HIS AUTOBIOGRAPHY
1706-1757
Twyford, at the Bishop of St. Asaph’s,
1771.
Dear son: I have ever
had pleasure in obtaining any little anecdotes of
my ancestors. You may remember the inquiries
I made among the remains of my relations when you
were with me in England, and the journey I undertook
for that purpose. Imagining it may be equally
agreeable to you to know the circumstances of my
life, many of which you are yet unacquainted with,
and expecting the enjoyment of a week’s uninterrupted
leisure in my present country retirement, I sit down
to write them for you. To which I have besides
some other inducements. Having emerged from the
poverty and obscurity in which I was born and bred,
to a state of affluence and some degree of reputation
in the world, and having gone so far through life
with a considerable share of felicity, the conducing
means I made use of, which with the blessing of God
so well succeeded, my posterity may like to know, as
they may find some of them suitable to their own situations,
and therefore fit to be imitated.
That felicity, when I reflected on
it, has induced me sometimes to say, that were it
offered to my choice, I should have no objection to
a repetition of the same life from its beginning,
only asking the advantages authors have in a second
edition to correct some faults of the first.
So I might, besides correcting the faults, change
some sinister accidents and events of it for others
more favorable. But though this were denied,
I should still accept the offer. Since such a
repetition is not to be expected, the next thing most
like living one’s life over again seems to be
a recollection of that life, and to make that recollection
as durable as possible by putting it down in writing.
Hereby, too, I shall indulge the inclination
so natural in old men, to be talking of themselves
and their own past actions; and I shall indulge it
without being tiresome to others, who, through respect
to age, might conceive themselves obliged to give
me a hearing, since this may be read or not as any
one pleases. And, lastly (I may as well confess
it, since my denial of it will be believed by nobody),
perhaps I shall a good deal gratify my own vanity.
Indeed, I scarce ever heard or saw the introductory
words, “Without vanity I may say,” &c.,
but some vain thing immediately followed. Most
people dislike vanity in others, whatever share they
have of it themselves; but I give it fair quarter
wherever I meet with it, being persuaded that it is
often productive of good to the possessor, and to
others that are within his sphere of action; and therefore,
in many cases, it would not be altogether absurd if
a man were to thank God for his vanity among the other
comforts of life.
And now I speak of thanking God, I
desire with all humility to acknowledge that I owe
the mentioned happiness of my past life to His kind
providence, which lead me to the means I used and gave
them success. My belief of this induces me to
hope, though I must not presume, that the same goodness
will still be exercised toward me, in continuing that
happiness, or enabling me to bear a fatal reverse,
which I may experience as others have done: the
complexion of my future fortune being known to Him
only in whose power it is to bless to us even our
afflictions.
The notes one of my uncles (who had
the same kind of curiosity in collecting family anecdotes)
once put into my hands, furnished me with several
particulars relating to our ancestors. From these
notes I learned that the family had lived in the same
village, Ecton, in Northamptonshire, for three hundred
years, and how much longer he knew not (perhaps from
the time when the name of Franklin, that before was
the name of an order of people, was assumed by them
as a surname when others took surnames all over the
kingdom), on a freehold of about thirty acres, aided
by the smith’s business, which had continued
in the family till his time, the eldest son being
always bred to that business; a custom which he and
my father followed as to their eldest sons.
When I searched the registers at Ecton, I found an
account of their births, marriages and burials from
the year 1555 only, there being no registers kept
in that parish at any time preceding. By that
register I perceived that I was the youngest son of
the youngest son for five generations back.
My grandfather Thomas, who was born in 1598, lived
at Ecton till he grew too old to follow business longer,
when he went to live with his son John, a dyer at Banbury,
in Oxfordshire, with whom my father served an apprenticeship.
There my grandfather died and lies buried.
We saw his gravestone in 1758. His eldest son
Thomas lived in the house at Ecton, and left it with
the land to his only child, a daughter, who, with
her husband, one Fisher, of Wellingborough, sold it
to Mr. Isted, now lord of the manor there. My
grandfather had four sons that grew up, viz.:
Thomas, John, Benjamin and Josiah. I will give
you what account I can of them, at this distance from
my papers, and if these are not lost in my absence,
you will among them find many more particulars.
Thomas was bred a smith under his
father; but, being ingenious, and encouraged in learning
(as all my brothers were) by an Esquire Palmer, then
the principal gentleman in that parish, he qualified
himself for the business of scrivener; became a considerable
man in the county; was a chief mover of all public-spirited
undertakings for the county or town of Northampton,
and his own village, of which many instances were
related of him; and much taken notice of and patronized
by the then Lord Halifax. He died in 1702, January
6, old style, just four years to a day before I was
born. The account we received of his life and
character from some old people at Ecton, I remember,
struck you as something extraordinary, from its similarity
to what you knew of mine.
“Had he died on the same day,”
you said, “one might have supposed a transmigration.”
John was bred a dyer, I believe of
woolens. Benjamin was bred a silk dyer, serving
an apprenticeship at London. He was an ingenious
man. I remember him well, for when I was a boy
he came over to my father in Boston, and lived in
the house with us some years. He lived to a great
age. His grandson, Samuel Franklin, now lives
in Boston. He left behind him two quarto volumes,
Ms., of his own poetry, consisting of little
occasional pieces addressed to his friends and relations,
of which the following, sent to me, is a specimen.
He had formed a short-hand of his own, which he taught
me, but, never practising it, I have now forgot it.
I was named after this uncle, there being a particular
affection between him and my father. He was very
pious, a great attender of sermons of the best preachers,
which he took down in his short-hand, and had with
him many volumes of them. He was also much of
a politician; too much, perhaps, for his station.
There fell lately into my hands, in London, a collection
he had made of all the principal pamphlets, relating
to public affairs, from 1641 to 1717; many of the
volumes are wanting as appears by the numbering, but
there still remain eight volumes in folio, and twenty-four
in quarto and in octavo. A dealer in old books
met with them, and knowing me by my sometimes buying
of him, he brought them to me. It seems my uncle
must have left them here, when he went to America,
which was about fifty years since. There are
many of his notes in the margins.
This obscure family of ours was early
in the Reformation, and continued Protestants through
the reign of Queen Mary, when they were sometimes
in danger of trouble on account of their zeal against
popery. They had got an English Bible, and to
conceal and secure it, it was fastened open with tapes
under and within the cover of a joint-stool. When
my great-great-grandfather read it to his family,
he turned up the joint-stool upon his knees, turning
over the leaves then under the tapes. One of
the children stood at the door to give notice if he
saw the apparitor coming, who was an officer of the
spiritual court. In that case the stool was
turned down again upon its feet, when the Bible remained
concealed under it as before. This anecdote I
had from my uncle Benjamin. The family continued
all of the Church of England till about the end of
Charles the Second’s reign, when some of the
ministers that had been outed for nonconformity holding
conventicles in Northamptonshire, Benjamin and Josiah
adhered to them, and so continued all their lives:
the rest of the family remained with the Episcopal
Church.
Josiah, my father, married young,
and carried his wife with three children into New
England, about 1682. The conventicles having
been forbidden by law, and frequently disturbed, induced
some considerable men of his acquaintance to remove
to that country, and he was prevailed with to accompany
them thither, where they expected to enjoy their mode
of religion with freedom. By the same wife he
had four children more born there, and by a second
wife ten more, in all seventeen; of which I remember
thirteen sitting at one time at his table, who all
grew up to be men and women, and married; I was the
youngest son, and the youngest child but two, and
was born in Boston, New England. My mother, the
second wife, was Abiah Folger, daughter of Peter Folger,
one of the first settlers of New England, of whom
honorable mention is made by Cotton Mather in his
church history of that country, entitled Magnalia
Christi Americana, as “a godly, learned Englishman,”
if I remember the words rightly. I have heard
that he wrote sundry small occasional pieces, but
only one of them was printed, which I saw now many
years since. It was written in 1675, in the
home-spun verse of that time and people, and addressed
to those then concerned in the government there.
It was in favor of liberty of conscience, and in behalf
of the Baptists, Quakers, and other sectaries that
had been under persecution, ascribing the Indian wars,
and other distresses that had befallen the country,
to that persecution, as so many judgments of God to
punish so heinous an offense, and exhorting a repeal
of those uncharitable laws. The whole appeared
to me as written with a good deal of decent plainness
and manly freedom. The six concluding lines I
remember, though I have forgotten the two first of
the stanza; but the purport of them was, that his
censures proceeded from good-will, and, therefore,
he would be known to be the author.
“Because
to be a libeller (says he)
I
hate it with my heart;
From
Sherburne town, where now I dwell
My
name I do put here;
Without
offense your real friend,
It
is Peter Folgier.”
My elder brothers were all put apprentices
to different trades. I was put to the grammar-school
at eight years of age, my father intending to devote
me, as the tithe of his sons, to the service of the
Church. My early readiness in learning to read
(which must have been very early, as I do not remember
when I could not read), and the opinion of all his
friends, that I should certainly make a good scholar,
encouraged him in this purpose of his. My uncle
Benjamin, too, approved of it, and proposed to give
me all his short-hand volumes of sermons, I suppose
as a stock to set up with, if I would learn his character.
I continued, however, at the grammar-school not quite
one year, though in that time I had risen gradually
from the middle of the class of that year to be the
head of it, and farther was removed into the next class
above it, in order to go with that into the third
at the end of the year. But my father, in the
meantime, from a view of the expense of a college
education, which having so large a family he could
not well afford, and the mean living many so educated
were afterwards able to obtain reasons
that he gave to his friends in my hearing altered
his first intention, took me from the grammar-school,
and sent me to a school for writing and arithmetic,
kept by a then famous man, Mr. George Brownell, very
successful in his profession generally, and that by
mild, encouraging methods. Under him I acquired
fair writing pretty soon, but I failed in the arithmetic,
and made no progress in it. At ten years old
I was taken home to assist my father in his business,
which was that of a tallow-chandler and sope-boiler;
a business he was not bred to, but had assumed on
his arrival in New England, and on finding his dying
trade would not maintain his family, being in little
request. Accordingly, I was employed in cutting
wick for the candles, filling the dipping mold and
the molds for cast candles, attending the shop, going
of errands, etc.
I disliked the trade, and had a strong
inclination for the sea, but my father declared against
it; however, living near the water, I was much in
and about it, learnt early to swim well, and to manage
boats; and when in a boat or canoe with other boys,
I was commonly allowed to govern, especially in any
case of difficulty; and upon other occasions I was
generally a leader among the boys, and sometimes led
them into scrapes, of which I will mention one instance,
as it shows an early projecting public spirit, tho’
not then justly conducted.
There was a salt-marsh that bounded
part of the mill-pond, on the edge of which, at high
water, we used to stand to fish for minnows.
By much trampling, we had made it a mere quagmire.
My proposal was to build a wharff there fit for us
to stand upon, and I showed my comrades a large heap
of stones, which were intended for a new house near
the marsh, and which would very well suit our purpose.
Accordingly, in the evening, when the workmen were
gone, I assembled a number of my play-fellows, and
working with them diligently like so many emmets, sometimes
two or three to a stone, we brought them all away
and built our little wharff. The next morning
the workmen were surprised at missing the stones,
which were found in our wharff. Inquiry was made
after the removers; we were discovered and complained
of; several of us were corrected by our fathers; and
though I pleaded the usefulness of the work, mine
convinced me that nothing was useful which was not
honest.
I think you may like to know something
of his person and character. He had an excellent
constitution of body, was of middle stature, but well
set, and very strong; he was ingenious, could draw
prettily, was skilled a little in music, and had a
clear pleasing voice, so that when he played psalm
tunes on his violin and sung withal, as he sometimes
did in an evening after the business of the day was
over, it was extremely agreeable to hear. He
had a mechanical genius too, and, on occasion, was
very handy in the use of other tradesmen’s tools;
but his great excellence lay in a sound understanding
and solid judgment in prudential matters, both in
private and publick affairs. In the latter,
indeed, he was never employed, the numerous family
he had to educate and the straitness of his circumstances
keeping him close to his trade; but I remember well
his being frequently visited by leading people, who
consulted him for his opinion in affairs of the town
or of the church he belonged to, and showed a good
deal of respect for his judgment and advice:
he was also much consulted by private persons about
their affairs when any difficulty occurred, and frequently
chosen an arbitrator between contending parties.
At his table he liked to have, as
often as he could, some sensible friend or neighbor
to converse with, and always took care to start some
ingenious or useful topic for discourse, which might
tend to improve the minds of his children. By
this means he turned our attention to what was good,
just, and prudent in the conduct of life; and little
or no notice was ever taken of what related to the
victuals on the table, whether it was well or ill
dressed, in or out of season, of good or bad flavor,
preferable or inferior to this or that other thing
of the kind, so that I was bro’t up in such
a perfect inattention to those matters as to be quite
indifferent what kind of food was set before me, and
so unobservant of it, that to this day if I am asked
I can scarce tell a few hours after dinner what I
dined upon. This has been a convenience to me
in travelling, where my companions have been sometimes
very unhappy for want of a suitable gratification
of their more delicate, because better instructed,
tastes and appetites.
My mother 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 dy’d, he at 89,
and she at 85 years of age. They lie buried
together at Boston, where I some years since placed
a marble over their grave, with this inscription:
JosiahFranklin,
and
Abiah his Wife,
lie here interred.
They lived lovingly together in wedlock
fifty-five years.
Without an estate, or any gainful employment,
By constant labor and industry,
with God’s blessing,
They 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, AEtat 89.
A.F. born 1667, died 1752, 95.
By my rambling digressions I perceive
myself to be grown old. I us’d to write
more methodically. But one does not dress for
private company as for a publick ball. ’Tis
perhaps only negligence.
To return: I continued thus
employed in my father’s business for two years,
that is, till I was twelve years old; and my brother
John, who was bred to that business, having left my
father, married, and set up for himself at Rhode Island,
there was all appearance that I was destined to supply
his place, and become a tallow-chandler. But
my dislike to the trade continuing, my father was
under apprehensions that if he did not find one for
me more agreeable, I should break away and get to
sea, as his son Josiah had done, to his great vexation.
He therefore sometimes took me to walk with him,
and see joiners, bricklayers, turners, braziers, etc.,
at their work, that he might observe my inclination,
and endeavor to fix it on some trade or other on land.
It has ever since been a pleasure to me to see good
workmen handle their tools; and it has been useful
to me, having learnt so much by it as to be able to
do little jobs myself in my house when a workman could
not readily be got, and to construct little machines
for my experiments, while the intention of making
the experiment was fresh and warm in my mind.
My father at last fixed upon the cutler’s trade,
and my uncle Benjamin’s son Samuel, who was
bred to that business in London, being about that
time established in Boston, I was sent to be with
him some time on liking. But his expectations
of a fee with me displeasing my father, I was taken
home again.
From a child I was fond of reading,
and all the little money that came into my hands was
ever laid out in books. Pleased with the Pilgrim’s
Progress, my first collection was of John Bunyan’s
works in separate little volumes. I afterward
sold them to enable me to buy R. Burton’s Historical
Collections; they were small chapmen’s books,
and cheap, 40 or 50 in all. My father’s
little library consisted chiefly of books in polemic
divinity, most of which I read, and have since often
regretted that, at a time when I had such a thirst
for knowledge, more proper books had not fallen in
my way since it was now resolved I should not be a
clergyman. Plutarch’s Lives there was in
which I read abundantly, and I still think that time
spent to great advantage. There was also a book
of De Foe’s, called an Essay on Projects, and
another of Dr. Mather’s, called Essays to do
Good, which perhaps gave me a turn of thinking that
had an influence on some of the principal future events
of my life.
This bookish inclination at length
determined my father to make me a printer, though
he had already one son (James) of that profession.
In 1717 my brother James returned from England with
a press and letters to set up his business in Boston.
I liked it much better than that of my father, but
still had a hankering for the sea. To prevent
the apprehended effect of such an inclination, my
father was impatient to have me bound to my brother.
I stood out some time, but at last was persuaded,
and signed the indentures when I was yet but twelve
years old. I was to serve as an apprentice till
I was twenty-one years of age, only I was to be allowed
journeyman’s wages during the last year.
In a little time I made great proficiency in the business,
and became a useful hand to my brother. I now
had access to better books. An acquaintance
with the apprentices of booksellers enabled me sometimes
to borrow a small one, which I was careful to return
soon and clean. Often I sat up in my room reading
the greatest part of the night, when the book was
borrowed in the evening and to be returned early in
the morning, lest it should be missed or wanted.
And after some time an ingenious tradesman,
Mr. Matthew Adams, who had a pretty collection of
books, and who frequented our printing-house, took
notice of me, invited me to his library, and very kindly
lent me such books as I chose to read. I now
took a fancy to poetry, and made some little pieces;
my brother, thinking it might turn to account, encouraged
me, and put me on composing occasional ballads.
One was called The Lighthouse Tragedy, and contained
an account of the drowning of Captain Worthilake,
with his two daughters: the other was a sailor’s
song, on the taking of Teach (or Blackbeard) the pirate.
They were wretched stuff, in the Grub-street-ballad
style; and when they were printed he sent me about
the town to sell them. The first sold wonderfully,
the event being recent, having made a great noise.
This flattered my vanity; but my father discouraged
me by ridiculing my performances, and telling me verse-makers
were generally beggars. So I escaped being a
poet, most probably a very bad one; but as prose writing
bad been of great use to me in the course of my life,
and was a principal means of my advancement, I shall
tell you how, in such a situation, I acquired what
little ability I have in that way.
There was another bookish lad in the
town, John Collins by name, with whom I was intimately
acquainted. We sometimes disputed, and very fond
we were of argument, and very desirous of confuting
one another, which disputatious turn, by the way,
is apt to become a very bad habit, making people often
extremely disagreeable in company by the contradiction
that is necessary to bring it into practice; and thence,
besides souring and spoiling the conversation, is productive
of disgusts and, perhaps enmities where you may have
occasion for friendship. I had caught it by
reading my father’s books of dispute about religion.
Persons of good sense, I have since observed, seldom
fall into it, except lawyers, university men, and men
of all sorts that have been bred at Edinborough.
A question was once, somehow or other,
started between Collins and me, of the propriety of
educating the female sex in learning, and their abilities
for study. He was of opinion that it was improper,
and that they were naturally unequal to it.
I took the contrary side, perhaps a little for dispute’s
sake. He was naturally more eloquent, had a ready
plenty of words; and sometimes, as I thought, bore
me down more by his fluency than by the strength of
his reasons. As we parted without settling the
point, and were not to see one another again for some
time, I sat down to put my arguments in writing, which
I copied fair and sent to him. He answered,
and I replied. Three or four letters of a side
had passed, when my father happened to find my papers
and read them. Without entering into the discussion,
he took occasion to talk to me about the manner of
my writing; observed that, though I had the advantage
of my antagonist in correct spelling and pointing (which
I ow’d to the printing-house), I fell far short
in elegance of expression, in method and in perspicuity,
of which he convinced me by several instances.
I saw the justice of his remark, and thence grew
more attentive to the manner in writing, and determined
to endeavor at improvement.
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. My time for these
exercises and for reading was at night, after work
or before it began in the morning, or on Sundays,
when I contrived to be in the printing-house alone,
evading as much as I could the common attendance on
public worship which my father used to exact on me
when I was under his care, and which indeed I still
thought a duty, though I could not, as it seemed to
me, afford time to practise it.
When about 16 years of age I happened
to meet with a book, written by one Tryon, recommending
a vegetable diet. I determined to go into it.
My brother, being yet unmarried, did not keep house,
but boarded himself and his apprentices in another
family. My refusing to eat flesh occasioned
an inconveniency, and I was frequently chid for my
singularity. I made myself acquainted with Tryon’s
manner of preparing some of his dishes, such as boiling
potatoes or rice, making hasty pudding, and a few
others, and then proposed to my brother, that if he
would give me, weekly, half the money he paid for my
board, I would board myself. He instantly agreed
to it, and I presently found that I could save half
what he paid me. This was an additional fund
for buying books. But I had another advantage
in it. My brother and the rest going from the
printing-house to their meals, I remained there alone,
and, despatching presently my light repast, which often
was no more than a bisket or a slice of bread, a handful
of raisins or a tart from the pastry-cook’s,
and a glass of water, had the rest of the time till
their return for study, in which I made the greater
progress, from that greater clearness of head and
quicker apprehension which usually attend temperance
in eating and drinking.
And now it was that, being on some
occasion made asham’d of my ignorance in figures,
which I had twice failed in learning when at school,
I took Cocker’s book of Arithmetick, and went
through the whole by myself with great ease.
I also read Seller’s and Shermy’s books
of Navigation, and became acquainted with the little
geometry they contain; but never proceeded far in
that science. And I read about this time Locke
On Human Understanding, and the Art of Thinking, by
Messrs. 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 procur’d
Xenophon’s Memorable Things of Socrates, wherein
there are many instances of the same method.
I was charm’d with it, adopted it, dropt my
abrupt contradiction and positive argumentation, and
put on the humble inquirer and doubter. And
being then, from reading Shaftesbury and Collins,
become a real doubter in many points of our religious
doctrine, I found this method safest for myself and
very embarrassing to those against whom I used it;
therefore I took a delight in it, practis’d
it continually, and grew very artful and expert in
drawing people, even of superior knowledge, into concessions,
the consequences of which they did not foresee, entangling
them in difficulties out of which they could not extricate
themselves, and so obtaining victories that neither
myself nor my cause always deserved. I continu’d
this method some few years, but gradually left it,
retaining only the habit of expressing myself in terms
of modest diffidence; never using, when I advanced
any thing that may possibly be disputed, the words
certainly, undoubtedly, or any others that give the
air of positiveness to an opinion; but rather say,
I conceive or apprehend a thing to be so and so; it
appears to me, or I should think it so or so, for
such and such reasons; or I imagine it to be so; or
it is so, if I am not mistaken. This habit,
I believe, has been of great advantage to me when
I have had occasion to inculcate my opinions, and
persuade men into measures that I have been from time
to time engag’d in promoting; and, as the chief
ends of conversation are to inform or to be informed,
to please or to persuade, I wish well-meaning, sensible
men would not lessen their power of doing good by a
positive, assuming manner, that seldom fails to disgust,
tends to create opposition, and to defeat every one
of those purposes for which speech was given to us,
to wit, giving or receiving information or pleasure.
For, if you would inform, a positive and dogmatical
manner in advancing your sentiments may provoke contradiction
and prevent a candid attention. If you wish
information and improvement from the knowledge of others,
and yet at the same time express yourself as firmly
fix’d in your present opinions, modest, sensible
men, who do not love disputation, will probably leave
you undisturbed in the possession of your error.
And by such a manner, you can seldom hope to recommend
yourself in pleasing your hearers, or to persuade
those whose concurrence you desire. Pope says,
judiciously:
“Men
should be taught as if you taught them not,
And
things unknown propos’d as things forgot;”
farther recommending to us
“To
speak, tho’ sure, with seeming diffidence.”
And he might have coupled with this
line that which he has coupled with another, I think,
less properly,
“For
want of modesty is want of sense.”
If you ask, Why less properly? I must repeat
the lines,
“Immodest
words admit of no defense,
For
want of modesty is want of sense.”
Now, is not want of sense (where a
man is so unfortunate as to want it) some apology
for his want of modesty? and would not the lines stand
more justly thus?
“Immodest
words admit but this defense,
That
want of modesty is want of sense.”
This, however, I should submit to better judgments.
My brother had, in 1720 or 1721, begun
to print a newspaper. It was the second that
appeared in America, and was called the New England
Courant. The only one before it was the
Boston News-Letter. I remember his being dissuaded
by some of his friends from the undertaking, as not
likely to succeed, one newspaper being, in their judgment,
enough for America. At this time (1771) there
are not less than five-and-twenty. He went on,
however, with the undertaking, and after having worked
in composing the types and printing off the sheets,
I was employed to carry the papers thro’ the
streets to the customers.
He had some ingenious men among his
friends, who amus’d themselves by writing little
pieces for this paper, which gain’d it credit
and made it more in demand, and these gentlemen often
visited us. Hearing their conversations, and
their accounts of the approbation their papers were
received with, I was excited to try my hand among them;
but, being still a boy, and suspecting that my brother
would object to printing anything of mine in his paper
if he knew it to be mine, I contrived to disguise
my hand, and, writing an anonymous paper, I put it
in at night under the door of the printing-house.
It was found in the morning, and communicated to his
writing friends when they call’d in as usual.
They read it, commented on it in my hearing, and
I had the exquisite pleasure of finding it met with
their approbation, and that, in their different guesses
at the author, none were named but men of some character
among us for learning and ingenuity. I suppose
now that I was rather lucky in my judges, and that
perhaps they were not really so very good ones as
I then esteem’d them.
Encourag’d, however, by this,
I wrote and convey’d in the same way to the
press several more papers which were equally approv’d;
and I kept my secret till my small fund of sense for
such performances was pretty well exhausted and then
I discovered it, when I began to be considered a little
more by my brother’s acquaintance, and in a manner
that did not quite please him, as he thought, probably
with reason, that it tended to make me too vain.
And, perhaps, this might be one occasion of the differences
that we began to have about this time. Though
a brother, he considered himself as my master, and
me as his apprentice, and accordingly, expected the
same services from me as he would from another, while
I thought he demean’d me too much in some he
requir’d of me, who from a brother expected
more indulgence. Our disputes were often brought
before our father, and I fancy I was either generally
in the right, or else a better pleader, because the
judgment was generally in my favor. But my brother
was passionate, and had often beaten me, which I took
extreamly amiss; and, thinking my apprenticeship very
tedious, I was continually wishing for some opportunity
of shortening it, which at length offered in a manner
unexpected.
One of the pieces in our newspaper
on some political point, which I have now forgotten,
gave offense to the Assembly. He was taken up,
censur’d, and imprison’d for a month, by
the speaker’s warrant, I suppose, because he
would not discover his author. I too was taken
up and examin’d before the council; but, tho’
I did not give them any satisfaction, they content’d
themselves with admonishing me, and dismissed me,
considering me, perhaps, as an apprentice, who was
bound to keep his master’s secrets.
During my brother’s confinement,
which I resented a good deal, notwithstanding our
private differences, I had the management of the paper;
and I made bold to give our rulers some rubs in it,
which my brother took very kindly, while others began
to consider me in an unfavorable light, as a young
genius that had a turn for libelling and satyr.
My brother’s discharge was accompany’d
with an order of the House (a very odd one), that
“James Franklin should no longer print the paper
called the New England Courant.”
There was a consultation held in our
printing-house among his friends, what he should do
in this case. Some proposed to evade the order
by changing the name of the paper; but my brother,
seeing inconveniences in that, it was finally concluded
on as a better way, to let it be printed for the future
under the name of Benjamin Franklin; and
to avoid the censure of the Assembly, that might fall
on him as still printing it by his apprentice, the
contrivance was that my old indenture should be return’d
to me, with a full discharge on the back of it, to
be shown on occasion, but to secure to him the benefit
of my service, I was to sign new indentures for the
remainder of the term, which were to be kept private.
A very flimsy scheme it was; however, it was immediately
executed, and the paper went on accordingly, under
my name for several months.
At length, a fresh difference arising
between my brother and me, I took upon me to assert
my freedom, presuming that he would not venture to
produce the new indentures. It was not fair in
me to take this advantage, and this I therefore reckon
one of the first errata of my life; but the unfairness
of it weighed little with me, when under the impressions
of resentment for the blows his passion too often urged
him to bestow upon me, though he was otherwise not
an ill-natur’d man: perhaps I was too saucy
and provoking.
When he found I would leave him, he
took care to prevent my getting employment in any
other printing-house of the town, by going round and
speaking to every master, who accordingly refus’d
to give me work. I then thought of going to
New York, as the nearest place where there was a printer;
and I was rather inclin’d to leave Boston when
I reflected that I had already made myself a little
obnoxious to the governing party, and, from the arbitrary
proceedings of the Assembly in my brother’s
case, it was likely I might, if I stay’d, soon
bring myself into scrapes; and farther, that my indiscrete
disputations about religion began to make me pointed
at with horror by good people as an infidel or atheist.
I determin’d on the point, but my father now
siding with my brother, I was sensible that, if I attempted
to go openly, means would be used to prevent me.
My friend Collins, therefore, undertook to manage
a little for me. He agreed with the captain
of a New York sloop for my passage, under the notion
of my being a young acquaintance of his, that had
got a naughty girl with child, whose friends would
compel me to marry her, and therefore I could not
appear or come away publicly. So I sold some
of my books to raise a little money, was taken on
board privately, and as we had a fair wind, in three
days I found myself in New York, near 300 miles from
home, a boy of but 17, without the least recommendation
to, or knowledge of any person in the place, and with
very little money in my pocket.
My inclinations for the sea were by
this time worne out, or I might now have gratify’d
them. But, having a trade, and supposing myself
a pretty good workman, I offer’d my service
to the printer in the place, old Mr. William Bradford,
who had been the first printer in Pennsylvania, but
removed from thence upon the quarrel of George Keith.
He could give me no employment, having little to do,
and help enough already; but says he, “My son
at Philadelphia has lately lost his principal hand,
Aquila Rose, by death; if you go thither, I believe
he may employ you.” Philadelphia was a
hundred miles further; I set out, however, in a boat
for Amboy, leaving my chest and things to follow me
round by sea.
In crossing the bay, we met with a
squall that tore our rotten sails to pieces, prevented
our getting into the Kill and drove us upon Long Island.
In our way, a drunken Dutchman, who was a passenger
too, fell overboard; when he was sinking, I reached
through the water to his shock pate, and drew him
up, so that we got him in again. His ducking
sobered him a little, and he went to sleep, taking
first out of his pocket a book, which he desir’d
I would dry for him. It proved to be my old
favorite author, Bunyan’s Pilgrim’s Progress,
in Dutch, finely printed on good paper, with copper
cuts, a dress better than I had ever seen it wear
in its own language. I have since found that
it has been translated into most of the languages
of Europe, and suppose it has been more generally
read than any other book, except perhaps the Bible.
Honest John was the first that I know of who mix’d
narration and dialogue; a method of writing very engaging
to the reader, who in the most interesting parts finds
himself, as it were, brought into the company and
present at the discourse. De Foe in his Cruso,
his Moll Flanders, Religious Courtship, Family Instructor,
and other pieces, has imitated it with success; and
Richardson has done the same, in his Pamela, etc.
When we drew near the island, we found
it was at a place where there could be no landing,
there being a great surff on the stony beach.
So we dropt anchor, and swung round towards the shore.
Some people came down to the water edge and hallow’d
to us, as we did to them; but the wind was so high,
and the surff so loud, that we could not hear so as
to understand each other. There were canoes on
the shore, and we made signs, and hallow’d that
they should fetch us; but they either did not understand
us, or thought it impracticable, so they went away,
and night coming on, we had no remedy but to wait
till the wind should abate; and, in the meantime,
the boatman and I concluded to sleep, if we could;
and so crowded into the scuttle, with the Dutchman,
who was still wet, and the spray beating over the
head of our boat, leak’d thro’ to us,
so that we were soon almost as wet as he. In
this manner we lay all night, with very little rest;
but, the wind abating the next day, we made a shift
to reach Amboy before night, having been thirty hours
on the water, without victuals, or any drink but a
bottle of filthy rum, and the water we sail’d
on being salt.
In the evening I found myself very
feverish, and went in to bed; but, having read somewhere
that cold water drank plentifully was good for a fever,
I follow’d the prescription, sweat plentiful
most of the night, my fever left me, and in the morning,
crossing the ferry, I proceeded on my journey on foot,
having fifty miles to Burlington, where I was told
I should find boats that would carry me the rest of
the way to Philadelphia.
It rained very hard all the day; I
was thoroughly soak’d, and by noon a good deal
tired; so I stopt at a poor inn, where I staid all
night, beginning now to wish that I had never left
home. I cut so miserable a figure, too, that
I found, by the questions ask’d me, I was suspected
to be some runaway servant, and in danger of being
taken up on that suspicion. However, I proceeded
the next day, and got in the evening to an inn, within
eight or ten miles of Burlington, kept by one Dr.
Brown. He entered into conversation with me while
I took some refreshment, and, finding I had read a
little, became very sociable and friendly. Our
acquaintance continu’d as long as he liv’d.
He had been, I imagine, an itinerant doctor, for there
was no town in England, or country in Europe, of which
he could not give a very particular account.
He had some letters, and was ingenious, but much of
an unbeliever, and wickedly undertook, some years
after, to travestie the Bible in doggrel verse, as
Cotton had done Virgil. By this means he set
many of the facts in a very ridiculous light, and might
have hurt weak minds if his work had been published;
but it never was.
At his house I lay that night, and
the next morning reach’d Burlington, but had
the mortification to find that the regular boats were
gone a little before my coming, and no other expected
to go before Tuesday, this being Saturday; wherefore
I returned to an old woman in the town, of whom I
had bought gingerbread to eat on the water, and ask’d
her advice. She invited me to lodge at her house
till a passage by water should offer; and being tired
with my foot travelling, I accepted the invitation.
She understanding I was a printer, would have had
me stay at that town and follow my business, being
ignorant of the stock necessary to begin with.
She was very hospitable, gave me a dinner of ox-cheek
with great good will, accepting only a pot of ale in
return; and I thought myself fixed till Tuesday should
come. However, walking in the evening by the
side of the river, a boat came by, which I found was
going towards Philadelphia, with several people in
her. They took me in, and, as there was no wind,
we row’d all the way; and about midnight, not
having yet seen the city, some of the company were
confident we must have passed it, and would row no
farther; the others knew not where we were; so we
put toward the shore, got into a creek, landed near
an old fence, with the rails of which we made a fire,
the night being cold, in October, and there we remained
till daylight. Then one of the company knew the
place to be Cooper’s Creek, a little above Philadelphia,
which we saw as soon as we got out of the creek, and
arriv’d there about eight or nine o’clock
on the Sunday morning, and landed at the Market-street
wharf.
I have been the more particular in
this description of my journey, and shall be so of
my first entry into that city, that you may in your
mind compare such unlikely beginnings with the figure
I have since made there. I was in my working
dress, my best cloaths being to come round by sea.
I was dirty from my journey; my pockets were stuff’d
out with shirts and stockings, and I knew no soul
nor where to look for lodging. I was fatigued
with travelling, rowing, and want of rest, I was very
hungry; and my whole stock of cash consisted of a Dutch
dollar, and about a shilling in copper. The
latter I gave the people of the boat for my passage,
who at first refus’d it, on account of my rowing;
but I insisted on their taking it. A man being
sometimes more generous when he has but a little money
than when he has plenty, perhaps thro’ fear
of being thought to have but little.
Then I walked up the street, gazing
about till near the market-house I met a boy with
bread. I had made many a meal on bread, and,
inquiring where he got it, I went immediately to the
baker’s he directed me to, in Secondstreet,
and ask’d for bisket, intending such as we had
in Boston; but they, it seems, were not made in Philadelphia.
