and material grandeur, of which history furnishes few examples, a
+state, without king, noble or pontiff, and deriving its inspiration and
+energy solely from the will of the People; nor yet merely because his
+brilliant discoveries in the province of electricity conspicuously helped
+to convert one of the most elusive and defiant of all the forces of nature
+into an humble and useful drudge of modern industry and progress; nor yet
+merely because, in addition to many other productions, marked by the
+indefinable charm of unerring literary intuition, he wrote several which
+are read in every part of the globe where a printed page is read; nor even
+because of all these things combined. They are, of course, the main pillars
+upon which his splendid fame rests. But what imparts to Franklin his aspect
+of greatness, and endows him with his irresistible appeal to the interest
+and admiration of the whole human race is the striking extent to which he
+was, in point of both precept and example, representative of human
+existence in all its more rational, more fruitful and more sympathetic
+manifestations. His vision was not that of the enthusiast; his was no
+Pentecostal tongue--cloven and aflame. He took little account of the higher
+spiritual forces which at times derange all the sober, prudent calculations
+of such a materialist as Poor Richard, and his message to mankind was
+blemished, as we have seen, by the excessive emphasis placed by it upon
+pecuniary thrift and the relations of pecuniary thrift to sound morals as
+well as physical comfort. But all the same, limited to the terrestrial
+horizon as he is, he must be reckoned one of the great leaders and teachers
+of humanity. He loved existence, shared it joyously and generously with his
+fellow-creatures, and vindicated its essential worth by bringing to bear
+upon everything connected with the conduct of life the maxims of a serene
+and almost infallible wisdom, and by responding with a mind as completely
+free from the prejudices and errors of his age as if he had lived a hundred
+years later, and with a heart as completely unconstrained by local
+considerations as if men were all of one blood and one country, to every
+suggestion that tended to make human beings happier, more intelligent and
+worthier in every respect of the universe which he found so delightful. It
+is this harmony with the world about him, this insight into what that world
+requires of everyone who seeks, to make his way in it, this enlightenment,
+this sympathy with human aspirations and needs everywhere, together with
+the rare strain of graphic and kindly instruction by which they were
+accompanied that cause the name of Franklin to be so often associated with
+those of the other great men whose fame is not the possession of a single
+class or land, but of all mankind. The result is that, when the faces of
+the few individuals, who are recognized by the entire world as having in
+the different ages of human history rendered service to the entire world,
+are ranged in plastic repose above the shelves of some public library or
+along the walls of some other institution, founded for the promotion of
+human knowledge or well-being, the calm, meditative face of Franklin is
+rarely missing.
+
+It is to be regretted that a character so admirable and amiable in all
+leading respects as his, so strongly fortified by the cardinal virtues of
+modesty, veracity, integrity and courage, and so sweetly flavored with all
+the finer charities of human benevolence and affection, should in some
+particulars have fallen short of proper standards of conduct. But it is
+only just to remember that the measure of his lapses from correct conduct
+is to be mainly found in humorous license, for which the best men of his
+own age, like Dr. Price and Charles Carroll of Carrollton, had only a
+laugh,[60] and in offences against sexual morality, which, except so far as
+they assumed in his youth the form of casual intercourse with low women,
+whose reputations were already too sorely injured to be further wounded,
+consisted altogether in the adoption by a singularly versatile nature of a
+foreign code of manners which imposed upon the members of the society, by
+which it was formed, the necessity of affecting the language of gallantry
+even when gallantry itself was not actually practised. There is at any rate
+no evidence to show that the long married life of Franklin, so full of
+domestic concord and tenderness, was ever sullied by the slightest
+violation of conjugal fidelity.
+
+On the whole, therefore, it is not strange that, repelled as we are at
+times by some passing episode or revelation in his life or character,
+everyone who has lingered upon his career finds it hard to turn away from
+it except with something akin to the feelings of those friends who clung to
+him so fondly. He was so kind, so considerate, so affectionate, so eager to
+do good, both to individuals and whole communities, that we half forget the
+human conventions that his bountiful intellect and heart overflowed. Of him
+it can at least be said that, if he had some of a man's failings, he had
+all of a man's merits; and his biographer, in taking leave of him, may
+well, mindful of his eminent virtues as well as of his brilliant
+achievements and services, waive all defence of the few vulnerable features
+of his life and conduct by summing up the final balance of his deserts in
+the single word engraved upon the pedestal of one of his busts in Paris at
+the time of his death. That word was "Vir"--a Man, a very Man.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[56] What Sir Walter Scott said of Jonathan Swift is as true of Franklin:
+"Swift executed his various and numerous works as a carpenter forms wedges,
+mallets, or other implements of his art, not with the purpose of
+distinguishing himself, by the workmanship bestowed on the tools
+themselves, but solely in order to render them fit for accomplishing a
+certain purpose, beyond which they were of no value in his eyes."
+
+[57] There is the following reference to Nanny in a letter from Franklin to
+Deborah, dated June 10, 1770, "Poor Nanny was drawn in to marry a worthless
+Fellow, who got all her Money, and then ran away and left her. So she is
+return'd to her old Service with Mrs. Stevenson, poorer than ever, but
+seems pretty patient, only looks dejected."
+
+[58] These conclusions about physical exercise had been previously
+expounded by Franklin to his son in a letter, dated Aug. 19, 1772, in which
+he expressed his concern at hearing that William was not well. In that
+connection they do not seem quite so pedantic. The writer thought that,
+when tested by the amount of corporeal warmth produced, there was, roughly
+speaking, more exercise in riding one mile on horseback than five in a
+coach, more in walking one mile on foot than five on horseback, and more in
+walking one mile up and down stairs than five on a level floor. He also had
+a good word to say for the use of the dumb-bell as a "compendious" form of
+exercise; stating that by the use of dumb-bells he had in forty swings
+quickened his pulse from sixty to one hundred beats in a minute, counted by
+a second watch. Warmth, he supposed, generally increased with a rapid
+pulse. Upon one occasion in France, when John Adams told him that he
+fancied that he did not exercise so much as he was wont, he replied: "Yes,
+I walk a league every day in my chamber. I walk quick, and for an hour, so
+that I go a league; I make a point of religion of it."
+
+[59] In the judgment of Matthew Arnold, Franklin was "a man who was the
+very incarnation of sanity and clear sense, a man the most considerable, it
+seems to me, whom America has yet produced."
+
+[60] In his _Jeu d'esprit_, commonly known as _The Choice of a Mistress_,
+Franklin gave various reasons why an elderly mistress should be preferred
+to a younger one; and, in a letter to him on Aug. 12, 1777, Charles Carroll
+of Carrollton, after expressing the hope that he continued to enjoy his
+usual health and the flow of spirits, which contributed to make the jaunt
+to Canada so agreeable to his fellow-travellers, adds: "Mr. John Carroll,
+and Chase are both well; the latter is now at Congress, and has been so
+fully and constantly employed that I believe he has not had leisure to
+refute your reasons in favor of the old ladies."
+
+
+
+
+INDEX
+
+
+A
+
+A Letter from China, i., 95; ii., 487
+
+Abuse of the Press, ii., 488
+
+Account of the Negotiation in London for effecting a Reconciliation between
+Great Britain and her American Colonies, ii., 446
+
+Account of the New-Invented Pennsylvanian Fireplaces, i., 15, 358;
+ ii., 8, 401, 424
+
+Account of the Supremest Court of Judicature of Pennsylvania, i., 342;
+ ii., 489
+
+Adams, Abigail, i., 492;
+ ii., 232
+
+Adams, John, i., 6, 35, 61, 149, 161, 284, 480, 483, 484, 486;
+ ii., 6 (note), 8, 7 (note), 96, 220 (note), 237, 241, 242, 244, 245, 246,
+252, 252 (note), 256, 257, 257 (note), 258 (note), 259, 261, 263, 274, 278,
+287, 288, 290, 291, 294, 312, 316, 319, 320, 322, 342, 414, 443, 483 (note)
+
+Adams, John Quincy, i., 486
+
+Adams, Miss, i., 478, 485, 488, 493;
+ ii., 9
+
+Address of the Pennsylvania Society for Promoting the Abolition of Slavery,
+ii., 454
+
+Advice to a Young Tradesman, ii., 455
+
+Albany Congress, ii., 141
+
+Alexander, Miss (Mariamne Williams), i., 211, 469, 542 (note)
+
+Alexander, William, i., 469, 495
+
+Alison, Francis, Vice-Provost, i., 131
+
+Allen, Chief Justice William, i., 170, 174, 337
+
+Alleyne, John, i., 105, 442
+
+American Philosophical Society, i., 128 (note)
+
+Answers to Strahan's Queries, ii., 446
+
+Apology for Printers, i., 93;
+ ii., 464, 465
+
+Arabian Tale, i., 73
+
+Argo, The, i., 146
+
+Arnold, Matthew, ii., 527 (note)
+
+Art of Procuring Pleasant Dreams, i., 412, 489
+
+Art of Virtue, i., 29, 34, 98, 521
+
+Articles of Belief and Acts of Religion, i., 72, 113
+
+Austin, Jonathan Loring, ii., 250
+
+Autobiography, i., 16, 19, 22, 343, 349, 432, 531, 537;
