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                  The True Benjamin Franklin


        [Illustration: THE DUPLESSIS PORTRAIT OF FRANKLIN]




                          The True
                      Benjamin Franklin

                             By
                    Sydney George Fisher

         Author of “Men, Women, and Manners in Colonial
         Times,” “The Making of Pennsylvania,” “The
         Evolution of the Constitution,” etc.

         “If rigid moral analysis be not the purpose of
         historical writing, there is no more value in
         it than in the fictions of mythological
         antiquity.”--CHARLES FRANCIS ADAMS, SR.

                       FIFTH EDITION

                      WITH AN APPENDIX

                        Philadelphia
                   J. B. Lippincott Company
                            1903


                      COPYRIGHT, 1898

                             BY

                   J. B. LIPPINCOTT COMPANY




Preface to the Third Edition


Since the appearance of the first edition there has been some discussion
of the question whether Mrs. Foxcroft was really Franklin’s daughter. In
the present edition I have added an appendix going fully into this
question.

Franklin’s plain language about love and marriage and his very frank
descriptions of his own shortcomings in these matters seem to have
surprised many people. I might have explained this more fully in the
first edition, but to any one who knows the age in which Franklin lived
there is nothing that need cause surprise.

It was an age of frank autobiographies and plain, detailed,
introspective statements about love affairs. Rousseau flourished in
those days, also Gozzi and Madame Roland; and Casanova began writing his
most extraordinary memoirs just about the time of Franklin’s death.
Anyone who is at all familiar with these authors will readily understand
why Franklin wrote his “Advice on the Choice of a Mistress.” His “Speech
of Polly Baker” was of the same sort. It had a most extraordinary
circulation because people were then looking at these matters from that
point of view. The philosophic thought of that age was somewhat
inclining to the opinion, since then much developed by German theorists
like Nietzche, that religion had made love impure. Franklin, as at page
106, was also inclining that way.

Such things must be mentioned and given their proper position and
importance in a book calling itself “The True Benjamin Franklin.” There
are many books describing the false Franklin, the impossible Franklin,
the Franklin that never existed, and could not in the nature of things
exist, and to these books those who do not like the truth are referred.




Preface


This analysis of the life and character of Franklin has in view a
similar object to that of the volume entitled “The True George
Washington,” which was prepared for the publishers by Mr. Paul Leicester
Ford and issued a year or two ago.

Washington sadly needed to be humanized, to be rescued from the
myth-making process which had been destroying all that was lovable in
his character and turning him into a mere bundle of abstract qualities
which it was piously supposed would be wholesome examples for the
American people. This assumption that our people are children who must
not be told the eternal truths of human nature, but deceived into
goodness by wooden heroes and lay figures, seems, fortunately, to be
passing away, and in a few years it will be a strange phase to look back
upon.

So thorough and systematic has been the expurgating during the last
century that some of its details are very curious. It is astonishing how
easily an otherwise respectable editor or biographer can get himself
into a state of complete intellectual dishonesty. It is interesting to
follow one of these literary criminals and see the minute care with
which he manufactures an entirely new and imaginary being out of the
real man who has been placed in his hands. He will not allow his victim
to say even a single word which he considers unbecoming. The story is
told that Washington wrote in one of his letters that a certain movement
of the enemy would not amount to a flea-bite; but one of his editors
struck out the passage as unfit to be printed. He thought, I suppose,
that Washington could not take care of his own dignity.

Franklin in his Autobiography tells us that when working as a journeyman
printer in London he drank nothing but water, and his fellow-workmen, in
consequence, called him the “Water-American;” but Weems in his version
of the Autobiography makes him say that they called him the “American
Aquatic,” an expression which the vile taste of that time was pleased to
consider elegant diction. In the same way Temple Franklin made
alterations in his grandfather’s writings, changing their vigorous
Anglo-Saxon into stilted Latin phrases.

It is curious that American myth-making is so unlike the ancient
myth-making which as time went on made its gods and goddesses more and
more human with mortal loves and passions. Our process is just the
reverse. Out of a man who actually lived among us and of whose life we
have many truthful details we make an impossible abstraction of
idealized virtues. It may be said that this could never happen among a
people of strong artistic instincts, and we have certainly in our
conceptions of art been theatrical and imitative rather than dramatic
and real. Possibly the check which is being given to our peculiar
myth-making is a favorable sign for our art.

The myth-makers could not work with Franklin in quite the same way that
they worked with Washington. With Washington they ignored his personal
traits and habits, building him up into a cold military and political
wonder. But Franklin’s human side would not down so easily. The human in
him was so interlaced with the divine that the one dragged the other
into light. His dramatic and artistic sense was very strong, far
stronger than in most distinguished Americans; and he made so many plain
statements about his own shortcomings, and followed pleasure and natural
instincts so sympathetically, broadly, and openly, that the efforts to
prepare him for exhibition are usually ludicrous failures.

But the eulogists soon found an effective way to handle him. Although
they could ignore certain phases of his character only so far as the
genial old fellow would let them, they could exaggerate the other phases
to an almost unlimited extent; for his career was in many ways
peculiarly open to exaggeration. It was longer, more varied, and more
full of controversy than Washington’s. Washington was twenty-six years
younger than Franklin and died at the age of sixty-seven, while Franklin
lived to be eighty-four. Washington’s important public life was all
covered by the twenty-two years from 1775 to 1797, and during more than
three of those years he was in retirement at Mount Vernon. But Franklin
was an active politician, philosopher, man of science, author,
philanthropist, reformer, and diplomat for the forty-odd years from 1745
to 1788.

Almost every event of his life has been distorted until, from the great
and accomplished man he really was, he has been magnified into an
impossible prodigy. Almost everything he wrote about in science has been
put down as a discovery. His wonderful ability in expressing himself has
assisted in this; for if ten men wrote on a subject and Franklin was one
of them, his statement is the one most likely to be preserved, because
the others, being inferior in language, are soon forgotten and lost.

Every scrap of paper he wrote upon is now considered a precious relic
and a great deal of it is printed, so that statements which were but
memoranda or merely his way of formulating other men’s knowledge for his
own convenience or for the sake of writing a pleasant letter to a
friend, are given undue importance. Indeed, when we read one of these
letters or memoranda it is so clearly and beautifully expressed and put
in such a captivating form that, as the editor craftily forbears to
comment on it, we instinctively conclude that it must have been a gift
of new knowledge to mankind.

The persistency with which people have tried to magnify Franklin is
curiously shown in the peculiar way in which James Logan’s translation
of Cicero’s essay on old age was attributed to him. This translation
with notes and a preface was made by Logan and printed in 1744 by
Franklin in his Philadelphia printing-office, and at the foot of the
title-page Franklin’s name appeared as the printer. In 1778 the book was
reprinted in London, with Franklin’s name on the title-page as the
translator. In 1809 one of his editors, William Duane, actually had this
translation printed in his edition of Franklin’s works. The editor was
afterwards accused of having done this with full knowledge that the
translation had not been made by Franklin; but, under the code of
literary morals which has so long prevailed, I suppose he would be held
excusable.

One of Franklin’s claims to renown is that he was a self-made man, the
first distinguished American who was created in that way; and it would
seem, therefore, all the more necessary that he should be allowed to
remain as he made himself. I have endeavored to act upon this principle
and so far as possible to let Franklin speak for himself. The analytical
method of writing a man’s life is well suited to this purpose. There are
already chronological biographies of Franklin in two volumes or more
giving the events in order with very full details from his birth to his
death. The present single volume is more in the way of an estimate of
his position, worth, and work, and yet gives, I believe, every essential
fact of his career with enough detail to enable the reader to appreciate
it. At the same time the chapters have been arranged with such regard to
chronological order as to show the development of character and
achievement from youth to age.




Contents


  CHAPTER                                        PAGE

  I.--PHYSICAL CHARACTERISTICS                    17

  II.--EDUCATION                                  41

  III.--RELIGION AND MORALS                       78

  IV.--BUSINESS AND LITERATURE                   132

  V.--SCIENCE                                    167

  VI.--THE PENNSYLVANIA POLITICIAN               192

  VII.--DIFFICULTIES AND FAILURE IN ENGLAND      231

  VIII.--AT HOME AGAIN                           265

  IX.--THE EMBASSY TO FRANCE AND ITS SCANDALS    270

  X.--PLEASURES AND DIPLOMACY IN FRANCE          314

  XI.--THE CONSTITUTION-MAKER                    349


  APPENDIX

  FRANKLIN’S DAUGHTER, MRS. FOXCROFT             365




List of Illustrations with Notes


                                                                    PAGE

  THE DUPLESSIS PORTRAIT OF FRANKLIN                     _Frontispiece._

      Painted from life by Duplessis in Paris in 1778, and believed to
      be the best likeness of Franklin. The reproduction is from the
      original in the Academy of Fine Arts, Philadelphia, by
      permission of the owner. Duplessis also made a pastel drawing of
      Franklin in 1783, which has often been reproduced.

  FRANKLIN TOWED BY HIS KITE                                          19

      This picture is copied from an engraving on the title-page of
      the old English edition of Franklin’s Works, published in 1806
      by J. Johnson & Co., London.

  THE SUMNER PORTRAIT OF FRANKLIN                                     29

      Painted, as is supposed, in London in 1726, when he was twenty
      years old, and now in the possession of Harvard University. Its
      history and the doubts as to its authenticity are given in the
      text.

  THE MARTIN PORTRAIT OF FRANKLIN                                     32

      Painted by Martin in England in 1765, at the request of Mr.
      Robert Alexander, for whom Franklin had performed a service in
      examining some documents and giving his opinion.

  THE GRUNDMANN IDEAL PORTRAIT OF FRANKLIN                            34

      Painted by Otto Grundmann, a German artist in America, after a
      careful study of Franklin’s career and of the portraits of him
      taken from life. The original is now in the Boston Art Museum.

  HOUSE IN WHICH FRANKLIN WAS BORN                                    42

      Franklin’s parents lived in this house, which stood on Milk
      Street, Boston, until 1810, when it was destroyed by fire.

  PRINTING-PRESS AT WHICH FRANKLIN WORKED WHEN A BOY IN BOSTON        45

      From a photograph kindly furnished by the Mechanics’ Institute
      of Boston, in whose rooms the press is exhibited.

  THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER AS ABRIDGED BY LORD DESPENCER AND
  FRANKLIN                                                           101

      The changes in the Venite on the left-hand page are by Franklin,
      and perhaps also those in the Te Deum. The changes in the
      rubrics are by Lord Despencer, and possibly he also made the
      changes in the Te Deum. The copy of the prayer-book from which
      this reproduction is made is in the collection of Mr. Howard
      Edwards, of Philadelphia.

  JOHN FOXCROFT                                                      105

      Reproduced by permission of the Historical Society of
      Pennsylvania from the painting in their possession. It has been
      supposed by some to be a portrait of Franklin; but it has not
      the slightest resemblance to his other portraits, and the letter
      held in the hand is addressed to John Foxcroft.

  WILLIAM FRANKLIN, ROYAL GOVERNOR OF NEW JERSEY                     108

      Born 1730, died 1813; son of Benjamin Franklin; was Governor of
      New Jersey from 1762 to 1776, when he became a Tory. The
      reproduction is from an etching by Albert Rosenthal of the
      portrait once temporarily in the Philadelphia Library and owned
      by Dr. T. Hewson Bache, of Philadelphia.

  WILLIAM TEMPLE FRANKLIN                                            113

      Born 1760, died 1823, son of William Franklin, Governor of New
      Jersey. He was brought up principally by his grandfather, for
      whom he acted as secretary in Paris, during the Revolution, and
      by whom he was saved from following his father to Toryism. The
      reproduction is from an etching by Albert Rosenthal of the
      portrait in the Trumbull Collection, Yale School of Art.

  MRS. FRANKLIN                                                      116

      This reproduction is from the portrait painted by Matthew Pratt,
      and now in the possession of Rev. F. B. Hodge, of Wilkesbarre,
      Pennsylvania.

  MRS. SARAH BACHE                                                   119

      This picture is copied from an engraved reproduction which has
      often appeared in books relating to Franklin; but none of these
      reproductions are faithful copies of the original painting,
      which represents an older and less handsome woman, with more
      rugged features and more resemblance to Franklin. Permission to
      reproduce the painting could not be secured.

  FRONT PAGE OF THE FIRST NUMBER OF THE “PENNSYLVANIA GAZETTE”       135

      Reproduced by permission from the collection of the Historical
      Society of Pennsylvania.

  TITLE-PAGE OF POOR RICHARD’S ALMANAC FOR 1733                      144

      Reproduced by permission from the collection of the Historical
      Society of Pennsylvania.

  FRANKLIN’S MARITIME SUGGESTIONS                                    188

      These figures accompanied Franklin’s letter to Alphonsus Le Roy
      on maritime improvements.

  FRANKLIN’S LETTER TO STRAHAN                                       267

      William Strahan was Franklin’s intimate friend, although they
      differed on the subject of the Revolution. The letter was half
      jest, half earnest, and in this tone Franklin always wrote to
      him on political subjects. In 1784 he wrote him an affectionate,
      but teasing and sarcastic letter on the success of the
      Revolution.

  FRANKLIN CANNOT DIE                                                275

      From an old French engraving in the collection of Mr. Clarence
      S. Bement, of Philadelphia. Death has seized Franklin and is
      dragging him to the lower world. The figure half kneeling is
      America, with her bow and arrows and the skin of a wild beast,
      imploring Death to spare her deliverer. Fame is flying in the
      air, with a crape on her arm and a trumpet, announcing that _le
      grand_ Franklin has saved his country and given her liberty in
      spite of tyrants. The spirit of Philosophy and a warrior are
      weeping at the foot of the monument, on which is a
      lightning-rod; while France, a fair, soft woman, seizes Franklin
      in her arms to bear him to the sky.

  AMERICA SET FREE BY FRANKLIN                                       309

      From an old French engraving in the collection of Mr. Clarence
      S. Bement, of Philadelphia. Like the preceding one, from the
      same collection, it represents America as a savage, in
      accordance with the French ideas of that time.

  FRANKLIN TEARS THE LIGHTNING FROM THE SKY AND THE SCEPTRE FROM THE
  TYRANTS                                                            312

      From an old French engraving in the collection of Mr. Clarence
      S. Bement, of Philadelphia. The figure with her arm on
      Franklin’s lap is America.

  FRANKLIN RELICS IN THE POSSESSION OF THE HISTORICAL SOCIETY OF
  PENNSYLVANIA                                                       330

      The cups and saucers are Dresden china, given him by Madame
      Helvetius. The china punch-barrel was given him by Count
      d’Artois; the wine-glass is one of the heavy kind then in use;
      the picture-frame contains a printed dinner invitation sent by
      him to the members of the Constitutional Convention of 1787.

  PORTRAIT OF LOUIS XVI                                              346

      The kings of France at that time usually gave their portrait to
      a foreign ambassador on his return to his country. This one, by
      Sicardi, which was given to Franklin, was formerly surrounded by
      two rows of four hundred and eight diamonds, and was probably
      worth from ten to fifteen thousand dollars. It is now in the
      possession of Mr. J. May Duane, of Philadelphia, by whose
      permission it is reproduced.

  FRANKLIN PORTRAIT IN WEST COLLECTION                               350

      A pencil drawing with Benjamin West’s name on the back, now the
      property of Hon. S. W. Pennypacker, of Philadelphia. It is
      supposed by some authorities to be merely a copy of the bust by
      Ceracchi; others believe it to be a drawing from life by West.

  FRANKLIN’S GRAVE IN CHRIST CHURCH GRAVEYARD, PHILADELPHIA          360

      The flat stone marks the grave of Franklin and his wife. The
      larger upright stone is in memory of John Read, Mrs. Franklin’s
      father, and the smaller one is in memory of Franklin’s son,
      Francis, who died in infancy.




The True Benjamin Franklin




I

PHYSICAL CHARACTERISTICS


Franklin was a rather large man, and is supposed to have been about five
feet ten inches in height. In his youth he was stout, and in old age
corpulent and heavy, with rounded shoulders. The portraits of him reveal
a very vigorous-looking man, with a thick upper arm and a figure which,
even in old age, was full and rounded. In fact, this rounded contour is
his most striking characteristic, as the angular outline is the
characteristic of Lincoln. Franklin’s figure was a series of harmonious
curves, which make pictures of him always pleasing. These curves
extended over his head and even to the lines of his face, softening the
expression, slightly veiling the iron resolution, and entirely
consistent with the wide sympathies, varied powers, infinite shrewdness,
and vast experience which we know he possessed.

In his earliest portrait as a youth of twenty he looks as if his bones
were large; but in later portraits this largeness of bone which he might
have had from his Massachusetts origin is not so evident. He was,
however, very muscular, and prided himself on it. When he was a young
printer, as he tells us in his Autobiography, he could carry with ease a
large form of letters in each hand up and down stairs. In his old age,
when past eighty, he is described as insisting on lifting unaided heavy
books and dictionaries to show the strength he still retained.

He was not brought up on fox-hunting and other sports, like Washington,
and there are no amusements of this sort to record of him, except his
swimming, in which he took great delight and continued until long after
he had ceased to be a youth. He appears, when a boy, to have been fond
of sailing in Boston Harbor, but has told us little about it. In
swimming he excelled. He could perform all the ordinary feats in the
water which were described in the swimming-books of his day, and on one
occasion tied himself to the string of his kite and was towed by it
across a pond a mile wide. In after-years he believed that he could in
this way cross the English Channel from Dover to Calais, but he admitted
that the packet-boat was preferable.

His natural fondness for experiment led him to try the effect of
fastening oval paddles to his hands, which gave him greater speed in
swimming, but were too fatiguing to his wrists. Paddles or large sandals
fastened to his feet he soon found altered the stroke, which the
observant boy had discovered was made with the inside of the feet and
ankles as well as with the flat part of the foot.

[Illustration: FRANKLIN TOWED BY HIS KITE]

While in London, as a wandering young journeyman printer, he taught an
acquaintance, Wygate, to swim in two lessons. Returning from Chelsea
with a party of Wygate’s friends, he gave them an exhibition of his
skill, going through all the usual tricks in the water, to their great
amazement and admiration, and swimming from near Chelsea to Blackfriars,
a distance of four miles. Wygate proposed that they should travel
through Europe, maintaining themselves by giving swimming-lessons, and
Franklin was at first inclined to adopt the suggestion.

Just as he was on the eve of returning to Pennsylvania, Sir William
Wyndham, at one time Chancellor of the Exchequer, having heard of his
swimming feats, wanted to engage him to teach his sons; but his ship
being about to sail, Franklin was obliged to decline. If he had remained
in England, he tells us, he would probably have started a
swimming-school.

When forty-three years old, retired from active business, and deep in
scientific researches, he lived in a house at Second and Race Streets,
Philadelphia. His garden is supposed to have extended to the river,
where every warm summer evening he used to spend an hour or two swimming
and sporting in the water.

This skill in swimming and the agility and grace which Franklin
displayed in performing feats in the water are good tests of general
strength of muscles, lungs, and heart. So far as can be discovered, only
one instance is recorded of his using his physical power to do violence
to his fellow-man.

He had a friend named Collins, rather inclined to drink, who, being in a
boat with Franklin and some other youths, on the Delaware, refused to
take his turn at rowing. He announced that the others should row him
home. Franklin, already much provoked at him for not returning money
which he had lent him, and for other misconduct, insisted that he row
his share. Collins replied that Franklin should row or he would throw
him overboard, and, as he was approaching him for that purpose, Franklin
seized him by the collar and breeches and threw him into the river,
where they kept him till his strength was exhausted and his temper
cooled.

Until he was forty years old Franklin worked on his own account or for
others as a printer, which included hard manual labor; for, even when in
business for himself, he did everything,--made his own ink, engraved
wooden cuts and ornaments, set the type, and worked the heavy
hand-presses. His pleasures were books, the theatre, and love-affairs.
Except swimming, he had no taste for out-door amusements. Sport, either
with rod, gun, horse, or hound, was altogether out of his line. As he
became prosperous and retired from the active business of money-getting,
he led an entirely sedentary life to the end of his long career.

Although he did a vast amount of work in his time, was fond of early
rising, and had the greatest endurance and capacity for labor, there
was, nevertheless, a touch of indolence about him. He did the things
which he loved and which came easy to him, cultivated his tastes and
followed their bent in a way rather unusual in self-made men. It has
been said of him that he never had the patience to write a book. His
writings have exerted great influence, are now considered of inestimable
value, and fill ten large volumes, but they are all occasional pieces,
letters, and pamphlets written to satisfy some need of the hour.

His indolence was more in his manner than in his character. It was the
confident indolence of genius. He was never in a hurry, and this was
perhaps one of the secrets of his success. His portraits all show this
trait. In nearly every one of them the whole attitude, the droop of the
shoulders and arms, and the quietude of the face are reposeful.

He seems to have been totally without either irritability or
excitability. In this he was the reverse of Washington, who was subject
to violent outbursts of anger, could swear “like an angel of God,” as
one of his officers said, and had a fiery temper to control. Perhaps
Franklin’s strong sense of humor saved him from oaths; there are no
swearing stories recorded of him; instead of them we have innumerable
jokes and witticisms. His anger when aroused was most deliberate,
calculating, and judicious. His enemies and opponents he always
ridiculed, often, however, with so little malice or sting that I have no
doubt they were sometimes compelled to join in the laugh. He never
attacked or abused.

Contentment was a natural consequence of these qualities, and
contributed largely to maintain his vigor through eighty-four years of a
very stormy life. It was a family trait. Many of his relations possessed
it; and he describes some of them whom he looked up in England as living
in happiness and enjoyment, in spite of the greatest poverty. Some able
men struggle with violence, bitterness, and heart-ache for the great
prizes of life, but all these prizes tumbled in on Franklin, who seems
to have had a fairy that brought them to him in obedience to his
slightest wish.

His easy-going sedentary life, of course, told on him in time. After
middle life he had both the gout and the stone, but his natural vitality
fortified him against them. He was as temperate as it was possible to be
in that age, and he studied his constitution and its requirements very
closely. He was so much interested in science that he not infrequently
observed, reasoned, and to some extent experimented in the domain which
properly belongs to physicians.

When only fifteen years old, and apprenticed in the printing-office of
his brother in Boston, in the year 1721, he became a vegetarian. A book
written by one of the people who have for many centuries been advocating
that plan of living fell in his way and converted him. It appealed to
his natural economy and to his desire for spare money with which to buy
books. He learned from the book the various ways of cooking vegetables,
and told his brother that if he would give him half the money paid for
his board he would board himself. He found very soon that he could pay
for his vegetable diet and still save half the money allowed him, and
that he could also very quickly eat his rice, potatoes, and pudding at
the printing-office and have most of the dinner-hour for reading the
books his spare money procured.

This was calculating very closely for a boy of fifteen, and shows
unusual ability as well as willingness to observe and master small
details. Such ability usually comes later in life with strengthened
intellect, but Franklin seems to have had this sort of mature strength
very early.

He did not remain an entire convert to the vegetarians, but he often
practised their methods and apparently found no inconvenience in it. He
could eat almost anything, and change from one diet to another without
difficulty. Two years after his first experiment with vegetarianism he
ran away from his brother at Boston, and found work at Philadelphia with
a rough, ignorant old printer named Keimer, who wanted, among other
projects, to form a religious sect, and to have Franklin help him.
Franklin played with his ideas for a while, and finally said that he
would agree to wear a long beard and observe Saturday instead of Sunday,
like Keimer, if Keimer would join him in a vegetable diet.

He found a woman in the neighborhood to cook for them, and taught her
how to prepare forty kinds of vegetable food, which reduced their cost
of living to eighteen pence a week for each. But Keimer, who was a heavy
meat-eater, could stand it only three months, and then ordered a
roast-pig dinner, to be enjoyed by the two vegetarians and a couple of
women. Keimer, however, arrived first at the feast, and before any of
his guests appeared had eaten the whole pig.

While working in the printing-office in London, Franklin drank water, to
the great astonishment and disgust of the beer-guzzling Englishmen who
were his fellow-laborers. They could not understand how the
water-American, as they called him, could go without strength-giving
beer and yet be able to carry a large form of letters in each hand up
and down stairs, while they could carry only one with both hands.

The man who worked one of the presses with Franklin drank a pint before
breakfast, a pint with bread and cheese for breakfast, one between
breakfast and dinner, one at dinner, another at six o’clock, and another
after he had finished his day’s work. The American boy, with his early
mastery of details, reasoned with him that the strength furnished by the
beer could come only from the barley dissolved in the water of which the
beer was composed; that there was a larger portion of flour in a penny
loaf, and if he ate a loaf and drank a pint of water with it he would
derive more strength than from a pint of beer. But the man would not be
convinced, and continued to spend a large part of his weekly wages for
what Franklin calls the cursed beverage which kept him in poverty and
wretchedness.

Franklin was, however, never a teetotaler. He loved, as he tells us, a
glass and a song. Like other people of that time, he could drink without
inconvenience a quantity which nowadays, especially in America, seems
surprising. Some of the chief-justices of England are described by their
biographer, Campbell, as two- or four-bottle men, according to the
quantity they could consume at a sitting. Washington, Mr. Ford tells us,
drank habitually from half a pint to a pint of Madeira, besides punch
and beer, which would now be thought a great deal. But Franklin
considered himself a very temperate man. When writing his Autobiography,
in his old age, he reminds his descendants that to temperance their
ancestor “ascribes his long-continued health and what is still left to
him of a good constitution.”

Like most of those who live to a great age, he was the child of
long-lived parents. “My mother,” he says, “had likewise an excellent
constitution; she suckled all her ten children. I never knew either my
father or mother to have any sickness but that of which they died,--he
at eighty-nine and she at eighty-five years of age.”

He was fond of air-baths, which he seems to have thought hardened his
skin and helped it to perform its functions, and when in London in 1768
he wrote one of his pretty letters about them to Dr. Dubourg in Paris.

    “You know the cold bath has long been in vogue here as a tonic;
    but the shock of the cold water has always appeared to me,
    generally speaking, as too violent, and I have found it much
    more agreeable to my constitution to bathe in another element, I
    mean cold air. With this view I rise almost every morning and
    sit in my chamber, without any clothes whatever, half an hour or
    an hour, according to the season, either reading or writing.
    This practice is not in the least painful, but, on the contrary,
    agreeable; and if I return to bed afterwards, before I dress
    myself, as sometimes happens, I make a supplement to my night’s
    rest of one or two hours of the most pleasing sleep that can be
    imagined. I find no ill consequences whatever resulting from it,
    and that at least it does not injure my health, if it does not
    in fact contribute much to its preservation. I shall therefore
    call it for the future a _bracing_ or _tonic_ bath.” (Bigelow’s
    Works of Franklin, vol. iv. p. 193.)

Some years afterwards, while in Paris and suffering severely from gout
in his foot, he used to expose the foot naked out of bed, which he
found relieved the pain, because, as he supposed, the skin was given
more freedom to act in a natural way. His remarks on air-baths were
published in the early editions of his works and induced many people to
try them. Davis, in his “Travels in America,” says that they must have
been suggested to him by a passage in Aubrey’s “Miscellanies;” but,
after searching all through that old volume, I cannot find it. Franklin,
however, made no claim to a discovery. Such baths have been used by
physicians to strengthen delicate persons, but in a more guarded and
careful manner than that in which Franklin applied them.

It was characteristic of his genial temperament that he loved to dream
in his sleep and to recollect his dreams. “I am often,” he says, “as
agreeably entertained by them as by the scenery of an opera.” He wrote a
pleasant little essay, addressed to an unknown young lady, on “The Art
of Procuring Pleasant Dreams,” which may be said to belong among his
medical writings. Fresh air and ventilation are the important
dream-persuaders, and bad dreams and restlessness in bed are caused by
excess of perspirable matter which is not allowed to get away from the
skin. Eat less, have thinner and more porous bedclothes, and if you are
restless, get up, beat and turn your pillows, shake all the sheets
twenty times, and walk about naked for a while. Then, when you return,
the lovely dreams will come.

Closely connected with his faith in air-baths was his opinion that
people seldom caught cold from exposure to air or even to dampness. He
wrote letters on the subject and prepared notes of his observations.
These notes are particularly interesting and full of curious
suggestions. The diseases usually classed as colds, he said, are not
known by that name in any other language, and the name is misleading,
for very few of them arise from cold or dampness. Indians and sailors,
who are continually wet, do not catch cold; nor is cold taken by
swimming. And he went on enumerating the instances of people who lived
in the woods, in barns, or with open windows, and, instead of catching
cold, found their health improved. Cold, he thought, was caused in most
cases by impure air, want of exercise, or over-eating.

    “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 and coaches, 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_.”

Much of this is true in a general way, for medical practitioners have
long held that all colds do not arise from exposure or draughts; but
they do not admit that colds can be taken from turning over old books
and clothes, although the dust from these might make one sneeze.

John Adams and Franklin while travelling together through New Jersey to
meet Lord Howe, in 1776, discussed the question of colds, and the former
has left an amusing account of it. The taverns were so full at Brunswick
that they had to sleep in the same bed. Franklin insisted on leaving the
window wide open, and discoursed on the causes of colds until they both
fell asleep.

    “I have often asked him whether a person heated with exercise
    going suddenly into cold air, or standing still in a current of
    it, might not have his pores suddenly contracted, his
    perspiration stopped, and that matter thrown into the
    circulation, or cast upon the lungs, which he acknowledged was
    the cause of colds. To this he never could give me a
    satisfactory answer, and I have heard that in the opinion of his
    own able physician, Dr. Jones, he fell a sacrifice at last, not
    to the stone, but to his own theory, having caught the violent
    cold which finally choked him, by sitting for some hours at a
    window, with the cool air blowing upon him.” (Adams’s Works,
    vol. iii. p. 75.)

In some of his letters Franklin denied positively that colds could be
taken by exposure. He got a young physician to experiment on the effect
of nakedness in increasing perspiration, and when he found, or thought
he had found, that the perspiration was greater than when the body was
clothed, he jumped to the conclusion that exposure could not check
perspiration. In a passage in his notes, however, he seems to admit that
a sudden cold air or a draught might check it.

[Illustration: THE SUMNER PORTRAIT OF FRANKLIN]

He wrote so well and so prettily on colds that people began to think he
was the discoverer of their causes, and his biographer, Parton, goes
so far as to say so. But upon inquiry among learned physicians I cannot
find that they recognize him as a discoverer, or that he has any
standing on this question in medical history. It would seem that he
merely collected and expressed the observations of others as well as his
own; none of them were entirely new, and many of them are now considered
unsound.

Nearer to the truth is Parton’s statement that “he was the first
effective preacher of the blessed gospel of ventilation.” He certainly
studied that subject very carefully, and was an authority on it, being
appointed while in England to prepare a plan for ventilating the Houses
of Parliament. It would, however, be better to say that he was one of
the most prominent advocates of ventilation rather than the first
effective preacher of it; for in Bigelow’s edition of his works[1] will
be found an excellent essay on the subject in which the other advocates
are mentioned. But Parton goes on to say, “He spoke, and the windows of
hospitals were lowered; consumption ceased to gasp and fever to inhale
poison;” which is an extravagant statement that he would find
difficulty, I think, in supporting.

In Franklin’s published works there is a short essay called “A
Conjecture as to the Cause of the Heat of the Blood in Health and of the
Cold and Hot Fits of Some Fevers.” The blood is heated, he says, by
friction in the action of the heart, by the distention and contraction
of the arteries, and by being forced through minute vessels. This essay
is very ingenious and well written, and the position given to it in his
works might lead one to suppose that it was of importance; but I am
informed by physicians that it was merely the revamping of an ancient
theory held long before his time, and quite without foundation.

Franklin’s excursions into the domain of medicine are not, therefore, to
be considered among his valuable contributions to the welfare of man,
except so far as they encouraged him to advocate fresh air and
ventilation, though they may have assisted him to take better care of
his own health.

Of the numerous portraits of him of varying merit, nearly all of which
have been reproduced over and over again, only a few deserve
consideration for the light they throw on his appearance and character.
The Sumner portrait, as it used to be called, is supposed to have been
painted in London in 1726, when he was there as a young journeyman
printer, twenty years old, and was brought by him to America and given
to his brother John, of Rhode Island. He evidently dressed himself for
this picture in clothes he was not in the habit of wearing at his work;
for he appears in a large wig, a long, decorated coat and waistcoat,
with a mass of white ruffles on his bosom and conspicuous wrist-bands.
The rotund and strongly developed figure is well displayed. Great
firmness and determination are shown in the mouth and lower part of the
face. The animal forces are evidently strong. The face is somewhat
frank, and at the same time very shrewd. The eyes are larger than in
the later portraits, which is not surprising, for eyes are apt to grow
smaller in appearance with age.

This portrait, which is now in Memorial Hall at Harvard University, has
been supposed by some critics not to be a portrait of Franklin at all.
How, they ask, could Franklin, who was barely able to earn his living at
that time, and whose companions were borrowing a large part of his spare
money, afford to have an oil-painting made of himself in such expensive
costume? and why is there no mention of this portrait in any of his
writings? But, on the other hand, the portrait has the peculiar set
expression of the mouth and the long chin which were so characteristic
of Franklin; and it would have been entirely possible for him to have
borrowed the clothes and had the picture painted cheaply or as a
kindness. It is not well painted, need not have been expensive, and, as
there were no photographs then, paintings were the only way by which
people could give their likenesses to relatives.

The Martin portrait, painted when he was about sixty years old,
represents him seated, his elbows resting on a table, and holding a
document, which he is reading with deep but composed and serene
attention. It was no doubt intended to represent him in a characteristic
attitude. As showing the calm philosopher and diplomat reading and
thinking, somewhat idealized and yet a more or less true likeness, it is
in many respects the best picture we have of him. But we cannot see the
eyes, and it does not reveal as much character as we could wish.

The Grundmann portrait, an excellent photograph of which hangs in the
Philadelphia Library, was painted by a German artist, after a careful
study of Franklin’s career and of all the portraits of him which had
been painted from life. As an attempt to reproduce his characteristics
and idealize them it is a distinct success and very interesting. He is
seated in a chair, in his court-dress, with long stockings and
knee-breeches, leaning back, his head and shoulders bent forward, while
his gaze is downward. He is musing over something, and there is that
characteristic shrewd smile on the lower part of the rugged face. It is
the smile of a most masterful and cunning intellect; but no one fears
it: it seems as harmless as your mother’s. You try to imagine which one
of his thousand clever strokes and sayings was passing through his mind
that day; and the strong, intensely individualized figure, which
resembles that of an old athlete, is wonderfully suggestive of life,
experience, and contest.

But the Duplessis portrait, which was painted from life in Paris in
1778, when he was seventy-two, reveals more than any of them. The Sumner
portrait is Franklin the youth; the Martin and the Grundmann portraits
are Franklin the philosopher and statesman; the Duplessis portrait is
Franklin the man.

[Illustration: THE MARTIN PORTRAIT OF FRANKLIN]

Unfortunately, it is impossible to get a good reproduction of the
Duplessis portrait, because there is so much detail in it and the
coloring and lights and shadows cannot be successfully copied. But any
one who will examine the original or any good replicas of it in oil
will, I am convinced, see Franklin as he really was. The care in
details, the wrinkles, and the color of the skin give us confidence in
it as a likeness. The round, strong, but crude form of the boy of twenty
has been beaten and changed by time into a hundred qualities and
accomplishments, yet the original form is still discernible, and the
face looks straight at us: we see the eyes and every line close at hand.

In this, the best portrait for studying Franklin’s eye, we see at once
that it is the eye of a very sensuous man, and we also see many details
which mark the self-made man, the man who never had been and never
pretended to be an aristocrat. This is in strong contrast to
Washington’s portraits, which all disclose a man distinctly of the upper
class and conscious of it.

But, in spite of this homeliness in the Duplessis portrait and the easy,
careless manner in which the clothes are worn, there are no signs of
what might be called vulgarity. The wonderful and many-sided
accomplishments of the man carried him well above this. Brought up as a
boy at candle- and soap-making, he nevertheless, when prosperous, turned
instinctively to higher things and refined accomplishments and was
comparatively indifferent to material wealth. Nor do we find in him any
of that bitter hostility and jealousy of the established and successful
which more modern experience might lead us to expect.

The Duplessis portrait conforms to what we read of Franklin in
representing him as hale and vigorous at seventy-two. The face is full
of lines, but they are the lines of thought, and of thought that has
come easily and cheerfully; there are no traces of anxiety, gnawing
care, or bitterness. In Paris, at the time the Duplessis portrait was
painted, Franklin was regarded as a rather unusual example of vigor and
good health in old age. John Adams in his Diary uses him as a standard,
and speaks of other old men in France as being equal or almost equal to
him in health.

Although not so free from disease as were his parents, he was not much
troubled with it until late in life. When a young man of about
twenty-one he had a bad attack of pleurisy, of which he nearly died. It
terminated in an abscess of the left lung, and when this broke, he was
almost suffocated by the quantity and suddenness of the discharge. A few
years afterwards he had a similar attack of pleurisy, ending in the same
way; and it was an abscess in his lung which finally caused his death.
The two abscesses which he had when a young man seem to have left no ill
effects; and after his two attacks of pleurisy he was free from serious
sickness for many years, until at the age of fifty-one he went to
England to represent the Province of Pennsylvania. Soon after landing he
was attacked by an obscure fever, of which he does not give the name,
and which disabled him for eight weeks. He was delirious, and they
cupped him and gave him enormous quantities of bark.

[Illustration: THE GRUNDMANN IDEAL PORTRAIT OF FRANKLIN]

After he had passed middle life he found that he could not remain
entirely well unless he took a journey every year. During the nine
years of his residence in Paris as minister to France he was unable to
take these journeys, and as a consequence his health rapidly
deteriorated. He had violent attacks which incapacitated him for weeks,
sometimes for months, and at the close of the nine years he could
scarcely walk and could not bear the jolting of a carriage.

In France his diseases were first the gout and afterwards the stone. He
was one of those stout, full-blooded men who the doctors say are
peculiarly liable to gout, and his tendency to it was evidently
increased by his very sedentary habits. He confesses this in part of
that clever dialogue which he wrote to amuse the Parisians:

    “MIDNIGHT, October 22, 1780.

    “_Franklin._--Eh! Oh! Eh! What have I done to merit these cruel
    sufferings?

    “_Gout._--Many things; you have ate and drank too freely, and
    too much indulged those legs of yours in their indolence.

    “_Franklin._--Who is it that accuses me?

    “_Gout._--It is I, even I, the Gout.

    “_Franklin._--What! my enemy in person?

    “_Gout._--No, not your enemy.

    “_Franklin._--I repeat it; my enemy; for you would not only
    torment my body to death, but ruin my good name; you reproach me
    as a glutton and a tippler; now all the world, that knows me,
    will allow that I am neither the one nor the other.

    “_Gout._--The world may think as it pleases; it is always very
    complaisant to itself, and sometimes to its friends; but I very
    well know that the quantity of meat and drink proper for a man,
    who takes a reasonable degree of exercise, would be too much for
    another, who never takes any.

    “_Franklin._--I take--Eh! Oh!--as much exercise--Eh!--as I can,
    Madam Gout. You know my sedentary state, and on that account, it
    would seem, Madam Gout, as if you might spare me a little,
    seeing it is not altogether my own fault.

    “_Gout._--Not a jot; your rhetoric and your politeness are
    thrown away; your apology avails nothing. If your situation in
    life is a sedentary one, your amusements, your recreations, at
    least, should be active. You ought to walk or ride; or, if the
    weather prevents that, play at billiards. But let us examine
    your course of life. While the mornings are long, and you have
    leisure to go abroad, what do you do? Why, instead of gaining an
    appetite for breakfast, by salutary exercise, you amuse yourself
    with books, pamphlets, or newspapers, which commonly are not
    worth the reading. Yet you eat an inordinate breakfast, four
    dishes of tea, with cream, and one or two buttered toasts, with
    slices of hung beef, which I fancy are not things the most
    easily digested. Immediately afterward you sit down to write at
    your desk, or converse with persons who apply to you on
    business. Thus the time passes till one, without any kind of
    bodily exercise. But all this I could pardon, in regard, as you
    say, to your sedentary condition. But what is your practice
    after dinner? Walking in the beautiful garden of those friends,
    with whom you have dined, would be the choice of men of sense;
    yours is to be fixed down to chess, where you are found engaged
    for two or three hours!... Wrapt in the speculations of this
    wretched game, you destroy your constitution. What can be
    expected from such a course of living, but a body replete with
    stagnant humors, ready to fall a prey to all kinds of dangerous
    maladies, if I, the Gout, did not occasionally bring you relief
    by agitating those humors, and so purifying or dissipating
    them?... But amidst my instructions, I had almost forgot to
    administer my wholesome corrections; so take that twinge,--and
    that....”

He tried to give himself exercise by walking up and down his room. In
that humorous essay, “The Craven Street Gazette,” in which he describes
the doings of Mrs. Stevenson’s household, where he lived in London,
there is a passage evidently referring to himself: “Dr. Fatsides made
four hundred and sixty 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.”

Some years afterwards, when he was in Paris, John Adams upbraided him
for not taking more exercise; but 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.” This was not a very good
substitute for out-of-door exertion. In fact, Franklin’s opinions on the
subject of exercise were not wise. The test of exercise was, he thought,
the amount of warmth it added to the body, and he inferred, therefore,
that walking must be better than riding on horseback, and he even
recommended walking up and down stairs. Walking, being monotonous and
having very little effect on the trunk and upper portions of the body,
is generally admitted to be insufficient for those who require much
exercise; while running up and down stairs would now be considered
positively injurious. But it is, perhaps, hardly in order to criticise
the methods of a man who succeeded in living to be eighty-four and who
served the public until the last year of his life.

Even when he was at his worst in Paris and unable to walk, his mind was
as vigorous as ever, and he looked well. Adams, who was determined to
comment on his neglect of exercise, says of him when in his crippled
condition, in 1785, “but he is strong and eats freely, so that he will
soon have other complaints besides the stone if he continues to live as
entirely without exercise as he does at present.” Adams also said that
his only chance for life was a sea-voyage.

Soon afterwards Franklin was carried in a litter by easy journeys from
Paris to the sea-coast, and crossed to Southampton, England, to wait for
the vessel that was to take him to Philadelphia. While at Southampton he
says,--

    “I went at noon to bathe in the Martin salt water hot bath, and
    floating on my back, fell asleep, and slept near an hour by my
    watch without sinking or turning! a thing I never did before and
    should hardly have thought possible. Water is the easiest bed
    that can be.”

It was certainly odd that in his seventy-ninth year and enfeebled by
disease he should renew his youthful skill as a swimmer and justify to
himself his favorite theory that nakedness and water are not the causes
of colds.

His opinion that occasional journeys were essential to his health and
Adams’s opinion of the necessity of a sea-voyage were both justified;
for when he reached Philadelphia, September 14, 1785, he could walk the
streets and bear the motion of an easy carriage. He was almost
immediately elected Governor of Pennsylvania, and held the office by
successive annual elections for three years. The public, he said, have
“engrossed the prime of my life. They have eaten my flesh, and seem
resolved now to pick my bones.” During the summer of 1787 he served as a
member of the convention which framed the national Constitution,
although unable to stand up long enough to make a speech, all his
speeches being read by his colleague, James Wilson; and yet it was in
that convention, as we shall see, that he performed the most important
act of his political career.

In December, 1787, he had a fall down the stone steps of his garden,
spraining his right wrist and bringing on another attack of the stone.
But he recovered in the spring; and at this period, and indeed to the
end of his life, his wonderful vitality bore up so well against severe
disease that his mental faculties were unimpaired, his spirits buoyant,
and his face fresh and serene.

But towards the end he had to take to his bed, and the last two or three
years of his life were passed in terrible pain, with occasional respites
of a few weeks, during which he would return to some of his old
avocations, writing letters or essays of extraordinary brightness and
gayety. He wrote a long letter on his religious belief to President
Stiles about five weeks before his death, his humorous protest against
slavery two weeks later, and an important letter to Thomas Jefferson on
the Northeast Boundary question nine days before his death.

His grandchildren played around his bedside; friends and distinguished
men called to see him, and went away to write notes of what they
recollected of his remarkable conversation and cheerfulness. One of his
grandchildren, afterwards Mrs. William J. Duane, was eight years old
during the last year of his life, and she has related that every evening
after tea he insisted that she should bring her Webster’s spelling-book
and say her lesson to him.

    “A few days before he died, he rose from his bed and begged that
    it might be made up for him so that he might die in a decent
    manner. His daughter told him that she hoped he would recover
    and live many years longer. He calmly replied, ‘I hope not.’
    Upon being advised to change his position in bed, that he might
    breathe easy, he said, ‘A dying man can do nothing easy.’”
    (Bigelow’s Franklin from his own Writings, vol. iii. p. 464.)

His physician, Dr. Jones, has described his last illness,--

    “About sixteen days before his death he was seized with a
    feverish indisposition, without any particular symptoms
    attending it, till the third or fourth day, when he complained
    of a pain in the left breast, which increased till it became
    extremely acute, attended with a cough and laborious breathing.
    During this state when the severity of his pains drew forth a
    groan of complaint, he would observe--that he was afraid he did
    not bear them as he ought--acknowledged his grateful sense of
    the many blessings he had received from that Supreme Being, who
    had raised him from small and low beginnings to such high rank
    and consideration among men--and made no doubt but his present
    afflictions were kindly intended to wean him from a world, in
    which he was no longer fit to act the part assigned him. In this
    frame of body and mind he continued till five days before his
    death, when his pain and difficulty of breathing entirely left
    him, and his family were flattering themselves with the hopes of
    his recovery, when an imposthumation, [abscess] which had formed
    itself in his lungs suddenly burst, and discharged a great
    quantity of matter, which he continued to throw up while he had
    sufficient strength to do it; but, as that failed, the organs of
    respiration became gradually oppressed--a calm lethargic state
    succeeded--and, on the 17th of April, 1790, about eleven o’clock
    at night, he quietly expired, closing a long and useful life of
    eighty-four years and three months.”


FOOTNOTES:

[1] Vol. iv. p. 271.




II

EDUCATION


Self-made men of eminence have been quite numerous in America for a
hundred years. Franklin was our first hero of this kind, and I am
inclined to think our greatest. The others have achieved wealth or
political importance; sometimes both. But Franklin achieved not only
wealth and the reputation of a diplomatist and a statesman, but made
himself a most accomplished scholar, a man of letters of world-wide
fame, a philosopher of no small importance, and as an investigator and
discoverer in science he certainly enlarged the domain of human
knowledge.

His father, Josiah Franklin, an industrious candle-maker in Boston,
intended that his youngest son, Benjamin, should enter the ministry of
the Puritan Church. With this end in view he sent him, when eight years
old, to the Boston Grammar-School; but before a year had expired he
found that the cost of even this slight schooling was too much for the
slender means with which he had to provide for a large family of
children. So Franklin went to another school, kept by one George
Brownell, where he stayed for about a year, and then his school-days
were ended forever. He entered his father’s shop to cut wicks and melt
tallow. During his two years of schooling he had learned to read and
write, but was not very good at arithmetic.

His associations were all humble, but they cannot be said to have been
those of either extreme poverty or ignorance. At Ecton,
Northamptonshire, England, whence his father came, the family had lived
for at least three hundred years, and how much longer is not known.
Several of those in the lineal line of Benjamin had been blacksmiths.
They were plain people who, having been always respectable and lived
long in one neighborhood, could trace their ancestry back for several
centuries.

They were unambitious, contented with their condition, and none of them
except Benjamin ever rose much above it, or even seriously tried to
rise. This may not have been from any lack of mental ability. Franklin’s
father was a strong, active man, as was to be expected of the descendant
of a line of blacksmiths. He was intelligent and inquiring, conversed
well on general subjects, could draw well, played the violin and sang in
his home when the day’s work was done, and was respected by his
neighbors as a prudent, sensible citizen whose advice was worth
obtaining. It does not appear that he was studious. But his brother
Benjamin, after whom our Franklin was named, was interested in politics,
collected pamphlets, made short-hand notes of the sermons he heard, and
was continually writing verses.

This Uncle Benjamin, while in England, took a great interest in the
nephew in America who was named after him, and he sent verses to him on
all sorts of subjects. He was unsuccessful in business, lost his wife
and all his children, save one, and finally came out to America to join
the family at Boston.

[Illustration: HOUSE IN WHICH FRANKLIN WAS BORN]

Franklin’s mother was Abiah Folger, the second wife of his father. She
was the daughter of Peter Folger, of Nantucket, a surveyor, who is
described by Cotton Mather as a somewhat learned man. He made himself
familiar with some of the Indian languages, and taught the Indians to
read and write. He wrote verses of about the same quality as those of
Uncle Benjamin. One of these, called “A Looking Glass for the Times,”
while it is mere doggerel, shows that its author was interested in
literature. He was a man of liberal views and opposed to the persecution
of the Quakers and Baptists in Massachusetts.

From this grandfather on his mother’s side Franklin no doubt inherited
his fondness for books, a fondness that was reinforced by a similar
tendency which, though not very strong in his father, evidently existed
in his father’s family, as Uncle Benjamin’s verses show. These verses
sent to the boy Franklin and his efforts at times to answer them were an
encouragement towards reading and knowledge. Franklin’s extremely
liberal views may possibly have had their origin in his maternal
grandfather, Peter Folger.

But independently of these suppositions as regards heredity, we find
Franklin at twelve years of age reading everything he could lay his
hands on. His first book was Bunyan’s “Pilgrim’s Progress,” which would
not interest boys nowadays, and scarcely interests mature people any
more; but there were no novels then and no story-books for boys.
“Pilgrim’s Progress” is a prose story with dialogues between the
characters, the first instance of this sort of writing in English, and
sufficient to fascinate a boy when there was nothing better in the
world.

He liked it so well that he bought the rest of Bunyan’s works, but soon
sold them to procure Burton’s Historical Collections, which were forty
small chapmen’s books, full of travels, adventures, history, and
descriptions of animals, well calculated to stimulate the interest of a
bright lad. Among his father’s theological books was Plutarch’s “Lives,”
which young Franklin read eagerly, also De Foe’s “Essay upon Projects,”
and Cotton Mather’s “Essays to do Good,” which he said had an important
influence on his character.

He so hated cutting wicks and melting tallow that, like many other boys
of his time, he wanted to run away to sea; and his father, to check this
inclination and settle him, compelled him to sign articles of
apprenticeship with his brother James, who was a printer. The child’s
taste for books, the father thought, fitted him to be a printer, which
would be a more profitable occupation than the ministry, for which he
was at first intended.

So Franklin was bound by law to serve his brother until he was
twenty-one. He learned the business quickly, stealing time to read
books, which he sometimes persuaded booksellers’ apprentices to take
from their masters’ shops in the evening. He would sit up nearly all
night to read them, so that they might be returned early in the morning
before they were missed.

[Illustration: PRINTING-PRESS AT WHICH FRANKLIN WORKED WHEN A BOY IN
BOSTON]

He wrote ballads, like his uncle Benjamin and his grandfather Peter
Folger, on popular events,--the drowning of a Captain Worthilake, and
the pirate Blackbeard,--and, after his brother had printed them, sold
them in the streets. His biographer, Weems, quotes one of these verses,
which he declares he had seen and remembered, and I give it with the
qualification that it comes from Weems:

    “Come all you jolly sailors,
      You all, so stout and brave;
    Come hearken and I’ll tell you
      What happened on the wave.

    “Oh! ’tis of that bloody Blackbeard
      I’m going now for to tell;
    And as how by gallant Maynard
      He soon was sent to hell--
        With a down, down, down, derry down.”

His father ridiculed these verses, in spite of their successful sale,
and dissuaded him from any more attempts; but Franklin remained more or
less of a verse-writer to the end of his life. Verse-writing trained him
to write good prose, and this accomplishment contributed, he thought,
more than anything else to his advancement.

He had an intimate friend, John Collins, likewise inclined to books, and
the two argued and disputed with each other. Franklin was fond of wordy
contention at that time, and it was possibly a good mental training for
him. He had caught it, he says, from reading his father’s books of
religious controversy. But in after-years he became convinced that this
disputatious turn was a very bad habit, which made one extremely
disagreeable and alienated friends; he therefore adopted during most of
his life a method of cautious modesty.

He once disputed with Collins on the propriety of educating women and on
their ability for study. He took the side of the women, and, feeling
himself worsted by Collins, who had a more fluent tongue, he reduced his
arguments to writing and sent them to him. A correspondence followed,
and Franklin’s father, happening to find the papers, pointed out to his
son the great advantage Collins had in clearness and elegance of
expression. A hint is all that genius requires, and Franklin went
resolutely to work to improve himself.

    “About this time 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 collections of hints into confusion,
    and after some weeks endeavored 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 or the
    language, and this encouraged me to think I might possibly in
    time come to be a tolerable English writer, of which I was
    extremely ambitious.”

In some respects this is the most interesting passage in all of
Franklin’s writings. It was this severe training of himself which gave
him that wonderful facility in the use of English that made him a great
man. Without it he would have been second-rate or ordinary. His method
of improving his style served also as a discipline in thought and logic
such as is seldom, if ever, given nowadays in any school or college.

Many of those who have reflected deeply on the subject of college
education have declared that its ultimate object should be to give in
the highest degree the power of expression. Some have said that a sense
of honor and the power of expression should be its objects. But there
are few who will dispute the proposition that a collegian who receives
his diploma without receiving with it more of the art of expression than
most men possess has spent his time and his money in vain.

During the last thirty years we have been trying every conceivable
experiment in college education, many of them mere imitations from
abroad and many of them mere suggestions, suppositions, or Utopian
theories. When we began these experiments it was taken for granted that
the old methods, which had produced in this country such scholars,
writers, and thinkers as Lowell, Longfellow, Holmes, Hawthorne,
Webster, Prescott, Motley, Bancroft, Everett, Phillips, Channing,
Parker, and Parkman, and in England a host too numerous to name, must
necessarily be wrong. We began to imitate Germany. It was assumed that
if we transplanted the German system we should begin to grind out
Mommsens and Bunsens by the yard, like a cotton-mill; and that if we
added to the German system every plausible suggestion of our own for
making things easy, the result would be a stupendous success.

But how many men have we produced who can be compared with the men of
the old system? Not one. The experiment, except so far as it has given a
large number of people a great deal of pretty information about history
and the fine arts, is a vast failure. After thirty years of effort we
have just discovered that the boys whose nerves and eyesight are being
worn out under our wonderful system cannot write a decent letter in the
English language; and a committee of Harvard University have spent
months of labor and issued a voluminous report of hundreds of pages on
this mortifying discovery, leaving it as perplexing and humiliating as
they found it.

Remedies are proposed. We have made a mistake, say some, and they
suggest that for a change we adopt the English University system. After
partially abolishing Latin and Greek we were to have in place of them a
great deal of history and mathematics, which were more practical, it was
said; but now we are informed that this also was a mistake, and a
movement is on foot to abolish history and algebra. Others suggest the
French system, and one individual writes a long article for the
newspapers proving beyond the possibility of a doubt that French
education is just the thing we need. Always imitating something; always
trying to bring in the foreign and distant. And until we stop this
vulgar provincial snobbery and believe in ourselves and learn to do our
own work with our own people in our own way, we shall continue to
flounder and fail.

Let us distinguish clearly between information and education. If it is
necessary, especially in these times, to give people information on
various subjects,--on science, history, art, bric-a-brac, or mud
pies,--very good; let it be done by all means, for it seems to have a
refining influence on the masses. But do not call it education.
Education is teaching a person to do something with his mind or his
muscles or with both. It involves training, discipline, drill; things
which, as a rule, are very unpleasant to young people, and which, unless
they are geniuses, like Franklin, they will not take up of their own
accord.

You can never teach a boy to write good English by having him read
elegant extracts from distinguished authors, or by making him wade
through endless text-books of anatomy, physics, botany, history, and
philosophy, or by giving him a glib knowledge of French or German, or by
perfunctory translations of Latin and Greek prepared in the
new-fashioned, easy way, without a grammar.

The old English method, by which boys were compelled to write Latin
verses, was simply another form of Franklin’s method, but rather more
severe in some respects, because the boy was compelled to discipline
his versifying power and hunt for and use words in two languages at
once. The result was some of the greatest masters of language that the
world has ever known, and the ordinary boy, though perhaps not a wonder
in all the sciences, did not have a learned committee of a university
investigating his disgraceful failure to use his native tongue. His
mind, moreover, had been so disciplined by the severe training in the
use of language--which is only another name for thought--that he was
capable of taking up and mastering with ease any subject in science or
philosophy, and could make as good mud pies and judge as well of
bric-a-brac as those who had never done anything else.

In this country people object to compelling boys to write verse,
because, as they say, it is an endeavor to force them to become poets
whether they have talent for it or not. Any one who reflects, however,
knows that there is no question of poetry in the matter. It is merely a
question of technical versifying and use of language. Franklin never
wrote a line of poetry in his life, but he wrote hundreds of lines of
verse, to the great improvement of the faculty which made him the man he
was.

When he voluntarily subjected himself to a mental discipline which
modern parents would consider cruel he was only fifteen years old;
certainly a rather unusual precocity, from which some people would
prophesy a dwarfed career or an early death. But he did some of his best
work after he was eighty, and died at the age of eighty-four.

He lived in the little village of Boston nearly two hundred years ago,
the wholesome wilderness on one side of him and the wholesome ocean on
the other. He worked with his strong arms and hands all day, and the
mental discipline and reading were stolen sweets at the dinner-hour, at
night, and on Sunday,--for he neglected church-going for the sake of his
studies. Could he have budded and grown amid our distraction, dust, and
disquietude? and have we any more of the elements of happiness than he?

Ashamed of his failure to learn arithmetic during his two short years at
school, he procured a book on the subject and studied it by himself. In
the same way he studied navigation and a little geometry. When scarcely
seventeen he read Locke’s “Essay on the Human Understanding” and “The
Art of Thinking,” by Messieurs du Port-Royal.

    “While I was intent on improving my language I met with an
    English grammar (I think it was Greenwood’s) at the end of which
    there were two little sketches of the arts of rhetoric and
    logic, the latter finishing with a specimen of a dispute in the
    Socratic method; and soon after I procured Xenophon’s memorable
    things of Socrates, wherein there are many instances of the same
    method. I was charmed with it, adopted it, dropt my abrupt
    contradiction and positive argumentation, and put on the humble
    inquirer and doubter.”

It was very shrewd of the boy to see so quickly the strategic advantage
of the humbler method. It was also significant of genius that he should
of his own accord not only train and discipline himself, but feed his
mind on the great masters of literature instead of on trash. He could
hardly have done any better at school, for he was gifted with unusual
power of self-education. Boys are occasionally met with who have by
their own efforts acquired a sufficient education to obtain a good
livelihood or even to become rich; but it would be difficult to find
another instance of a boy with only two years’ schooling self-educating
himself up to the ability not only of making a fortune, but of becoming
a man of letters, a man of science, a philosopher, a diplomat, and a
statesman of such very distinguished rank.

There was no danger of his inclination for the higher departments of
learning making him visionary or impractical, as is so often the case
with the modern collegian. He was of necessity always in close contact
with actual life. His brother, in whose printing-office he worked as an
apprentice, was continually beating him; perhaps not without reason, for
Franklin himself admits that he was rather saucy and provoking. He was,
it seems, at this period not a little vain of his learning and his skill
as a workman. He had been writing important articles for his brother’s
newspaper, and he thought that his brother failed to appreciate his
importance. They soon quarrelled, and Franklin ran away to New York.