Then I asked for a three-penny loaf, and was told
they had none such. So not considering or knowing
the difference of money, and the greater cheapness
nor the names of his bread, I made him give me three-penny
worth of any sort. He gave me, accordingly, three
great puffy rolls. I was surpriz’d at the
quantity, but took it, and, having no room in my pockets,
walk’d off with a roll under each arm, and eating
the other. Thus I went up Market-street as far
as Fourth-street, passing by the door of Mr. Read,
my future wife’s father; when she, standing at
the door, saw me, and thought I made, as I certainly
did, a most awkward, ridiculous appearance.
Then I turned and went down Chestnut-street and part
of Walnut-street, eating my roll all the way, and,
corning round, found myself again at Market-street
wharf, near the boat I came in, to which I went for
a draught of the river water; and, being filled with
one of my rolls, gave the other two to a woman and
her child that came down the river in the boat with
us, and were waiting to go farther.
Thus refreshed, I walked again up
the street, which by this time had many clean-dressed
people in it, who were all walking the same way.
I joined them, and thereby was led into the great
meeting-house of the Quakers near the market.
I sat down among them, and, after looking round awhile
and hearing nothing said, being very drowsy thro’
labor and want of rest the preceding night, I fell
fast asleep, and continued so till the meeting broke
up, when one was kind enough to rouse me. This
was, therefore, the first house I was in, or slept
in, in Philadelphia.
Walking down again toward the river,
and, looking in the faces of people, I met a young
Quaker man, whose countenance I lik’d, and,
accosting him, requested he would tell me where a stranger
could get lodging. We were then near the sign
of the Three Mariners. “Here,” says
he, “is one place that entertains strangers,
but it is not a reputable house; if thee wilt walk
with me, I’ll show thee a better.”
He brought me to the Crooked Billet in Water-street.
Here I got a dinner; and, while I was eating it, several
sly questions were asked me, as it seemed to be suspected
from my youth and appearance, that I might be some
runaway.
After dinner, my sleepiness return’d,
and being shown to a bed, I lay down without undressing,
and slept till six in the evening, was call’d
to supper, went to bed again very early, and slept
soundly till next morning. Then I made myself
as tidy as I could, and went to Andrew Bradford the
printer’s. I found in the shop the old man
his father, whom I had seen at New York, and who,
travelling on horseback, had got to Philadelphia before
me. He introduc’d me to his son, who receiv’d
me civilly, gave me a breakfast, but told me he did
not at present want a hand, being lately suppli’d
with one; but there was another printer in town, lately
set up, one Keimer, who, perhaps, might employ me;
if not, I should be welcome to lodge at his house,
and he would give me a little work to do now and then
till fuller business should offer.
The old gentleman said he would go
with me to the new printer; and when we found him,
“Neighbor,” says Bradford, “I have
brought to see you a young man of your business; perhaps
you may want such a one.” He ask’d
me a few questions, put a composing stick in my hand
to see how I work’d, and then said he would
employ me soon, though he had just then nothing for
me to do; and, taking old Bradford, whom he had never
seen before, to be one of the town’s people
that had a good will for him, enter’d into a
conversation on his present undertaking and projects;
while Bradford, not discovering that he was the other
printer’s father, on Keimer’s saying he
expected soon to get the greatest part of the business
into his own hands, drew him on by artful questions,
and starting little doubts, to explain all his views,
what interests he reli’d on, and in what manner
he intended to proceed. I, who stood by and
heard all, saw immediately that one of them was a crafty
old sophister, and the other a mere novice.
Bradford left me with Keimer, who was greatly surpris’d
when I told him who the old man was.
Keimer’s printing-house, I found,
consisted of an old shatter’d press, and one
small, worn-out font of English which he was then using
himself, composing an Elegy on Aquila Rose, before
mentioned, an ingenious young man, of excellent character,
much respected in the town, clerk of the Assembly,
and a pretty poet. Keimer made verses too, but
very indifferently. He could not be said to write
them, for his manner was to compose them in the types
directly out of his head. So there being no copy,
but one pair of cases, and the Elegy likely to require
all the letter, no one could help him. I endeavor’d
to put his press (which he had not yet us’d,
and of which he understood nothing) into order fit
to be work’d with; and, promising to come and
print off his Elegy as soon as he should have got
it ready, I return’d to Bradford’s, who
gave me a little job to do for the present, and there
I lodged and dieted, A few days after, Keimer sent
for me to print off the Elegy. And now he had
got another pair of cases, and a pamphlet to reprint,
on which he set me to work.
These two printers I found poorly
qualified for their business. Bradford had not
been bred to it, and was very illiterate; and Keimer,
tho’ something of a scholar, was a mere compositor,
knowing nothing of presswork. He had been one
of the French prophets, and could act their enthusiastic
agitations. At this time he did not profess any
particular religion, but something of all on occasion;
was very ignorant of the world, and had, as I afterward
found, a good deal of the knave in his composition.
He did not like my lodging at Bradford’s while
I work’d with him. He had a house, indeed,
but without furniture, so he could not lodge me; but
he got me a lodging at Mr. Read’s, before mentioned,
who was the owner of his house; and, my chest and
clothes being come by this time, I made rather a more
respectable appearance in the eyes of Miss Read than
I had done when she first happen’d to see me
eating my roll in the street.
I began now to have some acquaintance
among the young people of the town, that were lovers
of reading, with whom I spent my evenings very pleasantly;
and gaining money by my industry and frugality, I lived
very agreeably, forgetting Boston as much as I could,
and not desiring that any there should know where
I resided, except my friend Collins, who was in my
secret, and kept it when I wrote to him. At length,
an incident happened that sent me back again much
sooner than I had intended. I had a brother-in-law,
Robert Holmes, master of a sloop that traded between
Boston and Delaware. He being at Newcastle, forty
miles below Philadelphia, heard there of me, and wrote
me a letter mentioning the concern of my friends in
Boston at my abrupt departure, assuring me of their
good will to me, and that every thing would be accommodated
to my mind if I would return, to which he exhorted
me very earnestly. I wrote an answer to his
letter, thank’d him for his advice, but stated
my reasons for quitting Boston fully and in such a
light as to convince him I was not so wrong as he had
apprehended.
Sir William Keith, governor of the
province, was then at Newcastle, and Captain Holmes,
happening to be in company with him when my letter
came to hand, spoke to him of me, and show’d
him the letter. The governor read it, and seem’d
surpris’d when he was told my age. He said
I appear’d a young man of promising parts, and
therefore should be encouraged; the printers at Philadelphia
were wretched ones; and, if I would set up there,
he made no doubt I should succeed; for his part, he
would procure me the public business, and do me every
other service in his power. This my brother-in-law
afterwards told me in Boston, but I knew as yet nothing
of it; when, one day, Keimer and I being at work together
near the window, we saw the governor and another gentleman
(which proved to be Colonel French, of Newcastle),
finely dress’d, come directly across the street
to our house, and heard them at the door.
Keimer ran down immediately, thinking
it a visit to him; but the governor inquir’d
for me, came up, and with a condescension of politeness
I had been quite unus’d to, made me many compliments,
desired to be acquainted with me, blam’d me kindly
for not having made myself known to him when I first
came to the place, and would have me away with him
to the tavern, where he was going with Colonel French
to taste, as he said, some excellent Madeira.
I was not a little surprised, and Keimer star’d
like a pig poison’d. I went, however,
with the governor and Colonel French to a tavern, at
the corner of Third-street, and over the Madeira he
propos’d my setting up my business, laid before
me the probabilities of success, and both he and Colonel
French assur’d me I should have their interest
and influence in procuring the public business of
both governments. On my doubting whether my
father would assist me in it, Sir William said he would
give me a letter to him, in which he would state the
advantages, and he did not doubt of prevailing with
him. So it was concluded I should return to
Boston in the first vessel, with the governor’s
letter recommending me to my father. In the
mean time the intention was to be kept a secret, and
I went on working with Keimer as usual, the governor
sending for me now and then to dine with him, a very
great honor I thought it, and conversing with me in
the most affable, familiar, and friendly manner imaginable.
About the end of April, 1724, a little
vessel offer’d for Boston. I took leave
of Keimer as going to see my friends. The governor
gave me an ample letter, saying many flattering things
of me to my father, and strongly recommending the
project of my setting up at Philadelphia as a thing
that must make my fortune. We struck on a shoal
in going down the bay, and sprung a leak; we had a
blustering time at sea, and were oblig’d to
pump almost continually, at which I took my turn.
We arriv’d safe, however, at Boston in about
a fortnight. I had been absent seven months,
and my friends had heard nothing of me; for my br.
Holmes was not yet return’d, and had not written
about me. My unexpected appearance surpriz’d
the family; all were, however, very glad to see me,
and made me welcome, except my brother. I went
to see him at his printing-house. I was better
dress’d than ever while in his service, having
a genteel new suit from head to foot, a watch, and
my pockets lin’d with near five pounds sterling
in silver. He receiv’d me not very frankly,
look’d me all over, and turn’d to his work
again.
The journeymen were inquisitive where
I had been, what sort of a country it was, and how
I lik’d it. I prais’d it much, the
happy life I led in it, expressing strongly my intention
of returning to it; and, one of them asking what kind
of money we had there, I produc’d a handful
of silver, and spread it before them, which was a kind
of raree-show they had not been us’d to, paper
being the money of Boston. Then I took an opportunity
of letting them see my watch; and, lastly (my brother
still grum and sullen), I gave them a piece of eight
to drink, and took my leave. This visit of mine
offended him extreamly; for, when my mother some time
after spoke to him of a reconciliation, and of her
wishes to see us on good terms together, and that we
might live for the future as brothers, he said I had
insulted him in such a manner before his people that
he could never forget or forgive it. In this,
however, he was mistaken.
My father received the governor’s
letter with some apparent surprise, but said little
of it to me for some days, when Capt. Holmes returning
he showed it to him, ask’d him if he knew Keith,
and what kind of man he was; adding his opinion that
he must be of small discretion to think of setting
a boy up in business who wanted yet three years of
being at man’s estate. Holmes said what
he could in favor of the project, but my father was
clear in the impropriety of it, and at last gave a
flat denial to it. Then he wrote a civil letter
to Sir William, thanking him for the patronage he
had so kindly offered me, but declining to assist
me as yet in setting up, I being, in his opinion, too
young to be trusted with the management of a business
so important, and for which the preparation must be
so expensive.
My friend and companion Collins, who
was a clerk in the post-office, pleas’d with
the account I gave him of my new country, determined
to go thither also; and, while I waited for my father’s
determination, he set out before me by land to Rhode
Island, leaving his books, which were a pretty collection
of mathematicks and natural philosophy, to come with
mine and me to New York, where he propos’d to
wait for me.
My father, tho’ he did not approve
Sir William’s proposition, was yet pleas’d
that I had been able to obtain so advantageous a character
from a person of such note where I had resided, and
that I had been so industrious and careful as to equip
myself so handsomely in so short a time; therefore,
seeing no prospect of an accommodation between my
brother and me, he gave his consent to my returning
again to Philadelphia, advis’d me to behave
respectfully to the people there, endeavor to obtain
the general esteem, and avoid lampooning and libeling,
to which he thought I had too much inclination; telling
me, that by steady industry and a prudent parsimony
I might save enough by the time I was one-and-twenty
to set me up; and that, if I came near the matter,
he would help me out with the rest. This was
all I could obtain, except some small gifts as tokens
of his and my mother’s love, when I embark’d
again for New York, now with their approbation and
their blessing.
The sloop putting in at Newport, Rhode
Island, I visited my brother John, who had been married
and settled there some years. He received me
very affectionately, for he always lov’d me.
A friend of his, one Vernon, having some money due
to him in Pensilvania, about thirty-five pounds currency,
desired I would receive it for him, and keep it till
I had his directions what to remit it in. Accordingly,
he gave me an order. This afterwards occasion’d
me a good deal of uneasiness.
At Newport we took in a number of
passengers for New York, among which were two young
women, companions, and a grave, sensible, matron-like
Quaker woman, with her attendants. I had shown
an obliging readiness to do her some little services,
which impress’d her I suppose with a degree
of good will toward me; therefore, when she saw a daily
growing familiarity between me and the two young women,
which they appear’d to encourage, she took me
aside, and said: “Young man, I am concern’d
for thee, as thou has no friend with thee, and seems
not to know much of the world, or of the snares youth
is expos’d to; depend upon it, those are very
bad women; I can see it in all their actions; and if
thee art not upon thy guard, they will draw thee into
some danger; they are strangers to thee, and I advise
thee, in a friendly concern for thy welfare, to have
no acquaintance with them.” As I seem’d
at first not to think so ill of them as she did, she
mentioned some things she had observ’d and heard
that had escap’d my notice, but now convinc’d
me she was right. I thank’d her for her
kind advice, and promis’d to follow it.
When we arriv’d at New York, they told me where
they liv’d, and invited me to come and see them;
but I avoided it, and it was well I did; for the next
day the captain miss’d a silver spoon and some
other things, that had been taken out of his cabbin,
and, knowing that these were a couple of strumpets,
he got a warrant to search their lodgings, found the
stolen goods, and had the thieves punish’d.
So, tho’ we had escap’d a sunken rock,
which we scrap’d upon in the passage, I thought
this escape of rather more importance to me.
At New York I found my friend Collins,
who had arriv’d there some time before me.
We had been intimate from children, and had read the
same books together; but he had the advantage of more
time for reading and studying, and a wonderful genius
for mathematical learning, in which he far outstript
me. While I liv’d in Boston most of my
hours of leisure for conversation were spent with
him, and he continu’d a sober as well as an
industrious lad; was much respected for his learning
by several of the clergy and other gentlemen, and
seemed to promise making a good figure in life.
But, during my absence, he had acquir’d a habit
of sotting with brandy; and I found by his own account,
and what I heard from others, that he had been drunk
every day since his arrival at New York, and behav’d
very oddly. He had gam’d, too, and lost
his money, so that I was oblig’d to discharge
his lodgings, and defray his expenses to and at Philadelphia,
which prov’d extremely inconvenient to me.
The then governor of New York, Burnet
(son of Bishop Burnet), hearing from the captain that
a young man, one of his passengers, had a great many
books, desir’d he would bring me to see him.
I waited upon him accordingly, and should have taken
Collins with me but that he was not sober. The
gov’r. treated me with great civility, show’d
me his library, which was a very large one, and we
had a good deal of conversation about books and authors.
This was the second governor who had done me the
honor to take notice of me; which, to a poor boy like
me, was very pleasing.
We proceeded to Philadelphia.
I received on the way Vernon’s money, without
which we could hardly have finish’d our journey.
Collins wished to be employ’d in some counting-house,
but, whether they discover’d his dramming by
his breath, or by his behaviour, tho’ he had
some recommendations, he met with no success in any
application, and continu’d lodging and boarding
at the same house with me, and at my expense.
Knowing I had that money of Vernon’s, he was
continually borrowing of me, still promising repayment
as soon as he should be in business. At length
he had got so much of it that I was distress’d
to think what I should do in case of being call’d
on to remit it.
His drinking continu’d, about
which we sometimes quarrell’d; for, when a little
intoxicated, he was very fractious. Once, in
a boat on the Delaware with some other young men,
he refused to row in his turn. “I will
be row’d home,” says he. “We
will not row you,” says I. “You must,
or stay all night on the water,” says he, “just
as you please.” The others said, “Let
us row; what signifies it?” But, my mind being
soured with his other conduct, I continu’d to
refuse. So he swore he would make me row, or
throw me overboard; and coming along, stepping on
the thwarts, toward me, when he came up and struck
at me, I clapped my hand under his crutch, and, rising,
pitched him head-foremost into the river. I
knew he was a good swimmer, and so was under little
concern about him; but before he could get round to
lay hold of the boat, we had with a few strokes pull’d
her out of his reach; and ever when he drew near the
boat, we ask’d if he would row, striking a few
strokes to slide her away from him. He was ready
to die with vexation, and obstinately would not promise
to row. However, seeing him at last beginning
to tire, we lifted him in and brought him home dripping
wet in the evening. We hardly exchang’d
a civil word afterwards, and a West India captain,
who had a commission to procure a tutor for the sons
of a gentleman at Barbadoes, happening to meet with
him, agreed to carry him thither. He left me
then, promising to remit me the first money he should
receive in order to discharge the debt; but I never
heard of him after.
The breaking into this money of Vernon’s
was one of the first great errata of my life; and
this affair show’d that my father was not much
out in his judgment when he suppos’d me too young
to manage business of importance. But Sir William,
on reading his letter, said he was too prudent.
There was great difference in persons; and discretion
did not always accompany years, nor was youth always
without it. “And since he will not set
you up,” says he, “I will do it myself.
Give me an inventory of the things necessary to be
had from England, and I will send for them.
You shall repay me when you are able; I am resolv’d
to have a good printer here, and I am sure you must
succeed.” This was spoken with such an
appearance of cordiality, that I had not the least
doubt of his meaning what he said. I had hitherto
kept the proposition of my setting up, a secret in
Philadelphia, and I still kept it. Had it been
known that I depended on the governor, probably some
friend, that knew him better, would have advis’d
me not to rely on him, as I afterwards heard it as
his known character to be liberal of promises which
he never meant to keep. Yet, unsolicited as he
was by me, how could I think his generous offers insincere?
I believ’d him one of the best men in the world.
I presented him an inventory of a
little print’g-house, amounting by my computation
to about one hundred pounds sterling. He lik’d
it, but ask’d me if my being on the spot in
England to chuse the types, and see that every thing
was good of the kind, might not be of some advantage.
“Then,” says he, “when there, you
may make acquaintances, and establish correspondences
in the bookselling and stationery way.”
I agreed that this might be advantageous. “Then,”
says he, “get yourself ready to go with Annis;”
which was the annual ship, and the only one at that
time usually passing between London and Philadelphia.
But it would be some months before Annis sail’d,
so I continu’d working with Keimer, fretting
about the money Collins had got from me, and in daily
apprehensions of being call’d upon by Vernon,
which, however, did not happen for some years after.
I believe I have omitted mentioning
that, in my first voyage from Boston, being becalm’d
off Block Island, our people set about catching cod,
and hauled up a great many. Hitherto I had stuck
to my resolution of not eating animal food, and on
this occasion consider’d, with my master Tryon,
the taking every fish as a kind of unprovoked murder,
since none of them had, or ever could do us any injury
that might justify the slaughter. All this seemed
very reasonable. But I had formerly been a great
lover of fish, and, when this came hot out of the
frying-pan, it smelt admirably well. I balanc’d
some time between principle and inclination, till
I recollected that, when the fish were opened, I saw
smaller fish taken out of their stomachs; then thought
I, “If you eat one another, I don’t see
why we mayn’t eat you.” So I din’d
upon cod very heartily, and continued to eat with other
people, returning only now and then occasionally to
a vegetable diet. So convenient a thing it is
to be a reasonable creature, since it enables one
to find or make a reason for everything one has a mind
to do.
Keimer and I liv’d on a pretty
good familiar footing, and agreed tolerably well,
for he suspected nothing of my setting up. He
retained a great deal of his old enthusiasms and lov’d
argumentation. We therefore had many disputations.
I used to work him so with my Socratic method, and
had trepann’d him so often by questions apparently
so distant from any point we had in hand, and yet by
degrees lead to the point, and brought him into difficulties
and contradictions, that at last he grew ridiculously
cautious, and would hardly answer me the most common
question, without asking first, “What do you
intend to infer from that?” However, it gave
him so high an opinion of my abilities in the confuting
way, that he seriously proposed my being his colleague
in a project he had of setting up a new sect.
He was to preach the doctrines, and I was to confound
all opponents. When he came to explain with
me upon the doctrines, I found several conundrums
which I objected to, unless I might have my way a little
too, and introduce some of mine.
Keimer wore his beard at full length,
because somewhere in the Mosaic law it is said, “Thou
shalt not mar the corners of thy beard.”
He likewise kept the Seventh day, Sabbath; and these
two points were essentials with him. I dislik’d
both; but agreed to admit them upon condition of his
adopting the doctrine of using no animal food.
“I doubt,” said he, “my constitution
will not bear that.” I assur’d him
it would, and that he would be the better for it.
He was usually a great glutton, and I promised myself
some diversion in half starving him. He agreed
to try the practice, if I would keep him company.
I did so, and we held it for three months.
We had our victuals dress’d, and brought to
us regularly by a woman in the neighborhood, who had
from me a list of forty dishes to be prepar’d
for us at different times, in all which there was
neither fish, flesh, nor fowl, and the whim suited
me the better at this time from the cheapness of it,
not costing us above eighteenpence sterling each per
week. I have since kept several Lents most strictly,
leaving the common diet for that, and that for the
common, abruptly, without the least inconvenience,
so that I think there is little in the advice of making
those changes by easy gradations. I went on
pleasantly, but poor Keimer suffered grievously, tired
of the project, long’d for the flesh-pots of
Egypt, and order’d a roast pig. He invited
me and two women friends to dine with him; but, it
being brought too soon upon table, he could not resist
the temptation, and ate the whole before we came.
I had made some courtship during this
time to Miss Read. I had a great respect and
affection for her, and had some reason to believe she
had the same for me; but, as I was about to take a
long voyage, and we were both very young, only a little
above eighteen, it was thought most prudent by her
mother to prevent our going too far at present, as
a marriage, if it was to take place, would be more
convenient after my return, when I should be, as I
expected, set up in my business. Perhaps, too,
she thought my expectations not so well founded as
I imagined them to be.
My chief acquaintances at this time
were Charles Osborne, Joseph Watson, and James Ralph,
all lovers of reading. The two first were clerks
to an eminent scrivener or conveyancer in the town,
Charles Brogden; the other was clerk to a merchant.
Watson was a pious, sensible young man, of great
integrity; the others rather more lax in their principles
of religion, particularly Ralph, who, as well as Collins,
had been unsettled by me, for which they both made
me suffer. Osborne was sensible, candid, frank;
sincere and affectionate to his friends; but, in literary
matters, too fond of criticising. Ralph was
ingenious, genteel in his manners, and extremely eloquent;
I think I never knew a prettier talker. Both
of them great admirers of poetry, and began to try
their hands in little pieces. Many pleasant walks
we four had together on Sundays into the woods, near
Schuylkill, where we read to one another, and conferr’d
on what we read.
Ralph was inclin’d to pursue
the study of poetry, not doubting but he might become
eminent in it, and make his fortune by it, alleging
that the best poets must, when they first began to
write, make as many faults as he did. Osborne
dissuaded him, assur’d him he had no genius
for poetry, and advis’d him to think of nothing
beyond the business he was bred to; that, in the mercantile
way, tho’ he had no stock, he might, by his
diligence and punctuality, recommend himself to employment
as a factor, and in time acquire wherewith to trade
on his own account. I approv’d the amusing
one’s self with poetry now and then, so far
as to improve one’s language, but no farther.
On this it was propos’d that
we should each of us, at our next meeting, produce
a piece of our own composing, in order to improve by
our mutual observations, criticisms, and corrections.
As language and expression were what we had in view,
we excluded all considerations of invention by agreeing
that the task should be a version of the eighteenth
Psalm, which describes the descent of a Deity.
When the time of our meeting drew nigh, Ralph called
on me first, and let me know his piece was ready.
I told him I had been busy, and, having little inclination,
had done nothing. He then show’d me his
piece for my opinion, and I much approv’d it,
as it appear’d to me to have great merit.
“Now,” says he, “Osborne never
will allow the least merit in any thing of mine, but
makes 1000 criticisms out of mere envy. He is
not so jealous of you; I wish, therefore, you would
take this piece, and produce it as yours; I will pretend
not to have had time, and so produce nothing.
We shall then see what he will say to it.”
It was agreed, and I immediately transcrib’d
it, that it might appear in my own hand.
We met; Watson’s performance
was read; there were some beauties in it, but many
defects. Osborne’s was read; it was much
better; Ralph did it justice; remarked some faults,
but applauded the beauties. He himself had nothing
to produce. I was backward; seemed desirous of
being excused; had not had sufficient time to correct,
etc.; but no excuse could be admitted; produce
I must. It was read and repeated; Watson and
Osborne gave up the contest, and join’d in applauding
it. Ralph only made some criticisms, and propos’d
some amendments; but I defended my text. Osborne
was against Ralph, and told him he was no better a
critic than poet, so he dropt the argument. As
they two went home together, Osborne expressed himself
still more strongly in favor of what he thought my
production; having restrain’d himself before,
as he said, lest I should think it flattery.
“But who would have imagin’d,”
said he, “that Franklin had been capable of such
a performance; such painting, such force, such fire!
He has even improv’d the original. In
his common conversation he seems to have no choice
of words; he hesitates and blunders; and yet, good
God! how he writes!” When we next met, Ralph
discovered the trick we had plaid him, and Osborne
was a little laught at.
This transaction fixed Ralph in his
resolution of becoming a poet. I did all I could
to dissuade him from it, but he continued scribbling
verses till Pope cured him. He became, however,
a pretty good prose writer. More of him hereafter.
But, as I may not have occasion again to mention
the other two, I shall just remark here, that Watson
died in my arms a few years after, much lamented,
being the best of our set. Osborne went to the
West Indies, where he became an eminent lawyer and
made money, but died young. He and I had made
a serious agreement, that the one who happen’d
first to die should, if possible, make a friendly
visit to the other, and acquaint him how he found things
in that separate state. But he never fulfill’d
his promise.
The governor, seeming to like my company,
had me frequently to his house, and his setting me
up was always mention’d as a fixed thing.
I was to take with me letters recommendatory to a
number of his friends, besides the letter of credit
to furnish me with the necessary money for purchasing
the press and types, paper, etc. For these
letters I was appointed to call at different times,
when they were to be ready, but a future time was
still named. Thus he went on till the ship, whose
departure too had been several times postponed, was
on the point of sailing. Then, when I call’d
to take my leave and receive the letters, his secretary,
Dr. Bard, came out to me and said the governor was
extremely busy in writing, but would be down at Newcastle
before the ship, and there the letters would be delivered
to me.
Ralph, though married, and having
one child, had determined to accompany me in this
voyage. It was thought he intended to establish
a correspondence, and obtain goods to sell on commission;
but I found afterwards, that, thro’ some discontent
with his wife’s relations, he purposed to leave
her on their hands, and never return again. Having
taken leave of my friends, and interchang’d some
promises with Miss Read, I left Philadelphia in the
ship, which anchor’d at Newcastle. The
governor was there; but when I went to his lodging,
the secretary came to me from him with the civillest
message in the world, that he could not then see me,
being engaged in business of the utmost importance,
but should send the letters to me on board, wish’d
me heartily a good voyage and a speedy return, etc.
I returned on board a little puzzled, but still not
doubting.
Mr. Andrew Hamilton, a famous lawyer
of Philadelphia, had taken passage in the same ship
for himself and son, and with Mr. Denham, a Quaker
merchant, and Messrs. Onion and Russel, masters of
an iron work in Maryland, had engag’d the great
cabin; so that Ralph and I were forced to take up
with a berth in the steerage, and none on board knowing
us, were considered as ordinary persons. But
Mr. Hamilton and his son (it was James, since governor)
return’d from Newcastle to Philadelphia, the
father being recall’d by a great fee to plead
for a seized ship; and, just before we sail’d,
Colonel French coming on board, and showing me great
respect, I was more taken notice of, and, with my friend
Ralph, invited by the other gentlemen to come into
the cabin, there being now room. Accordingly,
we remov’d thither.
Understanding that Colonel French
had brought on board the governor’s despatches,
I ask’d the captain for those letters that were
to be under my care. He said all were put into
the bag together and he could not then come at them;
but, before we landed in England, I should have an
opportunity of picking them out; so I was satisfied
for the present, and we proceeded on our voyage.
We had a sociable company in the cabin, and lived
uncommonly well, having the addition of all Mr. Hamilton’s
stores, who had laid in plentifully. In this
passage Mr. Denham contracted a friendship for me
that continued during his life. The voyage was
otherwise not a pleasant one, as we had a great deal
of bad weather.
When we came into the Channel, the
captain kept his word with me, and gave me an opportunity
of examining the bag for the governor’s letters.
I found none upon which my name was put as under my
care. I picked out six or seven, that, by the
handwriting, I thought might be the promised letters,
especially as one of them was directed to Basket, the
king’s printer, and another to some stationer.
We arriv’d in London the 24th of December,
1724. I waited upon the stationer, who came first
in my way, delivering the letter as from Governor
Keith. “I don’t know such a person,”
says he; but, opening the letter, “O! this is
from Riddlesden. I have lately found him to
be a compleat rascal, and I will have nothing to do
with him, nor receive any letters from him.”
So, putting the letter into my hand, he turn’d
on his heel and left me to serve some customer.
I was surprized to find these were not the governor’s
letters; and, after recollecting and comparing circumstances,
I began to doubt his sincerity. I found my friend
Denham, and opened the whole affair to him. He
let me into Keith’s character; told me there
was not the least probability that he had written
any letters for me; that no one, who knew him, had
the smallest dependence on him; and he laught at the
notion of the governor’s giving me a letter
of credit, having, as he said, no credit to give.
On my expressing some concern about what I should
do, he advised me to endeavor getting some employment
in the way of my business. “Among the
printers here,” said he, “you will improve
yourself, and when you return to America, you will
set up to greater advantage.”
We both of us happen’d to know,
as well as the stationer, that Riddlesden, the attorney,
was a very knave. He had half ruin’d Miss
Read’s father by persuading him to be bound for
him. By this letter it appear’d there
was a secret scheme on foot to the prejudice of Hamilton
(suppos’d to be then coming over with us); and
that Keith was concerned in it with Riddlesden.
Denham, who was a friend of Hamilton’s thought
he ought to be acquainted with it; so, when he arriv’d
in England, which was soon after, partly from resentment
and ill-will to Keith and Riddlesden, and partly from
good-will to him, I waited on him, and gave him the
letter. He thank’d me cordially, the information
being of importance to him; and from that time he
became my friend, greatly to my advantage afterwards
on many occasions.
But what shall we think of a governor’s
playing such pitiful tricks, and imposing so grossly
on a poor ignorant boy! It was a habit he had
acquired. He wish’d to please everybody;
and, having little to give, he gave expectations.
He was otherwise an ingenious, sensible man, a pretty
good writer, and a good governor for the people, tho’
not for his constituents, the proprietaries, whose
instructions he sometimes disregarded. Several
of our best laws were of his planning and passed during
his administration.
Ralph and I were inseparable companions.
We took lodgings together in Little Britain at three
shillings and sixpence a week as much as
we could then afford. He found some relations,
but they were poor, and unable to assist him.
He now let me know his intentions of remaining in
London, and that he never meant to return to Philadelphia.
He had brought no money with him, the whole he could
muster having been expended in paying his passage.
I had fifteen pistoles; so he borrowed occasionally
of me to subsist, while he was looking out for business.
He first endeavored to get into the playhouse, believing
himself qualify’d for an actor; but Wilkes,
to whom he apply’d, advis’d him candidly
not to think of that employment, as it was impossible
he should succeed in it. Then he propos’d
to Roberts, a publisher in Paternoster Row, to write
for him a weekly paper like the Spectator, on certain
conditions, which Roberts did not approve. Then
he endeavored to get employment as a hackney writer,
to copy for the stationers and lawyers about the Temple,
but could find no vacancy.
I immediately got into work at Palmer’s,
then a famous printing-house in Bartholomew Close,
and here I continu’d near a year. I was
pretty diligent, but spent with Ralph a good deal
of my earnings in going to plays and other places
of amusement. We had together consumed all my
pistoles, and now just rubbed on from hand to
mouth. He seem’d quite to forget his wife
and child, and I, by degrees, my engagements with
Miss Read, to whom I never wrote more than one letter,
and that was to let her know I was not likely soon
to return. This was another of the great errata
of my life, which I should wish to correct if I were
to live it over again. In fact, by our expenses,
I was constantly kept unable to pay my passage.
At Palmer’s I was employed in
composing for the second edition of Wollaston’s
“Religion of Nature.” Some of his
reasonings not appearing to me well founded, I wrote
a little metaphysical piece in which I made remarks
on them. It was entitled “A Dissertation
on Liberty and Necessity, Pleasure and Pain.”
I inscribed it to my friend Ralph; I printed a small
number. It occasion’d my being more consider’d
by Mr. Palmer as a young man of some ingenuity, tho’
he seriously expostulated with me upon the principles
of my pamphlet, which to him appear’d abominable.
My printing this pamphlet was another erratum.
While I lodg’d in Little Britain, I made an
acquaintance with one Wilcox, a bookseller, whose
shop was at the next door. He had an immense
collection of second-hand books. Circulating
libraries were not then in use; but we agreed that,
on certain reasonable terms, which I have now forgotten,
I might take, read, and return any of his books.
This I esteem’d a great advantage, and I made
as much use of it as I could.
My pamphlet by some means falling
into the hands of one Lyons, a surgeon, author of
a book entitled “The Infallibility of Human
Judgment,” it occasioned an acquaintance between
us. He took great notice of me, called on me
often to converse on those subjects, carried me to
the Horns, a pale alehouse in
Lane, Cheapside, and introduced me to Dr. Mandeville,
author of the “Fable of the Bees,” who
had a club there, of which he was the soul, being a
most facetious, entertaining companion. Lyons,
too, introduced me to Dr. Pemberton, at Batson’s
Coffee-house, who promis’d to give me an opportunity,
some time or other, of seeing Sir Isaac Newton, of
which I was extreamely desirous; but this never happened.
I had brought over a few curiosities,
among which the principal was a purse made of the
asbestos, which purifies by fire. Sir Hans Sloane
heard of it, came to see me, and invited me to his
house in Bloomsbury Square, where he show’d
me all his curiosities, and persuaded me to let him
add that to the number, for which he paid me handsomely.
In our house there lodg’d a
young woman, a milliner, who, I think, had a shop
in the Cloisters. She had been genteelly bred,
was sensible and lively, and of most pleasing conversation.
Ralph read plays to her in the evenings, they grew
intimate, she took another lodging, and he followed
her. They liv’d together some time; but,
he being still out of business, and her income not
sufficient to maintain them with her child, he took
a resolution of going from London, to try for a country
school, which he thought himself well qualified to
undertake, as he wrote an excellent hand, and was
a master of arithmetic and accounts. This, however,
he deemed a business below him, and confident of future
better fortune, when he should be unwilling to have
it known that he once was so meanly employed, he changed
his name, and did me the honor to assume mine; for
I soon after had a letter from him, acquainting me
that he was settled in a small village (in Berkshire,
I think it was, where he taught reading and writing
to ten or a dozen boys, at sixpence each per week),
recommending Mrs. T to my care,
and desiring me to write to him, directing for Mr.
Franklin, schoolmaster, at such a place.
He continued to write frequently,
sending me large specimens of an epic poem which he
was then composing, and desiring my remarks and corrections.
These I gave him from time to time, but endeavor’d
rather to discourage his proceeding. One of
Young’s Satires was then just published.
I copy’d and sent him a great part of it, which
set in a strong light the folly of pursuing the Muses
with any hope of advancement by them. All was
in vain; sheets of the poem continued to come by every
post. In the mean time, Mrs. T ,
having on his account lost her friends and business,
was often in distresses, and us’d to send for
me, and borrow what I could spare to help her out of
them. I grew fond of her company, and, being
at that time under no religious restraint, and presuming
upon my importance to her, I attempted familiarities
(another erratum) which she repuls’d with a
proper resentment, and acquainted him with my behaviour.