+ ii., 27, 35, 424, 441, 499
+
+
+B
+
+Babcock, Dr. Joshua, ii., 172
+
+Bache, Benjamin Franklin, i., 45, 238, 239, 241, 255, 256, 258, 259, 260,
+261, 262, 266, 388, 390, 406, 486
+
+Bache, Richard, i., 46, 212, 236, 237, 238, 239, 254, 257, 259, 262, 263,
+300, 349, 390, 481;
+ ii., 24, 349 (note)
+
+Bache, Sally, i., 37, 38, 70, 71, 99, 103, 110, 212, 225, 228, 235, 238,
+240, 241, 243, 244, 246, 248, 253, 254, 255, 255 (note), 257, 259, 260,
+261, 263, 264, 265, 266, 272, 273, 287, 340, 373, 393;
+ ii., 277, 494
+
+Bache, William, i., 257, 260, 261
+
+Baker, Speech of Polly, ii., 467
+
+Balzac, Honore de, ii., 16 (note)
+
+Bancroft, Dr. Edward, i., 542 (note);
+ ii., 221, 224, 250
+
+Bancroft, George, i., 542 (note)
+
+Banks, Sir Joseph, i., 107, 154;
+ ii., 378, 384, 385, 386, 392
+
+Barclay, David, i., 423
+
+Barclay, Thomas, ii., 296, 315 (note)
+
+Bard, Dr. and Mrs. John, i., 4, 332, 333;
+ ii., 43
+
+Bartram, John, i., 35, 146, 334, 421;
+ ii., 23
+
+Baskerville, John, ii., 15
+
+Bathurst, Lord and Lady, i., 224
+
+Baynes, John, ii., 7 (note), 348
+
+Beatty, Rev. Mr., i., 93
+
+Beccaria, Giambatista, ii., 22, 378, 400
+
+Benezet, Anthony, i., 347
+
+Benger, Elliot, i., 174
+
+Bentham, Jeremy, ii., 221, 223, 225
+
+Bigelow, John, i., 24, 37, 540
+
+Bingham, Mr. Wm., ii., 283
+
+Blount, Dorothea, i., 380, 386, 391, 454
+
+Bond, Dr. Thomas, i., 140, 145, 180, 246, 331, 420
+
+Boston, City of, i., 8, 151, 312
+
+Boufflers, Madame de, i., 479 (note)
+
+Bouquet, Col. Henry, i., 95, 340;
+ ii., 21
+
+Bourbon, Don Gabriel de, ii., 236
+
+Bowdoin, James, i., 352, 353, 354;
+ ii., 203, 218, 230, 383, 403
+
+Braddock, General, i., 177
+
+Bradford, Andrew, ii., 21, 37, 62, 69, 74, 75, 88
+
+Bradford, William, ii., 35, 37
+
+Breintnal, Joseph, i., 180, 326;
+ ii., 67
+
+Bridgen, Edward, i., 442
+
+Brillon, Madame, i., 19, 47, 92, 229, 265, 478, 487, 494, 500, 529, 540;
+ ii., 22, 476, 478, 481, 484
+
+Brillon, M., i., 485
+
+Brougham, Lord, ii., 227 (note), 362
+
+Broughton, Sarah, i., 214
+
+Brown, Dr., i., 99
+
+Brownell, George, i., 138;
+ ii., 28
+
+Brownrigg, William, ii., 392
+
+Buffon, Comte de, i., 530;
+ ii., 379
+
+Burke, Edmund, i., 20, 116, 442, 443;
+ ii., 1, 195, 221, 223, 224
+
+Byles, Mather, i., 264, 354
+
+
+C
+
+Cabanis, Pierre Jean Georges, i., 488, 491
+
+Cadross, Lord, ii., 408
+
+Camden, Lord, ii., 195, 210
+
+Canada Pamphlet, ii., 439, 444
+
+Canton, John, i., 438
+
+Capefigue, i., 21 (note)
+
+Carlyle, Alexander, i., 38
+
+Carlyle, Thomas, i., 11, 303 (note)
+
+Carmichael, Wm., i., 322, 485, 500;
+ ii., 5, 257, 260, 263, 268, 274, 330 (note), 476
+
+Carroll of Carrollton, Charles, i., 321;
+ ii., 237, 241, 331 (note), 529
+
+Carroll, John, i., 321;
+ ii., 238, 240, 529 (note)
+
+Cats, The Very Humble Petition to Madame Helvetius from her, i., 488, 497
+
+Causes of the American Discontents, ii., 189
+
+Chastellux, Marquis de, i., 263, 503, 530, 532
+
+Chatham, Lord, i., 20, 438;
+ ii., 98, 180, 183, 195, 208, 210, 223, 229
+
+Chaumont, M. Donatien LeRay de, i., 479, 515, 532;
+ ii., 25, 249, 250, 263
+
+Chaumont, Madame Donatien LeRay de, i., 482
+
+Chaumont, Donatien LeRay de (the younger), i., 481
+
+Chess, Essay on the Morals of, i., 516;
+ ii., 491
+
+Choice of a Mistress, ii., 529 (note)
+
+Christ Church, Philadelphia, i., 23, 70, 130, 170, 346, 363
+
+Cincinnati, Franklin's letter on the, ii., 494
+
+Clapham, Col., i., 188
+
+Clare, Lord, ii., 338 (note)
+
+Clifton, John, i., 145
+
+Clinton, Gov. George, i., 170
+
+Cochin, ii., 359 (note)
+
+Colden, Cadwallader, i., 15;
+ ii., 79, 90, 382, 407, 408
+
+Coleman, William, i., 246, 326;
+ ii., 64, 64 (note), 66
+
+Collas, Mr., i., 298
+
+Collins, John, i., 90, 160, 200, 323;
+ ii., 35, 58, 428
+
+Collinson, Peter, i., 123, 124, 133, 178, 180, 361, 449;
+ ii., 17, 23, 123, 126, 137, 150, 151, 152, 154, 192, 342, 352, 353, 354,
+356, 357, 361, 362, 367, 368, 371, 372, 375, 378, 381, 397, 398, 416
+
+Committee of Correspondence in Massachusetts, ii., 205
+
+Comparison of the Conduct of the Ancient Jews and the Anti-Federalists,
+ii., 489
+
+Condorcet, Marquis de, i., 530;
+ ii., 350
+
+Conte, i., 64
+
+Conway, Madame, i., 43 (note)
+
+Conygham, Capt. Gustavus, ii., 283, 297, 298
+
+Cook, Capt. James, i., 154
+
+Cool Thoughts, ii., 102, 128
+
+Coombe, Rev. Thomas, i., 81, 346
+
+Cooper, Dr. Samuel, i., 21, 352, 353, 472, 486;
+ ii., 25, 165, 170, 182, 203, 212, 218, 228, 250, 267, 341, 414
+
+Council of Brutes, The, i., 440
+
+Courant, The Boston, i., 83, 357;
+ ii., 30, 31, 85, 429, 434
+
+Craven Street Gazette, i., 372;
+ ii., 468
+
+Croghan, George, i., 182;
+ ii., 418
+
+Cushing, Thomas, i., 405, 470;
+ ii., 81, 170, 172, 175, 191, 199, 203, 204, 210, 213, 218, 219, 229, 261
+(note)
+
+Cutler, Dr. Manasseh, i., 226;
+ ii., 7
+
+
+D
+
+D'Alibard, Thomas Francis, i., 474;
+ ii., 354, 355, 383
+
+Danforth, Samuel, i., 355
+
+Dartmouth, Lord, ii., 215
+
+Davenport, Josiah, i., 217, 271, 286, 311
+
+Davenport, Sarah, i., 286, 301
+
+Davy, Sir Humphry, ii., 361
+
+Deane, Silas, i., 318, 322, 334;
+ ii., 237, 249, 250, 255 (note), 262, 263 (note), 265, 306
+
+DeForbach, Madame, i., 528
+
+DeLancey, James, ii., 142
+
+Denham, Mr., ii., 43, 44, 45, 50, 52
+
+Denny, Gov. William, i., 204;
+ ii., 112, 120, 122, 155
+
+DeNeufville, ii., 294
+
+DeSaussure, M., ii., 414
+
+D'Houdetot, Comtesse, i., 487, 522
+
+Dialogue between Franklin and the Gout, i., 501;
+ ii., 472, 481
+
+Dialogue between Philocles and Horatio, i., 32;
+ ii., 464
+
+Dialogue between X Y and Z, i., 184
+
+Dick, Sir Alexander, i., 463, 466;
+ ii., 403
+
+Dick, Lady, i., 464
+
+Dickinson, John, ii., 128, 136, 137, 233, 234, 247, 333, 334
+
+Digges, Thomas, i., 408;
+ ii., 303
+
+Dissertation on Liberty and Necessity, i., 87, 90, 202;
+ ii., 435
+
+Doniol, Henri, i., 542 (note)
+
+Dove, Mr., i., 136
+
+Dowse, Elizabeth, i., 280, 281, 304
+
+Drinkers' Dictionary, i., 160
+
+Dubourg, Dr. Barbeu, i., 474, 530, 533;
+ ii., 237, 274, 412
+
+Dumas, Chas. W. F., i., 155;
+ ii., 236, 259 (note)
+
+Dunbar, Col., i., 182
+
+Dunning, John, ii., 221, 222, 223
+
+DuPont (DeNemours), i., 474, 530, 533;
+ ii., 274
+
+
+E
+
+Economical Project, ii., 472, 485
+
+Edict by the King of Prussia, ii., 436, 446
+
+Editor of a Newspaper, To the, i., 401;
+ ii., 188
+
+Elective Franchises Enjoyed by the Small Boroughs in England, ii., 454
+
+Eliot, Jared, i., 131, 335, 356;
+ ii., 24, 344, 416
+
+Ephemera, The, i., 500;
+ ii., 472, 476
+
+Epitaph by Franklin on himself, i., 114
+
+Evans, Cadwallader, i., 311, 342, 343, 348;
+ ii., 184, 202, 346, 409
+
+Evans, Lewis, i., 220 (note)
+
+Exporting of Felons to the Colonies, ii., 464, 467
+
+
+F
+
+Falconer, Capt. Nathaniel, i., 311, 401, 476
+
+Father Abraham's Speech, ii., 517
+
+Fisher, Daniel, i., 215, 216, 229
+
+Fisher, Mary, i., 15, 303
+
+Fisher, Sydney George, i., 36;
+ ii., 4 (note)
+
+Flainville, Mlle., i., 43 (note), 528, 529
+
+Folger, Peter, i., 268, 269, 270, 270 (note)
+
+Ford, Paul Leicester, i., 2;
+ ii., 92
+
+Fothergill, Dr. John, i., 242, 252, 320, 391, 421;
+ ii., 118, 119, 126, 230, 354
+
+Foucault, Madame, i., 482
+
+Fox, Charles James, ii., 221, 224, 227 (note)
+
+Foxcroft, John, i., 43, 213, 312, 346;
+ ii., 81
+
+Foxcroft, Mrs. John, i., 43
+
+Francis, Tench, i., 129
+
+Franklin, Abiah, i., 13, 37, 78, 85, 266, 268, 270, 271, 272;
+ ii., 41
+
+FRANKLIN, BENJAMIN:
+ _General Comments on his Life and Character_
+ Wrote for purely practical reasons, i., 4.
+ Stands out from both European and American backgrounds, 9.
+ His shortcomings, 18.
+ Atoned for his early offences, 26.
+ Summary of his career and character, ii., 527.
+ _His Moral Standing and System_
+ Not covetous, i., 12.
+ Unselfish relations to patents, 15.
+ Candor of Autobiography responsible for almost every blemish on his
+ reputation, 17, 22.
+ Attacks on his character, 17, 21 (note).
+ Coarser side of his character, 17.
+ Contemporary tributes to his moral worth, 18.
+ His prudential view of morality, 23, 31.
+ Real extent of his moral offences, 24, 34.
+ Had no objection to repeating his life, 24, 112, 113.
+ Motives back of Autobiography, 25.
+ Atoned for his offences, 26.
+ System of Morals adopted by him, 26.
+ Story of the axe, 27.
+ Observations on vanity, 28.
+ Freedom from dogmatism, 28.
+ His cheerful disposition, 29, 112.
+ Art of Virtue, 29, 97, 98.
+ United Party for Virtue, 31.
+ Society of the Free and Easy, 31.
+ His relations to eating and drinking, 35, 385.
+ His standing in point of sexual morality, 35, 204.
+ William Franklin, his natural son, 37.
+ Franklin's contentment with his life, 42 (note).
+ Supposed natural daughter, 43.
+ William Temple Franklin, his natural grandson, 44.
+ Story of the crying boy and the grandmother, 44.
+ _His Religious Views_
+ Gratitude to God, i., 51.
+ Faith in Providence, 52.
+ Confidence in a future state, 53.
+ Utterances about death and sleep, 57.
+ Saying about orthodoxy, 58.
+ Want of sympathy with purely theological and sectarian side of
+ religion, 58, 63, 68, 78, 88.
+ A trustee to hold Whitefield meeting-house, 59.
+ Early doubts, 60.
+ Impartial attitude towards sects, 61.
+ Relations to Whitefield, 61.
+ His Conte, 65.
+ Letter to Weems and Gantt, 65.
+ Views about heretics, 67.
+ About bigotry, 67.
+ Rev. Mr. Hemphill, 69.
+ Comments on sermons, 70.
+ Connection with Christ Church, Philadelphia, 70.
+ Habits as to church attendance, 70, 71.
+ His Articles of Belief and Acts of Religion, 71.
+ Collaboration with Le Despencer in the reform of the Book of Common
+ Prayer, 74.
+ Suggestion about prayers in Federal Convention, 78.
+ Views about practical religion, 78.
+ Effect of early environment on his beliefs, 82.
+ Attacks of Courant on intolerance, 83.
+ Youthful skepticism, 84, 85.
+ Falls asleep in Quaker meeting-house, 84.
+ London nun, 86.
+ Dissertation on Liberty and Necessity, 87.
+ Picture of Christ mentioned by Parson Weems, 88.
+ Miraculous element in Religion foreign to his nature, 88.
+ Purely practical character of his relations to Religion, 89.
+ Recession from youthful skepticism, 90.