He went secretly on board a sloop at Boston, having sold some of his
books to raise the passage-money; and after a three days’ voyage, which
completely cured his desire for the sea, he found himself in a strange
town, several hundred miles from home. He applied for work to old Mr.
William Bradford, the famous printer of the colonies, who had recently
removed from Philadelphia. But he had no position to give the boy, and
recommended him to go to Philadelphia, where his son kept a
printing-office and needed a hand.

Franklin started for Amboy, New Jersey, in a sloop; but in crossing the
bay they were struck by a squall, which tore their rotten sails to
pieces and drove them on Long Island. They saved themselves from wreck
on the beach by anchoring just in time, and lay thus the rest of the day
and the following night, soaked to the skin and without food or sleep.
They reached Amboy the next day, having had nothing to eat for thirty
hours, and in the evening Franklin found himself in a fever.

He had heard that drinking plentifully of cold water was a good remedy;
so he tried it, went to bed, and woke up well the next morning. But it
was probably his boyish elasticity that cured him, and not the cold
water, as he would have us believe.

He started on foot for Burlington, a distance of fifty miles, and
tramped till noon through a hard rain, when he halted at an inn, and
wished that he had never left home. He was a sorry figure, and people
began to suspect him to be a runaway servant, which in truth he was. But
the next day he got within eight miles of Burlington, and stopped at a
tavern kept by a Dr. Brown, an eccentric man, who, finding that the boy
had read serious books, was very friendly with him, and the two
continued their acquaintance as long as the tavern-keeper lived.

Reaching Burlington on Saturday, he lodged with an old woman, who sold
him some gingerbread and gave him a dinner of ox-cheek, to which he
added a pot of ale. His intention had been to stay until the following
Tuesday, but he found a boat going down the river that evening, which
brought him to Philadelphia on Sunday morning.

He walked up Market Street from the wharf, dirty, his pockets stuffed
with shirts and stockings, and carrying three great puffy rolls, one
under each arm and eating the third. Passing by the house of a Mrs.
Read, her daughter, standing at the door, saw the ridiculous,
awkward-looking boy, and was much amused. But he continued strolling
along the streets, eating his roll and calmly surveying the town where
he was to become so eminent. One roll was enough for his appetite, and
the other two, with a boy’s sincere generosity, he gave to a woman and
her child. He had insisted on paying for his passage, although the
boatman was willing to let him off because he had assisted to row. A
man, Franklin sagely remarks, is sometimes more generous when he has but
little money through fear of being thought to have but little.

He wandered into a Quaker meeting-house and, as it was a silent meeting,
fell fast asleep. Aroused by some one when the meeting broke up, he
sought the river again, and was shown the Crooked Billet Inn, where he
spent the afternoon sleeping, and immediately after supper went sound
asleep again, and never woke till morning.

The next day he succeeded in obtaining work with a printer named Keimer,
a man who had been a religious fanatic and was a good deal of a knave;
and this Keimer obtained lodging for him at the house of Mrs. Read,
whose daughter had seen him walking up Market Street eating his roll.
Well lodged, at work, and with a little money to spend, he lived
agreeably, he tells us, in Philadelphia, made the acquaintance of young
men who were fond of reading, and very soon his brother-in-law, Robert
Holmes, master of a sloop that traded between Boston and the Delaware
River, heard that the runaway was in Philadelphia.

Holmes wrote from New Castle, Delaware, to the boy, assuring him of the
regret of his family at his absconding, of their continued good will,
and urging him to return. Franklin replied, giving his side of the
story, and Holmes showed the letter to Sir William Keith, Governor of
Pennsylvania and Delaware, who happened to be at New Castle.

Keith was one of the most popular colonial governors that Pennsylvania
ever had, and enjoyed a successful administration of ten years, which
might have lasted much longer but for his reckless ambition. He had
allowed himself to fall into habits of extravagance and debt, and had a
way of building up his popularity by making profuse promises, most of
which he could not keep. Chicanery finally became an habitual vice which
he was totally unable to restrain, and he would indulge in it without
the slightest reason or excuse.

He was surprised at the ability shown in Franklin’s letter, declared
that he must be set up in the printing business in Philadelphia, where a
good printer was sadly needed, and promised to procure for him the
public printing. A few days afterwards Franklin and Keimer, working near
the window, were very much surprised to see the governor and Colonel
French, of New Castle, dressed in all the finery of the time, walking
across the street to their shop. Keimer thought that the visit was to
him, and “stared like a poisoned pig,” Franklin tells us, when he saw
the governor addressing his workman with all the blandishments of
courtly flattery. “Why,” exclaimed the unscrupulous Keith, “did you not
come to me immediately on your arrival in the town? It was unkind not to
do so.” He insisted that the boy should accompany him to the tavern,
where he and Colonel French were going to try some excellent Madeira.

At the tavern the boy’s future life was laid out for him. The governor
and Colonel French would give him the public printing of both
Pennsylvania and Delaware. Meantime he was to go back to Boston, see his
father, and procure his assistance in starting in business. The father
would not refuse, for Sir William would write him a letter which would
put everything right. So Franklin, completely deceived, agreed, and,
until a ship could be found that was going to Boston, he dined
occasionally with the governor, and became very much inflated with a
sense of his own importance.

Arrived at Boston, he strolled into his brother’s printing-office,
dressed in beautiful clothes, with a watch, and jingling five pounds
sterling in silver in his pockets. He drew out a handful of the silver
and spread it before the workmen, to their great surprise, for at that
time Massachusetts was afflicted with a paper currency. Then, with
consummate impudence and in his brother’s presence, he gave the men a
piece of eight to buy drink, and, after telling them what a good place
Philadelphia was, swaggered out of the shop. It is not surprising that
his brother turned away from him and refused to forgive or forget his
conduct.

His father, being a man of sense, flatly refused to furnish money to
start a boy of eighteen in an expensive business, and was curious to
know what sort of man Governor Keith was, to recommend such a thing. So
Franklin, with his conceit only slightly reduced, returned to
Philadelphia, but this time with the blessing and consent of his
parents.

He stopped in Rhode Island on his way, to visit his brother John, who
had quite an affection for him, and while there was asked by a Mr.
Vernon to collect thirty-five pounds due him in Pennsylvania, and was
given an order for the money. On the vessel from Newport to New York
were two women of the town, with whom Franklin, in his ignorance of the
world, talked familiarly, until warned by a matronly Quaker lady. When
the vessel reached New York, the women robbed the captain and were
arrested.

His education in worldly matters was now to begin in earnest. His friend
Collins accompanied him to Philadelphia; but Collins had taken to drink
and gambling, and from this time on was continually borrowing money of
Franklin. The Governor of New York, son of the famous Bishop Burnet,
hearing from the captain that a plain young man who was fond of books
had arrived, sent for him, flattered him, and added to his increasing
conceit. The boy who within a year had been made so much of by two
governors was on the brink of ruin.

On his journey to Philadelphia he collected the money due Mr. Vernon,
and used part of it to pay the expenses of Collins and himself. Collins
kept borrowing Mr. Vernon’s money from him, and Franklin was soon in the
position of an embezzler.

Governor Keith laughed at the prudence of his father in refusing to set
up in business such a promising young man. “I will do it myself,” he
said. “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.”

Thinking him the best man that had ever lived, Franklin brought him the
inventory.

“But now,” said Keith, “if you were on the spot in England to choose the
types and see that everything was good, might not that be of some
advantage? And then you may make acquaintances there and establish
correspondences in the bookselling and stationery way.”

Of course that was delightful.

“Then,” said Keith, “get yourself ready to go with Annis,” who was
captain of a vessel that traded annually between Philadelphia and
London.

Meantime, Franklin made love to Miss Read, who had seen him parading up
Market Street with his rolls, and, if we may trust a man’s account of
such matters, he succeeded in winning her affections. He had lost all
faith in religion, and his example unsettled those friends who
associated and read books with him. He was at times invited to dine with
the governor, who promised to give him letters of credit for money and
also letters recommending him to his friends in England.

He called at different times for these letters, but they were not ready.
The day of the ship’s sailing came, and he called to take leave of his
great and good friend and to get the letters. The governor’s secretary
said that his master was extremely busy, but would meet the ship at New
Castle, and the letters would be delivered.

The ship sailed from Philadelphia with Franklin and one of his friends,
Ralph, who was going to England, ostensibly on business, but really to
desert his wife and child, whom he left in Philadelphia. While the
vessel was anchored off New Castle, Franklin went ashore to see Keith,
and was again informed that he was very busy, but that the letters would
be sent on board.

The despatches of the governor were brought on board in due form by
Colonel French, and Franklin asked for those which were to be under his
care. But the captain said that they were all in the bag together, and
before he reached England he would have an opportunity to pick them out.
Arrived in London after a long, tempestuous voyage, Franklin found that
there were no letters for him and no money. On consulting with a Quaker
merchant, Mr. Denham, who had been friendly to him on the ship, he was
told that there was not the slightest probability of Keith’s having
written such letters; and Denham laughed at Keith’s giving a letter of
credit, having, as he said, no credit to give.

Franklin was stranded, alone and almost penniless, in London. When seven
years old he had been given pennies on a holiday and foolishly gave them
all to another boy in exchange for a whistle which pleased his fancy.
Mortified by the ridicule of his brothers and sisters, he afterwards
made a motto for himself, “Don’t give too much for the whistle.” More
than fifty years afterwards, when minister to France, he turned the
whistle story into a little essay which delighted all Paris, and “Don’t
give too much for the whistle” became a cant saying in both Europe and
America. He seldom forgot a lesson of experience; and, though he says
but little about it, the Keith episode, like the expensive whistle, must
have made a deep impression on him and sharpened his wits.

His life in London may be said to have been a rather evil one. He forgot
Miss Read; his companion, Ralph, forgot the wife and child he had left
in Philadelphia, and kept borrowing money from him, as Collins had done.
Franklin wrote a small pamphlet about this time, which he printed for
himself and called “A Dissertation on Liberty and Necessity, Pleasure
and Pain.” It was an argument in favor of fatalism, and while
acknowledging the existence of God, it denied the immortality of the
soul; suggesting, however, as a possibility, that there might be a
transmigration of souls. It was a clever performance in its way, with
much of the power of expression and brightness which were afterwards so
characteristic of him; but in later years he regretted having published
such notions.

He sums up his argument on Liberty and Necessity as follows:

    “When the Creator first designed the universe, either it was his
    will and intention that all things should exist and be in the
    manner they are at this time; or it was his will they should be
    otherwise, i.e. in a different manner: To say it was his will
    things should be otherwise than they are is to say somewhat hath
    contracted his will and broken his measures, which is impossible
    because inconsistent with his power; therefore we must allow
    that all things exist now in a manner agreeable to his will, and
    in consequence of that are all equally good, and therefore
    equally esteemed by him.”

His argument, though shorter, is almost precisely the same as that with
which Jonathan Edwards afterwards began his famous essay against the
freedom of the will, and it is strange that Franklin’s biographers have
not claimed that he anticipated Edwards. But, so far as Franklin is
concerned, it is probable that he was only using ideas that were afloat
in the philosophy of the time; the two men were merely elaborating an
argument and dealing with a metaphysical problem as old as the human
mind. But Edwards carried the train of thought far beyond Franklin, and
added the doctrine of election, while Franklin contented himself with
establishing to his own satisfaction the very ancient proposition that
there can be no freedom of the will, and that God must be the author of
evil as well as of good.

In the second part of his pamphlet, “Pleasure and Pain,” he argues that
pleasure and pain are exactly equal, because pain or uneasiness produces
a desire to be freed from it, and the accomplishment of this desire
produces a corresponding pleasure. His argument on this, as well as on
the first half of his subject, when we consider that he was a mere boy,
is very interesting. He had picked up by reading and conversation a
large part of the philosophy that permeated the mental atmosphere of the
time, and his keen observation of life and of his own consciousness
supplied the rest.

    “It will possibly be objected here, that even common Experience
    shows us, there is not in Fact this Equality: Some we see
    hearty, brisk and cheerful perpetually, while others are
    constantly burden’d with a heavy ‘Load of Maladies and
    Misfortunes, remaining for Years perhaps in Poverty, Disgrace,
    or Pain, and die at last without any Appearance of
    Recompence.’... And here let it be observed, that we cannot be
    proper Judges of the good or bad Fortune of Others; we are apt
    to imagine, that what would give us a great Uneasiness or a
    great Satisfaction, has the same Effect upon others; we think,
    for instance, those unhappy, who must depend upon Charity for a
    mean Subsistence, who go in Rags, fare hardly, and are despis’d
    and scorn’d by all; not considering that Custom renders all
    these Things easy, familiar, and even pleasant. When we see
    Riches, Grandeur and a chearful Countenance, we easily imagine
    Happiness accompanies them, when often times ’tis quite
    otherwise: Nor is a constantly sorrowful Look, attended with
    continual Complaints, an infallible Indication of
    Unhappiness.... Besides some take a Satisfaction in being
    thought unhappy, (as others take a Pride in being thought
    humble,) these will paint their Misfortunes to others in the
    strongest Colours, and leave no Means unus’d to make you think
    them thoroughly miserable; so great a Pleasure it is to them to
    be pitied; Others retain the form and outside Shew or Sorrow,
    long after the thing itself, with its Cause, is remov’d from the
    Mind; it is a Habit they have acquired and cannot leave.”

A very sharp insight into human nature is shown in this passage, and it
is not surprising that the boy who wrote it afterwards became a mover of
men. His mind was led to the subject by being employed to print a book
which was very famous in its day, called “The Religion of Nature
Delineated.” He disliked its arguments, and must needs refute them by
his pamphlet “Liberty and Necessity,” which was certainly a most
vigorous mental discipline for him, although he was afterwards
dissatisfied with its negative conclusions.

Obscure and poor as he was, he instinctively seized on everything that
would contribute to his education and enlargement of mind. He made the
acquaintance of a bookseller, who agreed for a small compensation to
lend him books. His pamphlet on Liberty and Necessity brought him to the
notice of Dr. Lyons, author of “The Infallibility of Human Judgment,”
who took him to an ale-house called The Horns, where a sort of club of
free-thinkers assembled. There he met Dr. Mandeville, who wrote “The
Fable of the Bees.” Lyons also introduced him to Dr. Pemberton, who
promised to give him an opportunity of seeing Sir Isaac Newton; but this
was never fulfilled.

The conversation of these men, if not edifying in a religious way, was
no doubt stimulating to his intelligence. He had brought over with him a
purse made of asbestos, and this he succeeded in selling to Sir Hans
Sloane, who invited him to his house and showed him his museum of
curiosities.

He says of the asbestos purse in his Autobiography that Sir Hans
“persuaded me to let him add it to his collection, for which he paid me
handsomely.” But the persuasion was the other way, for the letter which
he wrote to Sir Hans, offering to sell him the purse, has been
discovered and printed.

Even the woman he lodged with contributed to his education. She was a
clergyman’s daughter, had lived much among people of distinction, and
knew a thousand anecdotes of them as far back as the time of Charles II.
She was lame with the gout, and, seldom going out of her room, liked to
have company. Her conversation was so amusing and instructive that he
often spent an evening with her; and she, on her part, found the young
man so agreeable that after he had engaged a lodging near by for two
shillings a week she would not let him go, and agreed to keep him for
one and sixpence. So the future economist of two continents enlarged his
knowledge and at the same time reduced his board to thirty-seven cents a
week.

He certainly needed all the money he could get, for he was helping to
support Ralph, who was trying to become a literary man and gradually
degenerating into a political hack. Ralph made the acquaintance of a
young milliner who lodged in the same house with them. She had known
better days and was genteelly bred, but before long she became Ralph’s
mistress.

Ralph went into the country to look for employment at school-teaching,
and left his mistress in Franklin’s care. As she had lost friends and
employment by her association with Ralph, she was soon in need of money,
and borrowed from Franklin. Presuming on her dependent position, he
attempted liberties with her, and was repulsed with indignation. Ralph
hearing of it on his return, informed him that their friendship was at
an end and all obligations cancelled. This precluded Franklin’s hope of
being repaid the money he had lent, but it had the advantage of putting
a stop to further lending.

For a year and a half he lived in London, still keeping up his reading,
but also going to the theatres and meeting many odd characters and a few
distinguished ones. It was an experience which at least enlarged his
mind if it did not improve his morals. He eventually became very tired
of London, longing for the simple pleasures and happy days he had
enjoyed in Pennsylvania, and he seized the first opportunity to return.
Mr. Denham, the Quaker merchant who had come over in the same ship with
him, was about to return, and offered to employ him as clerk. He eagerly
accepted the offer, helped his benefactor to buy and pack his supply of
goods, and landed again in Philadelphia in the autumn of 1726.

Keith was no longer governor. Miss Read, despairing of Franklin’s
return, had yielded to the persuasions of her family and married a
potter named Rogers, and Keimer seemed to be prospering. But the young
printer was in a business that he liked. He was devoted to Mr. Denham,
with whom his prospects were excellent, and he thought himself settled
at last. In a few months, however, both he and Mr. Denham were taken
with the pleurisy. Mr. Denham died, and Franklin, fully expecting to
die, made up his mind to it like a philosopher who believed that there
was nothing beyond the grave. He was rather disappointed, he tells us,
when he got well, for all the troublesome business of resignation would
some day have to be done over again.

Finding himself on his recovery without employment, he went back again
to work at his old trade with Keimer, and before long was in business
for himself with a partner. He had never paid Mr. Vernon the money he
had collected for him; but, fortunately, Mr. Vernon was easy with him,
and, except for worrying over this very serious debt and the loss of
Miss Read, Franklin began to do fairly well, and his self-education was
continued in earnest.

It was about this time that he founded the club called the Junto, which
he has described as “the best school of philosophy, morality, and
politics that then existed in the province.”

This description was true enough, but was not very high praise, for at
that time Pennsylvania had no college, and the schools for children were
mostly of an elementary kind. Franklin, in making this very sweeping
assertion, may have intended one of his deep, sly jokes. It was the only
school of philosophy in the province, and in that sense undoubtedly the
best.

It was a sort of small debating club, in which the members educated one
another by discussion; and Franklin’s biographer, Parton, supposes that
it was in part suggested by Cotton Mather’s benefit societies, which
were well known in Boston when Franklin was a boy.

The first members of the Junto were eleven in number, young workmen like
Franklin, four of them being printers. The others were Joseph
Brientnal, a copier of deeds; Thomas Godfrey, a self-taught
mathematician, inventor of the quadrant now known as Hadley’s; Nicholas
Scull; William Parsons, a shoemaker; William Maugridge, a carpenter;
William Coleman, a merchant’s clerk; and Robert Grace, a witty, generous
young gentleman of some fortune. The Junto was popularly known as the
Leather-Apron Club, and Franklin has told us in his Autobiography of its
methods and rules:

    “We met on Friday evenings. The rules that I drew up required
    that every member, in his turn, should produce one or more
    queries on any point of Morals, Politics, or Natural Philosophy,
    to be discuss’d by the company; and once in three months produce
    and read an essay of his own writing, on any subject he pleased.
    Our debates were to be under the direction of a president, and
    to be conducted in the sincere spirit of inquiry after truth,
    without fondness for dispute, or desire of victory; and, to
    prevent warmth, all expressions of positiveness in opinions, or
    direct contradiction, were after some time made contraband, and
    prohibited under small pecuniary penalties.”

From other sources we learn that when a new member was initiated he
stood up and, with his hand on his breast, was asked the following
questions:

    “1. Have you any particular disrespect to any present member?
    Answer: I have not.

    “2. Do you sincerely declare that you love mankind in general of
    what profession or religion soever? Answer: I do.

    “3. Do you think any person ought to be harmed in his body,
    name, or goods for mere speculative opinions or his external way
    of worship? Answer: No.

    “4. Do you love truth for truth’s sake, and will you endeavor
    impartially to find and receive it yourself and communicate it
    to others? Answer: Yes.”

At every meeting certain questions were read, with a pause after each
one; and these questions might very well have been suggested by those of
the Mather benefit societies. The first six are sufficient to give an
idea of them all:

    “1. Have you met with anything in the author you last read,
    remarkable or suitable to be communicated to the Junto,
    particularly in history, morality, poetry, physic, travels,
    mechanic arts, or other parts of knowledge?

    “2. What new story have you lately heard, agreeable for telling
    in conversation?

    “3. Hath any citizen in your knowledge failed in his business
    lately, and what have you heard of the cause?

    “4. Have you lately heard of any citizen’s thriving well, and by
    what means?

    “5. Have you lately heard how any present rich man, here or
    elsewhere, got his estate?

    “6. Do you know of a fellow-citizen, who has lately done a
    worthy action, deserving praise and imitation; or who has lately
    committed an error, proper for us to be warned against and
    avoid?”

The number of members was limited to twelve, and Franklin always opposed
an increase. Instead of adding to the membership, he suggested that each
member form a similar club, and five or six were thus organized, with
such names as The Vine, The Union, The Band. The original club is said
to have continued for forty years. But it did not keep up its old
character. Its original purpose had been to educate its members, to
supply the place of the modern academy or college; but when the members
became older and their education more complete, they cared no longer for
self-imposed tasks of essay-writing and formal debate on set questions.
They turned it into a social club, or, rather, they dropped its
educational and continued its social side,--for it had always been
social, and even convivial, which was one of the means adopted for
keeping the members together and rendering their studies easy and
pleasant.

A list of some of the questions discussed by the Junto has been
preserved, from which a few are given as specimens:

    “Is sound an entity or body?

    “How may the phenomena of vapors be explained?

    “Is self-interest the rudder that steers mankind?

    “Which is the best form of government, and what was that form
    which first prevailed among mankind?

    “Can any one particular form of government suit all mankind?

    “What is the reason that the tides rise higher in the Bay of
    Fundy than in the Bay of Delaware?”

The young men who every Friday evening debated such questions as these
were certainly acquiring an education which was not altogether an
inferior substitute for that furnished by our modern institutions
endowed with millions of dollars and officered by plodding professors
prepared by years of exhaustive study. But the plodding professors and
the modern institutions are necessary, because young men, as a rule,
cannot educate themselves. The Junto could not have existed without
Franklin. He inspired and controlled it. His personality and energy
pervaded it, and the eleven other members were but clay in his hands.
His rare precocity and enthusiasm inspired a love for and an interest in
study which money, apparatus, and professors often fail to arouse.

The Junto debated the question of paper money, which was then agitating
the Province of Pennsylvania, and Franklin was led to write and publish
a pamphlet called “A Modest Inquiry into the Nature and Necessity of a
Paper Currency,” a very crude performance, showing the deficiencies of
his self-education. The use of the word modest in the title was in
pursuance of the shrewd plan he had adopted of affecting great humility
in the expression of his opinions. But his description in his
Autobiography of the effect of this pamphlet is by no means either
modest or humble:

    “It was well received by the common people in general; but the
    rich men disliked it, for it increased and strengthened the
    clamor for more money, and they happening to have no writers
    among them that were able to answer it their opposition
    slackened, and the point was carried by a majority in the
    House.”

In other words, he implies that the boyish debate of twelve young
workingmen, resulting in the publication of a pamphlet by one of them,
was the means of passing the Pennsylvania paper-money act of 1729. His
biographers have echoed his pleasant delusion, and this pamphlet, which
in reality contains some of the most atrocious fallacies in finance and
political economy, has been lauded as a wonder, the beginning of modern
political economy, and the source from which Adam Smith stole the
material for his “Wealth of Nations.”[2]

In spite of all his natural brightness and laudable efforts for his own
improvement, he was but half educated and full of crude enthusiasm. He
was only twenty-three, and nothing more could be expected.

Fifteen or twenty years afterwards, with added experience, Franklin
became a very different sort of person. The man of forty, laboriously
investigating science, discovering the secrets of electricity, and
rejecting everything that had not been subjected to the most rigid
proof, bore but little resemblance to the precocious youth of
twenty-three, the victim of any specious sophism that promised a
millennium. But he never fully apologized to the world for his
paper-money delusion, contenting himself with saying in his
Autobiography, “I now think there are limits beyond which the quantity
may be hurtful.”

Three years after the publication of his pamphlet on paper money he
began to study modern languages, and soon learned to read French,
Italian, and Spanish. An acquaintance who was also studying Italian
often tempted him to play chess. As this interfered with the Italian
studies, Franklin arranged with him that the victor in any game should
have the right to impose a task, either in grammar or translation; and
as they played equally, they beat each other into a knowledge of the
language.

After he had become tolerably well acquainted with these modern
languages he happened one day to look into a Latin Testament, and found
that he could read it more easily than he had supposed. The modern
languages had, he thought, smoothed the way for him, and he immediately
began to study Latin, which had been dropped ever since, as a little
boy, he had spent a year in the Boston Grammar School.

From this circumstance he jumped to the conclusion that the usual method
pursued in schools of studying Latin before the modern languages was all
wrong. It would be better, he said, to begin with the French, proceed to
the Italian, and finally reach the Latin. This would be beginning with
the easiest first, and would also have the advantage that if the pupils
should quit the study of languages, and never arrive at the Latin, they
would have acquired another tongue or two which, being in modern use,
might be serviceable to them in after-life.

This suggestion, though extravagantly praised, has never been adopted,
for the modern languages are now taught contemporaneously with Latin. It
was an idea founded exclusively on a single and very unusual experience,
without any test as to its general applicability. But all Franklin’s
notions of education were extremely radical, because based on his own
circumstances, which were not those of the ordinary youth, to whom all
systems of education have to be adapted.

He wished to entirely abolish Latin and Greek. They had been useful, he
said, only in the past, when they were the languages of the learned and
when all books of science and important knowledge were written in them.
At that time there had been a reason for learning them, but that reason
had now passed away. English should be substituted for them, and its
systematic study would give the same knowledge of language-structure and
the same mental training that were supposed to be attainable only
through Latin and Greek. His own self-education had been begun in
English. He had analyzed and rewritten the essays in Addison’s
_Spectator_, and, believing that in this way he had acquired his own
most important mental training, he concluded that the same method should
be imposed on every one. He wished to set up the study of that author
and of Pope, Milton, and Shakespeare as against Cicero, Virgil, and
Homer.

One of our most peculiar American habits is that every one who has a pet
fancy or experience immediately wants it adopted into the public school
system. We not uncommonly close our explanation of something that
strikes us as very important by declaring, “and I would have it taught
in the public schools.” It has even been suggested that the game of
poker should be taught as tending to develop shrewdness and observation.

Franklin’s foundation for all education was English. He would have also
French, German, or Italian, and practical subjects,--natural science,
astronomy, history, government, athletic sports, good manners, good
morals, and other topics; for when one is drawing up these ideal schemes
without a particle of practical experience in teaching it is so easy to
throw in one thing after another which seems noble or beautiful for boys
and girls to know. But English he naturally thought from his own
experience was the gate-way to everything.

In the course of his life Franklin received the honorary degree of
doctor of laws from Harvard, Yale, Oxford, Edinburgh, and St Andrew’s,
and he founded a college. It has been said in support of his peculiar
theories of education that when, in 1776, the Continental Congress,
which was composed largely of college graduates, was considering who
should be sent as commissioner to France, the only member who knew
enough of the language to be thoroughly eligible was the one who had
never been near a college except to receive honorary degrees for public
services he had performed without the assistance of a college training.

This is, of course, an interesting statement; but as an argument it is
of no value. Franklin could read French, but could not speak it, and he
had to learn to do so after he reached France. By his own confession he
never was able to speak it well, and disregarded the grammar
altogether,--a natural consequence of being self-taught. John Adams and
other members of the Congress could read French as well as Franklin; and
when, in their turn, they went to France, they learned to speak it as
fluently as he.

In 1743 Franklin attempted to establish an academy in Philadelphia. The
higher education was very much neglected at that time in the middle
colonies. The nearest colleges were Harvard and Yale, far to the north
in New England, and William and Mary, far to the south in Virginia. The
Presbyterians had a few good schools in Pennsylvania of almost the grade
of academies, but none in Philadelphia. The Quakers, as a class, were
not interested in colleges or universities, and confined their efforts
to elementary schools. People were alarmed at the ignorance in which not
only the masses but even the sons of the best citizens were growing up,
and it was the general opinion that those born in the colony were
inferior in intelligence to their fathers who had emigrated from
England.

Franklin’s efforts failed in 1743 because there was much political
agitation in the province and because of the preparations for the war
with Spain in which England was about to engage; but in 1749 he renewed
his attempt, and was successful. He was then a man of forty-three, had
been married thirteen years, and had children, legitimate and
illegitimate, to be educated. The Junto supported him, and in aid of his
plan he wrote a pamphlet called “Proposals relating to the Education of
Youth in Pennsylvania.”

In this pamphlet he could not set forth his extreme views of education
because even the most liberal people in the town were not in favor of
them. Philadelphia was at that time the home of liberal ideas in the
colonies. Many people were in favor of altering the old system of
education and teaching science and other practical subjects in addition
to Latin and Greek; but they did not favor abolishing the study of these
languages, and they could not see the necessity of making English so
all-important as Franklin wished. He was compelled, therefore, to
conform his arguments to the opinions of those from whom he expected
subscriptions, and he did this with his usual discretion, making,
however, the English branches as important as was possible under the
circumstances.

The result of the pamphlet was that five thousand pounds were
subscribed, and the academy started within a year, occupying a large
building on Fourth Street, south of Arch, which had been built for the
use of George Whitefield, the famous English preacher. It supplied a
real need of the community and had plenty of pupils. Within six years it
obtained a charter from the proprietors of the province, and became a
college, with an academy and a charitable school annexed.

A young Scotchman, the Rev. William Smith, was appointed to govern the
institution, and was called the provost. He had very advanced opinions
on education, holding much the same views as were expressed in
Franklin’s proposals; but he was not in accord with Franklin’s extreme
ideas.[3] Those who intended to become lawyers, doctors, or clergymen
should be taught to walk in the old paths and to study Latin and Greek;
but the rest were to be deluged with a knowledge of accounts,
mathematics, oratory, poetry, chronology, history, natural and mechanic
philosophy, agriculture, ethics, physics, chemistry, anatomy, modern
languages, fencing, dancing, religion, and everything else that by any
chance might be useful.

Thus the academy founded by Franklin became the College of
Philadelphia, and as managed by Provost Smith it was a very good one and
played a most interesting part in the life and politics of the colony.
Its charter was revoked and its property confiscated during the
Revolution, and another college was created, called the University of
the State of Pennsylvania, which was worthless. Eleven years afterwards
the old college was restored to its rights, and soon after that it was
combined with the State University, and the union of the two produced
the present University of Pennsylvania.[4] It should, however, have been
called Franklin University, which would have been in every way a better
name.


FOOTNOTES:

[2] Pennsylvania: Colony and Commonwealth, p. 80.

[3] Pennsylvania: Colony and Commonwealth, p. 141.

[4] Pennsylvania: Colony and Commonwealth, pp. 374-377, 381.




III

RELIGION AND MORALS


Franklin’s father and mother were Massachusetts Puritans who, while not
conspicuously religious, attended steadily to their religious duties.
They lived in Milk Street, Boston, near the Old South Church, and little
Benjamin was carried across the street the day he was born and baptized
in that venerable building.

He was born on Sunday, January 6, 1706 (Old Style), and if it had
occurred in one of the Massachusetts towns where the minister was very
strict, baptism might have been refused, for some of the Puritans were
so severe in their views of Sabbath-keeping that they said a child born
on the Sabbath must have been conceived on the Sabbath, and was
therefore hopelessly unregenerate.[5]

These good men would have found their theory fully justified in
Franklin, for he became a terrible example of the results of Sabbath
birth and begetting. As soon as opportunity offered he became a most
persistent Sabbath-breaker. While he lived with his parents he was
compelled to go to church; but when apprenticed to his elder brother,
and living away from home, he devoted Sunday to reading and study. He
would slip off to the printing-office and spend nearly the whole day
there alone with his books; and during a large part of his life Sunday
was to him a day precious for its opportunities for study rather than
for its opportunities for worship.

His persistence in Sabbath-breaking was fortified by his entire loss of
faith in the prevailing religion.

    “I had been religiously educated as a Presbyterian; and tho’
    some of the dogmas of that persuasion, such as _the eternal
    decrees of God_, _election_, _reprobation_, etc., appeared to me
    unintelligible, others doubtful, and I early absented myself
    from the public assemblies of the sect, Sunday being my studying
    day, I never was without some religious principles. I never
    doubted, for instance, the existence of the Deity; that he made
    the world and governed it by his Providence; that the most
    acceptable service of God was the doing good to man; that our
    souls are immortal; and that all crime will be punished and
    virtue rewarded, either here or hereafter.” (Bigelow’s Works of
    Franklin, vol. i. p. 172.)

It will be observed that he speaks of himself as having been educated a
Presbyterian, a term which in his time was applied to the Puritans of
Massachusetts. We find Thomas Jefferson also describing the New
Englanders as Presbyterians, and in colonial times the Quakers in
Pennsylvania used the same term when speaking of them. But they were not
Presbyterians in the sense in which the word is now used, and their
religion is usually described as Congregationalism.

In the earlier part of his Autobiography Franklin describes more
particularly how he was led away from the faith of his parents. Among
his father’s books were some sermons delivered on the Boyle foundation,
which was a fund established at Oxford, England, by Robert Boyle for
the purpose of having discourses delivered to prove the truth of
Christianity. Franklin read some of these sermons when he was only
fifteen years old, and was very much interested in the attacks made in
them on the deists, the forerunners of the modern Unitarians. He thought
that the arguments of the deists which were quoted to be refuted were
much stronger than the attempts to refute them.

Shaftesbury and Collins were the most famous deistical writers of that
time. Their books were in effect a denial of the miraculous part of
Christianity, and whoever accepted their arguments was left with a
belief only in God and the immortality of the soul, with Christianity a
code of morals and beautiful sentiments instead of a revealed religion.
From reading quotations from these authors Franklin was soon led to read
their works entire, and they profoundly interested him. Like their
successors, the Unitarians, they were full of religious liberty and
liberal, broad ideas on all subjects, and Franklin’s mind tended by
nature in that direction.

It seems that Franklin’s brother James was also a liberal. He had been
employed to print a little newspaper, called the _Boston Gazette_, and
when this work was taken from him, he started a newspaper of his own,
called the _New England Courant_. His apprentice, Benjamin, delivered
copies of it to the subscribers, and before long began to write for it.

The _Courant_, under the guidance of James Franklin and his friends,
devoted itself to ridiculing the government and religion of
Massachusetts. A description of it, supposed to have been written by
Cotton Mather, tells us that it was “full-freighted with nonsense,
unmanliness, raillery, profaneness, immorality, arrogance, calumnies,
lies, contradictions, and what not, all tending to quarrels and
divisions and to debauch and corrupt the minds and manners of New
England.” Among other things, the _Courant_, as Increase Mather informs
us, was guilty of saying that “if the ministers of God approve of a
thing, it is a sign it is of the devil; which is a horrid thing to be
related.” Its printer and editor was warned that he would soon, though a
young man, have to appear before the judgment-seat of God to answer for
things so vile and abominable.

Some of the Puritan ministers, under the lead of Cotton Mather, were at
that time trying to introduce inoculation as a preventive of small-pox,
and for this the _Courant_ attacked them. It attempted to make a
sensation out of everything. Increase Mather boasted that he had ceased
to take it. To which the _Courant_ replied that it was true he was no
longer a subscriber, but that he sent his grandson every week to buy it.
It was a sensational journal, and probably the first of its kind in this
country. People bought and read it for the sake of its audacity. It was
an instance of liberalism gone mad and degenerated into mere radicalism
and negation.

Some of the articles attributed to Franklin, and which were in all
probability written by him, were violent attacks on Harvard College,
setting forth the worthlessness of its stupid graduates, nearly all of
whom went into the Church, which is described as a temple of ambition
and fraud controlled by money. There is a touch of what would now be
called Socialism or Populism in these articles, and it is not surprising
to find the author of them afterwards writing a pamphlet in favor of an
inflated paper currency.

The government of Massachusetts allowed the _Courant_ to run its wicked
course for about a year, and then fell upon it, imprisoning James
Franklin for a month in the common jail. Benjamin conducted the journal
during the imprisonment of his brother, who was not released until he
had humbly apologized. The _Courant_ then went on, and was worse than
ever, until an order of council was issued forbidding its publication,
because it had mocked religion, brought the Holy Scriptures into
contempt, and profanely abused the faithful ministers of God, as well as
His Majesty’s government and the government of the province.

The friends of James Franklin met and decided that they would evade the
order of council. James would no longer print the paper, but it should
be issued in the name of Benjamin. So Benjamin’s papers of
apprenticeship were cancelled, lest it should be said that James was
still publishing the paper through his apprentice. And, in order to
retain Benjamin’s services, James secured from him secret articles of
apprenticeship. A little essay on “Hat Honor” which appeared in the
_Courant_ soon afterwards is supposed to have been written by Benjamin
and is certainly in his style.

    “In old Time it was no disrespect for Men and Women to be called
    by their own Names: _Adam_ was never called _Master_ Adam; we
    never read of Noah _Esquire_, Lot _Knight_ and _Baronet_, nor
    the _Right Honourable_ Abraham, Viscount of Mesopotamia, _Baron_
    of Canaan; no, no, they were plain Men, honest Country Grasiers,
    that took care of their Families and Flocks. Moses was a great
    Prophet, and _Aaron_ a priest of the Lord; but we never read of
    the _Reverend_ Moses, nor the Right Reverend Father in God
    Aaron, by Divine Providence, _Lord Arch-Bishop_ of Israel; Thou
    never sawest _Madam_ Rebecca in the Bible, my _Lady_ Rachel: nor
    Mary, tho’ a Princess of the Blood after the death of _Joseph_,
    called the Princess Dowager of Nazareth.”

This was funny, irreverent, and reckless, and shows a mind entirely out
of sympathy with its surroundings. In after-years Franklin wrote several
humorous parodies on the Scriptures, but none that was quite so shocking
to religious people as this one.

The _Courant_, however, was not again molested; but Franklin quarrelled
with his brother James, and was severely beaten by him. Feeling that
James dare not make public the secret articles of apprenticeship, he
resolved to leave him, and was soon on his way to Philadelphia, as has
been already related.

He had been at war with the religion of his native province, and, though
not yet eighteen years old, had written most violent attacks upon it. It
is not likely that he would have prospered if he had remained in Boston,
for the majority of the people were against him and he was entirely out
of sympathy with the prevailing tone of thought. He would have become a
social outcast devoted to mere abuse and negation. A hundred years
afterwards the little party of deists who gave support to the _Courant_
increased so rapidly that their opinions, under the name of
Unitarianism, became the most influential religion of Massachusetts.[6]
If Franklin had been born in that later time he would doubtless have
grown and flourished on his native soil along with Emerson and Channing,
Lowell and Holmes, and with them have risen to greatness. But previous
to the Revolution his superb faculties, which required the utmost
liberty for their expansion, would have been starved and stunted in the
atmosphere of intolerance and repression which prevailed in
Massachusetts.

After he left Boston, his dislike for the religion of that place, and,
indeed, for all revealed religion, seems to have increased. In London we
find him writing the pamphlet “Liberty and Necessity,” described in the
previous chapter, and adopting what was in effect the position of
Voltaire,--namely, an admission of the existence of some sort of God,
but a denial of the immortality of the soul. He went even beyond
Voltaire in holding that, inasmuch as God was omnipotent and all-wise,
and had created the universe, whatever existed must be right, and vice
and virtue were empty distinctions.

I have already told how this pamphlet brought him to the notice of a
certain Dr. Lyons, who had himself written a sceptical book, and who
introduced Franklin to other philosophers of the same sort who met at
an inn called The Horns. But, in spite of their influence, Franklin
began to doubt the principles he had laid down in his pamphlet. He had
gone so far in negation that a reaction was started in his mind. He tore
up most of the hundred copies of “Liberty and Necessity,” believing it
to be of an evil tendency. Like most of his writings, however, it
possessed a vital force of its own, and some one printed a second
edition of it.

His morals at this time were, according to his own account, fairly good.
He asserts that he was neither dishonest nor unjust, and we can readily
believe him, for these were not faults of his character. In his
Autobiography he says that he passed through this dangerous period of
his life “without any willful gross immorality or injustice that might
have been expected from my want of religion.” In the first draft of the
Autobiography he added, “some foolish intrigues with low women excepted,
which from the expense were rather more prejudicial to me than to them.”
But in the revision these words were crossed out.[7]

On the voyage from London to Philadelphia he kept a journal, and in it
entered a plan which he had formed for regulating his future conduct, no
doubt after much reflection while at sea. Towards the close of his life
he said of it, “It is the more remarkable as being formed when I was so
young and yet being pretty faithfully adhered to quite thro’ to old
age.” This plan was not found in the journal, but a paper which is
supposed to contain it was discovered and printed by Parton in his “Life
of Franklin.” It recommends extreme frugality until he can pay his
debts, truth-telling, sincerity, devotion to business, avoidance of all
projects for becoming suddenly rich, with a resolve to speak ill of no
man, but rather to excuse faults. Revealed religion had, he says, no
weight with him; but he had become convinced that “truth, sincerity, and
integrity in dealings between man and man were of the utmost importance
to the felicity of life.”

Although revealed religion seemed of no importance to him, he had begun
to think that, “though certain actions might not be bad because they
were forbidden by it, or good because it commanded them, yet probably
those actions might be forbidden because they were bad for us or
commanded because they were beneficial to us in their own natures, all
the circumstances of things considered.”

It was in this way that he avoided and confuted his own argument in the
pamphlet “Liberty and Necessity.” He had maintained in it that God must
necessarily have created both good and evil. And as he had created evil,
it could not be considered as something contrary to his will, and
therefore forbidden and wrong in the sense in which it is usually
described. If it was contrary to his will it could not exist, for it was
impossible to conceive of an omnipotent being allowing anything to exist
contrary to his will, and least of all anything which was evil as well
as contrary to his will. What we call evil, therefore, must be no worse
than good, because both are created by an all-wise, omnipotent being.

This argument has puzzled many serious and earnest minds in all ages,
and Franklin could never entirely give it up. But he avoided it by
saying that “probably” certain actions “might be forbidden,” because,
“all the circumstances of things considered,” they were bad for us, or
they might be commanded because they were beneficial to us. In other
words, God created evil as well as good; but for some reason which we do
not understand he has forbidden us to do evil and has commanded us to do
good. Or, he has so arranged things that what we call evil is injurious
to us and what we call good is beneficial to us.

This was his eminently practical way of solving the great problem of the
existence of evil. It will be said, of course, that it was simply
exchanging one mystery for another, and that one was as incomprehensible
as the other. To which he would probably have replied that his mystery
was the pleasanter one, and, being less of an empty, dry negation and
giving less encouragement to vice, was more comforting to live under,
“all the circumstances of things considered.”

He says that he felt himself the more confirmed in this course because
his old friends Collins and Ralph, whom he had perverted to his first
way of thinking, went wrong, and injured him greatly without the least
compunction. He also recollected the contemptible conduct of Governor
Keith towards him, and Keith was another free-thinker. His own conduct
while under the influence of arguments like those in “Liberty and
Necessity” had been by no means above reproach. He had wronged Miss
Read, whose affections he had won, and he had embezzled Mr. Vernon’s
money. So he began to suspect, he tells us, that his early doctrine,
“tho’ it might be true, was not very useful.”

When back again in Philadelphia and beginning to prosper a little, he
set himself more seriously to the task of working out some form of
religion that would suit him. He must needs go to the bottom of the
subject; and in this, as in other matters, nothing satisfied him unless
he had made it himself. In the year 1728, when he was twenty-two years
old, he framed a creed, a most curious compound, which can be given no
other name than Franklin’s creed.

Having rejected his former negative belief as not sufficiently practical
for his purposes, and having once started creed-building, he was led on
into all sorts of ideas, which it must be confessed were no better than
those of older creed-makers, and as difficult to believe as anything in
revealed religion. But he would have none but his own, and its
preparation was, of course, part of that mental training which,
consciously or unconsciously, was going on all the time.

He began by saying that he believed in one Supreme Being, the author and
father of the gods,--for in his system there were beings superior to
man, though inferior to God. These gods, he thought, were probably
immortal, or possibly were changed and others put in their places. Each
of them had a glorious sun, attended by a beautiful and admirable system
of planets. God the Infinite Father, required no praise or worship from
man, being infinitely above it; but as there was a natural principle in
man which inclined him to devotion, it seemed right that he should
worship something.

He went on to say that God had in him some of the human passions, and
was “not above caring for us, being pleased with our praise and offended
when we slight him or neglect his glory;” which was a direct
contradiction of what he had previously said about the Creator being
infinitely above praise or worship. “As I should be happy,” says this
bumptious youth of twenty-two, “to have so wise, good, and powerful a
Being my friend, let me consider in what manner I shall make myself most
acceptable to him.”

This good and powerful Being would, he thought, be delighted to see him
virtuous, because virtue makes men happy, and the great Being would be
pleased to see him happy. So he constructed a sort of liturgy, prefacing
it with the suggestion that he ought to begin it with “a countenance
that expresses a filial respect, mixed with a kind of smiling that
signifies inward joy and satisfaction and admiration,”--a piece of
formalism which was rather worse than anything that has been invented by
the ecclesiastics he so much despised. At one point in the liturgy he
was to sing Milton’s hymn to the Creator; at another point “to read part
of some such book as Ray’s Wisdom of God in the Creation, or Blackmore
on the Creation.” Then followed his prayers, of which the following are
specimens:

    “O Creator, O Father, I believe that thou art Good, and that
    thou art pleased with the pleasure of thy children.

    “Praised be thy name for ever.”

       *       *       *       *       *

    “That I may be preserved from Atheism, and Infidelity, Impiety
    and Profaneness, and in my Addresses to thee carefully avoid
    Irreverence and Ostentation, Formality and odious Hypocrisy.

    “Help me, O Father.

    “That I may be just in all my Dealings and temperate in my
    pleasures, full of Candour and Ingenuity, Humanity and
    Benevolence.

    “Help me, O Father.”

He was doing the best he could, poor boy! but as a writer of liturgies
he was not a success. His own liturgy, however, seems to have suited
him, and it is generally supposed that he used it for a great many
years, probably until he was forty years old. He had it all written out
in a little volume, which was, in truth, Franklin’s prayer-book in the
fullest sense of the word.

Later in life he appears to have dropped the eccentric parts of it and
confined himself to a more simple statement. At exactly what period he
made this change is not known. But when he was eighty-four years old,
and within a few weeks of his death, Ezra Stiles, the President of Yale
College, in a letter asking him to sit for his portrait for the college,
requested his opinion on religion. In his reply Franklin said, that as
to the portrait he was willing it should be painted, but the artist
should waste no time, or the man of eighty-four might slip through his
fingers. He then gave his creed, which was that there was one God, who
governed the world, who should be worshipped, to whom the most
acceptable service was doing good to man, and who would deal justly with
the immortal souls of men.

    “As to Jesus of Nazareth, my opinion of whom you particularly
    desire, I think his system of morals and his religion, as he
    left them to us, the best the world ever saw, or is like to see;
    but I apprehend it has received various corrupting changes, and
    I have, with most of the present Dissenters in England, some
    doubts as to his Divinity; though it is a question I do not
    dogmatize upon, having never studied it, and think it needless
    to busy myself with it now, when I expect soon an opportunity of
    knowing the truth with less trouble. I see no harm, however, in
    its being believed, if that belief has the good consequence, as
    probably it has, of making his doctrines more respected and more
    observed; especially as I do not perceive that the Supreme takes
    it amiss, by distinguishing the unbelievers in his government of
    the world with any peculiar marks of his displeasure.

    “I shall only add, respecting myself, having experienced the
    goodness of that Being in conducting me prosperously through a
    long life, I have no doubt of its continuance in the next,
    though without the smallest conceit of meriting such goodness.

    “P. S. I confide, that you will not expose me to criticisms and
    censures by publishing any part of this communication to you. I
    have ever let others enjoy their religious sentiments, without
    reflecting on them for those that appeared to me unsupportable
    or even absurd. All sects here, and we have a great variety,
    have experienced my good will in assisting them with
    subscriptions for the building their new places of worship; and,
    as I have never opposed any of their doctrines, I hope to go out
    of the world in peace with them all.”

So Franklin’s belief at the close of his life was deism, which was the
same faith that he had professed when a boy. From boyish deism he had
passed to youthful negation, and from negation returned to deism again.
He also in his old age argued out his belief in immortality from the
operations he had observed in nature, where nothing is lost; why then
should the soul not live?

In the convention that framed the National Constitution in 1787, when
there was great conflict of opinion among the members and it seemed
doubtful whether an agreement could be reached, he moved that prayers be
said by some clergyman every morning, but the motion was lost. In a
general way he professed to favor all religions. A false religion, he
said, was better than none; for if men were so bad with religion, what
would they be without it?

Commenting on the death of his brother John, he said,--

    “He who plucks out a tooth, parts with it freely, since the pain
    goes with it; and he who quits the whole body parts at once with
    all pains, and possibilities of pains and diseases, which it was
    liable to or capable of making him suffer. Our friend and we
    were invited abroad on a party of pleasure, which is to last
    forever. His chair was ready first, and he is gone before us. We
    could not all conveniently start together; and why should you
    and I be grieved at this, since we are soon to follow and know
    where to find him?”

He not infrequently expressed his views on the future life in a light
vein:

    “With regard to future bliss, I cannot help imagining that
    multitudes of the zealously orthodox of different sects who at
    the last day may flock together in hopes of seeing each other
    damned, will be disappointed and obliged to rest content with
    their own salvation.”

His wife was an Episcopalian, a member of Christ Church in Philadelphia,
and he always encouraged her, as well as his daughter, to attend the
services of that church.

    “Go constantly to church,” he wrote to his daughter after he had
    started on one of his missions to England, “whoever preaches.
    The act of devotion in the common prayer book is your principal
    business there, and if properly attended to, will do more
    towards mending the heart than sermons generally can do. For
    they were composed by men of much greater piety and wisdom than
    our common composers of sermons can pretend to be; and
    therefore, I wish you would never miss the prayer days; yet I do
    not mean that you should despise sermons even of the preachers
    you dislike; for the discourse is often much better than the
    man, as sweet and clear waters come through very dirty earth.”

It does not appear that he himself attended the services of Christ
Church, for to the end of his life he was always inclined to use Sunday
as a day for study, as he had done when a boy. At one time, soon after
he had adopted his curious creed, he was prevailed upon to attend the
preaching of a Presbyterian minister for five Sundays successively. But
finding that this preacher devoted himself entirely to the explanation
of doctrine instead of morals, he left him, and returned, he says, to
his own little liturgy.

Not long afterwards another Presbyterian preacher, a young man named
Hemphill, came to Philadelphia, and as he was very eloquent and
expounded morality rather than doctrine, Franklin was completely
captivated, and became one of his regular hearers. We would naturally
suppose that a Presbyterian minister able to secure the attention of
Franklin was not altogether orthodox, and such proved to be the case. He
was soon tried by the synod for wandering from the faith. Franklin
supported him, wrote pamphlets in his favor, and secured for him the
support of others. But it was soon discovered that the sermons of the
eloquent young man had all been stolen from a volume published in
England. This was, of course, the end of him, and he lost all his
adherents except Franklin, who humorously insisted that he “rather
approved of his giving us sermons composed by others, than bad ones of
his own manufacture; though the latter was the practice of our common
teachers.”

Whitefield, the great preacher who towards the middle of the eighteenth
century started such a revival of religion in all the colonies, was, of
course, a man of too much ability to escape the serious regard of
Franklin, who relates that he attended one of his sermons, fully
resolved not to contribute to the collection at the close of it. “I had
in my pocket,” he says, “a handful of copper money, three or four silver
dollars, and five pistoles in gold. As he proceeded, I began to soften
and concluded to give him the copper. Another stroke of his oratory made
me ashamed of that, and determined me to give the silver; and he
finished so admirably, that I emptied my pocket wholly into the
collector’s dish, gold and all.”

This seems to have been the only time that Franklin was carried away by
preaching. On another occasion, when Whitefield was preaching in Market
Street, Philadelphia, Franklin, instead of listening to the sermon,
employed himself in estimating the size of the crowd and the power of
the orator’s voice. He had often doubted what he had read of generals
haranguing whole armies, but when he found that Whitefield could easily
preach to thirty thousand people and be heard by them all, he was less
inclined to be incredulous.

He and Whitefield became fast friends, and Whitefield stayed at his
house. In replying to his invitation to visit him, Whitefield answered,
“If you make that offer for Christ’s sake, you will not miss of the
reward.” To which the philosopher replied, “Don’t let me be mistaken; it
was not for Christ’s sake, but for your sake.” Whitefield often prayed
for his host’s conversion, but “never,” says Franklin, “had the
satisfaction of believing that his prayers were heard.”

He admitted that Whitefield had an enormous influence, and that the
light-minded and indifferent became religious as the result of his
revivals. Whether the religion thus acquired was really lasting he has
not told us. He was the publisher of Whitefield’s sermons and journals,
of which great numbers were sold; but he thought that their publication
was an injury to their author’s reputation, which depended principally
upon his wonderful voice and delivery. He commented in his bright way on
a sentence in the journal which said that there was no difference
between a deist and an atheist. “M. B. is a deist,” Whitefield said, “I
had almost said an atheist.” “He might as well have written,” said
Franklin, “chalk, I had almost said charcoal.”

In spite of his deism and his jokes about sacred things, he enjoyed most
friendly and even influential relations with religious people, who might
have been supposed to have a horror of him. His conciliatory manner,
dislike of disputes, and general philanthropy led each sect to suppose
that he was on its side, and he made a practice of giving money to them
all without distinction. John Adams said of him,--

    “The Catholics thought him almost a Catholic. The Church of
    England claimed him as one of them. The Presbyterians thought
    him half a Presbyterian, and the Friends believed him a wet
    Quaker.”

When in England he was the intimate friend of the Bishop of St. Asaph,
stayed at his house, and corresponded in the most affectionate way with
the bishop’s daughters. At the outbreak of the Revolution he was sent to
Canada in company with the Rev. John Carroll, of Maryland, in the hope
of winning over that country to the side of the revolted colonies. His
tendency to form strong attachments for religious people again showed
itself, and he and Carroll, who was a Roman Catholic priest, became
life-long friends. Eight years afterwards, in 1784, when he was minister
to France, finding that the papal nuncio was reorganizing the Catholic
Church in America, he urged him to make Carroll a bishop. The suggestion
was adopted, and the first Roman Catholic bishop of the United States
owed his elevation to the influence of a deist.

At the same time the members of the Church of England in the
successfully revolted colonies were adapting themselves to the new order
of things; but, having no bishops, their clergy were obliged to apply to
the English bishops for ordination. They were, of course, refused, and
two of them applied to Franklin, who was then in Paris, for advice. It
was strange that they should have consulted the philosopher, who
regarded bishops and ordinations as mere harmless delusions. But he was
a very famous man, the popular representative of their country, and of
proverbial shrewdness.

He suggested--doubtless with a sly smile--that the Pope’s nuncio should
ordain them. The nuncio, though their theological enemy, believed in the
pretty delusion as well as they, and his ordination would be as valid as
that of the Archbishop of Canterbury. He asked the nuncio, with whom he
was no doubt on terms of jovial intimacy, if he would do it; but that
functionary was of course obliged to say that such a thing was
impossible, unless the gentlemen should first become Roman Catholics. So
the philosopher had another laugh over the vain controversies of man.

He carried on the joke by telling them to try the Irish bishops, and, if
unsuccessful, the Danish and Swedish. If they were refused, which was
likely, for human folly was without end, let them imitate the ancient
clergy of Scotland, who, having built their Cathedral of St. Andrew,
wanted to borrow some bishops from the King of Northumberland to ordain
them a bishop for themselves. The king would lend them none. So they
laid the mitre, crosier, and robes of a bishop on the altar, and, after
earnest prayers for guidance, elected one of their own members. “Arise,”
they said to him, “go to the altar and receive your office at the hand
of God,” And thus he became the first bishop of Scotland. “If the
British isles,” said Franklin, “were sunk in the sea (and the surface of
this globe has suffered greater changes) you would probably take some
such method as this.” And so he went on enlarging on the topic until he
had a capital story to tell Madame Helvetius the next time they flirted
and dined together in their learned way.

But his most notable escapade in religion, and one in which his sense of
humor seems to have failed him, was his abridgment of the Church of
England’s “Book of Common Prayer.” It seems that in the year 1772, while
in England as a representative of the colonies, he visited the
country-seat of Sir Francis Dashwood, Lord le Despencer, a reformed rake
who had turned deist and was taking a gentlemanly interest in religion.
He had been, it is said, a companion of John Wilkes, Bubb Doddington,
Paul Whitehead, the Earl of Sandwich, and other reckless characters who
established themselves as an order of monks at Medmenham Abbey, where
they held mock religious ceremonies, and where the trial of the
celebrated Chevalier D’Eon was held to prove his disputed sex. An old
book, called “Chrysal, or the Adventures of a Guinea,” professes to
describe the doings of these lively blades.

Lord Despencer and Franklin decided that the prayer-book was entirely
too long. Its prolixity kept people from going to church. The aged and
infirm did not like to sit so long in cold churches in winter, and even
the young and sinful might attend more willingly if the service were
shorter.

Franklin was already a dabster at liturgies. Had he not, when only
twenty-two, written his own creed and liturgy, compounded of mythology
and Christianity? and had he not afterwards, as is supposed, assisted
David Williams to prepare the “Apology for Professing the Religion of
Nature,” with a most reasonable and sensible liturgy annexed? Lord
Despencer had also had a little practice in such matters in his mock
religious rites at the old abbey. Franklin, who was very fond of him,
tells of the delightful days he spent at his country-seat, and adds,
“But a pleasanter thing is the kind countenance, the facetious and very
intelligent conversation of mine host, who having been for many years
engaged in public affairs, seen all parts of Europe, and kept the best
company in the world, is himself the best existing.”[8] I have no doubt
that his lordship’s experience had been a varied one; but it is a
question whether it was of such a character as to fit him for
prayer-book revision. He, however, went seriously to work, and revised
all of the book except the catechism and the reading and singing psalms,
which he requested Franklin to abridge for him.

The copy which this precious pair went over and marked with a pen is now
in the possession of Mr. Howard Edwards, of Philadelphia, and is a most
interesting relic. From this copy Lord Despencer had the abridgment
printed at his own expense; but it attracted no attention in England.
All references to the sacraments and to the divinity of the Saviour
were, of course, stricken out and short work made of the Athanasian and
the Apostles’ Creed. Even the commandments in the catechism had the pen
drawn through them, which was rather inconsistent with the importance
that Franklin attached to morals as against dogma. But both editors, no
doubt, had painful recollections on this subject; and as Franklin would
have been somewhat embarrassed by the seventh, he settled the question
by disposing of them all.

The most curious mutilation, however, was in the Te Deum, most of which
was struck out, presumably by Lord Despencer. The Venite was treated in
a similar way by Franklin. The beautiful canticle, “All ye Works of the
Lord,” which is sometimes used in place of the Te Deum, was entirely
marked out. As this canticle is the nearest approach in the prayer-book
to anything like the religion of nature, it is strange that it should
have suffered. But Franklin, though of picturesque life and character,
interested in music as a theory, a writer of verse as an exercise, and a
lover of the harmony of a delicately balanced prose sentence, had,
nevertheless, not the faintest trace of poetry in his nature.