This made a breach between us; and, when he returned
again to London, he let me know he thought I had cancell’d
all the obligations he had been under to me.
So I found I was never to expect his repaying me what
I lent to him, or advanc’d for him. This,
however, was not then of much consequence, as he was
totally unable; and in the loss of his friendship
I found myself relieved from a burthen. I now
began to think of getting a little money beforehand,
and, expecting better work, I left Palmer’s
to work at Watts’s, near Lincoln’s Inn
Fields, a still greater printing-house. Here
I continued all the rest of my stay in London.
At my first admission into this printing-house
I took to working at press, imagining I felt a want
of the bodily exercise I had been us’d to in
America, where presswork is mix’d with composing.
I drank only water; the other workmen, near fifty
in number, were great guzzlers of beer. On occasion,
I carried up and down stairs a large form of types
in each hand, when others carried but one in both hands.
They wondered to see, from this and several instances,
that the Water-American, as they called me, was stronger
than themselves, who drank strong beer! We had
an alehouse boy who attended always in the house to
supply the workmen. My companion at the press
drank every day a pint before breakfast, a pint at
breakfast with his bread and cheese, a pint between
breakfast and dinner, a pint at dinner, a pint in the
afternoon about six o’clock, and another when
he had done his day’s work. I thought
it a detestable custom; but it was necessary, he suppos’d,
to drink strong beer, that he might be strong to labor.
I endeavored to convince him that the bodily strength
afforded by beer could only be in proportion to the
grain or flour of the barley dissolved in the water
of which it was made; that there was more flour in
a pennyworth of bread; and therefore, if he would
eat that with a pint of water, it would give him more
strength than a quart of beer. He drank on,
however, and had four or five shillings to pay out
of his wages every Saturday night for that muddling
liquor; an expense I was free from. And thus
these poor devils keep themselves always under.
Watts, after some weeks, desiring
to have me in the composing-room, I left the pressmen;
a new bien venu or sum for drink, being five
shillings, was demanded of me by the compositors.
I thought it an imposition, as I had paid below;
the master thought so too, and forbad my paying it.
I stood out two or three weeks, was accordingly considered
as an excommunicate, and bad so many little pieces
of private mischief done me, by mixing my sorts, transposing
my pages, breaking my matter, etc., etc.,
if I were ever so little out of the room, and all
ascribed to the chappel ghost, which they said ever
haunted those not regularly admitted, that, notwithstanding
the master’s protection, I found myself oblig’d
to comply and pay the money, convinc’d of the
folly of being on ill terms with those one is to live
with continually.
I was now on a fair footing with them,
and soon acquir’d considerable influence.
I propos’d some reasonable alterations in their
chappel laws, and carried them against all opposition.
From my example, a great part of them left their
muddling breakfast of beer, and bread, and cheese,
finding they could with me be suppli’d from a
neighboring house with a large porringer of hot water-gruel,
sprinkled with pepper, crumbl’d with bread,
and a bit of butter in it, for the price of a pint
of beer, viz., three half-pence. This was
a more comfortable as well as cheaper breakfast, and
kept their heads clearer. Those who continued
sotting with beer all day, were often, by not paying,
out of credit at the alehouse, and us’d to make
interest with me to get beer; their light, as they
phrased it, being out. I watch’d the pay-table
on Saturday night, and collected what I stood engag’d
for them, having to pay sometimes near thirty shillings
a week on their account. This, and my being
esteem’d a pretty good riggite, that is, a jocular
verbal satirist, supported my consequence in the society.
My constant attendance (I never making a St. Monday)
recommended me to the master; and my uncommon quickness
at composing occasioned my being put upon all work
of dispatch, which was generally better paid.
So I went on now very agreeably.
My lodging in Little Britain being
too remote, I found another in Duke-street, opposite
to the Romish Chapel. It was two pair of stairs
backwards, at an Italian warehouse. A widow lady
kept the house; she had a daughter, and a maid servant,
and a journeyman who attended the warehouse, but lodg’d
abroad. After sending to inquire my character
at the house where I last lodg’d she agreed
to take me in at the same rate, 3s. 6d. per week;
cheaper, as she said, from the protection she expected
in having a man lodge in the house. She was a
widow, an elderly woman; had been bred a Protestant,
being a clergyman’s daughter, but was converted
to the Catholic religion by her husband, whose memory
she much revered; had lived much among people of distinction,
and knew a thousand anecdotes of them as far back as
the times of Charles the Second. She was lame
in her knees with the gout, and, therefore, seldom
stirred out of her room, so sometimes wanted company;
and hers was so highly amusing to me, that I was sure
to spend an evening with her whenever she desired
it. Our supper was only half an anchovy each,
on a very little strip of bread and butter, and half
a pint of ale between us; but the entertainment was
in her conversation. My always keeping good hours,
and giving little trouble in the family, made her
unwilling to part with me; so that, when I talk’d
of a lodging I had heard of, nearer my business, for
two shillings a week, which, intent as I now was on
saving money, made some difference, she bid me not
think of it, for she would abate me two shillings a
week for the future; so I remained with her at one
shilling and sixpence as long as I staid in London.
In a garret of her house there lived
a maiden lady of seventy, in the most retired manner,
of whom my landlady gave me this account: that
she was a Roman Catholic, had been sent abroad when
young, and lodg’d in a nunnery with an intent
of becoming a nun; but, the country not agreeing with
her, she returned to England, where, there being no
nunnery, she had vow’d to lead the life of a
nun, as near as might be done in those circumstances.
Accordingly, she had given all her estate to charitable
uses, reserving only twelve pounds a year to live on,
and out of this sum she still gave a great deal in
charity, living herself on water-gruel only, and using
no fire but to boil it. She had lived many years
in that garret, being permitted to remain there gratis
by successive Catholic tenants of the house below,
as they deemed it a blessing to have her there.
A priest visited her to confess her every day.
“I have ask’d her,” says my landlady,
“how she, as she liv’d, could possibly
find so much employment for a confessor?” “Oh,”
said she, “it is impossible to avoid vain thoughts.”
I was permitted once to visit her, She was chearful
and polite, and convers’d pleasantly. The
room was clean, but had no other furniture than a matras,
a table with a crucifix and book, a stool which she
gave me to sit on, and a picture over the chimney
of Saint Veronica displaying her handkerchief, with
the miraculous figure of Christ’s bleeding face
on it, which she explained to me with great seriousness.
She look’d pale, but was never sick; and I
give it as another instance on how small an income
life and health may be supported.
At Watts’s printing-house I
contracted an acquaintance with an ingenious young
man, one Wygate, who, having wealthy relations, had
been better educated than most printers; was a tolerable
Latinist, spoke French, and lov’d reading.
I taught him and a friend of his to swim at twice
going into the river, and they soon became good swimmers.
They introduc’d me to some gentlemen from the
country, who went to Chelsea by water to see the College
and Don Saltero’s curiosities. In our
return, at the request of the company, whose curiosity
Wygate had excited, I stripped and leaped into the
river, and swam from near Chelsea to Blackfryar’s,
performing on the way many feats of activity, both
upon and under water, that surpris’d and pleas’d
those to whom they were novelties.
I had from a child been ever delighted
with this exercise, had studied and practis’d
all Thevenot’s motions and positions, added some
of my own, aiming at the graceful and easy as well
as the useful. All these I took this occasion
of exhibiting to the company, and was much flatter’d
by their admiration; and Wygate, who was desirous of
becoming a master, grew more and more attach’d
to me on that account, as well as from the similarity
of our studies. He at length proposed to me
travelling all over Europe together, supporting ourselves
everywhere by working at our business. I was
once inclined to it; but, mentioning it to my good
friend Mr. Denham, with whom I often spent an hour
when I had leisure, he dissuaded me from it, advising
me to think only of returning to Pennsilvania, which
he was now about to do.
I must record one trait of this good
man’s character. He had formerly been
in business at Bristol, but failed in debt to a number
of people, compounded and went to America. There,
by a close application to business as a merchant,
he acquir’d a plentiful fortune in a few years.
Returning to England in the ship with me, he invited
his old creditors to an entertainment, at which he
thank’d them for the easy composition they had
favored him with, and, when they expected nothing but
the treat, every man at the first remove found under
his plate an order on a banker for the full amount
of the unpaid remainder with interest.
He now told me he was about to return
to Philadelphia, and should carry over a great quantity
of goods in order to open a store there. He
propos’d to take me over as his clerk, to keep
his books, in which he would instruct me, copy his
letters, and attend the store. He added that,
as soon as I should be acquainted with mercantile business,
he would promote me by sending me with a cargo of
flour and bread, etc., to the West Indies, and
procure me commissions from others which would be
profitable; and, if I manag’d well, would establish
me handsomely. The thing pleas’d me; for
I was grown tired of London, remembered with pleasure
the happy months I had spent in Pennsylvania, and wish’d
again to see it; therefore I immediately agreed on
the terms of fifty pounds a year, Pennsylvania money;
less, indeed, than my present gettings as a compositor,
but affording a better prospect.
I now took leave of printing, as I
thought, for ever, and was daily employed in my new
business, going about with Mr. Denham among the tradesmen
to purchase various articles, and seeing them pack’d
up, doing errands, calling upon workmen to dispatch,
etc.; and, when all was on board, I had a few
days’ leisure. On one of these days, I
was, to my surprise, sent for by a great man I knew
only by name, a Sir William Wyndham, and I waited
upon him. He had heard by some means or other
of my swimming from Chelsea to Blackfriar’s,
and of my teaching Wygate and another young man to
swim in a few hours. He had two sons, about
to set out on their travels; he wish’d to have
them first taught swimming, and proposed to gratify
me handsomely if I would teach them. They were
not yet come to town, and my stay was uncertain, so
I could not undertake it; but, from this incident,
I thought it likely that, if I were to remain in England
and open a swimming-school, I might get a good deal
of money; and it struck me so strongly, that, had the
overture been sooner made me, probably I should not
so soon have returned to America. After many
years, you and I had something of more importance
to do with one of these sons of Sir William Wyndham,
become Earl of Egremont, which I shall mention in
its place.
Thus I spent about eighteen months
in London; most part of the time I work’d hard
at my business, and spent but little upon myself except
in seeing plays and in books. My friend Ralph
had kept me poor; he owed me about twenty-seven pounds,
which I was now never likely to receive; a great sum
out of my small earnings! I lov’d him,
notwithstanding, for he had many amiable qualities.
I had by no means improv’d my fortune; but
I had picked up some very ingenious acquaintance, whose
conversation was of great advantage to me; and I had
read considerably.
We sail’d from Gravesend on
the 23d of July, 1726. For the incidents of
the voyage, I refer you to my journal, where you will
find them all minutely related. Perhaps the
most important part of that journal is the plan
to be found in it, which I formed at sea, for regulating
my future conduct in life. 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.
We landed in Philadelphia on the 11th
of October, where I found sundry alterations.
Keith was no longer governor, being superseded by
Major Gordon. I met him walking the streets
as a common citizen. He seem’d a little
asham’d at seeing me, but pass’d without
saying anything. I should have been as much
asham’d at seeing Miss Read, had not her friends,
despairing with reason of my return after the receipt
of my letter, persuaded her to marry another, one
Rogers, a potter, which was done in my absence.
With him, however, she was never happy, and soon
parted from him, refusing to cohabit with him or bear
his name, it being now said that he had another wife.
He was a worthless fellow, tho’ an excellent
workman, which was the temptation to her friends.
He got into debt, ran away in 1727 or 1728, went
to the West Indies, and died there. Keimer had
got a better house, a shop well supply’d with
stationery, plenty of new types, a number of hands,
tho’ none good, and seem’d to have a great
deal of business.
Mr. Denham took a store in Water-street,
where we open’d our goods; I attended the business
diligently, studied accounts, and grew, in a little
time, expert at selling. We lodg’d and,
boarded together; he counsell’d me as a father,
having a sincere regard for me. I respected
and lov’d him, and we might have gone on together
very happy; but, in the beginning of February, 1726-7,
when I had just pass’d my twenty-first year,
we both were taken ill. My distemper was a pleurisy,
which very nearly carried me off. I suffered
a good deal, gave up the point in my own mind, and
was rather disappointed when I found myself recovering,
regretting, in some degree, that I must now, some
time or other, have all that disagreeable work to do
over again. I forget what his distemper was;
it held him a long time, and at length carried him
off. He left me a small legacy in a nuncupative
will, as a token of his kindness for me, and he left
me once more to the wide world; for the store was
taken into the care of his executors, and my employment
under him ended.
My brother-in-law, Holmes, being now
at Philadelphia, advised my return to my business;
and Keimer tempted me, with an offer of large wages
by the year, to come and take the management of his
printing-house, that he might better attend his stationer’s
shop. I had heard a bad character of him in
London from his wife and her friends, and was not
fond of having any more to do with him. I tri’d
for farther employment as a merchant’s clerk;
but, not readily meeting with any, I clos’d
again with Keimer. I found in his house these
hands: Hugh Meredith, a Welsh Pensilvanian, thirty
years of age, bred to country work; honest, sensible,
had a great deal of solid observation, was something
of a reader, but given to drink. Stephen Potts,
a young countryman of full age, bred to the same,
of uncommon natural parts, and great wit and humor,
but a little idle. These he had agreed with at
extream low wages per week, to be rais’d a shilling
every three months, as they would deserve by improving
in their business; and the expectation of these high
wages, to come on hereafter, was what he had drawn
them in with. Meredith was to work at press,
Potts at book-binding, which he, by agreement, was
to teach them, though he knew neither one nor t’other.
John , a wild Irishman, brought
up to no business, whose service, for four years,
Keimer had purchased from the captain of a ship; he,
too, was to be made a pressman. George Webb,
an Oxford scholar, whose time for four years he had
likewise bought, intending him for a compositor, of
whom more presently; and David Harry, a country boy,
whom he had taken apprentice.
I soon perceiv’d that the intention
of engaging me at wages so much higher than he had
been us’d to give, was, to have these raw, cheap
hands form’d thro’ me; and, as soon as
I had instructed them, then they being all articled
to him, he should be able to do without me. I
went on, however, very cheerfully, put his printing-house
in order, which had been in great confusion, and brought
his hands by degrees to mind their business and to
do it better.
It was an odd thing to find an Oxford
scholar in the situation of a bought servant.
He was not more than eighteen years of age, and gave
me this account of himself; that he was born in Gloucester,
educated at a grammar-school there, had been distinguish’d
among the scholars for some apparent superiority in
performing his part, when they exhibited plays; belong’d
to the Witty Club there, and had written some pieces
in prose and verse, which were printed in the Gloucester
newspapers; thence he was sent to Oxford; where he
continued about a year, but not well satisfi’d,
wishing of all things to see London, and become a
player. At length, receiving his quarterly allowance
of fifteen guineas, instead of discharging his debts
he walk’d out of town, hid his gown in a furze
bush, and footed it to London, where, having no friend
to advise him, he fell into bad company, soon spent
his guineas, found no means of being introduc’d
among the players, grew necessitous, pawn’d
his cloaths, and wanted bread. Walking the street
very hungry, and not knowing what to do with himself,
a crimp’s bill was put into his hand, offering
immediate entertainment and encouragement to such as
would bind themselves to serve in America.
He went directly, sign’d the
indentures, was put into the ship, and came over,
never writing a line to acquaint his friends what was
become of him. He was lively, witty, good-natur’d,
and a pleasant companion, but idle, thoughtless, and
imprudent to the last degree.
John, the Irishman, soon ran away;
with the rest I began to live very agreeably, for
they all respected me the more, as they found Keimer
incapable of instructing them, and that from me they
learned something daily. We never worked on
Saturday, that being Keimer’s Sabbath, so I
had two days for reading. My acquaintance with
ingenious people in the town increased. Keimer
himself treated me with great civility and apparent
regard, and nothing now made me uneasy but my debt
to Vernon, which I was yet unable to pay, being hitherto
but a poor oeconomist. He, however, kindly made
no demand of it.
Our printing-house often wanted sorts,
and there was no letter-founder in America; I had
seen types cast at James’s in London, but without
much attention to the manner; however, I now contrived
a mould, made use of the letters we had as puncheons,
struck the matrices in lead, And thus supply’d
in a pretty tolerable way all deficiencies. I
also engrav’d several things on occasion; I
made the ink; I was warehouseman, and everything,
and, in short, quite a factotum.
But, however serviceable I might be,
I found that my services became every day of less
importance, as the other hands improv’d in the
business; and, when Keimer paid my second quarter’s
wages, he let me know that he felt them too heavy,
and thought I should make an abatement. He grew
by degrees less civil, put on more of the master,
frequently found fault, was captious, and seem’d
ready for an outbreaking. I went on, nevertheless,
with a good deal of patience, thinking that his encumber’d
circumstances were partly the cause. At length
a trifle snapt our connections; for, a great noise
happening near the court-house, I put my head out
of the window to see what was the matter. Keimer,
being in the street, look’d up and saw me, call’d
out to me in a loud voice and angry tone to mind my
business, adding some reproachful words, that nettled
me the more for their publicity, all the neighbors
who were looking out on the same occasion being witnesses
how I was treated. He came up immediately into
the printing-house, continu’d the quarrel, high
words pass’d on both sides, he gave me the quarter’s
warning we had stipulated, expressing a wish that
he had not been oblig’d to so long a warning.
I told him his wish was unnecessary, for I would
leave him that instant; and so, taking my hat, walk’d
out of doors, desiring Meredith, whom I saw below,
to take care of some things I left, and bring them
to my lodgings.
Meredith came accordingly in the evening,
when we talked my affair over. He had conceiv’d
a great regard for me, and was very unwilling that
I should leave the house while he remain’d in
it. He dissuaded me from returning to my native
country, which I began to think of; he reminded me
that Keimer was in debt for all he possess’d;
that his creditors began to be uneasy; that he kept
his shop miserably, sold often without profit for
ready money, and often trusted without keeping accounts;
that he must therefore fall, which would make a vacancy
I might profit of. I objected my want of money.
He then let me know that his father had a high opinion
of me, and, from some discourse that had pass’d
between them, he was sure would advance money to set
us up, if I would enter into partnership with him.
“My time,” says he, “will be out
with Keimer in the spring; by that time we may have
our press and types in from London. I am sensible
I am no workman; if you like it, your skill in the
business shall be set against the stock I furnish,
and we will share the profits equally.”
The proposal was agreeable, and I
consented; his father was in town and approv’d
of it; the more as he saw I had great influence with
his son, had prevail’d on him to abstain long
from dram-drinking, and he hop’d might break
him off that wretched habit entirely, when we came
to be so closely connected. I gave an inventory
to the father, who carry’d it to a merchant;
the things were sent for, the secret was to be kept
till they should arrive, and in the mean time I was
to get work, if I could, at the other printing-house.
But I found no vacancy there, and so remain’d
idle a few days, when Keimer, on a prospect of being
employ’d to print some paper money in New Jersey,
which would require cuts and various types that I
only could supply, and apprehending Bradford might
engage me and get the jobb from him, sent me a very
civil message, that old friends should not part for
a few words, the effect of sudden passion, and wishing
me to return. Meredith persuaded me to comply,
as it would give more opportunity for his improvement
under my daily instructions; so I return’d,
and we went on more smoothly than for some time before.
The New jersey jobb was obtain’d, I contriv’d
a copperplate press for it, the first that had been
seen in the country; I cut several ornaments and checks
for the bills. We went together to Burlington,
where I executed the whole to satisfaction; and he
received so large a sum for the work as to be enabled
thereby to keep his head much longer above water.
At Burlington I made an acquaintance
with many principal people of the province.
Several of them had been appointed by the Assembly
a committee to attend the press, and take care that
no more bills were printed than the law directed.
They were therefore, by turns, constantly with us,
and generally he who attended, brought with him a
friend or two for company. My mind having been
much more improv’d by reading than Keimer’s,
I suppose it was for that reason my conversation seem’d
to be more valu’d. They had me to their
houses, introduced me to their friends, and show’d
me much civility; while he, tho’ the master,
was a little neglected. In truth, he was an odd
fish; ignorant of common life, fond of rudely opposing
receiv’d opinions, slovenly to extream dirtiness,
enthusiastic in some points of religion, and a little
knavish withal.
We continu’d there near three
months; and by that time I could reckon among my acquired
friends, Judge Allen, Samuel Bustill, the secretary
of the Province, Isaac Pearson, Joseph Cooper, and
several of the Smiths, members of Assembly, and Isaac
Decow, the surveyor-general. The latter was a
shrewd, sagacious old man, who told me that he began
for himself, when young, by wheeling clay for the
brick-makers, learned to write after he was of age,
carri’d the chain for surveyors, who taught
him surveying, and he had now by his industry, acquir’d
a good estate; and says he, “I foresee that
you will soon work this man out of business, and make
a fortune in it at Philadelphia.” He had
not then the least intimation of my intention to set
up there or anywhere. These friends were afterwards
of great use to me, as I occasionally was to some
of them. They all continued their regard for
me as long as they lived.
Before I enter upon my public appearance
in business, it may be well to let you know the then
state of my mind with regard to my principles and
morals, that you may see how far those influenc’d
the future events of my life. My parents had
early given me religious impressions, and brought
me through my childhood piously in the Dissenting way.
But I was scarce fifteen, when, after doubting by
turns of several points, as I found them disputed
in the different books I read, I began to doubt of
Revelation itself. Some books against Deism fell
into my hands; they were said to be the substance
of sermons preached at Boyle’s Lectures.
It happened that they wrought an effect on me quite
contrary to what was intended by them; for the arguments
of the Deists, which were quoted to be refuted, appeared
to me much stronger than the réfutations; in
short, I soon became a thorough Deist. My arguments
perverted some others, particularly Collins and Ralph;
but, each of them having afterwards wrong’d
me greatly without the least compunction, and recollecting
Keith’s conduct towards me (who was another
freethinker), and my own towards Vernon and Miss Read,
which at times gave me great trouble, I began to suspect
that this doctrine, tho’ it might be true, was
not very useful. My London pamphlet, which had
for its motto these lines of Dryden:
“Whatever
is, is right. Though purblind man
Sees
but a part o’ the chain, the nearest link:
His
eyes not carrying to the equal beam,
That
poises all above;”
and from the attributes of God, his
infinite wisdom, goodness and power, concluded that
nothing could possibly be wrong in the world, and
that vice and virtue were empty distinctions, no such
things existing, appear’d now not so clever
a performance as I once thought it; and I doubted
whether some error had not insinuated itself unperceiv’d
into my argument, so as to infect all that follow’d,
as is common in metaphysical reasonings.
I grew convinc’d that truth,
sincerity and integrity in dealings between man and
man were of the utmost importance to the felicity of
life; and I form’d written resolutions, which
still remain in my journal book, to practice them
ever while I lived. Revelation had indeed no
weight with me, as such; but I entertain’d an
opinion that, though certain actions might not be
bad because they were forbidden by it, or good because
it commanded them, yet probably these 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.
And this persuasion, with the kind hand of Providence,
or some guardian angel, or accidental favorable circumstances
and situations, or all together, preserved me, thro’
this dangerous time of youth, and the hazardous situations
I was sometimes in among strangers, remote from the
eye and advice of my father, without any willful gross
immorality or injustice, that might have been expected
from my want of religion. I say willful, because
the instances I have mentioned had something of necessity
in them, from my youth, inexperience, and the knavery
of others. I had therefore a tolerable character
to begin the world with; I valued it properly, and
determin’d to preserve it.
We had not been long return’d
to Philadelphia before the new types arriv’d
from London. We settled with Keimer, and left
him by his consent before he heard of it. We
found a house to hire near the market, and took it.
To lessen the rent, which was then but twenty-four
pounds a year, tho’ I have since known it to
let for seventy, we took in Thomas Godfrey, a glazier,
and his family, who were to pay a considerable part
of it to us, and we to board with them. We had
scarce opened our letters and put our press in order,
before George House, an acquaintance of mine, brought
a countryman to us, whom he had met in the street
inquiring for a printer. All our cash was now
expended in the variety of particulars we had been
obliged to procure, and this countryman’s five
shillings, being our first-fruits, and coming so seasonably,
gave me more pleasure than any crown I have since
earned; and the gratitude I felt toward House has made
me often more ready than perhaps I should otherwise
have been to assist young beginners.
There are croakers in every country,
always boding its ruin. Such a one then lived
in Philadelphia; a person of note, an elderly man,
with a wise look and a very grave manner of speaking;
his name was Samuel Mickle. This gentleman,
a stranger to me, stopt one day at my door, and asked
me if I was the young man who had lately opened a new
printing-house. Being answered in the affirmative,
he said he was sorry for me, because it was an expensive
undertaking, and the expense would be lost; for Philadelphia
was a sinking place, the people already half-bankrupts,
or near being so; all appearances to the contrary,
such as new buildings and the rise of rents, being
to his certain knowledge fallacious; for they were,
in fact, among the things that would soon ruin us.
And he gave me such a detail of misfortunes now existing,
or that were soon to exist, that he left me half melancholy.
Had I known him before I engaged in this business,
probably I never should have done it. This man
continued to live in this decaying place, and to declaim
in the same strain, refusing for many years to buy
a house there, because all was going to destruction;
and at last I had the pleasure of seeing him give
five times as much for one as he might have bought
it for when he first began his croaking.
I should have mentioned before, that,
in the autumn of the preceding year, I had form’d
most of my ingenious acquaintance into a club of mutual
improvement, which we called the junto; 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.
The first members were Joseph Breintnal,
a copyer of deeds for the scriveners, a good-natur’d,
friendly, middle-ag’d man, a great lover of
poetry, reading all he could meet with, and writing
some that was tolerable; very ingenious in many little
Nicknackeries, and of sensible conversation.
Thomas Godfrey, a self-taught mathematician,
great in his way, and afterward inventor of what is
now called Hadley’s Quadrant. But he knew
little out of his way, and was not a pleasing companion;
as, like most great mathematicians I have met with,
he expected universal precision in everything said,
or was for ever denying or distinguishing upon trifles,
to the disturbance of all conversation. He soon
left us.
Nicholas Scull, a surveyor, afterwards
surveyor-general, who lov’d books, and sometimes
made a few verses.
William Parsons, bred a shoemaker,
but loving reading, had acquir’d a considerable
share of mathematics, which he first studied with a
view to astrology, that he afterwards laught at it.
He also became surveyor-general.
William Maugridge, a joiner, a most
exquisite mechanic, and a solid, sensible man.
Hugh Meredith, Stephen Potts, and
George Webb I have characteriz’d before.
Robert Grace, a young gentleman of
some fortune, generous, lively, and witty; a lover
of punning and of his friends.
And William Coleman, then a merchant’s
clerk, about my age, who had the coolest, dearest
head, the best heart, and the exactest morals of almost
any man I ever met with. He became afterwards
a merchant of great note, and one of our provincial
judges. Our friendship continued without interruption
to his death, upward of forty years; and the club
continued almost as long, and was the best school of
philosophy, morality, and politics that then existed
in the province; for our queries, which were read
the week preceding their discussion, put us upon reading
with attention upon the several subjects, that we might
speak more to the purpose; and here, too, we acquired
better habits of conversation, every thing being studied
in our rules which might prevent our disgusting each
other. From hence the long continuance of the
club, which I shall have frequent occasion to speak
further of hereafter.
But my giving this account of it here
is to show something of the interest I had, every
one of these exerting themselves in recommending business
to us. Breintnal particularly procur’d
us from the Quakers the printing forty sheets of their
history, the rest being to be done by Keimer; and
upon this we work’d exceedingly hard, for the
price was low. It was a folio, pro patria
size, in pica, with long primer notes. I compos’d
of it a sheet a day, and Meredith worked it off at
press; it was often eleven at night, and sometimes
later, before I had finished my distribution for the
next day’s work, for the little jobbs sent in
by our other friends now and then put us back.
But so determin’d I was to continue doing a
sheet a day of the folio, that one night, when, having
impos’d my forms, I thought my day’s work
over, one of them by accident was broken, and two
pages reduced to pi, I immediately distributed and
compos’d it over again before I went to bed;
and this industry, visible to our neighbors, began
to give us character and credit; particularly, I was
told, that mention being made of the new printing-office
at the merchants’ Every-night club, the general
opinion was that it must fail, there being already
two printers in the place, Keimer and Bradford; but
Dr. Baird (whom you and I saw many years after at
his native place, St. Andrew’s in Scotland) gave
a contrary opinion: “For the industry of
that Franklin,” says he, “is superior to
any thing I ever saw of the kind; I see him still
at work when I go home from club, and he is at work
again before his neighbors are out of bed.”
This struck the rest, and we soon after had offers
from one of them to supply us with stationery; but
as yet we did not chuse to engage in shop business.
I mention this industry the more particularly
and the more freely, tho’ it seems to be talking
in my own praise, that those of my posterity, who
shall read it, may know the use of that virtue, when
they see its effects in my favour throughout this
relation.
George Webb, who had found a female
friend that lent him wherewith to purchase his time
of Keimer, now came to offer himself as a journeyman
to us. We could not then employ him; but I foolishly
let him know as a secret that I soon intended to begin
a newspaper, and might then have work for him.
My hopes of success, as I told him, were founded on
this, that the then only newspaper, printed by Bradford,
was a paltry thing, wretchedly manag’d, no way
entertaining, and yet was profitable to him; I therefore
thought a good paper would scarcely fail of good encouragement.
I requested Webb not to mention it; but he told it
to Keimer, who immediately, to be beforehand with
me, published proposals for printing one himself,
on which Webb was to be employ’d. I resented
this; and, to counteract them, as I could not yet begin
our paper, I wrote several pieces of entertainment
for Bradford’s paper, under the title of the
busy body, which Breintnal continu’d
some months. By this means the attention of
the publick was fixed on that paper, and Keimer’s
proposals, which we burlesqu’d and ridicul’d,
were disregarded. He began his paper, however,
and, after carrying it on three quarters of a year,
with at most only ninety subscribers, he offered it
to me for a trifle; and I, having been ready some time
to go on with it, took it in hand directly; and it
prov’d in a few years extremely profitable to
me.
I perceive that I am apt to speak
in the singular number, though our partnership still
continu’d; the reason may be that, in fact, the
whole management of the business lay upon me.
Meredith was no compositor, a poor pressman, and
seldom sober. My friends lamented my connection
with him, but I was to make the best of it.
Our first papers made a quite different
appearance from any before in the province; a better
type, and better printed; but some spirited remarks
of my writing, on the dispute then going on between
Governor Burnet and the Massachusetts Assembly, struck
the principal people, occasioned the paper and the
manager of it to be much talk’d of, and in a
few weeks brought them all to be our subscribers.
Their example was follow’d by
many, and our number went on growing continually.
This was one of the first good effects of my having
learnt a little to scribble; another was, that the
leading men, seeing a newspaper now in the hands of
one who could also handle a pen, thought it convenient
to oblige and encourage me. Bradford still printed
the votes, and laws, and other publick business.
He had printed an address of the House to the governor,
in a coarse, blundering manner, we reprinted it elegantly
and correctly, and sent one to every member.
They were sensible of the difference: it strengthened
the hands of our friends in the House, and they voted
us their printers for the year ensuing.
Among my friends in the House I must
not forget Mr. Hamilton, before mentioned, who was
then returned from England, and had a seat in it.
He interested himself for me strongly in that instance,
as he did in many others afterward, continuing his
patronage till his death.
Mr. Vernon, about this time, put me
in mind of the debt I ow’d him, but did not
press me. I wrote him an ingenuous letter of
acknowledgment, crav’d his forbearance a little
longer, which he allow’d me, and as soon as
I was able, I paid the principal with interest, and
many thanks; so that erratum was in some degree corrected.
But now another difficulty came upon
me which I had never the least reason to expect.
Mr. Meredith’s father, who was to have paid
for our printing-house, according to the expectations
given me, was able to advance only one hundred pounds
currency, which had been paid; and a hundred more
was due to the merchant, who grew impatient, and su’d
us all. We gave bail, but saw that, if the money
could not be rais’d in time, the suit must soon
come to a judgment and execution, and our hopeful
prospects must, with us, be ruined, as the press and
letters must be sold for payment, perhaps at half
price.
In this distress two true friends,
whose kindness I have never forgotten, nor ever shall
forget while I can remember any thing, came to me
separately, unknown to each other, and, without any
application from me, offering each of them to advance
me all the money that should be necessary to enable
me to take the whole business upon myself, if that
should be practicable; but they did not like my continuing
the partnership with Meredith, who, as they said,
was often seen drunk in the streets, and playing at
low games in alehouses, much to our discredit.
These two friends were William Coleman and Robert
Grace. I told them I could not propose a separation
while any prospect remain’d of the Merediths’
fulfilling their part of our agreement, because I
thought myself under great obligations to them for
what they had done, and would do if they could; but,
if they finally fail’d in their performance,
and our partnership must be dissolv’d, I should
then think myself at liberty to accept the assistance
of my friends.
Thus the matter rested for some time,
when I said to my partner, “Perhaps your father
is dissatisfied at the part you have undertaken in
this affair of ours, and is unwilling to advance for
you and me what he would for you alone. If that
is the case, tell me, and I will resign the whole
to you, and go about my business.” “No,”
said he, “my father has really been disappointed,
and is really unable; and I am unwilling to distress
him farther. I see this is a business I am not
fit for. I was bred a farmer, and it was a folly
in me to come to town, and put myself, at thirty years
of age, an apprentice to learn a new trade. Many
of our Welsh people are going to settle in North Carolina,
where land is cheap. I am inclin’d to
go with them, and follow my old employment.
You may find friends to assist you. If you will
take the debts of the company upon you; return to
my father the hundred pound he has advanced; pay my
little personal debts, and give me thirty pounds and
a new saddle, I will relinquish the partnership, and
leave the whole in your hands.” I agreed
to this proposal: it was drawn up in writing,
sign’d, and seal’d immediately. I
gave him what he demanded, and he went soon after
to Carolina, from whence he sent me next year two
long letters, containing the best account that had
been given of that country, the climate, the soil,
husbandry, etc., for in those matters he was
very judicious. I printed them in the papers,
and they gave great satisfaction to the publick.
As soon as he was gone, I recurr’d
to my two friends; and because I would not give an
unkind preference to either, I took half of what each
had offered and I wanted of one, and half of the other;
paid off the company’s debts, and went on with
the business in my own name, advertising that the
partnership was dissolved. I think this was in
or about the year 1729.
About this time there was a cry among
the people for more paper money, only fifteen thousand
pounds being extant in the province, and that soon
to be sunk. The wealthy inhabitants oppos’d
any addition, being against all paper currency, from
an apprehension that it would depreciate, as it had
done in New England, to the prejudice of all creditors.
We had discuss’d this point in our Junto, where
I was on the side of an addition, being persuaded
that the first small sum struck in 1723 had done much
good by increasing the trade, employment, and number
of inhabitants in the province, since I now saw all
the old houses inhabited, and many new ones building;
whereas I remembered well, that when I first walk’d
about the streets of Philadelphia, eating my roll,
I saw most of the houses in Walnut-street, between
Second and Front streets, with bills on their doors,
“To be let”; and many likewise in Chestnut-street
and other streets, which made me then think the inhabitants
of the city were deserting it one after another.