+ Latterday beliefs as expressed to Madame Brillon and Ezra Stiles, 91.
+ Priestley's comments on his Christianity, 92.
+ His jests at the expense of the clergy and religion, 93.
+ Lack of reality about his religious faith but no scoffer, 97.
+ Injunctions to his wife and daughter about church attendance, 99.
+ Dr. Brown's travesty on Bible, 99.
+ Strictures by Franklin on letter against doctrine of special
+ providence, 100.
+ _As Philanthropist and Citizen_
+ Observation on escape from shipwreck, i., 102.
+ Humorous remarks on workings of human reason, 103.
+ Eager interest in increase of his species, 103.
+ Aversion to war, 107.
+ Comments on existence of evil in the world, 107 (note).
+ His freedom from misanthropy, 111.
+ Lines on Landlord of Life and Time, 113.
+ His famous epitaph, 114.
+ His desire to revisit world after death, 115.
+ Nothing less than a Friend of Man, 116.
+ Termed "lover of his species" by Burke, 116.
+ Indebtedness to Mather's Essays to do Good, 117.
+ Character of doer of good that most highly prized by him, 117.
+ His saying, that power of one man for doing good is prodigious, 117.
+ The Junto, 117.
+ The Philadelphia City Library, 122.
+ His comments on importance of modesty in promoting public objects, 122.
+ The Philadelphia City Watch, 125.
+ The Philadelphia Fire Company, 126.
+ The Philadelphia Academy, 127, 128.
+ The Philadelphia Philosophical Society, 127.
+ His opposition to Latin and Greek, 137.
+ His pedagogic insight, 138.
+ His early education, 138.
+ His bequest to schools of Boston, 138 (note).
+ His self-education, 139.
+ His observations on proper methods of teaching languages, 140.
+ The Philadelphia Hospital, 140.
+ Advice to Rev. Gilbert Tennent to solicit from everybody, 142.
+ Paving projects, 143.
+ Remarks on triviality of origin of human felicity, 144.
+ Philadelphia City lighting, 145.
+ Significance of Franklin's services to Philadelphia, 146.
+ Suggests voyage of the Argo to the Arctics, 146.
+ Efforts in behalf of Kalm and Bartram, the naturalists, 146.
+ Efforts in behalf of silk culture, 146.
+ Gifts to Philadelphia hospital, 147.
+ Purchases for and gifts to Harvard College, 147.
+ Services in connection with negro emancipation, the free blacks, the
+ Bray Fund and the Society for benefit of poor Germans, 147.
+ Comments on Germans in Pennsylvania, 147, 148 (note).
+ Introduces yellow willow and rhubarb plant, 148.
+ Disseminates broom-corn seed, 148.
+ Proves value of plaster, 148.
+ Suggests insurance against storms, etc., 148.
+ Essay on Maize, 149.
+ John Adams' story of the grapevines, 149.
+ Franklin's prayer that he might be useful to his fellow-creatures, 150.
+ His trick for doing much with little money, 150.
+ His posthumous benefactions to Boston and Philadelphia, 151.
+ Breadth of his philanthropy, 153.
+ Supports plan for supplying New Zealand with certain quadrupeds, 153.
+ Protects Capt. Cook, 154.
+ Also Moravian Mission vessel, 155.
+ Also Irish ship for West Indian relief, 155.
+ Enforces rule "free ships, free goods," 155.
+ Approves exemption of non-combatants from penalties of war, 155.
+ Stipulation against privateering in Prussian Treaty, 156.
+ Detestation of privateering, 156.
+ Franklin no Quaker or visionary, 157.
+ Story of Logan and William Penn, 157.
+ Physical characteristics of Franklin, 158.
+ Youthful love of water, 158.
+ Story of the purloined building stones and Josiah Franklin's lecture,
+ 159.
+ Was a boxing boy, 159 (note).
+ Adventure on the Isle of Wight, 159.
+ How he punished Collins, 160.
+ His firmness of character, 161.
+ Letter of rebuke to Capt. Landais, 162.
+ Circumstances which produced Plain Truth, 163.
+ Results of this pamphlet, 169.
+ Journey to New York in quest of cannon, 170.
+ Close relations at this time with Governor and Council, 171.
+ Draws up fast proclamation, 171.
+ Bearing of Quakers in regard to defence of Pennsylvania, 171.
+ Advice of young man to Franklin to resign his office as Clerk to
+ Assembly, 172.
+ Franklin as an office-holder, 172.
+ Forehandedness about office in keeping with his advice to grandson,
+ 174 (note).
+ Real extent of opposition of Quakers to defensive warfare, 174.
+ Relations of Franklin and his son to Braddock expedition, 177.
+ Pusillanimous conduct of Col. Dunbar, 182.
+ Dunbar violates promise to return servants, 183.
+ Franklin's Militia Bill, 183.
+ Dialogue between X Y and Z, 184.
+ Governor offers to make Franklin a general, 185.
+ Takes charge of N. W. frontier of Pennsylvania, 185.
+ Incidents on his way to and at Gnadenhutten, 186.
+ Returns to Philadelphia and is elected Colonel, 188.
+ His regiment and experiences as Colonel, 189.
+ Summary of military services of Franklin, 190.
+ Massacre of Indians by Paxton Boys and its denunciation by Franklin,
+ 191.
+ _His Family Relations_
+ Generous conduct to his brother James, i., 198.
+ And to James' son, 199.
+ Story of Franklin and Deborah, 205.
+ Their marriage, 211.
+ Her helpfulness to him, 211.
+ Advises her not to make an expensive wedding for their daughter Sally,
+ 212.
+ Letter of rebuke from him to her, 213.
+ Deborah and Sarah Broughton's charges, 214.
+ Incidents relating to Deborah told by Daniel Fisher in his Diary, 215.
+ Later improved relations between Deborah and William Franklin, 217,
+ 218.
+ Resolute conduct of Deborah when house threatened, 217.
+ Devotion of Deborah to Franklin, 219, 221.
+ Her illiteracy, 220, 222, 223.
+ Supplies sent by her to Franklin when absent, 223.
+ Absences of Franklin from her, 224.
+ Her aversion to the sea, 224.
+ Transatlantic voyages of Franklin, 224 (note).
+ Efforts of Strahan to get Deborah to England, 225, 227.
+ Early correspondence between Strahan and Franklin as to the latter's
+ daughter Sally, 225.
+ Personal appearance of this daughter, 226.
+ Affection of Franklin for Deborah, 228.
+ Loyalty to her irreproachable, 229.
+ Verses on his Plain Country Joan, 230.
+ References to Deborah in his letters to Catherine Ray, 231.
+ Correspondence between him and Deborah, 231.
+ References to his daughter in his letters to Deborah, 235.
+ Portrait of his daughter, 236 (note).
+ His son-in-law, Richard Bache, 236.
+ His grandson, Benjamin Franklin Bache, 238, 239, 240, 256, 258, 259,
+ 260, 261, 262, 266.
+ His godson, William Hewson, 239.
+ Other children of his daughter, 240.
+ Francis Folger, son of Franklin, 240.
+ "Franky" not his son, 240.
+ References to Deborah's relations in Franklin's letters to her, 241.
+ References to William Franklin in these letters, 241.
+ References to servants, 242.
+ References to Franklin's Pennsylvania friends, 244.
+ References to his new house, 245.
+ Exchanges of gifts between Franklin and Deborah, 246.
+ Gifts to his daughter, 248.
+ Familiarity with household affairs and articles, 249.
+ Occasional home-sickness, 250.
+ Illness when in England, 251.
+ Deborah's ill-health, 252.
+ Letters to his daughter and her husband, 253.
+ Letter from her to him about housekeeping for her mother, 255 (note).
+ Sally's hatred of South Carolinians, 259.
+ William Bache, Franklin's grandson, 260, 261.
+ Bequest of diamonds to Sally by Franklin, 261.
+ Appoints Richard Bache to office, 262.
+ On his return from his second mission he resided with the Baches, 261.
+ And after his return from France, 263.
+ Comments on Sally Bache by Marbois and De Chastellux, 263.
+ Domestic conditions surrounding Franklin towards his end, 263, 265.
+ Later relations between Franklin and his son William, 264, 264 (note).
+ Family of Sally Bache at close of Franklin's life, 265, 266.
+ Franklin's father and mother, 266.
+ Story told by his father, 268.
+ Franklin's grandfather, Peter Folger, 269.
+ The Folgers, 270.
+ Franklin's letters to his father and mother, 270.
+ Her letters to him, 272.
+ Letters to his sister Jane about their parents, 273.
+ Estate left by his father, 274.
+ Loving relations of Franklin with his kinsfolk, 274.
+ His uncles John and Thomas and grandfather Thomas, 274, 275.
+ His uncle Benjamin, 275.
+ This uncle's poetry books, 275.
+ And collection of pamphlets, 277.
+ Samuel Franklin, grandson of this uncle, 277.
+ Remaining relations of Franklin in England in 1767, 277.
+ His letter to a Franklin at Koenigsberg, 277.
+ Had exact account of Franklins from 1555, 278.
+ Observations on Jemmy Franklin, 278.
+ Bequest to his brother James' descendants, 279.
+ Franklin's four brothers who died young and his brother Josiah, 279.
+ His brothers John and Peter, 279, 280 (note).
+ His letter to Peter's widow, 280.
+ His brother Samuel, 280.
+ His sister Dowse, 280.
+ Wise and feeling letter about her, 280.
+ His sister Mrs. Holmes, 282.
+ His sister Lydia Scott, 282.
+ His sister Anne Harris and her descendants, 282.
+ Her daughter Grace Harris and her husband Jonathan Williams and her
+ sons, 283.
+ His sister Sarah Davenport, 286.
+ Letter from him to Josiah Davenport refusing him an office, 286.
+ Relations between him and his sister Jane Mecom and her family, 287.
+ Bequests by Franklin to members of his father's family, 301.
+ Relations between him and Deborah's family, 301.
+ Sharp letter to James Read, 301.
+ Franklin's interest in his ancestors, 302.
+ Notes on subject by his uncle Benjamin, 302.
+ Visit to his relation, Mary Fisher, in England, 303.
+ Old Tythes Book sent by Carlyle to Edw. Everett, 303 (note).
+ Thomas Franklin, 305.
+ Deborah's English relations, 306.
+ Sally Franklin and her father Thomas Franklin, of Lutterworth, 306.
+ Letter from Josiah Franklin about his ancestors, 307.
+ _His American Friends_
+ Friends who accompanied him to Trenton, i., 310.
+ House full of friends on his return from England in 1762, 311.
+ Rejoicing over his safe return to England, 311.
+ His friends "along the Continent," 311.
+ Many friends in New England, 312.
+ Visits to Boston, 312.
+ Description of his return from New England in 1755, 312.
+ Accidents to Franklin, 312.
+ Friends in New York and New Jersey, 314.
+ Visits to Maryland and Virginia, 314.
+ Friends in Charleston, 315.
+ Dr. Garden, Dr. Lining, Henry Laurens and John Laurens, 315.
+ Death of John Laurens, 316 (note).
+ Relations between Franklin and Washington, 316.
+ Widespread fame of the two in America, 317 (note).
+ Relations between Franklin and Jefferson, 318.
+ Humorous stories about Franklin by Jefferson, 318, 321 (note).
+ Franklin and Charles Carroll of Carrollton, 321.
+ Franklin and John Carroll, 321.
+ Franklin and William Carmichael, 322.
+ James Ralph and other young Philadelphia friends of Franklin, 323.
+ Ralph's version of 18th Psalm, 324.
+ Comments of author on Ralph, 325 (note).
+ Junto friends, 326.
+ Hugh Roberts, 328.
+ Philip Syng, 330.
+ Samuel Rhoads, 330.
+ Luke Morris, 331.