[Illustration: THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER AS ABRIDGED BY LORD DESPENCER
AND FRANKLIN]

The book, which is now a very rare and costly relic, a single copy
selling for over a thousand dollars, was known in America as “Franklin’s
Prayer-Book,” and he was usually credited with the whole revision,
although he expressly declared in a letter on the subject that he had
abridged only the catechism and the reading and singing psalms. But he
seems to have approved of the whole work, for he wrote the preface
which explains the alterations. A few years after the Revolution, when
the American Church was reorganizing itself, the “Book of Common Prayer”
was revised and abbreviated by competent hands; and from a letter
written by Bishop White it would seem that he had examined the “Franklin
Prayer-Book,” and was willing to adopt its arrangement of the calendar
of holy days.[9]

The preface which Franklin wrote for the abridgment was an exquisitely
pious little essay. It was written as though coming from Lord Despencer,
“a Protestant of the Church of England,” and a “sincere lover of social
worship.” His lordship also held “in the highest veneration the
doctrines of Jesus Christ,” which was a gratifying assurance.

When Franklin was about twenty-two or twenty-three and wrote his curious
creed and liturgy, he seems to have been in that not altogether
desirable state of mind which is sometimes vulgarly described as
“getting religion.” He was not the sort of man to be carried away by one
of those religious revival excitements of which we have seen so many in
our time, but he was as near that state as a person of his intellect
could be.

Preaching to him and direct effort at his conversion would, of course,
have had no effect on such an original disposition. The revival which he
experienced was one which he started for himself, and, besides his creed
and liturgy, it consisted of an attempt to arrive at moral perfection.

    “I wished to live,” he says, “without committing any fault at
    any time; I would conquer all that either natural inclination,
    custom, or company might lead me into. As I knew or thought I
    knew what was right and wrong, I did not see why I might not
    always do the one and avoid the other.”

So he prepared his moral code of all the virtues he thought necessary,
with his comments thereon, and it speaks for itself:

    “1. TEMPERANCE.--Eat not to dullness; drink not to elevation.

    “2. SILENCE.--Speak not but what may benefit others or yourself;
    avoid trifling conversation.

    “3. ORDER.--Let all your things have their places; let each part
    of your business have its time.

    “4. RESOLUTION.--Resolve to perform what you ought; perform
    without fail what you resolve.

    “5. FRUGALITY.--Make no expense but to do good to others or
    yourself; i. e. waste nothing.

    “6. INDUSTRY.--Lose no time; be always employed in something
    useful; cut off all unnecessary actions.

    “7. SINCERITY.--Use no hurtful deceit; think innocently and
    justly; and if you speak, speak accordingly.

    “8. JUSTICE.--Wrong none by doing injuries or omitting the
    benefits that are your duty.

    “9. MODERATION.--Avoid extremes; forbear resenting injuries so
    much as you think they deserve.

    “10. CLEANLINESS.--Tolerate no uncleanliness in body, clothes,
    or habitation.

    “11. TRANQUILLITY.--Be not disturbed at trifles, or at accidents
    common or unavoidable.

    “12. CHASTITY.--Rarely use venery but for health or offspring,
    never to dullness, weakness, or the injury of your own or
    another’s peace or reputation.

    “13. HUMILITY.--Imitate Jesus and Socrates.”

He thought that he could gradually acquire the habit of keeping all
these virtues, and instead of attempting the whole at once, he fixed his
attention on one at a time, and when he thought he was master of that,
proceeded to the next, and so on. He had arranged them in the order he
thought would most facilitate their gradual acquisition, beginning with
temperance and proceeding to silence; for the mastery of those which
were easiest would help him to attain the more difficult. He has,
therefore, left us at liberty to judge which were his most persistent
sins.

He had a little book with a page for each virtue, and columns arranged
for the days of the week, so that he could give himself marks for
failure or success. He began by devoting a week to each virtue, by which
arrangement he could go through the complete course in thirteen weeks,
or four courses in a year.

His intense moral earnestness and introspection were doubtless inherited
from his New England origin. But when he was in the midst of all this
creed- and code-making, he records of himself:

    “That hard to be governed passion of youth had hurried me
    frequently into intrigues with low women that fell in my way,
    which were attended with some expense and great inconvenience,
    besides a continual risk to my health by a distemper, which of
    all things I dreaded, though by great good luck I escaped it.”

His biographer, Parton, reminds us that his liturgy has no prayer
against this vice, and that about a year after the date of the liturgy
his illegitimate son William was born. The biographer then goes on to
say that Franklin was “too sincere and logical a man to go before his
God and ask assistance against a fault which he had not fully resolved
to overcome.” There is, however, a prayer in the liturgy against
lasciviousness. He had not yet paid Mr. Vernon the money he had
embezzled, although he was the author of a prayer asking to be delivered
from deceit and fraud, and another against unfaithfulness in trust.[10]

It is obvious that this inconsistency is very like human nature,
especially youthful human nature. There is nothing wonderful in it. It
was simply the struggle which often takes place in boys who are both
physically and mentally strong. The only thing unusual is that the
person concerned has made a complete revelation of it. Such things are
generally deeply concealed from the public. But that curious frankness
which was mingled with Franklin’s astuteness has in his own case opened
wide the doors.

It has been commonly stated in his biographies that he had but one
illegitimate child, a son; but from a manuscript letter in the
possession of the Pennsylvania Historical Society, written by John
Foxcroft, February 2, 1772, and never heretofore printed, it appears
that he had also an illegitimate daughter, married to John Foxcroft:

    “PHILAD^A  Feby 2d, 1772.

    “DEAR SIR

    “I have the happiness to acquaint you that your Daughter was
    safely brot to Bed the 20^th ulto and presented me with a sweet
    little girl, they are both in good spirits and are likely to do
    very well.

    “I was seized with a Giddyness in my head the Day before
    yesterday wch alarms me a good deal as I had 20 oz of blood
    taken from me and took physick wch does not seem in the least
    to have relieved me.

[Illustration: JOHN FOXCROFT]

    “I am hardly able to write this. Mrs F joins me in best
    affections to yourself and compts to Mrs Stevenson and Mr and
    Mrs Huson.

    “I am D^r Sir
    “Yrs. affectionately
    “JOHN FOXCROFT.

    “Mrs Franklin, Mrs Bache, little Ben & Family at Burlington are
    all well. I had a letter from ye Gov^r yesterday

    J. F.”

Among the Franklin papers in the State Department at Washington there
are copies of a number of letters which Franklin wrote to Foxcroft, and
in three of them--October 7, 1772, November 3, 1772, and March 3,
1773--he sends “love to my daughter.” There is also in Bigelow’s edition
of his works[11] a letter in which he refers to Mrs. Foxcroft as his
daughter. The letter I have quoted above was written while Franklin was
in England as the representative of some of the colonies, and is
addressed to him at his Craven Street lodgings. Foxcroft, who was
postmaster of Philadelphia, seems to have been on friendly terms with
the rest of Franklin’s family.

Mrs. Bache, whom Foxcroft mentions in the letter, was Franklin’s
legitimate daughter, Sarah, who was married. The family at Burlington
was the family of the illegitimate son, William, who was the royal
governor of New Jersey. This extraordinarily mixed family of legitimates
and illegitimates seems to have maintained a certain kind of harmony.
The son William, the governor, continued the line through an
illegitimate son, William Temple Franklin, usually known as Temple
Franklin. This condition of affairs enables us to understand the odium
in which Franklin was held by many of the upper classes of Philadelphia,
even when he was well received by the best people in England and France.

In his writings we constantly find him encouraging early marriages; and
he complains of the great number of bachelors and old maids in England.
“The accounts you give me,” he writes to his wife, “of the marriages of
our friends are very agreeable. I love to hear of everything that tends
to increase the number of good people.” He certainly lived up to his
doctrine, and more.

    “Men I find to be a sort of beings very badly constructed, as
    they are generally more easily provoked than reconciled, more
    disposed to do mischief to each other than to make reparation,
    much more easily deceived than undeceived, and having more pride
    and even pleasure in killing than in begetting one another; for
    without a blush they assemble in great armies at noonday to
    destroy, and when they have killed as many as they can they
    exaggerate the number to augment the fancied glory; but they
    creep into corners or cover themselves with the darkness of
    night when they mean to beget, as being ashamed of a virtuous
    action.” (Bigelow’s Works of Franklin, vol. vii. p. 464.)

There has always been much speculation as to who was the mother of
Franklin’s son, William, the governor of New Jersey; but as the gossips
of Philadelphia were never able to solve the mystery, it is hardly
possible that the antiquarians can succeed. Theodore Parker assumed that
he must have been the son of a girl whom Franklin would have married if
her parents had consented. Her name is unknown, for Franklin merely
describes her as a relative of Mrs. Godfrey, who tried to make the
match. Parker had no evidence whatever for his supposition. He merely
thought it likely; and, as a Christian minister, it would perhaps have
been more to his credit if he had abstained from attacking in this way
the reputation of even an unnamed young woman. An English clergyman,
Rev. Bennet Allen, writing in the London _Morning Post_, June 1, 1779,
when the ill feeling of the Revolution was at its height, says that
William’s mother was an oyster wench, whom Franklin left to die of
disease and hunger in the streets. The gossips, indeed, seem to have
always agreed that the woman must have been of very humble origin.

The nearest approach to a discovery has, however, been made by Mr. Paul
Leicester Ford, in his essay entitled “Who was the Mother of Franklin’s
Son?” He found an old pamphlet written during Franklin’s very heated
controversy with the proprietary party in Pennsylvania when the attempt
was made to abolish the proprietorship of the Penn family and make the
colony a royal province. The pamphlet, entitled “What is Sauce for a
Goose is also Sauce for a Gander,” after some general abuse of Franklin,
says that the mother of his son was a woman named Barbara, who worked in
his house as a servant for ten pounds a year; that he kept her in that
position until her death, when he stole her to the grave in silence
without a pall, tomb, or monument. This is, of course, a partisan
statement only, and reiterates what was probably the current gossip of
the time among Franklin’s political opponents.

There have also been speculations in Philadelphia as to who was the
mother of Franklin’s daughter, the wife of John Foxcroft; but they are
mere guesses unsupported by evidence.

From what Franklin has told us of the advice given him when a young man
by a Quaker friend, he was at that time exceedingly proud, and also
occasionally overbearing and insolent, and this is confirmed by various
passages in his early life. But in after-years he seems to have
completely conquered these faults. He complains, however, that he never
could acquire the virtue of order in his business, having a place for
everything and everything in its place. This failing seems to have
followed him to the end of his life, and was one of the serious
complaints made against him when he was ambassador to France.

But he believed himself immensely benefited by his moral code and his
method of drilling himself in it.

    “It may be well my posterity should be informed that to this
    little artifice, with the blessing of God, their ancestor owed
    the constant felicity of his life, down to his 79th year in
    which this is written.... To Temperance he ascribes his long
    continued health, and what is still left to him of a good
    constitution; to Industry and Frugality, the early easiness of
    his circumstances and acquisition of his fortune, with all that
    knowledge that enabled him to be a useful citizen, and obtained
    for him some degree of reputation among the learned; to
    Sincerity and Justice, the confidence of his country, and the
    honorable employs it conferred upon him; and to the joint
    influence of the whole mass of the virtues, even in the
    imperfect state he was able to acquire then, all that evenness
    of temper and that cheerfulness in conversation, which makes his
    company still sought for and agreeable even to his younger
    acquaintances.”

[Illustration: WILLIAM FRANKLIN, ROYAL GOVERNOR OF NEW JERSEY]

At the same time that he was trying to put into practice his moral code,
he conceived the idea of writing a book called “The Art of Virtue,” in
which he was to make comments on all the virtues, and show how each
could be acquired. Most treatises of this sort, he had observed, were
mere exhortations to be good; but “The Art of Virtue” would point out
the means. He collected notes and hints for this volume during many
years, intending that it should be the most important work of his life;
“a great and extensive project,” he calls it, into which he would throw
the whole force of his being, and he expected great results from it. He
looked forward to the time when he could drop everything else and devote
himself to this mighty project, and he received grandiloquent letters of
encouragement from eminent men. His vast experience of life would have
made it a fascinating volume, and it is to be regretted that public
employments continually called him to other tasks.

A young man such as he was is not infrequently able to improve his
morals more effectually by marrying than by writing liturgies and codes.
He decided to marry about two years after he had begun to discipline
himself in his creed and moral precepts. The step seems to have been
first suggested to him by Mrs. Godfrey, to whom, with her husband, he
rented part of his house and shop. She had a relative who, she thought,
would make a good match for him, and she took opportunities of bringing
them often together. The girl was deserving, and Franklin began to court
her. But he has described the affair so well himself that it would be
useless to try to abbreviate it.

    “The old folks encouraged me by continual invitations to supper,
    and by leaving us together, till at length it was time to
    explain. Mrs. Godfrey managed our little treaty. I let her know
    that I expected as much money with their daughter as would pay
    off my remaining debt for the printing-house, which I believe
    was not then above a hundred pounds. She brought me word they
    had no such sum to spare; I said they might mortgage their house
    in the loan office. The answer to this, after some days, was,
    that they did not approve the match; that, on inquiry of
    Bradford, they had been informed the printing business was not a
    profitable one; the types would soon be worn out, and more
    wanted; that S. Keimer and D. Harry had failed one after the
    other, and I should probably soon follow them; and, therefore, I
    was forbidden the house and the daughter shut up.”

This the young printer thought was a mere artifice, the parents thinking
that the pair were too fond of each other to separate, and that they
would steal a marriage, in which event the parents could give or
withhold what they pleased. He resented this attempt to force his hand,
dropped the whole matter, and as a consequence quarrelled with Mrs.
Godfrey, who with her husband and children left his house.

The passage which follows in Franklin’s Autobiography implies that his
utter inability at this period to restrain his passions directed his
thoughts more seriously than ever to marriage, and he was determined to
have a wife. It may be well here to comment again on his remarkable
frankness. There have been distinguished men, like Rousseau, who were at
times morbidly frank. Their frankness, however, usually took the form of
a confession which did not add to their dignity. But Franklin never
confessed anything; he told it. His dignity was as natural and as
instinctive as Washington’s, though of a different kind. His supreme
intellect easily avoided all positions in which he would have to confess
or make admissions; and, as there was nothing morbid in his character,
so there was nothing morbid in his frankness.

The frankness seems to have been closely connected with his serenity and
courage. There never was a man so little disturbed by consequences or
possibilities. He was quick to take advantage of popular whims, and he
would not expose himself unnecessarily to public censure. His letter to
President Stiles, of Yale, is an example. Being asked for his religious
opinion, he states it fully and without reserve, although knowing that
it would be extremely distasteful to the man to whom it was addressed,
and, if made public, would bring upon him the enmity of the most
respectable people in the country, whose good opinion every one wishes
to secure. The only precaution he takes is to ask the president not to
publish what he says, and he gives his reasons as frankly as he gives
the religious opinion. But if the letter had been published before his
death, he would have lost neither sleep nor appetite, and doubtless, by
some jest or appeal to human sympathy, would have turned it to good
account.

Since his time there have been self-made men in this country who have
advanced themselves by professing fulsome devotion to the most popular
forms of religion, and they have found this method very useful in their
designs on financial institutions or public office. We would prefer them
to take Franklin for their model; and they may have all his failings if
they will only be half as honest.

But to return to his designs for a wife, which were by no means
romantic. Miss Read, for whom he had a partiality, had married one
Rogers during Franklin’s absence in London. Rogers ill treated and
deserted her, and, dejected and melancholy, she was now living at home
with her mother. She and Franklin had been inclined to marry before he
went to London, but her mother prevented it. According to his account,
she had been in love with him; but, although he liked her, we do not
understand that he was in love. He never seems to have been in love with
any woman in the sense of a romantic or exalted affection, although he
flirted with many, both young and old, almost to the close of his life.

But now, on renewing his attentions, he found that her mother had no
objections. There was, however, one serious difficulty, for Mr. Rogers,
although he had deserted her, was not known to be dead, and divorces
were but little thought of at that time. Franklin naturally did not want
to add bigamy to his other youthful offences, and it would also have
required a revision of his liturgy and code. Rogers had, moreover, left
debts which Franklin feared he might be expected to pay, and he had had
enough of that sort of thing. “We ventured, however,” he says, “over all
these difficulties, and I took her to wife September 1, 1730.” None of
the inconveniences happened, for neither Rogers nor his debts ever
turned up.

[Illustration: WILLIAM TEMPLE FRANKLIN]

Franklin’s detractors have always insisted that no marriage ceremony was
performed and that he was never legally married. There is no record of
such a marriage in Christ Church, of which Mrs. Rogers was a member, and
the phrase used, “took her to wife,” is supposed to show that they
simply lived together, fearing a regular ceremony, which, if Rogers was
alive, would convict them of bigamy. The absence of any record of a
ceremony is, however, not necessarily conclusive that there was no
ceremony of any kind; and the question is not now of serious importance,
for they intended marriage, always regarded themselves as man and wife,
and, in any event, it was a common-law marriage. Their children were
baptized in Christ Church as legitimate children, and in a deed executed
three or four years after 1730 they are spoken of as husband and wife.

A few months after the marriage his illegitimate son William was born,
and Mr. Bigelow has made the extraordinary statement, “William may
therefore be said to have been born in wedlock, though he was not
reputed to be the son of Mrs. Franklin.”[12] This is certainly an
enlarged idea of the possibilities of wedlock, and on such a principle
marriage to one woman would legitimatize the man’s illegitimate
offspring by all others. It is difficult to understand the meaning of
such a statement, unless it is an indirect way of suggesting that
William was the son of Mrs. Franklin; but of this there is no evidence.

Franklin always considered his neglect of Miss Read after he had
observed her affection for him one of the errors of his life. He had
almost forgotten her while in London, and after he returned appears to
have shown her no attention, until, by the failure of the match Mrs.
Godfrey had arranged for him, he was driven to the determination to
marry some one. He believed that he had largely corrected this error by
marrying her. “She proved a good and faithful helpmate,” he says;
“assisted me much by attending the shop; we throve together, and have
ever mutually endeavored to make each other happy.” She died in 1774,
while Franklin was in England.

There is nothing in anything he ever said to show that they did not get
on well together. On the contrary, their letters seem to show a most
friendly companionship. He addressed her in his letters as “my dear
child,” and sometimes closed by calling her “dear Debby,” and she also
addressed him as “dear child.” During his absence in England they
corresponded a great deal. Her letters to him were so frequent that he
complained that he could not keep up with them; and his letters to her
were written in his best vein, beautiful specimens of his delicate
mastery of language, as the large collection of them in the possession
of the American Philosophical Society abundantly shows.

In writing to Miss Catharine Ray, afterwards the wife of Governor
Greene, of Rhode Island, who had sent him a cheese, he said,--

    “Mrs. Franklin was very proud that a young lady should have so
    much regard for her old husband as to send him such a present.
    We talk of you every time it comes to the table. She is sure you
    are a sensible girl, and a notable housewife, and talks of
    bequeathing me to you as a legacy; but I ought to wish you a
    better, and I hope she will live these hundred years; for we are
    grown old together, and if she has any faults, I am so used to
    them that I don’t perceive them. As the song says,--

    “‘Some faults we have all, & so has my Joan,
      But then they’re exceedingly small;
    And, now I’m grown used to them, so like my own,
      I scarcely can see them at all,
                My dear friends,
      I scarcely can see them at all.’

    “Indeed I begin to think she has none, as I think of you. And
    since she is willing I should love you as much as you are
    willing to be loved by me, let us join in wishing the old lady a
    long life and a happy one.”

While absent at an Indian conference on the frontier, he wrote
reprovingly to his wife for not sending him a letter:

    “I had a good mind not to write to you by this opportunity; but
    I never can be ill natured enough even when there is the most
    occasion. I think I won’t tell you that we are well, nor that we
    expect to return about the middle of the week, nor will I send
    you a word of news; that’s poz. My duty to mother, love to the
    children, and to Miss Betsey and Gracy. I am your loving
    husband.

    “P. S. I have _scratched out the loving words_; being writ in
    haste by mistake when I forgot I was angry.”

Mrs. Franklin was a stout, handsome woman. We have a description of her
by her husband in a letter he wrote from London telling her of the
various presents and supplies he had sent home:

    “I also forgot, among the china, to mention a large fine jug for
    beer, to stand in the cooler. I fell in love with it at first
    sight; for I thought it looked like a fat jolly dame, clean and
    tidy, with a neat blue and white calico gown on, good natured
    and lovely, and put me in mind of somebody.”

This letter is full of interesting details. He tells her of the regard
and friendship he meets with from persons of worth, and of his longing
desire to be home again. A full description of the articles sent would
be too long to quote entire, but some of it may be given as a glimpse of
their domestic life:

    “I send you some English china; viz, melons and hams for a
    dessert of fruit or the like; a bowl remarkable for the neatness
    of the figures, made at Bow, near this city; some coffee cups of
    the same; a Worcester bowl, ordinary. To show the difference of
    workmanship, there is something from all the china works in
    England; and one old true china bason mended, of an odd color.
    The same box contains four silver salt ladles, newest but
    ugliest fashion; a little instrument to core apples; another to
    make little turnips out of great ones; six coarse diaper
    breakfast cloths; they are to spread on the tea table, for
    nobody breakfasts here on the naked table, but on the cloth they
    set a large tea board with the cups. There is also a little
    basket, a present from Mrs. Stevenson to Sally, and a pair of
    garters for you, which were knit by the young lady, her
    daughter, who favored me with a pair of the same kind; the only
    ones I have been able to wear, as they need not be bound tight,
    the ridges in them preventing their slipping. We send them
    therefore as a curiosity for the form, more than for the value.
    Goody Smith may, if she pleases, make such for me hereafter. My
    love to her.”

At the time of the Stamp Act, in 1765, when the Philadelphians were much
incensed against Franklin for not having, as they thought, sufficiently
resisted, as their agent in England, the passage of the act, the mob
threatened Mrs. Franklin’s house, and she wrote to her husband:

[Illustration: MRS. FRANKLIN]

    “I was for nine days kept in a continual hurry by people to
    remove, and Sally was persuaded to go to Burlington for safety.
    Cousin Davenport came and told me that more than twenty people
    had told him it was his duty to be with me. I said I was pleased
    to receive civility from anybody, so he staid with me some time;
    towards night I said he should fetch a gun or two, as we had
    none. I sent to ask my brother to come and bring his gun also,
    so we turned one room into a magazine; I ordered some sort of
    defense up stairs such as I could manage myself. I said when I
    was advised to remove, that I was very sure you had done nothing
    to hurt anybody, nor had I given any offense to any person at
    all, nor would I be made uneasy by anybody, nor would I stir or
    show the least uneasiness, but if any one came to disturb me I
    would show a proper resentment. I was told that there were eight
    hundred men ready to assist anyone that should be molested.”

This letter is certainly written in a homely and pleasant way, not
unlike the style of her husband, and other letters of hers have been
published at different times possessing the same merit; but they have
all been more or less corrected, and in some instances rewritten, before
they appeared in print, for she was a very illiterate woman. I have not
access to the original manuscript of the letter I have quoted, but I
will give another, which is to be found in the collection of the
American Philosophical Society, exactly as she wrote it:

    October ye 29, 1773.

    “MY DEAR CHILD

    “I have bin very much distrest a boute as I did not oney letter
    nor one word from you nor did I hear one word from oney bodey
    that you wrote to So I must submit and indever to submit to what
    I ame to bair I did write by Capt Folkner to you but he is gone
    doun and when I read it over I did not like it and so if this
    dont send it I shante like it as I donte send you oney news nor
    I donte go abrode.

    “I shall tell you what consernes myself our yonegest Grandson is
    the finest child as alive he has had the small Pox and had it
    very fine and got abrod agen Capt All will tell you a boute him
    Benj Franklin Beache but as it is so deficall to writ I have
    desered him to tell you I have sente a squerel for your friend
    and wish her better luck it is a very fine one I have had very
    bad luck with two they one killed and another run a way allthou
    they was bred up tame I have not a caige as I donte know where
    the man lives that makes them my love to Sally Franklin--my
    love to all our cousins as thou menthond remember me to Mr and
    Mrs Weste due you ever hear aney thing of Ninely Evers as was.

       *       *       *       *       *

    “I cante write any mor I am your afeckthone wife

    “D. FRANKLIN”

She was not a congenial companion for Franklin in most of his tastes and
pursuits, in his studies in science and history, or in his political and
diplomatic career. He never appears to have written to her on any of
these subjects. But she helped him, as he has himself said, in the early
days in the printing-office, buying rags for the paper and stitching
pamphlets. It was her homely, housewifely virtues, handsome figure, good
health, and wholesome common sense which appealed to him; and it was a
strong appeal, for he enjoyed these earthly comforts fully as much as he
did the high walks of learning in which his fame was won. He once wrote
to her, “it was a comfort to me to recollect that I had once been
clothed from head to foot in woolen and linen of my wife’s manufacture,
and that I never was prouder of any dress in my life.”

She bore him two children. The first was a son, Francis Folger Franklin,
an unusually bright, handsome boy, the delight of all that knew him.
Franklin had many friends, and seems to have been very much attached to
his wife, but this child was the one human being whom he loved with
extravagance and devotion. Although believing in inoculation as a remedy
for the small-pox, he seems to have been unable to bear the thought of
protecting in this way his favorite son; at any rate, he neglected to
take the precaution, and the boy died of the disease when only four
years old. The father mourned for him long and bitterly, and nearly
forty years afterwards, when an old man, could not think of him without
a sigh.

[Illustration: MRS. SARAH BACHE]

The other child was a daughter, Sarah, also very handsome, who married
Richard Bache and has left numerous descendants. His illegitimate son,
William, was brought home when he was a year old and cared for along
with his other children; and William’s illegitimate son, Temple
Franklin, was the companion and secretary of his grandfather in England
and France. The illegitimate daughter was apparently never brought home,
and is not referred to in his writings, except in those occasional
letters in which he sends her his love. According to the letter already
mentioned as in the collection of the Pennsylvania Historical Society,
she was married to John Foxcroft, who was deputy colonial postmaster in
Philadelphia. It was well that she was kept away from Franklin’s house,
for the presence of William appears to have given trouble enough. A
household composed of legitimate and illegitimate children is apt to be
inharmonious at times, especially when the mother of the legitimate
children is the mistress of the house.

Franklin’s biographies tell us that Mrs. Franklin tenderly nurtured
William. This may be true, and, judging from expressions in her printed
letters, she seems to have been friendly enough with him. But from other
sources we find that as William grew up she learned to hate him, and
this, with some other secrets of the Franklin household, has been
described in the diary of Daniel Fisher:

    “As I was coming down from my chamber this afternoon a
    gentlewoman was sitting on one of the lowest stairs which were
    but narrow, and there not being room enough to pass, she rose up
    & threw herself upon the floor and sat there. Mr. Soumien & his
    Wife greatly entreated her to arise and take a chair, but in
    vain, she would keep her seat, and kept it, I think, the longer
    for their entreaty. This gentlewoman, whom though I had seen
    before I did not know, appeared to be Mrs. Franklin. She assumed
    the airs of extraordinary freedom and great Humility, Lamented
    heavily the misfortunes of those who are unhappily infected with
    a too tender or benevolent disposition, said she believed all
    the world claimed a privilege of troubling her Pappy (so she
    usually calls Mr. Franklin) with their calamities and
    distresses, giving us a general history of many such wretches
    and their impertinent applications to him.” (Pennsylvania
    Magazine of History, vol. xvii. p. 271.)

In the pamphlet called “What is Sauce for a Goose is also Sauce for a
Gander,” already alluded to, Franklin is spoken of as “Pappy” in a way
which seems to show that the Philadelphians knew his wife’s nickname for
him and were fond of using it to ridicule him.

Afterwards, Daniel Fisher lived in Franklin’s house as his clerk, and
thus obtained a still more intimate knowledge of his domestic affairs.

    “Mr. Soumien had often informed me of great uneasiness and
    dissatisfaction in Mr. Franklin’s family in a manner no way
    pleasing to me, and which in truth I was unwilling to credit,
    but as Mrs. Franklin and I of late began to be Friendly and
    sociable I discerned too great grounds for Mr. Soumien’s
    Reflections, arising solely from the turbulence and jealousy and
    pride of her disposition. She suspecting Mr. Franklin for having
    too great an esteem for his son in prejudice of herself and
    daughter, a young woman of about 12 or 13 years of age, for whom
    it was visible Mr. Franklin had no less esteem than for his son
    young Mr. Franklin. I have often seen him pass to and from his
    father’s apartment upon Business (for he does not eat, drink, or
    sleep in the House) without the least compliment between Mrs.
    Franklin and him or any sort of notice taken of each other, till
    one Day as I was sitting with her in the passage when the young
    Gentleman came by she exclaimed to me (he not hearing):--

    “‘Mr. Fisher there goes the greatest Villain upon Earth.’

    “This greatly confounded & perplexed me, but did not hinder her
    from pursuing her Invectives in the foulest terms I ever heard
    from a Gentlewoman.” (Pennsylvania Magazine of History, vol.
    xvii. p. 276.)

Fisher’s descriptions confirm the gossip which has descended by
tradition in many Philadelphia families. He found Mrs. Franklin to be a
woman of such “turbulent temper” that this and other unpleasant
circumstances forced him to leave. Possibly these were some of the
faults which her husband speaks of as so exceedingly small and so like
his own that he scarcely could see them at all. The presence of her
husband’s illegitimate son must have been very trying, and goes a long
way to excuse her.

All that Franklin has written about himself is so full of a serene
philosophic spirit, and his biographers have echoed it so faithfully,
that, in spite of his frankness, things are made to appear a little
easier than they really were. His life was full of contests, but they
have not all been noted, and the sharpness of many of them has been worn
off by time. In Philadelphia, where he was engaged in the most bitter
partisan struggles, where the details of his life were fully known,--his
humble origin, his slow rise, his indelicate jokes, and his illegitimate
children,--there were not a few people who cherished a most relentless
antipathy towards him which neither his philanthropy nor his
philosophic and scientific mind could soften. This bitter feeling
against the “old rogue,” as they called him, still survives among some
of the descendants of the people of his time, and fifty or sixty years
ago there were virtuous old ladies living in Philadelphia who would
flame into indignation at the mention of his name.

Chief-Justice Allen, who was his contemporary and opponent in politics,
described him as a man of “wicked heart,” and declared that he had often
been a witness of his “envenomed malice.” In H. W. Smith’s “Life of Rev.
William Smith” a great deal of this abuse can be found. Provost Smith
and Franklin quarrelled over the management of the College of
Philadelphia, and on a benevolent pamphlet by the provost Franklin wrote
a verse from the poet Whitehead:[13]

    “Full many a peevish, envious, slanderous elf
    Is in his works, Benevolence itself
    For all mankind, unknown his bosom heaves,
    He only injures those with whom he lives.
    Read then the man. Does truth his actions guide?
    Exempt from petulance, exempt from pride?
    To social duties does his heart attend--As
    son, as father, husband, brother, friend?
    Do those who know him love him? If they do
    You have my permission--you may love him too.”

    (Smith’s Life of Rev. William Smith, vol. i. p. 341.)

Provost Smith’s biographer resents this attack by giving contemporary
opinions of Franklin; and a paragraph omitted in the regular edition
(page 347 of volume i.), but printed on an extra leaf and circulated
among the author’s friends, may be quoted as an example. It was,
however, not original with Smith’s biographer, but was copied with a few
changes from Cobbett’s attack on Franklin:

    “Dr. Benjamin Franklin has told the world in poetry what, in his
    judgment, my ancestor was. His venerable shade will excuse me,
    if I tell in prose what, in the judgment of men who lived near a
    century ago, Dr. Smith was not: He was no almanack maker, nor
    quack, nor chimney-doctor, nor soap boiler, nor printer’s devil,
    neither was he a deist; and all his children were born in
    wedlock. He bequeathed no old and irrecoverable debts to a
    hospital. He never cheated the poor during his life nor mocked
    them in his death. If his descendants cannot point to his statue
    over a library, they have not the mortification of hearing him
    daily accused of having been a fornicator, a hypocrite, and an
    infidel.”

Some of the charges in this venomous statement are in a sense true, but
are exaggerated by the manner in which they are presented, an art in
which Cobbett excelled. I have in the preceding chapters given
sufficient details to throw light on many of them. Franklin was an
almanac-maker, a chimney-doctor, and a soap-boiler, but in none of these
is there anything to his discredit. As to his irrecoverable debts, it is
true that he left them to the Pennsylvania Hospital, saying in his will
that, as the persons who owed them were unwilling to pay them to him,
they might be willing to pay them to the hospital as charity. They were
a source of great annoyance to the managers, and were finally returned
to his executors. The statement that he cheated the poor during his life
and mocked them in his death is entirely unjustified. He was often
generous with his money to people in misfortune, and several such
instances can be found in his letters. It is also going too far to say
that he was a quack and a hypocrite.

While in England he associated on the most intimate terms with eminent
literary and scientific men. Distinguished travellers from the Continent
called on him to pay their respects. He stayed at noblemen’s
country-seats and with the Bishop of St. Asaph. He corresponded with all
these people in the most friendly and easy manner; they were delighted
with his conversation and could never see enough of him. In France
everybody worshipped him, and the court circles received him with
enthusiasm. But in Philadelphia the colonial aristocracy were not on
friendly terms with him. He had, of course, numerous friends, including
some members of aristocratic families; but we find few, if any,
evidences of that close intimacy and affection which he enjoyed among
the best people of Europe.

This hostility was not altogether due to his humble origin or to the
little printing-office and stationery store where he sold goose-feathers
as well as writing material and bought old rags. These disadvantages
would not have been sufficient, for his accomplishments and wit raised
him far above his early surroundings, and the colonial society of
Philadelphia was not illiberal in such matters. The principal cause of
the hostility towards him was his violent opposition to the proprietary
party, to which most of the upper classes belonged, and, having this
ground of dislike, it was easy for them to strengthen and excuse it by
the gossip about his illegitimate son and the son’s mother kept as a
servant in his house. They ridiculed the small economies he practised,
and branded his religious and moral theorizing as hypocrisy.

He was very fond of broad jokes, which have always been tolerated in
America under certain circumstances; but the man who writes them,
especially if he also writes and talks a great deal about religion and
undertakes to improve prayer-books, gives a handle to his enemies and an
opportunity for unfavorable comment. The _Portfolio_, a Philadelphia
journal, of May 23, 1801, representing more particularly the upper
classes of the city, prints one of his broad letters, and takes the
opportunity to assail him for “hypocrisy, hackneyed deism, muck-worn
economy,” and other characteristics of what it considers humbug and
deceit. It has been suggested that far back in the past one of
Franklin’s ancestors might have been French, for his name in the form
Franquelin was at one time not uncommon in France. This might account
for his easy brightness and vivacity, and also, it may be added, for
such letters as he sometimes wrote:

    “TO Mr. JAMES READ

    “Saturday morning Aug 17 ’45.

    “DEAR J.

    “I have been reading your letter over again, and since you
    desire an answer I sit me down to write you; yet as I write in
    the market, will I believe be but a short one, tho’ I may be
    long about it. I approve of your method of writing one’s mind
    when one is too warm to speak it with temper: but being myself
    quite cool in this affair I might as well speak as write, if I
    had opportunity. Your copy of Kempis must be a corrupt one if
    it has that passage as you quote it, _in omnibus requiem
    quaesivi, sed non inveni, nisi in angulo cum libello_. The good
    father understood pleasure (_requiem_) better, and wrote _in
    angulo cum puella_. Correct it thus without hesitation.”

       *       *       *       *       *

    (Portfolio, vol. i. p. 165.)

The letter continues the jest in a way that I do not care to quote; but
the last half of it is full of sage and saintly advice. It is perhaps
the only letter which gives at the same time both sides of Franklin’s
character. But Sparks and Bigelow in their editions of his works give
the last half only, with no indication that the first half has been
omitted.

In the same year that he wrote this letter he also wrote his letter of
advice to a young man on the choice of a mistress, a copy of which is
now in the State Department at Washington, while numerous copies taken
from it have been circulated secretly all over the country. This year
(1745) seems to have been his reckless period, for it was about that
time that he published “Polly Baker’s Speech,” which will be given in
another chapter. In the State Department at Washington is also preserved
his letter on Perfumes to the Royal Academy of Brussels, which cannot be
published under the rules of modern taste, and, in fact, Franklin
himself speaks of it as having “too much _grossièreté_” to be borne by
polite readers.[14] I shall, however, give as much of the letter on the
choice of a mistress as is proper to publish.

    “June 25th, 1745.

    “MY DEAR FRIEND:

    “I know of no medicine fit to diminish the violent natural
    inclinations you mention, and if I did, I think I should not
    communicate it to you. Marriage is the _proper_ remedy. It is
    the most natural state of man, and, therefore, the state in
    which you are most likely to find solid happiness. Your reasons
    against entering it at present appear to me not well founded.
    The circumstantial advantages you have in view of postponing it
    are not only uncertain, but they are small in comparison with
    that of the thing itself.

    “It is the man and woman united that make the complete human
    being. Separate she wants his force of body and strength of
    reason. He her softness, sensibility, and acute discernment.
    Together they are more likely to succeed in the world. A single
    man has not nearly the value he would have in a state of union.
    He is an incomplete animal. He resembles the odd half of a pair
    of scissors. If you get a prudent, healthy wife, your industry
    in your profession, with her good economy will be a fortune
    sufficient.

    “But if you will not take this counsel, and persist in thinking
    a commerce with the sex inevitable, then I repeat my former
    advice, that in all your amours you should _prefer old women to
    young ones_. You call this a paradox and demand my reasons. They
    are these:

    “1st. Because they have more knowledge of the world, and their
    minds are better stored with observations; their conversation is
    more improving and more lastingly agreeable.

    “2d. Because when women cease to be handsome, they study to be
    good. To maintain their influence over men, they supply the
    diminution of beauty by an augmentation of utility. They learn
    to do a thousand services, small and great, and are the most
    tender and useful of all friends when you are sick. Thus they
    continue amiable, and hence there is scarcely such a thing to be
    found as an old woman who is not a good woman.

    “3d. Because there is no hazard of children, which, irregularly
    produced, may be attended with much inconvenience.

    “4th. Because, through more experience, they are more prudent
    and discreet in conducting an intrigue to prevent suspicion. The
    commerce with them is therefore safe with regard to your
    reputation and with regard to theirs. If the affair should
    happen to be known, considerate people might be rather inclined
    to excuse an old woman who would kindly take care of a young
    man, form his manners by her good counsels, and prevent his
    ruining his health and fortunes among mercenary prostitutes.

    “5th....

    “6th....

    “7th. Because the compunction is less. The having made a young
    girl miserable may give you frequent bitter reflections, none of
    which can attend the making an _old_ woman _happy_.

    “8th and lastly....

    “Thus much for my paradox, but I still advise you to marry
    directly, being sincerely,

    “Your Affectionate Friend,
    “B. F.”

Franklin, however, was capable of the most courteous gallantry to
ladies. In France he delighted the most distinguished women of the court
by his compliments and witticisms. When about fifty years old he wrote
some letters to Miss Catharine Ray, of Rhode Island, which, as coming
from an elderly man to a bright young girl who was friendly with him and
told him her love-affairs, are extremely interesting. One of them about
his wife we have already quoted. In a letter to him Miss Ray had asked,
“How do you do and what are you doing? Does everybody still love you,
and how do you make them do so?” After telling her about his health, he
said,--

    “As to the second question, I must confess (but don’t you be
    jealous), that many more people love me now than ever did
    before; for since I saw you, I have been able to do some general
    services to the country and to the army, for which both have
    thanked and praised me, and say they love me. They say so, as
    you used to do; and if I were to ask any favors of them, they
    would, perhaps, as readily refuse me; so that I find little real
    advantage in being beloved, but it pleases my humor.”

On another occasion he wrote to her,--

    “Persons subject to the _hyp_ complain of the northeast wind as
    increasing their malady. But since you promised to send me
    kisses in that wind, and I find you as good as your word, it is
    to me the gayest wind that blows, and gives me the best spirits.
    I write this during a northeast storm of snow, the greatest we
    have had this winter. Your favors come mixed with the snowy
    fleeces, which are pure as your virgin innocence, white as your
    lovely bosom, and--as cold. But let it warm towards some worthy
    young man, and may Heaven bless you both with every kind of
    happiness.”

He had another young friend to whom he wrote pretty letters, Miss Mary
Stevenson, daughter of the Mrs. Stevenson in whose house he lived in
London when on his diplomatic missions to England. He encouraged her in
scientific study, and some of his most famous explanations of the
operations of nature are to be found in letters written to her. He had
hoped that she would marry his son William, but William’s fancy strayed
elsewhere.

    “PORTSMOUTH, 11 August, 1762.

    “MY DEAR POLLY

    “This is the best paper I can get at this wretched inn, but it
    will convey what is intrusted to it as faithfully as the finest.
    It will tell my Polly how much her friend is afflicted that he
    must perhaps never again see one for whom he has so sincere an
    affection, joined to so perfect an esteem; who he once flattered
    himself might become his own, in the tender relation of a child,
    but can now entertain such pleasing hopes no more. Will it tell
    _how much_ he is afflicted? No, it cannot.

    “Adieu, my dearest child. I will call you so. Why should I not
    call you so, since I love you with all the tenderness of a
    father? Adieu. May the God of all goodness shower down his
    choicest blessings upon you, and make you infinitely happier
    than that event would have made you....”

    (Bigelow’s Works of Franklin, vol. iii. p. 209.)

This correspondence with Miss Stevenson continued for a great many
years, and there are beautiful letters to her scattered all through his
published works. The letters both to her and to Miss Ray became more
serious as the two young women grew older and married. Miss Stevenson
sought his advice on the question of her marriage, and his reply was as
wise and affectionate as anything he ever wrote. She married Dr. Hewson,
of London, and they migrated to Philadelphia, where she became the
mother of a numerous family.

Franklin had a younger sister, Jane, a pretty girl, afterwards Mrs.
Mecom, of whom he was very fond, and he kept up a correspondence with
her all his life, sending presents to her at Boston, helping her son to
earn a livelihood, and giving her assistance in her old age. Their
letters to each other were most homely and loving, and she took the
greatest pride in his increasing fame.

His correspondence with his parents was also pleasant and familiar. In
one of his letters to his mother he amuses her by accounts of her
grandchildren, and at the same time pays a compliment to his sister
Jane.

    “As to your grandchildren, Will is now nineteen years of age, a
    tall, proper youth, and much of a beau. He acquired a habit of
    idleness on the Expedition, but begins of late to apply himself
    to business, and I hope will become an industrious man. He
    imagined his father had got enough for him, but I have assured
    him that I intend to spend what little I have myself, if it
    pleases God that I live long enough; and, as he by no means
    wants acuteness, he can see by my going on that I mean to be as
    good as my word.

    “Sally grows a fine girl, and is extremely industrious with her
    needle, and delights in her work. She is of a most affectionate
    temper, and perfectly dutiful and obliging to her parents, and
    to all. Perhaps I flatter myself too much, but I have hopes that
    she will prove an ingenious, sensible, notable and worthy woman
    like her aunt Jenny.” (Bigelow’s Works of Franklin, vol. ii. p.
    154.)

Over the grave of his parents in the Granary Burial-Ground in Boston he
placed a stone, and prepared for it one of those epitaphs in which he
was so skilful and which were almost poems:

                    Josiah Franklin and Abiah his wife
                            lie here interred.
            They lived together in wedlock fifty-five years;
          and without an estate or any gainful employment,
                 by constant labour, and honest industry,
                          (with God’s blessing,)
                  maintained a large family comfortably;
    and brought up thirteen children and seven grandchildren reputably.
                        From this instance, reader,
                be encouraged to diligence in thy calling,
                       and distrust not Providence.
                      He was a pious and prudent man,
                    she a discreet and virtuous woman.
                          Their youngest son,
                    in filial regard to their memory,
                          places this stone.

                   J. F. born 1655--died 1744,--Æ. 89.
                   A. F. born 1667--died 1752,--Æ. 85.


FOOTNOTES:

[5] Men, Women, and Manners in Colonial Times, vol. i. p. 210.

[6] Men, Women, and Manners in Colonial Times, vol. i. p. 222.

[7] Bigelow’s Works of Franklin, vol. i. p. 180.

[8] Bigelow’s Works of Franklin, vol. v. p. 209.

[9] H. W. Smith’s Life of Rev. William Smith, vol. ii. p. 174.

[10] Some years afterwards, when he had become prosperous, he restored
the money to Mr. Vernon, with interest to date.

[11] Vol. v. p. 201.

[12] Bigelow’s Works of Franklin, vol. iii. p. 216, note.

[13] This verse Franklin also quotes against Smith in a letter to Miss
Stevenson. (Bigelow’s Works of Franklin, vol. iii. p. 235.)

[14] Bigelow’s Works of Franklin, vol. vii. p. 374.




IV

BUSINESS AND LITERATURE


Franklin’s ancestors in both America and England had not been remarkable
for their success in worldly affairs. Most of them did little more than
earn a living, and, being of contented dispositions, had no ambition to
advance beyond it. Some of them were entirely contented with poverty.
All of them, however, were inclined to be economical and industrious.
They had no extended views of business enterprise, and we find none of
them among the great merchants or commercial classes who were reaching
out for the foreign trade of that age. Either from lack of foresight or
lack of desire, they seldom selected very profitable callings. They took
what was nearest at hand--making candles or shoeing horses--and clung to
it persistently.

Franklin advanced beyond them only because all their qualities of
economy, thrift, industry, and serene contentedness were intensified in
him. His choice of a calling was no better than theirs, for printing was
not a very profitable business in colonial times, and was made so in his
case only by his unusual sagacity.

I have already described his adventures as a young printer, and how he
was sent on a wild-goose chase to London by Governor Keith, of
Pennsylvania. I have also told how on his return to Philadelphia he
gave up printing and became the clerk of Mr. Denham. He liked Mr. Denham
and the clerkship, and never expected to return to his old calling. If
Mr. Denham had lived, Franklin might have become a renowned Philadelphia
merchant and financier, like Robert Morris, an owner of ships and
cargoes, a trader to India and China, and an outfitter of privateers.
But this sudden change from the long line of his ancestry was not to be.
Nature, as if indignant at the attempt, struck down both Denham and
himself with pleurisy within six months of their association in
business. Denham perished, and Franklin, after a narrow escape from
death, went back reluctantly to set type for Keimer.

He was now twenty-one, a good workman, with experience on two
continents, and Keimer made him foreman of his printing-office. Within
six months, however, his connection with Keimer was ended by a quarrel,
and one of the workmen, Hugh Meredith, suggested that he and Franklin
should set up in the printing business for themselves, Meredith to
furnish the money through his father, and Franklin to furnish the skill.
This offer was eagerly accepted; but as some months would be required to
obtain type and materials from London, Franklin’s quarrel with Keimer
was patched up and he went back to work for him.

In the spring of 1728 the type arrived. Franklin parted from Keimer in
peace, and then with Meredith sprung upon him the surprise of a rival
printing establishment. They rented a house for twenty-four pounds a
year, and to help pay it took in Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Godfrey as
lodgers. But their money was all spent in getting started, and they had
a hard struggle. Their first work was a translation of a Dutch history
of the Quakers. Franklin worked late and early. People saw him still
employed as they went home from their clubs late at night, and he was at
it again in the morning before his neighbors were out of bed.

There were already two other printing-offices, Keimer’s and Bradford’s,
and hardly enough work for them. The town prophesied failure for the
firm of Franklin & Meredith; and, indeed, their only hope of success
seemed to be in destroying one or both of their rivals, a serious
undertaking for two young men working on borrowed capital. There was so
little to be made in printing at that time that most of the printers
were obliged to branch out into journalism and to keep stationery
stores. Franklin resolved to start a newspaper, but, unfortunately, told
his secret to one of Keimer’s workmen, and Keimer, to be beforehand,
immediately started a newspaper of his own, called _The Universal
Instructor in all Arts and Sciences and the Pennsylvania Gazette_.

[Illustration: FRONT PAGE OF THE FIRST NUMBER OF THE “PENNSYLVANIA
GAZETTE,” PUBLISHED BY FRANKLIN AND MEREDITH]

Franklin was much disgusted, and in resentment, as he tells us, and to
counteract Keimer, began writing amusing letters for the other newspaper
of the town, Bradford’s _Mercury_. His idea was to crush Keimer’s paper
by building up Bradford’s until he could have one of his own. His
articles, which were signed “Busy Body,” show the same talent for humor
that he had displayed in Boston a few years before, when he wrote for
his brother’s newspaper over the name “Silence Dogood;” but there is a
great difference in their tone. No ridicule of the prevailing religion
or hatred of those in authority appears in them. The young man evidently
found Philadelphia more to his taste than Boston, and was not at war
with his surroundings. The “Busy Body” papers are merely pleasant
raillery at the failings of human nature in general, interspersed with
good advice, something like that which he soon afterwards gave in “Poor
Richard.”

Keimer tried to keep his journal going by publishing long extracts from
an encyclopædia which had recently appeared, beginning with the letter
A, and he tried to imitate the wit of the “Busy Body.” But he merely
laid himself open to the “Busy Body’s” attacks, who burlesqued and
ridiculed his attempts, and Franklin in his Autobiography gives himself
the credit of having drawn public attention so strongly to Bradford’s
_Mercury_ that Keimer, after keeping his _Universal Instructor_ going on
only ninety subscribers for about nine months, gave it up. Franklin &
Meredith bought it in and thus disposed of one of their rivals. That
rival, being incompetent and ignorant, soon disposed of himself by
bankruptcy and removal to the Barbadoes. Franklin continued the
publication of the newspaper under the title of the _Pennsylvania
Gazette;_ but it was vastly improved in every way,--better type, better
paper, more news, and intelligent, well-reasoned articles on public
affairs instead of Keimer’s stupid prolixity.

An article written by Franklin on that great question of colonial times,
whether the Legislature of each colony should give the governor a fixed
salary or pay him only at the end of each year, according as he had
pleased them, attracted much attention. It was written with considerable
astuteness, and, while upholding the necessity of the governor’s
dependence on the Legislature, was careful not to give offence to those
who were of a different opinion. The young printers also won favor by
reprinting neatly and correctly an address of the Assembly to the
governor, which Bradford had previously printed in a blundering way. The
members of the Assembly were so pleased with it that they voted their
printing to Franklin & Meredith for the ensuing year. These politicians,
finding that Franklin knew how to handle a pen, thought it well, as a
matter of self-interest, to encourage him.

The two young men were kept busily employed, yet found it very difficult
to make both ends meet, although they did everything themselves, not
having even a boy to assist them. Meredith’s father, having suffered
some losses, could lend them but half of the sum they had expected from
him. The merchant who had furnished them their materials grew impatient
and sued them. They succeeded in staying judgment and execution for a
time, but fully expected to be eventually sold out by the sheriff and
ruined.

At this juncture two friends of Franklin came to him and offered
sufficient money to tide over his difficulties if he would get rid of
Meredith, who was intemperate, and take all the business on himself.
This he succeeded in doing, and with the money supplied by his friends
paid off his debts and added a stationery shop, where he sold paper,
parchment, legal blanks, ink, books, and, in time, soap, goose-feathers,
liquors, and groceries; he also secured the printing of the laws of
Delaware, and, as he says, went on swimmingly. Soon after this he
married Miss Read, and he has left us an account of how they lived
together:

    “We kept no idle servants, our table was plain and simple, our
    furniture of the cheapest. For instance, my breakfast was for 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 called 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 deserved a silver spoon and china bowl as well as any of
    his neighbors.”

A story is told on the Eastern Shore of Maryland of a young man who
called one evening on an old farmer to ask him how it was that he had
become rich.

“It is a long story,” said the old man, “and while I am telling it we
might as well save the candle,” and he put it out.

“You need not tell it,” said the youth. “I see.”

Franklin’s method was the one that had always been practised by his
ancestors, and with his wider intelligence and great literary ability it
was sure to succeed. The silver spoons slowly increased until in the
course of years, as he tells us, the plate in his house was “augmented
gradually to several hundred pounds in value.”

His newspaper, the _Pennsylvania Gazette_, was the best in the colonies.
Besides the ordinary news and advertisements, together with little
anecdotes and squibs which he was always so clever in telling, he
printed in it extracts from _The Spectator_ and various moral writers,
articles from English newspapers, as well as articles of his own which
had been previously read to the Junto. He also published long poems by
Stephen Duck, now utterly forgotten; but he was then the poet laureate
and wrote passable verse. He carefully excluded all libelling and
personal abuse; but what would now be considered indelicate jests were
not infrequent. These broad jokes, together with witticisms at the
expense of ecclesiastics, constituted the stock amusements of the time,
as the English literature of that period abundantly shows.

Opening one of the old volumes of his _Gazette_ at random, we find for
September 5, 1734, a humorous account of a lottery in England, by which,
to encourage the propagation of the species, all the old maids of the
country are to be raffled for. Turning over the leaves, we find the
humorous will of a fellow who, among other queer bequests, leaves his
body “as a very wholesome feast to the worms of his family vault.” In
another number an account is given of some excesses of the Pope, with a
Latin verse and its translation which had been pasted on Pasquin’s
statue:

    “Omnia Venduntur imo
            Dogmata Christi
    Et ne me vendunt, evolo.
            Roma Vale.”

    “Rome all things sells, even doctrines old and new.
    I’ll fly for fear of sale; so Rome adieu.”

In the number for November 7, 1734, we are given “The Genealogy of a
Jacobite.”

    “The Devil _begat_ Sin, Sin _begat_ Error, Error _begat_ Pride,
    Pride _begat_ Hatred, Hatred _begat_ Ignorance, Ignorance
    _begat_ Blind Zeal, Blind Zeal _begat_ Superstition,
    Superstition _begat_ Priestcraft, Priestcraft _begat_ Lineal
    Succession, Lineal Succession _begat_ Indelible Character,
    Indelible Character _begat_ Blind Obedience, Blind Obedience
    _begat_ Infallibility, Infallibility _begat_ the Pope and his
    Brethren in the time of Egyptian Darkness, the Pope _begat_
    Purgatory, Purgatory _begat_ Auricular Confession, Auricular
    Confession _begat_ Renouncing of Reason, Renouncing of Reason
    _begat_ Contempt of Scriptures, Contempt of the Scriptures
    _begat_ Implicit Faith, Implicit Faith _begat_ Carnal Policy,
    Carnal Policy _begat_ Unlimited Passive Obedience, Unlimited
    Passive Obedience _begat_ Non-Resistance, Non-Resistance _begat_
    Oppression, Oppression _begat_ Faction, Faction _begat_
    Patriotism, Patriotism _begat_ Opposition to all the Measures of
    the Ministry, Opposition _begat_ Disaffection, Disaffection
    _begat_ Discontent, Discontent _begat_ a Tory, and a Tory
    _begat_ a Jacobite, with Craftsman and Fog and their Brethren on
    the Body of the Whore of Babylon when she was deemed past child
    bearing.”

Franklin’s famous “Speech of Polly Baker” is supposed to have first
appeared in the _Gazette_. This is a mistake, but it was reprinted again
and again in American newspapers for half a century.

    “The Speech of Miss Polly Baker before a Court of Judicatory, in
    New England, where she was prosecuted for a fifth time, for
    having a Bastard Child; which influenced the Court to dispense
    with her punishment, and which induced one of her judges to
    marry her the next day--by whom she had fifteen children.

    “May it please the honourable bench to indulge me in a few
    words: I am a poor, unhappy woman, who have no money to fee
    lawyers to plead for me, being hard put to it to get a
    living.... Abstracted from the law, I cannot conceive (may it
    please your honours) what the nature of my offence is. I have
    brought five children into the world, at the risque of my life;
    I have maintained them well by my own industry, without
    burthening the township, and would have done it better, if it
    had not been for the heavy charges and fines I have paid. Can it
    be a crime (in the nature of things, I mean) to add to the
    King’s subjects, in a new country that really needs people? I
    own it, I should think it rather a praiseworthy than a
    punishable action. I have debauched no other woman’s husband,
    nor enticed any youth; these things I never was charged with;
    nor has any one the least cause of complaint against me, unless,
    perhaps, the ministers of justice, because I have had children
    without being married, by which they have missed a wedding fee.
    But can this be a fault of mine? I appeal to your honours. You
    are pleased to allow I don’t want sense; but I must be stupefied
    to the last degree, not to prefer the honourable state of
    wedlock to the condition I have lived in. I always was, and
    still am willing to enter into it; and doubt not my behaving
    well in it; having all the industry, frugality, fertility, and
    skill in economy appertaining to a good wife’s character. I defy
    any one to say I ever refused an offer of that sort; on the
    contrary, I readily consented to the only proposal of marriage
    that ever was made me, which was when I was a virgin, but too
    easily confiding in the person’s sincerity that made it, I
    unhappily lost my honour by trusting to his; for he got me with
    child, and then forsook me.

    “That very person, you all know; he is now become a magistrate
    of this country; and I had hopes he would have appeared this day
    on the bench, and have endeavoured to moderate the Court in my
    favour; then I should have scorned to have mentioned it, but I
    must now complain of it as unjust and unequal, that my betrayer,
    and undoer, the first cause of all my faults and miscarriages
    (if they must be deemed such), should be advanced to honour and
    power in the government that punishes my misfortunes with
    stripes and infamy.... But how can it be believed that Heaven is
    angry at my having children, when to the little done by me
    towards it, God has been pleased to add his divine skill and
    admirable workmanship in the formation of their bodies, and
    crowned the whole by furnishing them with rational and immortal
    souls? Forgive me, gentlemen, if I talk a little extravagantly
    on these matters: I am no divine, but if you, gentlemen, must
    be making laws, do not turn natural and useful actions into
    crimes by your prohibitions. But take into your wise
    consideration the great and growing number of bachelors in the
    country, many of whom, from the mean fear of the expense of a
    family, have never sincerely and honestly courted a woman in
    their lives; and by their manner of living leave unproduced
    (which is little better than murder) hundreds of their posterity
    to the thousandth generation. Is not this a greater offence
    against the public good than mine? Compel them, then, by law,
    either to marriage, or to pay double the fine of fornication
    every year. What must poor young women do, whom customs and
    nature forbid to solicit the men, and who cannot force
    themselves upon husbands, when the laws take no care to provide
    them any, and yet severely punish them if they do their duty
    without them; the duty of the first and great command of nature
    and nature’s God, increase and multiply; a duty, from the steady
    performance of which nothing has been able to deter me, but for
    its sake I have hazarded the loss of the public esteem, and have
    frequently endured public disgrace and punishment; and therefore
    ought, in my humble opinion, instead of a whipping, to have a
    statue erected to my memory.”

A newspaper furnishing the people with so much information and sound
advice, mingled with broad stories, bright and witty, and appealing to
all the human passions,--in other words, so thoroughly like
Franklin,--was necessarily a success. It was, however, a small
affair,--a single sheet which, when folded, was about twelve by eighteen
inches,--and it appeared only twice a week.