Our debates possess’d me so
fully of the subject, that I wrote and printed an
anonymous pamphlet on it, entitled “The Nature
and Necessity of a Paper Currency.” It
was well receiv’d by the common people in general;
but the rich men dislik’d it, for it increas’d
and strengthen’d the clamor for more money,
and they happening to have no writers among them that
were able to answer it, their opposition slacken’d,
and the point was carried by a majority in the House.
My friends there, who conceiv’d I had been
of some service, thought fit to reward me by employing
me in printing the money; a very profitable jobb and
a great help to me. This was another advantage
gain’d by my being able to write.
The utility of this currency became
by time and experience so evident as never afterwards
to be much disputed; so that it grew soon to fifty-five
thousand pounds, and in 1739 to eighty thousand pounds,
since which it arose during war to upwards of three
hundred and fifty thousand pounds, trade, building,
and inhabitants all the while increasing, till I now
think there are limits beyond which the quantity may
be hurtful.
I soon after obtain’d, thro’
my friend Hamilton, the printing of the Newcastle
paper money, another profitable jobb as I then thought
it; small things appearing great to those in small
circumstances; and these, to me, were really great
advantages, as they were great encouragements.
He procured for me, also, the printing of the laws
and votes of that government, which continu’d
in my hands as long as I follow’d the business.
I now open’d a little stationer’s
shop. I had in it blanks of all sorts, the correctest
that ever appear’d among us, being assisted in
that by my friend Breintnal. I had also paper,
parchment, chapmen’s books, etc.
One Whitemash, a compositor I had known in London,
an excellent workman, now came to me, and work’d
with me constantly and diligently; and I took an apprentice,
the son of Aquila Rose.
I began now gradually to pay off the
debt I was under for the printing-house. In order
to secure my credit and character as a tradesman,
I took care not only to be in reality industrious and
frugal, but to avoid all appearances to the contrary.
I drest plainly; I was seen at no places of idle
diversion. I never went out a fishing or shooting;
a book, indeed, sometimes debauch’d me from my
work, but that was seldom, snug, and gave no scandal;
and, to show that I was not above my business, I sometimes
brought home the paper I purchas’d at the stores
thro’ the streets on a wheelbarrow. Thus
being esteem’d an industrious, thriving young
man, and paying duly for what I bought, the merchants
who imported stationery solicited my custom; others
proposed supplying me with books, and I went on swimmingly.
In the mean time, Keimer’s credit and business
declining daily, he was at last forc’d to sell
his printing house to satisfy his creditors.
He went to Barbadoes, and there lived some years in
very poor circumstances.
His apprentice, David Harry, whom
I had instructed while I work’d with him, set
up in his place at Philadelphia, having bought his
materials. I was at first apprehensive of a powerful
rival in Harry, as his friends were very able, and
had a good deal of interest. I therefore propos’d
a partner-ship to him which he, fortunately for me,
rejected with scorn. He was very proud, dress’d
like a gentleman, liv’d expensively, took much
diversion and pleasure abroad, ran in debt, and neglected
his business; upon which, all business left him; and,
finding nothing to do, he followed Keimer to Barbadoes,
taking the printing-house with him. There this
apprentice employ’d his former master as a journeyman;
they quarrel’d often; Harry went continually
behindhand, and at length was forc’d to sell
his types and return to his country work in Pensilvania.
The person that bought them employ’d Keimer
to use them, but in a few years he died.
There remained now no competitor with
me at Philadelphia but the old one, Bradford; who
was rich and easy, did a little printing now and then
by straggling hands, but was not very anxious about
the business. However, as he kept the post-office,
it was imagined he had better opportunities of obtaining
news; his paper was thought a better distributer of
advertisements than mine, and therefore had many, more,
which was a profitable thing to him, and a disadvantage
to me; for, tho’ I did indeed receive and send
papers by the post, yet the publick opinion was otherwise,
for what I did send was by bribing the riders, who
took them privately, Bradford being unkind enough to
forbid it, which occasion’d some resentment
on my part; and I thought so meanly of him for it,
that, when I afterward came into his situation, I took
care never to imitate it.
I had hitherto continu’d to
board with Godfrey, who lived in part of my house
with his wife and children, and had one side of the
shop for his glazier’s business, tho’
he worked little, being always absorbed in his mathematics.
Mrs. Godfrey projected a match for me with a relation’s
daughter, took opportunities of bringing us often together,
till a serious courtship on my part ensu’d,
the girl being in herself very deserving. The
old folks encourag’d me by continual invitations
to supper, and by leaving us together, till at length
it was time to explain. Mrs. Godfrey manag’d
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 inform’d 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.
Whether this was a real change of
sentiment or only artifice, on a supposition of our
being too far engaged in affection to retract, and
therefore that we should steal a marriage, which would
leave them at liberty to give or withhold what they
pleas’d, I know not; but I suspected the latter,
resented it, and went no more. Mrs. Godfrey
brought me afterward some more favorable accounts of
their disposition, and would have drawn me on again;
but I declared absolutely my resolution to have nothing
more to do with that family. This was resented
by the Godfreys; we differ’d, and they removed,
leaving me the whole house, and I resolved to take
no more inmates.
But this affair having turned my thoughts
to marriage, I look’d round me and made overtures
of acquaintance in other places; but soon found that,
the business of a printer being generally thought a
poor one, I was not to expect money with a wife, unless
with such a one as I should not otherwise think agreeable.
In the mean time, that hard-to-be-governed passion
of youth 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 risque to my health by a distemper
which of all things I dreaded, though by great good
luck I escaped it. A friendly correspondence
as neighbors and old acquaintances had continued between
me and Mrs. Read’s family, who all had a regard
for me from the time of my first lodging in their house.
I was often invited there and consulted in their affairs,
wherein I sometimes was of service. I piti’d
poor Miss Read’s unfortunate situation, who
was generally dejected, seldom cheerful, and avoided
company. I considered my giddiness and inconstancy
when in London as in a great degree the cause of her
unhappiness, tho’ the mother was good enough
to think the fault more her own than mine, as she had
prevented our marrying before I went thither, and persuaded
the other match in my absence. Our mutual affection
was revived, but there were now great objections to
our union. The match was indeed looked upon as
invalid, a preceding wife being said to be living in
England; but this could not easily be prov’d,
because of the distance; and, tho’ there was
a report of his death, it was not certain. Then,
tho’ it should be true, he had left many debts,
which his successor might be call’d upon to
pay. We ventured, however, over all these difficulties,
and I took her to wife, September 1st, 1730.
None of the inconveniences happened that we had apprehended,
she proved a good and faithful helpmate, assisted
me much by attending the shop; we throve together,
and have ever mutually endeavored to make each other
happy. Thus I corrected that great erratum as
well as I could.
About this time, our club meeting,
not at a tavern, but in a little room of Mr. Grace’s,
set apart for that purpose, a proposition was made
by me, that, since our books were often referr’d
to in our disquisitions upon the queries, it might
be convenient to us to have them altogether where
we met, that upon occasion they might be consulted;
and by thus clubbing our books to a common library,
we should, while we lik’d to keep them together,
have each of us the advantage of using the books of
all the other members, which would be nearly as beneficial
as if each owned the whole. It was lik’d
and agreed to, and we fill’d one end of the
room with such books as we could best spare.
The number was not so great as we expected; and tho’
they had been of great use, yet some inconveniences
occurring for want of due care of them, the collection,
after about a year, was separated, and each took his
books home again
And now I set on foot my first project
of a public nature, that for a subscription library.
I drew up the proposals, got them put into form by
our great scrivener, Brockden, and, by the help of
my friends in the Junto, procured fifty subscribers
of forty shillings each to begin with, and ten shillings
a year for fifty years, the term our company was to
continue. We afterwards obtain’d a charter,
the company being increased to one hundred:
this was the mother of all the North American subscription
libraries, now so numerous. It is become a great
thing itself, and continually increasing. These
libraries have improved the general conversation of
the Americans, made the common tradesmen and farmers
as intelligent as most gentlemen from other countries,
and perhaps have contributed in some degree to the
stand so generally made throughout the colonies in
defense of their privileges.
Memo. Thus far was written with
the intention express’d in the beginning and
therefore contains several little family anecdotes
of no importance to others. What follows was
written many years after in compliance with the advice
contain’d in these letters, and accordingly
intended for the public. The affairs of the Revolution
occasion’d the interruption.
Letter from Mr. Abel
James, with Notes of my Life
(received
in Paris).
“My dear and
honored friend: I have often been desirous
of writing to thee, but could not be reconciled to
the thought that the letter might fall into the hands
of the British, lest some printer or busy-body should
publish some part of the contents, and give our friend
pain, and myself censure.
“Some time since there fell
into my hands, to my great joy, about twenty-three
sheets in thy own handwriting, containing an account
of the parentage and life of thyself, directed to
thy son, ending in the year 1730, with which there
were notes, likewise in thy writing; a copy of which
I inclose, in hopes it may be a means, if thou continued
it up to a later period, that the first and latter
part may be put together; and if it is not yet continued,
I hope thee will not delay it. Life is uncertain,
as the preacher tells us; and what will the world say
if kind, humane, and benevolent Ben. Franklin
should leave his friends and the world deprived of
so pleasing and profitable a work; a work which would
be useful and entertaining not only to a few, but to
millions? The influence writings under that class
have on the minds of youth is very great, and has
nowhere appeared to me so plain, as in our public
friend’s journals. It almost insensibly
leads the youth into the resolution of endeavoring
to become as good and eminent as the journalist.
Should thine, for instance, when published (and I
think it could not fail of it), lead the youth to
equal the industry and temperance of thy early youth,
what a blessing with that class would such a work
be! I know of no character living, nor many of
them put together, who has so much in his power as
thyself to promote a greater spirit of industry and
early attention to business, frugality, and temperance
with the American youth. Not that I think the
work would have no other merit and use in the world,
far from it; but the first is of such vast importance
that I know nothing that can equal it.”
The foregoing letter and the minutes
accompanying it being shown to a friend, I received
from him the following:
Letter from Mr. Benjamin Vaughan.
“Paris,
January 31, 1783.
“My dearest sir:
When I had read over your sheets of minutes of the
principal incidents of your life, recovered for you
by your Quaker acquaintance, I told you I would send
you a letter expressing my reasons why I thought it
would be useful to complete and publish it as he desired.
Various concerns have for some time past prevented
this letter being written, and I do not know whether
it was worth any expectation; happening to be at leisure,
however, at present, I shall by writing, at least
interest and instruct myself; but as the terms I am
inclined to use may tend to offend a person of your
manners, I shall only tell you how I would address
any other person, who was as good and as great as
yourself, but less diffident. I would say to
him, Sir, I solicit the history of your life from
the following motives: Your history is so remarkable,
that if you do not give it, somebody else will certainly
give it; and perhaps so as nearly to do as much harm,
as your own management of the thing might do good.
It will moreover present a table of the internal
circumstances of your country, which will very much
tend to invite to it settlers of virtuous and manly
minds. And considering the eagerness with which
such information is sought by them, and the extent
of your reputation, I do not know of a more efficacious
advertisement than your biography would give.
All that has happened to you is also connected with
the detail of the manners and situation of a rising
people; and in this respect I do not think that the
writings of Cæsar and Tacitus can be more interesting
to a true judge of human nature and society.
But these, sir, are small reasons, in my opinion,
compared with the chance which your life will give
for the forming of future great men; and in conjunction
with your Art of Virtue (which you design to publish)
of improving the features of private character, and
consequently of aiding all happiness, both public
and domestic. The two works I allude to, sir,
will in particular give a noble rule and example of
self-education. School and other education constantly
proceed upon false principles, and show a clumsy apparatus
pointed at a false mark; but your apparatus is simple,
and the mark a true one; and while parents and young
persons are left destitute of other just means of
estimating and becoming prepared for a reasonable
course in life, your discovery that the thing is in
many a man’s private power, will be invaluable!
Influence upon the private character, late in life,
is not only an influence late in life, but a weak
influence. It is in youth that we plant our chief
habits and prejudices; it is in youth that we take
our party as to profession, pursuits and matrimony.
In youth, therefore, the turn is given; in youth
the education even of the next generation is given;
in youth the private and public character is determined;
and the term of life extending but from youth to age,
life ought to begin well from youth, and more especially
before we take our party as to our principal objects.
But your biography will not merely teach self-education,
but the education of a wise man; and the wisest man
will receive lights and improve his progress, by seeing
detailed the conduct of another wise man. And
why are weaker men to be deprived of such helps, when
we see our race has been blundering on in the dark,
almost without a guide in this particular, from the
farthest trace of time? Show then, sir, how
much is to be done, both to sons and fathers; and invite
all wise men to become like yourself, and other men
to become wise. When we see how cruel statesmen
and warriors can be to the human race, and how absurd
distinguished men can be to their acquaintance, it
will be instructive to observe the instances multiply
of pacific, acquiescing manners; and to find how compatible
it is to be great and domestic, enviable and yet good-humored.
“The little private incidents
which you will also have to relate, will have considerable
use, as we want, above all things, rules of prudence
in ordinary affairs; and it will be curious to see
how you have acted in these. It will be so far
a sort of key to life, and explain many things that
all men ought to have once explained to them, to give,
them a chance of becoming wise by foresight.
The nearest thing to having experience of one’s
own, is to have other people’s affairs brought
before us in a shape that is interesting; this is sure
to happen from your pen; our affairs and management
will have an air of simplicity or importance that
will not fail to strike; and I am convinced you have
conducted them with as much originality as if you had
been conducting discussions in politics or philosophy;
and what more worthy of experiments and system (its
importance and its errors considered) than human life?
“Some men have been virtuous
blindly, others have speculated fantastically, and
others have been shrewd to bad purposes; but you,
sir, I am sure, will give under your hand, nothing
but what is at the same moment, wise, practical and
good, your account of yourself (for I suppose the
parallel I am drawing for Dr. Franklin, will hold not
only in point of character, but of private history)
will show that you are ashamed of no origin; a thing
the more important, as you prove how little necessary
all origin is to happiness, virtue, or greatness.
As no end likewise happens without a means, so we
shall find, sir, that even you yourself framed a plan
by which you became considerable; but at the same
time we may see that though the event is flattering,
the means are as simple as wisdom could make them;
that is, depending upon nature, virtue, thought and
habit. Another thing demonstrated will be the
propriety of everyman’s waiting for his time
for appearing upon the stage of the world. Our
sensations being very much fixed to the moment, we
are apt to forget that more moments are to follow the
first, and consequently that man should arrange his
conduct so as to suit the whole of a life. Your
attribution appears to have been applied to your life,
and the passing moments of it have been enlivened with
content and enjoyment instead of being tormented with
foolish impatience or regrets. Such a conduct
is easy for those who make virtue and themselves in
countenance by examples of other truly great men, of
whom patience is so often the characteristic.
Your Quaker correspondent, sir (for here again I
will suppose the subject of my letter resembling Dr.
Franklin), praised your frugality, diligence and temperance,
which he considered as a pattern for all youth; but
it is singular that he should have forgotten your
modesty and your disinterestedness, without which
you never could have waited for your advancement, or
found your situation in the mean time comfortable;
which is a strong lesson to show the poverty of glory
and the importance of regulating our minds. If
this correspondent had known the nature of your reputation
as well as I do, he would have said, Your former writings
and measures would secure attention to your Biography,
and Art of Virtue; and your Biography and Art of Virtue,
in return, would secure attention to them. This
is an advantage attendant upon a various character,
and which brings all that belongs to it into greater
play; and it is the more useful, as perhaps more persons
are at a loss for the means of improving their minds
and characters, than they are for the time or the
inclination to do it. But there is one concluding
reflection, sir, that will shew the use of your life
as a mere piece of biography. This style of
writing seems a little gone out of vogue, and yet it
is a very useful one; and your specimen of it may
be particularly serviceable, as it will make a subject
of comparison with the lives of various public cutthroats
and intriguers, and with absurd monastic self-tormentors
or vain literary triflers. If it encourages
more writings of the same kind with your own, and
induces more men to spend lives fit to be written,
it will be worth all Plutarch’s Lives put together.
But being tired of figuring to myself a character
of which every feature suits only one man in the world,
without giving him the praise of it, I shall end my
letter, my dear Dr. Franklin, with a personal application
to your proper self. I am earnestly desirous,
then, my dear sir, that you should let the world into
the traits of your genuine character, as civil broils
nay otherwise tend to disguise or traduce it.
Considering your great age, the caution of your character,
and your peculiar style of thinking, it is not likely
that any one besides yourself can be sufficiently
master of the facts of your life, or the intentions
of your mind. Besides all this, the immense
revolution of the present period, will necessarily
turn our attention towards the author of it, and when
virtuous principles have been pretended in it, it will
be highly important to shew that such have really
influenced; and, as your own character will be the
principal one to receive a scrutiny, it is proper
(even for its effects upon your vast and rising country,
as well as upon England and upon Europe) that it should
stand respectable and eternal. For the furtherance
of human happiness, I have always maintained that
it is necessary to prove that man is not even at present
a vicious and detestable animal; and still more to
prove that good management may greatly amend him;
and it is for much the same reason, that I am anxious
to see the opinion established, that there are fair
characters existing among the individuals of the race;
for the moment that all men, without exception, shall
be conceived abandoned, good people will cease efforts
deemed to be hopeless, and perhaps think of taking
their share in the scramble of life, or at least of
making it comfortable principally for themselves.
Take then, my dear sir, this work most speedily into
hand: shew yourself good as you are good; temperate
as you are temperate; and above all things, prove yourself
as one, who from your infancy have loved justice,
liberty and concord, in a way that has made it natural
and consistent for you to have acted, as we have seen
you act in the last seventeen years of your life.
Let Englishmen be made not only to respect, but even
to love you. When they think well of individuals
in your native country, they will go nearer to thinking
well of your country; and when your countrymen see
themselves well thought of by Englishmen, they will
go nearer to thinking well of England. Extend
your views even further; do not stop at those who
speak the English tongue, but after having settled
so many points in nature and politics, think of bettering
the whole race of men. As I have not read any
part of the life in question, but know only the character
that lived it, I write somewhat at hazard. I
am sure, however, that the life and the treatise I
allude to (on the Art of Virtue) will necessarily
fulfil the chief of my expectations; and still more
so if you take up the measure of suiting these performances
to the several views above stated. Should they
even prove unsuccessful in all that a sanguine admirer
of yours hopes from them, you will at least have framed
pieces to interest the human mind; and whoever gives
a feeling of pleasure that is innocent to man, has
added so much to the fair side of a life otherwise
too much darkened by anxiety and too much injured
by pain. In the hope, therefore, that you will
listen to the prayer addressed to you in this letter,
I beg to subscribe myself, my dearest sir, etc.,
etc.,
“Signed, BENJ.
Vaughan.”
Continuation of the Account of my
Life, begun at Passy, near Paris, 1784.
It is some time since I receiv’d
the above letters, but I have been too busy till now
to think of complying with the request they contain.
It might, too, be much better done if I were at home
among my papers, which would aid my memory, and help
to ascertain dates; but my return being uncertain
and having just now a little leisure, I will endeavor
to recollect and write what I can; if I live to get
home, it may there be corrected and improv’d.
Not having any copy here of what is
already written, I know not whether an account is
given of the means I used to establish the Philadelphia
public library, which, from a small beginning, is now
become so considerable, though I remember to have
come down to near the time of that transaction (1730).
I will therefore begin here with an account of it,
which may be struck out if found to have been already
given.
At the time I establish’d myself
in Pennsylvania, there was not a good bookseller’s
shop in any of the colonies to the southward of Boston.
In New York and Philad’a the printers were indeed
stationers; they sold only paper, etc., almanacs,
ballads, and a few common school-books. Those
who lov’d reading were oblig’d to send
for their books from England; the members of the Junto
had each a few. We had left the alehouse, where
we first met, and hired a room to hold our club in.
I propos’d that we should all of us bring our
books to that room, where they would not only be ready
to consult in our conferences, but become a common
benefit, each of us being at liberty to borrow such
as he wish’d to read at home. This was
accordingly done, and for some time contented us.
Finding the advantage of this little
collection, I propos’d to render the benefit
from books more common, by commencing a public subscription
library. I drew a sketch of the plan and rules
that would be necessary, and got a skilful conveyancer,
Mr. Charles Brockden, to put the whole in form of
articles of agreement to be subscribed, by which each
subscriber engag’d to pay a certain sum down
for the first purchase of books, and an annual contribution
for increasing them. So few were the readers
at that time in Philadelphia, and the majority of
us so poor, that I was not able, with great industry,
to find more than fifty persons, mostly young tradesmen,
willing to pay down for this purpose forty shillings
each, and ten shillings per annum. On this little
fund we began. The books were imported; the library
wag opened one day in the week for lending to the
subscribers, on their promissory notes to pay double
the value if not duly returned. The institution
soon manifested its utility, was imitated by other
towns, and in other provinces. The libraries
were augmented by donations; reading became fashionable;
and our people, having no publick amusements to divert
their attention from study, became better acquainted
with books, and in a few years were observ’d
by strangers to be better instructed and more intelligent
than people of the same rank generally are in other
countries.
When we were about to sign the above-mentioned
articles, which were to be binding upon us, our heirs,
etc., for fifty years, Mr. Brockden, the scrivener,
said to us, “You are young men, but it is scarcely
probable that any of you will live to see the expiration
of the term fix’d in the instrument.”
A number of us, however, are yet living; but the
instrument was after a few years rendered null by a
charter that incorporated and gave perpetuity to the
company.
The objections and reluctances I met
with in soliciting the subscriptions, made me soon
feel the impropriety of presenting one’s self
as the proposer of any useful project, that might be
suppos’d to raise one’s reputation in
the smallest degree above that of one’s neighbors,
when one has need of their assistance to accomplish
that project. I therefore put myself as much
as I could out of sight, and stated it as a scheme
of a number of friends, who had requested me to go
about and propose it to such as they thought lovers
of reading. In this way my affair went on more
smoothly, and I ever after practis’d it on such
occasions; and, from my frequent successes, can heartily
recommend it. The present little sacrifice of
your vanity will afterwards be amply repaid.
If it remains a while uncertain to whom the merit
belongs, some one more vain than yourself will be encouraged
to claim it, and then even envy will be disposed to
do you justice by plucking those assumed feathers,
and restoring them to their right owner.
This library afforded me the means
of improvement by constant study, for which I set
apart an hour or two each day, and thus repair’d
in some degree the loss of the learned education my
father once intended for me. Reading was the
only amusement I allow’d myself. I spent
no time in taverns, games, or frolicks of any kind;
and my industry in my business continu’d as
indefatigable as it was necessary. I was indebted
for my printing-house; I had a young family coming
on to be educated, and I had to contend with for business
two printers, who were established in the place before
me. My circumstances, however, grew daily easier.
My original habits of frugality continuing, and my
father having, among his instructions to me when a
boy, frequently repeated a proverb of Solomon, “Seest
thou a man diligent in his calling, he shall stand
before kings, he shall not stand before mean men,”
I from thence considered industry as a means of obtaining
wealth and distinction, which encourag’d me,
tho’ I did not think that I should ever literally
stand before kings, which, however, has since happened;
for I have stood before five, and even had the honor
of sitting down with one, the King of Denmark, to
dinner.
We have an English proverb that says,
“He that would thrive, must ask his wife.”
It was lucky for me that I had one as much dispos’d
to industry and frugality as myself. She assisted
me cheerfully in my business, folding and stitching
pamphlets, tending shop, purchasing old linen rags
for the papermakers, etc., etc. We
kept no idle servants, our table was plain and simple,
our furniture of the cheapest. For instance,
my breakfast was a long time bread and milk (no tea),
and I ate it out of a twopenny earthen porringer,
with a pewter spoon. But mark how luxury will
enter families, and make a progress, in spite of principle:
being call’d one morning to breakfast, I found
it in a China bowl, with a spoon of silver!
They had been bought for me without my knowledge by
my wife, and had cost her the enormous sum of three-and-twenty
shillings, for which she had no other excuse or apology
to make, but that she thought her husband deserv’d
a silver spoon and China bowl as well as any of his
neighbors. This was the first appearance of
plate and China in our house, which afterward, in a
course of years, as our wealth increas’d, augmented
gradually to several hundred pounds in value.
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
govern’d 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.
These I esteem’d the essentials of every religion;
and, being to be found in all the religions we had
in our country, I respected them all, tho’ with
different degrees of respect, as I found them more
or less mix’d with other articles, which, without
any tendency to inspire, promote, or confirm morality,
serv’d principally to divide us, and make us
unfriendly to one another. This respect to all,
with an opinion that the worst had some good effects,
induc’d me to avoid all discourse that might
tend to lessen the good opinion another might have
of his own religion; and as our province increas’d
in people, and new places of worship were continually
wanted, and generally erected by voluntary contributions,
my mite for such purpose, whatever might be the sect,
was never refused.
Tho’ I seldom attended any public
worship, I had still an opinion of its propriety,
and of its utility when rightly conducted, and I regularly
paid my annual subscription for the support of the
only Presbyterian minister or meeting we had in Philadelphia.
He us’d to visit me sometimes as a friend,
and admonish me to attend his administrations, and
I was now and then prevail’d on to do so, once
for five Sundays successively. Had he been in
my opinion a good preacher, perhaps I might have continued,
notwithstanding the occasion I had for the Sunday’s
leisure in my course of study; but his discourses were
chiefly either polemic arguments, or explications
of the peculiar doctrines of our sect, and were all
to me very dry, uninteresting, and unedifying, since
not a single moral principle was inculcated or enforc’d,
their aim seeming to be rather to make us Presbyterians
than good citizens.
At length he took for his text that
verse of the fourth chapter of Philippians, “Finally,
brethren, whatsoever things are true, honest, just,
pure, lovely, or of good report, if there be any virtue,
or any praise, think on these things.”
And I imagin’d, in a sermon on such a text,
we could not miss of having some morality. But
he confin’d himself to five points only, as
meant by the apostle, viz.: 1. Keeping
holy the Sabbath day. 2. Being diligent in reading
the holy Scriptures. 3. Attending duly the
publick worship. 4. Partaking of the Sacrament.
5. Paying a due respect to God’s ministers.
These might be all good things; but, as they were
not the kind of good things that I expected from that
text, I despaired of ever meeting with them from any
other, was disgusted, and attended his preaching no
more. I had some years before compos’d
a little Liturgy, or form of prayer, for my own private
use (viz., in 1728), entitled, Articles of Belief and
Acts of Religion. I return’d to the use
of this, and went no more to the public assemblies.
My conduct might be blameable, but I leave it, without
attempting further to excuse it; my present purpose
being to relate facts, and not to make apologies for
them.
It was about this time I conceiv’d
the bold and arduous project of arriving at moral
perfection. I wish’d to live 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. But I
soon found I had undertaken a task of more difficulty
than I bad imagined. While my care was employ’d
in guarding against one fault, I was often surprised
by another; habit took the advantage of inattention;
inclination was sometimes too strong for reason.
I concluded, at length, that the mere speculative
conviction that it was our interest to be completely
virtuous, was not sufficient to prevent our slipping;
and that the contrary habits must be broken, and good
ones acquired and established, before we can have
any dependence on a steady, uniform rectitude of conduct.
For this purpose I therefore contrived the following
method.
In the various enumerations of the
moral virtues I had met with in my reading, I found
the catalogue more or less numerous, as different
writers included more or fewer ideas under the same
name. Temperance, for example, was by some confined
to eating and drinking, while by others it was extended
to mean the moderating every other pleasure, appetite,
inclination, or passion, bodily or mental, even to
our avarice and ambition. I propos’d to
myself, for the sake of clearness, to use rather more
names, with fewer ideas annex’d to each, than
a few names with more ideas; and I included under
thirteen names of virtues all that at that time occurr’d
to me as necessary or desirable, and annexed to each
a short precept, which fully express’d the extent
I gave to its meaning.
These names of virtues, with their precepts, were:
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 employ’d 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
extreams; forbear resenting injuries so much as you
think they deserve.
10. Cleanliness.
Tolerate no uncleanliness in body, cloaths, 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 dulness,
weakness, or the injury of your own or another’s
peace or reputation.
13. Humility. Imitate Jesus and Socrates.
My intention being to acquire the
habitude of all these virtues, I judg’d it would
be well not to distract my attention by attempting
the whole at once, but to fix it on one of them at
a time; and, when I should be master of that, then
to proceed to another, and so on, till I should have
gone thro’ the thirteen; and, as the previous
acquisition of some might facilitate the acquisition
of certain others, I arrang’d them with that
view, as they stand above. Temperance first,
as it tends to procure that coolness and clearness
of head, which is so necessary where constant vigilance
was to be kept up, and guard maintained against the
unremitting attraction of ancient habits, and the
force of perpetual temptations. This being acquir’d
and establish’d, Silence would be more easy;
and my desire being to gain knowledge at the same
time that I improv’d in virtue, and considering
that in conversation it was obtain’d rather by
the use of the ears than of the tongue, and therefore
wishing to break a habit I was getting into of prattling,
punning, and joking, which only made me acceptable
to trifling company, I gave Silence the second place.
This and the next, Order, I expected would allow
me more time for attending to my project and my studies.
Resolution, once become habitual, would keep me firm
in my endeavors to obtain all the subsequent virtues;
Frugality and Industry freeing me from my remaining
debt, and producing affluence and independence, would
make more easy the practice of Sincerity and Justice,
etc., etc. Conceiving then, that, agreeably
to the advice of Pythagoras in his Golden Verses,
daily examination would be necessary, I contrived
the following method for conducting that examination.
I made a little book, in which I allotted
a page for each of the virtues. I rul’d
each page with red ink, so as to have seven columns,
one for each day of the week, marking each column with
a letter for the day. I cross’d these
columns with thirteen red lines, marking the beginning
of each line with the first letter of one of the virtues,
on which line, and in its proper column, I might mark,
by a little black spot, every fault I found upon examination
to have been committed respecting that virtue upon
that day.
I determined to give a week’s
strict attention to each of the virtues successively.
Thus, in the first week, my great guard was to avoid
every the least offence against Temperance, leaving
the other virtues to their ordinary chance, only marking
every evening the faults of the day. Thus, if
in the first week I could keep my first line, marked
T, clear of spots, I suppos’d the habit of that
virtue so much strengthen’d and its opposite
weaken’d, that I might venture extending my
attention to include the next, and for the following
week keep both lines clear of spots. Proceeding
thus to the last, I could go thro’ a course
compleat in thirteen weeks, and four courses in a year.
And like him who, having a garden to weed, does not
attempt to eradicate all the bad herbs at once, which
would exceed his reach and his strength, but works
on one of the beds at a time, and, having accomplish’d
the first, proceeds to a second, so I should have,
I hoped, the encouraging pleasure of seeing on my
pages the progress I made in virtue, by clearing successively
my lines of their spots, till in the end, by a number
of courses, I should be happy in viewing a clean book,
after a thirteen weeks’ daily examination.
This my little book had for its motto
these lines from Addison’s Cato:
“Here
will I hold. If there’s a power above us
(And
that there is all nature cries aloud
Thro’
all her works), He must delight in virtue;
And
that which he delights in must be happy.”
Another from Cicero,
“O
vitae Philosophia dux! O virtutum
indagatrix
expultrixque
vitiorum! Unus dies, bene et
ex praeceptis
tuis
actus, peccanti immortalitati est anteponendus.”
Another from the Proverbs of Solomon,
speaking of wisdom or virtue:
“Length
of days is in her right hand, and in her left hand
riches
and honour. Her ways are ways of pleasantness,
and
all her paths are peace.” ii, 17.
And conceiving God to be the fountain
of wisdom, I thought it right and necessary to solicit
his assistance for obtaining it; to this end I formed
the following little prayer, which was prefix’d
to my tables of examination, for daily use.
“O powerful Goodness! bountiful
Father! merciful Guide! increase in me that wisdom
which discovers my truest interest! strengthen my
resolutions to perform what that wisdom dictates.
Accept my kind offices to thy other children as the
only return in my power for thy continual favors to
me.”
I used also sometimes a little prayer
which I took from Thomson’s Poems, viz.:
“Father
of light and life, thou Good Supreme!
O
teach me what is good; teach me Thyself!
Save
me from folly, vanity, and vice,
From
every low pursuit; and fill my soul
With
knowledge, conscious peace, and virtue pure;
Sacred,
substantial, never-fading bliss!”
The precept of Order requiring that
every part of my business should have its allotted
time, one page in my little book contain’d the
following scheme of employment for the twenty-four
hours of a natural day:
I enter’d upon the execution
of this plan for self-examination, and continu’d
it with occasional intermissions for some time.
I was surpris’d to find myself so much fuller
of faults than I had imagined; but I had the satisfaction
of seeing them diminish. To avoid the trouble
of renewing now and then my little book, which, by
scraping out the marks on the paper of old faults
to make room for new ones in a new course, became
full of holes, I transferr’d my tables and precepts
to the ivory leaves of a memorandum book, on which
the lines were drawn with red ink, that made a durable
stain, and on those lines I mark’d my faults
with a black-lead pencil, which marks I could easily
wipe out with a wet sponge. After a while I
went thro’ one course only in a year, and afterward
only one in several years, till at length I omitted
them entirely, being employ’d in voyages and
business abroad, with a multiplicity of affairs that
interfered; but I always carried my little book with
me.
My scheme of order gave me the
most trouble; and I found that, tho’ it might
be practicable where a man’s business was such
as to leave him the disposition of his time, that
of a journeyman printer, for instance, it was not
possible to be exactly observed by a master, who must
mix with the world, and often receive people of business
at their own hours. Order, too, with regard
to places for things, papers, etc., I found extreamly
difficult to acquire. I had not been early accustomed
to it, and, having an exceeding good memory, I was
not so sensible of the inconvenience attending want
of method. This article, therefore, cost me
so much painful attention, and my faults in it vexed
me so much, and I made so little progress in amendment,
and had such frequent relapses, that I was almost
ready to give up the attempt, and content myself with
a faulty character in that respect, like the man who,
in buying an ax of a smith, my neighbour, desired to
have the whole of its surface as bright as the edge.
The smith consented to grind it bright for him if
he would turn the wheel; he turn’d, while the
smith press’d the broad face of the ax hard and
heavily on the stone, which made the turning of it
very fatiguing. The man came every now and then
from the wheel to see how the work went on, and at
length would take his ax as it was, without farther
grinding. “No,” said the smith,
“turn on, turn on; we shall have it bright by-and-by;
as yet, it is only speckled.” “Yes,”
said the man, “but I think I like a speckled
ax best.” And I believe this may have been
the case with many, who, having, for want of some
such means as I employ’d, found the difficulty
of obtaining good and breaking bad habits in other
points of vice and virtue, have given up the struggle,
and concluded that “a speckled ax was best”;
for something, that pretended to be reason, was every
now and then suggesting to me that such extream nicety
as I exacted of myself might be a kind of foppery
in morals, which, if it were known, would make me
ridiculous; that a perfect character might be attended
with the inconvenience of being envied and hated; and
that a benevolent man should allow a few faults in
himself, to keep his friends in countenance.