+ Dr. Thomas Bond, 332.
+ Dr. John Bard, 332.
+ Dr. Benjamin Rush, 332.
+ Stories about Franklin by Dr. Rush, 333.
+ John Bartram, 334.
+ John Hughes, 336.
+ Thomas Hopkinson, 337.
+ Effect of Whitefield's eloquence on him, 338.
+ Francis Hopkinson, 338.
+ Col. Henry Bouquet, 340.
+ Lee and Izard, Franklin's only two enemies, 340.
+ Warning to his daughter about his enemies, 340.
+ Dr. Cadwallader Evans, 342.
+ Abel James and Thomas Wharton, 343.
+ Samuel Wharton, 343.
+ Ebenezer Kinnersley, 345.
+ John Foxcroft and Rev. Thos. Coombe, 346.
+ James Wright and Susannah Wright, 346.
+ Anthony Benezet, 347.
+ Joseph Galloway, 347.
+ James Logan, David Hall and Charles Thomson, 350.
+ David Rittenhouse, 350.
+ John Jay, 350.
+ Josiah Quincy, John Winthrop and Dr. Samuel Cooper, 352.
+ James Bowdoin, 352.
+ Young Josiah Quincy, 352.
+ Mather Byles, 354.
+ Samuel Danforth, 355.
+ Jared Eliot, 356.
+ Dr. Ezra Stiles, 362.
+ Dr. Samuel Johnson, 363, 364.
+ Jared Ingersoll, 364.
+ Catherine Ray, 364.
+ _His British Friends_
+ Mrs. Margaret Stevenson, i., 372.
+ Polly Stevenson, 374.
+ Wm. Strahan, 392.
+ Jonathan Shipley, Bishop of St. Asaph's, 405.
+ Catherine Louisa Shipley, 407, 409, 410, 412, 417, 417 (note).
+ Georgiana Shipley, 407, 410, 413.
+ Anna Maria Shipley, 411, 412.
+ Dr. John Pringle, 415, 416, 417, 417 (note).
+ Dr. John Fothergill, 421.
+ David Barclay, 423. Franklin a "clubable" man, 424.
+ Dr. Price, 425.
+ Dr. Joseph Priestley, 429.
+ Benjamin Vaughan, 432.
+ Dr. John Hawkesworth and John Stanley, 437.
+ John Sargent, 438.
+ John Canton, 438.
+ Dr. Alexander Small, 439.
+ John Alleyne, 442.
+ Edward Bridgen, 442.
+ Edmund Burke, 443.
+ Mrs. Thompson, 442, 443.
+ John Whitehurst, 442, 445.
+ Anthony Tissington, 442, 445.
+ Thomas Viny, 442, 445.
+ Caleb Whitefoord, 442, 447, 447 (note).
+ Peter Collinson, 447.
+ Rev. George Whitefield, 447, 449.
+ David Hartley, 447, 456.
+ Ballad of Auld Robin Gray, 460.
+ The Farce, God-send or the Wreckers, 462.
+ George Whatley, 447, 463.
+ Lord LeDespencer, 447, 452.
+ James Hutton, 447, 453.
+ Sir Alexander Dick, 463.
+ Lady Alexander Dick, 464.
+ Lord Kames, 464.
+ Scotch social conditions in 1759, 464, 465.
+ David Hume, 467.
+ William Alexander, 469.
+ Mariamne Williams, wife of Jonathan Williams, Jr., 469.
+ Sir Edward Newenham, 469.
+ Richard Jackson, 470.
+ Gen. Horatio Gates, 470.
+ Gen. Charles Lee, 470, 471.
+ Benjamin West, 470, 471.
+ Mrs. Benjamin West, 472.
+ Raphael West, 472.
+ Mr. Mead, 472.
+ _His French Friends_
+ Social life of Franklin in France, i., 473, 474.
+ His love of France and the French people, 476.
+ His opinion of the French people, 476.
+ DuPont De Nemours, 474, 530, 533.
+ D'Alibard, 474.
+ Dr. Barbeu Dubourg, 474, 530, 533.
+ Relations to French women, 477.
+ Franklin's residence at Passy, 479.
+ LeRay de Chaumont, 479.
+ LeRay de Chaumont, the younger, 481.
+ DeChaumont's family, 482.
+ Madame Foucault, 482.
+ Her kiss, 482.
+ Madame Chaumont, her comments on supposed attack of John Paul Jones
+ on an old woman, 482.
+ Her comment on the engagement of Mlle.
+ Passy to the Marquis de Tonnerre, 483.
+ Franklin's witty letter to the mother of this girl, 483.
+ Franklin's mode of life at Paris, 483.
+ His salary, 484.
+ His letter to John Adams about American criticism on his mode of life,
+ 484.
+ His hospitality at Passy, 485.
+ Dinners mentioned by Miss Adams, 485.
+ Story of the Abbe Raynal and American degeneracy, 485.
+ Letter from John Quincy Adams to Franklin, 486.
+ Franklin's visiting list, 486.
+ Entertainments attended by Franklin, 486.
+ Madame Helvetius, 487.
+ Madame Brillon, 487, 500.
+ Comtesse D'Houdetot, 487, 522.
+ Fete Champetre, 523.
+ Jean Georges Cabanis, 488.
+ Abbe Morellet, 488.
+ Abbe de la Roche, 488.
+ Abbe Morellet's Very Humble Petition to Madame Helvetius from her Cats,
+ 488.
+ Letter to the Abbe de la Roche from Franklin with regard to Madame
+ Helvetius, 489.
+ The Journey to the Elysian Fields, 489.
+ Letters from Franklin to Cabanis, 491.
+ Description of Madame Helvetius by Abigail Adams, 492.
+ Comment by Miss Adams on Madame Helvetius, 493.
+ The Abbes, 496.
+ Feeling letters from Abbe Morellet to Franklin, 497, 498.
+ The Abbe Morellet's drinking song, 498.
+ The Abbe Morellet's observations on good rum, 499.
+ Franklin's drinking song, 499.
+ Essay on the Morals of Chess, 516.
+ Madame Jean Baptiste Le Roy, 526.
+ Jean Baptiste Le Roy, 527.
+ Pierre Le Roy, 528.
+ Charles Le Roy, 528.
+ David Le Roy, 528.
+ Madame Lavoisier, 528.
+ Madame de Forbach, 528.
+ Mlle. Flainville, 528, 529.
+ Buffon, 530.
+ Condorcet, 530.
+ Lafayette, 530.
+ Madame de Lafayette, 531.
+ Duc de la Rochefoucauld, 530, 531.
+ Lavoisier, 530, 532.
+ Chastellux, 530, 532.
+ Ferdinand Grand, 530, 532.
+ LeVeillard, 530, 537.
+ Madame LeVeillard, 537.
+ Jefferson's letter to LeVeillard about the Autobiography, 540.
+ Letter from LeVeillard to Franklin about Mesdames Helvetius and
+ Brillon, 540.
+ Letter from LeVeillard's daughter to Franklin, 541.
+ Dr. Jan Ingenhousz, 541.
+ Debt due him by Samuel Wharton, 541.
+ Mrs. Paschal, 542 (note).
+ Thomas Mifflin, 542 (note).
+ Wm. Hunter, 542 (note).
+ Thomas Pownall, 542 (note).
+ Mr. and Mrs. Jean Holker, 542 (note).
+ Monthieu, 542 (note).
+ Madame La Marck, 542 (note).
+ Dr. Edward Bancroft, 542 (note).
+ Marquis de Turgot, 542 (note).
+ _His Personal and Social Characteristics_
+ Humorous observations on Vanity, i., 28.
+ Franklin's physique, 158.
+ Early eagerness of Franklin for the sea, 158.
+ Portraits of Franklin, 233 (note).
+ Sterner virtues of Franklin, ii., 1.
+ Statement of Franklin to Hancock that they must all hang together, 2.
+ Franklin slow to anger, 3.
+ His integrity, 3.
+ Description of Franklin by Dr. Cutler, 7.
+ His wit, 7.
+ His humor, 8.
+ Story of the powder cask, 9.
+ Story of the anchor, 9.
+ Story of the hot iron, 10.
+ Story of the Archbishop and the queen, 10.
+ The story of omnia vanitas, 11.
+ The story of the onions, 11.
+ Duelling story, 12.
+ His bon mots, 12.
+ His love of practical jokes, 15.
+ Remarks on man as a sociable being, 16.
+ Early Socratic method of arguing, 16.
+ Franklin's modesty and lack of dogmatism, i., 28; ii., 17.
+ His level-headedness, 18.
+ His dislike of disputation, 18.
+ Franklin a good listener, 19.
+ His amiable, generous disposition, i., 29; ii., 20, 22.
+ His love of games, 21.
+ His physical appetites, 21.
+ His fondness for music, 22.
+ His armonica. 22.
+ Cheerfulness under suffering, 22.
+ Benignity of mind, 23.
+ His habit of making gifts, 23.
+ His loyalty in friendship, 24.
+ His interest in his friend's children, 25.
+ Franklin's physical exercises, 483 (note).
+ _As a Man of Business_
+ General Comments on, ii., 26.
+ Main calling that of printer, 27.
+ Set as a boy to cutting wicks, 28.
+ Taken around among workmen by Josiah, 28.
+ Josiah makes a printer of him, 29.
+ Becomes apprentice to his brother, 29.
+ Nature of his brother's publications, 29.
+ James Franklin embroiled with magistracy, 30.
+ Courant issued in name of Franklin, 33.
+ Rubs between Franklin and his brother, 34.
+ Absconds from Boston, 35.
+ Passage from New York to New Jersey, 35.
+ Dr. Brown, the infidel, 36.
+ The kindly old woman at Burlington, 36.
+ Lands at Philadelphia, 36.
+ Falls asleep in Quaker Meeting-house, 37.
+ Puts up at the Crooked Billet, 37.
+ Calls on Andrew Bradford, 37.
+ Calls on Keimer, 37.
+ Keimer's printing outfit and elegy, 38.
+ Works for Bradford and Keimer, 39.
+ Is brought to the notice of Sir William Keith, 39.
+ Keith and Col. French call on him, 40.
+ Returns to Boston, 41.
+ Keith's promises, 41.
+ Continues at work with Keimer, 42.
+ Keith's continued deceit, 42, 43.
+ Sails for London, 43, 44.
+ Discovers Keith's perfidy, 44.
+ Makes a friend of Andrew Hamilton, 45.
+ And repays his kindness, 45.
+ Ralph a stumbling block to him in London, 45.
+ Franklin is employed at Palmer's, 46.
+ And at Watts', 46.
+ Relations to his fellow-printers in London, 47, 48.
+ Lodges with a Catholic widow, 49.
+ His skill as a swimmer, 49.
+ Is employed by Mr. Denham, 50.
+ Is invited by Sir Wm. Wyndham to teach his sons how to swim, 50.
+ Returns to Philadelphia and meets Keith on the street, 51.
+ Habits in London, 51 (note).
+ Mr. Denham dies, 52.
+ Franklin nearly dies, 52.
+ Story of Mr. Denham, 52.
+ Franklin goes back to Keimer, 53.
+ Keimer's other hands, 53.
+ Keimer benefits by Franklin's inventive faculty, 54.
+ Franklin quits Keimer, 55.
+ Meredith proposes partnership to Franklin, 56.
+ The latter is employed by Keimer again, 56.
+ And again proves very useful to him, 57.
+ New Jersey job, 57.
+ Story of Cotton Mather, 57.
+ Franklin attracts the attention of Governor Burnet, 58.
+ Acquires good will of prominent New Jersey men, 58.
+ Portrait of Keimer by Franklin, 59.
+ Prediction of Isaac Decow as to Franklin, 59.
+ Meredith and Franklin enter into partnership, 59.