It differed from other colonial newspapers chiefly in its greater
brightness and in the literary skill shown in its preparation. But
attempts have been made to exaggerate its merits, and Parton declares
that in it Franklin “originated the modern system of business
advertising” and that “he was the first man who used this mighty engine
of publicity as we now use it.” A careful examination of the _Gazette_
and the other journals of the time fails to disclose any evidence in
support of this extravagant statement. The advertisements in the
_Gazette_ are like those in the other papers,--runaway servants and
slaves, ships and merchandise for sale, articles lost or stolen. On the
whole, perhaps more advertisements appear in the _Gazette_ than in any
of the others, though a comparison of the _Gazette_ with Bradford’s
_Mercury_ shows days when the latter has the greater number.

Franklin advertised rather extensively his own publications, and the
lamp-black, soap, and “ready money for old rags” which were to be had at
his shop, for the reason, doubtless, that, being owner of both the
newspaper and the shop, the advertisements cost him nothing. This is the
only foundation for the tale of his having originated modern
advertising. His advertisements are of the same sort that appeared in
other papers, and there is not the slightest suggestion of modern
methods in them.

Parton also says that Franklin “invented the plan of distinguishing
advertisements by means of little pictures which he cut with his own
hands.” If he really was the inventor of this plan, it is strange that
he allowed his rival Bradford to use it in the _Mercury_ before it was
adopted by the _Gazette_. No cuts appear in the advertisements in the
_Gazette_ until May 30, 1734; but the _Mercury’s_ advertisements have
them in the year 1733.

Franklin made no sudden or startling changes in the methods of
journalism; he merely used them effectively. His reputation and fortune
were increased by his newspaper, but his greatest success came from his
almanac, the immortal “Poor Richard.”

In those days almanacs were the literature of the masses, very much as
newspapers are now. Everybody read them, and they supplied the place of
books to those who would not or could not buy these means of knowledge.
Every farm-house and hunter’s cabin had one hanging by the fireplace,
and the rich were also eager to read afresh every year the weather
forecasts, receipts, scraps of history, and advice mingled with jokes
and verses.

Every printer issued an almanac as a matter of course, for it was the
one publication which was sure to sell, and there was always more or
less money to be made by it. While Franklin and Meredith were in
business they published their almanac annually, and it was prepared by
Thomas Godfrey, the mathematician, who with his wife lived in part of
Franklin’s house. But, as has been related, Mrs. Godfrey tried to make a
match between Franklin and one of her relatives, and when that failed
the Godfreys and Franklin separated, and Thomas Godfrey devoted his
mathematical talents to the preparation of Bradford’s almanac.

This was in the year 1732, and the following year Franklin had no
philomath, as such people were called, to prepare his almanac. A great
deal depended on having a popular philomath. Some of them could achieve
large sales for their employer, while others could scarcely catch the
public attention at all. Franklin’s literary instinct at once suggested
the plan of creating a philomath out of his own imagination, an ideal
one who would achieve the highest possibilities of the art. So he wrote
his own almanac, and announced that it was prepared by one Richard
Saunders, who for short was called “Poor Richard,” and he proved to be
the most wonderful philomath that ever lived.

As Shakespeare took the suggestions and plots of his plays from old
tales and romances, endowing his spoils by the touch of genius with a
life that the originals never possessed, so Franklin plundered right and
left to obtain material for the wise sayings of “Poor Richard.” There
was, we are told, a Richard Saunders who was the philomath of a popular
English almanac called “The Apollo Anglicanus,” and another popular
almanac had been called “Poor Robin;” but “Poor Richard” was a real
creation, a new human character introduced to the world like Sir Roger
de Coverley.

Novel-writing was in its infancy in those days, and Bunyan’s “Pilgrim’s
Progress,” Addison’s character of Sir Roger, and the works of
Richardson, Fielding, and Smollett were the only examples of this new
literature. That beautiful sentiment that prompts children to say, “Tell
us a story,” and which is now fed to repletion by trash, was then
primitive, fresh, and simple. Franklin could have written a novel in the
manner of Fielding, but he had no inclination for such a task. He took
more naturally and easily to creating a single character somewhat in the
way Sir Roger de Coverley was created by Addison, whose essays he had
rewritten so often for practice.

[Illustration: TITLE-PAGE OF POOR RICHARD’S ALMANAC FOR 1733]

Sir Roger was so much of a gentleman, there were so many delicate
touches in him, that he never became the favorite of the common people.
But “Poor Richard” was the Sir Roger of the masses; he won the hearts of
high and low. In that first number for the year 1733 he introduces
himself very much after the manner of Addison.

    “Courteous Reader,

    “I might in this place attempt to gain thy favor by declaring
    that I write almanacks with no other view than that of the
    public good, but in this I should not be sincere; and men are
    now-a-days too wise to be deceived by pretences, how specious
    soever. The plain truth of the matter is, 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 threatened
    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. The printer has offered me some
    considerable share of the profits, and I have thus begun to
    comply with my dame’s desire.”

There was a rival almanac, of which the philomath was Titan Leeds. “Poor
Richard” affects great friendship for him, and says that he would have
written almanacs long ago had he not been unwilling to interfere with
the business of Titan. But this obstacle was soon to be removed.

   “He dies by my calculation,” says “Poor Richard,” “made at his
   request, on Oct. 17, 1733, 3 ho., 29 m., P. M., at the very
   instant of the ☌ of ☉ and ☿. 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 nine 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.”

In the next issue “Poor Richard” announces that his circumstances are
now much easier. His wife has a pot of her own and is no longer obliged
to borrow one of a neighbor; and, best of all, they have something to
put in it, which has made her temper more pacific. Then he begins to
tease Titan Leeds. He recalls his prediction of his death, but is not
quite sure whether it occurred; for he has been prevented by domestic
affairs from being at the bedside and closing the eyes of his old
friend. The stars have foretold the death with their usual exactitude;
but sometimes Providence interferes in these matters, which makes the
astrologer’s art a little uncertain. But on the whole he thinks Titan
must be dead, “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 scribbler, a fool, and a lyar;” and he goes on to show that
his good friend Titan would never have treated him in this way.

The next year he is still making sport of Titan, the deceased Titan, and
the ghost of Titan, “who pretends to be still living, and to write
Almanacks in spight of me;” and he proves again by means of the funniest
arguments that he must be dead. Another year he devotes several pages of
nonsense to disproving the charge that “Poor Richard” is not a real
person. He ridicules astrology and weather forecasting by pretending to
be very serious over it. At any rate, he says, “we always hit the day of
the month, and that I suppose is esteemed one of the most useful things
in an Almanack.” He and his good old wife are getting on now better than
ever; and the almanac for 1738 is prepared by Mistress Saunders herself,
who rails at her husband and makes queer work with eclipses and
forecasting. Then in the number for 1740 Titan writes a letter to “Poor
Richard” from the other world.

Besides the formal essays or prefaces which appeared in each number,
there were numerous verses, paragraphs of admirable satire on the events
of the day or the weaknesses of human nature, and those prudential
maxims which in the end became the most famous of all. As we look
through a collection of these almanacs for an hour or so we seem to have
lived among the colonists, who were not then Americans, but merry
Englishmen, heavy eaters and drinkers, full of broad jokes, whimsical,
humorous ways, and forever gossiping with hearty good nature over the
ludicrous accidents of life, the love-affairs, the married infelicities,
and the cuckolds. It is the freshness, the sap, and the rollicking
happiness of old English life.

    “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.”

    “Never spare the parson’s wine, nor the baker’s pudding.”

    “Ne’er take a wife till thou hast a house (and a fire) to put her in.”

    “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.”

    “Who has deceived thee so oft as thyself?”

    “There is no little enemy.”

    “_Of the Eclipses this year._

    “During the first visible eclipse Saturn is retrograde: For
    which reason the crabs will go sidelong and the ropemakers
    backward. The belly will wag before, and the ---- will sit down
    first.... When a New Yorker thinks to say THIS he shall say
    DISS, and the People in New England and Cape May will not be
    able to say Cow for their Lives, but will be forc’d to say KEOW
    by a certain involuntary Twist in the Root of their Tongues....”

    “Many dishes many diseases.”

    “Let thy maid servant be faithful, strong and homely.”

    “Here I sit naked, like some fairy elf;
    My seat a pumpkin; I grudge no man’s pelf,
    Though I’ve no bread nor cheese upon my shelf,
        I’ll tell thee gratis, when it safe is
    To purge, to bleed, or cut thy cattle or--thyself.”

    “Necessity never made a good bargain.”

    “A little house well filled, a little field well till’d and a
    little wife well will’d are great riches.”

    “_Of the Diseases this year._

    “This Year the Stone-blind shall see but very little; the Deaf
    shall hear but poorly; and the Dumb shan’t speak very plain. And
    it’s much, if my Dame Bridget talks at all this Year. Whole
    Flocks, Herds and Droves of Sheep, Swine and Oxen, Cocks and
    Hens, Ducks and Drakes, Geese and Ganders shall go to Pot; but
    the Mortality will not be altogether so great among Cats, Dogs
    and Horses....”

    “_Of the Fruits of the Earth._

    “I find that this will be a plentiful Year of all manner of good
    Things, to those who have enough; but the Orange Trees in
    Greenland will go near to fare the worse for the Cold. As for
    Oats, they’ll be a great Help to Horses....”

    “Lend money to an enemy, and thou’lt gain him; to a friend, and
    thou’lt lose him.”

    “Keep your eyes wide open before marriage, half shut
    afterwards.”

    “It is hard for an empty sack to stand upright.”

For twenty years and more “Poor Richard” kept up this continuous stream
of fun, breaking forth afresh every autumn,--sound, wholesome, dealing
with the real things and the elemental joys of life, and expressed in
that inimitable language of which Franklin was master. In this way was
built up the greater part of his wonderful reputation, which in some of
its manifestations surprises us so much. Such a reputation is usually of
long growth; one or two conspicuous acts will not achieve it. But the
man who every year for nearly a generation delighted every human being
in the country, from the ploughman and hunter to the royal governors,
was laying in store for himself a sure foundation of influence.

The success of “Poor Richard” was immediate. The first number of it went
through several editions, and after that the annual sales amounted to
about ten thousand copies. For the last number which Franklin prepared
for the year 1758, before he turned over the enterprise to his partner,
he wrote a most happy preface. It was always his habit, when a
controversy or service he was engaged in was finished, to summarize the
whole affair in a way that strengthened his own position and left an
indelible impression which all the efforts of his enemies could not
efface. Accordingly, for this last preface he invented a homely,
catching tale that enabled him to summarize all the best sayings of
“Poor Richard” for the last twenty-five years.

    “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 of 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 Things 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 that not drive thee; and Early to
    Bed, and early to rise, makes a Man healthy, wealthy, and wise.

       *       *       *       *       *

    “‘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.

       *       *       *       *       *

    “‘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 wrap 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 all
    his Cautions and their own Fear of Taxes.”

       *       *       *       *       *

This speech of the wise old man at the auction, while perhaps not so
interesting to us now as are some other parts of “Poor Richard,” was a
great hit in its day; in fact, the greatest Franklin ever made. Before
it appeared “Poor Richard’s” reputation was confined principally to
America, and without this final speech might have continued within
those limits. But the “clean old Man, with white locks” spread the fame
of “Poor Dick” over the whole civilized world. His speech was reprinted
on broadsides in England to be fastened to the sides of houses,
translated into French, and bought by the clergy and gentry for
distribution to parishioners and tenants. Mr. Paul Leicester Ford, in
his excellent little volume, “The Sayings of Poor Richard,” has
summarized its success. Seventy editions of it have been printed in
English, fifty-six in French, eleven in German, and nine in Italian. It
has also been translated into Spanish, Danish, Swedish, Welsh, Polish,
Gaelic, Russian, Bohemian, Dutch, Catalan, Chinese, and Modern Greek,
reprinted at least four hundred times, and still lives.

It was quite common a hundred years ago to charge Franklin with being an
arrant plagiarist. It is true that the sayings of “Poor Richard” and a
great deal that went to make up the almanac were taken from Rabelais,
Bacon, Rochefoucauld, Ray Palmer, and any other sources where they could
be found or suggested. But “Poor Richard” changed and rewrote them to
suit his purpose, and gave most of them a far wider circulation than
they had before.

More serious charges have, however, been made, and they are summarized
in Davis’s “Travels in America,”[15] which was published in 1803. I have
already noticed one of these,--the charge that his letter on air-baths
was taken from Aubrey’s “Miscellanies,”--which, on examination, I cannot
find to be sustained. Davis also charges that Franklin’s famous epitaph
on himself was taken from a Latin one by an Eton school-boy, published
with an English translation in the _Gentleman’s Magazine_ for February,
1736. Franklin’s epitaph is already familiar to most of us:

                    The Body
                       of
               Benjamin Franklin
                    Printer
         (Like the cover of an old book
             Its contents torn out
    And stript of its lettering and gilding)
           Lies here, food for worms.
         But the work shall not be lost
  For it will (as he believed) appear once more
       In a new and more elegant edition
             Revised and corrected
                       by
                   The Author.

The Eton boy’s was somewhat like it:

         Vitæ Volumine peracto
        Hic Finis Jacobi Tonson
     Perpoliti Sociorum Principis;
      Qui Velut Obstetrix Musarum
           In Lucem Edivit
        Fœlices Ingenii Partus.
      Lugete, Scriptorum chorus,
         Et Frangite Calamos;
 Ille vester, Margine Erasus, deletur!
      Sed hæc postrema Inscriptio
       Huic primæ Mortis Paginæ
              Imprimatur,
     Ne Prælo Sepulchri Commissus,
      Ipse Editor careat Titulo:
         Hic Jacet Bibliopola
          Folio vitæ delapso
       Expectans novam Editionem
       Auctiorem et Emendatiorem.

One of these productions might certainly have been suggested by the
other. But Franklin’s grandson, William Temple Franklin, who professed
to have the original in his possession, in his grandfather’s
handwriting, said that it was dated 1728, and it is printed with that
date in one of the editions of Franklin’s works. If this date is
correct, it would be too early for the epitaph to have been copied from
the one in the _Gentleman’s Magazine_ for February, 1736. It might be
said that possibly the Eton boy knew of Franklin’s epitaph; but I cannot
find that it was printed or in any way made public before 1736. There is
no reason why both should not be original, for everybody wrote epitaphs
in that century.

Franklin has been credited by one of his biographers with the invention
of the comic epitaph, and Smollett’s famous inscription on Commodore
Trunnion’s tomb in “Peregrine Pickle” is described as a mere imitation
of Franklin’s epitaph on himself. But there is no evidence that Smollett
had seen Franklin’s production before “Peregrine Pickle” was published
in 1750, and it was not necessary that he should. There were plenty of
similar productions long before that time. Franklin’s own _Gazette_,
January 6 to January 15, 1735/6, gives a very witty inscription on a
dead greyhound, which is described as cut on the walls of Lord Cobham’s
gardens at Stow. In writing comic epitaphs Franklin was merely following
the fashion of his time, and he was hardly as good at it as Smollett.

He has himself told us the source of one of his best short essays, “The
Ephemera,” a beautiful little allegory which he wrote to please Madame
Brillon in Paris. In a letter to William Carmichael, of June 17, 1780,
he describes the circumstances under which it was written, and says that
“the thought was partly taken from a little piece of some unknown
writer, which I met with fifty years since in a newspaper.”[16] It was
in this way that he worked over old material for “Poor Richard.”
Everything he had read seemed capable of supplying suggestions, and it
must be said that he usually improved on the work of other men.

He was very fond of paraphrasing the Bible as a humorous task and also
to show what he conceived to be the meaning of certain passages. He
altered the wording of the Book of Job so as to make it a satire on
English politics. He did it cleverly, and it was amusing; but it was a
very cheap sort of humor.

His most famous joke of this kind was his “Parable against Persecution.”
He had learned it by heart, and when he was in England, and the
discussion turned on religious liberty, he would open the Bible and read
his parable as the last chapter in Genesis. The imitation of the
language of Scripture was perfect, and the parable itself was so
interesting and striking that every one was delighted with it. His
guests would wonder and say that they had never known there was such a
chapter in Genesis.

The parable was published and universally admired, but when it appeared
in the _Gentleman’s Magazine_ some one very quickly discovered that it
had been taken from Jeremy Taylor’s Polemical Discourses, and there was
a great discussion over it. Franklin afterwards said, in a letter to Mr.
Vaughan, that he had taken it from Taylor; and John Adams said that he
never pretended that it was original.[17] It is interesting to see how
cleverly he improved on Taylor’s language:

    TAYLOR.

    “When Abraham sat at his tent door according to his custom,
    waiting to entertain strangers, he espied an old man stooping
    and leaning on his staff; weary with age and travel, coming
    towards him, who was an hundred years old. He received him
    kindly, washed his feet, provided supper, and caused him to sit
    down; but observing that the old man ate and prayed not, nor
    begged for a blessing on his meat, he asked him why he did not
    worship the God of heaven? The old man told him, that he
    worshipped the fire only and acknowledged no other god. At which
    answer Abraham grew so zealously angry, that he thrust the old
    man out of his tent, and exposed him to all the evils of the
    night and an unguarded condition. When the old man was gone, God
    called to Abraham, and asked him where the stranger was? He
    replied, I thrust him away, because he did not worship thee. God
    answered him, I have suffered him these hundred years, although
    he dishonoured me; and couldst not thou endure him one night,
    and when he gave thee no trouble? Upon this, saith the story,
    Abraham fetched him back again, and gave him hospitable
    entertainment and wise instruction. Go thou and do likewise and
    thy charity will be rewarded by the God of Abraham.”

    FRANKLIN.

    “¶ 1 And it came to pass after these things, that Abraham sat in
    the door of his tent, about the going down of the sun. ¶ 2 And
    behold a man, bent with age, coming from the way of the
    wilderness leaning on his staff. ¶ 3 And Abraham rose and met
    him, and said unto him: Turn in, I pray thee, and wash thy feet,
    and tarry all night; and thou shalt arise early in the morning
    and go on thy way. ¶ 4 But the man said, Nay, for I will abide
    under this tree. ¶ 5 And Abraham pressed him greatly: so he
    turned and they went into the tent, and Abraham baked unleavened
    bread, and they did eat. ¶ 6 And when Abraham saw that the man
    blessed not God he said unto him, wherefore dost thou not
    worship the Most High God, Creator of heaven and earth? ¶ 7 And
    the man answered, and said, I do not worship thy God, neither do
    I call upon his name; for I have made to myself a god, which
    abideth in my house and provideth me with all things. ¶ 8 And
    Abraham’s zeal was kindled against the man; and he arose and
    fell upon him, and drove him forth with blows into the
    wilderness. ¶ 9 And at midnight God called unto Abraham saying,
    Abraham, where is the stranger? ¶ 10 And Abraham answered and
    said, Lord, he would not worship thee, neither would he call
    upon thy name; therefore have I driven him out from before my
    face into the wilderness. ¶ 11 And God said, have I borne with
    him these hundred and ninety and eight years, and nourished him,
    and Cloathed him, notwithstanding his rebellion against me; and
    couldest not thou, who art thyself a sinner, bear with him one
    night? ¶ 12 And Abraham said, Let not the anger of the Lord wax
    hot against his servant; lo, I have sinned; forgive me I pray
    thee. ¶ 13 And Abraham arose and went forth into the wilderness
    and sought diligently for the man and found him, and returned
    with him to the tent; and when he had entreated him kindly, he
    sent him away on the morrow with gifts. ¶ 14 And God spake unto
    Abraham, saying, For this thy sin shall thy seed be afflicted
    four hundred years in a strange land. ¶ 15 But for thy
    repentance will I deliver them; and they shall come forth with
    power and gladness of heart, and with much substance.”

The parable was, indeed, older than Taylor for Taylor said he had found
it in “The Jews’ Book,” and at length it was discovered in a Latin
dedication of a rabbinical work, called “The Rod of Judah,” published at
Amsterdam in 1651, which ascribed the parable to the Persian poet Saadi.
None of them, however, had thought of introducing it into the Old
Testament, nor had they told it so well as Franklin, who gave it a new
currency, and it was reprinted as a half-penny tract and also in Lord
Kames’s “Sketches of the History of Man.”

While on this question of plagiarism it may be said that Franklin’s
admirable style was in part modelled on that of the famous Massachusetts
divine, Cotton Mather, whom he had known and whose books he had read in
his boyhood. The similarity is, indeed, quite striking, and for vigorous
English he could hardly have had a better model. But he improved so much
on Mather that his style is entirely his own. It is the most effective
literary style ever used by an American. Nearly one hundred and fifty
years have passed since his Autobiography was written, yet it is still
read with delight by all classes of people, has been called for at some
public libraries four hundred times a year, and shows as much promise of
immortality as the poems of Longfellow or the romances of Hawthorne.

Besides his almanac and newspaper, Franklin extended his business by
publishing books, consisting mostly of religious tracts and
controversies. He also imported books from England, and sold them along
with the lamp-black, soap, and groceries contained in that strange
little store and printing-office on Market Street. He sent one of his
journeymen to Charleston to establish a branch printing-office, of which
Franklin was to pay one-third of the expense and receive one-third of
the profits. After continuing in this manner some five years, the
Legislature of the province in 1736 elected him clerk of that body,
which enabled him to retain the printing of the notes, laws, paper
money, and other public jobs, which he tells us were very profitable.

The next year Colonel Spotswood, Postmaster-General of the colonies,
made him deputy postmaster of Philadelphia. This appointment reinforced
his other occupations. He could collect news for his _Gazette_ more
easily, and also had greater facilities for distributing it to his
subscribers. In those days the postmaster of a town usually owned a
newspaper, because he could have the post-riders distribute copies of it
without cost, and he did not allow them to carry any newspaper but his
own. Franklin had been injured by the refusal of his predecessor to
distribute his _Gazette_; but when he became postmaster, finding his
subscriptions and advertisements much increased and his competitor’s
newspaper declining, he magnanimously refused to retaliate, and allowed
his riders to carry the rival journal.

How much money Franklin actually made in his business is difficult to
determine, although many guesses have been made. He was, it would seem,
more largely and widely engaged than any other printer in the colonies,
for nearly all the important printing of the middle colonies and a
large part of that of the southern colonies came to his office. He made
enough to retire at forty-two years of age, having been working for
himself only twenty years.

On retiring he turned over his printing and publishing interest to his
foreman, David Hall, who was to carry on the business in his own way,
but under the firm name of Franklin & Hall, and to pay Franklin a
thousand pounds a year for eighteen years, at the end of which time Hall
was to become sole proprietor. This thousand pounds which Franklin was
to receive may be looked upon as an indication that before his
retirement the business was yielding him annually something more than
that sum, possibly almost two thousand pounds, as some have supposed.

He never again engaged actively in any gainful trade, and his retirement
seems to have been caused by the passion for scientific research which a
few years before had seized him, and by that trait of his character
which sometimes appears in the form of a sort of indolence and at other
times as a wilful determination to follow the bent of his inclinations
and pleasures. Although extremely economical and thrifty in practice as
well as in precept, he had very little love of money, and took no
pleasure in business for mere business’ sake. The charges of sordidness
and mean penny-wisdom are not borne out by any of the real facts of his
life. It is not improbable that just before his retirement he had
advanced far enough in his scientific experiments to see dimly in the
future the chance of a great discovery and distinction. He certainly
went to work with a will as soon as he got rid of the cares of the
printing-office, and in a few years was rewarded.

He had invested some of his savings in houses and land in Philadelphia,
and the thousand pounds (five thousand dollars) which he was to receive
for eighteen years was a very good income in those times, and more than
equivalent to ten thousand dollars at the present day. He moved from the
bustle of Market Street and his home in the old printing, stationery,
and grocery house, and is supposed to have taken a house at the
southeast corner of Second and Race Streets. This was at the northern
edge of the town, close to the river, where in the summer evenings he
renewed his youthful fondness for swimming.

It must be confessed that very few self-made men, conducting a
profitable business with the prospect of steady accumulation of money,
have willingly resigned it in the prime of life, under the influence of
such sentiments as appear to have moved him. But that intense and
absolute devotion to business which is the prevailing mood of our times
had not then begun in America, and it was rather the fashion to retire.

The years which followed his retirement, and before he became absorbed
in political affairs, seem to have had for him a great deal of ideal
happiness. He lived like a man of taste and a scholar accustomed to
cultured surroundings more than like a self-made man who had battled for
forty years with the material world. In writing to his mother, he
said,--

    “I read a great deal, ride a little, do a little business for
    myself, now and then for others, retire when I can, and go into
    company when I please; so the years roll round, and the last
    will come, when I would rather have it said, He lived usefully
    than He died rich.”

After his withdrawal from business he remained postmaster of
Philadelphia, and in 1753, after he had held that office for sixteen
years, he was appointed Postmaster-General of all the colonies, with
William Hunter, of Virginia, as his colleague, and he retained this
position until dismissed from it by the British government in 1774, on
the eve of the Revolution. There was some salary attached to these
offices, that of Postmaster-General yielding three hundred pounds. The
postmastership of Philadelphia entailed no difficult duties at that
time, and his wife assisted him; but when he was made Postmaster-General
he more than earned his salary during the first few years by making
extensive journeys through the colonies to reform the system. The salary
attached to the office was not to be allowed unless the office produced
it; and during the first four years the unpaid salary of Franklin and
his colleague amounted to nine hundred and fifty pounds. He procured
faster post-riders, increased the number of mails between important
places, made a charge for carrying newspapers, had all newspapers
carried by the riders, and reduced some of the rates of postage.

But he was not the founder of the modern post-office system, nor was he
the first Postmaster-General of America, as some of his biographers
insist. He merely improved the system which he found and increased its
revenues as others have done before and since.

The leisure he sought by retirement was enjoyed but a few years. He
became more and more involved in public affairs, and soon spent most of
his time in England as agent of Pennsylvania or other colonies, and
during the Revolution he was in France. There was a salary attached to
these offices. As agent of Pennsylvania he received five hundred pounds
a year, and when he represented other colonies he received from
Massachusetts four hundred, from Georgia two hundred, and from New
Jersey one hundred. These sums, together with the thousand pounds a year
from Hall, would seem to be enough for a man of his habits; but
apparently he used it all, and was often slow in paying his debts.

In a letter written to Mrs. Stevenson in London, while he 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. The thousand pounds from
Hall ceased in 1766, and after that his income must have been seriously
diminished, for the return from his invested savings is supposed to have
been only about seven hundred pounds. 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.

He procured for his natural son, William, the royal governorship of New
Jersey, and he was diligent all his life in getting government places
for relatives. This practice does not appear to have been much
disapproved of in his time; he was not subjected to abuse on account of
it; and, indeed, nepotism is far preferable to some of the more modern
methods.

When Governor of Pennsylvania, after the Revolution, he declined, we are
told, to receive any salary for his three years’ service, accepting only
his expenses for postage, which was high in those times, and amounted in
this case to seventy-seven pounds for the three years. This is one of
the innumerable statements about him in which the truth is distorted for
the sake of eulogy. He did not decline to receive his salary, but he
spent it in charity, and we find bequests of it in his will.

As minister to France he had at first five hundred pounds a year and his
expenses, and this was paid. He was also promised a secretary at a
salary of one thousand pounds a year; but, as the secretary was never
sent, he did the work himself with the assistance of his grandson,
William Temple Franklin, who was allowed only three hundred pounds a
year.

He considered himself very much underpaid for his services in resisting
the Stamp Act, for his mission to Canada in 1776 at the risk of his
life, and for the long and laborious years which he spent in France.
Certainly five hundred pounds a year and expenses was very small pay
for his diplomatic work in Paris, but during the last six years of his
mission there he received two thousand five hundred pounds a year, which
would seem to be sufficient compensation for acting as ambassador, as
well as merchant to buy and ship supplies to the United States, and as
financial agent to examine and accept innumerable bills of exchange
drawn by the Continental Congress (Bigelow’s Works of Franklin, vol. ix.
p. 127). In 1788, two years before his death, he made a statement of
these claims for extra service and sent it to Congress, accompanied by a
letter to his friend, Charles Thomson, the secretary.

He thought that Congress should recognize these services by a grant of
land, an office, or in some other way, as was the custom in Europe when
an ambassador returned from a long foreign service; and he reminded
Thomson that both Arthur Lee and John Jay had been rewarded handsomely
for similar services. But the old Congress under the Articles of
Confederation was then just expiring, and took no notice of his
petition; and when the new Congress came in under the Constitution, it
does not appear that his claims were presented. It is a mistake to say,
however, as some have done, that the United States never paid him for
his services and still owes him money. These claims were for extra
services which the government had never obligated itself to pay.

He died quite well off for those times, leaving an estate worth, it is
supposed, considerably over one hundred thousand dollars. The rapid rise
in the value of houses and land in Philadelphia after the Revolution
accounts for a part of this sum. He owned five or six large houses in
Philadelphia, the printing-house which he built for his grandson, and
several small houses. He had also a number of vacant lots in the town, a
house and lot in Boston, a tract of land in Nova Scotia, another large
tract in Georgia, and still another in Ohio. His personal property,
consisting mostly of bonds and money, was worth from sixty to seventy
thousand dollars.


FOOTNOTES:

[15] Pp. 209-217.

[16] Bigelow’s Franklin from His Own Writings, vol. ii. p. 511.

[17] Bigelow’s Works of Franklin, vol. v. p. 376; also vol. x. p. 78;
Adams’s Works, vol. i. p. 659.




V

SCIENCE


The exact period at which Franklin began to turn his attention to
original researches in science is difficult to determine. There are no
traces of such efforts when he was a youth in Boston. He was not then
interested in science, even in a boyish way. His instincts at that time
led him almost exclusively in the direction of general reading and the
training of himself in the literary art by verse-writing and by
analyzing the essays of the _Spectator_.

The atmosphere of Boston was completely theological. There was no room,
no opportunity, for science, and no inducement or even suggestion that
would lead to it, still less to original research in it. We find
Franklin in a state of rebellion against the prevailing tone of thought,
writing against it in his brother’s newspaper at the risk of
imprisonment, and in a manner more bitter and violent than anything he
afterwards composed. If he had remained in Boston it is not likely that
he would ever have taken seriously to science, for all his energies
would have been absorbed in fighting those intolerant conditions which
smothered all scientific inquiries.

In Pennsylvania he found the conditions reversed. The Quakers and the
German sects which made up the majority of the people of that province
in colonial times had more advanced ideas of liberty and free thought
than any of the other religious bodies in America, and in consequence
science flourished in Pennsylvania long before it gained entrance into
the other colonies. The first American medical college, the first
hospital, and the first separate dispensary were established there.
Several citizens of Philadelphia who were contemporaries of Franklin
achieved sufficient reputation in science to make their names well known
in Europe.

David Rittenhouse invented the metallic thermometer, developed the
construction of the compensation pendulum, and made valuable experiments
on the compressibility of water. He became a famous astronomer,
constructed an orrery to show the movements of the stars which was an
improvement on all its predecessors, and conducted the observations of
the transit of Venus in 1769. Pennsylvania was the only one of the
colonies that took these observations, which in that year were taken by
all the European governments in various parts of the world. The
Legislature and public institutions, together with a large number of
individuals, assisted in the undertaking, showing what very favorable
conditions for science prevailed in the province.[18]

These were the conditions which seem to have aroused Franklin. Without
them his mind tended more naturally to literature, politics, and schemes
of philanthropy and reform; but when his strong intellect was once
directed towards science, he easily excelled in it. Some of the early
questions discussed by the Junto, such as “Is sound an entity or body?”
and “How may the phenomena of vapors be explained?” show an inclination
towards scientific research; and it is very likely that he studied such
subjects more or less during the ten years which followed his beginning
business for himself.

In his _Gazette_ for December 15, 1737, there is an essay on the causes
of earthquakes, summarizing the various explanations which had been
given by learned men, and this essay is supposed to have been written by
him. Six years afterwards he made what has been usually considered his
first discovery,--namely, that the northeast storms of the Atlantic
coast move against the wind; or, in other words, that instead of these
storms coming from the northeast, whence the wind blows, they come from
the southwest. He was led to this discovery by attempting to observe an
eclipse of the moon which occurred on the evening of October 21, 1743;
but he was prevented by a heavy northeaster which did great damage on
the coast. He was surprised to find that it had not prevented the people
of Boston from seeing the eclipse. The storm, though coming from the
northeast, swept over Philadelphia before it reached Boston. For several
years he carefully collected information about these storms, and found
in every instance that they began to leeward and were often more violent
there than farther to windward.

He seems to have been the first person to observe these facts, but he
took no pains to make his observations public, except in conversation or
in letters to prominent men like Jared Eliot, of Connecticut, and these
letters were not published until long afterwards. This was his method in
all his investigations. He never wrote a book on science; he merely
reported his investigations and experiments by letter, usually to
learned people in England or France. There were no scientific
periodicals in those days. The men who were interested in such things
kept in touch with one another by means of correspondence and an
occasional pamphlet or book.

During the same period in which he was making observations on northeast
storms he invented the “Pennsylvania Fireplace,” as he called it, a new
sort of stove which was a great improvement over the old methods of
heating rooms. He published a complete description of this stove in
1745, and it is one of the most interesting essays he ever wrote. It is
astonishing with what pleasure one can still read the first half of this
essay written one hundred and fifty years ago on the driest of dry
subjects. The language is so clear and beautiful, and the homely
personality of the writer so manifest, that one is inclined to lay down
the principle that the test of literary genius is the ability to be
fascinating about stoves.

He explained the laws of hot air and its movements; the Holland stove,
which afforded but little ventilation; the German stove, which was
simply an iron box fed from outside, with no ventilating properties; and
the great open fireplace fed with huge logs, which required such a
draft to prevent the smoke from coming back into the room that the outer
door had to be left open,--and if the door was shut the draft would draw
the outer air whistling and howling through the crevices of the windows.
His “Pennsylvania Fireplace” was what we would now call an
open-fireplace stove. It was intended to be less wasteful of fuel than
the ordinary fireplace and to give ventilation, while combining the
heating power of the German and Holland stoves. It continued in common
use for nearly a century, and modified forms of it are still called the
Franklin stoves.

One of its greatest advantages was that it saved wood, which, for some
time prior to the introduction of coal, had to be brought such a long
distance that it was becoming very expensive. Franklin refused to take
out a patent for his invention; for he was on principle opposed to
patents, and said that as we enjoyed great advantages from the
inventions of others, we should be willing to serve them by inventions
of our own. He afterwards learned that a London ironmonger made a few
changes in the “Pennsylvania Fireplace” and sold it as his own, gaining
a small fortune.

Franklin’s invention was undoubtedly an improvement on the old methods
of heating and ventilation; but he was not, as has been absurdly
claimed, the founder of the “American stove system,” for that system
very soon departed from his lines and went back to the air-tight stoves
of Germany and Holland.

It was not until 1746 or 1747, after he had been making original
researches in science for about five years, that he took up the subject
of electricity, and he was then forty-one years old. It appears that Mr.
Peter Collinson, of London, who was interested in botany and other
sciences, and corresponded largely on such subjects, had presented to
the Philadelphia Library one of the glass tubes which were used at that
time for producing electricity by rubbing them with silk or skin.
Franklin began experimenting with this tube, and seems to have been
fascinated by the new subject. On March 28, 1747, he wrote to Mr.
Collinson thanking him for the tube, and saying that they had observed
with its aid some phenomena which they thought to be new.

    “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 crowds to see them, I
    have, during some months past, had little leisure for anything
    else.”

It will be observed that he speaks of crowds coming to see the
experiments, and this confirms what I have already shown of the strong
interest in science which prevailed at that time in Pennsylvania, and
which had evidently first aroused Franklin. In fact, a renewed interest
in science had been recently stirred up all over the world, and people
who had never before thought much of such things became investigators.
Voltaire, who resembled Franklin in many ways, had turned aside from
literature, and at forty-one, the same age at which Franklin began the
study of electricity, had become a man of science, and for four years
devoted himself to experiments.

Franklin was by no means alone in his studies. Besides the crowds who
were interested from mere curiosity, there were three men--Ebenezer
Kinnersley, Thomas Hopkinson, and Philip Syng--who experimented with
him, and it was no mere amateurish work in which these men were engaged.
Franklin was their spokesman and reported the results of his and their
labor by means of letters to Mr. Peter Collinson. Within six months
Hopkinson had observed the power of points to throw off electricity, or
electrical fire, as he called it, and Franklin had discovered and
described what is now known as positive and negative electricity. Within
the same time Syng had invented an electrical machine, consisting of a
sphere revolved on an axis with a handle, which was better adapted for
producing the electrical spark than the tube-rubbing practised in
Europe.

The experiments and the letters to Collinson describing them continued,
and about this time we find Franklin writing a long and apparently the
first intelligent explanation of the action of the Leyden jar. Then
followed attempts to explain thunder and lightning as phenomena of
electricity, and on July 29, 1750, Franklin sent to Collinson a paper
announcing the invention of the lightning-rod, together with an
explanation of its action.

In these papers he also suggested an experiment which would prove
positively that lightning was a form of electricity. The two phenomena
were alike as regarded light, color, crooked direction, noise, swift
motion, being conducted by metals, subsisting in water or ice, rending
bodies, killing animals, melting metals, and setting fire to various
substances. It remained to demonstrate with absolute certainty that
lightning resembled electricity in being attracted by points; and for
this purpose Franklin proposed that a man stand in a sort of sentry-box
on the top of some high tower or steeple and with a pointed rod draw
electricity from passing thunder-clouds.

This suggestion was successfully carried out in France, in the presence
of the king, at the county-seat of the Duke D’Ayen; and afterwards
Buffon, D’Alibard, and Du Lor confirmed it by experiments of their own.
But they did not use steeples; they erected lofty iron rods, in one
instance ninety-nine feet high. Nevertheless, it was in effect the same
method that Franklin had suggested. The experiment was repeated in
various forms in England, and the Philadelphia philosopher, postmaster,
and author of “Poor Richard” became instantly famous as the discoverer
of the identity of lightning with electricity.

Two years before these experiments were inaugurated he had retired from
business for various reasons, chief among which was his strong desire to
devote more time to science. His letters continue to be filled with
closely reasoned details of all sorts of experiments. So earnest were
these Philadelphia investigators, that when Kinnersley wrote complaining
that in travelling to Boston he found difficulty in keeping up his
experiments, Franklin, in reply, suggested a portable electrical
apparatus which would not break on a journey.

In a letter written to Collinson on October 19, 1752, Franklin says he
had heard of the success in France of the experiment he had suggested
for drawing the lightning from clouds by means of an elevated metal rod;
but in the mean time he had contrived another method for accomplishing
the same result without the aid of a steeple or lofty iron rod. This was
the kite experiment of which we have heard so much, and he goes on to
describe it:

    “Make a small cross of two light strips of cedar, the arms so
    long as to reach to the four corners of a large thin silk
    handkerchief when extended; tie the corners of the handkerchief
    to the extremities of the cross, so you have the body of a kite;
    which being properly accommodated with a tail, loop, and string,
    will rise in the air, like those made of paper; but this being
    of silk is fitter to bear the wet and wind of a thunder gust
    without tearing. To the top of the upright stick of the cross is
    to be fixed a very sharp pointed wire, rising a foot or more
    above the wood. To the end of the twine, next the hand, is to be
    tied a silk ribbon, and where the silk and twine join, a key may
    be fastened. This kite is to be raised when a thunder-gust
    appears to be coming on, and the person who holds the string
    must stand within a door or window, or under some cover, so that
    the silk ribbon may not be wet; and care must be taken that the
    twine does not touch the frame of the door or window. As soon as
    any of the thunder clouds come over the kite, the pointed wire
    will draw the electric fire from them, and the kite, with all
    the twine, will be electrified, and the loose filaments of the
    twine, will stand out every way, and be attracted by an
    approaching finger. And when the rain has wetted the kite and
    twine, so that it can conduct the electric fire freely, you will
    find it stream out plentifully from the key on the approach of
    your knuckle. At this key the phial may be charged: and from
    electric fire thus obtained, spirits may be kindled, and all the
    other electric experiments be performed, which are usually done
    by the help of a rubbed glass globe or tube, and thereby the
    sameness of the electric matter with that of lightning
    completely demonstrated.”

This is the only description by Franklin of the experiment which added
so much to his reputation. Franklin and the kite became a story for
school-books; innumerable pictures of him and his son drawing the
lightning down the string were made and reproduced for a century or more
in every conceivable form, and even engraved on some of our national
currency.

The experiment was made in June, 1752; in the following October the
above letter was written, and the news it contained appears to have
rushed over the world without any effort on his part to spread it. He
never wrote anything more concerning this experiment than the very
simple and unaffected letter to Mr. Collinson. But people, of course,
asked him about it, and from the details which they professed to have
obtained grand statements have been built up describing his conduct and
emotions on that memorable June afternoon on the outskirts of
Philadelphia, probably somewhere in the neighborhood of the present Vine
Street, near Fourth; how his heart stood still with anxiety lest the
trial should fail; how with trembling hand he applied his knuckles to
the key, and the wild exultation with which he saw success crown his
efforts.

But it is safe to say that there were none of these theatrical
exhibitions, and that he made the experiment in that matter-of-fact and
probably half-humorous way in which he did everything. Nothing important
depended on it, for he had already proved conclusively, not only by
reasoning but by his suggested experiments which had been tried in
Europe, that thunder and lightning were phenomena of electricity. The
kite was used because there were in Philadelphia no high steeples on
which he could try the experiment that had proved his discovery in
France.

But it was Franklin’s good fortune on a number of occasions to be placed
in picturesque and striking situations, which greatly increased his
fame. He did not foresee that kite-flying would be one of these, and as
it was not essential to his discovery of the nature of lightning, he was
disinclined at first to think much of it, and did not even report it to
Mr. Collinson until after several months had elapsed. But the world
fixed upon it instantly as something easy to remember. To this day it is
the popular way of illustrating Franklin’s discovery, and is all that
most people know of his contributions to science.

He went on steadily reporting his experiments to Collinson, and in 1753
was at work on the mistaken hypothesis of the sea being the grand source
of lightning, but at the same time making the discovery of the negative
and sometimes positive electricity of the clouds. He had a rod erected
on his house to draw down into it the mystical fire of any passing
clouds, with bells arranged to warn him when his apparatus was working;
and it was about this time that he was struck senseless and almost
killed while trying the effect of an electrical shock on a turkey.

Collinson kept his letters, and in May, 1751, had them published in a
pamphlet called “New Experiments and Observations in Electricity made at
Philadelphia in America.” It had immediately, like all of Franklin’s
writings, a vast success, at first in France, and afterwards in England
and other countries. Franklin was, strange to say, always more popular
in France than in either America or England. In England his experiments
in electricity were at first laughed at, and the Royal Society refused
to publish his letters in their proceedings. But after Collinson had
secured their publication in a pamphlet, they were translated into
German, Italian, and Latin, as well as into French, and were greatly
admired not only for the discoveries and knowledge they revealed, but
for their fascinating style and noble candor tinged occasionally with
the most telling and homely humor.

It has been repeatedly charged that Franklin was indebted to his
fellow-worker, Kinnersley, for his discoveries in electricity. The
charge is so vaguely made that it is impossible to ascertain which of
them are supposed to have been stolen. In Franklin’s letters on
electricity there are frequent footnotes giving credit to Hopkinson and
Syng for their original work, and there are also in his published works
letters to and from Kinnersley. He and Kinnersley seem to have been
always fast friends, and, so far as I can discover, the latter never
accused Franklin of stealing from him.

After he had proved in such a brilliant manner that lightning was merely
one of the forms or phenomena of that mysterious fire which appears when
we rub a glass tube with buckskin, Franklin made no more discoveries in
science; but his interest and patience of research were unabated. He
cannot be ranked among the great men of science, the Newtons and
Keplers, or the Humboldts, Huxleys, or Darwins. He belongs rather in the
second class, among the minor discoverers. But his discovery of the
nature of lightning was so striking and so capable of arousing the
wonder of the masses of mankind, and his invention of the lightning-rod
was regarded as so universally valuable, that he has received more
popular applause than men whose achievements were greater and more
important.

During the rest of his life his work in science was principally in the
way of encouraging its study. He was always observing, collecting facts,
and writing out his conclusions. The public business in which he was
soon constantly employed, and the long years of his diplomatic service
in England and France, were serious interruptions, and during the last
part of his life it was not often that he could steal time for that
loving investigation of nature which after his thirtieth year became the
great passion of his life.

His command of language had seldom been put to better use than in
explaining the rather subtle ideas and conceptions in the early
development of electricity. Even now after the lapse of one hundred and
fifty years we seem to gain a fresher understanding of that subject by
reading his homely and beautiful explanations; and modern students would
have an easier time if Franklin were still here to write their
text-books. His subsequent letters and essays were many of them even
more happily expressed than the famous letters on electricity.

In old editions of his works all his writings on science were collected
in one place, so that they could be read consecutively, which was rather
better than the modern strictly chronological plan by which they are
scattered throughout eight or ten large volumes. As we look over one of
the old editions we feel almost compelled to begin original research at
once,--it seems so easy and pretty. There are long investigations about
water-spouts and whirlwinds,--whether a water-spout ever actually
touches the surface of the sea, and whether its action is downward from
the sky or upward from the water. He interviewed sea-captains and
received letters from people in the West Indies to help him, and those
who had once come within the circle of his fascination were never weary
of giving aid.

He investigated what he called the light in sea-water, now called
phosphorescence. The cause of the saltness of the sea and the existence
of masses of salt or salt-mines in the earth he explained by the theory
that all the water of the world had once been salt, for sea-shells and
the bones of fishes were found, he said, on high land; upheavals had
isolated parts of the original water, which on evaporation had left the
salt, and this being covered with earth, became a salt-mine. This
explanation was given in a letter to his brother Peter, and is really a
little essay on geology, which was then not known by that or any other
name, but consisted merely of a few scattered observations.

Many of his most interesting explanations of phenomena appear in letters
to the young women with whom he was on such friendly terms. Indeed, it
has been said that he was never at his best except when writing to
women. People believe, he tells Miss Stevenson, that all rivers run
into the sea, and he goes on to show in his most clever way that some
rivers do not. The waters of the Delaware, for example, and the waters
of the rivers that flow into Chesapeake Bay, probably never reach the
ocean. The salt water backing up against them twice a day acts as a dam,
and their fresh water is dissipated by evaporation. Only a few, like the
Amazon and the Orinoco, are known to force their fresh water far out on
the surface of the sea. In this same letter he describes the experiments
he made to prove that dark colors absorb more of the sun’s rays, and are
therefore warmer than white.

While representing Pennsylvania in England, and living with Mrs.
Stevenson, in Craven Street, London, he made an experiment to prove that
vessels move faster in deep than in shallow water. This was generally
believed by seafaring men; but Franklin had a wooden trough made with a
false bottom by which he could regulate the depth of water, and he put
in it a little boat drawn by a string which ran over a pulley at the end
of the trough, with a shilling attached for a weight. In this way he
succeeded in demonstrating a natural law which, though known to
practical men, had never been described in books of science.

He took much pains to collect information about the Gulf Stream. This
wonderful river in the ocean has been long known, but the first people
to observe it closely were the Nantucket whalemen, who found that their
game was numerous on the edges of it, but was never seen within its
warm waters. In consequence of their more exact knowledge they were
able to make faster voyages than other seamen. Franklin learned about it
from them, and on his numerous voyages made many observations, which he
carefully recorded. He obtained a map of it from one of the whalemen,
which he caused to be engraved for the general benefit of navigation on
the old London chart then universally used by sailors. But the British
captains slighted it, and this, like his other efforts in science, was
first appreciated in France.

He has been called the discoverer of the temperature of the Gulf Stream;
but this statement is somewhat misleading. That the stream was warmer
than the surrounding ocean seems to have been long known; but Franklin
was the first to take its temperature at different points with a
thermometer. He did this most systematically on several of his voyages,
even when suffering severely from sea-sickness, and thus suggested the
use of the thermometer in investigating ocean currents. He first took
these temperatures in 1775, and the next year Dr. Charles Blagden, of
the British army, took them while on the voyage to America with troops
to suppress the Revolution. He and Franklin are ranked together as the
first to show the value of an instrument which is now universally used
in ocean experiments as well as in the practical navigation of
ships.[19]

In the same careful manner he collected all that was known of the effect
of oil in stilling waves by making the surface so smooth and slippery
that the wind cannot act on it. So fascinated was he with this
investigation that he had a cane made with a little receptacle for oil
in the head of it, and when walking in the country in England
experimented on every pond he passed. But it would be long to tell of
all he wrote on light and heat, the _vis inertiæ_ of matter, magnetism,
rainfall, evaporation, and the aurora borealis.

One of the discomforts of colonial times, when large open fireplaces
were so common, was a smoky chimney. Franklin’s attention was drawn to
this question about the time that he invented the Pennsylvania
fireplaces, and he made an exhaustive study of the nature of smoke and
heated air. He became very skilful in correcting defects in the chimneys
of his friends’ houses, and while he was in England noblemen and
distinguished people often sought his aid. It was not, however, until
1785, near the close of his life, that he put his knowledge in writing
in a letter to Dr. Ingenhausz, physician to the Emperor of Austria. The
letter was published and extensively circulated as the best summary of
all that was known on this important question. It is as fresh and
interesting to-day as when it was written, and well worth reading,
because it explains so charmingly the philosophy of some phenomena of
common occurrence which modern books of science are not at much pains to
make clear.

His enemies, of course, ridiculed him as a chimney doctor, and his
friends have gone to the other extreme in implying that he was the only
man in the world who understood the action of heat and smoke, and that,
alone and unaided, he delivered mankind from a great destroyer of their
domestic comfort. But his letter shows that most of his knowledge and
remedies were drawn from the French and Germans. In this, as in many
other similar services, he was merely an excellent collector of
scattered material, which he summarized so well that it was more
available than before. He was by no means the only person in the world
who could doctor a chimney; but there were few, if any, who could
describe in such beautiful language the way in which it was done.

He invented a stove that would consume its own smoke, taking the
principle from a Frenchman who had shown how the flame of a burning
substance could be made to draw downward through the fuel, so that the
smoke was burnt with the fuel. But the way in which this invention is
usually described would lead one to suppose that it was entirely
original with Franklin.

He was much interested in agriculture, and was an earnest advocate of
mineral manures, encouraged grape culture, and helped to introduce the
basket willow and broom-corn into the United States. He at one time
owned a farm of three hundred acres near Burlington, New Jersey, where
he tried agricultural experiments. He dabbled in medicine, as has been
shown, and also wasted time over that ancient delusion, phonetic
spelling.

Knowing, as we do, Franklin’s versatility, it is nevertheless somewhat
of a surprise to find him venturing into the sphere of music. He is said
to have been able to play on the harp, the guitar, and the violin, but
probably only in a philosopher’s way and not well on any of them. Some
people in England had succeeded in constructing a musical instrument
made of glasses, the idea being taken from the pleasant sound produced
by passing a wet finger round the brim of a drinking-glass. When in
England Franklin was so delighted with these instruments that he set
about improving them. He had glasses specially moulded of a bell-like
shape and ground with great care until each had its proper note. They
were placed in a frame in such a way that they could all be set
revolving at once by means of a treadle worked by the foot, and as they
revolved they were played by the wet fingers pressed on their brims. He
gave the name “Armonica” to his instrument, and describes its tones as
“incomparably sweet beyond those of any other.” It is said to have been
used in public concerts, and it was one of the curiosities at his famous
Craven Street lodging-house in London, where he also had a fine
electrical apparatus, and took pleasure in showing his English friends
the American experiments of which they had heard so much.

He seems to have studied music with great care as a science, just as he
studied the whirlwinds, the smoke, and the lightning; but he was
unalterably opposed to the so-called modern music then becoming
fashionable, and which is still to a great extent the music of our time.
The pleasure derived from it was, he said, not the natural pleasure
caused by harmony of sounds, but rather that felt on seeing the
surprising feats of tumblers and rope-dancers.

    “Many pieces of it are mere compositions of tricks. I have
    sometimes, at a concert, attended by a common audience, placed
    myself so as to see all their faces, and observed no signs of
    pleasure in them during the performance of a great part that was
    admired by the performers themselves; while a plain old Scotch
    tune, which they disdained, and could scarcely be prevailed upon
    to play, gave manifest and general delight.”

In a letter to Lord Kames which has been often quoted he explained at
length, and for the most part in very technical language, the reasons
for the superiority of the Scotch tunes.

    “Farther, when we consider by whom these ancient tunes were
    composed and how they were first performed we shall see that
    such harmonical successions of sounds were natural and even
    necessary in their construction. They were composed by the
    minstrels of those 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 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 tunes
    that has so long pleased, and will please forever, though men
    scarce know why.”

Franklin’s numerous voyages naturally turned his mind to problems of the
sea. He pondered much on the question whether the daily motion of the
earth from west to east would increase the speed of a ship sailing
eastward and retard it on a westward passage. He was not quite sure that
the earth’s motion would have such an effect, but he thought it
possible.

    “I wish I had mathematics enough to satisfy myself whether the
    much shorter voyages made by ships bound hence to England, than
    by those from England hither, are not in some degree owing to
    the diurnal motion of the earth, and if so in what degree. It is
    a notion that has lately entered my mind; I know not if ever any
    other’s.” (Bigelow’s Works of Franklin, vol. ii. p. 14.)

He referred to the subject again soon after, and finally a few years
before his death,[20] but always as an unsettled question. The idea
seems never to have got beyond the stage of investigation with him, but
Parton has built up out of it a wonderful discovery.

    “He conceived an idea still more practically useful, which has
    since given rise to a little library of nautical works, and
    conferred unmerited honor upon a naval charlatan--Maury. This
    idea was that by studying the form and motions of the earth and
    directing a ship’s course so that it shall partake of the
    earth’s diurnal motion a voyage may be materially shortened.”
    (Parton’s “Life of Franklin,” vol. ii. p. 72.)

This is certainly a most extraordinary statement to be made by a writer
like Parton, who has given the main facts of Franklin’s life with
considerable fidelity. He refers to it again in another passage, in
which he says that this method of navigation is now used by all
intelligent seamen. But there is no evidence that it was ever so used.
He may have confused it with great circle sailing. The theory is an
exploded one. There is no library of nautical works on the subject, and
I think that the officers of the United States navy, the captains of the
great ocean liners, and thousands of sailors all over the world would
be very much surprised to hear Maury called a charlatan.

Maury’s wonderful investigations were not in the line of sailing a ship
so as to take advantage of the earth’s diurnal motion, and could not
have been suggested by such an idea. He explored the physical geography
of the sea, and particularly the currents, trade-winds, and zones of
calm. It was he who first worked out the shortest routes from place to
place, which are still used. Although he never made a picturesque and
brilliant discovery about lightning, and had not Franklin’s exquisite
power of expression, he was a much more remarkable man of science.

In a long letter to Alphonsus Le Roy, of Paris, written in 1785, on his
voyage home from France with Captain Truxton, Franklin summed up all his
maritime observations, including what he knew of the Gulf Stream. This
letter is full of most curious suggestions for the navigation of ships,
and was accompanied by a plate of carefully drawn figures, which has
been reproduced in most editions of his works.

So much attention had been given, he said, to shaping the hull of a
vessel so as to offer the least resistance to the water, that it was
time the sails were shaped so as to offer the least resistance to the
air. He proposed to do this by making the sails smaller and increasing
their number, and contrived a most curious rig (Fig. 4) which he thought
would offer the least resistance both in sailing free and in beating to
windward.

[Illustration: FRANKLIN’S MARITIME SUGGESTIONS]

Figs. 5, 6, and 7 show why, in those days of rope cables, a ship was
always breaking the cable where it bent at right angles just outside the
hawse-hole. All the strain was on the outer strands of the rope at _a b
c_, Fig. 7, and as they broke the others followed one by one. His remedy
for this was to have a large wheel or pulley in the hawse-hole.

Figs. 8 and 9 show how a vessel with a leak at first fills very rapidly,
so that the crew, finding they cannot gain on the water with the pumps,
take to their boats. But if they would remain they would find after a
while that the quantity entering would be less as the surfaces without
and within became more nearly equal, and that the pumps would now be
able to prevent it from rising higher. The water would also begin to
reach light wooden work, empty chests, and water-casks, which would give
buoyancy, and thus the ship could be kept afloat longer than the crew at
first expected. In this connection he calls attention to the Chinese
method of water-tight compartments which Mr. Le Roy had already adopted
in his boat on the Seine.

Fig. 12 is intended to show the loss of power in a paddle-wheel because
the stroke from _A_ to _B_ is downward and from _D_ to _X_ upward, and
the only effective stroke is from _B_ to _D_. A better method of
propulsion, he thinks, is by pumping water out through the stern, as
shown in Figs. 13 and 14.

Figs. 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, and 22 illustrate methods of making
floating sea anchors by which to lay a vessel to in a gale. Fig. 24
shows how a heavy boat may be drawn ashore by bending the rope from _C_
to _D_. Fig. 23 represents a new way of planking ships to secure greater
strength, and Figs. 26 and 27 are soup-dishes which will not spill in a
heavy sea. But this delightful letter is published in all of the
editions of his works, and should be read in order to render his
ingenious contrivances intelligible.

Among the few of Franklin’s writings on scientific subjects which are
not in the form of letters is an essay, entitled “Peopling of
Countries,” supposed to have been written in 1751. It is in part
intended to show that Great Britain was not injured by the immigration
to America; the gap was soon filled up; and the colonies, by consuming
British manufactures, increased the resources of the mother country. The
essay is full of reflections on political economy, which had not then
become a science, and the twenty-second section contains the statement
that there is no bound to the productiveness of plants and animals other
than that occasioned by their crowding and interfering with one
another’s means of subsistence. This statement supplied Malthus with the
foundation for his famous theory that the population of the earth
increased in a geometrical ratio, while the means of subsistence
increased only in an arithmetical ratio, and some of those who opposed
this theory devoted themselves to showing error in Franklin’s
twenty-second section rather than to disputing the conclusions of
Malthus, which they believed would fall if Franklin could be shown to be
in the wrong.

He investigated the new field of political economy with the same
thoroughness as the other departments of science, and wrote on national
wealth, the price of corn, free trade, the effects of luxury, idleness,
and industry, the slave-trade, and peace and war. The humor and
imagination in one of his letters to Dr. Priestley on war justify the
quoting of a part of it:

    “A young angel of distinction being sent down to this world on
    some business, for the first time, had an old courier-spirit
    assigned him as a guide. They arrived over the seas of
    Martinico, in the middle of the long day of obstinate fight
    between the fleets of Rodney and De Grasse. When through the
    clouds of smoke he saw the fire of the guns, the decks covered
    with mangled limbs and bodies dead and dying, or blown into the
    air, and the quantity of pain, misery, and destruction the crews
    yet alive were thus with so much eagerness dealing round to one
    another, he turned angrily to his guide and said, ‘You
    blundering blockhead, you are ignorant of your business; you
    undertook to conduct me to the earth and you have brought me
    into hell!’ ‘No, sir,’ says the guide, ‘I have made no mistake;
    this is really the earth, and these are men. Devils never treat
    one another in this cruel manner; they have more sense, and more
    of what men (vainly) call humanity.’” (Bigelow’s Works of
    Franklin, vol. vii. p. 465.)


FOOTNOTES:

[18] Making of Pennsylvania, chap. ix.

[19] Pillsbury’s Gulf Stream, published by the U. S. government.

[20] Bigelow’s Works of Franklin, vol. ii. p. 331; vol. ix. p. 185.