In truth, I found myself incorrigible
with respect to Order; and now I am grown old, and
my memory bad, I feel very sensibly the want of it.
But, on the whole, tho’ I never arrived at the
perfection I had been so ambitious of obtaining, but
fell far short of it, yet I was, by the endeavour,
a better and a happier man than I otherwise should
have been if I had not attempted it; as those who
aim at perfect writing by imitating the engraved copies,
tho’ they never reach the wish’d-for excellence
of those copies, their hand is mended by the endeavor,
and is tolerable while it continues fair and legible.
It may be well my posterity should
be informed that to this little artifice, with the
blessing of God, their ancestor ow’d the constant
felicity of his life, down to his 79th year, in which
this is written. What reverses may attend the
remainder is in the hand of Providence; but, if they
arrive, the reflection on past happiness enjoy’d
ought to help his bearing them with more resignation.
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 them, all that evenness of temper,
and that cheerfulness in conversation, which makes
his company still sought for, and agreeable even to
his younger acquaintance. I hope, therefore,
that some of my descendants may follow the example
and reap the benefit.
It will be remark’d that, tho’
my scheme was not wholly without religion, there was
in it no mark of any of the distinguishing tenets
of any particular sect. I had purposely avoided
them; for, being fully persuaded of the utility and
excellency of my method, and that it might be serviceable
to people in all religions, and intending some time
or other to publish it, I would not have any thing
in it that should prejudice any one, of any sect,
against it. I purposed writing a little comment
on each virtue, in which I would have shown the advantages
of possessing it, and the mischiefs attending its opposite
vice; and I should have called my book the art
of virtue, because it would have shown
the means and manner of obtaining virtue, which would
have distinguished it from the mere exhortation to
be good, that does not instruct and indicate the means,
but is like the apostle’s man of verbal charity,
who only without showing to the naked and hungry how
or where they might get clothes or victuals, exhorted
them to be fed and clothed. James ii.
15, 16.
But it so happened that my intention
of writing and publishing this comment was never fulfilled.
I did, indeed, from time to time, put down short
hints of the sentiments, reasonings, etc., to
be made use of in it, some of which I have still by
me; but the necessary close attention to private business
in the earlier part of thy life, and public business
since, have occasioned my postponing it; for, it being
connected in my mind with a great and extensive project,
that required the whole man to execute, and which
an unforeseen succession of employs prevented my attending
to, it has hitherto remain’d unfinish’d.
In this piece it was my design to
explain and enforce this doctrine, that vicious actions
are not hurtful because they are forbidden, but forbidden
because they are hurtful, the nature of man alone considered;
that it was, therefore, every one’s interest
to be virtuous who wish’d to be happy even in
this world; and I should, from this circumstance (there
being always in the world a number of rich merchants,
nobility, states, and princes, who have need of honest
instruments for the management of their affairs, and
such being so rare), have endeavored to convince young
persons that no qualities were so likely to make a
poor man’s fortune as those of probity and integrity.
My list of virtues contain’d
at first but twelve; but a Quaker friend having kindly
informed me that I was generally thought proud; that
my pride show’d itself frequently in conversation;
that I was not content with being in the right when
discussing any point, but was overbearing, and rather
insolent, of which he convinc’d me by mentioning
several instances; I determined endeavouring to cure
myself, if I could, of this vice or folly among the
rest, and I added Humility to my list, giving an extensive
meaning to the word.
I cannot boast of much success in
acquiring the reality of this virtue, but I had a
good deal with regard to the appearance of it.
I made it a rule to forbear all direct contradiction
to the sentiments of others, and all positive assertion
of my own. I even forbid myself, agreeably to
the old laws of our Junto, the use of every word or
expression in the language that imported a fix’d
opinion, such as certainly, undoubtedly, etc.,
and I adopted, instead of them, I conceive, I apprehend,
or I imagine a thing to be so or so; or it so appears
to me at present. When another asserted something
that I thought an error, I deny’d myself the
pleasure of contradicting him abruptly, and of showing
immediately some absurdity in his proposition; and
in answering I began by observing that in certain
cases or circumstances his opinion would be right,
but in the present case there appear’d or seem’d
to me some difference, etc. I soon found
the advantage of this change in my manner; the conversations
I engag’d in went on more pleasantly. The
modest way in which I propos’d my opinions procur’d
them a readier reception and less contradiction; I
had less mortification when I was found to be in the
wrong, and I more easily prevail’d with others
to give up their mistakes and join with me when I
happened to be in the right.
And this mode, which I at first put
on with some violence to natural inclination, became
at length so easy, and so habitual to me, that perhaps
for these fifty years past no one has ever heard a
dogmatical expression escape me. And to this
habit (after my character of integrity) I think it
principally owing that I had early so much weight
with my fellow-citizens when I proposed new institutions,
or alterations in the old, and so much influence in
public councils when I became a member; for I was
but a bad speaker, never eloquent, subject to much
hesitation in my choice of words, hardly correct in
language, and yet I generally carried my points.
In reality, there is, perhaps, no
one of our natural passions so hard to subdue as pride.
Disguise it, struggle with it, beat it down, stifle
it, mortify it as much as one pleases, it is still
alive, and will every now and then peep out and show
itself; you will see it, perhaps, often in this history;
for, even if I could conceive that I had compleatly
overcome it, I should probably be proud of my humility.
[Thus far written at Passy, 1784.]
["I am now about to write at home,
August, 1788, but can not have the help expected from
my papers, many of them being lost in the war.
I have, however, found the following."]
Having mentioned a great and
extensive project which I had conceiv’d, it
seems proper that some account should be here given
of that project and its object. Its first rise
in my mind appears in the following little paper,
accidentally preserv’d, viz.:
Observations on my reading history,
in Library, May 19th, 1731.
“That the great affairs of the
world, the wars, revolutions, etc., are carried
on and affected by parties.
“That the view of these parties
is their present general interest, or what they take
to be such.
“That the different views of
these different parties occasion all confusion.
“That while a party is carrying
on a general design, each man has his particular private
interest in view.
“That as soon as a party has
gain’d its general point, each member becomes
intent upon his particular interest; which, thwarting
others, breaks that party into divisions, and occasions
more confusion.
“That few in public affairs
act from a meer view of the good of their country,
whatever they may pretend; and, tho’ their actings
bring real good to their country, yet men primarily
considered that their own and their country’s
interest was united, and did not act from a principle
of benevolence.
“That fewer still, in public
affairs, act with a view to the good of mankind.
“There seems to me at present
to be great occasion for raising a United Party for
Virtue, by forming the virtuous and good men of all
nations into a regular body, to be govern’d
by suitable good and wise rules, which good and wise
men may probably be more unanimous in their obedience
to, than common people are to common laws.
“I at present think that whoever
attempts this aright, and is well qualified, can not
fail of pleasing God, and of meeting with success.
B. F.”
Revolving this project in my mind,
as to be undertaken hereafter, when my circumstances
should afford me the necessary leisure, I put down
from time to time, on pieces of paper, such thoughts
as occurr’d to me respecting it. Most
of these are lost; but I find one purporting to be
the substance of an intended creed, containing, as
I thought, the essentials of every known religion,
and being free of every thing that might shock the
professors of any religion. It is express’d
in these words, viz.:
“That there is one God, who made all things.
“That he governs the world by his providence.
“That he ought to be worshiped by adoration,
prayer, and thanksgiving.
“But that the most acceptable service of God
is doing good to man.
“That the soul is immortal.
“And that God will certainly
reward virtue and punish vice either here or hereafter."
My ideas at that time were, that the
sect should be begun and spread at first among young
and single men only; that each person to be initiated
should not only declare his assent to such creed, but
should have exercised himself with the thirteen weeks’
examination and practice of the virtues, as in the
before-mention’d model; that the existence of
such a society should be kept a secret, till it was
become considerable, to prevent solicitations for
the admission of improper persons, but that the members
should each of them search among his acquaintance
for ingenuous, well-disposed youths, to whom, with
prudent caution, the scheme should be gradually communicated;
that the members should engage to afford their advice,
assistance, and support to each other in promoting
one another’s interests, business, and advancement
in life; that, for distinction, we should be call’d
The Society of the Free and Easy: free, as being,
by the general practice and habit of the virtues,
free from the dominion of vice; and particularly by
the practice of industry and frugality, free from
debt, which exposes a man to confinement, and a species
of slavery to his creditors.
This is as much as I can now recollect
of the project, except that I communicated it in part
to two young men, who adopted it with some enthusiasm;
but my then narrow circumstances, and the necessity
I was under of sticking close to my business, occasion’d
my postponing the further prosecution of it at that
time; and my multifarious occupations, public and
private, induc’d me to continue postponing, so
that it has been omitted till I have no longer strength
or activity left sufficient for such an enterprise;
tho’ I am still of opinion that it was a practicable
scheme, and might have been very useful, by forming
a great number of good citizens; and I was not discourag’d
by the seeming magnitude of the undertaking, as I
have always thought that one man of tolerable abilities
may work great changes, and accomplish great affairs
among mankind, if he first forms a good plan, and,
cutting off all amusements or other employments that
would divert his attention, makes the execution of
that same plan his sole study and business.
In 1732 I first publish’d my
Almanack, under the name of Richard Saunders; it was
continu’d by me about twenty-five years, commonly
call’d Poor Richard’s Almanac. I
endeavor’d to make it both entertaining and
useful, and it accordingly came to be in such demand,
that I reap’d considerable profit from it, vending
annually near ten thousand. And observing that
it was generally read, scarce any neighborhood in
the province being without it, I consider’d it
as a proper vehicle for conveying instruction among
the common people, who bought scarcely any other books;
I therefore filled all the little spaces that occurr’d
between the remarkable days in the calendar with proverbial
sentences, chiefly such as inculcated industry and
frugality, as the means of procuring wealth, and thereby
securing virtue; it being more difficult for a man
in want, to act always honestly, as, to use here one
of those proverbs, it is hard for an empty sack to
stand up-right.
These proverbs, which contained the
wisdom of many ages and nations, I assembled and form’d
into a connected discourse prefix’d to the Almanack
of 1757, as the harangue of a wise old man to the people
attending an auction. The bringing all these
scatter’d counsels thus into a focus enabled
them to make greater impression. The piece, being
universally approved, was copied in all the newspapers
of the Continent; reprinted in Britain on a broad
side, to be stuck up in houses; two translations were
made of it in French, and great numbers bought by
the clergy and gentry, to distribute gratis among their
poor parishioners and tenants. In Pennsylvania,
as it discouraged useless expense in foreign superfluities,
some thought it had its share of influence in producing
that growing plenty of money which was observable
for several years after its publication.
I considered my newspaper, also, as
another means of communicating instruction, and in
that view frequently reprinted in it extracts from
the Spectator, and other moral writers; and sometimes
publish’d little pieces of my own, which had
been first compos’d for reading in our Junto.
Of these are a Socratic dialogue, tending to prove
that, whatever might be his parts and abilities, a
vicious man could not properly be called a man of
sense; and a discourse on self-denial, showing that
virtue was not secure till its practice became a habitude,
and was free from the opposition of contrary inclinations.
These may be found in the papers about the beginning
Of 1735.
In the conduct of my newspaper, I
carefully excluded all libelling and personal abuse,
which is of late years become so disgraceful to our
country. Whenever I was solicited to insert anything
of that kind, and the writers pleaded, as they generally
did, the liberty of the press, and that a newspaper
was like a stagecoach, in which any one who would
pay had a right to a place, my answer was, that I would
print the piece separately if desired, and the author
might have as many copies as he pleased to distribute
himself, but that I would not take upon me to spread
his detraction; and that, having contracted with my
subscribers to furnish them with what might be either
useful or entertaining, I could not fill their papers
with private altercation, in which they had no concern,
without doing them manifest injustice. Now, many
of our printers make no scruple of gratifying the
malice of individuals by false accusations of the
fairest characters among ourselves, augmenting animosity
even to the producing of duels; and are, moreover,
so indiscreet as to print scurrilous reflections on
the government of neighboring states, and even on
the conduct of our best national allies, which may
be attended with the most pernicious consequences.
These things I mention as a caution to young printers,
and that they may be encouraged not to pollute their
presses and disgrace their profession by such infamous
practices, but refuse steadily, as they may see by
my example that such a course of conduct will not,
on the whole, be injurious to their interests.
In 1733 I sent one of my journeymen
to Charleston, South Carolina, where a printer was
wanting. I furnish’d him with a press and
letters, on an agreement of partnership, by which
I was to receive one-third of the profits of the business,
paying one-third of the expense. He was a man
of learning, and honest but ignorant in matters of
account; and, tho’ he sometimes made me remittances,
I could get no account from him, nor any satisfactory
state of our partnership while he lived. On his
decease, the business was continued by his widow, who,
being born and bred in Holland, where, as I have been
inform’d, the knowledge of accounts makes a
part of female education, she not only sent me as
clear a state as she could find of the transactions
past, but continued to account with the greatest regularity
and exactness every quarter afterwards, and managed
the business with such success, that she not only
brought up reputably a family of children, but, at
the expiration of the term, was able to purchase of
me the printing-house, and establish her son in it.
I mention this affair chiefly for
the sake of recommending that branch of education
for our young females, as likely to be of more use
to them and their children, in case of widowhood,
than either music or dancing, by preserving them from
losses by imposition of crafty men, and enabling them
to continue, perhaps, a profitable mercantile house,
with establish’d correspondence, till a son
is grown up fit to undertake and go on with it, to
the lasting advantage and enriching of the family.
About the year 1734 there arrived
among us from Ireland a young Presbyterian preacher,
named Hemphill, who delivered with a good voice, and
apparently extempore, most excellent discourses, which
drew together considerable numbers of different persuasion,
who join’d in admiring them. Among the
rest, I became one of his constant hearers, his sermons
pleasing me, as they had little of the dogmatical kind,
but inculcated strongly the practice of virtue, or
what in the religious stile are called good works.
Those, however, of our congregation, who considered
themselves as orthodox Presbyterians, disapprov’d
his doctrine, and were join’d by most of the
old clergy, who arraign’d him of heterodoxy
before the synod, in order to have him silenc’d.
I became his zealous partisan, and contributed all
I could to raise a party in his favour, and we combated
for him a while with some hopes of success. There
was much scribbling pro and con upon the occasion;
and finding that, tho’ an elegant preacher,
he was but a poor writer, I lent him my pen and wrote
for him two or three pamphlets, and one piece in the
Gazette of April, 1735. Those pamphlets, as is
generally the case with controversial writings, tho’
eagerly read at the time, were soon out of vogue,
and I question whether a single copy of them now exists.
During the contest an unlucky occurrence
hurt his cause exceedingly. One of our adversaries
having heard him preach a sermon that was much admired,
thought he had somewhere read the sermon before, or
at least a part of it. On search he found that
part quoted at length, in one of the British Reviews,
from a discourse of Dr. Foster’s. This detection
gave many of our party disgust, who accordingly abandoned
his cause, and occasion’d our more speedy discomfiture
in the synod. I stuck by him, however, as I
rather approv’d his giving us good sermons compos’d
by others, than bad ones of his own manufacture, tho’
the latter was the practice of our common teachers.
He afterward acknowledg’d to me that none of
those he preach’d were his own; adding, that
his memory was such as enabled him to retain and repeat
any sermon after one reading only. On our defeat,
he left us in search elsewhere of better fortune,
and I quitted the congregation, never joining it after,
tho’ I continu’d many years my subscription
for the support of its ministers.
I had begun in 1733 to study languages;
I soon made myself so much a master of the French
as to be able to read the books with ease. I
then undertook the Italian. An acquaintance,
who was also learning it, us’d often to tempt
me to play chess with him. Finding this took
up too much of the time I had to spare for study,
I at length refus’d to play any more, unless
on this condition, that the victor in every game should
have a right to impose a task, either in parts of the
grammar to be got by heart, or in translations, etc.,
which tasks the vanquish’d was to perform upon
honour, before our next meeting. As we play’d
pretty equally, we thus beat one another into that
language. I afterwards with a little painstaking,
acquir’d as much of the Spanish as to read their
books also.
I have already mention’d that
I had only one year’s instruction in a Latin
school, and that when very young, after which I neglected
that language entirely. But, when I had attained
an acquaintance with the French, Italian, and Spanish,
I was surpriz’d to find, on looking over a Latin
Testament, that I understood so much more of that language
than I had imagined, which encouraged me to apply
myself again to the study of it, and I met with more
success, as those preceding languages had greatly
smooth’d my way.
From these circumstances, I have thought
that there is some inconsistency in our common mode
of teaching languages. We are told that it is
proper to begin first with the Latin, and, having acquir’d
that, it will be more easy to attain those modern languages
which are deriv’d from it; and yet we do not
begin with the Greek, in order more easily to acquire
the Latin. It is true that, if you can clamber
and get to the top of a staircase without using the
steps, you will more easily gain them in descending;
but certainly, if you begin with the lowest you will
with more ease ascend to the top; and I would therefore
offer it to the consideration of those who superintend
the education of our youth, whether, since many of
those who begin with the Latin quit the same after
spending some years without having made any great
proficiency, and what they have learnt becomes almost
useless, so that their time has been lost, it would
not have been better to have begun with the French,
proceeding to the Italian, etc.; for, tho’,
after spending the same time, they should quit the
study of languages and never arrive at the Latin,
they would, however, have acquired another tongue
or two, that, being in modern use, might be serviceable
to them in common life.
After ten years’ absence from
Boston, and having become easy in my circumstances,
I made a journey thither to visit my relations, which
I could not sooner well afford. In returning,
I call’d at Newport to see my brother, then
settled there with his printing-house. Our former
differences were forgotten, and our meeting was very
cordial and affectionate. He was fast declining
in his health, and requested of me that, in case of
his death, which he apprehended not far distant, I
would take home his son, then but ten years of age,
and bring him up to the printing business. This
I accordingly perform’d, sending him a few years
to school before I took him into the office.
His mother carried on the business till he was grown
up, when I assisted him with an assortment of new
types, those of his father being in a manner worn
out. Thus it was that I made my brother ample
amends for the service I had depriv’d him of
by leaving him so early.
In 1736 I lost one of my sons, a fine
boy of four years old, by the small-pox, taken in
the common way. I long regretted bitterly, and
still regret that I had not given it to him by inoculation.
This I mention for the sake of parents who omit that
operation, on the supposition that they should never
forgive themselves if a child died under it; my example
showing that the regret may be the same either way,
and that, therefore, the safer should be chosen.
Our club, the Junto, was found so
useful, and afforded such satisfaction to the members,
that several were desirous of introducing their friends,
which could not well be done without exceeding what
we had settled as a convenient number, viz.,
twelve. We had from the beginning made it a
rule to keep our institution a secret, which was pretty
well observ’d; the intention was to avoid applications
of improper persons for admittance, some of whom,
perhaps, we might find it difficult to refuse.
I was one of those who were against any addition
to our number, but, instead of it, made in writing
a proposal, that every member separately should endeavor
to form a subordinate club, with the same rules respecting
queries, etc., and without informing them of
the connection with the Junto. The advantages
proposed were, the improvement of so many more young
citizens by the use of our institutions; our better
acquaintance with the general sentiments of the inhabitants
on any occasion, as the Junto member might propose
what queries we should desire, and was to report to
the Junto what pass’d in his separate club;
the promotion of our particular interests in business
by more extensive recommendation, and the increase
of our influence in public affairs, and our power of
doing good by spreading thro’ the several clubs
the sentiments of the Junto.
The project was approv’d, and
every member undertook to form his club, but they
did not all succeed. Five or six only were compleated,
which were called by different names, as the Vine,
the Union, the Band, etc. They were useful
to themselves, and afforded us a good deal of amusement,
information, and instruction, besides answering, in
some considerable degree, our views of influencing
the public opinion on particular occasions, of which
I shall give some instances in course of time as they
happened.
My first promotion was my being chosen,
in 1736, clerk of the General Assembly. The
choice was made that year without opposition; but the
year following, when I was again propos’d (the
choice, like that of the members, being annual), a
new member made a long speech against me, in order
to favour some other candidate. I was, however,
chosen, which was the more agreeable to me, as, besides
the pay for the immediate service as clerk, the place
gave me a better opportunity of keeping up an interest
among the members, which secur’d to me the business
of printing the votes, laws, paper money, and other
occasional jobbs for the public, that, on the whole,
were very profitable.
I therefore did not like the opposition
of this new member, who was a gentleman of fortune
and education, with talents that were likely to give
him, in time, great influence in the House, which,
indeed, afterwards happened. I did not, however,
aim at gaining his favour by paying any servile respect
to him, but, after some time, took this other method.
Having heard that he had in his library a certain
very scarce and curious book, I wrote a note to him,
expressing my desire of perusing that book, and requesting
he would do me the favour of lending it to me for
a few days. He sent it immediately, and I return’d
it in about a week with another note, expressing strongly
my sense of the favour. When we next met in
the House, he spoke to me (which he had never done
before), and with great civility; and he ever after
manifested a readiness to serve me on all occasions,
so that we became great friends, and our friendship
continued to his death. This is another instance
of the truth of an old maxim I had learned, which
says, “He that has once done you a kindness will
be more ready to do you another, than he whom you
yourself have obliged.” And it shows how
much more profitable it is prudently to remove, than
to resent, return, and continue inimical proceedings.
In 1737, Colonel Spotswood, late governor
of Virginia, and then postmaster-general, being dissatisfied
with the conduct of his deputy at Philadelphia, respecting
some negligence in rendering, and inexactitude of
his accounts, took from him the commission and offered
it to me. I accepted it readily, and found it
of great advantage; for, tho’ the salary was
small, it facilitated the correspondence that improv’d
my newspaper, increas’d the number demanded,
as well as the advertisements to be inserted, so that
it came to afford me a considerable income.
My old competitor’s newspaper declin’d
proportionably, and I was satisfy’d without retaliating
his refusal, while postmaster, to permit my papers
being carried by the riders. Thus he suffer’d
greatly from his neglect in due accounting; and I
mention it as a lesson to those young men who may be
employ’d in managing affairs for others, that
they should always render accounts, and make remittances,
with great clearness and punctuality. The character
of observing such a conduct is the most powerful of
all recommendations to new employments and increase
of business.
I began now to turn my thoughts a
little to public affairs, beginning, however, with
small matters. The city watch was one of the
first things that I conceiv’d to want regulation.
It was managed by the constables of the respective
wards in turn; the constable warned a number of housekeepers
to attend him for the night. Those who chose
never to attend paid him six shillings a year to be
excus’d, which was suppos’d to be for
hiring substitutes, but was, in reality, much more
than was necessary for that purpose, and made the constableship
a place of profit; and the constable, for a little
drink, often got such ragamuffins about him as a watch,
that respectable housekeepers did not choose to mix
with. Walking the rounds, too, was often neglected,
and most of the nights spent in tippling. I
thereupon wrote a paper, to be read in Junto, representing
these irregularities, but insisting more particularly
on the inequality of this six-shilling tax of the
constables, respecting the circumstances of those who
paid it, since a poor widow housekeeper, all whose
property to be guarded by the watch did not perhaps
exceed the value of fifty pounds, paid as much as the
wealthiest merchant, who had thousands of pounds worth
of goods in his stores.
On the whole, I proposed as a more
effectual watch, the hiring of proper men to serve
constantly in that business; and as a more equitable
way of supporting the charge the levying a tax that
should be proportion’d to the property.
This idea, being approv’d by the Junto, was
communicated to the other clubs, but as arising in
each of them; and though the plan was not immediately
carried into execution, yet, by preparing the minds
of people for the change, it paved the way for the
law obtained a few years after, when the members of
our clubs were grown into more influence.
About this time I wrote a paper (first
to be read in Junto, but it was afterward publish’d)
on the different accidents and carelessnesses by which
houses were set on fire, with cautions against them,
and means proposed of avoiding them. This was
much spoken of as a useful piece, and gave rise to
a project, which soon followed it, of forming a company
for the more ready extinguishing of fires, and mutual
assistance in removing and securing the goods when
in danger. Associates in this scheme were presently
found, amounting to thirty. Our articles of agreement
oblig’d every member to keep always in good
order, and fit for use, a certain number of leather
buckets, with strong bags and baskets (for packing
and transporting of goods), which were to be brought
to every fire; and we agreed to meet once a month
and spend a social evening together, in discoursing
and communicating such ideas as occurred to us upon
the subject of fires, as might be useful in our conduct
on such occasions.
The utility of this institution soon
appeared, and many more desiring to be admitted than
we thought convenient for one company, they were advised
to form another, which was accordingly done; and this
went on, one new company being formed after another,
till they became so numerous as to include most of
the inhabitants who were men of property; and now,
at the time of my writing this, tho’ upward of
fifty years since its establishment, that which I
first formed, called the Union Fire Company, still
subsists and flourishes, tho’ the first members
are all deceas’d but myself and one, who is older
by a year than I am. The small fines that have
been paid by members for absence at the monthly meetings
have been apply’d to the purchase of fire-engines,
ladders, fire-hooks, and other useful implements for
each company, so that I question whether there is
a city in the world better provided with the means
of putting a stop to beginning conflagrations; and,
in fact, since these institutions, the city has never
lost by fire more than one or two houses at a time,
and the flames have often been extinguished before
the house in which they began has been half consumed.
In 1739 arrived among us from Ireland
the Reverend Mr. Whitefield, who had made himself
remarkable there as an itinerant preacher. He
was at first permitted to preach in some of our churches;
but the clergy, taking a dislike to him, soon refus’d
him their pulpits, and he was oblig’d to preach
in the fields. The multitudes of all sects and
denominations that attended his sermons were enormous,
and it was matter of speculation to me, who was one
of the number, to observe the extraordinary influence
of his oratory on his hearers, and how much they admir’d
and respected him, notwithstanding his common abuse
of them, by assuring them that they were naturally
half beasts and half devils. It was wonderful
to see the change soon made in the manners of our
inhabitants. From being thoughtless or indifferent
about religion, it seem’d as if all the world
were growing religious, so that one could not walk
thro’ the town in an evening without hearing
psalms sung in different families of every street.
And it being found inconvenient to
assemble in the open air, subject to its inclemencies,
the building of a house to meet in was no sooner propos’d,
and persons appointed to receive contributions, but
sufficient sums were soon receiv’d to procure
the ground and erect the building, which was one hundred
feet long and seventy broad, about the size of Westminster
Hall; and the work was carried on with such spirit
as to be finished in a much shorter time than could
have been expected. Both house and ground were
vested in trustees, expressly for the use of any preacher
of any religious persuasion who might desire to say
something to the people at Philadelphia; the design
in building not being to accommodate any particular
sect, but the inhabitants in general; so that even
if the Mufti of Constantinople were to send a missionary
to preach Mohammedanism to us, he would find a pulpit
at his service.
Mr. Whitefield, in leaving us, went
preaching all the way thro’ the colonies to
Georgia. The settlement of that province had
lately been begun, but, instead of being made with
hardy, industrious husbandmen, accustomed to labor,
the only people fit for such an enterprise, it was
with families of broken shop-keepers and other insolvent
debtors, many of indolent and idle habits, taken out
of the jails, who, being set down in the woods, unqualified
for clearing land, and unable to endure the hardships
of a new settlement, perished in numbers, leaving many
helpless children unprovided for. The sight of
their miserable situation inspir’d the benevolent
heart of Mr. Whitefield with the idea of building
an Orphan House there, in which they might be supported
and educated. Returning northward, he preach’d
up this charity, and made large collections, for his
eloquence had a wonderful power over the hearts and
purses of his hearers, of which I myself was an instance.
I did not disapprove of the design,
but, as Georgia was then destitute of materials and
workmen, and it was proposed to send them from Philadelphia
at a great expense, I thought it would have been better
to have built the house here, and brought the children
to it. This I advis’d; but he was resolute
in his first project, rejected my counsel, and I therefore
refus’d to contribute. I happened soon
after to attend one of his sermons, in the course
of which I perceived he intended to finish with a
collection, and I silently resolved he should get nothing
from me, I had in my pocket 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 the coppers. Another stroke
of his oratory made me asham’d of that, and
determin’d me to give the silver; and he finish’d
so admirably, that I empty’d my pocket wholly
into the collector’s dish, gold and all.
At this sermon there was also one of our club, who,
being of my sentiments respecting the building in
Georgia, and suspecting a collection might be intended,
had, by precaution, emptied his pockets before he
came from home. Towards the conclusion of the
discourse, however, he felt a strong desire to give,
and apply’d to a neighbour, who stood near him,
to borrow some money for the purpose. The application
was unfortunately [made] to perhaps the only man in
the company who had the firmness not to be affected
by the preacher. His answer was, “At any
other time, Friend Hopkinson, I would lend to thee
freely; but not now, for thee seems to be out of thy
right senses.”
Some of Mr. Whitefield’s enemies
affected to suppose that he would apply these collections
to his own private emolument; but I who was intimately
acquainted with him (being employed in printing his
Sermons and Journals, etc.), never had the least
suspicion of his integrity, but am to this day decidedly
of opinion that he was in all his conduct a perfectly
honest man, and methinks my testimony in his favour
ought to have the more weight, as we had no religious
connection. He us’d, indeed, sometimes
to pray for my conversion, but never had the satisfaction
of believing that his prayers were heard. Ours
was a mere civil friendship, sincere on both sides,
and lasted to his death.
The following instance will show something
of the terms on which we stood. Upon one of
his arrivals from England at Boston, he wrote to me
that he should come soon to Philadelphia, but knew
not where he could lodge when there, as he understood
his old friend and host, Mr. Benezet, was removed
to Germantown. My answer was, “You know
my house; if you can make shift with its scanty accommodations,
you will be most heartily welcome.” He
reply’d, that if I made that kind offer for
Christ’s sake, I should not miss of a reward.
And I returned, “Don’t let me be mistaken;
it was not for Christ’s sake, but for your sake.”
One of our common acquaintance jocosely remark’d,
that, knowing it to be the custom of the saints, when
they received any favour, to shift the burden of the
obligation from off their own shoulders, and place
it in heaven, I had contriv’d to fix it on earth.
The last time I saw Mr. Whitefield
was in London, when he consulted me about his Orphan
House concern, and his purpose of appropriating it
to the establishment of a college.
He had a loud and clear voice, and
articulated his words and sentences so perfectly,
that he might be heard and understood at a great distance,
especially as his auditories, however numerous, observ’d
the most exact silence. He preach’d one
evening from the top of the Court-house steps, which
are in the middle of Market-street, and on the west
side of Second-street, which crosses it at right angles.
Both streets were fill’d with his hearers to
a considerable distance. Being among the hindmost
in Market-street, I had the curiosity to learn how
far he could be heard, by retiring backwards down the
street towards the river; and I found his voice distinct
till I came near Front-street, when some noise in
that street obscur’d it. Imagining then
a semi-circle, of which my distance should be the radius,
and that it were fill’d with auditors, to each
of whom I allow’d two square feet, I computed
that he might well be heard by more than thirty thousand.
This reconcil’d me to the newspaper accounts
of his having preach’d to twenty-five thousand
people in the fields, and to the antient histories
of generals haranguing whole armies, of which I had
sometimes doubted.
By hearing him often, I came to distinguish
easily between sermons newly compos’d, and those
which he had often preach’d in the course of
his travels. His delivery of the latter was so
improv’d by frequent repetitions that every
accent, every emphasis, every modulation of voice,
was so perfectly well turn’d and well plac’d,
that, without being interested in the subject, one
could not help being pleas’d with the discourse;
a pleasure of much the same kind with that receiv’d
from an excellent piece of musick. This is an
advantage itinerant preachers have over those who
are stationary, as the latter can not well improve
their delivery of a sermon by so many rehearsals.
His writing and printing from time
to time gave great advantage to his enemies; unguarded
expressions, and even erroneous opinions, delivered
in preaching, might have been afterwards explain’d
or qualifi’d by supposing others that might
have accompani’d them, or they might have been
deny’d; but litera scripta monet.
Critics attack’d his writings violently, and
with so much appearance of reason as to diminish the
number of his votaries and prevent their encrease;
so that I am of opinion if he had never written any
thing, he would have left behind him a much more numerous
and important sect, and his reputation might in that
case have been still growing, even after his death,
as there being nothing of his writing on which to
found a censure and give him a lower character, his
prosélytes would be left at liberty to feign for
him as great a variety of excellence as their enthusiastic
admiration might wish him to have possessed.
My business was now continually augmenting,
and my circumstances growing daily easier, my newspaper
having become very profitable, as being for a time
almost the only one in this and the neighbouring provinces.
I experienced, too, the truth of the observation,
“that after getting the first hundred pound,
it is more easy to get the second,” money itself
being of a prolific nature.
The partnership at Carolina having
succeeded, I was encourag’d to engage in others,
and to promote several of my workmen, who had behaved
well, by establishing them with printing-houses in
different colonies, on the same terms with that in
Carolina. Most of them did well, being enabled
at the end of our term, six years, to purchase the
types of me and go on working for themselves, by which
means several families were raised. Partnerships
often finish in quarrels; but I was happy in this,
that mine were all carried on and ended amicably, owing,
I think, a good deal to the precaution of having very
explicitly settled, in our articles, every thing to
be done by or expected from each partner, so that
there was nothing to dispute, which precaution I would
therefore recommend to all who enter into partnerships;
for, whatever esteem partners may have for, and confidence
in each other at the time of the contract, little
jealousies and disgusts may arise, with ideas of inequality
in the care and burden of the business, etc.,
which are attended often with breach of friendship
and of the connection, perhaps with lawsuits and other
disagreeable consequences.
I had, on the whole, abundant reason
to be satisfied with my being established in Pennsylvania.
There were, however, two things that I regretted,
there being no provision for defense, nor for a compleat
education of youth; no militia, nor any college.
I therefore, in 1743, drew up a proposal for establishing
an academy; and at that time, thinking the Reverend
Mr. Peters, who was out of employ, a fit person to
superintend such an institution, I communicated the
project to him; but he, having more profitable views
in the service of the proprietaries, which succeeded,
declin’d the undertaking; and, not knowing another
at that time suitable for such a trust, I let the
scheme lie a while dormant. I succeeded better
the next year, 1744, in proposing and establishing
a Philosophical Society. The paper I wrote for
that purpose will be found among my writings, when
collected.
With respect to defense, Spain having
been several years at war against Great Britain, and
being at length join’d by France, which brought
us into great danger; and the laboured and long-continued
endeavour of our governor, Thomas, to prevail with
our Quaker Assembly to pass a militia law, and make
other provisions for the security of the province,
having proved abortive, I determined to try what might
be done by a voluntary association of the people.
To promote this, I first wrote and published a pamphlet,
entitled plain truth, in which I stated our
defenceless situation in strong lights, with the necessity
of union and discipline for our defense, and promis’d
to propose in a few days an association, to be generally
signed for that purpose. The pamphlet had a
sudden and surprising effect. I was call’d
upon for the instrument of association, and having
settled the draft of it with a few friends, I appointed
a meeting of the citizens in the large building before
mentioned. The house was pretty full; I had prepared
a number of printed copies, and provided pens and
ink dispers’d all over the room. I harangued
them a little on the subject, read the paper, and explained
it, and then distributed the copies, which were eagerly
signed, not the least objection being made.