+ First money earned by them, 60.
+ Samuel Mickle, the croaker, 60.
+ New firm helped by members of The Junto, 61.
+ Franklin's industry wins attention, 61.
+ Webb betrays Franklin, 62.
+ Franklin buys Keimer's newspaper, 62.
+ Franklin founds Pennsylvania Gazette, 63.
+ Its practical value to him, 63.
+ On the brink of ruin, 63.
+ Meredith a drunkard, 64.
+ Coleman and Grace come to Franklin's aid, 64, 64 (note).
+ Partnership of Meredith and Franklin dissolved, 65.
+ Franklin continues, 66.
+ Advocates more paper money, 66.
+ Secures paper money printing contracts, 67.
+ Opens up a stationery shop, 67.
+ Employs a compositor, 67.
+ Personal and business habits at this time, 67.
+ Keimer goes to Barbadoes, 68.
+ His railings at fortune, 68.
+ David Harry declines Franklin's offer of partnership, 69.
+ Franklin seeks a wife, 69.
+ Franklin's industry in business, 70.
+ His frugality, 70.
+ Establishes his Poor Richard's Almanac, 71.
+ Its success, 71.
+ Principles on which Franklin conducted the Pennsylvania Gazette, 71.
+ Extends his printing business, 72.
+ Establishes a German newspaper and a magazine, 74.
+ Latter project betrayed by John Webbe, 74.
+ Chosen Clerk of General Assembly and appointed Postmaster, 75.
+ Refuses to retaliate Bradford's meanness, 75.
+ Business value of office of Clerk, 75.
+ Conciliates a member of the Assembly, 76.
+ Business increases, 77.
+ Gazette profitable, 77.
+ Admits Hall to partnership, 77.
+ Terms of partnership, 78.
+ Business income of Franklin, 78.
+ Profits from the Gazette, 78.
+ Franklin's interest in art of printing, 78 (note).
+ Disagreement between him and Hall over a copyright, 79.
+ Franklin burns his fingers with the Stamp Tax, 80.
+ Appointed Comptroller of Post Office accounts, 80.
+ Appointed Deputy Postmaster-General, 80.
+ Success in managing Post Office, 81, 82.
+ Comments of Franklin on his removal from office of Postmaster, 81.
+ Gives Post Office patronage to relations, 83.
+ Income of Franklin from other sources than business, 83.
+ Appointed Postmaster General of the United States, 84.
+ Gift of land to him by State of Georgia, 84.
+ His estate at his death, 85.
+ Character of the Pennsylvania Gazette, 86.
+ Books published by Franklin, 90.
+ Sold other books, 91.
+ Miscellaneous side of his business, 91.
+ Sold bond servants and negroes, 92.
+ Mrs. Read's ointments, 93.
+ _As a Statesman_
+ Appointed Clerk of General Assembly, ii., 95.
+ Appointed and elected to other offices including a seat in the
+ Assembly, 95.
+ Minor legislation in which he had a hand, 95 (note).
+ Lacking in fluency but spoke to the point, 96.
+ Influence very great in every Assembly in which he sat, 96.
+ Remarks on the importance of character to an orator, 97.
+ Political positions occupied by him, 97.
+ Not easily imposed on by mere glibness, but alive to eloquence like
+ that of Lord Chatham, 98.
+ Repeatedly re-elected to Assembly, 98.
+ Usually with the majority, 98 (note).
+ A true democrat, 98.
+ Detested arbitrary power, 99.
+ Conservative, yet liberal, 99.
+ Believed in universal suffrage and law of gavelkind, 100.
+ History of the conflict between the Proprietary and Popular Parties in
+ Pennsylvania, 100.
+ And reasons therefor, 101.
+ Value of the Penn Estate in Pennsylvania, 102, 102 (note).
+ Strictures of Franklin on the Proprietary Government, 102, 104, 107.
+ Traffic in legislation, 104.
+ Despicable conduct of the Proprietaries, 106.
+ Bitterness of the struggle between the Proprietaries and the Assembly,
+ 108.
+ Stand of the Quakers in the struggle, 108.
+ Franklin the leader of the Popular Party, 109.
+ His relations to Governors of Pennsylvania during the struggle, 109,
+ 110, 111, 112, 113, 114.
+ Story about a dinner at the house of Governor Morris, 110.
+ Reply of Shirley to Franklin at a banquet, 112.
+ Governor Denny brings over gold medal to Franklin, 112.
+ Plies Franklin with solicitations, 112.
+ Franklin appointed agent to go to England, 114.
+ Lord Loudon intervenes in the conflict, 114.
+ Vacillating conduct of Lord Loudon about sailing, 114.
+ "Always on horseback, and never rides on," said Innis, 115.
+ Long detention of Franklin at New York, 115.
+ Franklin's opinion of Lord Loudon, 117, 117 (note).
+ Loudon's reply to Franklin about filling his own pockets, 118.
+ Franklin arrives in London, 118.
+ Interview with Lord Granville, 118.
+ Meeting between Proprietaries and Franklin, 119.
+ Settlement of dispute with Proprietaries, 120.
+ Franklin thanks Assembly, 122.
+ His personal relations to the Proprietaries and their governors, 122.
+ Proprietary oppression, 124.
+ Governor Penn's dependence on Franklin, 126.
+ Letter to Dr. Fothergill from Franklin about the Proprietary, 127.
+ Factional dissensions in Pennsylvania, 127.
+ Popular conflict with Governor Penn, 127.
+ Franklin elected Speaker, 129.
+ Writes preface to Galloway's speech, 129.
+ Denunciation of Proprietaries by him, 130.
+ Lapidary attacks on Thomas and Richard Penn by him, 132.
+ Factious attacks on him in prose and verse, 133.
+ Franklin defeated at election, 135.
+ Franklin attacks fairness of the election, 136.
+ Wearies of political contentions, 137.
+ Recommends son of Thomas Penn to good will of Dickinson, 138.
+ Scathing comments by Franklin on Thomas Penn's meanness, 138.
+ Philadelphia merchants raise sum to send him abroad as agent, 140.
+ Pennsylvania feud sinks into the background, 140.
+ The Albany Congress, 141.
+ A day's journey under colonial conditions, 143 (note).
+ Letters from Franklin to Shirley on the colonial connection, 146.
+ Letter to James Parker from Franklin anticipating Albany Plan of Union,
+ 151.
+ Franklin and the Indians, 152.
+ Humorous stories about the Indians told by him, 157, 158 (note).
+ Distinction enjoyed by him in England during his first and second
+ missions, 162.
+ General relations to England before Revolution, 163, 164 (note).
+ Loyalty to England and its king, 163, 170.
+ Subsequent change of attitude, 168.
+ Willingness to accept office under the Duke of Grafton, 169.
+ His counsels of moderation, 170.
+ First of all an American, 171.
+ His gloomy pictures of Irish and Scotch conditions, 172.
+ Favorable view of American conditions taken by him as contrasted with
+ foreign, 171.
+ Parliamentary corruption, 174, 206.
+ Franklin's familiarity with American conditions, 177.
+ His foresight into the American future, 178, 191, 193, 204.
+ Misconstruction produced by his fairness during colonial contest, 178.
+ His view of legal tie between England and the Colonies and
+ Parliamentary supremacy, 178.
+ An imperialist, 182, 191.
+ Favored representation of Colonies in Parliament, but realized its
+ impracticability, 184, 187.
+ General position taken by Franklin in colonial contest, 185.
+ His relations to the Stamp Act, 187, 194, 206, 230.
+ English haughtiness towards, and ignorance of, Colonies, 188.
+ Misrepresentations by Colonial Governors, 189.
+ Economic restrictions on Colonies, 190.
+ Views in regard to the taxation of the Colonies, 192.
+ And in regard to English emigration, 192.
+ Influence exerted by Franklin as colonial agent, 194.
+ Impartiality of Franklin during colonial contest, 196.
+ Summary of argument addressed by him to the British and American
+ Public, 196.
+ His advice to the Colonies, 201.
+ His final sense of certainty of armed conflict, 205.
+ Comments on tea duty, 207.
+ Refusal to recognize Franklin as agent, 207, 211.
+ His comments on rejection of Chatham's plan, 208.
+ Draws up angry protest, 209.
+ Lord Sandwich attacks him as enemy of England, 210.
+ Franklin's relations to Hillsborough, 211.
+ His opinion of Lord Dartmouth, 216.
+ Wedderburn's tirade against Franklin, 222.
+ Efforts of Franklin after dismissal from office to avert war, 229.
+ He leaves England, 231.
+ His reputation at this time very high, 231.
+ Elected to Congress, 232.
+ His services in Congress, 232, 235, 241.
+ Made member of committee to visit Washington's camp, 234.
+ Early stand in favor of independence, 235.
+ Interviews French stranger, 235.
+ Made member of committee of secret correspondence with foreign friends
+ of America, 236.
+ His mission to Canada, 237.
+ His relations to the Declaration of Independence and the Articles of
+ Confederation, 241.
+ Devises seal, 242.
+ Offers lure to Hessians, 242.
+ Meets Lord Howe, 242.
+ Other services by Franklin at beginning of Revolution, 246.
+ His political hobbies, 249 (note).
+ Goes to France, 249.
+ Receives news of Burgoyne's surrender, 250.
+ Peculiar fitness of Franklin for French mission, 251.
+ Unfitness of his colleagues, 252.
+ Rubs between John Adams and Vergennes, 252.
+ Vergennes' opinion of John Adams, 253.
+ Comments on John Adams by Franklin, 253.
+ Jefferson's opinion of John Adams, 254 (note).
+ Vergennes' strictures on Arthur Lee and Izard, 255, 255 (note).
+ Vergennes' opinion of Franklin, 255.
+ Judgments on Arthur Lee, 255 (note).
+ Jay's dislike of the French, 256.
+ John Laurens comes to Paris, 256.
+ Deane's efficiency, 257 (note).
+ Inutility of Franklin's colleagues, 257, 273.
+ Testimony of John Adams as to tempers of Arthur Lee and Izard, 258
+ (note).
+ Adams' vanity, 258 (note).
+ A young state should be like a young virgin, thought Franklin, 259
+ (note).
+ Franklin not to blame for enmity of his colleagues, 259.
+ Causes of Lee's enmity to Franklin purely selfish, 260.
+ Arthur Lee's character, 262.
+ Jealousy of Franklin felt by Arthur Lee and Adams, 263, 263 (note).
+ Rebukes from Franklin to Arthur Lee, 264.
+ Disputatious and artful natures of Arthur and William Lee, 265.
+ Trunk entrusted to Franklin by William Lee, 266.
+ Franklin's opinion of Arthur Lee, 267.
+ His opinion of William Lee, 269.
+ Treacherous conduct of William Lee and Izard, 270.
+ Relations of Franklin to Izard, 271.
+ Izard's passionate temper, 272, 272 (note).
+ Enmity of colleagues ascribed by Franklin to envy, 274.
+ Franklin's first French friends, 274.
+ Franklin's fame when in France, 274.
+ His academic degrees, 274, 274 (note).
+ Special causes underlying fame of Franklin in France, 275, 276 (note),
+ 280.
+ Comments of Count Segur on the American envoys, 276 (note).
+ John Adams' testimony to fame of Franklin, 278.
+ Meeting between Voltaire and Franklin, 278.
+ Apotheosis of Voltaire, 279.
+ Franklin's opinion of Vergennes, 280.
+ Jefferson on Franklin in France, 281.
+ History of pecuniary aids obtained by Franklin from France, 281.
+ His remark about the Mississippi, 285.
+ His relations to bills of exchange, 295.
+ To dispatches, 295.
+ Duty devolved on him of purchasing supplies and fitting out ships, 296.
+ This duty disagreeable to him, 296.