VI

THE PENNSYLVANIA POLITICIAN


While Franklin kept his little stationery shop and printing-office, sent
out his almanacs every year, read and studied, experimented in science,
and hoped for an assured income which would give larger leisure for
study and experiment, he was all the time drifting more and more into
public life. In a certain sense he had been accustomed to dealing with
living public questions from boyhood. When an apprentice in his teens,
he had written articles for his brother’s newspaper attacking the
established religious and political system of Massachusetts, and during
his brother’s imprisonment the newspaper had been published in the
apprentice’s name. In Pennsylvania his own newspaper, the _Gazette_,
which he established when he was but twenty-three years old, made him
something of a public man; and his pamphlet in favor of paper money,
which appeared at about the same period, showed how strongly his mind
inclined towards the large questions of government.

When he reached manhood he also developed a strong inclination to assist
in public improvements, in the encouragement of thrift and comfort, and
in the relief of suffering, subjects which are now included under the
heads of philanthropy and reform. He had in full measure the social and
public spirit of the Anglo-Saxon, the spirit which instinctively builds
up the community while at the same time it is deeply devoted to its own
concerns. The only one of his ancestors that had risen above humble
conditions was of this sort, and had been a leader in the public affairs
of a village.

His natural disposition towards benevolent enterprises was much
stimulated, he tells us, by a book called “Essays to do Good,” by the
eminent Massachusetts divine, Cotton Mather, of witchcraft fame. He also
read about the same time De Foe’s “Essay upon Projects,” a volume
recommending asylums for the insane, technical schools, mutual benefit
societies, improved roads, better banking, bankrupt laws, and other
things which have now become the commonplace characteristics of our age.

His club, the Junto, was the first important fruit of this benevolent
disposition. At first its members kept all their books at its rooms for
the common benefit; but some of the books having been injured, all were
taken back by the owners, and this loss suggested to Franklin the idea
of a circulating library supported by subscriptions. He drew up a plan
and went about soliciting money in 1731, but it took him more than a
year to collect forty-five pounds. James Logan, the secretary of the
province, gave advice as to what books to buy, and the money was sent to
London to be expended by Mr. Peter Collinson, to whom Franklin’s famous
letters on electricity were afterwards written.

Mr. Collinson was the literary and philosophic agent of Pennsylvania in
those days. To him John Bartram, the first American botanist, sent the
plants that he collected in the New World, and Mr. Collinson obtained
for him the money with which to pursue his studies. Collinson encouraged
the new library in every way. For thirty years he made for it the annual
purchase of books, always adding one or two volumes as a present, and it
will be remembered that it was through him that Franklin obtained the
electrical tube which started him on his remarkable discoveries.

The library began its existence at the Junto’s rooms and grew steadily.
Influential people gradually became interested in it and added their
gifts. For half a century it occupied rooms in various buildings,--at
one time in the State-House, and during the Revolution in Carpenters’
Hall,--until in 1790, the year of Franklin’s death, it erected a pretty
building on Fifth Street, opposite Independence square. During the
period from 1731 to 1790 similar libraries were established in the town,
which it absorbed one by one: in 1769 the Union Library, in 1771 the
Association Library Company and Amicable Library Company, and, finally,
in 1790 the Loganian Library, which James Logan had established by his
will. Before the Revolution the number of books increased but slowly,
and in 1785 was only 5487. They now number 190,000.

Franklin says that it was the mother of subscription libraries in North
America, and that in a few years the colonists became more of a reading
people, and the common tradesmen and farmers were as intelligent as
most gentlemen from other countries. This statement seems to be
justified; for within a few years libraries sprang up in New England and
the South, and they may have been suggested by the Philadelphia Library
which Franklin founded.

I have already shown how Franklin established the academy which soon
became the College of Philadelphia, but this was some twenty years after
he founded the library. Almost immediately after the academy was started
Dr. Thomas Bond sought his assistance in establishing a hospital.
Pennsylvania was receiving at that time great numbers of German
immigrants, who arrived in crowded ships after a voyage of months, in a
terrible state of dirt and disease. There was no proper place provided
for them, and they were a source of danger to the rest of the people. A
hospital was needed, and Dr. Bond, at first meeting with but little
success, finally accomplished his object with the assistance of
Franklin, who obtained for him a grant of two thousand pounds from the
Assembly, and helped to stir up subscribers.

This was the first hospital in America, and it still fulfils its mission
in the beautiful old colonial buildings which were originally erected
for it. Additional buildings have been since added, fortunately, in the
same style of architecture. For the corner-stone Franklin wrote an
inscription matchless for its originality and appropriateness:

    “In the year of CHRIST MDCCLV George the Second happily reigning
    (for he sought the happiness of his people), Philadelphia
    flourishing (for its inhabitants were public spirited), this
    building, by the bounty of the government, and of many private
    persons, was piously founded for the relief of the sick and
    miserable. May the GOD OF MERCIES bless the undertaking.”

In the same spirit Franklin secured by a little agitation the paving of
the street round the market, and afterwards started subscriptions to
keep this pavement clean. At that time the streets of Philadelphia, like
those of most of the colonial towns, were merely earth roads, and it was
not until some years after Franklin’s first efforts at the market that
there was any general paving done. He also secured a well-regulated
night watch for the city in place of the disorderly, drunken heelers of
the constables, who had long made a farce of the duty; and he
established a volunteer fire company which was the foundation of the
system that prevailed in Philadelphia until the paid department was
introduced after the civil war.

The American Philosophical Society, which was also originated by him,
might seem to be more entitled to mention in the chapter on science. But
it was really a benevolent enterprise, intended to propagate useful
knowledge, to encourage agriculture, trade, and the mechanic arts, and
to multiply the conveniences and pleasures of life. He first suggested
it in 1743, in which year he prepared a plan for a society for promoting
useful knowledge, and one appears to have been organized which led a
languishing existence until 1769, when it was joined by another
organization, called “The American Society held at Philadelphia for
Promoting Useful Knowledge,” and from this union resulted the American
Philosophical Society, which still exists. Franklin was for a long time
its president, and was succeeded by Rittenhouse. It was the first
society in America devoted to science. Thomas Jefferson and other
prominent persons throughout the colonies were members of it, and during
the colonial period and long afterwards it held a very important
position.

Franklin was by nature a public man; but the beginning of his life as an
office-holder may be said to have dated from his appointment as clerk of
the Assembly. This took place in 1736, when he had been in business for
himself for some years, and his newspaper and “Poor Richard” were well
under way. It was a tiresome task to sit for hours listening to buncombe
speeches, and drawing magic squares and circles to while away the time.
But he valued the appointment because it gave him influence with the
members and a hold on the public printing.

The second year his election to the office was opposed; an influential
member wanted the place for a friend, and Franklin had a chance to show
a philosopher’s skill in practical politics.

    “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.’” (Bigelow’s Franklin
    from his own Writings, vol. i. p. 260.)

Some people have professed to be very much shocked at this disingenuous
trick, as they call it, although perhaps capable of far more
discreditable ones themselves. It would be well if no worse could be
said of modern practical politics.

Franklin held his clerkship nearly fifteen years. During this period he
was also postmaster of Philadelphia, and these two offices, with the
benevolent enterprises of the library, the hospital, the Philosophical
Society, and the academy and college, made him very much of a public man
in the best sense of the word long before he was engaged in regular
politics.

In the year 1747 he performed an important public service by organizing
the militia. War had been declared by England against both France and
Spain, and the colonies were called upon to help the mother country.
Great difficulty was experienced in recruiting troops in Quaker
Pennsylvania, although the Quakers would indirectly consent to it when
given a reasonable excuse. They would vote money for the king’s use, and
the king’s officials might take the responsibility of using it for war;
they would supply provisions to the army, for that was charity; and on
one occasion they voted four thousand pounds for the purchase of beef,
pork, flour, wheat, or _other grain_; and as powder was grain, the money
was used in supplying it.

But the actual recruiting of troops was more difficult, and it was to
further this object that Franklin exerted himself. He wrote one of his
clever pamphlets showing the danger of a French invasion, and supplied
biblical texts in favor of defensive war. Then calling a mass-meeting in
the large building afterwards used for the college, he urged the people
to form an association for defence. Papers were distributed among them,
and in a few minutes he had twelve hundred signatures. These citizen
soldiers were called “Associators,”--a name used down to the time of the
Revolution to describe the Pennsylvania militia. In a few days he had
enrolled ten thousand volunteers, which shows how large the combatant
portion of the population was in spite of Quaker doctrine.

In 1748 he retired from active business with the purpose of devoting
himself to science. It was the custom at that time to give retired men
of business the more important public offices; and in 1752, about the
time of his discovery of the nature of lightning, he was elected to the
Assembly as one of the members to represent Philadelphia. In the same
year he was also elected a justice of the peace and a member of the City
Councils.

At this time France and England were temporarily at peace. The treaty of
Aix-la-Chapelle in 1748 had resulted in a sort of cessation of
hostilities, which France was using to push more actively her advantages
on the Ohio River and in the Mississippi Valley. She intended to get
behind all the colonies and occupy the continent to the Pacific Ocean.
The efforts of Great Britain to check these designs, including the
expeditions of the youthful Washington to the Ohio, need not be given
here.[21] England broke the treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle, and what is
known as the Seven Years’ War began with the memorable defeat of
Braddock.

Franklin was sent by the Pennsylvania Assembly to Braddock’s
head-quarters in Virginia to give any assistance he could and to prevent
Braddock from making a raid into Pennsylvania to procure wagons, as he
had threatened. The journey was made on horseback in company with the
governors of New York and Massachusetts, and on the way Franklin had an
opportunity to observe the action of a small whirlwind, which he
reported in a pleasant letter to Mr. Collinson. It was while on this
visit that Franklin appears in Thackeray’s “Virginians,” in which he is
strangely described as a shrewd, bright little man who would drink only
water.

He told Braddock that there were plenty of wagons in Pennsylvania, and
he was accordingly commissioned to procure them. He returned to
Philadelphia, and within two weeks had delivered one hundred and fifty
wagons and two hundred and fifty pack-horses. He had received only eight
hundred pounds from Braddock, and was obliged to advance two hundred
pounds himself and give bond to indemnify the owners of such horses as
should be lost in the service. Claims to the amount of twenty thousand
pounds were afterwards made against him, and he would have been ruined
if the government, after long delay, had not come to his rescue. Such
disinterested service was not forgotten, and his popularity was greatly
increased.

He had the year before been one of the representatives of Pennsylvania
in the convention at Albany, where he had offered a plan for the union
of all the colonies, which was generally approved, and I shall consider
this plan more fully in another chapter. It was intended, of course,
primarily to enable the colonies to make more effective resistance
against the French and Indians, and as an additional assistance he
suggested that a new colony be planted on the Ohio River. The
establishment of this colony was a favorite scheme with him, and he
urged it again many years afterwards while in England.

As a member of the Pennsylvania Assembly he joined the Quaker majority
in that body and became one of its leaders. This majority was in
continual conflict with the governor appointed by William Penn’s sons,
who were the proprietors of the province. The government of the colony
was divided in a curious way. The proprietors had the right to appoint
the governor, judges, and sheriffs, or, in other words, had absolute
control of the executive offices, while the colonists controlled the
Legislature, or Assembly, as it was called, and in this Assembly the
Quakers exercised the strongest influence.

During the seventy years that the colony had been founded the Assembly
had built up by slow degrees a body of popular rights. It paid the
governor his salary, and this gave it a vast control over him; for if he
vetoed any favorite law it could retaliate by cutting off his means of
subsistence. This right to withhold the governor’s salary constituted
the most important principle of colonial constitutional law, and by it
not only Pennsylvania but the other colonies maintained what liberty
they possessed and saved themselves from the oppression of royal or
proprietary governors.

Another right for which the Pennsylvania Assembly always strenuously
contended was that any bill passed by it for raising money for the crown
must be simply accepted or rejected by the governor. He was not to
attempt to force its amendment by threats of rejection, or to interfere
in any way with the manner of raising the money, and was to have no
control over its disbursement. The king had a right to ask for aid, but
the colony reserved the right to use its own methods in furnishing it.

These rights the proprietors were constantly trying to break down by
instructing their governors to assent to money and other bills only on
certain conditions, among which was the stipulation that they should not
go into effect until the king’s pleasure was known. They sent out their
governors with secret instructions, and compelled them to give bonds for
their faithful performance. When the governors declined to reveal these
instructions, the Assembly thought it had another grievance, for it had
always refused to be governed in this manner; and was now more
determined than ever to maintain this point because several bills had
been introduced in Parliament for the purpose of making royal
instructions to governors binding on all the colonial assemblies without
regard to their charters or constitutions.

These were all very serious designs on liberty, and the proprietors took
advantage of the war necessities and Braddock’s defeat to carry them
out in the most extreme form. The home government was calling on all the
colonies for war supplies, and Pennsylvania must comply not only to
secure her own safety but under fear of displeasing the Parliament and
king. If under such pressure she could be induced to pass some of the
supply bills at the dictation of the governor, or with an admission of
the validity of his secret instructions, a precedent would be
established and the proprietary hold on the province greatly
strengthened.

The Quakers, especially those comprising the majority in the Assembly,
were not at heart opposed to war or to granting war supplies. As they
expressed it in the preamble to one of their laws, they had no objection
to others bearing arms, but were themselves principled against it. If
the others wished to fight, or if it was necessary for the province to
fight, they, as the governing body, would furnish the means. Franklin
relates how, when he was organizing the Associators, it was proposed in
the Union Fire Company that sixty pounds should be expended in buying
tickets in a lottery, the object of which was to raise money for the
purchase of cannon. There were twenty-two Quakers in the fire company
and eight others; but the twenty-two, by purposely absenting themselves,
allowed the proposition to be carried.

The Quaker Assembly voted money for war supplies as liberally and as
loyally as the Assembly of any other colony; but at every step it was
met by the designs of the governor to force upon it those conditions
which would be equivalent to a surrender of the liberties of the colony.
Thus, in 1754 it voted a war supply of twenty thousand pounds, which was
the same amount as Virginia, the most active of the colonies against the
French, had just subscribed, and was much more than other colonies gave.
New York gave only five thousand pounds, Maryland six thousand pounds,
and New Jersey nothing. But the governor refused his assent to the bill
unless a clause was inserted suspending it until the approval of the
king had been obtained, and this condition the Assembly felt bound to
reject.

During the whole seven years of the war these contests with the governor
continued; and the members of the Assembly, to show their zeal for the
war, were obliged at times to raise the money on their own credit
without submitting their bill to the governor for his approval. In these
struggles Franklin bore a prominent part, drafting the replies which the
Assembly made to the governor’s messages, and acquiring a most thorough
knowledge of all the principles of colonial liberty. At the same time he
continued to enjoy jovial personal relations with the governors whom he
resisted so vigorously in the Assembly, and was often invited to dine
with them, when they would joke with him about his support of the
Quakers.

The disputes were increased about the time of Braddock’s defeat by a new
subject of controversy. As the Assembly was passing bills for war
supplies which had to be raised by taxation, it was thought to be no
more than right that the proprietary estates should also bear their
share of the tax. The proprietors owned vast tracts of land which they
had not yet sold to the people, and as the war was being waged for the
defence of these as well as all the other property of the country, the
Assembly and the people in general were naturally very indignant when
the governor refused his consent to any bill which did not expressly
exempt these lands from taxation. The amount assessed on the proprietary
land was trifling,--only five hundred pounds; but both parties felt that
they were contending for a principle, and when some gentlemen offered to
pay the whole amount in order to stop the dispute, it was rejected.

The proprietors, through the governor, offered a sort of indirect bribe
in the form of large gifts of land,--a thousand acres to every colonel,
five hundred to every captain, and so on down to two hundred to each
private,--which seemed very liberal, and was an attempt to put the
Assembly in an unpatriotic position if it should refuse to exempt the
estates after such a generous offer. But the Assembly was unmoved, and
declined to vote any more money for the purposes of the war, if it
involved a sacrifice of the liberties of the people or enabled the
proprietors to escape taxation. “Those,” said Franklin, “who would give
up essential liberty for the sake of a little temporary safety, deserve
neither liberty nor safety.”

But the proprietors were determined to carry the point of exemption of
their estates, and as a clamor was being raised against them in England
for defeating, through their governor, the efforts of the Assembly to
raise money for the war, they sent over word that they would subscribe
five thousand pounds for the protection of the colony. Such munificence
took the Assembly by surprise, and an appropriation bill was passed
without taxing the proprietary estates. But popular resentment against
the proprietors was raised to a high pitch when it was discovered that
the five thousand pounds was to be collected out of the arrears of
quit-rents due the proprietors. It was merely a clever trick on their
part to saddle their bad debts on the province, have their estates
exempted from taxation, and at the same time give themselves a
reputation for generosity.

The defeat of Braddock in July, 1755, was followed in September and
October by a terrible invasion of the Indians, who massacred the farmers
almost as far east as Philadelphia. Evidently something more was
necessary to protect the province than the mere loose organization of
the Associators, and a militia law drafted by Franklin was passed by the
Quaker Assembly. The law had a long preamble attached, which he had
prepared with great ingenuity to satisfy Quaker scruples. It was made up
largely of previous Quaker utterances on war, and declared that while it
would be persecution, and therefore unlawful in Pennsylvania, to compel
Quakers to bear arms against their consciences, so it would be wrong to
prohibit from engaging in war those who thought it their duty. The
Quaker Assembly, as representing all the people of the province, would
accordingly furnish to those who wanted to fight the legal means for
carrying out their wish; and the law then went on to show how they
should be organized as soldiers.

In his _Gazette_ Franklin published a Dialogue written by himself, which
was intended to answer criticisms on the law and especially the
objections of those who were disgusted because the new law exempted the
Quakers. Why, it was asked, should the combatant portion of the people
fight for the lives and property of men who are too cowardly to fight
for themselves? These objectors required as delicate handling as the
Quakers, and Franklin approached them with his usual skill.

    “Z. For my part I am no coward, but hang me if I will fight to
    save the Quakers.

    “X. That is to say, you will not pump ship, because it will save
    the rats as well as yourself.”

As a consequence of his success in writing in favor of war, the
philosopher, electrician, and editor found himself elected colonel of
the men he had persuaded, and was compelled to lead about five hundred
of them to the Lehigh Valley, where the German village of Gnadenhutten
had been burnt and its inhabitants massacred. He had no taste for such
business, and would have avoided it if he could; for he never used a gun
even for amusement, and would not keep a weapon of any kind in his
house. But the province with its peace-loving Quakers and Germans had
never before experienced actual war, nor even difficulties with the
Indians, and Franklin was as much a military man as anybody.

So the philosopher of nearly fifty years, famous the world over for his
discoveries in electricity and his “Poor Richard’s Almanac,” set forth
in December, slept on the ground or in barns, arranged the order of
scouting parties, and regulated the serving of grog to his men. He built
a line of small forts in the Lehigh Valley, and during the two months
that he was there no doubt checked the Indians who were watching him all
the time from the hilltops, and who went no farther than to kill ten
unfortunate farmers. He had no actual battle with them, and was perhaps
fortunate in escaping a surprise; but he was very wily in his movements,
and in his shrewd common-sense way understood Indian tactics. He has
left us a description in one of his letters how a force like his should,
before stopping for the night, make a circuit backward and camp near
their trail, setting a guard to watch the trail so that any Indians
following it could be seen long before they reached the camp.

He, indeed, conducted his expedition in the most thorough and systematic
manner, marching his men in perfect order with a semicircle of scouts in
front, an advance-guard, then the main body, with scouts on each flank
and spies on every hill, followed by a watchful rear-guard. He observed
all the natural objects with his usual keen interest, noting the exact
number of minutes required by his men to fell a tree for the palisaded
forts he was building. After two months of roughing it he could not
sleep in a bed on his return to Bethlehem. “It was so different,” he
says, “from my hard lodging on the floor of a hut at Gnadenhutten with
only a blanket or two.”

Very characteristic of him also was the suggestion he made to his
chaplain when the good man found it difficult to get the soldiers to
attend prayers. “It is perhaps beneath the dignity of your profession,”
said Franklin, “to act as steward of the rum; but if you were only to
distribute it after prayers you would have them all about you.” The
chaplain thought well of it, and “never,” Franklin tells us, “were
prayers more generally or more punctually attended.”

On the return of the troops to Philadelphia after their two months’
campaign they had a grand parade and review, saluting the houses of all
their officers with discharges of cannon and small-arms; and the salute
given before the door of their philosopher colonel broke several of the
glasses of his electrical apparatus.

The next year, 1756, brought some relief to the colonists by Armstrong’s
successful expedition against the Indians at Kittanning. But the year
1757 was more gloomy than ever. Nothing was wanting but a few more
soldiers to enable the French to press on down the Mississippi and
secure their line to New Orleans, or to fall upon the rear of the
colonies and conquer them. The proprietors of Pennsylvania took
advantage of the situation to force the Assembly to abandon all its most
cherished rights. The new governor came out with full instructions to
assent to no tax bill unless it exempted the proprietary estates, to
have the proprietary quit-rents paid in sterling instead of Pennsylvania
currency, and to assent to no money bill unless the money to be raised
was appropriated for some particular object or was to be at the
disposal of the governor and Assembly jointly.

Their attack on the liberties of the province was well timed; for, the
English forces having been everywhere defeated, the Assembly felt that
it must assist in the prosecution of the war at all hazards. It
therefore resolved to waive its rights for the present, and passed a
bill for raising thirty thousand pounds to be expended under the joint
supervision of the Assembly and the governor. So the proprietors gained
one of their points, and they soon gained another. The Assembly was
before long obliged to raise more money, and voted one hundred thousand
pounds, the largest single appropriation ever made. It was to be raised
by a general tax, and the tax was to include the proprietary estates.
The governor objected, and the Assembly, influenced by the terrible
necessities of the war, yielded and passed the bill in February, 1757,
without taxing the estates.

But it was determined to carry on its contest with the governor in
another way, and resolved to send two commissioners to England to lay
before the king and Privy Council the conduct of the proprietors. The
first avowed object of the commissioners was to secure the taxing of the
proprietary estates, and the second was to suggest that the
proprietorship be abolished and the province taken under the direct rule
of the crown. Franklin and Isaac Norris, the Speaker of the Assembly,
were appointed commissioners, but Norris being detained by ill health,
Franklin started alone.

He set forth as a sort of minister plenipotentiary to London, where he
had at one time worked as a journeyman printer. He had left London an
obscure, impoverished boy; he was returning as a famous man of science,
retired from worldly business on an assured income. He remained in
England for five years, and so full of pleasure, interesting occupation,
and fame were those years that it is remarkable that he was willing to
come back to Pennsylvania.

He secured lodgings for himself and his son William at Mrs. Stevenson’s,
No. 7 Craven Street. Here he lived all of the five years and also during
his subsequent ten years’ residence in London. He had been recommended
to her house by some Pennsylvania friends who had boarded there; but he
soon ceased to be a mere lodger, and No. 7 Craven Street became his
second home. He and Mrs. Stevenson became firm friends, and for her
daughter Mary he formed a strong attachment, which continued all his
life. His letters to her are among the most beautiful ever written by
him, and he encouraged her to study science. “In all that time,” he once
wrote to her, referring to the happy years he had spent at her mother’s
house, “we never had among us the smallest misunderstanding; our
friendship has been all clear sunshine, without the least cloud in its
hemisphere.”

Mrs. Stevenson took care of the small every-day affairs of his life,
advised as to the presents he sent home to his wife, assisted in buying
them, and when a child of one of his poor English relatives needed
assistance, she took it into her house and cared for it with almost as
tender an interest as if she had been its mother. Many years afterwards,
in a letter to her written while he was in France, Franklin regrets “the
want of that order and economy in my family which reigned in it when
under your prudent direction.”[22]

The familiar, pleasant life he led with her family is shown in a little
essay written for their amusement, called “The Craven Street Gazette.”
It is a burlesque on the pompous court news of the English journals.
Mrs. Stevenson figures as the queen and the rest of the family and their
friends as courtiers and members of the nobility, and we get in this way
pleasant glimpses of each one’s peculiarities and habits, the way they
lived, and their jokes on one another.

He had an excellent electrical machine and other apparatus for
experiments in her house, and went on with the researches which so
fascinated him in much the same way as he had done at home. It was at
No. 7 Craven Street that he planned his musical instrument, the
armonica, already described, and exhibited it to his friends who came to
see his electrical experiments. He quickly became a member of all the
learned societies, was given the degree of doctor of laws by the
universities of St Andrew’s, Edinburgh, and Oxford, and soon knew all
the celebrities in England. But he does not appear to have seen much of
that burly and boisterous literary chieftain, Dr. Johnson. This was
unfortunate, for Franklin’s description of him would have been
invaluable.

Peter Collinson, to whom his letters on electricity had been sent, of
course welcomed him. He became intimate with Dr. Fothergill, the
fashionable physician of London, who had assisted to make his electrical
discoveries known. This was another of his life-long friendships: the
two were always in perfect sympathy, investigating with the enthusiasm
of old cronies everything of philosophic and human interest.

Priestley, the discoverer of oxygen and one of the foremost men of
science of that time, became another bosom friend, and Franklin
furnished him the material for his “History of Electricity.” William
Strahan, the prosperous publisher and friend of Dr. Johnson, also
conceived a great liking for the Pennsylvania agent. Strahan afterwards
became a member of Parliament, and was fond of saying to Franklin that
they both had started life as printers, but no two printers had ever
risen so high. He was a whole-souled, jovial man, wanted his son to
marry Franklin’s daughter, and wanted Mrs. Franklin to come over to
England and settle there with her husband, who, he said, must never go
back to America. He used to write letters to Mrs. Franklin trying to
persuade her to overcome her aversion to the sea, and he made bets with
Franklin that his persuasions would succeed.

We need not wonder that Franklin spent five years on his mission, when
he was so comfortably settled with his own servant in addition to those
of Mrs. Stevenson, his chariot to drive in like an ambassador, and his
son William studying law at the inns of court. During his stay, and
about the year 1760, William presented him with an illegitimate
grandson, William Temple Franklin. This boy was brought up exclusively
by his grandfather, and scarcely knew his father, who soon married a
young lady from the West Indies. In his infancy Temple was not an inmate
of the Craven Street house, but he lived there afterwards during his
grandfather’s second mission to England, and accompanied him to France.

The birth of Temple and his parentage were probably not generally known
among Franklin’s English friends during this first mission. It has been
said also that William’s illegitimacy was not known in London, but this
is unlikely. It did not, however, interfere with the young man’s
advancement; for in 1762, just before Franklin returned to America,
William was appointed by the crown governor of New Jersey. This honor,
it is said, was entirely unsolicited by either father or son, and the
explanation usually given is that it was intended to attach the father
more securely to the royal interest in the disputes which were
threatening between the colonies and the mother country.

William and his father were on very good terms at this time. Every
summer they took a little tour together, and on one occasion travelled
in Holland. On a visit they made to the University of Cambridge they
were entertained by the heads of colleges, the chancellor, and the
professors in the most distinguished manner, discussed new points of
science with them, and with Professor Hadley experimented on what was
then a great wonder, the production of cold by evaporation. They
wandered also to the old village of Ecton, where the Franklins had lived
poor and humble for countless generations, saw many of the old people,
and copied inscriptions on tombstones and parish registers. But Scotland
they enjoyed most of all. There they met Lord Kames, the author of the
“Elements of Criticism,” and the historians Hume and Robertson. It was
an atmosphere of philosophy and intelligence which Franklin thoroughly
enjoyed. “The time we spent there,” he wrote to Lord Kames, “was six
weeks of the _densest_ happiness I have met with in any part of my
life.”

During his stay in England the war against the French and Indians, which
was raging when he left America, came to a close, and Quebec and Canada
were surrendered. It became a question in settling with France whether
it would be most advantageous for Great Britain to retain Canada or the
Guadeloupe sugar islands, and there were advocates on both sides.
Franklin published an admirable argument in favor of retaining Canada,
without which the American colonies would never be secure from the
Indians instigated by the French, and the acquisition of Canada would
also tend to a grander development of the British empire. It was an able
appeal, but there is no evidence that it alone influenced the final
decision of the ministry, as has been claimed, any more than there is
evidence that Franklin suggested the policy of William Pitt which had
brought the war to a successful close. There were many advocates of
these opinions and suggestions, and Franklin was merely one of them,
though unquestionably an able one.

He also published his essay on the “Peopling of Countries” and an
article in favor of the vigorous prosecution of the war in Europe.
These, with his pleasures and experiments in science, occupied most of
the five years, and the work of his mission, though well done, was by no
means absorbing.

When he arrived, in July, 1757, he had, under the advice of Dr.
Fothergill, first sought redress from the proprietors themselves before
appealing to the government; but meeting with no success, he tried the
members of the Privy Council, and first of all William Pitt, the great
minister who was then conducting the war against France and recreating
England. But he could not even secure an interview with that busy
minister, which is a commentary on the extravagant claims of those who
say that Franklin suggested Pitt’s policy.

Two years and more passed without his being able to accomplish anything
except enlighten the general public concerning the facts of the
situation. An article appeared in the _General Advertiser_ abusing the
Pennsylvania Assembly, and his son William replied to it. The reply
being extensively copied by other newspapers, the son was set to work on
a book now known as the “Historical Review of Pennsylvania,” which went
over the whole ground of the quarrels of the Assembly with the
proprietors and their deputy governors. It was circulated quite widely,
some copies being sold and others distributed free to important persons.
But it is doubtful whether it had very much influence, for it was an
extremely dull book, and valuable only for its quotations from the
messages of the governors and the replies of the Assembly.

His opportunity to accomplish the main object of his mission came at
last by accident. The Assembly in Pennsylvania were gradually starving
the governor into submission by withholding his salary, and under
pressure for want of money, he gave his assent to a bill taxing the
proprietary estates. The bill being sent to England, the proprietors
opposed it before the Privy Council as hostile to their rights, and
obtained a decision in their favor in spite of the arguments of Franklin
and his lawyers. But Franklin secured a reconsideration, and Lord
Mansfield asked him if he really thought that no injury would be done
the proprietary estates by the Assembly, for the proprietors had
represented that the colonists intended to tax them out of existence.
Franklin assured him that no injury would be done, and he was
immediately asked if he would enter into an engagement to assure that
point. On his agreeing to do this, the papers were drawn, the Assembly’s
bill taxing the estates was approved by the crown, and from that time
the assaults of the proprietors on the liberties of the colony were
decisively checked.

Franklin was now most furiously attacked and hated by the proprietary
party in Pennsylvania, but from the majority of the people, led by the
Quakers, he received increased approbation and applause, and his
willingness to risk his own personal engagement, as in the affair with
Braddock, was regarded as an evidence of the highest public spirit.

He remained two years longer in England on one pretext or another, and
no doubt excuses for continuing such a delightful life readily suggested
themselves. He returned in the early autumn of 1762, receiving from the
Assembly three thousand pounds for his services, and during the five
years of his absence he had been annually elected to that body. For a
few months he enjoyed comparative quiet, but the next year he was again
in the turmoil of a most bitter political contest.

The war with France was over, and Canada and the Ohio Valley had been
ceded to the English by the treaty of Paris, signed in February, 1763.
But the Indians, having lost their French friends, determined to destroy
the English, and, inspired by the genius of Pontiac, they took fort
after fort and, rushing upon the whole colonial frontier of
Pennsylvania, swept the people eastward to the Delaware with even worse
devastation and slaughter than they had inflicted after Braddock’s
defeat. I cannot give here the full details of this war,[23] and must
confine myself to one phase of it with which Franklin was particularly
concerned.

The Scotch-Irish who occupied the frontier counties of Pennsylvania
suffered most severely from these Indian raids, and believed that the
proprietary and Quaker government at Philadelphia neglected the defence
of the province. Their resentment was strongest against the Quakers.
They held the Quaker religion in great contempt and viewed with scorn
the attempts of the Quakers to pacify the Indians and befriend those of
them who were willing to give up the war-path and adopt the white man’s
mode of life.

Some friendly Indians, descendants of the tribes that had welcomed
William Penn, were living at Conestoga, near Lancaster, in a degenerate
condition, having given up both war and hunting, and following the
occupations of basket- and broom-making. They were the wards of the
proprietary government, and were given presents and supplies from time
to time. There were also at Bethlehem some other friendly Indians who
had been converted to Christianity by the Moravians.

The Scotch-Irish believed that all of these so-called friendly Indians
were in league with the hostile tribes, furnished them with information,
and even participated in their murders. They asked the governor to
remove them, and assured him that their removal would secure the safety
of the frontier. Nothing being done by the governor, a party of
Scotch-Irish rangers started to destroy the Moravian Indians, but were
prevented by a rain-storm. The governor afterwards, through
commissioners, investigated these Moravian Indians, and finding reason
to suspect them, they were all brought down to Philadelphia and
quartered in barracks. But the Conestoga Indians were attacked by a
party of fifty-seven Scotch-Irish, afterwards known as the “Paxton
Boys,” who, finding only six of them in the village,--three men, two
women, and a boy,--massacred them all, mangled their bodies, and burnt
their property. The remaining fourteen of the tribe were collected by
the sheriff and put for protection in the Lancaster jail. The Paxtons
hearing of it, immediately attacked the jail and cut the Indians to
pieces with hatchets.

We have grown so accustomed to lynch law that this slaughter of the
Conestogas would not now cause much surprise, especially in some parts
of the country; but it was a new thing to the colonists, who in many
respects were more orderly than are their descendants, and a large part
of the community were shocked, disgusted, and indignant. Franklin wrote
a pamphlet which had a wide circulation and assailed the Scotch-Irish as
inhuman, brutal cowards, worse than Arabs and Turks; fifty-seven of
them, armed with rifles, knives, and hatchets, had actually succeeded,
he said, in killing three old men, two women, and a boy.

The Paxton lynchers, however, were fully supported by the people of the
frontier. A large body of frontiersmen marched on Philadelphia with the
full intention of revolutionizing the Quaker government, and they would
have succeeded but for the unusual preparations for defence. They were
finally, with some difficulty, persuaded to return without using their
rifles.

The governor was powerless to secure even the arrest of the men who had
murdered the Indians in the jail, and the disorder was so flagrant and
the weakness of the executive branch of the government so apparent that
the Quakers and a majority of the people thought there was now good
reason for openly petitioning the crown to abolish the proprietorship.
While in England, Franklin had been advised not to raise this question,
and he had accordingly confined his efforts to taxing the proprietary
estates.

The arrangement he had made provided that the estates should be fairly
taxed, but the governor and the Assembly differed in opinion as to what
was fair. The governor claimed that the best wild lands of the
proprietors should be taxed at the rate paid by the people for their
worst, and he tried the old tactics of forcing this point by delaying a
supply bill intended to defend the province against Pontiac and his
Indians. The Assembly passed the bill to suit him, but immediately
raised the question of the abolition of the proprietorship. Twenty-five
resolutions were passed most abusive of the proprietors, and the
Assembly then adjourned to let the people decide by a general election
whether a petition should be sent to the king asking for direct royal
government.

A most exciting political campaign followed in which Franklin took the
side of the majority in favor of a petition, and wrote several of his
most brilliant pamphlets. He particularly assailed Provost Smith, who,
in a preface to a printed speech by John Dickinson defending the
proprietary government, had eulogized William Penn in one of those
laudatory epitaphs which were the fashion of the day:

    “Utterly to confound the assembly, and show the excellence of
    proprietary government, the Prefacer has extracted from their
    own votes the praises they have from time to time bestowed on
    the first proprietor, in their addresses to his son. And, though
    addresses are not generally the best repositories of historical
    truth, we must not in this instance deny their authority.

    “That these encomiums on the father, though sincere, have
    occurred so frequently, was owing, however, to two causes:
    first, a vain hope the assemblies entertained, 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 upon 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 hoped to curry more favor with the family,
    by the inscription he has framed for that great man’s monument,
    he may find himself mistaken; for there is too much in it of
    _our father_.”

Franklin then goes on to say that he will give a sketch “in the lapidary
way” which will do for a monument to the sons of William Penn.

               “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 engaged in a bloody & 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
                    Groaned
           Under the universal burden.
               To gain this point
          They refused the necessary laws
          For the defence of their people
  And suffered 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 endeavoring to reduce them
            To the most abject slavery;
   Though 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.”

Dickinson’s followers, of course, assailed Franklin on all sides. Their
pamphlets are very exciting reading, especially Hugh Williamson’s “What
is Sauce for a Goose is also Sauce for a Gander,” which describes itself
in its curious old-fashioned subtitle as

    “Being a small Touch in the Lapidary Way, or Tit for Tat, in
    your own way. An Epitaph on a certain Great Man. Written by a
    Departed Spirit, and now most humbly inscribed to all his
    dutiful Sons and Children, who may hereafter choose to
    distinguish him by the Name of A Patriot. Dear Children, I send
    you here a little Book for you to look upon that you may see
    your Pappy’s Face when he is dead and gone. Philadelphia,
    Printed in Arch Street 1764.”

“Pappy” is then described for the benefit of his children in an epitaph:

                 “An Epitaph &c
         To the much esteem’d Memory of
             B ... F ... Esq., LL.D.

        *       *       *       *       *

          Possessed of many lucrative
                    Offices
      Procured to him by the Interest of Men
          Whom he infamously treated
          And receiving enormous sums
               from the Province
                  For Services
               He never performed
    After betraying it to Party and Contention
     He lived, as to the Appearance of Wealth
           In moderate circumstances;
     His principal Estate, seeming to consist
            In his Hand Maid Barbara
              A most valuable Slave
                The Foster Mother
              of his last offspring
              Who did his dirty Work
            And in two Angelic Females
             Whom Barbara also served
         As Kitchen Wench and Gold Finder
               But alas the Loss!
       Providence for wise tho’ secret ends
        Lately deprived him of the Mother
                  of Excellency.
       His Fortune was not however impaired
         For he piously withheld from her
                     Manes
    The pitiful stipend of Ten pounds per Annum
        On which he had cruelly suffered her
                    To starve
       Then stole her to the Grave in Silence
  Without a Pall, the covering due to her dignity
               Without a tomb or even
             A Monumental Inscription.”

Franklin was a more skilful “lapidary” than his enemies, and his
pamphlets were expressed in better language, but there is now very
little doubt that he and the majority of the people were in the wrong.
The colony had valuable liberties and privileges which had been built up
by the Assembly through the efforts of nearly a hundred years. In spite
of all the aggressions of the proprietors these liberties remained
unimpaired and were even stronger than ever. The appeal to the king to
take the colony under his direct control might lead to disastrous
results; for if the people once surrendered themselves to the crown and
the proprietorship was abolished, the king and Parliament might also
abolish the charter and destroy every popular right.[24] In fact, the
ministry were at that very time contemplating the Stamp Act and other
measures which brought on the Revolution. Franklin seemed incapable of
appreciating this, and retained for ten years, and in the face of the
most obvious facts, his strange confidence in the king.

But the petition was carried by an overwhelming majority, although
Franklin failed to be re-elected to the Assembly. He never had been so
fiercely assailed, and it is probable that the attacks on his morals and
motives were far more bitter in ordinary conversation than in the
pamphlets. This abuse may have had considerable effect in preventing his
election. He was, however, appointed by the Assembly its agent to convey
the petition to England and present it to the king. He set out in
November, 1764, on this his second mission to England which resulted in
a residence there of ten years. Fortunately, the petition was
unsuccessful. He did not press it much, and the Assembly soon repented
of its haste.

He settled down comfortably at No. 7 Craven Street, where Mrs. Stevenson
and her daughter were delighted to have again their old friend. His
scientific studies were renewed,--spots on the sun, smoky chimneys, the
aurora borealis, the northwest passage, the effect of deep and shallow
water on the speed of boats,--and he was appointed on committees to
devise plans for putting lightning-rods on St. Paul’s Cathedral and the
government powder-magazines. The circle of his acquaintance was much
enlarged. He associated familiarly with the noblemen he met at country
houses, was dined and entertained by notables of every sort, became
acquainted with Garrick, Mrs. Montague, and Adam Smith, and added
another distinguished physician, Sir John Pringle, to the list of his
very intimate friends. He dined out almost every day, was admitted to
all sorts of clubs, and of course diligently attended the meetings of
all the associations devoted to learning and science.

Although only an amateur in medicine, he was invited by the physicians
to attend the meetings of their club, and it was of this club that he
told the story that the question was once raised whether physicians had,
on the whole, done more good than harm. After a long debate, Sir John
Pringle, the president, was asked to give his opinion, and replied that
if by physicians they meant to include old women, he thought they had
done more good than harm; otherwise more harm than good.

During this his second mission to England he became more intimate than
ever with the good Bishop of St. Asaph, spending part of every summer
with him, and it was at his house that he wrote the first part of his
Autobiography. In a letter to his wife, dated August 14, 1771, he
describes the close of a three weeks’ stay at the bishop’s:

    “The Bishop’s lady knows what children and grandchildren I have
    and their ages; so, when I was to come away on Monday, the 12th,
    in the morning, she insisted on my staying that one day longer,
    that we might together keep my grandson’s birthday. At dinner,
    among other nice things, we had a floating island, which they
    always particularly have on the birthdays of any of their own
    six children, who were all but one at table, where there was
    also a clergyman’s widow, now above one hundred years old. The
    chief toast of the day was Master Benjamin Bache, which the
    venerable old lady began in a bumper of _mountain_. The Bishop’s
    lady politely added ‘and that he may be as good a man as his
    grandfather.’ I said I hoped he would be _much better_. The
    Bishop, still more complaisant than his lady, said: ‘We will
    compound the matter and be contented if he should not prove
    _quite so good_.’” (Bigelow’s Works of Franklin, vol. vi. p.
    71.)

The bishop’s daughters were great friends of Franklin, and often
exchanged with him letters which in many respects were almost equal to
his own. Years afterwards, when he was in France during the Revolution,
and it was rather imprudent to write to him, one of them, without the
knowledge of her parents, sent him a most affectionate and charming
girl’s letter, which is too long to quote, but is well worth reading.

He had his wife send him from Pennsylvania a number of live squirrels,
which he gave to his friends. One which he presented to one of the
bishop’s daughters having escaped from its cage, and being killed by a
dog, he wrote an epitaph on it rather different from his political
epitaph:

                  “Alas! poor MUNGO!
           Happy wert thou, hadst thou known
                  Thy own felicity.
           Remote from the fierce bald eagle
              Tyrant of thy native woods,
   Thou hadst naught to fear from his piercing talons,
               Nor from the murdering gun
             Of the thoughtless sportsman.
                Safe in thy weird castle
            GRIMALKIN never could annoy thee.
     Daily wert thou fed with the choicest viands,
       By the fair hand of an indulgent mistress;
                   But, discontented,
            Thou wouldst have more freedom.
          Too soon, alas! didst thou obtain it;
                     And wandering
  Thou art fallen by the fangs of wanton cruel Ranger!
                      Learn hence
            Ye who blindly seek more liberty,
     Whether subjects, sons, squirrels or daughters,
     That apparent restraint may be real protection
               Yielding peace and plenty
                    With security.”

Franklin’s pleasures in England remind us of other distinguished
Americans who, having gone to London to represent their country, have
suddenly found themselves in congenial intercourse with all that was
best in the nation and enjoying the happiest days of their lives.
Lowell, when minister there, had the same experience as Franklin, and
when we read their experiences together, the resemblance is very
striking. Others, though perhaps in less degree, have felt the same
touch of race. Blood is thicker than water. But I doubt if any of
them--Lowell, Motley, or even Holmes in his famous three months’
visit--had such a good time as Franklin.

He loved England and was no doubt delighted with the appointments that
sent him there. If it is true, as his enemies have charged, that he
schemed for public office, it is not surprising in view of the pleasure
he derived from appointments such as these. Writing to Miss Stevenson on
March 23, 1763, after he had returned to Pennsylvania from his first
mission, he says,--

    “Of all the enviable things England has, I envy it most its
    people. Why should that petty Island, which, compared to
    America, is but 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 neighborhood, more
    sensible, virtuous, and elegant minds than we can collect in
    ranging a hundred leagues of our vast forests?” (Bigelow’s Works
    of Franklin, vol. iii. p. 233.)

In fact, he had resolved at one time, if he could prevail on Mrs.
Franklin to accompany him, to settle permanently in England. His reason,
he writes to Mr. Strahan, was for America, but his inclination for
England. “You know which usually prevails. I shall probably make but
this one vibration and settle here forever. Nothing will prevent it, if
I can, as I hope I can, prevail with Mrs. F. to accompany me, especially
if we have a peace.”[25] This fondness for the old home no doubt helped
to form that very conservative position which he took in the beginning
of the Revolution, and which was so displeasing to some people in
Massachusetts. His reason, though not his inclination, was, as he says,
for America, but the ignorant and brutal course of the British ministry
finally made reason and inclination one.


FOOTNOTES:

[21] Pennsylvania: Colony and Commonwealth, p. 147.

[22] Bigelow’s Works of Franklin, vol. vi. p. 300.

[23] Pennsylvania: Colony and Commonwealth, p. 221.

[24] Pennsylvania: Colony and Commonwealth, chap. xix.

[25] Bigelow’s Works of Franklin, vol. iii. p. 212; vol. x. pp. 295,
302.




VII

DIFFICULTIES AND FAILURE IN ENGLAND


Franklin’s diplomatic career was now to begin in earnest. Although the
petition to change Pennsylvania into a royal province under the direct
rule of the crown was, fortunately, not acted upon and not very
seriously pressed, he, nevertheless, continued to believe that such a
change would be beneficial and might some day be accomplished.

He looked upon the king as supreme ruler of the colonies, and retained
this opinion until he heard of actual bloodshed in the battle of
Lexington. The king and not Parliament had in the beginning given the
colonies their charters; the king and not Parliament had always been the
power that ruled them; wherefore the passage by Parliament of stamp acts
and tea acts was a usurpation. This was one of the arguments in which
many of the colonists had sought refuge, but few of them clung to it so
long as Franklin.

Almost immediately after his arrival in London in December, 1764, the
agitations about the proposed Stamp Act began, and within a few weeks he
was deep in them. His previous residence of five years in London when he
was trying to have the proprietary estates taxed had given him some
knowledge of men and affairs in the great capital; had given him,
indeed, his first lessons in the diplomat’s art; but he was now
powerless against the Stamp Act. The ministry had determined on its
passage, and they considered the protests of Franklin and the other
colonial agents of little consequence.

The act passed, and Franklin wrote home on the subject one of his
prettiest letters to Charles Thomson:

    “Depend upon it, my good neighbor, I took every step in my power
    to prevent the passing of the Stamp Act. 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 it is 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 towards 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.”

Grenville, in conformity with his assurance that the act would work
satisfactorily even to the Americans, announced that stamp officers
would not be sent from England, but that the kind mother would appoint
colonists, and he asked the colonial agents to name to him honest and
responsible men in their several colonies. Franklin recommended his old
friend John Hughes, a respectable merchant of Philadelphia, never
dreaming that by so doing he was getting the good man into trouble. But
as soon as Hughes’s commission arrived his house was threatened by the
mob and he was forced to resign.

Franklin had no idea that the colonies would be so indignant and offer
so much resistance. He supposed that they would quietly submit, buy the
stamps, and paste them on all their documents. He bought a quantity of
stamped paper and sent it over to his partner, David Hall, to sell in
the little stationery shop which was still attached to their
printing-office. When he heard of the mob violence and the positive
determination not to pay the tax, he was surprised and disgusted. He
wrote to John Hughes, expressing surprise at the indiscretion of the
people and the rashness of the Virginia Assembly. “A firm loyalty to the
crown,” he said, “and a 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.”[26]

His old opponents, the proprietary party, were not slow to take this
opportunity to abuse him as faithless to his province and the American
cause. A certain Samuel Smith went about telling the people that
Franklin had planned the Stamp Act and intended to have the Test Act put
in force in America. A caricature of the time represents the devil
whispering in his ear, “Thee shall be agent, Ben, for all my dominions,”
and underneath was printed--

    “All his designs concentre in himself
    For building castles and amassing pelf.
    The public ’tis his wit to sell for gain,
    Whom private property did ne’er maintain.”

The mob even threatened his house, much to the alarm of his wife, who,
however, sturdily remained and refused to seek safety in flight. This
and other events, together with the information that he received from
America during the next few months, compelled him to change his ground.
He saw that there was to be substantial resistance to the act, and he
joined earnestly in the agitation for its repeal. This agitation was
carried on during the autumn of 1765 and a very strong case made for the
colonies, the most telling part of which was the refusal of the
colonists to buy English manufactured goods, which had already lost the
British merchants millions of pounds sterling.

In December Parliament met and the whole question was gone into with
thoroughness. For six weeks testimony was taken before the House sitting
as committee of the whole, and merchants, manufacturers, colonial
agents, and every one who was supposed to be able to throw light on the
subject were examined. It was during the course of this investigation
that Franklin was called and gave those famous answers which enhanced
his reputation more than any other one act of his life, except, perhaps,
his experiment with the kite.

For a long time before the examination he had been very busy
interviewing all sorts of persons, going over the whole ground of the
controversy and trying to impress members of Parliament with the
information and arguments that had come to him from the colonies. His
answers in the examination were not given so entirely on the spur of the
moment as has sometimes been supposed, for he had gone over the subject
again and again in conversation, and was well prepared. But his replies
are truly wonderful in their exquisite shrewdness, the delicate turns of
phrase, and the subtle but perfectly clear meaning given to words. The
severe training in analyzing and rewriting the essays of the _Spectator_
stood him in good stead that day, and we realize more fully what he
himself said, that it was to his mastery of language that he owed his
great reputation.

They asked him, for example, “Are you acquainted with Newfoundland?” He
could not tell to what they might be leading him, and some people would
have replied no, or yes; but the wily old philosopher contented himself
with saying, “I never was there.”

They drove him into an awkward corner at one point of the examination.
He had been showing that the colonies had no objection to voting of
their own free will supplies to the British crown, and had frequently
done so in the French and Indian wars.

“But,” said his questioner, “suppose one of the colonial assemblies
should refuse to raise supplies for its own local government, would it
not then be right, in order to preserve order and carry on the
government in that locality, that Parliament should tax that colony,
inasmuch as it would not tax itself for its own support?”

Franklin parried the question by saying that such a case could not
happen, and if it did, it would cure itself by the disorder and
confusion that would arise.

“But,” insisted his tormentor, “just suppose that it did happen; should
not Parliament have the right to remedy such an evil state of affairs?”

The philosopher yielded a little to this last question, and said that
there might be such a right if it were used only for the good of the
people of the colony. This was exactly what they had wanted him to say,
so they put the next question which would clinch the nail.

“But who is to judge of that, Britain or the colonies?”

This was difficult to answer; but with inimitable sagacity their victim
replied,--

“Those that feel can best judge.”

It was a narrow escape, but he was safely out of the trap. Then they
badgered him about the difference between external taxes, such as
customs duties and taxes on commerce, which he said the colonists had
always been willing to pay, and internal taxes, like the Stamp Tax,
which they would never pay and could not be made to pay. He was very
positive on this point; so a member asked him whether it was not likely,
since the colonists were so opposed to internal taxes, that they would
in time assume the same rebellious attitude towards external taxes.
Franklin’s reply was very subtle in showing how Great Britain was
driving the colonies more and more into rebellion:

    “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.”

They reminded him of the clause in the charter of Pennsylvania which
expressly allowed Parliament to tax that colony. How, then, they said,
can the Pennsylvanians assert that the Stamp Act is an infringement of
their rights? This was a poser; but Franklin was equal to the occasion.

    “They understand it thus: by the same charter and otherwise they
    are entitled to all the privileges and liberties of Englishmen.
    They find in the Great Charters and the Petition and Declaration
    of Rights that one of the privileges of English subjects is,
    that they are not to be taxed but by their common consent. They
    have therefore relied upon it, from the first settlement of the
    province, that the Parliament never would, nor could, by color
    of that clause in the charter, assume a right of taxing them
    till it had qualified itself to exercise such right by admitting
    representatives from the people to be taxed, who ought to make a
    part of that common consent.”

But to print all the brilliant passages of this examination would
require too much space. It should be read entire; for in its wonderful
display of human intelligence we see Franklin at his best. He never did
anything else quite equal to it, and he never again had such an
opportunity. It was an ordeal that would have crushed or appalled
ordinary men, and would have been too much for some very able men. They
would have evaded the severe questions, given commonplace answers, or
sought refuge in obscurity, eloquence, or sentiment. But Franklin, with
perfect composure, ease, and almost indifference, met every question
squarely as it was asked. Many other persons were examined during the
long weeks of that investigation, but who now knows who they were? They
may have been as well informed as Franklin, and doubtless many of them
were; but they were submerged in the situation which he made a
stepping-stone to greatness.

In nothing that he said can there be discovered the slightest trace of
hurry, surprise, or disturbed temper; everything is unruffled and
smooth. He guards without effort the beauty and perfection of his
language as carefully as its substance. Each reply is complete. Nothing
can be added to it, and it would be impossible to abbreviate it. It was
his superb physical constitution that enabled him to bear himself thus.
No prize-fighter could have been more self-possessed.

As is well known, he could seldom speak long, especially at this time of
his life, without jesting or telling stories; but there is no trace of
this in the examination, and the slightest touch of anything of the kind
would have marred its wonderful merit. In his previous conversations
with members he had been humorous enough. On one occasion a Tory asked
him, as he would not agree to the act, to at least help them to amend
it. He said he could easily do that by the change of a single word. The
act read that it was to be enforced on a certain day in the year one
thousand seven hundred and sixty-five. Just change one to two, he said,
and America will have little or no objection to it. During his
examination members who favored the repeal asked him questions
calculated to bring out his favorite arguments, and one of them,
remembering this jest, asked him a question which would lead to it. It
seems to have been the only question he evaded; for, as he has told us,
he considered such a jest too light and ridiculous for the occasion.

The Stamp Act was repealed principally through the efforts of the
merchants and tradespeople who thronged the lobbies of the House of
Commons and clamorously demanded that the Americans should be restored
to a condition in which they would be willing to buy British goods; but
there is no question that Franklin’s efforts and examination greatly
assisted, and members of the opposition party thanked him for the aid he
had given them in carrying the repeal. Pennsylvania reappointed him her
agent, and he continued his life in London as a sort of colonial
ambassador. In 1768 Georgia made him her agent, and during the next two
years he was appointed agent for both New Jersey and Massachusetts; so
that he was in a sense representing at London the interests of America.

His appointment as the agent of Massachusetts had been opposed by many
of the leaders of the liberty party in Boston; for his opinions were
rather too moderate to suit them. He still retained his confidence in
George III. as a safe ruler for America, and he did all he could to
soften and accommodate the differences existing between the colonies and
the mother country.

His motives were, of course, attacked and his moderation ascribed to his
love of office. He was at that time Postmaster of North America, and as
his income of a thousand pounds a year from his partnership with David
Hall in the printing business ceased in 1766, he was naturally desirous
to retain his postmaster’s salary. His zeal for the American cause was
inclining Lord Sandwich, the Postmaster-General, to remove him, while
the Duke of Grafton was disposed to give him a better office in England,
in order to identify him with the mother country and bring him into
close relations with the government.

There is no evidence that he was unduly influenced by love of office.
His confidence in the king was merely a mistake which many other people
made, and his moderation and attempt to settle all difficulties amicably
were measures which a man of his temperament and in his position would
naturally take.

He tried to give the English correct opinions about America, and to
disclose the true interest and the true relations which should subsist
between the mother and her daughters. To this end he wrote articles for
the newspapers, and reprinted Dickinson’s “Farmer’s Letters” with a
preface written by himself. There was a large party led by Burke, Barré,
Onslow, Lord Chatham, and others who were favorable to America, and it
seemed as if this party might be made larger. At any rate, Franklin felt
bound to take sides with them, and assist them as far as possible. His
articles were humorous, and necessarily anonymous; for he feared they
would lose half of the slight effect they had if the name of the
American agent were signed to them.

His two famous articles were published in the early autumn of 1773. One,
called “Rules for Reducing a Great Empire to a Small One,” was an
admirable satire on the conduct of the British government. A great
empire is like a cake, most easily diminished at the edges. Take care
that colonies never enjoy the same rights as the mother country. Forget
all benefits conferred by colonies; treat them as if they were always
inclined to revolt; send prodigals, broken gamesters, and stock-jobbers
to rule over them; punish them for petitioning against injustice;
despise their voluntary grants of money, and harass them with novel
taxes; threaten that you have the right to tax them without limit; take
away from them trial by jury and _habeas corpus_, and those who are
suspected of crimes bring to the mother country for trial; send the most
insolent officials to collect the taxes; apply the proceeds of the taxes
to increasing salaries and pensions; keep adjourning the colonial
assemblies until they pass the laws you want; redress no grievances; and
send a standing army among them commanded by a general with unlimited
power.

The popularity of this piece was so great that all the newspapers copied
it and new editions had to be issued. The other article was a short
squib, called “An Edict of the King of Prussia,” and professes to be a
formal announcement by Frederick the Great that, inasmuch as the British
isles were originally Saxon colonies and have now reached a flourishing
condition, it is just and expedient that a revenue be raised from them;
and he goes on to declare the measures he had decided to put in force,
which are most clever burlesques on the measures adopted by England for
America.

This edict also had a great run of popularity, and of course its
authorship became known. Many of the slow-witted English at first
thought it real, and Franklin in a letter to his son gives an
interesting account of its reception, and at the same time allows us a
glimpse of his life at English country houses:

    “I was down at Lord le Despencer’s, 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 parlor, 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.”

This was all very pleasant for Franklin, and increased his fame,
especially among the Whigs, who were already on the side of America. But
the Tories, whom it was necessary to win, were so indignant and so
deeply disgusted that these brilliant essays may be said to have done
more harm than good.

It is not usual for an ambassador in a foreign country to discuss in the
public prints the questions at issue between that country and his own.
It would generally be regarded as serious misconduct, and the rule
which prohibits it seems to be founded on good reasons. The ambassador
is not there for the purpose of instructing or influencing the general
public. He is not in any way concerned with them, but is concerned only
with the heads of the government, with whom alone he carries on the
business of his mission. In order that he may fulfil his part
successfully he must be acceptable, or at least not offensive, to the
persons in control of the government. But how can he be acceptable to
them if he is openly or in secret appealing to the people of the country
against them? Will they not regard him very much as if he were a spy or
an enemy in disguise in their midst?

This was precisely the difficulty into which Franklin got himself. He
was not called an ambassador, and he would not have been willing to
admit that he was in a foreign country. But in effect he was in that
position, being the duly accredited agent of colonies that had a serious
quarrel with the mother country which every one knew might terminate in
war. When he began to write anonymous articles full of sarcasm and
severity against the ministry of the party in power he was doing what,
under ordinary diplomatic circumstances, might have caused his
dismissal. It was distinctly a step downward. It was not different in
essentials from that of an ambassador joining one of the political
parties of the country to which he is accredited and making stump
speeches for it. His arguments were approved only by people among the
English liberals who were already convinced, while they made him bitter
enemies among the Tory governing class at a time when he had every
reason to mollify them, and when he was doing his utmost to accommodate
amicably the differences between the mother and her daughters. They had
now a handle against him, something that would offset the charm of his
conversation, his learning, and his discoveries in science which gave
him such influence among notable people. They soon had the opportunity
they wanted in the famous episode of the Hutchinson letters.