When the company separated, and the
papers were collected, we found above twelve hundred
hands; and, other copies being dispersed in the country,
the subscribers amounted at length to upward of ten
thousand. These all furnished themselves as soon
as they could with arms, formed themselves into companies
and regiments, chose their own officers, and met every
week to be instructed in the manual exercise, and other
parts of military discipline. The women, by
subscriptions among themselves, provided silk colors,
which they presented to the companies, painted with
different devices and mottos, which I supplied.
The officers of the companies composing
the Philadelphia regiment, being met, chose me for
their colonel; but, conceiving myself unfit, I declin’d
that station, and recommended Mr. Lawrence, a fine
person, and man of influence, who was accordingly
appointed. I then propos’d a lottery to
defray the expense of building a battery below the
town, and furnishing it with cannon. It filled
expeditiously, and the battery was soon erected, the
merlons being fram’d of logs and fill’d
with earth. We bought some old cannon from Boston,
but, these not being sufficient, we wrote to England
for more, soliciting, at the same time, our proprietaries
for some assistance, tho’ without much expectation
of obtaining it.
Meanwhile, Colonel Lawrence, William
Allen, Abram Taylor, Esqr., and myself were sent to
New York by the associators, commission’d to
borrow some cannon of Governor Clinton. He at
first refus’d us peremptorily; but at dinner
with his council, where there was great drinking of
Madeira wine, as the custom of that place then was,
he softened by degrees, and said he would lend us
six. After a few more bumpers he advanc’d
to ten; and at length he very good-naturedly conceded
eighteen. They were fine cannon, eighteen-pounders,
with their carriages, which we soon transported and
mounted on our battery, where the associators kept
a nightly guard while the war lasted, and among the
rest I regularly took my turn of duty there as a common
soldier.
My activity in these operations was
agreeable to the governor and council; they took me
into confidence, and I was consulted by them in every
measure wherein their concurrence was thought useful
to the association. Calling in the aid of religion,
I propos’d to them the proclaiming a fast, to
promote reformation, and implore the blessing of Heaven
on our undertaking. They embrac’d the motion;
but, as it was the first fast ever thought of in the
province, the secretary had no precedent from which
to draw the proclamation. My education in New
England, where a fast is proclaimed every year, was
here of some advantage: I drew it in the accustomed
stile, it was translated into German, printed in both
languages, and divulg’d thro’ the province.
This gave the clergy of the different sects an opportunity
of influencing their congregations to join in the
association, and it would probably have been general
among all but Quakers if the peace had not soon interven’d.
It was thought by some of my friends
that, by my activity in these affairs, I should offend
that sect, and thereby lose my interest in the Assembly
of the province, where they formed a great majority.
A young gentleman who had likewise some friends in
the House, and wished to succeed me as their clerk,
acquainted me that it was decided to displace me at
the next election; and he, therefore, in good will,
advis’d me to resign, as more consistent with
my honour than being turn’d out. My answer
to him was, that I had read or heard of some public
man who made it a rule never to ask for an office,
and never to refuse one when offer’d to him.
“I approve,” says I, “of his rule,
and will practice it with a small addition; I shall
never ask, never refuse, nor ever resign an office.
If they will have my office of clerk to dispose of
to another, they shall take it from me. I will
not, by giving it up, lose my right of some time or
other making reprisals on my adversaries.”
I heard, however, no more of this; I was chosen again
unanimously as usual at the next election. Possibly,
as they dislik’d my late intimacy with the members
of council, who had join’d the governors in
all the disputes about military preparations, with
which the House had long been harass’d, they
might have been pleas’d if I would voluntarily
have left them; but they did not care to displace
me on account merely of my zeal for the association,
and they could not well give another reason.
Indeed I had some cause to believe
that the defense of the country was not disagreeable
to any of them, provided they were not requir’d
to assist in it. And I found that a much greater
number of them than I could have imagined, tho’
against offensive war, were clearly for the defensive.
Many pamphlets pro and con were publish’d on
the subject, and some by good Quakers, in favour of
defense, which I believe convinc’d most of their
younger people.
A transaction in our fire company
gave me some insight into their prevailing sentiments.
It had been propos’d that we should encourage
the scheme for building a battery by laying out the
present stock, then about sixty pounds, in tickets
of the lottery. By our rules, no money could
be dispos’d of till the next meeting after the
proposal. The company consisted of thirty members,
of which twenty-two were Quakers, and eight only of
other persuasions. We eight punctually attended
the meeting; but, tho’ we thought that some
of the Quakers would join us, we were by no means
sure of a majority. Only one Quaker, Mr. James
Morris, appear’d to oppose the measure.
He expressed much sorrow that it had ever been propos’d,
as he said Friends were all against it, and it would
create such discord as might break up the company.
We told him that we saw no reason for that; we were
the minority, and if Friends were against the measure,
and outvoted us, we must and should, agreeably to
the usage of all societies, submit. When the
hour for business arriv’d it was mov’d
to put the vote; he allow’d we might then do
it by the rules, but, as he could assure us that a
number of members intended to be present for the purpose
of opposing it, it would be but candid to allow a
little time for their appearing.
While we were disputing this, a waiter
came to tell me two gentlemen below desir’d
to speak with me. I went down, and found they
were two of our Quaker members. They told me
there were eight of them assembled at a tavern just
by; that they were determin’d to come and vote
with us if there should be occasion, which they hop’d
would not be the case, and desir’d we would
not call for their assistance if we could do without
it, as their voting for such a measure might embroil
them with their elders and friends. Being thus
secure of a majority, I went up, and after a little
seeming hesitation, agreed to a delay of another hour.
This Mr. Morris allow’d to be extreamly fair.
Not one of his opposing friends appear’d, at
which he express’d great surprize; and, at the
expiration of the hour, we carry’d the resolution
eight to one; and as, of the twenty-two Quakers, eight
were ready to vote with us, and thirteen, by their
absence, manifested that they were not inclin’d
to oppose the measure, I afterward estimated the proportion
of Quakers sincerely against defense as one to twenty-one
only; for these were all regular members of that society,
and in good reputation among them, and had due notice
of what was propos’d at that meeting.
The honorable and learned Mr. Logan,
who had always been of that sect, was one who wrote
an address to them, declaring his approbation of defensive
war, and supporting his opinion by many strong arguments.
He put into my hands sixty pounds to be laid out
in lottery tickets for the battery, with directions
to apply what prizes might be drawn wholly to that
service. He told me the following anecdote of
his old master, William Penn, respecting defense.
He came over from England, when a young man, with
that proprietary, and as his secretary. It was
war-time, and their ship was chas’d by an armed
vessel, suppos’d to be an enemy. Their
captain prepar’d for defense; but told William
Penn and his company of Quakers, that he did not expect
their assistance, and they might retire into the cabin,
which they did, except James Logan, who chose to stay
upon deck, and was quarter’d to a gun.
The suppos’d enemy prov’d a friend, so
there was no fighting; but when the secretary went
down to communicate the intelligence, William Penn
rebuk’d him severely for staying upon deck, and
undertaking to assist in defending the vessel, contrary
to the principles of Friends, especially as it had
not been required by the captain. This reproof,
being before all the company, piqu’d the secretary,
who answer’d, “I being thy servant, why
did thee not order me to come down? But thee
was willing enough that I should stay and help to fight
the ship when thee thought there was danger.”
My being many years in the Assembly,
the majority of which were constantly Quakers, gave
me frequent opportunities of seeing the embarrassment
given them by their principle against war, whenever
application was made to them, by order of the crown,
to grant aids for military purposes. They were
unwilling to offend government, on the one hand, by
a direct refusal; and their friends, the body of the
Quakers, on the other, by a compliance contrary to
their principles; hence a variety of evasions to avoid
complying, and modes of disguising the compliance
when it became unavoidable. The common mode at
last was, to grant money under the phrase of its being
“for the king’s use,” and never
to inquire how it was applied.
But, if the demand was not directly
from the crown, that phrase was found not so proper,
and some other was to be invented. As, when
powder was wanting (I think it was for the garrison
at Louisburg), and the government of New England solicited
a grant of some from Pennsilvania, which was much
urg’d on the House by Governor Thomas, they
could not grant money to buy powder, because that was
an ingredient of war; but they voted an aid to New
England of three thousand pounds, to be put into the
hands of the governor, and appropriated it for the
purchasing of bread, flour, wheat, or other grain.
Some of the council, desirous of giving the House
still further embarrassment, advis’d the governor
not to accept provision, as not being the thing he
had demanded; but be reply’d, “I shall
take the money, for I understand very well their meaning;
other grain is gunpowder,” which he accordingly
bought, and they never objected to it.
It was in allusion to this fact that,
when in our fire company we feared the success of
our proposal in favour of the lottery, and I had said
to my friend Mr. Syng, one of our members, “If
we fail, let us move the purchase of a fire-engine
with the money; the Quakers can have no objection
to that; and then, if you nominate me and I you as
a committee for that purpose, we will buy a great
gun, which is certainly a fire-engine.”
“I see,” says he, “you have improv’d
by being so long in the Assembly; your equivocal project
would be just a match for their wheat or other grain.”
These embarrassments that the Quakers
suffer’d from having establish’d and published
it as one of their principles that no kind of war was
lawful, and which, being once published, they could
not afterwards, however they might change their minds,
easily get rid of, reminds me of what I think a more
prudent conduct in another sect among us, that of
the Dunkers. I was acquainted with one of its
founders, Michael Welfare, soon after it appear’d.
He complain’d to me that they were grievously
calumniated by the zealots of other persuasions, and
charg’d with abominable principles and practices,
to which they were utter strangers. I told him
this had always been the case with new sects, and
that, to put a stop to such abuse, I imagin’d
it might be well to publish the articles of their
belief, and the rules of their discipline. He
said that it had been propos’d among them, but
not agreed to, for this reason: “When
we were first drawn together as a society,”
says he, “it had pleased God to enlighten our
minds so far as to see that some doctrines, which
we once esteemed truths, were errors; and that others,
which we had esteemed errors, were real truths.
From time to time He has been pleased to afford us
farther light, and our principles have been improving,
and our errors diminishing. Now we are not sure
that we are arrived at the end of this progression,
and at the perfection of spiritual or theological
knowledge; and we fear that, if we should once print
our confession of faith, we should feel ourselves
as if bound and confin’d by it, and perhaps be
unwilling to receive farther improvement, and our
successors still more so, as conceiving what we their
elders and founders had done, to be something sacred,
never to be departed from.”
This modesty in a sect is perhaps
a singular instance in the history of mankind, every
other sect supposing itself in possession of all truth,
and that those who differ are so far in the wrong;
like a man traveling in foggy weather, those at some
distance before him on the road he sees wrapped up
in the fog, as well as those behind him, and also the
people in the fields on each side, but near him all
appears clear, tho’ in truth he is as much in
the fog as any of them. To avoid this kind of
embarrassment, the Quakers have of late years been
gradually declining the public service in the Assembly
and in the magistracy, choosing rather to quit their
power than their principle.
In order of time, I should have mentioned
before, that having, in 1742, invented an open stove
for the better warming of rooms, and at the same time
saving fuel, as the fresh air admitted was warmed in
entering, I made a present of the model to Mr. Robert
Grace, one of my early friends, who, having an iron-furnace,
found the casting of the plates for these stoves a
profitable thing, as they were growing in demand.
To promote that demand, I wrote and published a pamphlet,
entitled “An Account of the new-invented Pennsylvania
Fireplaces; wherein their Construction and Manner
of Operation is particularly explained; their Advantages
above every other Method of warming Rooms demonstrated;
and all Objections that have been raised against the
Use of them answered and obviated,” etc.
This pamphlet had a good effect. Gov’r.
Thomas was so pleas’d with the construction
of this stove, as described in it, that he offered
to give me a patent for the sole vending of them for
a term of years; but I declin’d it from a principle
which has ever weighed with me on such occasions,
viz., That, as we enjoy great advantages from
the inventions of others, we should be glad of an
opportunity to serve others by any invention of ours;
and this we should do freely and generously.
An ironmonger in London however, assuming
a good deal of my pamphlet, and working it up into
his own, and making some small changes in the machine,
which rather hurt its operation, got a patent for it
there, and made, as I was told, a little fortune by
it. And this is not the only instance of patents
taken out for my inventions by others, tho’
not always with the same success, which I never contested,
as having no desire of profiting by patents myself,
and hating disputes. The use of these fireplaces
in very many houses, both of this and the neighbouring
colonies, has been, and is, a great saving of wood
to the inhabitants.
Peace being concluded, and the association
business therefore at an end, I turn’d my thoughts
again to the affair of establishing an academy.
The first step I took was to associate in the design
a number of active friends, of whom the Junto furnished
a good part; the next was to write and publish a pamphlet,
entitled Proposals Relating to the Education of Youth
in Pennsylvania. This I distributed among the
principal inhabitants gratis; and as soon as I could
suppose their minds a little prepared by the perusal
of it, I set on foot a subscription for opening and
supporting an academy; it was to be paid in quotas
yearly for five years; by so dividing it, I judg’d
the subscription might be larger, and I believe it
was so, amounting to no less, if I remember right,
than five thousand pounds.
In the introduction to these proposals,
I stated their publication, not as an act of mine,
but of some publick-spirited gentlemen, avoiding as
much as I could, according to my usual rule, the presenting
myself to the publick as the author of any scheme
for their benefit.
The subscribers, to carry the project
into immediate execution, chose out of their number
twenty-four trustees, and appointed Mr. Francis, then
attorney-general, and myself to draw up constitutions
for the government of the academy; which being done
and signed, a house was hired, masters engag’d,
and the schools opened, I think, in the same year,
1749.
The scholars increasing fast, the
house was soon found too small, and we were looking
out for a piece of ground, properly situated, with
intention to build, when Providence threw into our
way a large house ready built, which, with a few alterations,
might well serve our purpose. This was the building
before mentioned, erected by the hearers of Mr. Whitefield,
and was obtained for us in the following manner.
It is to be noted that the contributions
to this building being made by people of different
sects, care was taken in the nomination of trustees,
in whom the building and ground was to be vested, that
a predominancy should not be given to any sect, lest
in time that predominancy might be a means of appropriating
the whole to the use of such sect, contrary to the
original intention. It was therefore that one
of each sect was appointed, viz., one Church-of-England
man, one Presbyterian, one Baptist, one Moravian,
etc., those, in case of vacancy by death, were
to fill it by election from among the contributors.
The Moravian happen’d not to please his colleagues,
and on his death they resolved to have no other of
that sect. The difficulty then was, how to avoid
having two of some other sect, by means of the new
choice.
Several persons were named, and for
that reason not agreed to. At length one mention’d
me, with the observation that I was merely an honest
man, and of no sect at all, which prevail’d with
them to chuse me. The enthusiasm which existed
when the house was built had long since abated, and
its trustees had not been able to procure fresh contributions
for paying the ground-rent, and discharging some other
debts the building had occasion’d, which embarrass’d
them greatly. Being now a member of both sets
of trustees, that for the building and that for the
Academy, I had a good opportunity of negotiating with
both, and brought them finally to an agreement, by
which the trustees for the building were to cede it
to those of the academy, the latter undertaking to
discharge the debt, to keep for ever open in the building
a large hall for occasional preachers, according to
the original intention, and maintain a free school
for the instruction of poor children. Writings
were accordingly drawn, and on paying the debts the
trustees of the academy were put in possession of the
premises; and by dividing the great and lofty hall
into stories, and different rooms above and below
for the several schools, and purchasing some additional
ground, the whole was soon made fit for our purpose,
and the scholars remov’d into the building.
The care and trouble of agreeing with the workmen,
purchasing materials, and superintending the work,
fell upon me; and I went thro’ it the more cheerfully,
as it did not then interfere with my private business,
having the year before taken a very able, industrious,
and honest partner, Mr. David Hall, with whose character
I was well acquainted, as he had work’d for me
four years. He took off my hands all care of
the printing-office, paying me punctually my share
of the profits. This partnership continued eighteen
years, successfully for us both.
The trustees of the academy, after
a while, were incorporated by a charter from the governor;
their funds were increas’d by contributions
in Britain and grants of land from the proprietaries,
to which the Assembly has since made considerable
addition; and thus was established the present University
of Philadelphia. I have been continued one of
its trustees from the beginning, now near forty years,
and have had the very great pleasure of seeing a number
of the youth who have receiv’d their education
in it, distinguish’d by their improv’d
abilities, serviceable in public stations and ornaments
to their country.
When I disengaged myself, as above
mentioned, from private business, I flatter’d
myself that, by the sufficient tho’ moderate
fortune I had acquir’d, I had secured leisure
during the rest of my life for philosophical studies
and amusements. I purchased all Dr. Spence’s
apparatus, who had come from England to lecture here,
and I proceeded in my electrical experiments with
great alacrity; but the publick, now considering me
as a man of leisure, laid hold of me for their purposes,
every part of our civil government, and almost at the
same time, imposing some duty upon me. The governor
put me into the commission of the peace; the corporation
of the city chose me of the common council, and soon
after an alderman; and the citizens at large chose
me a burgess to represent them in Assembly.
This latter station was the more agreeable to me,
as I was at length tired with sitting there to hear
debates, in which, as clerk, I could take no part,
and which were often so unentertaining that I was
induc’d to amuse myself with making magic squares
or circles, or any thing to avoid weariness; and I
conceiv’d my becoming a member would enlarge
my power of doing good. I would not, however,
insinuate that my ambition was not flatter’d
by all these promotions; it certainly was; for, considering
my low beginning, they were great things to me; and
they were still more pleasing, as being so many spontaneous
testimonies of the public good opinion, and by me
entirely unsolicited.
The office of justice of the peace
I try’d a little, by attending a few courts,
and sitting on the bench to hear causes; but finding
that more knowledge of the common law than I possess’d
was necessary to act in that station with credit,
I gradually withdrew from it, excusing myself by my
being oblig’d to attend the higher duties of
a legislator in the Assembly. My election to
this trust was repeated every year for ten years,
without my ever asking any elector for his vote, or
signifying, either directly or indirectly, any desire
of being chosen. On taking my seat in the House,
my son was appointed their clerk.
The year following, a treaty being
to be held with the Indians at Carlisle, the governor
sent a message to the House, proposing that they should
nominate some of their members, to be join’d
with some members of council, as commissioners for
that purpose. The House named the speaker (Mr.
Norris) and myself; and, being commission’d,
we went to Carlisle, and met the Indians accordingly.
As those people are extreamly apt
to get drunk, and, when so, are very quarrelsome and
disorderly, we strictly forbad the selling any liquor
to them; and when they complain’d of this restriction,
we told them that if they would continue sober during
the treaty, we would give them plenty of rum when
business was over. They promis’d this,
and they kept their promise, because they could get
no liquor, and the treaty was conducted very orderly,
and concluded to mutual satisfaction. They then
claim’d and receiv’d the rum; this was
in the afternoon; they were near one hundred men,
women, and children, and were lodg’d in temporary
cabins, built in the form of a square, just without
the town. In the evening, hearing a great noise
among them, the commissioners walk’d out to
see what was the matter. We found they had made
a great bonfire in the middle of the square; they
were all drunk, men and women, quarreling and fighting.
Their dark-colour’d bodies, half naked, seen
only by the gloomy light of the bonfire, running after
and beating one another with firebrands, accompanied
by their horrid yellings, form’d a scene the
most resembling our ideas of hell that could well be
imagin’d; there was no appeasing the tumult,
and we retired to our lodging. At midnight a
number of them came thundering at our door, demanding
more rum, of which we took no notice.
The next day, sensible they had misbehav’d
in giving us that disturbance, they sent three of
their old counselors to make their apology.
The orator acknowledg’d the fault, but laid it
upon the rum; and then endeavored to excuse the rum
by saying, “The Great Spirit, who made all things,
made every thing for some use, and whatever use he
design’d any thing for, that use it should always
be put to. Now, when he made rum, he said ‘Let
this be for the Indians to get drunk with,’
and it must be so.” And, indeed, if it
be the design of Providence to extirpate these savages
in order to make room for cultivators of the earth,
it seems not improbable that rum may be the appointed
means. It has already annihilated all the tribes
who formerly inhabited the sea-coast.
In 1751, Dr. Thomas Bond, a particular
friend of mine, conceived the idea of establishing
a hospital in Philadelphia (a very beneficent design,
which has been ascrib’d to me, but was originally
his), for the reception and cure of poor sick persons,
whether inhabitants of the province or strangers.
He was zealous and active in endeavouring to procure
subscriptions for it, but the proposal being a novelty
in America, and at first not well understood, he met
with but small success.
At length he came to me with the compliment
that he found there was no such thing as carrying
a public-spirited project through without my being
concern’d in it. “For,” says
he, “I am often ask’d by those to whom
I propose subscribing, Have you consulted Franklin
upon this business? And what does he think of
it? And when I tell them that I have not (supposing
it rather out of your line), they do not subscribe,
but say they will consider of it.” I enquired
into the nature and probable utility of his scheme,
and receiving from him a very satisfactory explanation,
I not only subscrib’d to it myself, but engag’d
heartily in the design of procuring subscriptions from
others. Previously, however, to the solicitation,
I endeavoured to prepare the minds of the people by
writing on the subject in the newspapers, which was
my usual custom in such cases, but which he had omitted.
The subscriptions afterwards were
more free and generous; but, beginning to flag, I
saw they would be insufficient without some assistance
from the Assembly, and therefore propos’d to
petition for it, which was done. The country
members did not at first relish the project; they
objected that it could only be serviceable to the city,
and therefore the citizens alone should be at the expense
of it; and they doubted whether the citizens themselves
generally approv’d of it. My allegation
on the contrary, that it met with such approbation
as to leave no doubt of our being able to raise two
thousand pounds by voluntary donations, they considered
as a most extravagant supposition, and utterly impossible.
On this I form’d my plan; and
asking leave to bring in a bill for incorporating
the contributors according to the prayer of their
petition, and granting them a blank sum of money, which
leave was obtained chiefly on the consideration that
the House could throw the bill out if they did not
like it, I drew it so as to make the important clause
a conditional one, viz., “And be it enacted,
by the authority aforesaid, that when the said contributors
shall have met and chosen their managers and treasurer,
and shall have raised by their contributions a capital
stock of value (the yearly interest of which
is to be applied to the accommodating of the sick poor
in the said hospital, free of charge for diet, attendance,
advice, and medicines), and shall make the same appear
to the satisfaction of the speaker of the Assembly
for the time being, that then it shall and may be
lawful for the said speaker, and he is hereby required,
to sign an order on the provincial treasurer for the
payment of two thousand pounds, in two yearly payments,
to the treasurer of the said hospital, to be applied
to the founding, building, and finishing of the same.”
This condition carried the bill through;
for the members, who had oppos’d the grant,
and now conceiv’d they might have the credit
of being charitable without the expence, agreed to
its passage; and then, in soliciting subscriptions
among the people, we urg’d the conditional promise
of the law as an additional motive to give, since every
man’s donation would be doubled; thus the clause
work’d both ways. The subscriptions accordingly
soon exceeded the requisite sum, and we claim’d
and receiv’d the public gift, which enabled us
to carry the design into execution. A convenient
and handsome building was soon erected; the institution
has by constant experience been found useful, and
flourishes to this day; and I do not remember any of
my political manoeuvres, the success of which gave
me at the time more pleasure, or wherein, after thinking
of it, I more easily excus’d myself for having
made some use of cunning.
It was about this time that another
projector, the Rev. Gilbert Tennent, came to me with
a request that I would assist him in procuring a subscription
for erecting a new meeting-house. It was to be
for the use of a congregation he had gathered among
the Presbyterians, who were originally disciples of
Mr. Whitefield. Unwilling to make myself disagreeable
to my fellow-citizens by too frequently soliciting
their contributions, I absolutely refus’d.
He then desired I would furnish him with a list of
the names of persons I knew by experience to be generous
and public-spirited. I thought it would be unbecoming
in me, after their kind compliance with my solicitations,
to mark them out to be worried by other beggars, and
therefore refus’d also to give such a list.
He then desir’d I would at least give him my
advice. “That I will readily do,”
said I; “and, in the first place, I advise you
to apply to all those whom you know will give something;
next, to those whom you are uncertain whether they
will give any thing or not, and show them the list
of those who have given; and, lastly, do not neglect
those who you are sure will give nothing, for in some
of them you may be mistaken.” He laugh’d
and thank’d me, and said he would take my advice.
He did so, for he ask’d of everybody, and he
obtained a much larger sum than he expected, with
which he erected the capacious and very elegant meeting-house
that stands in Arch-street.
Our city, tho’ laid out with
a beautiful regularity, the streets large, strait,
and crossing each other at right angles, had the disgrace
of suffering those streets to remain long unpav’d,
and in wet weather the wheels of heavy carriages plough’d
them into a quagmire, so that it was difficult to
cross them; and in dry weather the dust was offensive.
I had liv’d near what was call’d the
Jersey Market, and saw with pain the inhabitants wading
in mud while purchasing their provisions. A strip
of ground down the middle of that market was at length
pav’d with brick, so that, being once in the
market, they had firm footing, but were often over
shoes in dirt to get there. By talking and writing
on the subject, I was at length instrumental in getting
the street pav’d with stone between the market
and the brick’d foot-pavement, that was on each
side next the houses. This, for some time, gave
an easy access to the market dry-shod; but, the rest
of the street not being pav’d, whenever a carriage
came out of the mud upon this pavement, it shook off
and left its dirt upon it, and it was soon cover’d
with mire, which was not remov’d, the city as
yet having no scavengers.
After some inquiry I found a poor
industrious man, who was willing to undertake keeping
the pavement clean, by sweeping it twice a week, carrying
off the dirt from before all the neighbours’
doors, for the sum of sixpence per month, to be paid
by each house. I then wrote and printed a paper
setting forth the advantages to the neighbourhood that
might be obtain’d by this small expense; the
greater ease in keeping our houses clean, so much
dirt not being brought in by people’s feet;
the benefit to the shops by more custom, etc.,
etc., as buyers could more easily get at them;
and by not having, in windy weather, the dust blown
in upon their goods, etc., etc. I sent
one of these papers to each house, and in a day or
two went round to see who would subscribe an agreement
to pay these sixpences; it was unanimously sign’d,
and for a time well executed. All the inhabitants
of the city were delighted with the cleanliness of
the pavement that surrounded the market, it being
a convenience to all, and this rais’d a general
desire to have all the streets paved, and made the
people more willing to submit to a tax for that purpose.
After some time I drew a bill for
paving the city, and brought it into the Assembly.
It was just before I went to England, in 1757, and
did not pass till I was gone. and then with an
alteration in the mode of assessment, which I thought
not for the better, but with an additional provision
for lighting as well as paving the streets, which
was a great improvement. It was by a private
person, the late Mr. John Clifton, his giving a sample
of the utility of lamps, by placing one at his door,
that the people were first impress’d with the
idea of enlighting all the city. The honour
of this public benefit has also been ascrib’d
to me but it belongs truly to that gentleman.
I did but follow his example, and have only some
merit to claim respecting the form of our lamps, as
differing from the globe lamps we were at first supply’d
with from London. Those we found inconvenient
in these respects: they admitted no air below;
the smoke, therefore, did not readily go out above,
but circulated in the globe, lodg’d on its inside,
and soon obstructed the light they were intended to
afford; giving, besides, the daily trouble of wiping
them clean; and an accidental stroke on one of them
would demolish it, and render it totally useless.
I therefore suggested the composing them of four flat
panes, with a long funnel above to draw up the smoke,
and crevices admitting air below, to facilitate the
ascent of the smoke; by this means they were kept
clean, and did not grow dark in a few hours, as the
London lamps do, but continu’d bright till morning,
and an accidental stroke would generally break but
a single pane, easily repair’d.
I have sometimes wonder’d that
the Londoners did not, from the effect holes in the
bottom of the globe lamps us’d at Vauxhall have
in keeping them clean, learn to have such holes in
their street lamps. But, these holes being made
for another purpose, viz., to communicate flame
more suddenly to the wick by a little flax hanging
down thro’ them, the other use, of letting in
air, seems not to have been thought of; and therefore,
after the lamps have been lit a few hours, the streets
of London are very poorly illuminated.
The mention of these improvements
puts me in mind of one I propos’d, when in London,
to Dr. Fothergill, who was among the best men I have
known, and a great promoter of useful projects.
I had observ’d that the streets, when dry,
were never swept, and the light dust carried away;
but it was suffer’d to accumulate till wet weather
reduc’d it to mud, and then, after lying some
days so deep on the pavement that there was no crossing
but in paths kept clean by poor people with brooms,
it was with great labour rak’d together and
thrown up into carts open above, the sides of which
suffer’d some of the slush at every jolt on
the pavement to shake out and fall, sometimes to the
annoyance of foot-passengers. The reason given
for not sweeping the dusty streets was, that the dust
would fly into the windows of shops and houses.
An accidental occurrence had instructed
me how much sweeping might be done in a little time.
I found at my door in Craven-street, one morning,
a poor woman sweeping my pavement with a birch broom;
she appeared very pale and feeble, as just come out
of a fit of sickness. I ask’d who employ’d
her to sweep there; she said, “Nobody, but I
am very poor and in distress, and I sweeps before
gentlefolkses doors, and hopes they will give me something.”
I bid her sweep the whole street clean, and I would
give her a shilling; this was at nine o’clock;
at 12 she came for the shilling. From the slowness
I saw at first in her working, I could scarce believe
that the work was done so soon, and sent my servant
to examine it, who reported that the whole street was
swept perfectly clean, and all the dust plac’d
in the gutter, which was in the middle; and the next
rain wash’d it quite away, so that the pavement
and even the kennel were perfectly clean.
I then judg’d that, if that
feeble woman could sweep such a street in three hours,
a strong, active man might have done it in half the
time. And here let me remark the convenience
of having but one gutter in such a narrow street,
running down its middle, instead of two, one on each
side, near the footway; for where all the rain that
falls on a street runs from the sides and meets in
the middle, it forms there a current strong enough
to wash away all the mud it meets with; but when divided
into two channels, it is often too weak to cleanse
either, and only makes the mud it finds more fluid,
so that the wheels of carriages and feet of horses
throw and dash it upon the foot-pavement, which is
thereby rendered foul and slippery, and sometimes splash
it upon those who are walking. My proposal,
communicated to the good doctor, was as follows:
“For the more effectual cleaning
and keeping clean the streets of London and Westminster,
it is proposed that the several watchmen be contracted
with to have the dust swept up in dry seasons, and
the mud rak’d up at other times, each in the
several streets and lanes of his round; that they
be furnish’d with brooms and other proper instruments
for these purposes, to be kept at their respective
stands, ready to furnish the poor people they may
employ in the service.
“That in the dry summer months
the dust be all swept up into heaps at proper distances,
before the shops and windows of houses are usually
opened, when the scavengers, with close-covered carts,
shall also carry it all away.
“That the mud, when rak’d
up, be not left in heaps to be spread abroad again
by the wheels of carriages and trampling of horses,
but that the scavengers be provided with bodies of
carts, not plac’d high upon wheels, but low
upon sliders, with lattice bottoms, which, being cover’d
with straw, will retain the mud thrown into them, and
permit the water to drain from it, whereby it will
become much lighter, water making the greatest part
of its weight; these bodies of carts to be plac’d
at convenient distances, and the mud brought to them
in wheel-barrows; they remaining where plac’d
till the mud is drain’d, and then horses brought
to draw them away.”
I have since had doubts of the practicability
of the latter part of this proposal, on account of
the narrowness of some streets, and the difficulty
of placing the draining-sleds so as not to encumber
too much the passage; but I am still of opinion that
the former, requiring the dust to be swept up and
carry’d away before the shops are open, is very
practicable in the summer, when the days are long;
for, in walking thro’ the Strand and Fleet-street
one morning at seven o’clock, I observ’d
there was not one shop open, tho’ it had been
daylight and the sun up above three hours; the inhabitants
of London chusing voluntarily to live much by candle-light,
and sleep by sunshine, and yet often complain, a little
absurdly, of the duty on candles and the high price
of tallow.
Some may think these trifling matters
not worth minding or relating; but when they consider
that tho’ dust blown into the eyes of a single
person, or into a single shop on a windy day, is but
of small importance, yet the great number of the instances
in a populous city, and its frequent repetitions give
it weight and consequence, perhaps they will not censure
very severely those who bestow some attention to affairs
of this seemingly low nature. Human felicity
is produc’d not so much by great pieces of good
fortune that seldom happen, as by little advantages
that occur every day. Thus, if you teach a poor
young man to shave himself, and keep his razor in order,
you may contribute more to the happiness of his life
than in giving him a thousand guineas. The money
may be soon spent, the regret only remaining of having
foolishly consumed it; but in the other case, he escapes
the frequent vexation of waiting for barbers, and of
their sometimes dirty fingers, offensive breaths,
and dull razors; he shaves when most convenient to
him, and enjoys daily the pleasure of its being done
with a good instrument. With these sentiments
I have hazarded the few preceding pages, hoping they
may afford hints which some time or other may be useful
to a city I love, having lived many years in it very
happily, and perhaps to some of our towns in America.
Having been for some time employed
by the postmaster-general of America as his comptroller
in regulating several offices, and bringing the officers
to account, I was, upon his death in 1753, appointed,
jointly with Mr. William Hunter, to succeed him, by
a commission from the postmaster-general in England.
The American office never had hitherto paid any thing
to that of Britain. We were to have six hundred
pounds a year between us, if we could make that sum
out of the profits of the office. To do this,
a variety of improvements were necessary; some of
these were inevitably at first expensive, so that in
the first four years the office became above nine
hundred pounds in debt to us. But it soon after
began to repay us; and before I was displac’d
by a freak of the ministers, of which I shall speak
hereafter, we had brought it to yield three times
as much clear revenue to the crown as the postoffice
of Ireland. Since that imprudent transaction,
they have receiv’d from it not one
farthing!
The business of the postoffice occasion’d
my taking a journey this year to New England, where
the College of Cambridge, of their own motion, presented
me with the degree of Master of Arts. Yale College,
in Connecticut, had before made me a similar compliment.
Thus, without studying in any college, I came to
partake of their honours. They were conferr’d
in consideration of my improvements and discoveries
in the electric branch of natural philosophy.
In 1754, war with France being again
apprehended, a congress of commissioners from the
different colonies was, by an order of the Lords of
Trade, to be assembled at Albany, there to confer with
the chiefs of the Six Nations concerning the means
of defending both their country and ours. Governor
Hamilton, having receiv’d this order, acquainted
the House with it, requesting they would furnish proper
presents for the Indians, to be given on this occasion;
and naming the speaker (Mr. Norris) and myself to
join Mr. Thomas Penn and Mr. Secretary Peters as commissioners
to act for Pennsylvania. The House approv’d
the nomination, and provided the goods for the present,
and tho’ they did not much like treating out
of the provinces; and we met the other commissioners
at Albany about the middle of June.