+ Was also a Judge in Admiralty, 297.
+ Success of American privateers, 297.
+ Franklin advises attacks on English cities, 298.
+ His relations to John Paul Jones, 299.
+ His efforts for the release of American prisoners, 300.
+ Rascality of Thomas Digges, 303.
+ Services by Thomas Wren to American prisoners, 304.
+ Pressure on Franklin for place in American army, 304.
+ Applications of Messrs. Lith and Pellion, 307.
+ Inquiries about America made of Franklin, 308.
+ Beset by beggars, 308.
+ Intense feelings aroused in Franklin by war, 309.
+ Hutton's mission to France, 309.
+ Pulteney's mission, 310.
+ Mission of Hartley and Hammond, 311.
+ Weissenstein's mission, 311.
+ Sir William Jones' mission, 313.
+ Audit of Franklin's accounts, 315 (note).
+ Adams' accusation of subserviency to the French against Franklin, 316.
+ Vergennes' persistency of character, 317 (note).
+ Comment of D'Aranda on M. de Maurepas and Vergennes, 317 (note).
+ Franklin justified in opposing signing of preliminary treaty of peace
+ without consent of Vergennes, 319.
+ Franklin's efforts to acquire Canada, 321.
+ Final treaty of peace signed, 329.
+ Franklin resigns, 329.
+ Returns to Pennsylvania and is further honored, 329.
+ Elected a member of Federal Convention of 1787, 329.
+ Jefferson's estimate of Franklin as a man, 330 (note).
+ Part taken by Franklin in the Convention of 1787, 330.
+ Reaction in his liberalism, 331 (note).
+ Franklin and paper currency, 336.
+ Franklin and free trade, 342.
+ Franklin and export duties, 345.
+ Franklin and pauperism, 345.
+ Franklin and agriculture, 346.
+ Franklin and the criminal laws, 347.
+ Franklin and imprisonment for debt, 348.
+ Franklin and slavery 348.
+ _As a Man of Science_
+ Indifference to his inventions, i., 15.
+ Early interest of Franklin in science, ii., 350, 352.
+ Essentially a man of science, 351.
+ His three essays written at sea, 351.
+ Relations of Franklin to electricity, 352.
+ Qualifications of Franklin for scientific inquiry, 379.
+ Franklin's interest in balloons, 384.
+ Franklin's study of marsh gas and effect of oil on water, 390.
+ Franklin's inquiry into the effect of depth of water on speed and
+ navigation, 394.
+ His interest in the Gulf Stream, 395.
+ Franklin and pulse glasses, 396.
+ Inventions of Franklin, 396.
+ Franklin and magic squares, 397.
+ Franklin's alphabet and reform spelling, 398.
+ Franklin and the armonica, 400.
+ The Franklin stove, 401, 404.
+ Chimney, place improvements by Franklin, 403.
+ Franklin and smoky chimneys, 404.
+ Franklin and ventilation, 405.
+ Distraction to which Franklin was subject in the pursuit of science,
+ 406.
+ Cruder reflections of Franklin on scientific subjects 407.
+ Franklin's relations to medicine, 407.
+ Franklin and the dry bellyache, 408.
+ Franklin's ideas about colds, 410.
+ Franklin lectures John Adams on open windows, 414.
+ Franklin and waterspouts, whirlwinds and northeast storms, 415.
+ Franklin on light, 416.
+ Loose Thoughts on a Universal Fluid, 417.
+ Franklin on the conservation of matter, 417.
+ Franklin and the mastodon, 417.
+ Letter from Franklin to Gebelin on language variations, 418.
+ Franklin and astronomy, 419.
+ Franklin and refrigeration, 419.
+ Franklin and geology, 420.
+ Franklin and the physical convulsions of the earth, 421.
+ _As a Writer_
+ Lost letters, i., 5.
+ Way to Wealth known to whole civilized globe, 13.
+ Franklin first American man of letters in the opinion of Hume, ii.,
+ 423.
+ Franklin an author for practical purposes only, 423.
+ Indifference to his own writings, 424.
+ Franklin foresaw increased patronage of English authors, 425.
+ Manner in which he was educated, 425.
+ His early love of books, 426.
+ His ballads, 427.
+ His controversy with Collins, 428.
+ Means adopted by him to improve himself as a writer, 428.
+ Silence Dogood letters, 429.
+ Meets Governor Burnet, 434.
+ Forms acquaintance with Ralph and other lovers of reading in
+ Philadelphia, 434.
+ Love of books, 434.
+ Franklin's scruples about niceties of authorship and printing, 435.
+ Criticism of Hume on his use of words, 439.
+ Franklin's conception of good writing, 440.
+ Advice to Benjamin Vaughn as to writing, 440.
+ General character of Franklin's writings, 441.
+ His fable of the eagle and the hare, 443.
+ Canada pamphlet, 439, 444.
+ Papers written by Franklin on the Colonial controversy before his
+ return from his second mission to England, 446.
+ Effect of the Edict by the King of Prussia and its companion satire,
+ 447.
+ Letters to the Public Advertiser, 449.
+ Dialogue between Rodrigue and Fell, the apothecary, 449.
+ Copper plate engraving designed by Franklin, 450.
+ Papers written by Franklin in France to promote the American Cause,
+ 451.
+ His dialogue between Britain and other countries, 452.
+ Graver latter-day writings by Franklin, 454.
+ His papers on how to grow rich, 455.
+ Parable against Persecution, 456.
+ Parable on Brotherly Love, 456.
+ Papers contributed by Franklin to the Busybody and the Pennsylvania
+ Gazette, 457.
+ Speech of Polly Baker, 467.
+ Means of Disposing the Enemy to Peace, 468.
+ Craven Street Gazette, 468.
+ Petition of the Letter Z, 471.
+ Sale of the Hessians, 472.
+ Supplement to the Boston Independent Chronicle, 472, 474.
+ The Ephemera, 472, 476.
+ The Whistle, 472, 478.
+ His petite chanson a boire, 472, 479.
+ His letter to the Abbe Morellet on wine, 472, 480.
+ Dialogue between Franklin and the Gout, 472, 481.
+ Handsome and Deformed Leg, 472, 484.
+ Economical Project, 472, 485.
+ A Letter from China, 487.
+ Abuse of the Press, 488.
+ Comparison of the Conduct of the Ancient Jews and of the
+ Anti-Federalists, 489.
+ Account of the Supremest Court of Judicature in Pennsylvania, 489.
+ Speech of Sidi Mehemet Ibrahim against the Erika, 489.
+ Petition of the Left Hand, 490.
+ Morals of Chess, 491.
+ Franklin's letters, 492.
+ His letter on the Cincinnati, 494.
+ General observations on the history and contents of the Autobiography,
+ 499.
+ General observations on Poor Richard's Almanac, 503.
+ The Way to Wealth, or Father Abraham's Speech, 517
+
+Franklin, Benjamin (Franklin's uncle), i., 60, 82, 275, 276, 277, 289, 304
+
+Franklin College, Pa., i., 15
+
+Franklin, Deborah, i., 52, 70, 88, 99, 103, 205, 211, 218, 224 (note), 290,
+303, 306, 307, 314, 336, 346, 367, 372, 373, 423, 449, 489;
+ ii., 23, 45, 70, 79, 93, 470 (note)
+
+Franklin, Francis Folger, i., 70, 240
+
+Franklin in France, by the Hales, ii., 6 (note)
+
+Franklin, James, i., 83, 199, 279, 301; ii., 29, 30, 41, 426, 427
+
+Franklin, James, Jr., i., 199, 278, 279
+
+Franklin, John (Franklin's brother), i., 53, 94, 274, 278, 279, 296
+
+Franklin, John (Franklin's uncle), i., 274, 277
+
+Franklin, Josiah (Franklin's father), i., 60, 78, 82, 85, 158, 159, 200,
+ 266, 267, 268, 270, 274, 304, 307;
+ ii., 28, 41, 428
+
+Franklin, Josiah, Jr., i., 158, 276, 279
+
+Franklin, Peter, i., 279, 280 (note);
+ ii., 83
+
+Franklin, Sally (daughter of Thomas Franklin, of Lutterworth), i., 277,
+ 306;
+ ii., 469
+
+Franklin, Samuel (Franklin's brother), i., 280, 301
+
+Franklin, Samuel (son of Franklin's Uncle Benjamin),
+ ii., 29
+
+Franklin, Samuel (grandson of Franklin's Uncle Benjamin), i., 275, 277
+
+Franklin, Thomas (Franklin's uncle), i., 38, 275, 303, 305
+
+Franklin, Thomas (Franklin's grandfather), i., 275
+
+Franklin, Thomas (of Lutterworth), i., 277, 306
+
+Franklin, William, i., 26, 36, 44, 48, 134, 173, 178, 216, 218, 236, 238,
+241, 262, 264, 264 (note), 273, 295, 305, 337, 348, 375, 379, 393, 453,
+474, 476;
+ ii., 82, 83, 98, 104 (note), 134, 166, 175, 177, 178, 181, 185, 207, 338
+(note), 436, 448, 483 (note)
+
+Franklin, Mrs. William, i., 40, 255, 264 (note)
+
+Franklin, William Temple, i., 44, 92, 93, 174 (note), 261, 264 (note), 372,
+388, 390, 453, 482, 497, 530, 539;
+ ii., 24, 224, 247, 255, 295, 306
+
+French, Col. ii., 40, 43
+
+
+G
+
+Galloway, Joseph, i., 5, 253, 343, 347;
+ ii., 100, 128, 129, 135, 136, 174, 175, 176, 201, 206, 210, 339
+
+Gantt, Edward, i., 65
+
+Garden, Dr. Alexander, i., 315
+
+Gates, Gen. Horatio, i., 470
+
+Gazetteer, Letter to, ii., 202
+
+Gebelin, Antoine Court de, ii., 418
+
+General Magazine and Historical Chronicle for all the British Plantations
+in America, ii., 74
+
+George III, i., 418, 419, 453, 455, 457;
+ ii., 99, 165
+
+Gladstone, Wm. E., ii., 168, 204
+