In order to carry out his purpose of accommodating all disputes, he was
in the habit of saying wherever he went in England that the colonies
were most loyal and loving; that there was no necessity for the severe
measures against Boston,--quartering troops on her, and other
oppressions. Such severities created the impression among the Americans
that the whole English nation was against them; they did not stop to
think that it was merely the ministry and the party in power.
Accordingly there were riots and tumults among some of the disorderly
classes in America which in their turn created a wrong impression in
England, where such disturbances were falsely supposed to be
representative of the colonists at large. In this way the
misunderstanding was continually aggravated because the true state of
things was unknown.

Many people in England were disposed to smile at this pretty delusion of
peace and affection, but they thought it best to let the colonial agents
continue under its influence and not acquaint them with the means they
had of knowing the contrary. At last, however, in the year 1772, one of
them let the cat out of the bag. Franklin was talking in his usual
strain to a Whig member of Parliament who was disposed to be very
friendly to America, when that member frankly told him that he must be
mistaken. The disorders in America were much worse than he supposed. The
severe measures complained of were not the mere suggestion of the party
in power in England, but had been asked for by people in Boston as the
only means of restoring order and pacifying the country, which was
really in a most rebellious and dangerous state.

When Franklin expressed surprise and doubt, the member said he would
soon satisfy him, and a few days after placed in his hands a packet of
letters which had been written by Thomas Hutchinson, the Governor of
Massachusetts, Andrew Oliver, the Lieutenant-Governor, and some other
officials to Mr. William Whately, a man who had held some subordinate
offices and had been an important political worker in the Grenville
party.

The letters described the situation in Massachusetts in the year 1768;
the riotous proceedings when John Hancock’s sloop was seized for
violating the revenue laws; how the customs officers were insulted,
beaten, the windows of their houses broken, and they obliged to take
refuge on the “Romney” man-of-war. These and other proceedings the
writers of the letters intimated were approved by the majority of the
people, and they recommended that these turbulent colonists should, for
their own good, be restrained by force, and the liberty they were
misusing curtailed. “There must be an abridgment,” said one of
Hutchinson’s letters, “of what are called English liberties.”

Hutchinson, as well as some of the other writers of the letters, were
natives of New England; and Hutchinson, before he became governor, had
had a long public career in Massachusetts in which he had distinguished
himself as a most conservative, prudent, and able man who had conferred
many benefits on the colony. The letters by him and the other officials
had been handed about among prominent people in London, who regarded
them as better evidence of the real situation in America than the
benevolent talk of the colonial agent or his brilliant and anonymous
sallies in the newspapers.

The condition which the member of Parliament annexed to his loan of the
letters to Franklin was that they should not be printed or copied, and
after having been read by the leaders of the patriot movement in
Massachusetts, they were to be returned to London. He must have had very
little knowledge of the world, and Franklin must have smiled at the
condition. Of course, in transmitting the letters to Massachusetts
Franklin mentioned the condition. This relieved him from responsibility,
and John Adams and John Hancock could do what they thought right under
the circumstances.

What might have been expected soon followed. The leaders in Boston read
the letters and were furious. Here were their own governors and
officials secretly furnishing the British government with information
that would bring punishment on the colony, and actually recommending
that the punishment should be inflicted. One of Hutchinson’s letters
distinctly stated that the information furnished by him in a previous
letter had brought the troops to Boston; and, as is well known, it was
the collision of some of these troops with a mob which led to what has
been called the “Boston massacre.”

John Adams showed the letters to his aunt; others showed them to
relatives and friends, no doubt, with the most positive instructions
that they were not to be copied or printed, and were to be exhibited
only to certain people. The Assembly met, and John Hancock, with a
mysterious air, announced that a most important matter would in a few
days be submitted to that body for consideration; but most of the
members knew about it already; and when the day arrived the public was
refused admittance and the letters read to the Assembly in secret
session. As for publishing them, they were soon in print in London as
well as in the colonies; and when the originals could be of no further
use, John Adams put them in an envelope and sent them back to London, as
the condition required.

The Assembly resolved to ask the crown to remove both Hutchinson and
Oliver, and prepared a petition to that effect, basing the request on
the ground that these two men had plotted to encourage and intensify the
quarrel of the colonies with the mother country. By their false
representations they had caused a fleet and an army to be brought to
Massachusetts, and were therefore the cause of the confusion and
bloodshed which had resulted. This petition reached the king in the
summer of 1773.

Franklin thought that the whole affair would have a good effect. The
resentment of the colonies against the mother country would be
transferred to Hutchinson and the other individuals who had caused it;
the ministry would see that the colonists were sincerely desirous of a
good understanding with the British government and that Hutchinson and
Oliver were evil persons bent on fomenting trouble and responsible for
all the recent difficulties in Massachusetts. This was a pleasant
theory, but it turned out to be utterly unsound and useless. The effect
of the letters was just the opposite of what was expected. Instead of
modifying the feelings of the colonists and the ministry, they increased
the resentment of both.

The king and his Privy Council were not inclined to pay any attention to
the petition, and it might have slept harmlessly like other petitions
from America at that time. But when the letters were printed in London,
people began to wonder how they had reached the colonists. They were in
a sense secret information, and had been intrusted to persons who were
supposed to understand that they were for government circles alone.
William Whately, to whom they had been written, was dead, and as it
began to be suspected that his brother and executor, Thomas Whately,
might have put them into circulation, he felt bound to defend himself.

As a matter of fact, they seem to have passed out of William Whately’s
hands before his death, and were never in the possession of the
executor. But the executor had given permission to John Temple to look
over the deceased Whately’s papers and to take from them certain letters
which Temple and his brother had written to him. Accordingly, Thomas
Whately went to see Temple, who gave the most positive assurances that
he had taken only his own and his brother’s letters, and he repeated
these assurances twice afterwards. But the suspicion against him getting
into the newspapers, he demanded from Whately a public statement
exonerating him. Whately published a statement which merely gave the
facts and exonerated him no more than to say that Temple had assured him
he did not take the Hutchinson letters. Such a statement left an
unpleasant implication against Temple, for the executor seemed
studiously to avoid saying that he believed Temple’s assurances.

So Temple challenged Whately, and the challenge was carried by Ralph
Izard, of South Carolina. They fought a queer sort of duel which would
have amused Frenchmen, and half a century later would have amused
Carolinians. Whately declined to be bothered with a second, so Temple
could not have one. They met in Hyde Park at four in the morning,
Whately with a sword and Temple with both sword and pistols. Seeing that
Whately had only a sword, he supposed that he must be particularly
expert with it, and he therefore suggested that they fight with pistols.
They emptied their weapons without effect, and then took to their
blades.

Temple, who was something of a swordsman, soon discovered that Whately
knew nothing of the art, and he chivalrously tried to wound him
slightly, so as to end the encounter. But Whately slashed and cut in a
bungling way that was extremely dangerous; and Temple, finding that he
was risking his life by his magnanimity, aimed a thrust which would have
killed Whately if he had not seized the blade in his left hand. As it
was, it wounded him severely in the side, and he suggested that the
fight end. But his opponent in this extraordinary duel was deaf, and,
recovering his sword, as Whately slipped forward he wounded him in the
back of the shoulder.

Izard and Arthur Lee, of Virginia, now arrived on the scene and
separated the combatants. One result of not fighting in the regular
manner with witnesses was that some people believed, from the wound on
Whately’s back, that Temple had attempted to stab him when he was down.
Meantime Franklin, who had been out of town on one of his pleasant
excursions, returned to London and, hearing that another duel between
the two was imminent, published a letter in the newspapers announcing
that he was the person who had obtained and sent the letters to
Massachusetts, and that they had never been in the possession of the
executor and consequently could not have been stolen from him by Temple.

He supposed that he had ended the difficulty most handsomely, and he
continued to hope for good results from making the letters public. But
the ministry and the Tories had now the opportunity they wanted. They
saw a way to deprive him of his office of postmaster and attack his
character. He had admitted sending the letters to Massachusetts. But how
had he obtained them? How did he get possession of the private letters
of a deceased member of the government; letters, too, that every one had
been warned not to allow to get into a colonial agent’s hands? If the
distinguished man of science whose fascinating manner and conversation
were the delight of London drawing-rooms and noblemen’s country-seats
had stepped down from the heights of philosophy to do this sort of work,
why, then, his great reputation and popularity need no longer be
considered as protecting him.

It was unfortunate that Franklin sent these letters to Massachusetts in
the way that has been described. At the same time it is rather too much
to expect that he should have foreseen all the results. But after more
than a hundred years have passed we can perhaps review the position of
the Tory government a little more calmly than has been usual.

Let us suppose that the Spanish minister in the United States should get
possession of letters sent from Spain by our minister there to the
Secretary of State at Washington; and we will assume also that these
letters relate to a matter of serious controversy between our country
and Spain, and are the private communications from our minister to the
Secretary of State. If the Spanish minister should send these letters to
his government, and that government should publish them in its own and
our newspapers, would there not be considerable indignation in America?
Would it not be said that the Spanish minister was here to conduct
diplomatic negotiations in the usual way and not for the purpose of
securing possession of the private documents of our government? Would it
not be assumed at once that he must have bribed some one to give him the
letters, or got them in some other clandestine way? and would not his
country in all probability be asked to recall him?

Then, too, we must remember that Franklin’s argument that the colonies
were all loyal and needed only a little kind treatment was in the eyes
of the Tories a pious sham; and they were somewhat justified in thinking
so. It is true, indeed, that outside of Massachusetts the people were
very loyal, and determined not to break with Great Britain unless they
were forced to it. But in Massachusetts Samuel Adams was laboring night
and day to force a breach. He had as much contempt as the Tories for
Franklin’s peace and love policy, and thought it ridiculous that such a
man should be the agent for Massachusetts. He was convinced that there
never would be peace, that it was not desirable, and that the sooner
there were war and independence the better.

The Tory government knew all this; it knew of the committees of
correspondence that the Boston patriots were inaugurating to inflame the
whole country; it knew all these things, from the reports of the royal
governors and other officials in the colonies, and it was probably
better acquainted with the real situation than was Franklin. There may
still be read among the documents of the British government the
affidavits of the persons who followed Samuel Adams about and took down
his words when he was secretly inciting the lower classes of the people
in Boston to open rebellion.[27] About the time that Whately and Temple
fought their duel, in December, 1773, the tea was thrown overboard in
Boston harbor, and it is now generally believed that Samuel Adams
inspired and encouraged this act as one which would most surely lead to
a breach with the mother country.

The school-book story of the “Boston Tea Party” has been so deeply
impressed upon our minds as one of the glorious deeds of patriotism that
its true bearings are obscured. There were many patriots at the time who
did not consider it a wise act. Besides Boston, the tea was sent by the
East India Company to Charleston, Philadelphia, and New York, and in
these cities the people prevented its being landed and sold; but they
did not destroy it. They considered that they had a right to prevent its
landing and sale; that in doing this they were acting in a legal and
constitutional manner to protect their rights; but to destroy it would
have been both a riotous act and an attack on private property.

The Tory ministry, while having no serious objection to the method
adopted in Charleston, Philadelphia, and New York, considered the Boston
method decidedly riotous, and from its point of view such a conclusion
was natural. It seemed to be of a piece with all the other occurrences
which Hutchinson and Oliver had described in their letters, and it
confirmed most strongly all the statements and recommendations in those
letters. It was decided to punish Boston in a way that she would
remember, and in the following March, after careful deliberation,
Parliament passed the Boston Port Bill, which locked up the harbor of
that town, destroyed for the time her commerce, and soon brought on the
actual bloodshed of the Revolution.

Meantime the ministry also attended to Franklin’s case. The Privy
Council sent word to Franklin that it was ready to take up the petition
of the Massachusetts Assembly asking for the removal of Governor
Hutchinson, and required his presence as the colony’s agent. He found
that Hutchinson and Oliver had secured as counsel Alexander Wedderburn,
a Scotch barrister, afterwards most successful in securing political
preferment, and ending his career as Lord Rosslyn. Franklin had no
counsel, and asked for a postponement of three weeks to obtain legal aid
and prepare his case, which was granted.

The day fixed for the hearing aroused great expectations. An
unprecedented number of the members of the Privy Council attended. The
Archbishop of Canterbury, Burke, Dr. Priestley, Izard, Lee, and many
other distinguished persons, friends or opponents of Franklin, crowded
into the chamber. The members of the Privy Council sat at a long table,
and every one else had to stand as a mark of respect. The room was one
of those apartments which tourists are often shown in palaces in Europe,
somewhat like a large drawing-room with an open fireplace at one end.
The fireplace projected into the room, and in one of the recesses at the
side of it Franklin stood, not far behind Lord Gower, president of the
Council, who had his back to the fireplace.

Franklin’s astute counsel, John Dunning, a famous barrister, afterwards
Lord Ashburton, told him that his peace and love theory was not a very
good ground to rest his case on before the Council. It would be well not
to use the Hutchinson letters at all, or refer to them as little as
possible; for the Privy Council believed every word in them to be true,
and the passages in them which had most inflamed the colonists were the
very ones which were most acceptable to the Council.

So Dunning made a speech in which he said that no crime or offence was
charged against Hutchinson and Oliver; they were in no way attacked or
accused; the colonists were simply asking a favor of His Majesty, which
was that the governor and the lieutenant-governor had become so
distasteful to the people that it would be good policy and tend to peace
and quiet to remove them.

It was a ridiculous attempt, of course, and none knew better than
Dunning that there was not the slightest hope of success. The Privy
Council would never have taken up the petition, it would have slept in
the dust of its pigeon-hole, if the council had not seen in it a way of
attacking Franklin. Wedderburn’s speech was the event awaited, and to it
the Tories looked forward as to a cock-fight or a bull-baiting.

A little volume published in England and to be found in some of the
libraries in America contains an account of the proceedings and gives a
large part of Wedderburn’s speech. He has been most abundantly abused in
America and by Whigs in England as an unprincipled office-seeker and a
shallow orator, with no other talent than that of invective. That he was
successful in obtaining office and rising to high distinction as an
ardent Tory cannot be denied, and in this respect he did not differ
materially from others or from the Whigs themselves when they had their
innings. As to the charge of shallowness, it is not borne out by his
speech on this occasion. Once concede his point of view as a Tory, and
the speech is a very clever one.

He began by a history of Hutchinson’s useful public career in
Massachusetts; and there is no question that Hutchinson had been a most
valuable official; even the Massachusetts people themselves conceded
that. The difficulty with Hutchinson was the same as with
Wedderburn,--his point of view was not ours. Having reviewed Hutchinson,
he went on to show how ridiculous it was to suppose that he alone had
been the cause of sending the troops to Boston, and in this he was again
probably right. The home government, as he well said, had abundant other
means of information from General Gage, Sir Francis Bernard, and its
officials all through the colonies; and he concluded this part of his
speech with the point that Hutchinson, by the admission of Massachusetts
herself, had never done anything wrong except write these letters, and
would it not be ridiculous to dismiss a man for giving information
which had been furnished by a host of others?

Then he turned his attention to Franklin. How had he obtained those
letters? And here it must be confessed that Franklin was in a scrape,
and from the Tory point of view was fair game. He could not disclose the
name of the member of Parliament who gave them to him, for he had
promised not to do so, and even without this promise it would have been
wanton cruelty to have subjected the man to the ruin and disgrace that
would have instantly fallen upon him. Nothing could drag this secret
from Franklin. He refused to answer questions on the subject, and it is
a secret to this day, as it is also still a secret who was the mother of
his son. Ingenious persons have written about one as about the other,
and supposed and guessed and piled up probabilities to no purpose.
Franklin told the world more private matters than is usual with men in
his position; but in the two matters on which he had determined to
withhold knowledge the world has sought for it in vain.

Praiseworthy as his conduct may have been in this respect, it gave his
opponents an advantage which we must admit they were entitled to take.
If, as Wedderburn put it, he refused to tell from whom he received the
letters, they were at liberty to suppose the worst, and the worst was
that he had obtained them by improper means and fraud.

For a time which must have seemed like years to Franklin, Wedderburn
drew out and played on this point with most exasperating skill.
Gentlemen respect private correspondence. They do not usually steal
people’s letters and print them. Even a foreign ambassador on the
outbreak of war would hardly be justified in stealing documents. Must he
not have known as soon as the letters were handed to him that honorable
permission to use them could be obtained only from the family of
Whately? Why had he chosen to bring that family into painful notoriety
and one of them within a step of being murdered? He had sent the letters
to Massachusetts with the address removed from them, and he was here
supporting the petition with nothing but copies of the letters. He
would, forsooth, have removed from office a governor in the midst of a
long career of usefulness on the ground of letters the originals of
which he could not produce and which he dared not tell how he had
obtained.

The orator went on to cite some of Franklin’s letters to the people in
Massachusetts encouraging them in their opposition. He read the
resolutions of New England town meetings, and gave what, indeed, was a
truthful description, from his point of view, of the measures taken for
resistance in America. Franklin was aspiring to be Governor of
Massachusetts in the place of Hutchinson, that was the secret of the
whole affair, he said; and as for that beautiful argument that
Hutchinson and Oliver had incensed the mother country against the
colonies, what absurdity!

We are perpetually told, he said, of men’s incensing the mother country
against the colonies, but we hear nothing of the vast variety of acts
which have been made use of to incense the colonies against the mother
country, setting at defiance the king’s authority, treating Parliament
as usurpers, pulling down the houses of royal officials and attacking
their persons, burning His Majesty’s ships of war, and denying the
supreme jurisdiction of the British empire; and yet these people pretend
a great concern about these letters as having a tendency to incense the
parent state against the colonies, and would have a governor turned out
because he reports their doings. “Was it to confute or prevent the
pernicious effect of these letters that the good men of Boston have
lately held their meetings, appointed their committees, and with their
usual moderation destroyed the cargo of three British ships?”

While this ferocious attack was being delivered,--and it is said to have
been delivered in thundering tones, emphasized by terrible blows of the
orator’s fist on a cushion before him on the table,--Franklin stood with
head erect, unmoved, and without the slightest change upon his face from
the beginning to the end. When all was over he went out, silent,
dignified, without a word or sign to any one except that, as he passed
Dr. Priestley, he secretly pressed his hand. His superb nerves and
physique again raised him far above the occasion.

It was one of the most remarkable traits of his wonderful personality
that in all the great trials of his life he could give a dramatic
interest and force to the situation which in the end turned everything
in his favor. Burke said that his examination before Parliament
reminded him of a master examined by a parcel of school-boys; and
Whitefield said that every answer he gave made the questioner appear
insignificant. In his much severer test before Wedderburn and the Privy
Council he was defeated; but his supreme and serene manner was never
forgotten by the spectators, and will live forever as a dramatic
incident. Pictures have been painted of it, for it lends itself
irresistibly to the purposes of the artist. In these pictures Franklin
is the hero, for it is impossible, from an artistic point of view, to
make any one else the hero in that scene.

The petition of the Massachusetts Assembly was, of course, rejected with
contempt; Franklin was immediately deprived of his office of postmaster
of the colonies, and his usefulness as a colonial agent or as a
diplomatist was at an end. He could no longer go to court or even be on
friendly terms with the Tory party which controlled the government; and
from this time on he was compelled to associate almost exclusively with
the opposition, who still continued to be his friends. In other words,
from being a colonial representative he had become a mere party man or
party politician in England, and his own acts had brought him to this
condition. While in a position which was essentially diplomatic, he had
chosen to write anonymous newspaper articles against the very men with
whom he was compelled to carry on his diplomatic negotiations. They
naturally watched their opportunity to destroy him; and his conduct with
regard to the Hutchinson letters gave it to them.

He fully realized his situation, and made preparations to return to
Philadelphia. He was, in fact, in danger of arrest; and the government
had sent to America for the originals of some of his letters on which to
base a prosecution for treason. But when it became known that the first
Continental Congress was called to meet in September, he was persuaded
to remain, as the Congress might have business for him to transact. He
still believed that all difficulties would be finally settled. He did
not think that there would be war; and this belief may have been caused
partly by his conviction of the utter folly of such a war and partly
because it was impossible for him to get full and accurate information
of the real state of mind of the people in America. He had great faith
in a change of ministry. If the Americans refused for another year to
buy British goods, there would be such a clamor from the merchants and
manufacturers that the Whigs would ride into power and colonial rights
be safe.

He remained until the following spring, without being able to accomplish
anything, but he caught at several straws. Lord Chatham, who, as William
Pitt, had conquered Canada in the French and Indian wars and laid the
foundations of the modern British empire, was thoroughly disgusted at
the conduct of the administration towards America. An old man, living at
his country-seat within a couple of hours’ drive from London, and
suffering severely at times from the gout, he nevertheless aroused
himself to reopen the subject in the House of Lords. He sent for
Franklin, who has left us a most graphic account of the great man, so
magnificent, eloquent, and gracious in his declining years.

Franklin went over the whole ground with him; but the aged nobleman who
had been such a conqueror of nations was fond of having everything his
own way, and Franklin confesses that he was so charmed in watching the
wonderful powers of his mind that he cared but little about criticising
his plans. His lordship raised the question in the House of Lords in a
grand oration, parts of which are still spoken by our school-boys, and
he followed it by other speeches. He was for withdrawing all the troops
from the colonies and restoring peace; but his oratory had no more
effect on Parliament than Franklin’s jokes.

At the same time Lord Howe, brother of the General Howe who was
afterwards prominent in the war against the colonies, attempted a plan
of pacification which was to be accomplished through Franklin’s aid. The
Howes were favorably inclined towards America. Their brother, General
Viscount Howe, had been very popular in the colonies, was killed at
Ticonderoga in 1758 in the French and Indian war, and Massachusetts had
erected a monument to his memory in Westminster Abbey.

Lord Howe’s object was to secure some basis of compromise which both
Franklin and the ministry could agree upon, an essential part of which
was that his lordship was to be sent over to the colonies as a special
commissioner to arrange final terms. The negotiations began by Franklin
being asked to play chess with Lord Howe’s sister, and he was also
approached by a prominent Quaker, David Barclay, and by his old friend,
Dr. Fothergill. There were numerous interviews, and Franklin prepared
several papers containing conditions to which he thought the colonies
would agree. Lord Howe promised him high rewards in case of success, and
even offered, as an assurance of the good things to come, to pay him at
once the arrears of his salary as agent of Massachusetts.

Whether this was a sincere attempt at accommodation on the part of some
of the more moderate of the Tories, or a scheme of Lord Howe’s private
ambition, or a mere trap for Franklin, has never been made clear.
Franklin, however, rejected all the bribes and stood on the safe ground
of terms which he knew would be acceptable in America; so this attempt
also came to naught.

After reading the long account Franklin has given of these negotiations,
and the innumerable letters and proposals that were exchanged, one may
see many causes of the break with the colonies,--ignorance, blindness,
the infatuation of the king or of North or of Townsend,--but the primary
cause of all is the one given at the end by Franklin,--corruption. The
whole British government of that time was penetrated through and through
with a vast system of bribery. Statesmen and politicians cared for
nothing and would do nothing that did not give them offices to
distribute. That was one of the objects of Lord Howe’s scheme. Dr.
Fothergill was intimate with all the governing class, and he said to
Franklin, “Whatever specious pretences are offered, they are hollow; to
get a larger field on which to fatten a herd of worthless parasites is
all that is regarded.” England lost her colonies by corruption, and she
could not have built up her present vast colonial empire unless
corruption had been abolished.

At the end of April Franklin set out on his return to Philadelphia, and
there was some question whether he would not be arrested before he could
start. He used some precautions in getting away as quietly as possible,
and sailed from Portsmouth unmolested.

He still believed that there would be no war, and fully expected to
return in October with instructions from the Continental Congress that
would end the controversy. His ground for this belief seems to have been
the old one that the hostility in England towards America was purely a
ministerial or party question, and would be overthrown by the refusal of
the colonists to buy British goods. But on his arrival in Philadelphia
on the 5th of May he heard of the battle of Lexington, and never after
that entertained much hope of a peaceful accommodation.


FOOTNOTES:

[26] Pennsylvania: Colony and Commonwealth, p. 314.

[27] Hosmer’s Life of Samuel Adams, p. 117.




VIII

AT HOME AGAIN


Franklin’s wife had died while he was in England, and his daughter, Mrs.
Sarah Bache, was now mistress of his new house, which had been built
during his absence. The day after his arrival the Assembly made him one
of its deputies in the Continental Congress which was soon to meet in
Philadelphia. For the next eighteen months (from his arrival on the 5th
of May, 1775, until October 26, 1776, when he sailed for France) every
hour of his time seems to have been occupied with labors which would
have been enough for a man in his prime, but for one seventy years old
were a heavy burden.

He was made Postmaster-General of the united colonies, and prepared a
plan for a line of posts from Maine to Georgia. He dropped all his
conservatism and became very earnest for the war, but was humorous and
easy-going about everything. He had, of course, the privilege of
franking his own letters; but instead of the usual form, “Free. B.
Franklin,” he would mark them “B free Franklin.” He prepared a plan or
constitution for the union of the colonies, which will be considered
hereafter. Besides his work in Congress, he was soon made a member of
the Pennsylvania Legislature, and was on the Committee of Safety which
was preparing the defences of the province, and was, in effect, the
executive government in place of the proprietary governor. From six to
nine in the morning he was with this committee, and from nine till four
in the afternoon he attended the session of Congress. He assisted in
devising plans for obstructing the channel of the Delaware River, and
the _chevaux-de-frise_, as they were called, which were placed in the
water were largely of his design.

It was extremely difficult for the Congress to obtain gunpowder for the
army. The colonists had always relied on Europe for their supply, and
were unaccustomed to manufacturing it. Franklin suggested that they
should return to the use of bows and arrows:

    “These were good weapons not wisely laid aside: 1st. Because a
    man may shoot as truly with a bow as with a common musket. 2dly.
    He can discharge four arrows in the time of charging and
    discharging one bullet. 3dly. His object is not taken from his
    view by the smoke of his own side. 4thly. A flight of arrows
    seen coming upon them, terrifies and disturbs the enemies’
    attention to their business. 5thly. An arrow striking any part
    of a man puts him _hors de combat_ till it is extracted. 6thly.
    Bows and arrows are more easily provided everywhere than muskets
    and ammunition.”

This suggestion seems less strange when we remember that the musket of
that time was a smooth-bore and comparatively harmless at three hundred
yards.

[Illustration: FRANKLIN’S LETTER TO STRAHAN]

His letters to his old friends in England were full of resentment
against the atrocities of the British fleet and army, especially the
burning of the town of Portland, Maine. It was at this time that he
wrote his famous letter to his old London friend, Mr. Strahan, a
reproduction of which, taken from the copy at the State Department,
Washington, is given in this volume. It is a most curiously worded,
half-humorous letter, and the most popular one he ever wrote. It has
been reprinted again and again, and _fac-similes_ of it have appeared
for a hundred years, some of them in school-books.

He could have desired nothing better than its appearance in
school-books. One of his pet projects was that all American
school-children should be taught how shockingly unjust and cruel Great
Britain had been to her colonies; they must learn, he said, to hate her;
and while he was in France he prepared a long list of the British
outrages which he considered contrary to all the rules of civilized
warfare. He intended to have a picture of each one prepared by French
artists and sent to America, that the lesson of undying hatred might be
burnt into the youthful mind.

In the autumn of 1775 he went with two other commissioners to
Washington’s army before Boston to arrange for supplies and prepare
general plans for the conduct of the war. In the following March he was
sent to Canada with Samuel Chase and Charles Carroll, of Maryland, to
win over the Canadians to the side of the revolted colonies. Charles
Carroll’s brother John, a Roman Catholic priest, accompanied them at the
request of the members of Congress, who hoped that he would be able to
influence the French Canadian clergy.

It was a terrible journey for Franklin, now an old man; for as they
advanced north they found the ground covered with snow and the lakes
filled with floating ice. They spent five days beating up the Hudson in
a little sloop to Albany, and two weeks after they had started they
reached Lake George. General Schuyler, who lived near Albany,
accompanied them after they had rested at his house, and assisted in
obtaining wagons and boats. Franklin was ill with what he afterwards
thought was an incipient attack of the gout which his constitution
wanted strength to develop completely. At Saratoga he made up his mind
that he would never see his home again, and wrote several letters of
farewell.

But by the care and assistance of John Carroll, the priest, with whom he
contracted a life-long friendship, he was able to press on, and they
reached the southern end of Lake George, where they embarked on a large
flat-bottomed boat without a cabin, and sailed the whole length of the
lake through the floating ice in about a day. Their boat was hauled by
oxen across the land to Lake Champlain, and after a delay of five days
they embarked again amidst the floating ice. Sailing and rowing,
sleeping under a canvas cover at night, and going ashore to cook their
meals, they made the upper end of the lake in about four days, and
another day in wagons brought them to Montreal.

Their mission was fruitless. The army under General Montgomery which had
invaded the country had been unsuccessful against the British, had
contracted large debts with the Canadians which it was unable to pay,
and the Canadians would not join in the Revolution. So Franklin and the
commissioners had to make their toilsome journey back again without
having accomplished anything; and many years afterwards Franklin
mentioned this journey, which nearly destroyed his life, as one of the
reasons why Congress should vote him extra pay for his services in the
Revolution.

In June, 1776, Franklin was made a member of the convention which framed
a new constitution for Pennsylvania to supply the place of the old
colonial charter of William Penn, and he was engaged in this work during
the summer, when his other duties permitted; but of this more hereafter.
At the same time he was laboring in the Congress on the question of
declaring independence. He was in favor of an immediate declaration, and
his name is signed to the famous instrument.

During this same summer he also had another conference with Lord Howe,
who had arrived in New York harbor in command of the British fleet, and
again wanted to patch up a peace. He failed, of course, for he had
authority from his government only to receive the submission of the
colonies; and he was plainly told by Franklin and the other
commissioners who met him that the colonies would make no treaty with
England except one that acknowledged them as an independent nation.




IX

THE EMBASSY TO FRANCE AND ITS SCANDALS


Franklin’s most important duties in the Continental Congress were
connected with his membership of the “Secret Committee,” afterwards
known as the “Committee of Correspondence.” It was really a committee on
foreign relations, and had been formed for the purpose of corresponding
with the friends of the revolted colonies in Europe and securing from
them advice and assistance. From appointing agents to serve this
committee in France or England, Franklin was soon promoted to be himself
one of the agents and to represent in France the united colonies which
had just declared their independence.

On September 26, 1776, he was given this important mission, not by the
mere appointment of his own committee, but by vote of Congress. He was
to be one of three commissioners of equal powers, who would have more
importance and weight than the mere agents hitherto sent to Europe. The
news received of the friendly disposition of France was very
encouraging, and it was necessary that envoys should be sent with full
authority to take advantage of it. Silas Deane, who had already gone to
France as a secret agent, and Thomas Jefferson were elected as
Franklin’s fellow-commissioners. The ill health of Jefferson’s wife
compelled him to decline, and Arthur Lee, already acting as an agent for
the colonies in Europe, was elected in his place.

When the result of the first ballot taken in Congress showed that
Franklin was elected, he is said to have turned to Dr. Rush, sitting
near him, and remarked, “I am old and good for nothing; but as the
storekeepers say of their remnants of cloth, I am but a fag end, you may
have me for what you please.”

There was, however, fourteen more years of labor in the “fag end,” as he
called himself; and the jest was one of those appropriately modest
remarks which he knew so well how to make. He probably looked forward
with not a little satisfaction to the prospect of renewing again those
pleasures of intercourse with the learned and great which he was so
capable of enjoying and which could be found only in Europe. His
reputation was already greater in France than in England. He would be
able to see the evidences of it as well as increase it in this new and
delightful field. But the British newspapers, of course, said that he
had secured this appointment as a clever way of escaping from the
collapse of the rebellion which he shrewdly foresaw was inevitable.

On October 26, 1776, he left Philadelphia very quietly and, accompanied
by his two grandsons, William Temple Franklin and Benjamin Franklin
Bache, drove some fifteen miles down the river to Marcus Hook, where the
“Reprisal,” a swift war-vessel of the revolted colonies, awaited him.
She set sail immediately and got out of the river into the ocean as
quickly as possible, for the British desired nothing better than to
capture this distinguished envoy to the court of France. Wickes, the
captain, afterwards famous for the prizes he took from the British, knew
that he must run the gauntlet of the cruisers, and he drove his little
vessel with all sail through the November gales, making Quiberon Bay, on
the coast of France, in thirty-three days.

It was a rough, dangerous, exciting voyage; the venerable philosopher of
seventy years was confined to a little, cramped cabin, more sick and
distressed than he had ever been before on the ocean; and yet he
insisted on taking the temperature of the water every day to test again
his theory of the Gulf Stream. They were chased by cruisers, but the
fleet “Reprisal” could always turn them into fading specks on the
horizon’s verge; and as she neared the coast of France she fell in with
some good luck,--two British vessels loaded with lumber, wine, brandy,
and flaxseed, which were duly brought to and carried into a French port
to be sold. The “Reprisal” had on board a small cargo of indigo, which,
with the prizes, was to go towards paying the expense of the mission to
France. In this simple and homely way were the colonies beginning their
diplomatic relations.

The French people received Franklin with an outburst of enthusiasm which
has never been given by them to any other American. So weak from the
sickness of the voyage that he could scarcely stand, the old man was
overwhelmed with attention,--a grand dinner at Nantes, an invitation to
a country house where he expected to find rest, but had none from the
ceaseless throng of visitors. The unexpected and romantic manner of his
arrival, dodging the cruisers and coming in with two great merchantmen
as prizes, aroused the greatest interest and delight. It was like a
brilliant stroke in a play or a tale from the “Arabian Nights,” worthy
of French imagination; and here this wonderful American from the woods
had made it an accomplished fact.

The enthusiasm of this reception never abated, but, on the contrary,
soon became extravagant worship, which continued during the nine years
of his residence in France. Even on his arrival they were exaggerating
everything about him, adding four years to his age to make his
adventures seem more wonderful; and Paris waited in as much restless
expectation for his arrival as if he had been a king.

Beneath all this lay, of course, the supreme satisfaction with which the
French contemplated the revolt of the colonies and the inevitable
weakening of their much-hated enemy and rival, Great Britain; and they
had made up their minds to assist in this dismemberment to the utmost of
their ability. They were already familiar with Franklin; his name was a
household word in France; his brilliant discovery of the nature of
lightning appealed strongly to every imagination; “Poor Richard” had
been translated for them, and its shrewd economy and homely wisdom had
been their delight for years. Its author was the synonyme and
personification of liberty,--that liberty which they were just beginning
to rave about, for their own revolution was not twenty years away.

It interested them all the more that the man who represented all this
for them, and whose name seemed to be really a French one, came from the
horrible wilderness of America, the home of interminable dark forests,
filled with savage beasts and still more savage men.

France at that time was the gay, pleasure- and sensation-loving France
which had just been living under the reign of Louis XIV. Sated with
luxury and magnificence, with much intelligence and culture even among
the middle classes, there was no novelty that pleased Frenchmen more
than something which seemed to be close to nature; and when they
discovered that this exceedingly natural man from the woods had also the
severe and serene philosophy of Cato, Phocion, Socrates, and the other
sages of antiquity, combined with a conversation full of wit, point, and
raillery like their own, it is not surprising that they made a perpetual
joy and feast over him. It was so delightful for a lady to pay him a
pretty compliment about having drawn down the fire from heaven, and have
him instantly reply in some most apt phrase of an old man’s gallantry;
and then he never failed; there seemed to be no end to his resources.

[Illustration: FRANKLIN CANNOT DIE

(From a French engraving)]

Amidst these brilliant surroundings he wore for a time that shocking old
fur cap which appears in one of his portraits; and although his
biographers earnestly protest that he was incapable of such affectation,
there is every reason to believe that he found that it intensified
the character the French people had already formed of him. Several
writers of the time speak of his very rustic dress, his firm but free
and direct manner which seemed to be the simplicity of a past age. But
if he was willing to encourage their laudation by a little clever
acting, he never carried it too far; and there is no evidence that his
head was ever turned by all this extravagant worship. He was altogether
too shrewd to make such a fatal mistake. He knew the meaning and real
value of it, and nursed it so carefully that he kept it living and fresh
for nine years.

So he went to live in Paris, while the people began to make portraits,
medals, and busts of him, until there were some two hundred different
kinds to be set in rings, watches, snuff-boxes, bracelets,
looking-glasses, and other articles. Within a few days after his arrival
it was the fashion for every one to have a picture of him on their
mantel-piece. He selected for his residence the little village of Passy,
about two miles from the heart of Paris, and not too far from the court
at Versailles. There for nine years his famous letters were dated, and
Franklin at Passy, with his friends, their gardens and their wit, was a
subject of interest and delight to a whole generation of the civilized
world.

M. Ray de Chaumont had there a large establishment called the Hôtel de
Valentinois. In part of it he lived himself, and, to show his devotion
to the cause of America, he insisted that Franklin should occupy the
rest of it as his home and for the business of the embassy free of rent.
This arrangement Franklin accepted in his easy way, and nothing more
was thought of it until precise John Adams arrived from Massachusetts
and was greatly shocked to find an envoy of the United States living in
a Frenchman’s house without paying board.

Pleasantly situated, with charming neighbors who never wearied of him,
enjoying the visits and improving conversation of the great men of the
learned and scientific worlds, caressed at court, exchanging repartees
and flirtations with clever women, oppressed at times with terrible
anxiety for his country, but slowly winning success, and dining out six
nights of nearly every week when he was not disabled by the gout, the
old Philadelphia printer cannot be said to have fallen upon very evil
days.

His position was just the reverse of what it had been in England, where
his task had been almost an impossible one. In France everything was in
his favor. There were no Wedderburns or Tory ministers, no powerful
political party opposed to his purposes, and no liberal party with which
he might be tempted to take sides. The whole nation--king, nobles, and
people--was with him. He had only to suggest what was wanted; and,
indeed, a great deal was done without even his suggestion.

This condition of affairs precluded the possibility of his accomplishing
any great feat in diplomacy. The tide being all in his favor, he had
only to take advantage of it and abstain from anything that would check
its flow. Instead of the aggressive course he had seen fit to follow in
England, he must avoid everything which in the least resembled
aggression. He must be complaisant, popular, and encourage the
universal feeling instead of opposing it, and this part he certainly
played to perfection.

He was by no means the sole representative of his country in France, and
considerable work had been accomplished before he arrived. In fact, the
French were ready to do the work themselves without waiting for a
representative. When Franklin was leaving London in 1775 the French
ambassador called upon him and gave him to understand in no doubtful
terms that France would be on the side of the colonies.

It is a mistake to suppose, as has sometimes been done, that some one
person suggested to the French government, or that Franklin himself
suggested or urged, the idea of weakening England by assisting America.
It was a policy the wisdom of which was obvious to every one. As early
as the time of the Stamp Act, Louis XV. sent De Kalb to America to watch
the progress of the rebellion, and to foment it. The English themselves
foresaw and dreaded a French alliance with the colonies. Lord Howe
referred to it in his last interview with Franklin; Beaumarchais argued
about it in long letters to the king; it was favored by the Count
d’Artois, the Duke of Orléans, and the Count de Broglie, not to mention
young Lafayette; and the colonists themselves thought of it as soon as
they thought of resistance. The French king, Louis XVI., who, as an
absolute monarch, disliked rebellion, hesitated for a time; but he was
won over by Vergennes and Beaumarchais.

France had just come out of a long war with England in which she had
lost Canada and valuable possessions in the East and West Indies.
England held the port of Dunkirk, on French soil, and searched French
ships whenever she pleased. France was humiliated and full of
resentment. She had failed to conquer the English colonies; but it would
be almost as good and some slight revenge if she deprived England of
them by helping them to secure their own independence. It would cripple
English commerce, which was rapidly driving that of France from the
ocean. England had in 1768 helped the Corsican rebels against France,
and that was a good precedent for France helping the American rebels
against England.

In the autumn of 1775 the Secret Committee of Congress had sent Thomas
Story to London, Holland, and France to consult with persons friendly to
the colonies. He was also to deliver a letter to Arthur Lee, who had
taken Franklin’s place as agent of Massachusetts in London, and this
letter instructed Lee to learn the disposition of foreign powers. A
similar letter was to be delivered to Mr. Dumas in Holland, and soon
after Story’s departure M. Penet, a French merchant of Nantes, was sent
to France to buy ammunition, arms, and clothing.

A few months afterwards, in the beginning of 1776, the committee sent to
Paris Silas Deane, of Connecticut, who had served in the Congress. He
was more of a diplomatic representative than any of the others, and was
instructed to procure, if possible, an audience with Vergennes, the
French Minister of Foreign Affairs, suggest the establishment of
friendly relations, the need of arms and ammunition, and finally lead up
to the question whether, if the colonies declared their independence,
they might look upon France as an ally.

Meantime that strange character, Beaumarchais, the author of “The Barber
of Seville” and “The Marriage of Figaro,” and still a distinguished
light of French literature, fired by the general enthusiasm for the
Americans, constituted himself their agent and ambassador, and was by no
means an unimportant one. He was the son of a respectable watch-maker,
and when a mere youth had distinguished himself by the invention of an
improvement in escapements, which was stolen by another watch-maker, who
announced it as his own. Beaumarchais appealed to the Academy of
Sciences in a most cleverly written petition, and it decided in his
favor. Great attention had been drawn to him by the contest; he appeared
at court, and was soon making wonderful little watches for the king and
queen; he became a favorite, the familiar friend of the king’s
daughters, and his career as an adventurer, courtier, and speculator
began. A most wonderful genius, typical in many ways of his century, few
men have ever lived who could play so many parts, and his excellent
biographer, Loménie, has summed up the occupations in which he excelled:

    “Watch-maker, musician, song writer, dramatist, comic writer,
    man of fashion, courtier, man of business, financier,
    manufacturer, publisher, ship-owner, contractor, secret agent,
    negotiator, pamphleteer, orator on certain occasions, a peaceful
    man by taste, and yet always at law, engaging, like Figaro, in
    every occupation, Beaumarchais was concerned in most of the
    events, great or small, which preceded the Revolution.”

He traded all over the world, and made three or four fortunes and lost
them; he had at times forty vessels of his own on the ocean, and his
private man-of-war assisted the French navy at the battle of Grenada. In
fact, he was like his great contemporary, Voltaire, who, besides being a
dramatist, a philosopher, a man of letters, and a reformer, was one of
the ablest business men of France, a ship-owner, contractor, and
millionaire.

The resemblance of Franklin to these two men is striking. He showed the
same versatility of talents, though perhaps in less degree. He had the
same strange ability to excel at the same time in both literary and
practical affairs, he had very much the same opinion on religion, and
his morals, like Voltaire’s, were somewhat irregular. When we connect
with this his wonderful reputation in France, the adoration of the
people, and the strange way in which during his residence in Paris he
became part of the French nation, we are almost led to believe that
through some hidden process the causes which produced Franklin must have
been largely of French origin. He is, indeed, more French than English,
and seems to belong with Beaumarchais and Voltaire rather than with
Chatham, Burke, or Priestley.

But to return to Beaumarchais and the Revolution. He was carried away by
the importance of the rebellion in America, and devoted his whole soul
to bringing France to the assistance of the colonies. He argued with
the court and the king, visited London repeatedly in the secret service
of his government, and became more than ever convinced of the weakness
of Great Britain.

The plan which the French ministry now adopted was to aid the colonies
in secret and avoid for the present an open breach with England. Arms
were to be sent to one of the French West India islands, where the
governor would find means of delivering them to the Americans. Soon,
however, this method was changed as too dangerous, and in place of it
Beaumarchais established in Paris a business house, which he personally
conducted under the name of Roderique Hortalez & Company. He did this at
the request of the government, and his biographer, De Loménie, has given
us a statement of the arrangement in language which he assumes Vergennes
must have used in giving instructions to Beaumarchais:

    “The operation must essentially in the eyes of the English
    government, and even in the eyes of the Americans, have the
    appearance of an individual speculation, to which the French
    ministers are strangers. That it may be so in appearance, it
    must also be so, to a certain point, in reality. We will give a
    million secretly, we will try to induce the court of Spain to
    unite with us in this affair, and supply you on its side with an
    equal sum; with these two millions and the co-operation of
    individuals who will be willing to take part in your enterprise
    you will be able to found a large house of commerce, and at your
    own risk can supply America with arms, ammunition, articles of
    equipment, and all other articles necessary for keeping up the
    war. Our arsenals will give you arms and ammunition, but you
    shall replace them or shall pay for them. You shall ask for no
    money from the Americans, as they have none; but you shall ask
    them for returns in products of their soil, and we will help you
    to get rid of them in this country, while you shall grant them,
    on your side, every facility possible. In a word, the
    operation, after being secretly supported by us at the
    commencement, must afterwards feed and support itself; but, on
    the other side, as we reserve to ourselves the right of favoring
    or discouraging it, according to the requirements of our policy,
    you shall render us an account of your profits and your losses,
    and we will judge whether we are to accord you fresh assistance,
    or give you an acquittal for the sums previously granted.” (De
    Loménie’s Beaumarchais, p. 273.)

It was in June, 1776, that Beaumarchais started his extraordinary
enterprise in the Rue Vieille du Temple, in a large building called the
Hôtel de Hollande, which had formerly been used as the residence of the
Dutch ambassador. The million francs was paid to him by the French
government, another million by Spain in September, and still another
million by France in the following year. So with the greatest
hopefulness and delight he began shipping uniforms, arms, ammunition,
and all sorts of supplies to America. He had at times great difficulty
in getting his laden ships out of port. The French government was
perfectly willing that they should go, and always affected to know
nothing about them. But Lord Stormont, the British ambassador, would
often discover their destination and protest in most vigorous and
threatening language. Then the French ministry would appear greatly
surprised and stop the ships. This process was repeated during two
years,--a curious triangular, half-masked contest between Beaumarchais,
Lord Stormont, and the ministry.

    “If government caused my vessels to be unloaded in one port, I
    sent them secretly to reload at a distance in the roads. Were
    they stopped under their proper names, I changed them
    immediately, or made pretended sales, and put them anew under
    fictitious commissions. Were obligations in writing exacted from
    my captains to go nowhere but to the West India Islands,
    powerful gratifications on my part made them yield again to my
    wishes. Were they sent to prison on their return for
    disobedience, I then doubled their gratifications to keep their
    zeal from cooling, and consoled them with gold for the rigor of
    our government.”

In this way he sent to the colonies within a year eight vessels with
supplies worth six million francs. Sometimes, in spite of all efforts,
one of his vessels with a valuable cargo was obliged to sail direct to
the West Indies, and could go nowhere else. In one instance of this sort
he wrote to his agent Francy, in America, to have several American
privateers sent to the West Indies to seize the vessel.

    “My captain will protest violently, and will draw up a written
    statement threatening to make his complaint to the Congress. The
    vessel will be taken where you are. The Congress will loudly
    disavow the action of the brutal privateer, and will set the
    vessel at liberty with polite apologies to the French flag;
    during this time you will land the cargo, fill the ship with
    tobacco, and send it back to me as quickly as possible, with all
    you may happen to have ready to accompany it.”

Imagination is sometimes a very valuable quality in practical affairs,
and this neat description by the man of letters was actually carried out
in every detail and with complete success by his agent in America. He
was certainly a valuable ambassador of the colonies, this wonderful
Beaumarchais; but he suffered severely for his devotion. Under his
agreement with his government, the government’s outlay was to be paid
back gradually by American produce; but Congress would not send the
produce, or sent it so slowly that Beaumarchais was threatened with
ruin, and suffered the torturing anxiety which comes with the conviction
that those for whom you are making the greatest sacrifices are
indifferent and incapable of gratitude.

It was in vain that he appealed to Congress; for Arthur Lee was
continually informing that body that he was a fraud and his claims
groundless, because the French government intended that all the supplies
sent through Hortalez & Co. should be a free gift to the revolted
colonies. Lee may have sincerely believed this; but it was very
unfortunate, because more than two years elapsed before Congress became
convinced that the supplies were not entirely a present, and voted
Beaumarchais its thanks and some of the money he claimed. A large part
of his claims were never paid. For fifty years there was a controversy
about “the lost million,” and for its romantic history the reader is
referred to De Loménie, Durand’s “New Material for the History of the
American Revolution,” and Dr. Stillé’s “Beaumarchais and the Lost
Million.”

But he was not the only person who suffered. The truth is that the whole
arrangement made by Congress for conducting the business in France was
ridiculously inefficient, not to say cruel and inhuman. That we got most
important aid from France was due to the eagerness and efforts of the
French themselves, and not to anything done by Congress.

Franklin and his two fellow-commissioners, Silas Deane and Arthur Lee,
had equal powers. They had to conduct a large and complicated business
involving the expenditure of millions of dollars without knowing exactly
where the millions were to come from, and with no regular system of
accounts or means of auditing and investigating; their arrangements had
to be largely kept secret; they expended money in lump sums without
always knowing what use was made of it; they were obliged to rely on the
assistance of all sorts of people,--naval agents, commercial agents, and
others for whose occupation there was no exact name; and they had no
previous experience or precedents to guide them. On their arrival at
Paris, the three commissioners found a fourth person, Beaumarchais, well
advanced in his work, and accomplishing in a practical way rather more
than any of them could hope to do. Moreover, Beaumarchais’s arrangement
was necessarily so secret that though they knew in a general way, as did
Lord Stormont and all Paris, what he was doing, yet only one of them,
Deane, was ever fully admitted into the secret, and it is probable that
the other two died without having fully grasped the real nature and
conditions of his service.

That three joint commissioners of equal powers should conduct such an
enormous business of expenditure and credit for a series of years
without becoming entangled in the most terrible suspicions and bitter
quarrels was in the nature of things impossible. The result was that the
history of their horrible disputes and accusations against one another
is more voluminous than the history of their services. Deane, who did
more actual work than any one except Beaumarchais, was thoroughly and
irretrievably ruined. Arthur Lee, who accomplished very little besides
manufacturing suspicions and charges, has left behind him a reputation
for malevolence which no one will envy; Beaumarchais suffered tortures
which he considered almost equivalent to ruin, and his reputation was
not entirely rescued until nearly half a century after his death; and
Franklin came nearer than ever before in his life to sinking his great
fame in an infamy of corruption, for the attacks made upon him by Arthur
Lee were a hundred times worse than those of Wedderburn.

It was a terrible ordeal for the four men,--those two years before
France made an open alliance with the colonies,--and I will add a few
other circumstances which contributed variety to their situation. Ralph
Izard, of South Carolina, a very passionate man, was appointed by the
wise Congress an envoy to the Grand Duke of Tuscany. He never went to
Tuscany for the simple reason that the duke could not receive him
without becoming embroiled with Great Britain; so he was obliged to
remain in Paris, where he assisted Lee in villifying Deane, Franklin,
and Beaumarchais, and his letters home were full of attacks on their
characters.

He was not a member of the commission which had charge of French
affairs, and yet, in the loose way in which all the foreign business of
the colonies was being managed, it was perhaps natural that, as an
energetic and able man and an American, he should wish to be consulted
occasionally by Franklin and Deane. In a certain way he was directly
connected with them, for he had to obtain money from them for some of
his expenses incurred in attempting to go to Tuscany, and on this
subject he quarrelled with Franklin, who thought that he had used too
much. He was also obliged to apply to Franklin for certain papers to
enable him to make a commercial treaty with Tuscany, and these, he said,
Franklin had delayed supplying. He complained further of Franklin’s
neglect to answer his letters and obstructing his means of sending
information to America.

Franklin afterwards admitted that he might have saved himself from
Izard’s enmity by showing him a little attention; his letters to both
Izard and Lee were very stinging; in fact, they were the severest that
he ever wrote; and Izard’s charge that he delayed answering letters was
probably true, for we know from other sources that he was never orderly
in business matters. At any rate, the result of his neglect of Izard was
that that gentleman’s hatred for him steadily increased to the end of
his life, and years after Izard had left Paris he is described as unable
to contain himself at the mention of Franklin’s name, bursting out into
passionate denunciation of him like the virtuous old ladies we are told
of in Philadelphia.

Then there was William Lee, brother of Arthur Lee, appointed envoy to
Berlin and Vienna, which places he could not reach for the same reason
that prevented Izard from going to Tuscany. So he also stayed in Paris,
assisted his brother Arthur, became a commercial agent, and had no love
for either Franklin or Deane. There was also Dr. Edward Bancroft, who
had no regular appointment, but flitted back and forth between London
and Paris. He was intimate with Franklin, assisted Deane, knew the
secrets of the American business in Paris, which knowledge Lee tells us
he used for the purpose of speculating in London, and Bancroft the
historian says that he was really a British spy. Thomas Morris, a
younger brother of Robert Morris, was a commercial agent at Nantes,
wrecked himself with drink, and started what came near being a serious
dispute between Robert Morris and Franklin; and Franklin himself had his
own nephew, Jonathan Williams, employed as naval agent, which gave Lee a
magnificent opportunity to charge that the nephew was in league with the
uncle and with Deane to steal the public money and share with them the
proceeds of the sale of prizes.

It is impossible to go fully into all these details; but we are obliged
to say, in order to make the situation plain, that Deane, being taken
into the full confidence of Beaumarchais, conducted with him an immense
amount of business through the firm of Hortalez & Co. On several
occasions Franklin testified in the warmest manner to Deane’s efficiency
and usefulness, and this testimony is the stronger because Franklin was
never taken into the confidence of Beaumarchais, had no intercourse with
him, and might be supposed to be piqued, as Lee was, by this neglect.
But the greatest secrecy was necessary, and Deane could not reveal his
exact relationship with the French contractor and dramatist. So letter
after letter was received by Congress from Lee, describing what dreadful
fraud and corruption the wicked pair, Deane and Beaumarchais, were
guilty of every day. Deane, he said, was making a fortune for himself by
his relations with Beaumarchais, and was speculating in London. Deane
also urged that Beaumarchais should be paid for the supplies, which were
not, he said, a present from the king, and this Lee, of course, thought
was another evidence of his villany.

Some of Lee’s accusations are on their face rather far-fetched. On the
charge, however, that Deane and Franklin’s nephew, Jonathan Williams,
were speculating on their own account in the sale of prizes, he quotes a
letter from Williams to Deane which is rather strong:

    “I have been on board the prize brig. Mr. Ross tells me he has
    written to you on the subject and the matter rests whether
    according to his letter you will undertake or not; if we take
    her on private account she must be passed but 13,000 livres.”

This, it must be confessed, looked very suspicious, for Williams was in
charge of the prizes, and by this letter he seemed prepared to act as
both seller and purchaser and to share with Deane.

The charge that Deane had assumed to himself the whole management of
affairs and ignored Lee was undoubtedly true, and no one has ever denied
it. Franklin also ignored him, for he was an unbearable man with whom no
one could live at peace.

Lee kept on with his accusations, declaring that Deane’s accounts were
in confusion. A packet of despatches sent to Congress was found on its
arrival to contain nothing but blank paper. It had evidently been opened
and robbed. Lee promptly insinuated that Deane must have been the thief,
and that Franklin probably assisted.

In a letter to Samuel Adams, Lee said,--

    “It is impossible to describe to you to what a degree this kind
    of intrigue has disgraced, confounded, and injured our affairs
    here. The observation of this at head-quarters has encouraged
    and produced through the whole a spirit of neglect, abuse,
    plunder, and intrigue in the public business which it has been
    impossible for me to prevent or correct.”

So the evidence, or rather suspicions, piled up against Deane, and he
was ordered home. Supposing that Congress wanted him merely for
information about the state of France, he returned after the treaty of
alliance was signed, coming over, as he thought, in triumph with Admiral
D’Estaing and the fleet that was to assist the Americans.

He expected to be welcomed with gratitude, but Congress would not notice
him; and when at last he was allowed to tell his story, the members of
that body did not believe a word of it. He made public statements in the
newspapers, fought Lee with paper and ink, and the curious may still
read his and Lee’s recriminations, calling one another traitors, and
become more confused than ever over the controversy. His arguments only
served to injure his case. He made the mistake of attacking Lee instead
of merely defending himself, and he talked so openly about our affairs
in France, revealing, among other things, the dissensions among the
members of the commission, that he was generally regarded as having
injured our standing among the governments of Europe.

He struggled with Congress, and returned to Paris to have his accounts
audited; but it was all useless; he was ruined; and, in despair and fury
at the injustice done him, he went over to the British, like Arnold, and
died in poverty and obscurity.

In America both he and Beaumarchais seem to have been considered rascals
until far into the next century, when the publication of Beaumarchais’s
life and the discovery of some papers by a member of the Connecticut
Historical Society put a different face upon their history. Congress
voted Deane’s heirs thirty-eight thousand dollars as a recompense for
the claims which the Continental Congress had refused to pay their
ancestor. Indeed, the poverty in which Deane died was not consistent
with Lee’s story that he had been making millions by his arrangement
with Beaumarchais. Franklin always stood by him, and publicly declared
that in all his dealings with him he had never had any occasion to
suspect that he lacked integrity.

Lee was a Virginian, a member of the famous family of that name, and a
younger brother of Richard Henry Lee, who was a member of the
Continental Congress. Though born in Virginia, he was educated in
England at Eton and also at Edinburgh, where he took the degree of
doctor of medicine. The easy-going methods by which Franklin and Deane
handled millions of dollars, sold hundreds of prizes brought in by Paul
Jones and other American captains, and shipped cargoes of arms,
ammunition, and clothing to America were extremely shocking to him. Or
perhaps he was extremely shocked because he was not allowed a hand in
it. But it was necessary to be prompt in giving assistance to the
revolted colonies, and Franklin and Deane pushed the business along as
best they could.

If Congress had made a less stupid arrangement the embassy might have
been organized on a business-like system in which everything would move
by distinct, definite orders, everybody’s sphere be defined, with a
regular method of accounts in which every item should have its voucher.
But, as Franklin himself confessed, he never could learn to be orderly;
and now, when he was past seventy, infirm, often laid up with violent
attacks of the gout, with a huge literary and philosophic reputation to
support, tormented by Lee and Izard, the whole French nation insane with
admiration for him, and dining out almost every day, it was difficult
for him to do otherwise than as he did.

Although the others had equal power with him, he was necessarily the
head of the embassy, for his reputation was so great in France that
everything gravitated towards him. Most people scarcely knew that there
were two other commissioners, and the little they knew of Lee they did
not like. Lee was absent part of the time on journeys to Spain, Berlin,
and Vienna, and as Deane had started the business of sending supplies
before either Franklin or Lee arrived, the conduct of affairs naturally
drifted away from Lee. It afforded a good excuse for ignoring him. He
was insanely suspicious, and charged John Jay, Reed, Duane, and other
prominent Americans with treason, apparently without the slightest
foundation.

Finding himself ignored and in an awkward and useless position, he
should have resigned, giving his reasons. But he chose to stay and send
private letters to members of Congress attacking the characters of his
fellow-commissioners and intriguing to have himself appointed the sole
envoy to France. Among his letters are to be found three on this
subject, two to his brother in Congress and one to Samuel Adams.

    “There is but one way of redressing this and remedying the
    public evil; that is the plan I before sent you of appointing
    the Dr. _honoris causa_ to Vienna, Mr. Deane to Holland, Mr.
    Jennings to Madrid, and leaving me here.” (Life of Arthur Lee,
    vol. ii. p. 127.)