In our way thither, I projected and
drew a plan for the union of all the colonies under
one government, so far as might be necessary for defense,
and other important general purposes. As we pass’d
thro’ New York, I had there shown my project
to Mr. James Alexander and Mr. Kennedy, two gentlemen
of great knowledge in public affairs, and, being fortified
by their approbation, I ventur’d to lay it before
the Congress. It then appeared that several
of the commissioners had form’d plans of the
same kind. A previous question was first taken,
whether a union should be established, which pass’d
in the affirmative unanimously. A committee
was then appointed, one member from each colony, to
consider the several plans and report. Mine happen’d
to be preferr’d, and, with a few amendments,
was accordingly reported.
By this plan the general government
was to be administered by a president-general, appointed
and supported by the crown, and a grand council was
to be chosen by the representatives of the people of
the several colonies, met in their respective assemblies.
The debates upon it in Congress went on daily, hand
in hand with the Indian business. Many objections
and difficulties were started, but at length they were
all overcome, and the plan was unanimously agreed to,
and copies ordered to be transmitted to the Board
of Trade and to the assemblies of the several provinces.
Its fate was singular: the assemblies did not
adopt it, as they all thought there was too much prerogative
in it, and in England it was judg’d to have
too much of the democratic.
The Board of Trade therefore did not
approve of it, nor recommend it for the approbation
of his majesty; but another scheme was form’d,
supposed to answer the same purpose better, whereby
the governors of the provinces, with some members
of their respective councils, were to meet and order
the raising of troops, building of forts, etc.,
and to draw on the treasury of Great Britain for the
expense, which was afterwards to be refunded by an
act of Parliament laying a tax on America. My
plan, with my reasons in support of it, is to be found
among my political papers that are printed.
Being the winter following in Boston,
I had much conversation with Governor Shirley upon
both the plans. Part of what passed between us
on the occasion may also be seen among those papers.
The different and contrary reasons of dislike to
my plan makes me suspect that it was really the true
medium; and I am still of opinion it would have been
happy for both sides the water if it had been adopted.
The colonies, so united, would have been sufficiently
strong to have defended themselves; there would then
have been no need of troops from England; of course,
the subsequent pretence for taxing America, and the
bloody contest it occasioned, would have been avoided.
But such mistakes are not new; history is full of
the errors of states and princes.
Look
round the habitable world, how few
Know
their own good, or, knowing it, pursue!
Those who govern, having much business
on their hands, do not generally like to take the
trouble of considering and carrying into execution
new projects. The best public measures are therefore
seldom adopted from previous wisdom, but forc’d
by the occasion.
The Governor of Pennsylvania, in sending
it down to the Assembly, express’d his approbation
of the plan, “as appearing to him to be drawn
up with great clearness and strength of judgment, and
therefore recommended it as well worthy of their closest
and most serious attention.” The House,
however, by the management of a certain member, took
it up when I happen’d to be absent, which I thought
not very fair, and reprobated it without paying any
attention to it at all, to my no small mortification.
In my journey to Boston this year,
I met at New York with our new governor, Mr. Morris,
just arriv’d there from England, with whom I
had been before intimately acquainted. He brought
a commission to supersede Mr. Hamilton, who, tir’d
with the disputes his proprietary instructions subjected
him to, had resign’d. Mr. Morris ask’d
me if I thought he must expect as uncomfortable an
administration. I said, “No; you may,
on the contrary, have a very comfortable one, if you
will only take care not to enter into any dispute
with the Assembly.” “My dear friend,”
says he, pleasantly, “how can you advise my avoiding
disputes? You know I love disputing; it is one
of my greatest pleasures; however, to show the regard
I have for your counsel, I promise you I will, if
possible, avoid them.” He had some reason
for loving to dispute, being eloquent, an acute sophister,
and, therefore, generally successful in argumentative
conversation. He had been brought up to it from
a boy, his father, as I have heard, accustoming his
children to dispute with one another for his diversion,
while sitting at table after dinner; but I think the
practice was not wise; for, in the course of my observation,
these disputing, contradicting, and confuting people
are generally unfortunate in their affairs. They
get victory sometimes, but they never get good will,
which would be of more use to them. We parted,
he going to Philadelphia, and I to Boston.
In returning, I met at New York with
the votes of the Assembly, by which it appear’d
that, notwithstanding his promise to me, he and the
House were already in high contention; and it was a
continual battle between them as long as he retain’d
the government. I had my share of it; for, as
soon as I got back to my seat in the Assembly, I was
put on every committee for answering his speeches
and messages, and by the committees always desired
to make the drafts. Our answers, as well as
his messages, were often tart, and sometimes indecently
abusive; and, as he knew I wrote for the Assembly,
one might have imagined that, when we met, we could
hardly avoid cutting throats; but he was so good-natur’d
a man that no personal difference between him and me
was occasion’d by the contest, and we often
din’d together.
One afternoon, in the height of this
public quarrel, we met in the street. “Franklin,”
says he, “you must go home with me and spend
the evening; I am to have some company that you will
like;” and, taking me by the arm, he led me
to his house. In gay conversation over our wine,
after supper, he told us, jokingly, that he much admir’d
the idea of Sancho Panza, who, when it was proposed
to give him a government, requested it might be a
government of blacks, as then, if he could not agree
with his people, he might sell them. One of his
friends, who sat next to me, says, “Franklin,
why do you continue to side with these damn’d
Quakers? Had not you better sell them?
The proprietor would give you a good price.”
“The governor,” says I, “has not
yet blacked them enough.” He, indeed, had
labored hard to blacken the Assembly in all his messages,
but they wip’d off his coloring as fast as he
laid it on, and plac’d it, in return, thick
upon his own face; so that, finding he was likely
to be negrofied himself, he, as well as Mr. Hamilton,
grew tir’d of the contest, and quitted the government.
But I am got forward too fast with
my story: there are still some transactions
to be mention’d that happened during the administration
of Governor Morris.
War being in a manner commenced with
France, the government of Massachusetts Bay projected
an attack upon Crown Point, and sent Mr. Quincy to
Pennsylvania, and Mr. Pownall, afterward Governor Pownall,
to New York, to solicit assistance. As I was
in the Assembly, knew its temper, and was Mr. Quincy’s
countryman, he appli’d to me for my influence
and assistance. I dictated his address to them,
which was well receiv’d. They voted an
aid of ten thousand pounds, to be laid out in provisions.
But the governor refusing his assent to their bill
(which included this with other sums granted for the
use of the crown), unless a clause were inserted exempting
the proprietary estate from bearing any part of the
tax that would be necessary, the Assembly, tho’
very desirous of making their grant to New England
effectual, were at a loss how to accomplish it.
Mr. Quincy labored hard with the governor to obtain
his assent, but he was obstinate.
I then suggested a method of doing
the business without the governor, by orders on the
trustees of the Loan Office, which, by law, the Assembly
had the right of drawing. There was, indeed,
little or no money at that time in the office, and
therefore I propos’d that the orders should
be payable in a year, and to bear an interest of five
per cent. With these orders I suppos’d
the provisions might easily be purchas’d.
The Assembly, with very little hesitation, adopted
the proposal. The orders were immediately printed,
and I was one of the committee directed to sign and
dispose of them. The fund for paying them was
the interest of all the paper currency then extant
in the province upon loan, together with the revenue
arising from the excise, which being known to be more
than sufficient, they obtain’d instant credit,
and were not only receiv’d in payment for the
provisions, but many money’d people, who had
cash lying by them, vested it in those orders, which
they found advantageous, as they bore interest while
upon hand, and might on any occasion be used as money;
so that they were eagerly all bought up, and in a
few weeks none of them were to be seen. Thus
this important affair was by my means compleated.
My Quincy return’d thanks to the Assembly in
a handsome memorial, went home highly pleas’d
with the success of his embassy, and ever after bore
for me the most cordial and affectionate friendship.
The British government, not chusing
to permit the union of the colonies as propos’d
at Albany, and to trust that union with their defense,
lest they should thereby grow too military, and feel
their own strength, suspicions and jealousies at this
time being entertain’d of them, sent over General
Braddock with two regiments of regular English troops
for that purpose. He landed at Alexandria, in
Virginia, and thence march’d to Frederictown,
in Maryland, where he halted for carriages. Our
Assembly apprehending, from some information, that
he had conceived violent prejudices against them,
as averse to the service, wish’d me to wait
upon him, not as from them, but as postmaster-general,
under the guise of proposing to settle with him the
mode of conducting with most celerity and certainty
the despatches between him and the governors of the
several provinces, with whom he must necessarily have
continual correspondence, and of which they propos’d
to pay the expense. My son accompanied me on
this journey.
We found the general at Frederictown,
waiting impatiently for the return of those he had
sent thro’ the back parts of Maryland and Virginia
to collect waggons. I stayed with him several
days, din’d with him daily, and had full opportunity
of removing all his prejudices, by the information
of what the Assembly had before his arrival actually
done, and were still willing to do, to facilitate his
operations. When I was about to depart, the returns
of waggons to be obtained were brought in, by which
it appear’d that they amounted only to twenty-five,
and not all of those were in serviceable condition.
The general and all the officers were surpris’d,
declar’d the expedition was then at an end,
being impossible, and exclaim’d against the
ministers for ignorantly landing them in a country
destitute of the means of conveying their stores,
baggage, etc., not less than one hundred and
fifty waggons being necessary.
I happened to say I thought it was
a pity they had not been landed rather in Pennsylvania,
as in that country almost every farmer had his waggon.
The general eagerly laid hold of my words, and said,
“Then you, sir, who are a man of interest there,
can probably procure them for us; and I beg you will
undertake it.” I ask’d what terms
were to be offer’d the owners of the waggons;
and I was desir’d to put on paper the terms
that appeared to me necessary. This I did, and
they were agreed to, and a commission and instructions
accordingly prepar’d immediately. What
those terms were will appear in the advertisement I
publish’d as soon as I arriv’d at Lancaster,
which being, from the great and sudden effect it produc’d,
a piece of some curiosity, I shall insert it at length,
as follows:
“Advertisement.
“Lancaster,
April 26, 1755.
“Whereas, one hundred and fifty
waggons, with four horses to each waggon, and fifteen
hundred saddle or pack horses, are wanted for the
service of his majesty’s forces now about to
rendezvous at Will’s Creek, and his excellency
General Braddock having been pleased to empower me
to contract for the hire of the same, I hereby give
notice that I shall attend for that purpose at Lancaster
from this day to next Wednesday evening, and at York
from next Thursday morning till Friday evening, where
I shall be ready to agree for waggons and teams, or
single horses, on the following terms, viz.:
I. That there shall be paid for each waggon, with
four good horses and a driver, fifteen shillings per
diem; and for each able horse with a pack-saddle, or
other saddle and furniture, two shillings per diem;
and for each able horse without a saddle, eighteen
pence per diem. 2. That the pay commence from
the time of their joining the forces at Will’s
Creek, which must be on or before the 20th of May
ensuing, and that a reasonable allowance be paid over
and above for the time necessary for their travelling
to Will’s Creek and home again after their discharg. Each waggon and team, and every saddle or
pack horse, is to be valued by indifferent persons
chosen between me and the owner; and in case of the
loss of any waggon, team, or other horse in the service,
the price according to such valuation is to be allowed
and paid. 4. Seven days’ pay is to be
advanced and paid in hand by me to the owner of each
waggon and team, or horse, at the time of contracting,
if required, and the remainder to be paid by General
Braddock, or by the paymaster of the army, at the
time of their discharge, or from time to time, as
it shall be demanded. 5. No drivers of waggons,
or persons taking care of the hired horses, are on
any account to be called upon to do the duty of soldiers,
or be otherwise employed than in conducting or taking
care of their carriages or horses. 6. All oats,
Indian corn, or other forage that waggons or horses
bring to the camp, more than is necessary for the
subsistence of the horses, is to be taken for the
use of the army, and a reasonable price paid for the
same.
“Note. My son, William
Franklin, is empowered to enter into like contracts
with any person in Cumberland county.
“B.
Franklin.”
“To the inhabitants
of the Counties of Lancaster,
York
and Cumberland.
“Friends and Countrymen,
“Being occasionally at the camp
at Frederic a few days since, I found the general
and officers extremely exasperated on account of their
not being supplied with horses and carriages, which
had been expected from this province, as most able
to furnish them; but, through the dissensions between
our governor and Assembly, money had not been provided,
nor any steps taken for that purpose.
“It was proposed to send an
armed force immediately into these counties, to seize
as many of the best carriages and horses as should
be wanted, and compel as many persons into the service
as would be necessary to drive and take care of them.
“I apprehended that the progress
of British soldiers through these counties on such
an occasion, especially considering the temper they
are in, and their resentment against us, would be attended
with many and great inconveniences to the inhabitants,
and therefore more willingly took the trouble of trying
first what might be done by fair and equitable means.
The people of these back counties have lately complained
to the Assembly that a sufficient currency was wanting;
you have an opportunity of receiving and dividing
among you a very considerable sum; for, if the service
of this expedition should continue, as it is more
than probable it will, for one hundred and twenty
days, the hire of these waggons and horses will amount
to upward of thirty thousand pounds, which will be
paid you in silver and gold of the king’s money.
“The service will be light and
easy, for the army will scarce march above twelve
miles per day, and the waggons and baggage-horses,
as they carry those things that are absolutely necessary
to the welfare of the army, must march with the army,
and no faster; and are, for the army’s sake,
always placed where they can be most secure, whether
in a march or in a camp.
“If you are really, as I believe
you are, good and loyal subjects to his majesty, you
may now do a most acceptable service, and make it easy
to yourselves; for three or four of such as can not
separately spare from the business of their plantations
a waggon and four horses and a driver, may do it together,
one furnishing the waggon, another one or two horses,
and another the driver, and divide the pay proportionately
between you; but if you do not this service to your
king and country voluntarily, when such good pay and
reasonable terms are offered to you, your loyalty
will be strongly suspected. The king’s
business must be done; so many brave troops, come
so far for your defense, must not stand idle through
your backwardness to do what may be reasonably expected
from you; waggons and horses must be had; violent measures
will probably be used, and you will be left to seek
for a recompense where you can find it, and your case,
perhaps, be little pitied or regarded.
“I have no particular interest
in this affair, as, except the satisfaction of endeavoring
to do good, I shall have only my labour for my pains.
If this method of obtaining the waggons and horses
is not likely to succeed, I am obliged to send word
to the general in fourteen days; and I suppose Sir
John St. Clair, the hussar, with a body of soldiers,
will immediately enter the province for the purpose,
which I shall be sorry to hear, because I am very
sincerely and truly your friend and well-wisher, B.
Franklin.”
I received of the general about eight
hundred pounds, to be disbursed in advance-money to
the waggon owners, etc.; but, that sum being
insufficient, I advanc’d upward of two hundred
pounds more, and in two weeks the one hundred and
fifty waggons, with two hundred and fifty-nine carrying
horses, were on their march for the camp. The
advertisement promised payment according to the valuation,
in case any waggon or horse should be lost.
The owners, however, alleging they did not know General
Braddock, or what dependence might be had on his promise,
insisted on my bond for the performance, which I accordingly
gave them.
While I was at the camp, supping one
evening with the officers of Colonel Dunbar’s
regiment, he represented to me his concern for the
subalterns, who, he said, were generally not in affluence,
and could ill afford, in this dear country, to lay
in the stores that might be necessary in so long a
march, thro’ a wilderness, where nothing was
to be purchas’d. I commiserated their case,
and resolved to endeavor procuring them some relief.
I said nothing, however, to him of my intention,
but wrote the next morning to the committee of the
Assembly, who had the disposition of some public money,
warmly recommending the case of these officers to
their consideration, and proposing that a present
should be sent them of necessaries and refreshments.
My son, who had some experience of a camp life, and
of its wants, drew up a list for me, which I enclos’d in my letter.
These twenty parcels, well pack’d,
were placed on as many horses, each parcel, with the
horse, being intended as a present for one officer.
They were very thankfully receiv’d, and the kindness
acknowledg’d by letters to me from the colonels
of both regiments, in the most grateful terms.
The general, too, was highly satisfied with my conduct
in procuring him the waggons, etc., and readily
paid my account of disbursements, thanking me repeatedly,
and requesting my farther assistance in sending provisions
after him. I undertook this also, and was busily
employ’d in it till we heard of his defeat, advancing
for the service of my own money, upwards of one thousand
pounds sterling, of which I sent him an account.
It came to his hands, luckily for me, a few days
before the battle, and he return’d me immediately
an order on the paymaster for the round sum of one
thousand pounds, leaving the remainder to the next
account. I consider this payment as good luck,
having never been able to obtain that remainder, of
which more hereafter.
This general was, I think, a brave
man, and might probably have made a figure as a good
officer in some European war. But he had too
much self-confidence, too high an opinion of the validity
of regular troops, and too mean a one of both Americans
and Indians. George Croghan, our Indian interpreter,
join’d him on his march with one hundred of those
people, who might have been of great use to his army
as guides, scouts, etc., if he had treated them
kindly; but he slighted and neglected them, and they
gradually left him.
In conversation with him one day,
he was giving me some account of his intended progress.
“After taking Fort Duquesne,” says he,
“I am to proceed to Niagara; and, having taken
that, to Frontenac, if the season will allow time;
and I suppose it will, for Duquesne can hardly detain
me above three or four days; and then I see nothing
that can obstruct my march to Niagara.”
Having before revolv’d in my mind the long line
his army must make in their march by a very narrow
road, to be cut for them thro’ the woods and
bushes, and also what I had read of a former defeat
of fifteen hundred French, who invaded the Iroquois
country, I had conceiv’d some doubts and some
fears for the event of the campaign. But I ventur’d
only to say, “To be sure, sir, if you arrive
well before Duquesne, with these fine troops, so well
provided with artillery, that place not yet compleatly
fortified, and as we hear with no very strong garrison,
can probably make but a short resistance. The
only danger I apprehend of obstruction to your march
is from ambuscades of Indians, who, by constant practice,
are dexterous in laying and executing them; and the
slender line, near four miles long, which your army
must make, may expose it to be attack’d by surprise
in its flanks, and to be cut like a thread into several
pieces, which, from their distance, can not come up
in time to support each other.”
He smil’d at my ignorance, and
reply’d, “These savages may, indeed, be
a formidable enemy to your raw American militia, but
upon the king’s regular and disciplin’d
troops, sir, it is impossible they should make any
impression.” I was conscious of an impropriety
in my disputing with a military man in matters of
his profession, and said no more. The enemy,
however, did not take the advantage of his army which
I apprehended its long line of march expos’d
it to, but let it advance without interruption till
within nine miles of the place; and then, when more
in a body (for it had just passed a river, where the
front had halted till all were come over), and in
a more open part of the woods than any it had pass’d,
attack’d its advanced guard by a heavy fire
from behind trees and bushes, which was the first intelligence
the general had of an enemy’s being near him.
This guard being disordered, the general hurried
the troops up to their assistance, which was done
in great confusion, thro’ waggons, baggage, and
cattle; and presently the fire came upon their flank:
the officers, being on horseback, were more easily
distinguish’d, pick’d out as marks, and
fell very fast; and the soldiers were crowded together
in a huddle, having or hearing no orders, and standing
to be shot at till two-thirds of them were killed;
and then, being seiz’d with a panick, the whole
fled with precipitation.
The waggoners took each a horse out
of his team and scamper’d; their example was
immediately followed by others; so that all the waggons,
provisions, artillery, and stores were left to the
enemy. The general, being wounded, was brought
off with difficulty; his secretary, Mr. Shirley, was
killed by his side; and out of eighty-six officers,
sixty-three were killed or wounded, and seven hundred
and fourteen men killed out of eleven hundred.
These eleven hundred had been picked men from the
whole army; the rest had been left behind with Colonel
Dunbar, who was to follow with the heavier part of
the stores, provisions, and baggage. The flyers,
not being pursu’d, arriv’d at Dunbar’s
camp, and the panick they brought with them instantly
seiz’d him and all his people; and, tho’
he had now above one thousand men, and the enemy who
had beaten Braddock did not at most exceed four hundred
Indians and French together, instead of proceeding,
and endeavoring to recover some of the lost honour,
he ordered all the stores, ammunition, etc., to
be destroy’d, that he might have more horses
to assist his flight towards the settlements, and
less lumber to remove. He was there met with
requests from the governors of Virginia, Maryland,
and Pennsylvania, that he would post his troops on
the frontiers, so as to afford some protection to
the inhabitants; but he continu’d his hasty march
thro’ all the country, not thinking himself
safe till he arriv’d at Philadelphia, where
the inhabitants could protect him. This whole
transaction gave us Americans the first suspicion that
our exalted ideas of the prowess of British regulars
had not been well founded.
In their first march, too, from their
landing till they got beyond the settlements, they
had plundered and stripped the inhabitants, totally
ruining some poor families, besides insulting, abusing,
and confining the people if they remonstrated.
This was enough to put us out of conceit of such
defenders, if we had really wanted any. How different
was the conduct of our French friends in 1781, who,
during a march thro’ the most inhabited part
of our country from Rhode Island to Virginia, near
seven hundred miles, occasioned not the smallest complaint
for the loss of a pig, a chicken, or even an apple.
Captain Orme, who was one of the general’s
aids-de-camp, and, being grievously wounded, was brought
off with him, and continu’d with him to his
death, which happen’d in a few days, told me
that he was totally silent all the first day, and
at night only said, “Who would have thought
it?” That he was silent again the following
day, saying only at last, “We shall better know
how to deal with them another time;” and dy’d
in a few minutes after.
The secretary’s papers, with
all the general’s orders, instructions, and
correspondence, falling into the enemy’s hands,
they selected and translated into French a number
of the articles, which they printed, to prove the
hostile intentions of the British court before the
declaration of war. Among these I saw some letters
of the general to the ministry, speaking highly of
the great service I had rendered the army, and recommending
me to their notice. David Hume, too, who was
some years after secretary to Lord Hertford, when minister
in France, and afterward to General Conway, when secretary
of state, told me he had seen among the papers in
that office, letters from Braddock highly recommending
me. But, the expedition having been unfortunate,
my service, it seems, was not thought of much value,
for those recommendations were never of any use to
me.
As to rewards from himself, I ask’d
only one, which was, that he would give orders to
his officers not to enlist any more of our bought
servants, and that he would discharge such as had been
already enlisted. This he readily granted, and
several were accordingly return’d to their masters,
on my application. Dunbar, when the command
devolv’d on him, was not so generous. He
being at Philadelphia, on his retreat, or rather flight,
I apply’d to him for the discharge of the servants
of three poor farmers of Lancaster county that he had
enlisted, reminding him of the late general’s
orders on that bead. He promised me that, if
the masters would come to him at Trenton, where he
should be in a few days on his march to New York, he
would there deliver their men to them. They
accordingly were at the expense and trouble of going
to Trenton, and there he refus’d to perform his
promise, to their great loss and disappointment.
As soon as the loss of the waggons
and horses was generally known, all the owners came
upon me for the valuation which I had given bond to
pay. Their demands gave me a great deal of trouble,
my acquainting them that the money was ready in the
paymaster’s hands, but that orders for paying
it must first be obtained from General Shirley, and
my assuring them that I had apply’d to that
general by letter; but, he being at a distance, an
answer could not soon be receiv’d, and they
must have patience, all this was not sufficient to
satisfy, and some began to sue me. General Shirley
at length relieved me from this terrible situation
by appointing commissioners to examine the claims,
and ordering payment. They amounted to near twenty
thousand pound, which to pay would have ruined me.
Before we had the news of this defeat,
the two Doctors Bond came to me with a subscription
paper for raising money to defray the expense of a
grand firework, which it was intended to exhibit at
a rejoicing on receipt of the news of our taking Fort
Duquesne. I looked grave, and said it would,
I thought, be time enough to prepare for the rejoicing
when we knew we should have occasion to rejoice.
They seem’d surpris’d that I did not
immediately comply with their proposal. “Why
the d l!” says one of them, “you
surely don’t suppose that the fort will not be
taken?” “I don’t know that it will
not be taken, but I know that the events of war are
subject to great uncertainty.” I gave them
the reasons of my doubting; the subscription was dropt,
and the projectors thereby missed the mortification
they would have undergone if the firework had been
prepared. Dr. Bond, on some other occasion afterward,
said that he did not like Franklin’s forebodings.
Governor Morris, who had continually
worried the Assembly with message after message before
the defeat of Braddock, to beat them into the making
of acts to raise money for the defense of the province,
without taxing, among others, the proprietary estates,
and had rejected all their bills for not having such
an exempting clause, now redoubled his attacks with
more hope of success, the danger and necessity being
greater. The Assembly, however, continu’d
firm, believing they had justice on their side, and
that it would be giving up an essential right if they
suffered the governor to amend their money-bills.
In one of the last, indeed, which was for granting
fifty thousand pounds, his propos’d amendment
was only of a single word. The bill expressed
“that all estates, real and personal, were to
be taxed, those of the proprietaries not excepted.”
His amendment was, for not read only: a small,
but very material alteration. However, when the
news of this disaster reached England, our friends
there, whom we had taken care to furnish with all
the Assembly’s answers to the governor’s
messages, rais’d a clamor against the proprietaries
for their meanness and injustice in giving their governor
such instructions; some going so far as to say that,
by obstructing the defense of their province, they
forfeited their right to it. They were intimidated
by this, and sent orders to their receiver-general
to add five thousand pounds of their money to whatever
sum might be given by the Assembly for such purpose.
This, being notified to the House,
was accepted in lieu of their share of a general tax,
and a new bill was form’d, with an exempting
clause, which passed accordingly. By this act
I was appointed one of the commissioners for disposing
of the money, sixty thousand pounds. I had been
active in modelling the bill and procuring its passage,
and had, at the same time, drawn a bill for establishing
and disciplining of a voluntary militia, which I carried
thro’ the House without much difficulty, as
care was taken in it to leave the Quakers at their
liberty. To promote the association necessary
to form the militia, I wrote a dialogue, stating
and answering all the objections I could think of
to such a militia, which was printed, and had, as I
thought, great effect.
While the several companies in the
city and country were forming and learning their exercise,
the governor prevail’d with me to take charge
of our North-western frontier, which was infested by
the enemy, and provide for the defense of the inhabitants
by raising troops and building a line of forts.
I undertook this military business, tho’ I
did not conceive myself well qualified for it.
He gave me a commission with full powers, and a parcel
of blank commissions for officers, to be given to
whom I thought fit. I had but little difficulty
in raising men, having soon five hundred and sixty
under my command. My son, who had in the preceding
war been an officer in the army rais’d against
Canada, was my aid-de-camp, and of great use to me.
The Indians had burned Gnadenhut, a village settled
by the Moravians, and massacred the inhabitants; but
the place was thought a good situation for one of the
forts.
In order to march thither, I assembled
the companies at Bethlehem, the chief establishment
of those people. I was surprised to find it in
so good a posture of defense; the destruction of Gnadenhut
had made them apprehend danger. The principal
buildings were defended by a stockade; they had purchased
a quantity of arms and ammunition from New York, and
had even plac’d quantities of small paving stones
between the windows of their high stone houses, for
their women to throw down upon the heads of any Indians
that should attempt to force into them. The armed
brethren, too, kept watch, and reliev’d as methodically
as in any garrison town. In conversation with
the bishop, Spangenberg, I mention’d this my
surprise; for, knowing they had obtained an act of
Parliament exempting them from military duties in the
colonies, I had suppos’d they were conscientiously
scrupulous of bearing arms. He answer’d
me that it was not one of their established principles,
but that, at the time of their obtaining that act,
it was thought to be a principle with many of their
people. On this occasion, however, they, to
their surprise, found it adopted by but a few.
It seems they were either deceiv’d in themselves,
or deceiv’d the Parliament; but common sense,
aided by present danger, will sometimes be too strong
for whimsical opinions.
It was the beginning of January when
we set out upon this business of building forts.
I sent one detachment toward the Minisink, with instructions
to erect one for the security of that upper part of
the country, and another to the lower part, with similar
instructions; and I concluded to go myself with the
rest of my force to Gnadenhut, where a fort was tho’t
more immediately necessary. The Moravians procur’d
me five waggons for our tools, stores, baggage, etc.
Just before we left Bethlehem, eleven
farmers, who had been driven from their plantations
by the Indians, came to me requesting a supply of
firearms, that they might go back and fetch off their
cattle. I gave them each a gun with suitable
ammunition. We had not march’d many miles
before it began to rain, and it continued raining all
day; there were no habitations on the road to shelter
us, till we arriv’d near night at the house
of a German, where, and in his barn, we were all huddled
together, as wet as water could make us. It was
well we were not attack’d in our march, for
our arms were of the most ordinary sort, and our men
could not keep their gun locks dry. The Indians
are dextrous in contrivances for that purpose, which
we had not. They met that day the eleven poor
farmers above mentioned, and killed ten of them.
The one who escap’d inform’d that his
and his companions’ guns would not go off, the
priming being wet with the rain.
The next day being fair, we continu’d
our march, and arriv’d at the desolated Gnadenhut.
There was a saw-mill near, round which were left
several piles of boards, with which we soon hutted
ourselves; an operation the more necessary at that
inclement season, as we had no tents. Our first
work was to bury more effectually the dead we found
there, who had been half interr’d by the country
people.
The next morning our fort was plann’d
and mark’d out, the circumference measuring
four hundred and fifty-five feet, which would require
as many palisades to be made of trees, one with another,
of a foot diameter each. Our axes, of which
we had seventy, were immediately set to work to cut
down trees, and, our men being dextrous in the use
of them, great despatch was made. Seeing the
trees fall so fast, I had the curiosity to look at
my watch when two men began to cut at a pine; in six
minutes they had it upon the ground, and I found it
of fourteen inches diameter. Each pine made
three palisades of eighteen feet long, pointed at
one end. While these were preparing, our other
men dug a trench all round, of three feet deep, in
which the palisades were to be planted; and, our waggons,
the bodys being taken off, and the fore and hind wheels
separated by taking out the pin which united the two
parts of the perch, we had ten carriages, with two
horses each, to bring the palisades from the woods
to the spot. When they were set up, our carpenters
built a stage of boards all round within, about six
feet high, for the men to stand on when to fire thro’
the loopholes. We had one swivel gun, which
we mounted on one of the angles, and fir’d it
as soon as fix’d, to let the Indians know, if
any were within hearing, that we had such pieces;
and thus our fort, if such a magnificent name may
be given to so miserable a stockade, was finish’d
in a week, though it rain’d so hard every other
day that the men could not work.
This gave me occasion to observe,
that, when men are employ’d, they are best content’d;
for on the days they worked they were good-natur’d
and cheerful, and, with the consciousness of having
done a good day’s work, they spent the evening
jollily; but on our idle days they were mutinous and
quarrelsome, finding fault with their pork, the bread,
etc., and in continual ill-humor, which put me
in mind of a sea-captain, whose rule it was to keep
his men constantly at work; and, when his mate once
told him that they had done every thing, and there
was nothing further to employ them about, “Oh,”
says he, “Make them scour the anchor.”
This kind of fort, however contemptible,
is a sufficient defense against Indians, who have
no cannon. Finding ourselves now posted securely,
and having a place to retreat to on occasion, we ventur’d
out in parties to scour the adjacent country.
We met with no Indians, but we found the places on
the neighboring hills where they had lain to watch
our proceedings. There was an art in their contrivance
of those places, that seems worth mention. It
being winter, a fire was necessary for them; but a
common fire on the surface of the ground would by
its light have discovered their position at a distance.
They had therefore dug holes in the ground about
three feet diameter, and somewhat deeper; we saw where
they had with their hatchets cut off the charcoal
from the sides of burnt logs lying in the woods.
With these coals they had made small fires in the
bottom of the holes, and we observ’d among the
weeds and grass the prints of their bodies, made by
their laying all round, with their legs hanging down
in the holes to keep their feet warm, which, with
them, is an essential point. This kind of fire,
so manag’d, could not discover them, either by
its light, flame, sparks, or even smoke: it appear’d
that their number was not great, and it seems they
saw we were too many to be attacked by them with prospect
of advantage.
We had for our chaplain a zealous
Presbyterian minister, Mr. Beatty, who complained
to me that the men did not generally attend his prayers
and exhortations. When they enlisted, they were
promised, besides pay and provisions, a gill of rum
a day, which was punctually serv’d out to them,
half in the morning, and the other half in the evening;
and I observ’d they were as punctual in attending
to receive it; upon which I said to Mr. Beatty, “It
is, perhaps, below the dignity of your profession
to act as steward of the rum, but if you were to deal
it out and only just after prayers, you would have
them all about you.” He liked the tho’t,
undertook the office, and, with the help of a few
hands to measure out the liquor, executed it to satisfaction,
and never were prayers more generally and more punctually
attended; so that I thought this method preferable
to the punishment inflicted by some military laws
for non-attendance on divine service.
I had hardly finish’d this business,
and got my fort well stor’d with provisions,
when I receiv’d a letter from the governor, acquainting
me that he had call’d the Assembly, and wished
my attendance there, if the posture of affairs on
the frontiers was such that my remaining there was
no longer necessary. My friends, too, of the
Assembly, pressing me by their letters to be, if possible,
at the meeting, and my three intended forts being
now compleated, and the inhabitants contented to remain
on their farms under that protection, I resolved to
return; the more willingly, as a New England officer,
Colonel Clapham, experienced in Indian war, being
on a visit to our establishment, consented to accept
the command. I gave him a commission, and, parading
the garrison, had it read before them, and introduc’d
him to them as an officer who, from his skill in military
affairs, was much more fit to command them than myself;
and, giving them a little exhortation, took my leave.
I was escorted as far as Bethlehem, where I rested
a few days to recover from the fatigue I had undergone.
The first night, being in a good bed, I could hardly
sleep, it was so different from my hard lodging on
the floor of our hut at Gnaden wrapt only in a blanket
or two.
While at Bethlehem, I inquir’d
a little into the practice of the Moravians:
some of them had accompanied me, and all were very
kind to me. I found they work’d for a
common stock, eat at common tables, and slept in common
dormitories, great numbers together. In the
dormitories I observed loopholes, at certain distances
all along just under the ceiling, which I thought
judiciously placed for change of air. I was
at their church, where I was entertain’d with
good musick, the organ being accompanied with violins,
hautboys, flutes, clarinets, etc. I understood
that their sermons were not usually preached to mixed
congregations of men, women, and children, as is our
common practice, but that they assembled sometimes
the married men, at other times their wives, then
the young men, the young women, and the little children,
each division by itself. The sermon I heard was
to the latter, who came in and were plac’d in
rows on benches; the boys under the conduct of a young
man, their tutor, and the girls conducted by a young
woman. The discourse seem’d well adapted
to their capacities, and was deliver’d in a
pleasing, familiar manner, coaxing them, as it were,
to be good. They behav’d very orderly,
but looked pale and unhealthy, which made me suspect
they were kept too much within doors, or not allow’d
sufficient exercise.