+Godfrey, Mrs., i., 208
+
+Godfrey, Thomas, i., 118, 326, 327;
+ ii,. 59
+
+Grace, Robert, i., 15, 118, 301, 326;
+ ii., 64, 64 (note), 66
+
+Grafton, Duke of, ii., 169, 227 (note)
+
+Grand, Ferdinand, i., 513, 530, 532;
+ ii., 85
+
+Granville, Lord, i., 448;
+ ii., 118
+
+Greene, Gen. Nathanael, ii., 232
+
+Grenville, George, ii., 140, 190, 338, 339 (note)
+
+
+H
+
+Hall, David, i., 133, 244, 350;
+ ii., 4 (note), 77, 79, 167
+
+Hamilton, Andrew, ii., 43, 45, 63, 67
+
+Hamilton, Gov. James, ii., 107, 109, 110, 141, 145
+
+Hancock, John, ii., 2, 312
+
+Handsome and Deformed Leg, ii., 472, 484
+
+Harris, Anne, i., 282, 301
+
+Harris, Grace, i., 283
+
+Harry, David, ii., 54, 69
+
+Hartley, David, i., 57, 108, 153, 447, 456, 542 (note), 543;
+ ii., 301, 302, 311
+
+Hawkesworth, Dr. John, i., 57, 380, 437;
+ ii., 394
+
+Helvetius, M., i., 489
+
+Helvetius, Madame, i., 487, 518, 529, 540;
+ ii., 481, 483
+
+Hemphill, Rev. Mr., i., 69
+
+Herschel, Sir William, ii., 419
+
+Hewson, Elizabeth, i., 262, 387, 390
+
+Hewson, Mary (Polly Stevenson), i., 19, 35, 56, 107, 133, 224 (note), 243,
+261, 262, 372, 373, 374, 471;
+ ii., 165, 167, 399, 412, 469, 499
+
+Hewson, Dr. William, i., 19, 384, 385;
+ ii., 469
+
+Hewson, William (Franklin's godson), i., 239, 388, 390
+
+Hints for Those that would be Rich, ii., 455
+
+Historical Review of the Constitution and Government of Pennsylvania from
+its Origin, i., 39 (note)
+
+Hodgson, William, ii., 303
+
+Holker, Jean, i., 542 (note)
+
+Holker, Mrs. Jean, i., 542 (note)
+
+Holmes, Abdiel, ii., 24
+
+Holmes, Mary, i., 282
+
+Holmes, Capt. Robert, i., 282;
+ ii., 39, 53
+
+Hopkinson, Francis, i., 246, 338, 339, 341;
+ ii., 277
+
+Hopkinson, Thomas, i., 339;
+ ii., 379
+
+Howe, Lord, i., 154, 423;
+ ii., 184, 230, 242, 424
+
+Hubbard (or Partridge), Elizabeth, i., 20, 43 (note), 53, 64, 265, 355,
+477;
+ ii., 9
+
+Huey, Joseph, i., 79, 153
+
+Hughes, John, i., 217, 222, 336;
+ ii., 25, 155, 167
+
+Hume, David, i., 466, 467;
+ ii., 423, 425
+
+Hunter, William, i., 542 (note);
+ ii., 80, 81
+
+Huntingdon, Samuel, i., 47;
+ ii., 287, 317
+
+Hutchinson Letters, Tract Relative to the Affair of, ii., 183, 207, 217,
+446
+
+Hutchinson, Gov. Thomas, ii., 142, 195, 217, 226
+
+Hutton, James, i., 447, 453
+
+
+I
+
+Idea of the English School Sketched out for the Consideration of the
+Trustees of the Philadelphia Academy, i., 138
+
+Increase of Mankind, Essay on, ii., 191, 193, 348, 424
+
+Ingenhousz, Jan, i., 5, 45 (note), 263, 334, 345, 418, 419, 421, 472, 532,
+541;
+ ii., 138, 374, 379, 388, 389, 406, 415
+
+Ingersoll, Jared, i., 95, 356, 364
+
+Interest of Great Britain Considered with Regard to her Colonies, etc.,
+ii., 444
+
+Internal State of America, The, ii., 347, 454
+
+Izard, Ralph, ii., 221, 250, 255 (note), 256, 258 (note), 268, 270, 271,
+274
+
+
+J
+
+Jackson, Richard, i., 147, 361, 470;
+ ii., 136, 156, 158, 165, 346, 444
+
+Jackson, William, ii., 288
+
+James, Abel, i., 18, 253, 342, 539;
+ ii., 100
+
+Jay, John, i., 263, 339, 341, 350, 487;
+ ii., 4, 84, 235, 255 (note), 256, 257, 258 (note), 284, 285, 288, 290,
+291, 292, 316, 319, 320, 321, 324, 333
+
+Jefferson, Thomas, i., 6, 18, 318, 485, 540;
+ ii., 8, 17, 96, 235, 241, 242, 249, 255 (note), 281, 330 (note), 424
+
+Jenyns, Soame, ii., 338
+
+Johnson, Samuel, i., 130, 311, 356, 363
+
+Johnson, Gov. William, ii., 160
+
+Jones, Dr. John, i., 112
+
+Jones, John Paul, i., 482, 485;
+ ii., 263, 268, 290, 299, 301, 476
+
+Jones, Sir William, i., 411, 412, 416;
+ ii., 313
+
+Jordan, Thomas, i., 57, 438
+
+Journal of the Negotiation for Peace with Great Britain, i., 9;
+ ii., 5
+
+Journal of a Voyage from London to Philadelphia, i., 32;
+ ii., 16, 350
+
+Journey to the Elysian Fields, i., 489
+
+Junius, ii., 227 (note)
+
+Junto, The, i., 117;
+ ii., 9, 66
+
+
+K
+
+Kalm, Peter, i., 124, 146
+
+Kames, Lord, i., 20, 29, 98, 196, 391, 464, 466;
+ ii., 166, 177, 187, 191, 400, 424
+
+Keimer, Samuel, i., 85, 206;
+ ii., 37, 51, 53, 62, 68, 69
+
+Keith, Sir William, i., 90, 282;
+ ii., 20, 39, 40, 41, 51
+
+Kelly and Fry, Doctors, i., 134, 135
+
+Kent, Benjamin, i., 64, 64 (note)
+
+Kinnersley, Ebenezer, i., 246, 345;
+ ii., 353, 379
+
+
+L
+
+Lafayette, Marquis de, i., 48, 485, 503, 530;
+ ii., 256, 298
+
+Lafayette, Madame de, i., 531
+
+LaLuzerne, Chevalier de, ii., 253, 319, 324, 327
+
+LaMarck, Madame, i., 542 (note)
+
+Landais, Peter, i., 162;
+ ii., 268
+
+Lathrop, Rev. John, i., 8, 115
+
+Laurens, Henry, i., 315;
+ ii., 5, 6 (note), 25, 255 (note), 257 (note), 284, 388
+
+Laurens, Col. John, i., 315, 316 (note);
+ ii., 256, 288
+
+Lavoisier, Antoine Laurent, i., 530, 532
+
+Lavoisier, Madame, i., 477, 528
+
+Lawrence, Col., i., 170
+
+Lee, Arthur, i., 21 (note), 284, 285 (note), 469;
+ ii., 7 (note), 221, 236, 237, 249, 250, 252 (note), 255, 255 (note), 256,
+258 (note), 260, 263 (note), 267, 268, 271, 274
+
+Lee, Gen. Charles, i., 71, 470, 471
+
+Lee, John, ii., 221, 222
+
+Lee, Ludlow, i., 285 (note)
+
+Lee, William, i., 285 (note);
+ ii., 250, 265, 266, 270
+
+LeDespencer, Lord (Sir Francis, Dashwood), i., 74, 391, 447, 452;
+ ii., 216, 448
+
+LeRoy, Charles, i., 528
+
+LeRoy, David, i., 528
+
+LeRoy, Jean Baptiste, i., 526;
+ ii., 170, 354, 388, 413
+
+LeRoy, Madame Jean Baptiste, i., 526
+
+LeRoy, Pierre, i., 528
+
+Lettsom, Dr. John Coakley, i., 421, 422
+
+Le Veillard, M. Louis, i., 389, 501, 521, 530, 537;
+ ii., 342, 344
+
+Le Veillard, Madame, i., 530, 537
+
+Le Veillard, Mlle., i., 541
+
+Lining, John, i., 315;
+ ii., 373 (note), 381, 397 (note), 419
+
+Lith, M., ii., 307
+
+Livezey, Thomas, i., 344
+
+Livingston, Robert R., i., 480;
+ ii., 241, 253, 292, 293, 304, 326, 327, 345
+
+Lloyd, Thomas, ii., 152
+
+Logan, James, i., 132, 158, 171, 350;
+ ii., 17, 90, 397
+
+Logan, Miss, ii., 20
+
+Loose Thoughts on a Universal Fluid, ii., 417
+
+Lor, M. de, ii., 355
+
+Loudon, Lord, ii., 112, 114, 117 (note)
+
+Lovell, James, ii., 13, 301, 305, 345
+
+
+M
+
+Madison, James, ii., 330, 335
+
+Maize, Essay on, i., 149
+
+Mansfield, Lord, ii., 121, 227 (note), 448
+
+Marat, Jean Paul, ii., 277
+
+Marbois, i., 263;
+ ii., 324, 327
+
+Maritime Observations, i., 528
+
+Marshall, Humphrey, i., 421;
+ ii., 344 (note)
+
+Martin, David, i., 131
+
+Martin, Henri, i., 473
+
+Maseres, Francis, i., 441 (note)
+
+Mather, Cotton, i., 83, 117, 269;
+ ii., 57
+
+Mather, Rev. Increase, i., 83, 117
+
+Mather, Samuel, i., 117;
+ ii., 57
+
+Maurepas, M. de, ii., 317 (note)
+
+Meanes of Disposing the Enemie to Peace, ii., 468
+
+Mecom, Benny, i., 286, 291, 297;
+ ii., 73
+
+Mecom, Mrs. Benny, i., 294
+
+Mecom, Edward, i., 291
+
+Mecom, Jane, i., 20, 31 (note), 52, 68, 71, 80, 95, 107 (note), 172, 177,
+240, 270, 273, 274, 278, 279, 281, 282, 284, 287, 295, 297, 354, 371, 372,
+477;
+ ii., 10, 22, 187, 203, 399
+
+Meditation on a Quart Mugg, ii., 464, 466
+
+Meredith, Hugh, i., 326;
+ ii., 53, 55, 63
+
+Mesmer, ii., 407
+
+Mifflin, Thomas, i., 542 (note)
+
+Militia Act, i., 183;
+ ii., 126
+
+Mitchell, Dr., ii., 354
+
+Montaudouin, M., i., 56
+
+Monthieu, John Joseph, i., 542 (note)
+
+Morellet, Abbe, i., 229, 488, 495, 496, 497, 513, 518;
+ ii., 7 (note), 274, 394, 472, 480
+
+Morellet, Abbe, Franklin's letter to, on wine, ii., 472
+
+Morris, Eleanor, i., 277
+
+Morris, Robert, i., 159 (note);
+ ii., 19, 24, 253, 254, 257 (note), 266, 291, 292, 330
+
+Morris, Gov. Robert Hunter, i., 185;
+ ii., 19, 104, 104 (note), 109, 111
+
+Morris, Robert and Thomas Leach, ii., 203
+
+Morris, Thomas, ii., 266, 269
+
+Moustiers, Comte de, i., 477 (note)
+
+
+N
+
+Narrative of the Late Massacres in Lancaster County, i., 194
+
+Nature and Necessity of a Paper Currency, ii., 66
+
+Neave, Oliver, ii., 383
+
+Newenham, Sir Edward, i., 5, 469
+
+New York, ii., 35 (note)
+
+New Zealand, i., 153
+
+Nogaret, Felix, ii., 18
+
+Nollet, Abbe, ii., 354, 382
+
+Norris, Isaac, ii., 129, 141, 155
+
+North, Lord, ii., 5, 221, 223
+
+Notes and Hints for a Paper on Catching Cold, ii., 412
+
+
+O
+
+Observations Relative to the Intentions of the Original Founders of the
+Academy in Philadelphia, i., 136, 138
+
+Onslow, Col., ii., 339 (note)
+
+Osborne, Charles, i., 323
+
+Oswald, Richard, i., 110, 156;
+ ii., 7, 322
+
+
+P
+
+Paine, Thomas, i., 259, 530
+
+Parable of Brotherly Love, i., 64;
+ ii., 425, 456
+
+Parable against Persecution, i., 64;
+ ii., 15, 456
+
+Paradise, Mr., i., 496
+
+Paris, Ferdinand John, ii., 119
+