His attack on Franklin and his nephew, Jonathan Williams, was a very
serious one, and was published in a pamphlet, entitled “Observations on
Certain Commercial Transactions in France Laid Before Congress.”
Williams was one of Franklin’s Boston nephews who turned up in Paris
poor and without employment. Franklin was always taking care of his
relatives with government positions, and he gave this one the position
of naval agent at Nantes. He had charge of the purchase of supplies for
American men-of-war, sold the prizes that were brought in, and also
bought and shipped arms and ammunition. It was a large business
involving the handling of enormous sums of money, and there is no doubt
that there were opportunities in it for making a fortune. Under the
modern spoils system it would be regarded as a precious plum which a
political party would be justified in making almost any sacrifices to
secure.

Franklin and Deane seem to have let Williams manage this department
pretty much as he pleased, and, as has been already shown, Lee had some
ground for suspecting that Deane was privately interested with Williams
in the sale of prizes. Williams certainly expended large sums on Deane’s
orders alone, and he was continually calling for more money from the
commissioners’ bankers. Lee demanded that there should be no more orders
signed by Deane alone, and that Williams should send in his accounts;
and, notwithstanding Lee’s naturally captious and suspicious
disposition, he was perfectly right in this.

Deane and Williams kept demanding more money, and Lee asked Franklin to
stop it, which he not only refused to do, but wrote a letter to his
nephew justifying him in everything:

    “PASSY, Dec. 22, 1777.

    “DEAR NEPHEW:

    “I received yours of the 16th and am concerned as well as you at
    the difference between Messrs. Deane and Lee, but cannot help
    it. You need, however, be under no concern as to your orders
    being only from Mr. Deane. As you have always acted uprightly
    and ably for the public service, you would be justified if you
    had no orders at all. But as he generally consulted with me and
    had my approbation in the orders he gave, and I know they were
    for the best and aimed at the public good, I hereby certify you
    that I approve and join in those you received from him and
    desire you to proceed in the execution of the same.”

Williams at last sent in his accounts, and Lee went over them, marking
some items “manifestly unjust,” others “plainly exorbitant,” and others
“altogether unsatisfactory for want of names, dates, or receipts.” He
refused to approve the accounts, sent them to Congress, and asked
Williams to produce his vouchers. The vouchers, Lee tells us, were never
produced. He asked for them again and again, but there was always some
excuse, and he charges that Williams had in his possession a hundred
thousand livres more than was accounted for. Finally, John Adams, who
had come out to supersede Deane, joined with Franklin in giving Williams
an order on the bankers for the balance claimed by him; but the order
expressly stated that it was not to be understood as an approval of his
accounts, for which he must be responsible to Congress. Franklin
appointed certain persons to audit the accounts, but at a time, Lee
says, when they were on the point of sailing for America, and therefore
could not act. Adams seems to have been convinced that Williams was not
all that could be desired, and he and Franklin soon dismissed him from
his office, again reminding him that this was not to be considered as an
approval of his accounts.

Lee’s charge against Franklin was that he had connived at the acts of
his nephew and done everything possible to shield him and enable him to
get possession of the balance of money he claimed. Readers must draw
their own conclusions, for the matter was never officially investigated.
It would have been unwise for Congress to inaugurate a public scandal
at a time when the country was struggling for existence, needed all the
moral and financial support it could obtain from Europe, and as yet saw
no end to the Revolution.

One more point must be noticed. Lee commented with much sarcasm on the
sudden prosperity of Jonathan Williams. He had been clerk to a
sugar-baker in England, and was supposed to be without means; but as
naval agent he soon began to call himself a merchant, and when waiting
on the commissioners charged five Louis d’ors a day for the loss of his
time. Lee, according to some of his letters, had been trying for some
time to have a certain John Lloyd, of South Carolina, appointed in the
place of Williams; and I shall quote part of one of these letters, which
shows why Lee wanted Williams’s place for one of his friends.

    “My brother and myself have conceived that as the public
    allowance to the commercial agent is very liberal and the
    situation necessarily must recommend considerable business, the
    person appointed might with the most fair and conscientious
    discharge of his duty to the public make his own fortune.” (Life
    of Arthur Lee, vol. ii. p. 144.)

He did not succeed in having Lloyd appointed, but he and his brother
William secured the position for a friend of theirs called
Schweighauser, on the dismissal of Williams, and this Schweighauser
appointed a nephew of the Lees as one of his assistants.

It should be said that although Lee and Izard were constantly hinting at
evil practices by Franklin, and sometimes directly stigmatized him as
the “father of corruption” and deeply involved in the most disreputable
schemes, they never produced any proof that he had enriched himself or
was directly engaged in anything discreditable. There seems to be no
doubt that certain people were making money under cover of the loose way
in which affairs were managed. Franklin must have known of this, as well
as Adams and the other commissioners, but neither he nor they were
enriched by it. Lee’s pamphlet goes no farther than to say that Franklin
had shielded his nephew. John Adams, it may be observed, assisted in
this shielding, if it can with justice be so called, for he signed with
Franklin the order allowing the money to be paid to Williams on
condition that it should not be considered an approval of his accounts.
Adams afterwards described very concisely the situation, and how he,
with the others, was compelled to connive at peculations under the
absurd system.

    “I knew it to be impossible to give any kind of satisfaction to
    our constituents, that is to Congress, or their constituents,
    while we consented or connived at such irregular transactions,
    such arbitrary proceedings, and such contemptible peculations as
    had been practised in Mr. Deane’s time, not only while he was in
    France, alone, without any public character, but even while he
    was associated with Dr. Franklin and Mr. Arthur Lee in a real
    commission; and which were continued in some degree while I was
    combined in the commission with Franklin and Lee, in spite of
    all the opposition and remonstrance that Lee and I could make.”
    (Adams’s Works, vol. i. p. 657.)

Franklin said and wrote very little on the subject. He sent no letters
to members of Congress undermining the characters of his
fellow-commissioners; the few statements that he made were exceedingly
mild and temperate, and were usually to the effect that there were
differences and disputes which he regretted. He usually invited his
fellow-commissioners to dine with him every Sunday, and on these
occasions they appeared very friendly, though at heart cherishing
vindictive feelings towards one another.

In truth, Lee and Izard wrote so much and so violently that they dug the
graves of their own reputations. It was Dr. Johnson who said that no man
was ever written down except by himself, and Franklin once shrewdly
remarked, “spots of dirt thrown upon my character I suffered while fresh
to remain; I did not choose to spread by endeavoring to remove them, but
relied on the vulgar adage that they would all rub off when they were
dry.”

General public opinion was then and has remained in favor of Franklin,
and the prominent men of France were, without exception, on his side.
They all in the end detested Lee, whose conduct showed a vindictive
disposition, and who evidently had purposes of his own to serve. One of
his pet suspicions was that Paul Jones was a rascal in league with the
other rascal, Franklin, and he protests in a letter to a member of
Congress against Jones being “kept upon a cruising job of Chaumont and
Dr. Franklin.” Jones, he predicted, would not return from this cruise,
but would go over to the enemy.

Franklin’s service in France may be divided into four periods. First,
from his arrival in December, 1776, until February, 1778, during which
two years he and Deane conducted the business as best they could and
quarrelled with Lee and Izard. Second, the year from February, 1778,
until February, 1779, during which John Adams was in Paris in the place
of Silas Deane. Third, some of the remaining months of 1779, during
which, although Franklin was sole plenipotentiary to France, Lee, Izard,
and others still retained their appointments to other countries, and
remained in Paris, continuing the quarrels more viciously than ever.
They were recalled towards the close of 1779, and from that time dates
the fourth period, during which Franklin enjoyed the sole control,
unassailed by the swarm of hornets which had made his life a burden.

I have already described most of the first period as briefly as
possible; its full treatment would require a volume. All that remains is
to describe the act with which it closed,--the signing of the treaty of
alliance. This treaty, which secured the success of our Revolution by
giving us the assistance of a French army and fleet, was the result of
unforeseen events, and was not obtained by the labors of Franklin or
those of any of the commissioners.

France had been anxious to ally herself with us during the first two
years of the Revolution, but dared not, because there was apparently no
prospect that we would be successful. In fact, all the indications
pointed to failure. Washington was everywhere defeated; had been driven
from New York, lost the battle of the Brandywine, lost Philadelphia, and
then the news arrived in Europe that Burgoyne was moving from Canada
down the Hudson, and would be joined by Howe from New York. This would
cut the colonies in half; separate New England, the home of the
Revolution, from the Middle and Southern Colonies and result in our
total subjugation.

The situation of the commissioners in Paris was dismal enough at this
time. They had been successful at first, with the aid of Beaumarchais;
but now Beaumarchais was in despair at the ingratitude of Congress and
its failure to pay him; no more prizes were coming in, for the British
fleets had combined against the American war vessels and driven them
from the ocean; the commissioners had spent all their money, and
Franklin proposed that they should sell what clothing and arms they had
been unable to ship and pay their debts as far as possible with the
proceeds. At any moment they might hear that they had neither country
nor flag, that the Revolution had collapsed, and that they must spend
the rest of their lives in France as pensioners on the royal bounty,
daring to go neither to America nor to England, where they would be hung
as ringleaders of the rebels.

In their dire extremity they forgot their animosities, and one is
reminded of those pictures of the most irreconcilable wild
animals--foxes and hares, or wolves and wild-cats--seeking refuge
together from a flood on a floating log. In public they kept a bold
front, in spite of the sneers of the English residents in Paris and the
shrugging shoulders of the Frenchmen.

“Well, doctor,” said an Englishman to Franklin, “Howe has taken
Philadelphia.”

“I beg your pardon, sir; Philadelphia has taken Howe.”

But in his heart Franklin was bowed down with anxiety and apprehension.
We all know what happened. Burgoyne and Howe failed to connect, and
Burgoyne surrendered his army to the American general, Gates. That was
the turning-point of the Revolution, and there was now no doubt in
France of the final issue. A young man, Jonathan Austin, of
Massachusetts, was sent on a swift ship to carry the news to Paris. The
day his carriage rolled into the court-yard of Chaumont’s house at
Passy, Franklin, Deane, both the Lees, Izard, Beaumarchais,--in fact,
all the snarling and quarrelling agents,--were there, debating, no
doubt, where they would drag out the remains of their miserable lives.

They all rushed out to see Austin, and Franklin addressed to him one sad
question which they all wanted answered, whether Philadelphia really was
taken.

“Yes, sir,” said Austin.

The old philosopher clasped his hands and was stumbling back into the
house.

“But, sir, I have greater news than that. General Burgoyne and his whole
army are prisoners of war.”

Beaumarchais drove his carriage back to Paris so fast that it was
overturned and his arm dislocated. Austin relates that for a long time
afterwards Franklin would often sit musing and dreaming and then break
out, “Oh, Mr. Austin, you brought us glorious news.”

Austin had arrived on December 3, 1777. On the 6th of the same month
the French government requested the commissioners to renew their
proposals for an alliance. Eleven days after that they were told that
the treaty would be made, and within two months,--namely, on February 6,
1778,--after full discussion of all the details, it was signed. This was
certainly very prompt action on the part of France and shows her
eagerness.

On the day that he signed the treaty, Franklin, it is said, wore the
same suit of Manchester velvet in which he had been dressed when
Wedderburn made his attack upon him before the Privy Council in London,
and after the signing it was never worn again. When asked if there had
not been some special meaning attached to the wearing of these clothes
at the signing, he would make no other reply than a smile. It was really
beautiful philosophic vengeance, and adds point to Walpole’s epigram on
the scene before the Council:

    “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.”

There was much discussion among the three envoys over the terms of the
treaty, and their love for one another was not increased. The principal
part of Izard’s bitterness against Franklin is supposed to have begun at
this time. Lee made a point on the question of molasses. In the first
draft of the treaty it was agreed that France should never lay an export
duty on any molasses taken from her West India islands by Americans.
Vergennes objected that this was not fair, as the Americans bound
themselves to no equivalent restriction on their own exports. Franklin
suggested a clause that, in consideration of France agreeing to lay no
export duty on molasses, the United States should agree to lay no export
duty on any article taken by Frenchmen from America, and this was
accepted by Vergennes.

Lee, however, objected that we were binding ourselves on every article
of export, while France bound herself on only one. In this he was
entirely right, and it was not an officious interference, as Franklin’s
biographers have maintained. He pressed his point so hard that it was
finally agreed with the French government that Congress might accept or
reject the whole arrangement on this question, if it saw fit. Congress
supported Lee and rejected it.

The signing of the treaty of course rendered Beaumarchais’s secret work
through Hortalez & Co. of less importance. France was now the open ally
of the United States; the French government need no longer smuggle arms
and clothing into America, but was preparing to send a fleet and an army
to assist the insurgents, as they were still called in Paris. All this
rendered the labors of the embassy lighter and less complicated.

In April, 1778, a few months after the signing of the treaty, John
Adams, after a most dangerous and adventurous voyage across the
Atlantic, arrived to take the place of Silas Deane. He has left us a
very full account of the condition of affairs and his efforts at
reform. Franklin’s biographers have been sorely puzzled to know what to
do with these criticisms; but any one who will take the trouble to read
impartially all that Adams has said, and not merely extracts from it,
will easily be convinced of his fairness. He makes no mistake about Lee;
speaks of him as a man very difficult to get on with, and describes
Izard in the same way. There is not the slightest evidence that these
two men poisoned his mind against Franklin. He does not side with them
entirely; but, on the contrary, in the changes he undertook to make was
sometimes on their side and sometimes against them. He held the scales
very evenly.

Lee wanted all the papers of the embassy brought to his own house, and
Adams wrote him a letter which certainly shows that Adams had not gone
over to the Lee party, and is also an example of the efforts he was
making to improve the situation.

    “I have not asked Dr. Franklin’s opinion concerning your
    proposal of a room in your house for the papers, and an hour to
    meet there, because I know it would be in vain; for I think it
    must appear to him more unequal still. It cannot be expected,
    that two should go to one, when it is as easy again for one to
    go to two; not to mention Dr. Franklin’s age, his rank in the
    country, or his character in the world; nor that nine-tenths of
    the public letters are constantly brought to this house, and
    will ever be carried where Dr. Franklin is. I will venture to
    make a proposition in my turn, in which I am very sincere; it is
    that you would join families with us. There is room enough in
    this house to accommodate us all. You shall take the apartments
    which belong to me at present, and I will content myself with
    the library room and the next to it. Appoint a room for
    business, any that you please, mine or another, a person to keep
    the papers, and certain hours to do business. This arrangement
    will save a large sum of money to the public, and, as it would
    give us a thousand opportunities of conversing together, which
    now we have not, and, by having but one place for our countrymen
    and others to go to, who have occasion to visit us, would
    greatly facilitate the public business. It would remove the
    reproach we lie under, of which I confess myself very much
    ashamed, of not being able to agree together, and would make the
    commission more respectable, if not in itself, yet in the
    estimation of the English, the French, and the American nations;
    and, I am sure, if we judge by the letters we receive, it wants
    to be made more respectable, at least in the eyes of many
    persons of this country.” (Bigelow’s Franklin from His Own
    Writings, vol. ii. p. 424.)

Adams had none of the rancor of Lee and Izard, but he tells us candidly
that he found the public business in great confusion. It had never been
methodically conducted. “There never was before I came a minute book, a
letter book, or an account book; and it is not possible to obtain a
clear idea of our affairs.” Of Deane he says that he “lived expensively,
and seems not to have had much order in his business, public or private;
but he was active, diligent, subtle, and successful, having accomplished
the great purpose of his mission to advantage.”

Adams procured blank books and devoted himself to assorting the papers
of the office at Passy, where Franklin had allowed everything to lie
about in the greatest confusion. He found that too many people had been
making money out of the embassy, and of these Jonathan Williams appears
to have been one. He united with Lee in demanding Williams’s accounts,
and compelled Franklin to join in dismissing him. A man named Ross was
another delinquent who was preying on the embassy, and the arrangement
by which he was allowed to do it is described by Adams as “more
irregular, more inconsistent with the arrangement of Congress and every
way more unjustifiable than even the case of Mr. Williams.”

He gives us many glimpses of Franklin’s life,--his gayety, the bright
stories he told, and his wonderful reputation among the French. An
interesting young lady, Mademoiselle de Passy, was a great favorite with
Franklin, who used to call her his flame and his love. She married a man
whose name translated into English would be “Marquis of Thunder.” The
next time Madame de Chaumont met Franklin, she cried out, “Alas! all the
conductors of Mr. Franklin could not prevent the thunder from falling on
Mademoiselle de Passy.”

Adams was at the Academy of Sciences when Franklin and Voltaire were
present, and a general cry arose among the sensation-loving people that
these two wonderful men should be introduced to each other. They
accordingly bowed and spoke. But this was not enough, and the two
philosophers could not understand what more was wanted. They took each
other by the hand; but still the clamor continued. Finally it was
explained to them that “they must embrace in French fashion.” The two
old men immediately began hugging and kissing each other, which
satisfied the company, and the cry spread through the whole country,
“How beautiful it was to see Solon and Sophocles embrace!”

Some of Adams’s criticisms and estimates of Franklin, though not
satisfactory to his eulogists, are, on the whole, exceedingly just.

    “That he was a great genius, a great wit, a great humorist, a
    great satirist, and a great politician is certain. That he was a
    great philosopher, a great moralist, and a great statesman is
    more questionable.” (Adams’s Works, vol. iii. p. 139.)

This brief statement will bear the test of very close investigation.
Full credit, it will be observed, is given to his qualities as a
humorous and satirical writer, and even as a politician. The word
politician is used very advisedly, for up to that time Franklin had done
nothing that would raise him beyond that class into statesmanship.

He had had a long career in Pennsylvania politics, where his abilities
were confined to one province, and in the attempt to change the colony
into a royal government he had been decidedly in the wrong. While
representing Pennsylvania, Massachusetts, and Georgia in England from
the time of the Stamp Act until the outbreak of the Revolution, he had
accomplished nothing, except that his examination before Parliament had
encouraged the colonists to persist in their opposition; he had got
himself into a very bad scrape about the Hutchinson letters; and his
plan of reconciliation with the mother country had broken down. In
France, the government being already very favorable to the colonies,
there was but little for the embassy to do except to conduct the
business of sending supplies and selling prizes, and in this Deane and
Beaumarchais did most of the work, while Franklin had kept no accounts,
had allowed his papers to get into confusion, was utterly unable to keep
the envoys in harmony, and had not made any effective appeal to
Congress to change the absurd system which permitted the sending to a
foreign country of three commissioners with equal powers. In the last
years of his mission in France he did work which was more valuable; but
it was not until some years afterwards, when he was past eighty and on
the verge of the grave, that he accomplished in the Constitutional
Convention of 1787 the one act of his life which may be called a
brilliant stroke of statesmanship.

His qualities as a moralist have been discussed in a previous chapter
which fully justifies Adams’s assertion. As a philosopher, by which
Adams meant what we now call a man of science, Franklin was
distinguished, but not great. It could not be said that he deserved to
be ranked with Kepler or Newton. His discovery of the nature of
lightning was picturesque and striking, and had given him popular
renown, but it could not put him in the front rank of discoverers.

In a later passage in his Diary Adams attempts to combat the French idea
that Franklin was the American legislator.

    “‘Yes,’ said M. Marbois, ‘he is celebrated as the great
    philosopher and the great legislator of America.’ ‘He is,’ said
    I, ‘a great philosopher, but as a legislator of America he has
    done very little. It is universally believed in France, England,
    and all Europe, that his electric wand has accomplished all this
    revolution. But nothing is more groundless. He has done very
    little. It is believed that he made all the American
    constitutions and their confederation; but he made neither. He
    did not even make the constitution of Pennsylvania, bad as it
    is.’...

[Illustration: AMERICA SET FREE BY FRANKLIN

(From a French engraving)]

    ”I said that Mr. Franklin had great merit as a philosopher. His
    discoveries in electricity were very grand, and he certainly was
    a great genius, and had great merit in our American affairs.
    But he had no title to the ‘legislator of America.’ M. Marbois
    said he had wit and irony; but these were not the faculties of
    statesmen. His Essay upon the true means of bringing a great
    Empire to be a small one was very pretty. I said he had wrote
    many things which had great merit, and infinite wit and
    ingenuity. His Bonhomme Richard was a very ingenious thing,
    which had been so much celebrated in France, gone through so
    many editions, and been recommended by curates and bishops to so
    many parishes and dioceses.

    “M. Marbois asked, ‘Are natural children admitted in America to
    all privileges like children born in wedlock?’... M. Marbois
    said this, no doubt, in allusion to Mr. F.’s natural son, and
    natural son of a natural son. I let myself thus freely into this
    conversation, being led on naturally by the Chevalier and M.
    Marbois on purpose, because I am sure it cannot be my duty, nor
    the interest of my country, that I should conceal any of my
    sentiments of this man, at the same time that I do justice to
    his merits. It would be worse than folly to conceal my opinion
    of his great faults.” (Adams’s Works, vol. iii. p. 220.)

The French always believed that Franklin was the originator of the
Revolution, and that he was a sort of Solon who had prepared laws for
all the revolted colonies, directed their movements, and revised all
their state papers and public documents. It was under the influence of
this notion that they worshipped him as the personification of liberty.
It must have been extremely irritating to Adams and others to find the
French people assuming that the old patriarch in his fur cap had
emancipated in the American woods a rude and strange people who without
him could not have taken care of themselves. But, protest as they might,
they never could persuade the French to give up their ideal, and this
was undoubtedly the foundation of a great deal of the hostility to
Franklin which showed itself in Congress.

In 1811, long after Franklin’s death, Adams wrote a newspaper article
defending himself against some complaints that Franklin had made, of
which I shall have more to say hereafter. It is a most vigorous piece of
writing, and, in spite of some unfounded suspicions which it contains
and the bluster and egotism so characteristic of its author, is by far
the most searching and fairest criticism of Franklin that was ever
written:

    “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 and 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.” (Adams’s Works,
    vol. i. p. 660.)

A large part of this reputation rested, Adams thought, on great talents
and qualities, but the rest was artificial, the result of peculiar
circumstances which had exaggerated the importance of Franklin’s
opinions and actions. The whole tribe of printers and newspaper editors
in Europe and America had become enamoured and proud of him as a member
of their body. Every day in the year they filled the magazines,
journals, pamphlets, and all the gazettes of Europe “with incessant
praise of Monsieur Franklin.” From these gazettes could be collected “a
greater number of panegyrical paragraphs upon ‘_le grand_ Franklin’ than
upon any other man that ever lived.” He had become a member of two of
the most powerful democratic and liberal bodies in Europe, the
Encyclopedists and the Society of Economists, and thus effectually
secured their devotion and praise. All the people of that time who were
rousing discontent in Europe and preparing the way for the French
Revolution counted Franklin as one of themselves. When he took part in
the American Revolution their admiration knew no bounds. He was “the
magician who had excited the ignorant Americans to resistance,” and he
would soon “abolish monarchy, aristocracy, and hierarchy throughout the
world.” But most important of all in building up his reputation was the
lightning-rod.

    “Nothing,” says Adams, “perhaps, that ever occurred upon the
    earth was so well calculated to give any man an extensive and
    universal a celebrity as the discovery of the efficacy of iron
    points and the invention of lightning-rods. The idea was one of
    the most sublime that ever entered a human imagination, that a
    mortal should disarm the clouds of heaven, and almost ‘snatch
    from his hand the sceptre and the rod.’ The ancients would have
    enrolled him with Bacchus and Ceres, Hercules and Minerva. His
    paratonnerres erected their heads in all parts of the world, on
    temples and palaces no less than on cottages of peasants and the
    habitations of ordinary citizens. These visible objects reminded
    all men of the name and character of their inventor; and in the
    course of time have not only tranquillized the minds and
    dissipated the fears of the tender sex and their timorous
    children, but have almost annihilated that panic, terror, and
    superstitious horror which was once almost universal in violent
    storms of thunder and lightning.” (Adams’s Works, vol. 1. p.
    661.)

The Latin motto universally applied to Franklin at this time, _Eripuit
cœlo fulmen sceptrumque tyrannis_, has usually been attributed to
Turgot, the French Minister of Finance; but Adams believed that Sir
William Jones was the author of it. Turgot made an alteration in it. As
usually understood, the last half referred to the American colonies
delivered from the oppression of Great Britain; but as Franklin grew to
be more and more the favorite of that large class of people in Europe
who were opposed to monarchy, and who believed that he would soon be
instrumental in destroying or dethroning all kings and abolishing all
monarchical government, Turgot suggested that the motto should read,
_Eripuit cœlo fulmen; mox septra tyrannis_, which may be freely
translated, “He has torn the lightning from the sky; soon he will tear
their sceptres from the kings.”

At first Adams took the quarrelling lightly, trying to ignore and keep
clear of it; but in a little while he confesses that “the uncandor, the
prejudices, the rage among several persons here make me sick as death.”
After about a month he was so disgusted with the service, so fully
convinced that the public business was being delayed and neglected on
account of the disputes, that he determined to try to effect a change.
He therefore wrote to Samuel Adams, then in Congress, declaring that the
affairs of the embassy were in confusion, prodigious sums of money
expended, large sums yet due, but no account-books or documents; the
commissioners lived expensively, each one at the rate of from three to
six thousand pounds a year; this would necessarily continue as long as
their salaries were not definitely fixed, and it would be impossible to
get an account of the expenditure of the public money. Equally
ridiculous was the arrangement which made the envoys half ambassadors
and half commercial agents. Instead of all this he suggested that
Congress separate the offices of public ministers from those of
commercial agents, recall all the envoys except one, define with
precision the salary he should receive, and see that he got no more.

[Illustration: FRANKLIN TEARS THE LIGHTNING FROM THE SKY AND THE SCEPTRE
FROM THE TYRANTS

(From a French engraving)]

This is what Lee should have done long before. Franklin had indeed
recommended a change in one of his letters, but not with such force as
to cause its adoption. Now that Adams had set the example, they all
wrote letters in the succeeding months begging for reform. The wisdom of
Adams’s plan was so apparent that when the facts were laid before
Congress it was quickly adopted and Franklin made sole plenipotentiary.

But Lee and Izard retained their missions to other countries and
remained in Paris, renewing their discussions and attacks on Franklin
until the subject was again brought before Congress, and it was proposed
to order all of them back to America and send others in their stead.
Franklin had a narrow escape. The large committee which had the question
before it was at one time within a couple of votes of recalling him and
sending Arthur Lee in his place, which, whatever were the failings of
Franklin, would have been a terrible misfortune. The French minister to
the United States, M. Gérard, came to the rescue. He disclosed the
extreme favor with which the French government regarded Franklin and its
detestation of Lee. Franklin’s wonderful reputation in Europe saved him,
for it would have been folly to recall under a cloud the one man whom
our allies took such delight in honoring.




X

PLEASURES AND DIPLOMACY IN FRANCE


Congress not only refused to recall Franklin, but relieved him entirely
of the presence of Lee and Izard, so that the remaining six years of his
service were peaceful and can be very briefly described. The improvement
in the management of the embassy which immediately followed shows what a
serious mistake the previous arrangement had been. Left entirely to his
own devices, and master of the situation, he began the necessary reforms
of his own accord, had complete books of account prepared, and managed
the business without difficulty.

It is curious to read of the diverse functions the old man of
seventy-four had to perform in this infancy of our diplomatic service.
He was a merchant, banker, judge of admiralty, consul, director of the
navy, ambassador to France, and negotiator with England for the exchange
of prisoners and for peace, in addition to attending to any other little
matter, personal or otherwise, which our representatives to other
countries or the individual States of the Union might ask of him. The
crudeness of the situation is revealed when we remember that not only
was Congress obtaining loans of money and supplies of arms in Europe,
but several of the States were doing the same thing, and it was often
rather difficult for Franklin to assist them all without discrimination
or injustice.

Paul Jones and the other captains of our navy who were cruising against
British commerce on that side of the Atlantic made their head-quarters
in French ports, and were necessarily under the direction of Franklin
because the great distance made it impossible to communicate with
Congress without months of delay. That they were lively sailors we may
judge from the exploits of the “Black Prince,” which in three months on
the English coast took thirty-seven prizes, and brought in seventy-five
within a year. Franklin had to act as a court of admiralty in the matter
of prizes and their cargoes, settle disputes between the officers and
men, quiet discontent about their pay by advancing money, decide what
was to be done with mutineers, and see that ships were refitted and
repaired. A couple of quotations from one of his letters to Congress
will give some idea of his duties:

    “In the mean time, I may just mention some particulars of our
    disbursements. Great quantities of clothing, arms, ammunition,
    and naval stores, sent from time to time; payment of bills from
    Mr. Bingham, one hundred thousand livres; Congress bills in
    favor of Haywood & Co., above two hundred thousand; advanced to
    Mr. Ross, about twenty thousand pounds sterling; paid Congress
    drafts in favor of returned officers, ninety-three thousand and
    eighty livres; to our prisoners in England, and after their
    escape to help them home, and to other Americans here in
    distress, a great sum, I cannot at present say how much;
    supplies to Mr. Hodge for fitting out Captain Conyngham, very
    considerable; for the freight of ships to carry over the
    supplies, great sums; to Mr. William Lee and Mr. Izard, five
    thousand five hundred pounds sterling; and for fitting the
    frigates _Raleigh_, _Alfred_, _Boston_, _Providence_,
    _Alliance_, _Ranger_, &c., I imagine not less than sixty or
    seventy thousand livres each, taken one with another; and for
    the maintenance of the English prisoners, I believe, when I get
    in all the accounts, I shall find one hundred thousand livres
    not sufficient, having already paid above sixty-five thousand on
    that article. And now, 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, have for
    a long time been very great indeed.”

       *       *       *       *       *

    “With regard to the fitting out of ships, receiving and
    disposing of cargoes, and purchasing of supplies, I beg leave to
    mention, that, besides my being wholly unacquainted with such
    business, the distance I am from the ports renders my having
    anything to do with it extremely inconvenient. Commercial agents
    have indeed been appointed by Mr. William Lee; but they and the
    captains are continually writing for my opinion or orders, or
    leave to do this or that, by which much time is lost to them,
    and much of mine taken up to little purpose, from my ignorance.
    I see clearly, however, that many of the captains are exorbitant
    in their demands, and in some cases I think those demands are
    too easily complied with by the agents, perhaps because the
    commissions are in proportion to the expense. I wish, therefore,
    the Congress would appoint the consuls they have a right to
    appoint by the treaty, and put into their hands all that sort of
    employment. I have in my desk, I suppose, not less than fifty
    applications from different ports, praying the appointment, and
    offering to serve gratis for the honor of it, and the advantage
    it gives in trade; but I imagine, that, if consuls are
    appointed, they will be of our own people from America, who, if
    they should make fortunes abroad, might return with them to
    their country.”

He was, in fact, deciding questions and assuming responsibilities which
with other nations and afterwards with our own belonged to the home
government. He had great discretionary power, an instance of which may
be given in connection with the subject which was then agitating
European countries, of “free ships, free goods.” He wrote to Congress,
telling that body how the matter stood:

    “Whatever may formerly have been the law of nations, all the
    neutral powers at the instance of Russia seem at present
    disposed to change it, and to enforce the rule that _free ships
    shall make free goods_, except in the case of contraband.
    Denmark, Sweden, and Holland have already acceded to the
    proposition, and Portugal is expected to follow. France and
    Spain, in their answers, have also expressed their approbation
    of it. I have, therefore, instructed our privateers to bring in
    no more neutral ships, as such prizes occasion much litigation,
    and create ill blood.”

He did not know whether Congress would approve of this new rule of law,
but he took his chances. He was not the first person to suggest the
principle of “free ships, free goods,” nor was he a prominent advocate
of it, as has sometimes been implied; for his letter shows that Russia
had suggested this improvement in the rules of international law, and
that other nations were accepting it. He, however, urged on a number of
occasions that war should be confined exclusively to regularly organized
armies and fleets, that privateering should be abolished, that merchant
vessels should be free from capture even by men-of-war, and that
fishermen, farmers, and all who were engaged in supplying the
necessaries of life should be allowed to pursue their avocations
unmolested. The world has not yet caught up with this suggestion.

The great difficulty during the last two or three years of the
Revolution was the want of money. The supplies sent out by Beaumarchais
and Deane in the early part of the struggle merely served to start it.
In the long run expenses increased enormously, the resources of the
country were drained, the paper money depreciated with terrible
rapidity, and we were compelled to continue borrowing from France or
Holland. We borrowed principal and then borrowed more to pay the
interest on the principal, and a large part of this business passed
through Franklin’s hands.

He persuaded the French government to lend, and then to lend again to
pay interest. He was regarded as the source from which all the money was
to come. Congress drew on him, John Jay in Spain drew on him, he had to
pay salaries and the innumerable expenses appertaining to the fitting
out and repairing of ships and the exchange of prisoners. These calls
upon him were made often from a long distance, with a sort of blind
confidence that he would in some way manage to meet them. A captain in
the West Indies would run his ship into a port to be careened, refitted,
and supplied, and coolly draw on him for the expense. It was extremely
dangerous sometimes to refuse to accept a bill presented to him, and, as
he said to Congress, if a single draft for interest on a loan went to
protest there would be “dreadful consequences of ruin to our public
credit both in America and Europe.”

He suffered enough anxiety and strain to have destroyed some men. When
Jay went to Spain in 1780, Congress was so sure he would obtain money
from that monarchy that it drew on him. But as Jay could not get a cent,
he forwarded the drafts to Franklin, who in reply wrote, “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 indisposed
by continual anxiety as to be rendered almost incapable of writing.” He
would have gone under in this storm if he had not persuaded the French
government to come to his rescue.

He was also from time to time receiving all sorts of proposals of peace
from emissaries or agents of the British government; and he had a long
correspondence on this subject with David Hartley, who helped him to
arrange the exchange of prisoners in England. Nearly all these proposals
contained a trap of some kind, as that we should break our alliance with
France and then England would treat with us, or that there should be a
peace without a definite recognition of independence; and some of them
may have been intended to entrap Franklin himself. It was, in any event,
most dangerous and delicate work, for it was corresponding with the
public enemy. Most men in Franklin’s position would have been compelled
to drop it entirely, for fear of becoming involved in some serious
difficulty; for it was suspected, if not actually proved, that persons
connected with our own embassy in France were using their official
knowledge to speculate in stocks in England. But Franklin came through
it all unscathed.

He was much annoyed by numerous applications from people who wished to
serve in the American army. Most of them had proved failures in France
and were burdens on their relations. In the early years of the embassy
many were sent out who gave endless trouble and embarrassment to
Washington and Congress. Out of the whole horde, only about
three--Lafayette, Steuben, and De Kalb--were ever anything more than a
nuisance. But, to avoid giving offence to the French people, Franklin
was often obliged to give these applicants some sort of letter of
recommendation, and he drew up a form which he sometimes used in extreme
cases:

    “The bearer of this, who is going to America, presses me to give
    him a letter of recommendation, though 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 favor, that, on
    further acquaintance, you shall find him to deserve. I have the
    honor to be, &c.”

The old man’s sense of humor carried him through many a difficulty; and
it is hardly necessary to say that the management of all this
multifarious business, the exercise of such large authority and
discretion, and the weight of such responsibility required a nervous
force, patience, tact, knowledge of men and affairs, mental equipoise,
broad, cool judgment, and strength of character which comparatively few
men in America possessed. Indeed, it is difficult to name another who
could have filled the position. John Adams could not have done it. He
would have lost his temper and blazed out at some point, or have
committed some huge indiscretion that would have wrecked everything.
That Lee, Izard, or even Deane could have held the post would be
ridiculous to suppose.

Adams appeared again in Paris in the beginning of the year 1780, having
been sent by Congress to await England’s expected willingness to treat
for peace. He was authorized to receive overtures for a general peace,
and also, if possible, to negotiate a special commercial treaty with
England. He had nothing to do but wait, and was in no way connected with
our embassy in France. But being presented at court and asked by
Vergennes to furnish information, he must needs try to make an
impression. He assailed Vergennes, the Minister of Foreign Affairs, with
numerous reasons why he should at once disclose to the court at London
his readiness to make a commercial treaty. He argued about the question
of the Continental currency and how it should be redeemed. He urged the
sending of a large naval force to the United States; and when told that
the force had already been sent without solicitation, he attempted to
prove in the most tactless and injudicious manner that it was not
without solicitation, but, on the contrary, the king had been repeatedly
asked for it, and had yielded at last to importunity.

This conduct was so offensive to Vergennes that he complained of it to
Franklin, who was obliged to rebuke Adams; and Congress, when the matter
came before it, administered another rebuke. Adams never forgave
Franklin for this, and afterwards publicly declared that Franklin and
Vergennes had conspired to destroy his influence and ruin him. At the
time, however, he had the good sense to take his rebuff in silence, and
went off grumbling to Holland to see if something could not be done to
render the United States less dependent on France.

Adams represented a large party, composed principally of New-Englanders,
who did not like the alliance with France and were opposed to Franklin’s
policy of extreme conciliation and friendliness with the French court.
It was as one of this party that Adams had attempted to give Vergennes a
lesson and show him that America was not a suppliant and a pauper. Like
the rest of his party, he harbored the bitter thought that France
intended to lord it over the United States, send a general over there
who would control all the military operations, get all the glory, and
give the French ever after a preponderating influence. He thought
America had been too free in expressions of gratitude to France, that a
little more stoutness, a greater air of independence and boldness in our
demands, would procure sufficient assistance and at the same time save
us from the calamity of passing into the hands of a tyrant who would be
worse than Great Britain had been.

His attempt at stoutness, however, was at once checked by Vergennes, who
refused to answer any more of his letters; and there is no doubt that if
Adams’s plan had been adopted by the United States government, our
alliance with France would have been jeopardized. It is not pleasant to
think that without the aid of France the Revolution would have failed
and we would have again been brought under subjection to England; but it
is unquestionably true, and as Washington had no hesitation in frankly
admitting it, we need have none.

At the time of Adams’s attempted interference with Franklin’s policy our
fortunes were at a very low ebb. The resources of the country were
exhausted and the army could no longer be maintained on them. The
soldiers were starving and naked, and the generals could not show
themselves without being assailed with piteous demands for food and
clothes. France had much to gain by assisting us against England, and
she never pretended that she had not; but in all the documents and
correspondence that have been brought to light there is no evidence that
she intended to take advantage of our situation or that her ministers
had designs on our liberties. Indeed, when we read the whole story of
her assistance, including the secret correspondence, it will be found
almost unequalled for its worthiness of purpose and for the honorable
means employed.

Franklin had spent several years at the court, knew everybody, and
thoroughly understood the situation.

    “The king, a young and virtuous prince, has, I am persuaded, a
    pleasure in reflecting on the generous benevolence of the action
    in assisting an oppressed people, and proposes it as a part of
    the glory of his reign. I think it right to increase this
    pleasure by our thankful acknowledgments, and that such an
    expression of gratitude is not only our duty, but our interest.
    A different conduct seems to me what is not only improper and
    unbecoming, but what may be hurtful to us.... It is my intention
    while I stay here to procure what advantages I can for our
    country by endeavoring to please this court; and I wish I could
    prevent anything being said by any of our countrymen here that
    may have a contrary effect, and increase an opinion lately
    showing itself in Paris, that we seek a difference, and with a
    view of reconciling ourselves in England.”

Please the court, as well as the whole French nation, he most certainly
did. His communications with Vergennes, even when he was asking for
money or some other valuable thing, were not only free from offence, but
so adroit, so beautifully and happily expressed, that they charmed the
exquisite taste of Frenchmen. There is not space in this volume to give
expression to all that the people of the court thought of his way of
managing the business intrusted to him by America, but one sentence from
a letter of Vergennes to the French minister in America may be given:

    “If you are questioned respecting our opinion of Dr. Franklin,
    you may without hesitation say that we esteem him as much on
    account of the patriotism as the wisdom of his conduct, and it
    has been owing in a great part to this cause, and to the
    confidence we put in the veracity of Dr. Franklin, that we have
    determined to relieve the pecuniary embarrassments in which he
    has been placed by Congress.”

It is not likely that Gouverneur Morris, Jefferson, or any other
American of that time possessed the qualifications necessary to give
them such a hold on the French court as Franklin had. We were colonists,
very British in our manners, of strong energy and intelligence, but
quite crude in many things, and capable of appearing in a very
ridiculous light in French society, which was in effect the society of
Louis XIV., very exacting, and by no means so republican as it has since
become.

As a matter of fact, the French disliked everybody we sent to them at
that time except Franklin. Deane they tolerated, Izard they laughed at,
Adams they snubbed, and Lee they despised as a stupid blunderer who
knew no better than to abuse French manners in the presence of his
servants, who spread the tale all over Paris. But dear, delightful,
philosophic, shrewd, economical, naughty, flirtatious, and
anecdote-telling Franklin seemed like one of themselves. He still
remains the only American that the French have thoroughly known and
liked. The more we read of him the more confidence we are inclined to
place in the supposition that three or four centuries back he must have
had a French ancestor who migrated to England, and some of whose
characteristics were reproduced in his famous descendant. The little
fables and allegories he wrote to please them read like translations
from the most subtle literary men of France. Fancy any other American or
Englishman writing to Madame Brillon the letter which was really a
little essay afterwards known as the “Ephemera,” and very popular in
France.

    “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 stopped a little in one of our walks, and stayed
    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 natural 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.”...

The letter is too long to quote entire; but some of the fine touches in
the passage given should be observed. He refers to the little progress
he had made in French, and he certainly spoke that language badly,
although he read it with ease. He probably had a large vocabulary; but
he trampled all over the grammar, as Adams tells us. He managed,
however, by means of a little humor to make this defect endear him still
more to the people. The musical dispute of the insects is a hit at a
similar dispute among the Parisians over two musicians, Gluck and
Picini. But what a depth of subtlety is shown in the suggestion which
follows, that the French were under such a wise government and such a
good king that they could afford to waste their time in disputing about
trifles! No wonder that all the notable people and the rulers loved him.

This single delicately veiled point was alone almost sufficient to make
his fortune in the peculiar society of that time. It was in such perfect
taste, so French, such a rebuke to the fanatics who were laying the
foundations of the Reign of Terror; and yet, at the same time,
Franklin, as the apostle of liberty, was regarded by many of those
fanatics as one of themselves. In this way he carried with him all
France.

But suppose that John Adams had been given the opportunity to write such
a letter to a French lady; what would he have done? The straightforward
fellow would probably have thought it his religious, moral, and
patriotic duty to tell her that the government she lived under was
wasteful and extravagant, and was plotting to destroy the liberties of
America.

Madame Brillon, for whom the “Ephemera” was written, was a charming
woman and more domestic than French ladies are supposed to be. For her
amusement were written some of Franklin’s most famous essays,--“The
Morals of Chess,” “The Dialogue between Franklin and the Gout,” “The
Story of the Whistle,” “The Handsome and Deformed Leg,” and “The
Petition of the Left Hand.” In a letter telling how the “Ephemera”
happened to be written he has described the intimacy he and his grandson
enjoyed at her house:

    “The person to whom it was addressed is Madame Brillon, a lady
    of most respectable character and pleasing conversation;
    mistress of an amiable family in this neighborhood, with which I
    spend an evening twice every week. She has, among other elegant
    accomplishments, that of an excellent musician; and with her
    daughter who sings prettily, and some friends who play, she
    kindly entertains me and my grandson with little concerts, a cup
    of tea, and a game of chess. I call this _my Opera_, for I
    rarely go to the Opera at Paris.”

Madame Helvetius, a still more intimate friend, was a very different
sort of woman. She was the widow of a literary man of some celebrity,
and she and Franklin were always carrying on an absurd sort of
flirtation. They hugged and kissed each other in public, and exchanged
extravagant notes which were sometimes mock proposals of marriage,
although some have supposed them to have been real ones. He wrote a sort
of essay addressed to her, in which he imagines himself in the other
world, where he meets her husband, and, after the exchange of many
clever remarks with him about madame, he discovers that Helvetius is
married to his own deceased wife, Mrs. Franklin, who declares herself
rather better pleased with him than she had been with the Philadelphia
printer.

    “Indignant at this refusal of my Eurydice, I immediately
    resolved to quit those ungrateful shades, and return to this
    good world again, to behold the sun and you! Here I am: let us
    _avenge ourselves_!”

Such sport over deceased wives and husbands would not be in good taste
in America or England, but it was correct enough in France. One of his
short notes to Madame Helvetius has also been preserved:

    “Mr. Franklin never forgets any party at which Madame Helvetius
    is expected. He even believes that if he were engaged to go to
    Paradise this morning, he would pray for permission to remain on
    earth until half-past one, to receive the embrace promised him
    at the Turgots’.”

Mrs. Adams has left a description of Madame Helvetius which admirers of
Franklin have in vain attempted to explain away by saying that all
French women were like her, and that she was, after all, a really noble
person:

    “She entered the room with a careless, jaunty air; upon seeing
    ladies who were strangers to her, she bawled out, ‘Ah! mon Dieu,
    where is Franklin? Why did you not tell me there were ladies
    here?’ You must suppose her speaking all this in French. ‘How I
    look!’ said she, taking hold of a chemise made of tiffany, which
    she had on over a blue lute-string, and which looked as much
    upon the decay as her beauty, for she was once a handsome woman;
    her hair was frizzled; over it she had a small straw hat, with a
    dirty gauze half-handkerchief round it, and a bit of dirtier
    gauze than ever my maids wore was bowed on behind. She had a
    black gauze scarf thrown over her shoulders. She ran out of the
    room; when she returned, the Doctor entered at one door, she at
    the other; upon which she ran forward to him, caught him by the
    hand, ‘Hélas! Franklin;’ then gave him a double kiss, one upon
    each cheek, and another upon his forehead. When we went into the
    room to dine, she was placed between the Doctor and Mr. Adams.
    She carried on the chief of the conversation at dinner,
    frequently locking her hand into the Doctor’s, and sometimes
    spreading her arms upon the backs of both the gentlemen’s
    chairs, then throwing her arm carelessly upon the Doctor’s neck.

    “I should have been greatly astonished at this conduct, if the
    good Doctor had not told me that in this lady I should see a
    genuine Frenchwoman, wholly free from affectation or stiffness
    of behavior, and one of the best women in the world. For this I
    must take the Doctor’s word; but I should have set her down for
    a very bad one, although sixty years of age, and a widow. I own
    I was highly disgusted, and never wish for an acquaintance with
    any ladies of this cast. After dinner she threw herself upon a
    settee, where she showed more than her feet. She had a little
    lap-dog, who was, next to the Doctor, her favorite. This she
    kissed, and when he wet the floor she wiped it up with her
    chemise. This is one of the Doctor’s most intimate friends, with
    whom he dines once every week, and she with him. She is rich,
    and is my near neighbor; but I have not yet visited her. Thus
    you see, my dear, that manners differ exceedingly in different
    countries. I hope, however, to find amongst the French ladies
    manners more consistent with my ideas of decency, or I shall be
    a mere recluse.” (Letters of Mrs. John Adams, p. 252.)

It is not likely that Franklin had the respect for Madame Helvetius that
he had for Madame Brillon. She was, strange to say, an illiterate woman,
as one of her letters to him plainly shows. Some of his letters to her
read as if he were purposely feeding her inordinate vanity. He tells her
in one that her most striking quality is her artless simplicity; that
statesmen, philosophers, and poets flock to her; that he and his friends
find in her “sweet society that charming benevolence, that amiable
attention to oblige, that disposition to please and to be pleased which
we do not always find in the society of one another.” She lived at
Auteuil, and he and the Abbé Morellet and others called her “Our Lady of
Auteuil.” They boasted much of their love for her, and enjoyed many
wonderful conversations on literature and philosophy, and much gayety at
her house, which they called “The Academy.”

After Franklin had returned to America the Abbé Morellet, who was an
active and able man in his way, wrote him many amusing letters about
their lady and her friends.

    “I shall never forget the happiness I have enjoyed in knowing
    you and seeing you intimately. I write to you from Auteuil,
    seated in your arm chair, on which I have engraved _Benjamin
    Franklin hic sedebat_, and having by my side the little bureau,
    which you bequeathed to me at parting with a drawerful of nails
    to gratify the love of nailing and hammering, which I possess in
    common with you. But, believe me, I have no need of all these
    helps to cherish your endeared remembrance and to love you.

    “‘Dum memor ipse mei, dum spiritus hos reget artus.’”

[Illustration: FRANKLIN RELICS IN THE POSSESSION OF THE HISTORICAL
SOCIETY OF PENNSYLVANIA]

One of the cleverest letters Franklin wrote while in France was
addressed to an old English friend, Mrs. Thompson, who had called him
a rebel. “You are too early, _hussy_” he says, “as well as too saucy, in
calling me _rebel_; you should wait for the event, which will determine
whether it is a _rebellion_ or only a _revolution_. Here the ladies are
more civil; they call us _les insurgens_, a character that usually
pleases them.” He continues chaffing her, and describes himself as
wearing his own hair in France, where every one else had on a great
powdered wig. If they would only dismiss their _friseurs_ and give him
half the money they pay to them, “I could then enlist these _friseurs_,
who are at least one hundred thousand, and with the money I would
maintain them, make a visit with them to England, and dress the heads of
your ministers and privy councillors, which I conceive at present to be
_un peu dérangées_. Adieu, madcap; and believe me ever, your
affectionate friend and humble servant.”

In the large house of M. de Chaumont, which he occupied, he, of course,
had his electrical apparatus, and played doctor by giving electricity to
paralytic people who were brought to him. On one occasion he made the
wrong contact, and fell to the floor senseless. He had, also, a small
printing-press with type made in the house by his own servants, and he
used it to print the little essays with which he amused his friends.

His friendships in France seem to have been mostly among elderly people.
There are only a few traces of his fondness for young girls, and we find
none of those pleasant intimacies such as he enjoyed with Miss Ray, Miss
Stevenson, or the daughters of the Bishop of St. Asaph. Unmarried women
in France were too much restricted to be capable of such friendships
even with an elderly man. But among his papers in the collection of the
American Philosophical Society there is a letter written by some French
girl who evidently had taken a fancy to him and playfully insisted on
calling herself his daughter.

    “MY DEAR FATHER AMÉRICAIN

    “god Bess liberty! I drunk with all my heart to the republick of
    the united provinces. I am prepared to my departure if you will
    and if it possible. give me I pray you leave to go. I shall be
    happy of to live under the laws of venerable good man richard.
    adieu my dear father I am with the most respect and tenderness

    “Your humble Servant
      “and your daughter
        “J. B. J. CONWAY.

    “Auxerre 22 M. 1778.”

Besides the dining abroad, which, he tells us, occurred six days out of
seven, he gave a dinner at home every Sunday for any Americans that were
in Paris; “and I then,” he says, “have my grandson Ben, with some other
American children from the school.”

New-Englanders had very economical ideas in those days, and when it was
learned that Franklin entertained handsomely in Paris there was a great
fuss over it in the Connecticut newspapers.

The _fête-champêtre_ that was given to him by the Countess d’Houdetot
must have been a ridiculous and even nauseous dose of adulation to
swallow; but he no doubt went through it all without a smile, and it
serves to show the extraordinary position that he occupied. He was more
famous in France than Voltaire or any Frenchman.

A formal account of the _fête_ was prepared by direction of the
countess, and copies circulated in Paris. The victim of it is described
as “the venerable sage” who, “with his gray hairs flowing down upon his
shoulders, his staff in his hand, the spectacles of wisdom on his nose,
was the perfect picture of true philosophy and virtue;” and this
sentence is as complete a summary as could be made of what Franklin was
to the French people.

As soon as he arrived the countess addressed him in verse:

    “Soul of the heroes and the wise,
    Oh, Liberty! first gift of the gods.
    Alas! at too great a distance do we offer our vows.
    As lovers we offer homage
    To the mortal who has made citizens happy.”

The company walked through the gardens and then sat down to the banquet.
At the first glass of wine they rose and sang,--

    “Of Benjamin let us celebrate the glory;
    Let us sing the good he has done to mortals.
    In America he will have altars;
    And in Sanoy let us drink to his glory.”

At the second glass the countess sang a similar refrain, at the third
glass the viscount sang, and so on for seven glasses, each verse more
extraordinary than the others. Virtue herself had assumed the form of
Benjamin; he was greater than William Tell; Philadelphia must be such a
delightful place; the French would gladly dwell there, although there
was neither ball nor play. But Sanoy was Philadelphia as long as dear
Benjamin remained there. He was led to the garden to plant a tree, with
more singing about the lightning that he had drawn from the sky, and the
lightning, of course, would never strike that tree. Finally he was
allowed to depart with another song of adulation addressed to him after
he was seated in the carriage.

Now that more than a hundred years have passed it is gratifying to our
national pride to reflect that a man who was so thoroughly American in
his origin and education should have been worshipped in this way by an
alien race as no other man, certainly no other American, was ever
worshipped by foreigners. But the enjoyment of this stupendous
reputation, overshadowing and dwarfing the Adamses, Jays, and all other
public men who went to Europe, was marred by some unpleasant
consequences. Jealousies were aroused not only among individuals, but to
a certain extent among all the American people. It was too much. He had
ceased to be one of them. It was rumored that he would never return to
America, but would resign and settle down among those strangers who
treated him as though he were a god.

It was also inevitable that a worse suspicion should arise. He was too
subservient, it was said, to France. He yielded everything to her. He
was turning her from an ally into a ruler. He could no longer see her
designs; or, if he saw them, he approved of them. This suspicion gained
such force that it was the controlling principle with Adams and Jay
when they went to Paris to arrange the treaty of peace with England
after the surrender of Lord Cornwallis at Yorktown in October, 1781. We
have seen instances in our own time of our ministers to Great Britain
becoming very unpopular at home because they were liked in England, and
in Franklin’s case this feeling was vastly greater than anything we have
known in recent years, because his popularity in France was prodigious,
and he avowedly acted upon the principle that it was best to be
complaisant to the French court.

During the winter which followed the surrender of Lord Cornwallis
overtures of peace were made by England to Franklin, as representing
America, and to Vergennes, as representing France, and they became more
earnest in March after the Tory ministry, which had been conducting the
war, was driven from power. In April the negotiations with Franklin were
well under way, and he continued to conduct them until June, when he was
taken sick and incapacitated for three months. After his recovery he
took only a minor part in the proceedings, for Jay and Adams had
meanwhile arrived.

Congress had appointed Adams, Jay, Franklin, Jefferson, and Laurens
commissioners to arrange the treaty, and made Adams head of the
commission. When the negotiations began, however, Franklin was the only
commissioner at Paris, and necessarily took charge of all the business.
Just before he was taken sick Jay arrived, and he and Jay conducted
affairs until Adams joined them at the end of October. Laurens, who had
been a prisoner in England, did not reach Paris until just before the
preliminary treaty was signed, and Jefferson, being detained in America,
took no part in the proceedings.

While Franklin was carrying on the negotiations alone, he insisted on
most of the terms which were afterwards agreed upon: first of all,
independence, and, in addition to that, the right to fish on the
Newfoundland Banks and a settlement of boundaries; but he added a point
not afterwards pressed by the others,--namely, that Canada should be
ceded to the United States. In exchange for Canada he was prepared to
allow some compensation to the Tories for their loss of property during
the war. Adams and Jay, on taking up the negotiations, dropped Canada
entirely and insisted stoutly to the end that there should be no
compensation whatever to the Tories.

Franklin’s admirers have always contended that it would have been better
if Jay and Adams had kept away altogether, for in that case Franklin
would have secured all that they got for us and Canada besides. This,
however, is mere supposition, one of those vague ideas of what might
have been without any proof to support it. Franklin pressed the cession
of Canada, it is true; but there is no evidence that it would have been
granted. At that time the people of the United States appear not to have
wanted the land of snow, and ever since then the general opinion has
been that we have enough to manage already, and are better off without a
country vexed with serious political controversies with its French
population and the Roman Catholic school question.

On the whole, it would not have been well for Franklin to have continued
to conduct the negotiations alone. The situation was difficult, and the
united efforts and varied ability of at least three commissioners were
required. Neither Franklin nor Jay knew much about the fisheries
question, and they might have been forced to yield on this point. But
Adams, from his long experience in conducting litigation for the
Massachusetts fishing interests, was better prepared on this subject
than any other American, and it was generally believed by the public men
of that time that the important rights we secured on the Newfoundland
Banks were due almost entirely to his skill. He was also more familiar
with the boundary question between Maine and New Brunswick, and had
brought with him documents from Massachusetts which were invaluable.

While Jay and Franklin were acting together before the arrival of Adams,
a serious question arose about the commission of Oswald, the British
negotiator who had come over to Paris. He was empowered to treat with
the “Colonies or Plantations,” and nowhere in the document was the term
United States of America used. Jay refused to treat with a man who held
such a commission. Franklin and Vergennes vainly urged that it was a
mere form, and that Great Britain had already in several ways
acknowledged the independence of the United States. Oswald showed an
article of his instructions which authorized him to grant complete
independence to the thirteen colonies, and he offered to write a letter
declaring that he treated with them as an independent power; but Jay
was inflexible, and in this he seems to have been right.

Franklin made a great mistake in not agreeing with him, for in the
suspicious state of people’s minds at that time his conduct in this
respect was taken as proof positive of his subserviency to the French
court. Jay suspected that Vergennes advised accepting Oswald’s
commission so as to prevent a clear admission of independence, and thus
keep the United States embroiled with England as long as possible. In
order to support his opposition to Jay, Franklin was obliged to talk
about his confidence in the French court, its past generosity and
friendliness, and also to call attention to the instruction of Congress
that the commissioners should do nothing without the knowledge of the
French government, and in all final decisions be guided by that
government’s advice.

This instruction had been passed by Congress after much debate and
hesitation, and was finally carried, it is said, through the influence
of the French minister. Its adoption was a mistake; without it the
commissioners would probably of their own accord have sought the advice
of Vergennes; but a positive order to do so put them in an undignified
and humiliating position. Franklin had been so long intimate with
Vergennes and was so accustomed to consulting him that the instruction
was superfluous as to him. His reputation was so great in France and his
tact so perfect that he was in no danger of feeling overshadowed or
subdued by such consultations; but Jay and Adams so thoroughly detested
the instruction that they had made up their minds to disregard it
altogether.

“Would you break your instruction?” said Franklin.

“Yes,” said Jay, “as I break this pipe,” and he threw the pieces into
the fire.

Jay’s firmness compelled Oswald to obtain a new commission in the proper
form, and while he deserves credit for this and also for his principle,
“We must be honest and grateful to our allies, but think for ourselves,”
he seems in the light of later evidence to have been mistaken in his
deep mistrust of the French court. His opinions have been briefly stated
by Adams:

    “Mr. Jay 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. Our allies don’t play fair, he told me;
    they were endeavoring to deprive us of the fishery, the western
    lands, and the navigation of the Mississippi; they would even
    bargain with the English to deprive us of them; they want to
    play the western lands, Mississippi, and whole Gulf of Mexico
    into the hands of Spain.” (Adams’s Works, vol. iii. p. 303.)

Jay had had a very bitter experience in Spain, where the cold
haughtiness and chicanery of the court had made him feel that he was
among enemies. The instructions sent to him by Congress had been
intercepted, and instead of receiving them as secret orders from his
government, they had been handed to him by the Spanish prime-minister
after that official had read them. He was accordingly prepared to think
that the French government was no better.

In a certain sense there were grounds for his suspicion of France. She
was interested in the fisheries on the Banks of Newfoundland, and would
naturally like to have a share in them. It was also obviously her policy
to prevent the United States and England from becoming too friendly and
from making too firm a peace, for fear that they might unite at some
future time against her. If she could get them to make a sort of half
peace with a number of subjects left unsettled, about which there would
be difficulties for many years, it would be a great advantage to her.