I inquir’d concerning the Moravian
marriages, whether the report was true that they were
by lot. I was told that lots were us’d
only in particular cases; that generally, when a young
man found himself dispos’d to marry, he inform’d
the elders of his class, who consulted the elder ladies
that govern’d the young women. As these
elders of the different sexes were well acquainted
with the tempers and dispositions of their respective
pupils, they could best judge what matches were suitable,
and their judgments were generally acquiesc’d
in; but if, for example, it should happen that two
or three young women were found to be equally proper
for the young man, the lot was then recurred to.
I objected, if the matches are not made by the mutual
choice of the parties, some of them may chance to
be very unhappy. “And so they may,”
answer’d my informer, “if you let the parties
chuse for themselves;” which, indeed, I could
not deny.
Being returned to Philadelphia, I
found the association went on swimmingly, the inhabitants
that were not Quakers having pretty generally come
into it, formed themselves into companies, and chose
their captains, lieutenants, and ensigns, according
to the new law. Dr. B. visited me, and gave me
an account of the pains he had taken to spread a general
good liking to the law, and ascribed much to those
endeavors. I had had the vanity to ascribe all
to my Dialogue; however, not knowing but that he might
be in the right, I let him enjoy his opinion, which
I take to be generally the best way in such cases.
The officers, meeting, chose me to be colonel of the
regiment, which I this time accepted. I forget
how many companies we had, but we paraded about twelve
hundred well-looking men, with a company of artillery,
who had been furnished with six brass field-pieces,
which they had become so expert in the use of as to
fire twelve times in a minute. The first time
I reviewed my regiment they accompanied me to my house,
and would salute me with some rounds fired before
my door, which shook down and broke several glasses
of my electrical apparatus. And my new honour
proved not much less brittle; for all our commissions
were soon after broken by a repeal of the law in England.
During this short time of my colonelship,
being about to set out on a journey to Virginia, the
officers of my regiment took it into their heads that
it would be proper for them to escort me out of town,
as far as the Lower Ferry. Just as I was getting
on horseback they came to my door, between thirty
and forty, mounted, and all in their uniforms.
I had not been previously acquainted with the project,
or I should have prevented it, being naturally averse
to the assuming of state on any occasion; and I was
a good deal chagrin’d at their appearance, as
I could not avoid their accompanying me. What
made it worse was, that, as soon as we began to move,
they drew their swords and rode with them naked all
the way. Somebody wrote an account of this to
the proprietor, and it gave him great offense.
No such honor had been paid him when in the province,
nor to any of his governors; and he said it was only
proper to princes of the blood royal, which may be
true for aught I know, who was, and still am, ignorant
of the etiquette in such cases.
This silly affair, however, greatly
increased his rancour against me, which was before
not a little, on account of my conduct in the Assembly
respecting the exemption of his estate from taxation,
which I had always oppos’d very warmly, and
not without severe reflections on his meanness and
injustice of contending for it. He accused me
to the ministry as being the great obstacle to the
king’s service, preventing, by my influence
in the House, the proper form of the bills for raising
money, and he instanced this parade with my officers
as a proof of my having an intention to take the government
of the province out of his hands by force. He
also applied to Sir Everard Fawkener, the postmaster-general,
to deprive me of my office; but it had no other effect
than to procure from Sir Everard a gentle admonition.
Notwithstanding the continual wrangle
between the governor and the House, in which I, as
a member, had so large a share, there still subsisted
a civil intercourse between that gentleman and myself,
and we never had any personal difference. I
have sometimes since thought that his little or no
resentment against me, for the answers it was known
I drew up to his messages, might be the effect of
professional habit, and that, being bred a lawyer,
he might consider us both as merely advocates for
contending clients in a suit, he for the proprietaries
and I for the Assembly. He would, therefore,
sometimes call in a friendly way to advise with me
on difficult points, and sometimes, tho’ not
often, take my advice.
We acted in concert to supply Braddock’s
army with provisions; and, when the shocking news
arrived of his defeat, the governor sent in haste
for me, to consult with him on measures for preventing
the desertion of the back counties. I forget
now the advice I gave; but I think it was, that Dunbar
should be written to, and prevail’d with, if
possible, to post his troops on the frontiers for their
protection, till, by re-enforcements from the colonies,
he might be able to proceed on the expedition.
And, after my return from the frontier, he would
have had me undertake the conduct of such an expedition
with provincial troops, for the reduction of Fort
Duquesne, Dunbar and his men being otherwise employed;
and he proposed to commission me as general.
I had not so good an opinion of my military abilities
as he profess’d to have, and I believe his professions
must have exceeded his real sentiments; but probably
he might think that my popularity would facilitate
the raising of the men, and my influence in Assembly,
the grant of money to pay them, and that, perhaps,
without taxing the proprietary estate. Finding
me not so forward to engage as he expected, the project
was dropt, and he soon after left the government,
being superseded by Captain Denny.
Before I proceed in relating the part
I had in public affairs under this new governor’s
administration, it may not be amiss here to give some
account of the rise and progress of my philosophical
reputation.
In 1746, being at Boston, I met there
with a Dr. Spence, who was lately arrived from Scotland,
and show’d me some electric experiments.
They were imperfectly perform’d, as he was
not very expert; but, being on a subject quite new
to me, they equally surpris’d and pleased me.
Soon after my return to Philadelphia, our library
company receiv’d from Mr. P. Collinson, Fellow
of the Royal Society of London, a present of a glass
tube, with some account of the use of it in making
such experiments. I eagerly seized the opportunity
of repeating what I had seen at Boston; and, by much
practice, acquir’d great readiness in performing
those, also, which we had an account of from England,
adding a number of new ones. I say much practice,
for my house was continually full, for some time,
with people who came to see these new wonders.
To divide a little this incumbrance
among my friends, I caused a number of similar tubes
to be blown at our glass-house, with which they furnish’d
themselves, so that we had at length several performers.
Among these, the principal was Mr. Kinnersley, an ingenious
neighbor, who, being out of business, I encouraged
to undertake showing the experiments for money, and
drew up for him two lectures, in which the experiments
were rang’d in such order, and accompanied with
such explanations in such method, as that the foregoing
should assist in comprehending the following.
He procur’d an elegant apparatus for the purpose,
in which all the little machines that I had roughly
made for myself were nicely form’d by instrument-makers.
His lectures were well attended, and gave great satisfaction;
and after some time he went thro’ the colonies,
exhibiting them in every capital town, and pick’d
up some money. In the West India islands, indeed,
it was with difficulty the experiments could be made,
from the general moisture of the air.
Oblig’d as we were to Mr. Collinson
for his present of the tube, etc., I thought
it right he should be inform’d of our success
in using it, and wrote him several letters containing
accounts of our experiments. He got them read
in the Royal Society, where they were not at first
thought worth so much notice as to be printed in their
Transactions. One paper, which I wrote for Mr.
Kinnersley, on the sameness of lightning with electricity,
I sent to Dr. Mitchel, an acquaintance of mine, and
one of the members also of that society, who wrote
me word that it had been read, but was laughed at
by the connoisseurs. The papers, however, being
shown to Dr. Fothergill, he thought them of too much
value to be stifled, and advis’d the printing
of them. Mr. Collinson then gave them to Cave
for publication in his Gentleman’s Magazine;
but he chose to print them separately in a pamphlet,
and Dr. Fothergill wrote the preface. Cave,
it seems, judged rightly for his profit, for by the
additions that arrived afterward they swell’d
to a quarto volume, which has had five editions, and
cost him nothing for copy-money.
It was, however, some time before
those papers were much taken notice of in England.
A copy of them happening to fall into the hands of
the Count de Buffon, a philosopher deservedly of great
reputation in France, and, indeed, all over Europe,
he prevailed with M. Dalibard to translate them into
French, and they were printed at Paris. The
publication offended the Abbe Nollet, preceptor in
Natural Philosophy to the royal family, and an able
experimenter, who had form’d and publish’d
a theory of electricity, which then had the general
vogue. He could not at first believe that such
a work came from America, and said it must have been
fabricated by his enemies at Paris, to decry his system.
Afterwards, having been assur’d that there really
existed such a person as Franklin at Philadelphia,
which he had doubted, he wrote and published a volume
of Letters, chiefly address’d to me, defending
his theory, and denying the verity of my experiments,
and of the positions deduc’d from them.
I once purpos’d answering the
abbe, and actually began the answer; but, on consideration
that my writings contain’d a description of
experiments which any one might repeat and verify,
and if not to be verifi’d, could not be defended;
or of observations offer’d as conjectures, and
not delivered dogmatically, therefore not laying me
under any obligation to defend them; and reflecting
that a dispute between two persons, writing in different
languages, might be lengthened greatly by mistranslations,
and thence misconceptions of one another’s meaning,
much of one of the abbé’s letters being
founded on an error in the translation, I concluded
to let my papers shift for themselves, believing it
was better to spend what time I could spare from public
business in making new experiments, than in disputing
about those already made. I therefore never
answered M. Nollet, and the event gave me no cause
to repent my silence; for my friend M. lé Roy,
of the Royal Academy of Sciences, took up my cause
and refuted him; my book was translated into the Italian,
German, and Latin languages; and the doctrine it contain’d
was by degrees universally adopted by the philosophers
of Europe, in preference to that of the abbe; so that
he lived to see himself the last of his sect, except
Monsieur B , of Paris, his élève
and immediate disciple.
What gave my book the more sudden
and general celebrity, was the success of one of its
proposed experiments, made by Messrs. Dalibard and
De Lor at Marly, for drawing lightning from the clouds.
This engag’d the public attention every where.
M. de Lor, who had an apparatus for experimental
philosophy, and lectur’d in that branch of science,
undertook to repeat what he called the Philadelphia
Experiments; and, after they were performed before
the king and court, all the curious of Paris flocked
to see them. I will not swell this narrative
with an account of that capital experiment, nor of
the infinite pleasure I receiv’d in the success
of a similar one I made soon after with a kite at
Philadelphia, as both are to be found in the histories
of electricity.
Dr. Wright, an English physician,
when at Paris, wrote to a friend, who was of the Royal
Society, an account of the high esteem my experiments
were in among the learned abroad, and of their wonder
that my writings had been so little noticed in England.
The society, on this, resum’d the consideration
of the letters that had been read to them; and the
celebrated Dr. Watson drew up a summary account of
them, and of all I had afterwards sent to England
on the subject, which he accompanied with some praise
of the writer. This summary was then printed
in their Transactions; and some members of the society
in London, particularly the very ingenious Mr. Canton,
having verified the experiment of procuring lightning
from the clouds by a pointed rod, and acquainting
them with the success, they soon made me more than
amends for the slight with which they had before treated
me. Without my having made any application for
that honor, they chose me a member, and voted that
I should be excus’d the customary payments, which
would have amounted to twenty-five guineas; and ever
since have given me their Transactions gratis.
They also presented me with the gold medal of Sir
Godfrey Copley for the year 1753, the delivery of
which was accompanied by a very handsome speech of
the president, Lord Macclesfield, wherein I was highly
honoured.
Our new governor, Captain Denny, brought
over for me the before-mentioned medal from the Royal
Society, which he presented to me at an entertainment
given him by the city. He accompanied it with
very polite expressions of his esteem for me, having,
as he said, been long acquainted with my character.
After dinner, when the company, as was customary
at that time, were engag’d in drinking, he took
me aside into another room, and acquainted me that
he had been advis’d by his friends in England
to cultivate a friendship with me, as one who was capable
of giving him the best advice, and of contributing
most effectually to the making his administration
easy; that he therefore desired of all things to have
a good understanding with me, and he begg’d me
to be assur’d of his readiness on all occasions
to render me every service that might be in his power.
He said much to me, also, of the proprietor’s
good disposition towards the province, and of the
advantage it might be to us all, and to me in particular,
if the opposition that had been so long continu’d
to his measures was dropt, and harmony restor’d
between him and the people; in effecting which, it
was thought no one could be more serviceable than
myself; and I might depend on adequate acknowledgments
and recompenses, etc., etc. The drinkers,
finding we did not return immediately to the table,
sent us a decanter of Madeira, which the governor
made liberal use of, and in proportion became more
profuse of his solicitations and promises.
My answers were to this purpose:
that my circumstances, thanks to God, were such as
to make proprietary favours unnecessary to me; and
that, being a member of the Assembly, I could not
possibly accept of any; that, however, I had no personal
enmity to the proprietary, and that, whenever the
public measures he propos’d should appear to
be for the good of the people, no one should espouse
and forward them more zealously than myself; my past
opposition having been founded on this, that the measures
which had been urged were evidently intended to serve
the proprietary interest, with great prejudice to that
of the people; that I was much obliged to him (the
governor) for his professions of regard to me, and
that he might rely on every thing in my power to make
his administration as easy as possible, hoping at the
same time that he had not brought with him the same
unfortunate instruction his predecessor had been hamper’d
with.
On this he did not then explain himself;
but when he afterwards came to do business with the
Assembly, they appear’d again, the disputes were
renewed, and I was as active as ever in the opposition,
being the penman, first, of the request to have a
communication of the instructions, and then of the
remarks upon them, which may be found in the votes
of the time, and in the Historical Review I afterward
publish’d. But between us personally no
enmity arose; we were often together; he was a man
of letters, had seen much of the world, and was very
entertaining and pleasing in conversation. He
gave me the first information that my old friend Jas.
Ralph was still alive; that he was esteem’d
one of the best political writers in England; had been
employ’d in the dispute between Prince Frederic
and the king, and had obtain’d a pension of
three hundred a year; that his reputation was indeed
small as a poet, Pope having damned his poetry in the
Dunciad; but his prose was thought as good as any
man’s.
I had agreed with Captain Morris,
of the paquet at New York, for my passage, and
my stores were put on board, when Lord Loudoun arriv’d
at Philadelphia, expressly, as he told me, to endeavor
an accommodation between the governor and Assembly,
that his majesty’s service might not be obstructed
by their dissensions. Accordingly, he desir’d
the governor and myself to meet him, that he might
hear what was to be said on both sides. We met
and discuss’d the business. In behalf of
the Assembly, I urg’d all the various arguments
that may be found in the public papers of that time,
which were of my writing, and are printed with the
minutes of the Assembly; and the governor pleaded his
instructions; the bond he had given to observe them,
and his ruin if he disobey’d, yet seemed not
unwilling to hazard himself if Lord Loudoun would
advise it. This his lordship did not chuse to
do, though I once thought I had nearly prevail’d
with him to do it; but finally he rather chose to
urge the compliance of the Assembly; and he entreated
me to use my endeavours with them for that purpose,
declaring that he would spare none of the king’s
troops for the defense of our frontiers, and that,
if we did not continue to provide for that defense
ourselves, they must remain expos’d to the enemy.
I acquainted the House with what had
pass’d, and, presenting them with a set of resolutions
I had drawn up, declaring our rights, and that we
did not relinquish our claim to those rights, but only
suspended the exercise of them on this occasion thro’
force, against which we protested, they at length
agreed to drop that bill, and frame another conformable
to the proprietary instructions. This of course
the governor pass’d, and I was then at liberty
to proceed on my voyage. But, in the meantime,
the paquet had sailed with my sea-stores, which
was some loss to me, and my only recompense was his
lordship’s thanks for my service, all the credit
of obtaining the accommodation falling to his share.
He set out for New York before me;
and, as the time for dispatching the paquet-boats
was at his disposition, and there were two then remaining
there, one of which, he said, was to sail very soon,
I requested to know the precise time, that I might
not miss her by any delay of mine. His answer
was, “I have given out that she is to sail on
Saturday next; but I may let you know, entre
nous, that if you are there by Monday morning,
you will be in time, but do not delay longer.”
By some accidental hinderance at a ferry, it was
Monday noon before I arrived, and I was much afraid
she might have sailed, as the wind was fair; but I
was soon made easy by the information that she was
still in the harbor, and would not move till the next
day. One would imagine that I was now on the
very point of departing for Europe. I thought
so; but I was not then so well acquainted with his
lordship’s character, of which indecision was
one of the strongest features. I shall give some
instances. It was about the beginning of April
that I came to New York, and I think it was near the
end of June before we sail’d. There were
then two of the paquet-boats, which had been long
in port, but were detained for the general’s
letters, which were always to be ready to-morrow.
Another paquet arriv’d; she too was detain’d;
and, before we sail’d, a fourth was expected.
Ours was the first to be dispatch’d, as having
been there longest. Passengers were engag’d
in all, and some extremely impatient to be gone, and
the merchants uneasy about their letters, and the
orders they had given for insurance (it being war
time) for fall goods! but their anxiety avail’d
nothing; his lordship’s letters were not ready;
and yet whoever waited on him found him always at
his desk, pen in hand, and concluded he must needs
write abundantly.
Going myself one morning to pay my
respects, I found in his antechamber one Innis, a
messenger of Philadelphia, who had come from thence
express with a paquet from Governor Denny for
the General. He delivered to me some letters
from my friends there, which occasion’d my inquiring
when he was to return, and where be lodg’d, that
I might send some letters by him. He told me
he was order’d to call to-morrow at nine for
the general’s answer to the governor, and should
set off immediately. I put my letters into his
hands the same day. A fortnight after I met
him again in the same place. “So, you are
soon return’d, Innis?” “Returned!
no, I am not gone yet.” “How so?”
“I have called here by order every morning
these two weeks past for his lordship’s letter,
and it is not yet ready.” “Is it possible,
when he is so great a writer? for I see him constantly
at his escritoire.” “Yes,”
says Innis, “but he is like St. George on the
signs, always on horseback, and never rides on!”
This observation of the messenger was, it seems, well
founded; for, when in England, I understood that Mr.
Pitt gave it as one reason for removing this general,
and sending Generals Amherst and Wolfe, that the minister
never heard from him, and could not know what he was
doing.
This daily expectation of sailing,
and all the three paquets going down to Sandy
Hook, to join the fleet there, the passengers thought
it best to be on board, lest by a sudden order the
ships should sail, and they be left behind.
There, if I remember right, we were about six weeks,
consuming our sea-stores, and oblig’d to procure
more. At length the fleet sail’d, the
General and all his army on board, bound to Louisburg,
with intent to besiege and take that fortress; all
the paquet-boats in company ordered to attend
the General’s ship, ready to receive his dispatches
when they should be ready. We were out five
days before we got a letter with leave to part, and
then our ship quitted the fleet and steered for England.
The other two paquets he still detained, carried
them with him to Halifax, where he stayed some time
to exercise the men in sham attacks upon sham forts,
then alter’d his mind as to besieging Louisburg,
and return’d to New York, with all his troops,
together with the two paquets above mentioned,
and all their passengers! During his absence
the French and savages had taken Fort George, on the
frontier of that province, and the savages had massacred
many of the garrison after capitulation.
I saw afterwards in London Captain
Bonnell, who commanded one of those paquets.
He told me that, when he had been detain’d a
month, he acquainted his lordship that his ship was
grown foul, to a degree that must necessarily hinder
her fast sailing, a point of consequence for a paquet-boat,
and requested an allowance of time to heave her down
and clean her bottom. He was asked how long
time that would require. He answer’d,
three days. The general replied, “If you
can do it in one day, I give leave; otherwise not;
for you must certainly sail the day after to-morrow.”
So he never obtain’d leave, though detained
afterwards from day to day during full three months.
I saw also in London one of Bonnell’s
passengers, who was so enrag’d against his lordship
for deceiving and detaining him so long at New York,
and then carrying him to Halifax and back again, that
he swore he would sue for damages. Whether he
did or not, I never heard; but, as he represented
the injury to his affairs, it was very considerable.
On the whole, I wonder’d much
how such a man came to be intrusted with so important
a business as the conduct of a great army; but, having
since seen more of the great world, and the means of
obtaining, and motives for giving places, my wonder
is diminished. General Shirley, on whom the
command of the army devolved upon the death of Braddock,
would, in my opinion, if continued in place, have made
a much better campaign than that of Loudoun in 1757,
which was frivolous, expensive, and disgraceful to
our nation beyond conception; for, tho’ Shirley
was not a bred soldier, he was sensible and sagacious
in himself, and attentive to good advice from others,
capable of forming judicious plans, and quick and
active in carrying them into execution. Loudoun,
instead of defending the colonies with his great army,
left them totally expos’d while he paraded idly
at Halifax, by which means Fort George was lost, besides,
he derang’d all our mercantile operations, and
distress’d our trade, by a long embargo on the
exportation of provisions, on pretence of keeping
supplies from being obtain’d by the enemy, but
in reality for beating down their price in favor of
the contractors, in whose profits, it was said, perhaps
from suspicion only, he had a share. And, when
at length the embargo was taken off, by neglecting
to send notice of it to Charlestown, the Carolina fleet
was detain’d near three months longer, whereby
their bottoms were so much damaged by the worm that
a great part of them foundered in their passage home.
Shirley was, I believe, sincerely
glad of being relieved from so burdensome a charge
as the conduct of an army must be to a man unacquainted
with military business. I was at the entertainment
given by the city of New York to Lord Loudoun, on
his taking upon him the command. Shirley, tho’
thereby superseded, was present also. There
was a great company of officers, citizens, and strangers,
and, some chairs having been borrowed in the neighborhood,
there was one among them very low, which fell to the
lot of Mr. Shirley. Perceiving it as I sat by
him, I said, “They have given you, sir, too low
a seat.” “No matter,” says
he, “Mr. Franklin, I find a low seat the easiest.”
While I was, as afore mention’d,
detain’d at New York, I receiv’d all the
accounts of the provisions, etc., that I had furnish’d
to Braddock, some of which accounts could not sooner
be obtain’d from the different persons I had
employ’d to assist in the business. I presented
them to Lord Loudoun, desiring to be paid the ballance.
He caus’d them to be regularly examined by
the proper officer, who, after comparing every article
with its voucher, certified them to be right; and the
balance due for which his lordship promis’d
to give me an order on the paymaster. This was,
however, put off from time to time; and, tho’
I call’d often for it by appointment, I did
not get it. At length, just before my departure,
he told me he had, on better consideration, concluded
not to mix his accounts with those of his predecessors.
“And you,” says he, “when in England,
have only to exhibit your accounts at the treasury,
and you will be paid immediately.”
I mention’d, but without effect,
the great and unexpected expense I had been put to
by being detain’d so long at New York, as a reason
for my desiring to be presently paid; and on my observing
that it was not right I should be put to any further
trouble or delay in obtaining the money I had advanc’d,
as I charged no commission for my service, “O,
sir,” says he, “you must not think of persuading
us that you are no gainer; we understand better those
affairs, and know that every one concerned in supplying
the army finds means, in the doing it, to fill his
own pockets.” I assur’d him that
was not my case, and that I had not pocketed a farthing;
but he appear’d clearly not to believe me; and,
indeed, I have since learnt that immense fortunes are
often made in such employments. As to my ballance,
I am not paid it to this day, of which more hereafter.
Our captain of the paquet had
boasted much, before we sailed, of the swiftness of
his ship; unfortunately, when we came to sea, she proved
the dullest of ninety-six sail, to his no small mortification.
After many conjectures respecting the cause, when
we were near another ship almost as dull as ours,
which, however, gain’d upon us, the captain
ordered all hands to come aft, and stand as near the
ensign staff as possible. We were, passengers
included, about forty persons. While we stood
there, the ship mended her pace, and soon left her
neighbour far behind, which prov’d clearly what
our captain suspected, that she was loaded too much
by the head. The casks of water, it seems, had
been all plac’d forward; these he therefore
order’d to be mov’d further aft, on which
the ship recover’d her character, and proved
the sailer in the fleet.
The captain said she had once gone
at the rate of thirteen knots, which is accounted
thirteen miles per hour. We had on board, as
a passenger, Captain Kennedy, of the Navy, who contended
that it was impossible, and that no ship ever sailed
so fast, and that there must have been some error
in the division of the log-line, or some mistake in
heaving the log. A wager ensu’d between
the two captains, to be decided when there should
be sufficient wind. Kennedy thereupon examin’d
rigorously the log-line, and, being satisfi’d
with that, he determin’d to throw the log himself.
Accordingly some days after, when the wind blew very
fair and fresh, and the captain of the paquet,
Lutwidge, said he believ’d she then went at
the rate of thirteen knots, Kennedy made the experiment,
and own’d his wager lost.
The above fact I give for the sake
of the following observation. It has been remark’d,
as an imperfection in the art of ship-building, that
it can never be known, till she is tried, whether a
new ship will or will not be a good sailer; for that
the model of a good-sailing ship has been exactly
follow’d in a new one, which has prov’d,
on the contrary, remarkably dull. I apprehend
that this may partly be occasion’d by the different
opinions of seamen respecting the modes of lading,
rigging, and sailing of a ship; each has his system;
and the same vessel, laden by the judgment and orders
of one captain, shall sail better or worse than when
by the orders of another. Besides, it scarce
ever happens that a ship is form’d, fitted for
the sea, and sail’d by the same person.
One man builds the hull, another rigs her, a third
lades and sails her. No one of these has the
advantage of knowing all the ideas and experience
of the others, and, therefore, can not draw just conclusions
from a combination of the whole.
Even in the simple operation of sailing
when at sea, I have often observ’d different
judgments in the officers who commanded the successive
watches, the wind being the same. One would have
the sails trimm’d sharper or flatter than another,
so that they seem’d to have no certain rule
to govern by. Yet I think a set of experiments
might be instituted, first, to determine the most
proper form of the hull for swift sailing; next, the
best dimensions and properest place for the masts:
then the form and quantity of sails, and their position,
as the wind may be; and, lastly, the disposition of
the lading. This is an age of experiments, and
I think a set accurately made and combin’d would
be of great use. I am persuaded, therefore, that
ere long some ingenious philosopher will undertake
it, to whom I wish success.
We were several times chas’d
in our passage, but outsail’d every thing, and
in thirty days had soundings. We had a good observation,
and the captain judg’d himself so near our port,
Falmouth, that, if we made a good run in the night,
we might be off the mouth of that harbor in the morning,
and by running in the night might escape the notice
of the enemy’s privateers, who often crus’d
near the entrance of the channel. Accordingly,
all the sail was set that we could possibly make, and
the wind being very fresh and fair, we went right
before it, and made great way. The captain,
after his observation, shap’d his course, as
he thought, so as to pass wide of the Scilly Isles;
but it seems there is sometimes a strong indraught
setting up St. George’s Channel, which deceives
seamen and caused the loss of Sir Cloudesley Shovel’s
squadron. This indraught was probably the cause
of what happened to us.
We had a watchman plac’d in
the bow, to whom they often called, “Look well
out before there,” and he as often answered,
“Ay ay;” but perhaps had his eyes shut,
and was half asleep at the time, they sometimes answering,
as is said, mechanically; for he did not see a light
just before us, which had been hid by the studdingsails
from the man at the helm, and from the rest of the
watch, but by an accidental yaw of the ship was discover’d,
and occasion’d a great alarm, we being very near
it, the light appearing to me as big as a cart-wheel.
It was midnight, and our captain fast asleep; but
Captain Kennedy, jumping upon deck, and seeing the
danger, ordered the ship to wear round, all sails
standing; an operation dangerous to the masts, but
it carried us clear, and we escaped shipwreck, for
we were running right upon the rocks on which the
light-house was erected. This deliverance impressed
me strongly with the utility of light-houses, and
made me resolve to encourage the building more of
them in America, if I should live to return there.
In the morning it was found by the
soundings, etc., that we were near our port,
but a thick fog hid the land from our sight.
About nine o’clock the fog began to rise, and
seem’d to be lifted up from the water like the
curtain at a play-house, discovering underneath, the
town of Falmouth, the vessels in its harbor, and the
fields that surrounded it. This was a most pleasing
spectacle to those who had been so long without any
other prospects than the uniform view of a vacant
ocean, and it gave us the more pleasure as we were
now free from the anxieties which the state of war
occasion’d.
I set out immediately, with my son,
for London, and we only stopt a little by the way
to view Stonehenge on Salisbury Plain, and Lord Pembroke’s
house and gardens, with his very curious antiquities
at Wilton. We arrived in London the 27th of
July, 1757.
As soon as I was settled
in a lodging Mr. Charles had provided for me, I went
to visit Dr. Fothergill, to whom I was strongly recommended,
and whose counsel respecting my proceedings I was
advis’d to obtain. He was against an immediate
complaint to government, and thought the proprietaries
should first be personally appli’d to, who might
possibly be induc’d by the interposition and
persuasion of some private friends, to accommodate
matters amicably. I then waited on my old friend
and correspondent, Mr. Peter Collinson, who told me
that John Hanbury, the great Virginia merchant, had
requested to be informed when I should arrive, that
he might carry me to Lord Granville’s, who was
then President of the Council and wished to see me
as soon as possible. I agreed to go with him
the next morning. Accordingly Mr. Hanbury called
for me and took me in his carriage to that nobleman’s,
who receiv’d me with great civility; and after
some questions respecting the present state of affairs
in America and discourse thereupon, he said to me:
“You Americans have wrong ideas of the nature
of your constitution; you contend that the king’s
instructions to his governors are not laws, and think
yourselves at liberty to regard or disregard them at
your own discretion. But those instructions
are not like the pocket instructions given to a minister
going abroad, for regulating his conduct in some trifling
point of ceremony. They are first drawn up by
judges learned in the laws; they are then considered,
debated, and perhaps amended in Council, after which
they are signed by the king. They are then, so
far as they relate to you, the law of the land, for
the king is the legislator of the colonies.”
I told his lordship this was new doctrine to me.
I had always understood from our charters that our
laws were to be made by our Assemblies, to be presented
indeed to the king for his royal assent, but that
being once given the king could not repeal or alter
them. And as the Assemblies could not make permanent
laws without his assent, so neither could he make a
law for them without theirs. He assur’d
me I was totally mistaken. I did not think so,
however, and his lordship’s conversation having
a little alarm’d me as to what might be the
sentiments of the court concerning us, I wrote it
down as soon as I return’d to my lodgings.
I recollected that about 20 years before, a clause
in a bill brought into Parliament by the ministry
had propos’d to make the king’s instructions
laws in the colonies, but the clause was thrown out
by the Commons, for which we adored them as our friends
and friends of liberty, till by their conduct towards
us in 1765 it seem’d that they had refus’d
that point of sovereignty to the king only that they
might reserve it for themselves.
After some days, Dr. Fothergill having
spoken to the proprietaries, they agreed to a meeting
with me at Mr. T. Penn’s house in Spring Garden.
The conversation at first consisted of mutual declarations
of disposition to reasonable accommodations, but I
suppose each party had its own ideas of what should
be meant by reasonable. We then went into consideration
of our several points of complaint, which I enumerated.
The proprietaries justify’d their conduct as
well as they could, and I the Assembly’s.
We now appeared very wide, and so far from each other
in our opinions as to discourage all hope of agreement.
However, it was concluded that I should give them
the heads of our complaints in writing, and they promis’d
then to consider them. I did so soon after,
but they put the paper into the hands of their solicitor,
Ferdinand John Paris, who managed for them all their
law business in their great suit with the neighbouring
proprietary of Maryland, Lord Baltimore, which had
subsisted 70 years, and wrote for them all their papers
and messages in their dispute with the Assembly.
He was a proud, angry man, and as I had occasionally
in the answers of the Assembly treated his papers
with some severity, they being really weak in point
of argument and haughty in expression, he had conceived
a mortal enmity to me, which discovering itself whenever
we met, I declin’d the proprietary’s proposal
that he and I should discuss the heads of complaint
between our two selves, and refus’d treating
with any one but them. They then by his advice
put the paper into the hands of the Attorney and Solicitor-General
for their opinion and counsel upon it, where it lay
unanswered a year wanting eight days, during which
time I made frequent demands of an answer from the
proprietaries, but without obtaining any other than
that they had not yet received the opinion of the
Attorney and Solicitor-General. What it was when
they did receive it I never learnt, for they did not
communicate it to me, but sent a long message to the
Assembly drawn and signed by Paris, reciting my paper,
complaining of its want of formality, as a rudeness
on my part, and giving a flimsy justification of their
conduct, adding that they should be willing to accommodate
matters if the Assembly would send out some person
of candour to treat with them for that purpose, intimating
thereby that I was not such.
The want of formality or rudeness
was, probably, my not having address’d the paper
to them with their assum’d titles of True and
Absolute Proprietaries of the Province of Pennsylvania,
which I omitted as not thinking it necessary in a
paper, the intention of which was only to reduce to
a certainty by writing, what in conversation I had
delivered viva voce.
But during this delay, the Assembly
having prevailed with Gov’r Denny to pass an
act taxing the proprietary estate in common with the
estates of the people, which was the grand point in
dispute, they omitted answering the message.
When this act however came over, the
proprietaries, counselled by Paris, determined to
oppose its receiving the royal assent. Accordingly
they petition’d the king in Council, and a hearing
was appointed in which two lawyers were employ’d
by them against the act, and two by me in support
of it. They alledg’d that the act was
intended to load the proprietary estate in order to
spare those of the people, and that if it were suffer’d
to continue in force, and the proprietaries who were
in odium with the people, left to their mercy in proportioning
the taxes, they would inevitably be ruined. We
reply’d that the act had no such intention,
and would have no such effect. That the assessors
were honest and discreet men under an oath to assess
fairly and equitably, and that any advantage each of
them might expect in lessening his own tax by augmenting
that of the proprietaries was too trifling to induce
them to perjure themselves. This is the purport
of what I remember as urged by both sides, except that
we insisted strongly on the mischievous consequences
that must attend a repeal, for that the money, L100,000,
being printed and given to the king’s use, expended
in his service, and now spread among the people, the
repeal would strike it dead in their hands to the
ruin of many, and the total discouragement of future
grants, and the selfishness of the proprietors in
soliciting such a general catastrophe, merely from
a groundless fear of their estate being taxed too
highly, was insisted on in the strongest terms.
On this, Lord Mansfield, one of the counsel rose,
and beckoning me took me into the clerk’s chamber,
while the lawyers were pleading, and asked me if I
was really of opinion that no injury would be done
the proprietary estate in the execution of the act.
I said certainly. “Then,” says
he, “you can have little objection to enter
into an engagement to assure that point.”
I answer’d, “None at all.”
He then call’d in Paris, and after some discourse,
his lordship’s proposition was accepted on both
sides; a paper to the purpose was drawn up by the
Clerk of the Council, which I sign’d with Mr.
Charles, who was also an Agent of the Province for
their ordinary affairs, when Lord Mansfield returned
to the Council Chamber, where finally the law was
allowed to pass. Some changes were however recommended
and we also engaged they should be made by a subsequent
law, but the Assembly did not think them necessary;
for one year’s tax having been levied by the
act before the order of Council arrived, they appointed
a committee to examine the proceedings of the assessors,
and on this committee they put several particular
friends of the proprietaries. After a full enquiry,
they unanimously sign’d a report that they found
the tax had been assess’d with perfect equity.
The Assembly looked into my entering
into the first part of the engagement, as an essential
service to the Province, since it secured the credit
of the paper money then spread over all the country.
They gave me their thanks in form when I return’d.
But the proprietaries were enraged at Governor Denny
for having pass’d the act, and turn’d
him out with threats of suing him for breach of instructions
which he had given bond to observe. He, however,
having done it at the instance of the General, and
for His Majesty’s service, and having some powerful
interest at court, despis’d the threats and they
were never put in execution. . . . [Unfinished].