+Parker, James, i., 148 (note), 291, 293;
+ ii., 73
+
+Parsons, William, i., 326, 327
+
+Parton, James, i., 73, 74, 227, 275, 303;
+ ii., 85, 153
+
+Paschal, Mrs., i., 542 (note)
+
+Passy, Mlle., de, i., 483
+
+Pellion, Louis Givanetti, ii., 307
+
+Penn, Gov. John, i., 193, 196, 197;
+ ii., 126, 153
+
+Penn, Thomas, i., 124, 170, 189;
+ ii., 102, 102 (note), 131, 141
+
+Penn, Lady Thomas, ii., 21, 139
+
+Penn, William, i., 158, 191;
+ ii., 101, 102, 125, 131, 138
+
+Pennsylvania Gazette, ii., 20, 21, 27, 62, 69, 75, 78, 85
+
+Percival, Thomas, ii., 12
+
+Perkins, John, ii., 380
+
+Peters, Rev. Mr., i., 127
+
+Peters, Richard, ii., 141, 155
+
+Petition of the Left Hand, ii., 490
+
+Petition of the Letter Z, ii., 471
+
+Philadelphia, i., 8, 151
+
+Philadelphische Zeitung, ii., 74
+
+Pitt, Miss, i., 380
+
+Plain Truth, i., 163
+
+Plan for Improving the Condition of the Free Blacks, ii., 454
+
+Plan for Settling two Western Colonies in North America, i., 103, (note)
+
+Poetry of Franklin, i., 113, 230, 275, 380, 499;
+ ii., 427, 498
+
+Poor, Essay on the Laboring, ii., 345
+
+Poor Richard's Almanac, i., 16, 27;
+ ii., 503
+
+Potts, Stephen, i., 326, 327;
+ ii., 53
+
+Pownall, Thomas, i., 343, 542 (note);
+ ii., 159, 340 (note)
+
+Preface to the Speech of Joseph Galloway, ii., 104, 129
+
+Price, Dr. Richard, i., 58, 93, 96, 416, 425, 531;
+ ii., 385, 529
+
+Price of Corn, ii., 347
+
+Priestley, Joseph, i., 27, 67, 92, 106, 109, 110, 224 (note), 373, 416,
+426, 427, 429;
+ ii., 171, 221, 223, 224, 230, 375, 405
+
+Prince, Rev. Thomas, ii., 358 (note)
+
+Pringle, Sir John, i., 93, 320, 391, 402, 415, 416, 417, 417 (note), 421,
+425;
+ ii., 408, 421
+
+Proposals Relating to Education, i., 129;
+ ii., 23
+
+Proposition Relative to Privateering, i., 110, 156
+
+Prussia, i., 156
+
+Public Advertiser, Letters to, ii., 192, 220, 228, 449
+
+
+Q
+
+Queries and Remarks in Relation to the Pennsylvania Constitution, ii., 331
+(note)
+
+Quincy, Edmund, i., 149
+
+Quincy, Josiah, i., 52, 352, 353, 476;
+ ii., 25, 247, 261
+
+Quincy, Josiah, Jr., i., 21 (note), 352
+
+
+R
+
+Ralph, James, i., 87, 90, 202, 224 (note), 323;
+ ii., 21, 43, 45
+
+Ray, Catherine (or Mrs. William Greene), i., 207, 231, 266, 312, 356, 364,
+385, 533
+
+Raynal, Abbe, i., 318, 485
+
+Read, James, i., 301
+
+Read, Joseph, i., 301; ii., 83
+
+Read, Mrs. (Franklin's mother-in-law), i., 24, 37, 206, 241, 243, 301;
+ ii., 93
+
+Reed, Joseph, ii., 226, 268
+
+Remarks and Facts Concerning American Paper Money, ii., 336, 340
+
+Remarks on the Late Protest, i., 67;
+ ii., 136
+
+Retort Courteous, The, ii., 454
+
+Rhoads, Samuel, i., 246, 330, 542 (note);
+ ii., 137
+
+Rise and Progress of the Differences between Great Britain and her American
+Colonies, ii., 175
+
+Rittenhouse, David, i., 350
+
+Robert, Messrs., ii., 386, 387
+
+Roberts, Hugh, i., 246, 311, 327, 328, 330, 331, 359
+
+Robespierre, ii., 277
+
+Robinson, Crabbe, i., 39
+
+Roche, Abbe de la, i., 488, 489, 496, 499, 501, 513, 518
+
+Rochefoucauld, Duc de la, i., 477, 486, 530, 531;
+ ii., 321, 342
+
+Romilly, Sir Samuel, i., 20;
+ ii., 7 (note), 248, 347
+
+Rozier, M. Pilatre de, ii., 385, 389
+
+Rules by Which a Great Empire May be Reduced to a Small One, ii., 446
+
+Rush, Dr. Benjamin, i., 321, 332, 333, 420;
+ ii., 410
+
+Russell, Lord John, ii., 227
+
+Ruston, Thomas, ii., 341
+
+
+S
+
+Sainte-Beuve, i., 11
+
+Sale of the Hessians, ii., 472
+
+Sargent, John, i., 42 (note), 104, 438
+
+Sayre, Stephen, i., 21 (note);
+ ii., 340
+
+Schuyler, Gen. Philip, ii., 238, 240
+
+Schweighauser, M., i., 285 (note)
+
+Scott, Lydia, i., 282, 301
+
+Sharp, Granville, i., 76, 77
+
+Shavers and Trimmers, ii., 464, 467
+
+Shelburne, Lord, i., 430;
+ ii., 161, 162, 195, 221, 223, 261, 320, 321, 394
+
+Shipley, Anna Maria, i., 408, 411, 412;
+ ii., 313
+
+Shipley, Catherine, i., 330, 407, 409, 410, 412, 416, 417, 417 (note)
+
+Shipley, Emily, i., 408, 414, 417
+
+Shipley, Georgiana, i., 405, 407, 410, 412, 413, 417, 417 (note);
+ ii., 231 (note)
+
+Shipley, Jonathan (Bishop of St. Asaph's), i., 5, 20, 56, 405, 537;
+ ii., 346
+
+Shipley, Mrs. Jonathan, i., 406, 407, 412, 417 (note)
+
+Shirley, Gen. William, ii., 112, 146
+
+Silence Dogood, i., 83, 84;
+ ii., 31
+
+Small, Alexander, i., 77, 265, 439;
+ ii., 383, 405
+
+Smeathman, Henry, ii., 362
+
+Smith, Sydney, i., 465, 466;
+ ii., 527
+
+Smith, Dr. William, i., 128, 131, 311, 340;
+ ii., 129
+
+Smyth, Albert Henry, i., 43, 248 (note), 484
+
+Some Good Whig Principles, ii., 100, 454
+
+Soulavie, Abbe, ii., 420
+
+Sparks, Jared, i., 248 (note);
+ ii., 200 (note), 211 (note)
+
+Speech of Sidi Mehemet Ibrahim against the Erika, i., 7;
+ ii., 489
+
+St. John, Hector, ii., 7 (note)
+
+Stanley, John, i., 57, 284, 380, 437
+
+Stevenson, Mrs. Margaret, i., 44, 134, 236, 242, 247, 250, 306, 307, 372,
+373, 386, 388, 391, 454, 479;
+ ii., 4 (note), 468, 469, 470, 470 (note)
+
+Stiles, Ezra, i., 91, 114, 356, 362
+
+Stories, i., 27, 44, 67, 110, 289, 297, 318, 319, 320, 321 (note), 338,
+341, 349, 354, 361, 377, 402, 430, 434, 437, 445, 469, 510;
+ ii., 9, 10, 11, 12, 241, 247
+
+Stormont, Lord, ii., 13, 14 (note)
+
+Strachey, Henry, ii., 244
+
+Strahan, William, i., 14, 39, 41, 55, 58, 131, 134, 201, 224 (note), 225,
+227, 229, 230, 302, 311, 313, 385, 392, 438, 467;
+ ii., 21, 79, 91, 117, 164, 165, 425
+
+Sumner, Charles, i., 71
+
+Supplement to the Boston Independent Chronicle, ii., 472, 474
+
+Syng, Philip, i., 328, 330, 331;
+ ii., 367, 379
+
+
+T
+
+Tasker, Col. Benjamin, i., 178, 314
+
+Temple, John, ii., 220, 220 (note)
+
+Tennent, Rev. Gilbert, i., 142
+
+Thayer, John, i., 64
+
+Thomas, Sir George, i., 175;
+ ii., 105, 109
+
+Thompson, Mrs., i., 442, 443
+
+Thomson, Charles, i., 246, 350;
+ ii., 84, 168, 187, 201, 208, 209, 390
+
+Tissington, Anthony, i., 442, 445
+
+Toleration in Old England and New England, ii., 446
+
+Torris, J. i., 155
+
+Transatlantic Voyages of Franklin, i., 224 (note)
+
+Tucker, Dean, ii., 162
+
+Turgot, Marquis de, i., 9, 486, 488, 542 (note);
+ ii., 18, 274, 404
+
+Tyler, Moses Coit, ii., 6 (note)
+
+
+V
+
+Vanetta, Capt., i., 188;
+ ii., 513
+
+Vaughan, Benjamin, i., 18, 67, 109, 156, 432, 531, 537;
+ ii., 24, 162, 343, 347, 409, 440, 444
+
+Vergennes, Comte de, i., 487;
+ ii., 252, 253, 255, 280, 285, 287, 293, 312, 317 (note), 318, 319, 320,
+321, 324, 325, 326, 327, 328, 342
+
+Vernon, Mr., i., 200
+
+Vindication and Offer from Congress to Parliament, ii., 452
+
+Viny, Thomas, i., 391, 442, 445;
+ ii., 397 (note)
+
+Virginia, i., 315
+
+Voltaire, i., 48;
+ ii., 278, 358
+
+
+W
+
+Walker, Hannah, i., 277
+
+Walpole, Horace, ii., 227, 476
+
+Walpole, Thomas, ii., 209
+
+Washington, George, i., 6, 18, 21, 182, 261, 262, 302, 316, 403, 529;
+ ii., 96, 111, 247, 287, 312, 329
+
+Watson, Joseph, i., 323
+
+Way to Wealth, i., 12;
+ ii., 517
+
+Webb, Benjamin, i., 150
+
+Webb, George, i., 326;
+ ii., 54, 62
+
+Webster, Noah, ii., 400, 436
+
+Wedderburn, Alexander, ii., 221, 227 (note)
+
+Weems, Mason, i., 65, 88
+
+Weissenstein, Charles de, ii., 311
+
+Welfare, Michael, i., 58
+
+West, Benjamin, i., 470, 471
+
+West Wycombe, i., 75, 452
+
+Wharton, Dr. Francis, i., 542 (note);
+ ii., 6 (note)
+
+Wharton, Samuel, i., 311, 343, 344, 541;
+ ii., 268
+
+Wharton, Thomas, i., 245, 246, 253, 311, 343, 344
+
+Whatley, George, i., 6, 55, 57, 104, 447, 463;
+ ii., 251, 396
+
+Whateley, Thomas, ii., 220
+
+Whateley, William, ii., 220
+
+Whistle, The, i., 501;
+ ii., 472, 478
+
+Whitefield, George, i., 54, 59, 61, 132, 142, 338, 447. 449
+
+Whitefoord, Caleb, i., 133, 442, 447, 447 (note)
+
+Whitehead, Paul, i., 75;
+ ii., 448
+
+Whitehead, Wm. A., i., 39 (note)
+
+Whitehurst, John, i., 442, 445
+
+Wickes, Capt., ii., 249, 295, 297
+
+Wilkes, John, i., 75;
+ ii., 99, 165
+
+Williams, Jonathan, i., 281, 283, 288, 295, 297
+
+Williams, Jonathan, Jr., i., 283, 289, 469, 481;
+ ii., 4 (note), 11, 263, 269, 296
+
+Williams, Josiah, i., 283
+
+Williams, Mariamne (Miss Alexander), i., 211, 469, 542 (note)
+
+Winthrop, John, i., 352, 426, 430;
+ ii., 218
+
+Witch Trial at Mt. Holly, ii., 464
+
+Wren, Thomas, ii., 304
+
+Wright, Dr., ii., 355
+
+Wright, James, i., 346
+
+Wright, Susannah, i., 192, 346
+
+Wygate, ii., 49
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Benjamin Franklin; Self-Revealed,
+Volume II (of 2), by Wiliam Cabell Bruce
+
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