Spain wanted to secure the control of the Gulf of Mexico, the exclusive
navigation of the Mississippi, and the possession of the lands west of
that river, and France, as her ally, might be expected to assist her to
obtain these concessions. Arguments and suggestions favoring all these
projects were unquestionably used by Frenchmen at that time, and no
doubt Vergennes and other public men often had them in mind. It was
their duty at least to consider them. But there is no evidence that they
actively promoted these schemes or acted in any other than an honorable
manner towards us.

As a matter of fact, our commercial relations with England were left
unsettled. England claimed, among other things, the right to search our
ships, and there was great discontent over this for a long time, amply
sufficient to keep us from friendship with England until the question
was finally settled by the war of 1812. Adams seems to imply that he
could have settled this and other difficulties in 1780 by the
commercial treaty which he was empowered to make with England, and that
Vergennes, in advising him not to communicate with England, had intended
to keep England and the United States embroiled. Possibly that may have
been Vergennes’s intention. But as it was afterwards found impossible to
adjust these commercial difficulties until the war of 1812, and as Adams
himself did not attempt it, though he might have done so in spite of
Vergennes’s advice, and as they were finally settled only by a war, it
is not probable that Adams could have adjusted them in the easy, offhand
way he imagines. In any event, it was not worth while for the sake of
these future contingencies to offend Vergennes and jeopardize our
alliance and the loans of money we were obtaining from France.

Franklin’s policy of making absolutely sure of the friendship and
assistance of France seems to have been the sound one, and with his
wonderful accomplishments and adaptability he could be friendly and
agreeable without sacrificing anything. But Adams went at everything
with a club, and could understand no other method.

I cannot find that Franklin was at any time willing to sacrifice the
fisheries, or the Mississippi River or the western lands. In fact, he
was more firm on the question of the Mississippi than Congress. In its
extremity, Congress finally instructed Jay to yield the navigation of
the Mississippi if he could get assistance from Spain in no other way;
and the Spanish premier, having intercepted this instruction and read
it, had poor Jay at his mercy. But Franklin was very strenuous on this
point, and wrote to Jay,--

    “Poor as we are, 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 neighbor
    might as well ask me to sell my street door.”

Jay grew more and more suspicious of France, and Adams reports him as
saying, “Every day produces some fresh proof and example of their vile
schemes.” One of the British negotiators obtained for him a letter which
Marbois, the secretary of the French legation in America, had written
home, urging Vergennes not to support the commissioners in their claim
to the right of fishing on the Newfoundland Banks. This he considered
absolute proof; but the examination which has since been made of all the
confidential correspondence of that period does not show that Marbois’s
suggestion was ever acted upon. Individuals doubtless cherished purposes
of their own, but the French government in all its actions seems to have
fully justified Franklin’s confidence in it. Jefferson, who afterwards
went to France, declared that there was no proof whatever of Franklin’s
subserviency.

When Adams arrived he was delighted to find himself in full accord with
Jay. He had been in Holland, where he had succeeded in negotiating a
loan and a commercial treaty, and consequently felt that he was somewhat
of a success as a diplomatist, and need not any longer be so much
overawed by Franklin. He relates in his diary how the French courtiers
heaped compliments on him. “Sir,” they would say, “you have been the
Washington of the negotiation.” To which he would answer in his best
French, “Sir, you have given me the grandest honor and a compliment the
most sublime.” They would reply, “Ah, sir, in truth you have well
deserved it.” And he concludes by saying, “A few of these compliments
would kill Franklin, if they should come to his ears.”

He uses strong language about the “base system” pursued by Franklin, and
talks in a lofty way of the impossibility of a man becoming
distinguished as a diplomatist who allows his passion for women to get
the better of him. He and Jay conducted the rest of the negotiations and
completed the treaty, Franklin merely assisting; and Adams gloried in
breaking the instruction of Congress to take the advice of France. He
was still smarting under the rebuke administered for his interference
and for the offence he gave Vergennes a year or two before, and after
declaring that Congress in this rebuke had prostituted its own honor as
well as his, he breaks forth on the subject of the instruction to take
the advice of France:

    “Congress surrendered their own sovereignty into the hands of a
    French minister. Blush! blush! ye guilty records! blush and
    perish! It is glory to have broken such infamous orders.
    Infamous, I say, for so they will be to all posterity. How can
    such a stain be washed out? Can we cast a veil over it and
    forget it?” (Adams’s Works, vol. iii. p. 359.)

Franklin finally agreed that they should go on with the negotiations and
make the treaty without consulting the French government. Vergennes was
offended, but Franklin managed to smooth the matter over and pacify him.
Congress censured the commissioners for violating the instruction, and
they all made the best excuses they could. Franklin’s was a very clever
one.

    “We did what appeared to all of us best at the time, and if we
    have done wrong, the Congress will do right, after hearing us,
    to censure us. Their nomination of five persons to the service
    seems to mark, that they had some dependence on our joint
    judgment, since one alone could have made a treaty by direction
    of the French ministry as well as twenty.”

It is probable that Franklin agreed to ignore the instruction, and
assented to all the other acts of the commissioners, because he thought
it best to have harmony. Such an opportunity for a terrible quarrel
could not have been resisted by some men, for Adams bluntly told him
that he disapproved of all his previous conduct in the matter of the
treaty. As Adams was the head of the commission, it would seem that
Franklin, finding himself outvoted, took the proper course of not
blocking a momentous negotiation by his personal feelings or opinions,
so long as substantial results were being secured. In this respect he
did exactly the reverse of what Adams had prophesied. In the beginning
of the negotiations Adams entered in his diary, “Franklin’s cunning will
be to divide us; to this end he will provoke, he will insinuate, he will
intrigue, he will manœuvre.” Instead of that he encouraged their
union.

Adams’s writings are full of extraordinary suspicions of this sort which
turned out to be totally unfounded; but so fond was he of them that,
after having been obliged to confess that Franklin had acted in entire
harmony with the commissioners, and after all had ended well and
Franklin had obtained another loan of six millions from Vergennes, he
cannot resist saying, “I suspect, however, and have reason, but will say
nothing.” Those familiar with him know that this means that he had no
reason or evidence whatever, but was simply determined to gratify his
peculiar passion.

Franklin wrote a long letter to Congress about the treaty, and after
saying that he entirely discredited the suspicions of the treachery of
the French court, he squares accounts with Adams:

    “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 straitened 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 negotiations with foreign courts, and afforded
    us, during the war, the assistance we received, only to keep it
    alive, that we might be so much the more weakened by it; that to
    think of gratitude to France is the greatest of follies, and
    that to be influenced by it would ruin us. He makes no secret of
    his having these opinions, expresses them publicly, sometimes in
    presence of the English ministers, and speaks of hundreds of
    instances which he could produce in proof of them. None,
    however, have yet appeared to me, unless the conversations and
    letter above-mentioned are reckoned such.

    “If I were not convinced of the real inability of this court to
    furnish the further supplies we asked, I should suspect these
    discourses of a person in his station might have influenced the
    refusal; but I think they have gone no further than to occasion
    a suspicion, that we have a considerable party of Antigallicians
    in America, who are not Tories, and consequently to produce some
    doubts of the continuance of our friendship. As such doubts may
    hereafter have a bad effect, I think we cannot take too much
    care to remove them; and it is therefore I write this, to put
    you on your guard, (believing it my duty, though I know that I
    hazard by it a mortal enmity), and to caution you respecting the
    insinuations of this gentleman against this court, and the
    instances he supposes of their ill will to us, which I take to
    be as imaginary as I know his fancies to be, that Count de
    Vergennes and myself are continually plotting against him, and
    employing the news-writers of Europe to depreciate his
    character, &c. But as Shakespeare 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.”

Adams never forgave this slap, and he and his descendants have kept up
the “mortal enmity” which Franklin knew he was hazarding.

Before he left France Franklin took part in making a treaty with
Prussia, and secured the insertion of an article which embodied his
favorite idea that in case of war there should be no privateering, the
merchant vessels of either party should pass unmolested, and unarmed
farmers, fishermen, and artisans should remain undisturbed in their
employments. But as a war usually breaks all treaties between the
contending nations, this one might have been difficult to enforce.

At last, in July, 1785, came the end of his long and delightful
residence in a country which he seems to have loved as much as if it had
been his own. No American, and certainly no Englishman, has ever spoken
so well of the French. He never could forget, he said, the nine years’
happiness that he had enjoyed there “in the sweet society of a people
whose conversation is instructive, whose manners are highly pleasing,
and who, above all the nations of the world, have, in the greatest
perfection, the art of making themselves beloved by strangers.”

[Illustration: PORTRAIT OF LOUIS XVI. GIVEN BY HIM TO FRANKLIN]

The king gave him his picture set in two circles of four hundred and
eight diamonds,[28] and furnished the litter, swung between two mules,
to carry him to the coast. If the king himself had been in the litter he
could not have received more attention and worship from noblemen,
ecclesiastics, governors, soldiers, and important public bodies on the
journey to the sea. It was a triumphal march for the American
philosopher, now so old and so afflicted with the gout and the stone
that he could barely endure the easy motion of the royal mules.

His two grandsons accompanied him. De Chaumont and his daughter insisted
on going as far as Nanterre, and his old friend Le Veillard went with
him all the way to England. He kept a diary of the journey, full of most
interesting details of the people who met him on the road, how the
Cardinal de la Rochefoucauld sent messengers to stop him and order him
with mock violence to spend the night at his castle. It is merely the
jotting down of odd sentences in a diary, but the magic of Franklin’s
genius has given to the smallest incidents an immortal fascination.

He would have liked to spend some time in England among his old friends,
but the war feeling was still too violent. He, however, crossed to
England and stayed four days at Southampton waiting for Captain
Truxton’s ship, which was to call for him. English friends flocked down
to see him and to give him little mementos, and the British government
gave orders that his baggage should not be examined. The Bishop of St.
Asaph, who lived near by, hastened to Southampton with his wife and one
of his daughters and spent several days in saying farewell. On the
evening of the last day they accompanied him on board the ship, dined
there, and intended to stay all night; but, to save him the pain of
parting, they went ashore after he had gone to bed. “When I waked in the
morning,” he says, “found the company gone and the ship under sail.”

The bishop’s daughter, Catherine, wrote him one of her charming letters
which, as it relates to him, is as immortal as any of his own writings.
Every day at dinner, she tells him, they drank to his prosperous voyage.
She is troubled because she forgot to give him a pin-cushion. He seemed
to have everything else he needed, and that might have been useful. “We
are forever talking of our good friend; something is perpetually
occurring to remind us of the time spent with you.” They had besought
him to finish during the voyage his Autobiography, which had been begun
at their house. “We never walk in the garden without seeing _Dr.
Franklin’s room_, and thinking of the work that was begun in it.”


FOOTNOTES:

[28] By his will Franklin left this picture to his daughter, Sarah
Bache, and it is still in the possession of her descendants. He
requested her not to use the outer circle of diamonds as ornaments and
introduce the useless fashion of wearing jewels in America, but he
implied that she could sell them. She sold them, and with the proceeds
she and her husband made the tour of Europe. The inner circle he
directed should be preserved with the picture, but they were removed.




XI

THE CONSTITUTION-MAKER


Almost immediately on Franklin’s return to Philadelphia he was made
President of the Supreme Executive Council of Pennsylvania, under the
extraordinary constitution he had helped to make before he went to
France in 1776. This office was somewhat like that of the modern
governor. He held it for three years, by annual re-elections, but
without being involved in any notable questions or controversies.

He was at this period of his life still genial and mellow, in spite of
disease, and full of anecdotes, learning, and curious experiences. His
voice is described as low and his countenance open, frank, and pleasing.

He enjoyed what to him was one of the greatest pleasures of life,
children and grandchildren. He had six grandchildren, and no doubt often
wished that he had a hundred. He had no patience with celibacy, and was
constantly urging marriage on his friends. To John Sargent he wrote,--

    “The account you give me of your family is pleasing, except that
    your eldest son continues so long unmarried. I hope he does not
    intend to live and die in celibacy. The wheel of life that has
    rolled down to him from Adam without interruption should not
    stop with him. I would not have one dead unbearing branch in the
    genealogical tree of the Sargents. The married state is, after
    all our jokes, the happiest.”

Sir Samuel Romilly, who visited him in Paris shortly before his return
to America, says 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.”
    (Life of Romilly. By his Sons. Vol. i. p. 50.)

He lived in a large house in Philadelphia, situated on a court long
afterwards called by his name, a little back from the south side of
Market Street, between Third and Fourth Streets. There was a small
garden attached to it, and also a grass-plot on which was a large
mulberry-tree, under which he often sat and received visitors on summer
afternoons. He built a large addition to the house, comprising a
library, a room for the meetings of the American Philosophical Society,
with some bedrooms in the third story. Here he passed the closing years
of his life with his daughter and six grandchildren, reading, writing,
receiving visits from distinguished men, and playing cards in the winter
evenings.

    “I have indeed now and then,” he writes to Mrs. Hewson, “a
    little compunction in reflecting that I spend time so idly; but
    another reflection comes to relieve me, whispering, ‘_You know
    that the soul is immortal; why then should you be such a niggard
    of a little time, when you have a whole eternity before you?_’
    So, being easily convinced, and, like other reasonable
    creatures, satisfied with a small reason, when it is in favor of
    doing what I have a mind to, I shuffle the cards again, and
    begin another game.”

[Illustration: FRANKLIN PORTRAIT IN WEST COLLECTION]

He was soon, however, given very important employment in spite of his
age. He had made himself famous in many varied spheres, from almanacs
and stove-making to treaties of alliance. Nothing seemed to be too small
or too great for him. He invented an apparatus for taking books from
high shelves. He suggested that sailors could mitigate thirst by sitting
in the salt water or soaking their clothes in it. The pores of the skin,
he said, while large enough to admit the water, are too small to allow
the salt to penetrate; and the experiment was successfully tried by
shipwrecked crews. He suggested that bread and flour could be preserved
for years in air-tight bottles, and Captain Cook tried it with good
results in his famous voyage. It is certainly strange that the man who
was so passionately interested in such subjects should enter the great
domain of constitution-making and, in spite of many blunders, excel
those who had made it their special study.

He had no knowledge of technical law, either in practice or as a
science. He was once elected a justice of the peace in Philadelphia, but
soon resigned, because, as he said, he knew nothing of the rules of
English common law. It was perhaps the only important domain of human
knowledge in which he was not interested.

As a public man of long experience he had considerable knowledge of
general laws and their practical effect. He was a law-maker rather than
a law-interpreter. He understood colonial rights, and knew every phase
of the controversy with Great Britain, and he had fixed opinions as to
constitutional forms and principles. Some of his ideas on
constitution-making were unsound; but it is astonishing what an
important part he played during his long life in American constitutional
development.

I have shown in another volume, called “The Evolution of the
Constitution of the United States,” how the principles and forms of that
instrument were developed out of two hundred years’ experience with more
than forty colonial charters and Revolutionary constitutions and more
than twenty plans of union. The plans of union were devised from time to
time with the purpose of uniting the colonies under one general
government. None of them was put into actual practice until the
“Articles of Confederation” were adopted during the Revolution. But
although unsuccessful in the sense that no union was formed under any of
them, they contributed ideas and principles which finally produced the
federalism of the national Constitution under which we now live.

Two of these plans of union were prepared by Franklin. No other American
prepared more than one, and Franklin’s two were the most important of
all. Not only was he the originator of the two most important plans, but
he lived long enough to take part in framing the final result of all the
plans, the national Constitution, and he was the author of one of the
most valuable provisions in it.

The first plan of union which he drafted was the one adopted by the
Albany Conference of 1754, that had been called to make a general treaty
with the Indians which would obviate the confusion of separate treaties
made by the different colonies. Such a general treaty, by controlling
the Indians, would, it was hoped, assist in resisting the designs of the
French in Canada. It was obvious, also, that if the colonies were united
under a general government they would be better able to withstand the
French. Franklin had advocated this idea of union in his _Gazette_, and
had published a wood-cut representing a wriggling snake separated into
pieces, each of which had on it the initial letter of one of the
colonies, and underneath was written, “Join or die.”

He was sent to the conference as one of the delegates from Pennsylvania,
and his plan of union, which was adopted, was a distinct improvement on
all others that had preceded it, and contained the germs of principles
which are now a fundamental part of our political system. In 1775, while
a member of the Continental Congress, he drafted another plan, which,
though not adopted, added new suggestions and developments. But as both
of these plans are fully discussed in “The Evolution of the
Constitution,”[29] it is unnecessary to say more about them here.

He was a member of the convention which in 1776 framed a new
constitution for Pennsylvania, and in this instrument he secured the
adoption of two of his favorite ideas. He believed that a Legislature
should consist of only one House, and that the executive authority,
instead of being vested in a single person, should be exercised by a
committee. The executive department of Pennsylvania became, therefore, a
Supreme Executive Council of twelve members elected by the different
counties. In order to make up for the lack of a double House, there was
a sort of makeshift provision providing that every bill must pass two
sessions of the Assembly before it became a law. There was also a
curious body called the Council of Censors, two from each city and
county, who were to see that the constitution was not violated and that
all departments of government did their duty. It was a crude and awkward
attempt to prevent unconstitutional legislation, and proved an utter
failure. The whole constitution was a most bungling contrivance which
wrought great harm to the State and was replaced by a more suitable one
in 1790.

But Franklin heartily approved of it, and in 1790 protested most
earnestly against a change. He argued at length against a single
executive and in favor of a single house Legislature in the teeth of
innumerable facts proving the utter impracticability of both. No other
important public men of the time believed in them, and they had been
rejected in the national Constitution. He was, however, as humorous and
clever in this argument as if he had been in the right. A double-branch
Legislature would, he said, be too weak in each branch to support a good
measure or obstruct a bad one.

    “Has not 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 through 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.” (Bigelow’s Works of
    Franklin, vol. x. p. 186.)

After Franklin had taken part in framing the Pennsylvania constitution
of 1776 and had gone to Paris as ambassador to France, he had all the
new Revolutionary constitutions of the American States translated into
French and widely circulated. Much importance has been attached to this
translation by some writers, Thomas Paine saying that these translated
constitutions “were to liberty what grammar is to language: they define
its parts of speech and practically construct them into syntax;” and
both he and some of Franklin’s biographers ascribe to them a vast
influence in shaping the course of the French Revolution. Franklin wrote
to the Rev. Dr. Cooper, of Boston, that the French people read the
translations with rapture, and added,--

    “There are such numbers everywhere who talk of removing to
    America with their families and fortunes as soon as peace and
    our independence shall be established that it is generally
    believed we shall have a prodigious addition of strength, wealth
    and arts from the emigration of Europe; and it is thought that
    to lessen or prevent such emigration the tyrannies established
    there must relax and allow more liberty to their people. Hence
    it is a common observation here that our cause is the cause of
    all mankind and that we are fighting for their liberty in
    defending our own.”

As there was none of the vast emigration out of France which he speaks
of, and the great emigration from Europe did not begin until after the
year 1820, it may very well be that both he and his biographers have
exaggerated the effect of the translations. But there seems to be no
doubt that the translations must, on general principles, have had a
stimulating effect on liberal ideas, although we may not be able to
measure accurately the full force of their influence. They also were
valuable in arousing the enthusiasm of the French forces, and making
more sure of their assistance and alliance.

His last work in constitution-making was in 1787, when the convention
met at Philadelphia to frame the national document which was to take the
place of the old Articles of Confederation, and this was also the last
important work of his life. He was then eighty-one years old, and
suffering so much from the gout and stone that he could not remain
standing for any length of time. His important speeches he usually wrote
out and had his colleague, Mr. Wilson, read them to the convention. This
was in some respects an advantage, for these speeches have been
preserved entire in Madison’s notes of the debates, while what was said
by the other members was written by Madison from memory or much
abbreviated. It was Franklin’s characteristic good luck attending him to
the last.

Considering his age and infirmity, one would naturally not expect much
from him, and, as we go over the debates, some propositions which he
advocated and his treatment by the other members incline us at first to
the opinion that he had passed his days of great usefulness, and that he
was in the position of an old man whose whims are treated with kindness.

One of the principles which he advocated most earnestly was that the
President, or whatever the head of the government should be called,
should receive no salary. He moved to amend the part relating to the
salary by substituting for it “whose necessary expenses shall be
defrayed, but who shall receive no salary, stipend, fee, or reward
whatsoever for their services.”

He wrote an interesting speech in support of his amendment. But it is
easy to see that his suggestion is not a wise one. No one familiar with
modern politics would approve of it, and scarcely any one in the
convention looked upon it with favor. Madison records that Hamilton
seconded the motion merely to bring it before the House and out of
regard for Dr. Franklin. It was indefinitely postponed without debate,
and Madison adds that “it was treated with great respect, but rather for
the author of it than from any apparent conviction of its expediency or
practicability.”

He also clung steadfastly to his old notions that the executive
authority should be vested in a number of persons,--a sort of council,
like the absurd arrangement in Pennsylvania,--and that the Legislature
should consist of only one House. These two propositions he advocated to
the end of the session. We find, moreover, that he seconded the motion
giving the President authority to suspend the laws for a limited time,
certainly a most dangerous power to give, and very inconsistent with
Franklin’s other opinions on the subject of liberty.

On the other hand, however, we find him opposing earnestly any
restrictions on the right to vote. He was always urging the members to
a spirit of conciliation and a compromise of their violent opinions on
the ground that it was only by this means that a national government
could be created. It was for this purpose that he proposed the daily
reading of prayers by some minister of the Gospel, which was rejected by
the convention, because, as they had not begun in this way, their taking
it up in the midst of their proceedings would cause the outside world to
think that they were in great difficulties.

He was strongly in favor of a clause allowing the President to be
impeached for misdemeanors, which would, he said, be much better than
the ordinary old-fashioned way of assassination; and he was opposed to
allowing the President an absolute veto on legislation. All matters
relating to money should, he thought, be made public; there should be no
limitation of the power of Congress to increase the compensation of the
judges, and very positive proof should be required in cases of treason.
In these matters he was in full accord with the majority of the
convention.

But his great work was done in settling the question of the amount of
representation to be given to the smaller States, and was accomplished
in a curious way. John Dickinson, of Delaware, was the champion of the
interests of the small commonwealths, which naturally feared that if
representation in both Houses of Congress was to be in proportion to
population, their interests would be made subordinate to those of the
States which outnumbered them in inhabitants. This was one of the most
serious difficulties the convention had to face, and the strenuousness
with which the small States maintained their rights came near breaking
up the convention.

Franklin was in favor of only one House of Congress, with the
representation in it proportioned to population, and he made a most
ingenious and fallacious argument to show that there was more danger of
the smaller States absorbing the larger than of the larger swallowing
the smaller. But, in the hope of conciliating Dickinson and his
followers, he suggested several compromises, the first one of which was
very cumbersome and impracticable and need not be mentioned here. It
seemed to take for granted that there was to be only one House of
Congress.

Afterwards, when it was definitely decided to have two Houses, the
question as to the position of the smaller States was again raised in
deciding how the Senate was to be composed. Some were for making its
representation proportional to population, like that of the lower House,
and this the small States resisted. Franklin said that the trouble
seemed to be that with proportional representation in the Senate the
small States thought their liberties in danger, and if each State had an
equal vote in the Senate the large States thought their money was in
danger. He would, therefore, try to unite the two factions. Let each
State have an equal number of delegates in the Senate, but when any
question of appropriating money arose, let these delegates “have
suffrage in proportion to the sums which their respective States do
actually contribute to the treasury.” This was not very practical, but
it proved to be a step which led him in the right direction.

A few days afterwards, in a committee appointed to consider the
question, he altered his suggestion so that in the lower House the
representation should be in proportion to population, but in the Senate
each State should have an equal vote, and that money bills should
originate only in the lower House. The committee reported in favor of
his plan, and it was substantially adopted in the Constitution. The
lower House was given proportional representatives, and the Senate was
composed of two Senators from each State, which gave absolute equality
of representation in that body to all the States. Money bills were
allowed to originate only in the lower House, but the Senate could
propose or concur with amendments as on other bills.

Thus the great question was settled by one of those strokes of
Franklin’s sublime luck or genius. He disapproved of the whole idea of a
double-headed Congress, and thought the fears of the small States
ridiculous; but, for the sake of conciliation and compromise with John
Dickinson and his earnest followers, his masterful intellect worked out
an arrangement which satisfied everybody and is one of the most
important fundamental principles of our Constitution. Without it there
would be no federal union. We would be a mere collection of warring,
revolutionary communities like those of South America. It has never been
changed and in all human probability never will be so long as we
retain even the semblance of a republic.

[Illustration: FRANKLIN’S GRAVE IN CHRIST CHURCH GRAVEYARD,
PHILADELPHIA]

This was Franklin’s greatest and most permanent service to his country,
more valuable than his work in England or France, and a fitting close to
his long life. The most active period of his life, as he has told us,
was between his seventieth and eighty-second years. How much can be done
in eighty vigorous years, and what labors had he performed and what
pleasures and vast experiences enjoyed in that time! Few men do their
best work at such a great age. Moses, however, we are told, was eighty
years old before he began his life’s greatest work of leading the
children of Israel out of Egypt. But it would be difficult to find any
other instances in history except Franklin.

After the Constitution as prepared by the convention had been engrossed
and read, it became a question whether all the members of the convention
could be persuaded to sign it, and Franklin handed one of his happy
speeches to Mr. Wilson to be read. He admitted that the Constitution did
not satisfy him; it was not as he would have had it prepared; but still
he would sign it. With all its faults it was better than none. A new
convention would not make a better one, for it would merely bring
together a new set of prejudices and passions. He was old enough, he
said, to doubt somewhat the infallibility of his own judgment. He was
willing to believe that others might be right as well as he; and he
amused the members with his humor and the witty story of the French lady
who, in a dispute with her sister, said, “I don’t know how it happens,
sister, but I meet with nobody but myself that is always in the right.”

    “It therefore astonishes me, sir, to find this system
    approaching so near to perfection as it does; and I think it
    will astonish our enemies, who are waiting with confidence to
    hear that our councils are confounded, like those of the
    builders of Babel, and that our States are on the point of
    separation, only to meet hereafter for the purpose of cutting
    one another’s throats....

    “On the whole, sir, I cannot help expressing a wish, that every
    member of the Convention who may still have objections to it,
    would with me on this occasion doubt a little of his own
    infallibility, and, to make _manifest_ our _unanimity_, put his
    name to this instrument.”

At the close of the reading of his speech Franklin moved that the
Constitution be signed, and offered as a convenient form,--

    “Done in Convention by the unanimous consent of the States
    present the 17th day of September, etc. In witness whereof we
    have hereunto subscribed our names.”

Madison explains that this form, with the words “consent of the States,”
had been drawn up by Gouverneur Morris to gain the doubtful States’
rights party. It was given to Franklin, he says, “that it might have the
better chance of success.”

    “Whilst the last members were signing,” says Madison, “Dr.
    Franklin, looking towards the president’s chair, at the back of
    which a rising sun happened to be painted, observed to a few
    members near him that painters had found it difficult to
    distinguish in their art a rising from a setting sun. ‘I have,’
    said he, ‘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.’”

So Franklin, from whose life picturesqueness and charm were seldom
absent, gave, in his easy manner, to the close of the dry details of the
convention a touch of beautiful and true sentiment which can never be
dissociated from the history of the republic he had helped to create.


FOOTNOTES:

[29] Pp. 218, 231-236.




Appendix to Page 104

FRANKLIN’S DAUGHTER, MRS. FOXCROFT


It was impossible in the text at page 104 to give in full all the
letters which showed that Mrs. Foxcroft was Franklin’s daughter. Most of
them, however, were cited. It seems necessary now to give them in full,
because since the book was first published the correctness of the
statement in the text has been questioned; and the reasons for
questioning it have been set forth by a reviewer in a New York newspaper
called _The Nation_. A reply to this review appeared in _Lippincott’s
Magazine_ for May, 1899, and this reply, so far as it relates to Mrs.
Foxcroft, was as follows:

    The best way to discuss the above statement, and a great deal
    more nonsense that the reviewer has written on this subject, is
    to give in full the letters and reasons which have led the
    members of the Historical Society of Pennsylvania to believe
    that a certain manuscript letter in the possession of the
    society showed that Franklin had an illegitimate daughter.

    The letter itself, which Mr. Fisher gives in his book, is
    addressed to Franklin at his Craven Street lodgings in London,
    and is as follows:

       PHILADA. Feby. 2d, 1772.

       Dear Sir:

       I have the happiness to acquaint you that your daughter was
       safely brot to Bed the 20th ulto. and presented me with a
       sweet little girl, they are both in good spirits and are
       likely to do very well.

       I was seized with a Giddyness in my head the Day before
       yesterday as I had 20 oz. of blood taken from me and took
       physick wch does not seem in the least to have relieved me.

       I am hardly able to write this. Mrs. F. Joins me in best
       affections to yourself and compts to Mrs. Stevenson and Mr.
       and Mrs. Huson.

       I am Dr Sir

       yrs affectionately

       JOHN FOXCROFT.

       Mrs. Franklin, Mrs. Bache, little Ben & Family at Burlington
       are all well. I had a letter from yr. Govr. yesterday.

       J. F.

It is to be observed that the above letter is an entirely serious one
from beginning to end; there is no attempt to joke or make sport, as
some of Franklin’s correspondents did; and the first sentence in the
letter states that the writer’s wife was Franklin’s daughter and that
she had given birth to a girl. The letter is apparently written to
announce that event to Franklin. Such a statement, made by a man about
his wife, is certainly deserving of serious consideration. Would he on
such an occasion and in such a manner have said that she was Franklin’s
daughter unless he firmly believed that she was?

If she was Franklin’s daughter, as her husband describes her, she must
have been illegitimate, for it is well known that Franklin’s only
legitimate daughter was Mrs. Sarah Bache.

John Foxcroft, the writer of the letter, is well known as the deputy
postmaster of Philadelphia at that time, and Franklin was
postmaster-general of the Colonies. Foxcroft and Franklin were close
friends and often corresponded on business matters. We shall give,
therefore, the letters of Franklin to Foxcroft in which he refers to
Mrs. Foxcroft as his daughter, and we shall give them in full, so that
the connection can be seen. Some of these letters are in the collection
of Franklin’s papers in the State Department at Washington, and have
been copied from that source. Others are from the collection of the
American Philosophical Society at Philadelphia, and one or two can be
found in Bigelow’s “Works of Franklin.”

American Philosophical Society Collection, vol. xlv., No. 46:

    LONDON, Feb. 4, 1772.

    MR. FOXCROFT,

    Dear Friend

    I have written two or three small letters to you since my return
    from Ireland and Scotland. I now have before me your favours of
    Oct. 1, Nov. 5 and Nov. 13.

    Mr. Todd has not yet shown me that which you wrote to him about
    the New Colony, tho he mentioned it and will let me see it, I
    suppose, when I call on him. I told you in one of mine, that he
    had advanced for your share what has been paid by others, tho I
    was ready to [torn] and shall in the whole Affair take the same
    care of your interests as of my own. You take notice that Mr.
    Wharton’s friends will not allow me _any Merit_ in this
    transaction, but insist _the Whole_ is owing to his superior
    Abilities. It is a common error in Friends when they would extol
    their Friend to make comparison and depreciate the merit of
    others. It was not necessary for his Friends to do so in this
    case. Mr. Wharton will in truth have a good deal of Merit in the
    Affair if it succeeds, he having been exceedingly active and
    industrious in soliciting it, and in drawing up Memorials and
    Papers to support the Application, remove objections &c. But tho
    I have not been equally active (it not being thought proper that
    I should appear much in the solicitation since I became a little
    obnoxious to the Ministry on acct. of my Letters to America) yet
    I suppose my Advice may have been thought of some use since it
    has been asked in every step, and I believe that being longer
    and better known here than Mr. Wharton, I may have lent some
    weight to his Negotiations by joining in the Affair, from the
    greater confidence men are apt to place in one they know than in
    a stranger. However, as I neither ask or expect any particular
    consideration for any service I may have done and only think I
    ought to escape censure, I shall not enlarge on this invidious
    topic. Let us all do our endeavours, in our several capacities,
    for the common Service, and if one has the ability or
    opportunity of doing more for his Friends than another let him
    think that a happiness and be satisfied.

    The Business is not yet quite completed and as many Things
    happen between the Cup and the Lip, perhaps there may be nothing
    of this kind for Friends to dispute about. For if no body should
    receive any Benefit there would be no scrambling for the Honour.

    Stavers is in the wrong to talk of my promising him the Rider’s
    Place again. I only told him that I would (as he requested it)
    recommend him to Mr. Hubbard to be replaced if it could be done
    without impropriety or inconveniency. This I did & the rather as
    I had always understood him to have been a good honest punctual
    Rider. His behaviour to you entitles him to no Favour, and I
    believe any Application he may make here will be to little
    purpose.

    In yours from N York of July 3 you mention your intention of
    purchasing a Bill to send hither as soon as you return home from
    your journey. I have not since received any from you, which I
    only take notice of to you, that if you have sent one you may
    not blame me for not acknowledging the Receipt of it.

    In mine of April 20 I explained to you what I had before
    mentioned that in settling our private Account I had paid you
    the sum of 389£ (or thereabouts) in my own Wrong, having before
    paid it for you to the General Post Office. I hope that since
    you have received your Books and looked over the Accounts you
    are satisfied of this. I am anxious for your Answer upon it, the
    sum being large and what cannot prudently for you or me be left
    long without an Adjustment.

    My Love to my Daughter and compliments to your Brother, I am
    ever my dear Friend

    Yours most affectionately

    B FRANKLIN

The above letter is taken from the copy kept by Franklin in his own
handwriting in the collection of the American Philosophical Society.
The same letter, with some verbal differences and without the last
clause relating to the daughter, appears in Bigelow’s “Works of
Franklin,” vol. iv., p. 473.

Library of State Department, Washington, 11 R, 8:

    LONDON, Oct. 7, 1772.

    MR. FOXCROFT,

    Dear Sir--

    I had no line from you by this last Packet, but find with
    Pleasure by yours to Mr. Todd that you and yours are well.

    The affair of the Patent is in good Train and we hope, if new
    Difficulties unexpected do not arise, we may get thro’ it as
    soon as the Board meet. We are glad you made no Bargain [torn]
    your Share and hope none of our Partners [torn] do any such
    thing; for the Report of such a Bargain before the Business is
    completed might overset the whole.

    Mr. Colden has promised by this Packet that we shall certainly
    have the Accounts by the next. If they do not come I think we
    shall be blamed, and he will be superseded; For their Lordships
    our masters are incensed with the long Delay.

    I hope you have by this time examined our private Accounts as
    you promised, and satisfyd yourself that I did, as I certainly
    did, pay you that Ballance of about 389£ in my own wrong. It
    would relieve me of some uneasiness to have the Matter settled
    between us, as it is a Sum of Importance and in case of Death
    might be not so easily understood as while we are both living.

    With love to my Daughter and best Wishes of Prosperity to you
    both, and to the little one, I am ever my dear Friend

    Yours most affectionately,
    B. FRANKLIN

Library of State Department, Washington, 11 R, 12:

    LONDON Nov 3 1772

    MR. FOXCROFT

    Dear Sir

    I received your Favour of June 22d by Mr. Finlay and shall be
    glad of an opportunity of rendering him any service on your
    Recommendation. There does not at present appear to be any
    Disposition in the Board to appoint a Riding Surveyor, nor does
    Mr. Finlay seem desirous of such an Employment. Everything at
    the Office remains as when I last wrote only the Impatience for
    the Accounts seems increasing. I hope they are in the October
    Packet now soon expected agreeable to Mr. Colden’s last
    promise.

    I spent a Fortnight lately at West Wycomb with our good master
    Lord Le Despencer and left him well.

    The Board has begun to act again and I hope our Business will
    again go forward.

    My love to my Daughter concludes from

    Your affectionate Friend
    and humble servant
    B. F.

There is a letter to Foxcroft in the Library of the State Department,
Washington, 11 R, 8, dated London, December 2, 1772, which need not
perhaps be given in full, because Franklin sends love to his daughter
and then crosses it out as follows:

    I can now only add my Love to my Daughter and best Wishes of
    Happiness to you and yours from Dear Friend

    Yours most affectionately
    B. FRANKLIN.

He apparently struck out the words “Love to my Daughter and” because
they were in effect included in the best wishes and happiness which
followed.

Library of State Department, Washington, 11 R, 63:

    LONDON Mar. 3, 73

    MR. FOXCROFT,

    Dear Friend--

    I am favoured with yours of June 5, and am glad to hear that you
    and yours are well. The Flour and Bisket came to hand in good
    order. I am much obliged to you and your brother for your care
    in sending them.

    I believe I wrote you before that the Demand made upon us on
    Acct. of the Packet Letters was withdrawn as being without
    Foundation. As to the Ohio Affair we are daily amused with
    Expectations that it is to be compleated at this and T’other
    time, but I see no Progress made in it. And I think more and
    more that I was right in never placing any great dependence on
    it. Mr. Todd has received your 200£.

    Mr. Finlay sailed yesterday for New York. Probably you will have
    seen him before this comes to hand.

    You misunderstood me if you thought I meant in so often
    mentioning our Acct. to press an immediate Payment of the
    Ballance. My Wish only was, that you would inspect the Account
    and satisfy yourself that I had paid you when here that large
    supposed Ballance in my own wrong. If you are now satisfied
    about it and transmit me the Account you promise with the
    Ballance stated I shall be easy and you will pay it when
    convenient.

    With my Love to my Daughter &c I am ever Dear Friend

    Yours most affectionately
    B. FRANKLIN

Bigelow’s “Works of Franklin,” vol. v. p. 201:

    LONDON, 14 July, 1773.

    TO MR. FOXCROFT.

    Dear Friend:--I received yours of June 7th, and am glad to find
    by it that you are safely returned from your Virginia journey,
    having settled your affairs there to satisfaction, and that you
    found your family well at New York.

    I feel for you in the fall you had out of your chair. I have had
    three of those squelchers in different journeys, and never
    desire a fourth.

    I do not think it was without reason that you continued so long
    one of St. Thomas’ disciples: for there was always some cause
    for doubting. Some people always ride before the horse’s head.
    The draft of the patent is at length got into the hands of the
    Attorney General, who must approve the form before it passes the
    seals, so one would think much more time can scarce be required
    to complete the business: but ’tis good not to be too sanguine.
    He may go into the country, and the Privy Councillors likewise,
    and some months elapse before they get together again:
    therefore, if you have any patience, use it.

    I suppose Mr. Finlay will be some time at Quebec in settling his
    affairs. By the next packet you will receive a draft of
    instructions for him.

    In mine of December 2d, upon the post-office accounts to April,
    1772, I took notice to you that I observed I had full credit for
    my salary: but no charge appeared against me for money paid on
    my account to Mrs. Franklin from the Philadelphia office. I
    supposed the thirty pounds currency per month was regularly
    paid, because I had had no complaint from her for want of money,
    and I expected to find the charge in the accounts of the last
    year--that is, to April 3, 1773: but nothing of it appearing
    there, I am at a loss to understand it, and you take no notice
    of my observation above mentioned. The great balance due from
    that office begins to be remarked here, and I should have
    thought the officer would, for his own sake, not have neglected
    to lessen it by showing what he had paid on my account. Pray, my
    dear friend, explain this to me.

    I find by yours to Mr. Todd that you expected soon another
    little one. God send my daughter a good time, and you a good
    boy. Mrs. Stevenson is pleased with your remembrance of her, and
    joins with Mr. and Mrs. Hewson and myself in best wishes for you
    and yours.

    I am ever yours affectionately,

    B. FRANKLIN.

American Philosophical Society Collection, vol. xlv., No. 80:

    LONDON Feb. 18, 1774

    MR. FOXCROFT,

    Dear Friend--

    It is long since I have heard from you. I hope
    nothing I have written has occasioned any coolness. We are no
    longer Colleagues, but let us part as we have lived so long in
    Friendship.

    I am displaced unwillingly by our masters who were obliged to
    comply with the orders of the Ministry. It seems I am too much
    of an American. Take care of yourself for you are little less.

    I hope my daughter continues well. My blessing to her. I
    shall soon, God willing, have the Pleasure of seeing you, intending
    homewards in May next. I shall only wait the Arrival of the April
    Pacquet with the accounts, that I may settle them here before I go.
    I beg you will not fail of forwarding them by that Opportunity,
    which will greatly oblige.

    Dear Friend

    Yours most affectionately

It is to be observed of all these letters that, like the original letter
of Foxcroft, they are entirely serious. They are business letters. They
are not letters of amusement and pleasure, in which Franklin might joke
and laugh with a young girl and in sport call her his daughter. They are
not addressed to the woman in question but to her husband, and at the
close of long details about business matters he simply says “give my
love to my daughter,” or he refers to her, as in the letter next to the
last, as about to have another child. Read in connection with Foxcroft’s
original letter, they form very strong proof that Franklin believed Mrs.
Foxcroft to be his daughter.

But the reviewer says that Mr. Fisher notes in two places that women
correspondents in writing to Franklin called him father and signed
themselves “your daughter.” Mr. Fisher notes on page 332 the letter of a
girl written to Franklin in broken French and English, in which she
begins by calling him “My dear father Americain,” and signs herself
“your humble servant and your daughter J. B. J. Conway.” The letter is
obviously childish and sportive. We do not find the other instance of a
similar letter to which the reviewer alludes. The Conway letter is such
a frivolous one that it amounts to nothing as proof to overcome the
serious, solemn statements by Franklin and Foxcroft in their letters. A
light-minded French girl calling Franklin her father is very different
from serious, business-like statements by Franklin saying that a certain
woman was his daughter.

The reviewer goes on to say that “a little more research would have
shown him [Mr. Fisher] letters of Franklin couched in the same parental
terms.” The meaning of this is presumably that Franklin was in the habit
of calling the young women he corresponded with his daughters. This,
however, it will be observed, is quite a different matter from
Franklin’s writing to a husband and sending love to the husband’s wife
as his daughter. But there are some letters to young girls on which a
reckless, slap-dash reviewer would be likely to base the statement that
Franklin habitually called women his daughters. Let us look into these
letters and see what they are.

Franklin’s first correspondent of this sort was Miss Catherine Ray, of
Rhode Island. They were great friends and exchanged some beautiful
letters, almost unequalled in the English language. They are collected
in Bigelow’s “Works of Franklin,” vol. ii. pp. 387, 414, 495. The letter
at page 387 begins “Dear Katy,” and ends “believe me, my dear girl, your
affectionate faithful friend and humble servant.” The letter at page 414
begins “My Katy,” speaks of her as “dear girl,” and ends with the same
phrase as the previous one, except that the word “faithful” is left out.
The one at page 495 begins “Dear Katy,” and closes “Adieu dear good girl
and believe me ever your affectionate friend.” In none of these letters
does he speak of her as his daughter.

The letters to Miss Catherine Louisa Shipley and to Miss Georgiana
Shipley, the daughters of the Bishop of St. Asaph, are friendly but not
very endearing in the terms used. He once calls Georgiana “My dear
friend,” and in the famous letter on the squirrel addresses her as “My
dear Miss.” He nowhere calls them his daughters.

The letters that come nearest to what the reviewer wants are those to
Miss Mary Stevenson. There are quite a number of them, and she and
Franklin were on the most affectionate terms. We will give the citations
of them in Bigelow, although any one can look them up in the index: In
vol. iii. pp. 34, 46, 54, 56, 62, 139, 151, 186, 187, 195, 209, 232,
238, 245; in vol. iv. pp. 17, 33, 212, 258, 264, 287, 332, 339; in vol.
x. p. 285. These letters call Miss Stevenson “Dear Polly,” “My dear
friend,” “My good girl,” and “My dear good girl.” The first of them,
vol. iii. p. 34, begins by addressing her as “dear child,” and another,
vol. iii. p. 209, closes by saying “Adieu my dear child. I will call you
so. Why should I not call you so, since I love you with all the
tenderness of a father.”

This may be what the reviewer had in his mind. But Franklin nowhere
calls Miss Stevenson his daughter. The word daughter and child are very
different. We all of us often call children we fancy “my child.”
Franklin’s use of the word child as applied to Miss Stevenson has from
the context of the letters a perfectly obvious meaning,--no one can
mistake it; just as his use of the word daughter in the Foxcroft letters
has, from the context and all the circumstances, a perfectly obvious
meaning.

It would be endless to discuss all the reviewer’s irrelevant and
extravagant statements. We shall call attention to only one other
illustration of his methods. He closes one of his wild paragraphs by
saying that if “Mr. Fisher wishes further knowledge on this subject for
‘speculation,’ we recommend him to read Franklin’s letter to Foxcroft of
September 7, 1774.”

The reviewer is careful not to quote from this letter or even to say
where it may be found, and the inference the ordinary reader would draw
from the way it is paraded is that it contains some very positive denial
that Mrs. Foxcroft was Franklin’s daughter. But when it is examined, it
is found to be a business letter like the others, referring to the lady
in question as “Mrs. Foxcroft” instead of as “my daughter,” a perfectly
natural way of referring to her and entirely consistent with the other
letters. We give the letter in full. It is in the American Philosophical
Society Collection, vol. xlv., No. 94:

    LONDON Sept. 7, 1774.

    MR. FOXCROFT,

    Dear Friend--

    Mr. Todd called to see me yesterday. I perceive there is good
    deal of uneasiness at the office concerning the Delay of the
    Accounts. He sent me in the Evening to read and return to him a
    Letter he had written to you for the Mail. Friendship requires
    me to urge earnestly your Attention to the contents, if you
    value the Continuance of your Appointment; for these are times
    of uncertainty, and I think it not unlikely that there is some
    Person in view ready to step into your Shoes, if a tolerable
    reason could be given for dismissing you. Mr. Todd is
    undoubtedly your Friend. But everything is not always done as he
    would have it This to yourself; and I confide that you will take
    it as I mean it for your Good.

    Several Packets are arrived since I have had a Line from you.
    But I had the pleasure of seeing by yours to Mr. Todd that you
    and Mrs. Foxcroft with your little Girl are all in good Health
    which I pray may continue.

    I am ever my dear old friend

    Yours most affectionately

    B. FRANKLIN.




Index


    Academy established by Franklin, 74-5.

    ---- of Madame Helvetius, 330.

    ADAMS, John, 295, 297, 303-5;
      criticisms of Franklin, 306-12;
      his difficulties with Vergennes, 321;
      opposed to France, 322-3, 341-6;
      Franklin criticises, 345-6.

    ----, Mrs. John, 328-9.

    Advertising, Franklin's methods of, 141-2.

    Air-baths, 25-6.

    Albany Conference, 201, 352-3.

    ALLEN, Chief-Justice, 122.

    Alliance, treaty of, 299-303.

    Almanac, Franklin's, 143-52.

    American Philosophical Society, 196.

    Amusements as a youth, 18, 20.

    Ancestors of Franklin, 42, 132.

    Aristocracy, colonial, opposed to Franklin, 124.

    Arithmetic, Franklin learns, 51.

    "Armonica," the, 185.

    Asaph, St., the Bishop of, 227, 348;
      his daughters, 227-8.

    Asbestos purse, the, 63.

    Assembly, Franklin clerk of, 159;
      elected a member of, 199.

    "Associators," the, 199.

    AUSTIN, Jonathan, 301.

    Autobiography, Franklin's, 158.


    BACHE, Sarah, 119, 265.

    BAKER, Polly, 139.

    Ballads by Franklin, 45.

    BANCROFT, Dr. Edward, 288.

    BARTRAM, John, 192.

    BEAUMARCHAIS, 279-83.

    Black Prince, the, 315.

    BLAGDEN, Dr. Charles, 182.

    Blood, causes of heat of, 29.

    Books read by Franklin, 44.

    Bows and arrows, Franklin suggests use of, 266.

    BRADDOCK, Franklin visits, 200.

    BRILLON, Madame, 325-7.

    Broad jokes of Franklin, 125.

    Broom-corn, 184.

    BURGOYNE, surrender of, 301.

    "Busy Body" papers, 135.


    Canada, cession of, 336;
      Franklin's journey to, 267-9.

    CARROLL, Rev. John, 96, 267.

    Celibacy, Franklin's dislike of, 106, 349.

    CHATHAM, Lord, assists the Americans, 261.

    CHAUMONT, Ray de, 275, 347.

    Chevaux-de-frise devised by Franklin, 266.

    Chimneys, smoky, 183.

    Claims for extra service, 164-5.

    Clerk of the Assembly, 159, 197.

    COBBETT, his attack on Franklin, 123.

    Colds, Franklin's theory of, 27-9.

    College of Philadelphia founded, 74-6.

    COLLINS, John, 19-20, 45, 57.

    COLLINSON, Peter, 172-3, 177.

    Constitution of Pennsylvania, 349, 353-4.

    ----, signing of, 361-2.

    Constitutional Convention of 1787, 356.

    Constitution-making, 349-63.

    Constitutions, American, translated into French, 355.

    Contentment of Franklin, 21.

    CONWAY, Mademoiselle, 332.

    _Courant, New England_, 80-1.

    COVERLEY, Sir Roger de, 144-5.

    Creed, Franklin's, 88-91.


    DEANE, Silas, 270, 278, 288, 289-91.

    Death of Franklin, 39-40.

    Deep water, effect of, on vessels, 181.

    DE FOE'S "Essay upon Projects," 193.

    Deism, Franklin's, 80, 84, 91.

    DENHAM, Mr., befriends Franklin, 59, 65, 133.

    DESPENCER, Lord le, 98, 242.

    Diseases of Franklin, 34-40.

    Diurnal motion of the earth, 186-7.

    "Dogood, Silence," 135.

    Dreams, Franklin's fondness for, 26.


    Edict of the King of Prussia, 241-2.

    Education, defects of modern, 47-50.

    Electricity, 172-8.

    ELIOT, Jared, 170.

    "Ephemera, The," 154-5, 325-6.

    Epitaph of Franklin on himself, 153;
      comic epitaphs, 154;
      on the Penns, 223;
      on Franklin, 224;
      on the squirrel, 228.

    Examination before Parliament, 234-9.

    Exercise, Franklin's opinion of, 37.


    "Fireplace, Pennsylvania," 170.

    Fisheries, the, 337, 340-2.

    FORD, Paul Leicester, his essay on the mother of Franklin's son,
      106-7.

    FOTHERGILL, Dr., 213.

    FOXCROFT, John, 104-5.

    France, willingness of, to assist America, 277-8;
      loans from, 317-18;
      Franklin's love for, 346;
      appointed commissioner to, 270;
      subserviency to, 343;
      departure from, 347.

    FRANKLIN, Mrs., 114-18, 120-1, 137.

    ----, William, 105-7, 113, 214.

    ----, William Temple, 106, 214.

    Free ships, 316.

    French, enthusiasm of the, for Franklin, 273-5.

    ----, Franklin's knowledge of, 71, 74, 325-6.

    Fur cap, Franklin's, 274.


    _Gazette, Pennsylvania_, founded by Franklin, 135-42;
      advertisements in, 142.

    Girls, Franklin's fondness for, 128-9, 332-3.

    GODFREY, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas, 134, 143.

    Gout, dialogue of the, with Franklin, 35.

    Governor, the Assembly's contests with the, 204.

    Governor's salary, contests about, 201.

    "Great Empire, Rules for Reducing a," 240-1.

    Gulf Stream, 181-2.


    HALL, David, Franklin's partner, 160.

    HARTLEY, David, 319.

    "Hat Honor," 82-3.

    HELVETIUS, Madame, 327-30.

    HOPKINSON, Thomas, 173.

    Hospital, the Pennsylvania, 123, 195.

    HOUDETOT, Countess d', 332-4.

    HOWE, Lord, 262, 269.

    HUGHES, John, 232.

    Hutchinson Letters, the, 245-60.


    Illegitimate children of Franklin, 104.

    Immorality, Franklin's, 103.

    Indolence, Franklin's, 21.

    IZARD, Ralph, 286-7.


    "Jacobite, The Genealogy of a," 139.

    JAY, John, 318, 338-9, 341-2.

    Junto, the, 66-70.


    KAMES, Lord, 158, 186, 215.

    KEIMER, 54-5, 65, 133-5.

    KEITH, Governor, 55, 56-9.

    KINNERSLEY, Ebenezer, 173-4, 178.

    Kite experiment, 175-6.


    Languages, modern, 71-2.

    Latin, Franklin learns, 71;
      wants to abolish the study of, 72.

    LEE, Arthur, 286, 291-5.

    LEEDS, Titan, 145-6.

    Legislature, Franklin clerk of, 159;
      elected a member of, 199.

    Lehigh Valley, expedition to, 207-9.

    "Liberty and Necessity," Franklin's pamphlet on, 60-3, 85-6.

    Library, the Philadelphia, 193-4.

    Liturgy, Franklin's, 89-90.

    Loans from France, 317-18.

    London, Franklin's first visit to, 59;
      his life there, 60-5.

    LOUIS XVI. gives his portrait to Franklin, 347.

    Love of money, Franklin's, 160.


    MALTHUS, 190.

    Manures, mineral, 184.

    MARBOIS, 342.

    Maritime suggestions, 188-90.

    Marriage, Franklin favors, 106, 349;
      attempts it for himself, 109, 111;
      marries Mrs. Rogers, 112-13.

    MATHER, Cotton, 66, 68, 81, 158, 193.

    MAURY, 187-8.

    MECOM, Jane, 130.

    _Mercury_, the, 134-5, 142.

    MEREDITH, Hugh, 133, 136.

    Militia, Franklin organizes the, 198.

    ---- law drafted by Franklin, 206.

    Mississippi, navigation of the, 341.

    Mistress, Franklin's advice on the choice of a, 126-7.

    Modern languages, 71-2.

    Molasses, export duty on, 302-3.

    Money, Franklin's love of, 160.

    Moral code, Franklin's, 102, 108.

    Music, 185.


    Nepotism, 164, 293.

    Northeast storms, origin of, 169.

    Nuncio, the papal, 96-7.


    Oil, effect of, on waves, 182-3.

    Ordination of bishops, 96-7.

    OSWALD, commission of, 337-9.


    Paper money, Franklin's pamphlet on, 70.

    Parable against persecution, 155-8.

    Paralytic people brought to Franklin, 331.

    PARKER, Theodore, 106.

    Passy, Franklin at, 275.

    PASSY, Mademoiselle de, 306.

    "Paxton Boys," 219-20.

    Peace, proposals of, 319;
      treaty of, 335.

    "Pennsylvania Fireplace," 170.

    ---- Hospital, 195.

    Peopling of countries, 190.

    Perfumes, Franklin's letter on, 126.

    Persecution, parable against, 155-8.

    Philadelphia, Franklin's first journey to, 52-4.

    ---- Library, 193-4.

    Plagiarism, 26, 152.

    Plan of life, Franklin's, 85.

    Polly Baker's speech, 139.

    PONTIAC, conspiracy of, 218.

    "Poor Richard," 143-52.

    Portraits of Franklin, 30-3.

    Postmaster of Philadelphia, 159.

    Postmaster-General of the colonies, 162;
      under Congress, 265.

    Prayer-book, Franklin's revision of, 98-101.

    PRIESTLEY, Joseph, 213.

    Privateering, Franklin opposed to, 317.

    Profits of business, 159-61, 163-5.

    Proprietary estates, taxing of, 204-5, 209-10, 216-17, 221.

    Proprietorship, abolition of, 221-6, 231.


    RALPH, a friend of Franklin, 59, 64.

    RAY, Miss Catharine, 128.

    READ, Miss, 54, 58, 60, 65-6, 112.

    Reading as a boy, 42.

    Recommendation, letters of, 319-20.

    "Reprisal," the, 271-2.

    Retirement from business, 160-1.

    RITTENHOUSE, David, 168.

    Rolls, Franklin's story of the, 54.

    ROMILLY, Sir Samuel, visits Franklin, 350.

    Royal government, petition to, 221-6, 231.

    "Rules for Reducing a Great Empire," 240-1.


    Sabbath-breaker, Franklin as a, 78, 93.

    Salaries of Franklin's offices, 163-4.

    Salary of the President, Franklin opposes, 357.

    School-days, 41.

    Scotch-Irish, the, 219-20.

    Sedentary life of Franklin, 22.

    Self-made man, Franklin as a, 41.

    Senate, composition of the, 360.

    Shallow water, effect of, 181.

    SLOANE, Sir Hans, 63.

    Small-pox, inoculation for, 81.

    SMITH, Rev. William, 76, 122.

    Smoke-consuming stove, 184.

    Smoky chimneys, 183.

    Soldier, Franklin as a, 207.

    Spain, her interests in the Mississippi, 340.

    _Spectator, The_, analyzed by Franklin, 46.

    Stamp Act, 231-9.

    States, the smaller, 358.

    STEVENSON, Miss Mary, 129.

    ----, Mrs., 211-12.

    Storms from the northeast, 169.

    STRAHAN, William, 213, 267.

    Street-cleaning, 196.

    Subserviency to France, 334-5, 343.

    Swimming, 18-19.

    SYNG, Philip, 173.


    Taxing the estates, 204-5, 209-10, 216-17, 221.

    Temperance, 24-5.

    TEMPLE, John, his duel with Whately, 249.

    THOMPSON, Mrs., calls Franklin a rebel, 331.

    THUNDER, Marquis of, 306.

    TRUXTON, Captain, 348.

    TURGOT, 311-12.


    Union, plans of, 352-3.


    Vegetarianism, 22.

    VEILLARD, Le, 347.

    Ventilation, 29.

    Venus, transit of, 168.

    VERGENNES, 277, 281, 303, 321-2, 324, 338, 341, 344.

    "Virtue, The Art of," planned by Franklin, 109.

    VOLTAIRE, resemblance of, to Franklin, 280;
      embraces Franklin, 306.


    War, Franklin's opinion of, 191.

    War, Quaker opinion of, 203.

    Water, depth of, as affecting vessels, 181.

    Water-drinking, 23.

    Water-spouts, 180.

    Wealth of Franklin, 165.

    WEDDERBURN, 256-9.

    WHATELY, Thomas, his duel with Temple, 249.

    Whistle, story of the, 60.

    WHITEFIELD, Rev. George, 94-5.

    WILLIAMS, Jonathan, 293-8.

    Writing, Franklin trains himself in, 46.


THE END.




Transcriber’s Note.


Irregular spelling in quoted material is as per the original. Minor
errors in punctuation corrected without note. The following
typographical errors have been corrected:

   Page 23: Original: “... other projects, to form a religous ...”
       (changed to “religious”)

   Page 35: Original: “... ate and drank too freeely, and ...”
       (changed to “freely”)

   Page 139: Original: “... American newsapers for half a ...”
       (changed to “newspapers”)

   Page 291: Original: “... publication of Beamarchais’s life ...”
       (changed to “Beaumarchais’s”)

   Page 293: Original: “... in a phamphlet, entitled ...”
       (changed to “pamphlet”)

   Page 349: Original: “... Eripuit cœlo fulmen septrumque ...”
       (changed to “sceptrumque”)

The section of text comparing Taylor’s and Franklin’s language (pp.
156-7) was printed side by side in the original.

This Unicode file uses the symbols: ☌: conjunction, ☉: sun, ☿: Mercury,
œ: oe ligature. If these do not appear correctly, try using a different
font.





End of Project Gutenberg's The True Benjamin Franklin, by Sydney George Fisher