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Not Your Usual Founding Father: Selected Readings from Benjamin Franklin PDF

318 Pages·2006·0.896 MB·English
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Not your usual founding father. [To view this image, refer to the print version of this title.] Not your usual founding father. Selected Readings from Benjamin Franklin Edited by Edmund S. Morgan Yale university press, new haven and london. Copyright ∫ 2006 by Yale University. All rights reserved. This book may not be reproduced, in whole or in part, including illustrations, in any form (beyond that copying permitted by Sections 107 and 108 of the U.S. Copyright Law and except by reviewers for the public press), without written permission from the publishers. Designed by Nancy Ovedovitz and set in Monotype Fournier by Keystone Typesetting, Inc. and printed in the United States of America by R. R. Donnelley & Sons. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Franklin, Benjamin, 1706–1790. Not your usual founding father : selected readings from Benjamin Franklin / edited by Edmund S. Morgan. p. cm. Includes index. isbn-13: 978-0-300-11394-5 (alk. paper) isbn-10: 0-300-11394-3 (alk. paper) 1. Franklin, Benjamin, 1706–1790—Archives. 2. Franklin, Benjamin, 1706–1790—Correspondence. 3. Franklin, Benjamin, 1706–1790—Philosophy. 4. United States—Politics and government—To 1775—Sources. 5. United States—Politics and government—1775–1783—Sources. 6. United States— Politics and government—1783–1789—Sources. 7. United States—Social life and customs—18th century—Sources. 8. Statesmen—United States—Archives. I. Morgan, Edmund Sears. II. Title. e302.f82 2006 973.3—dc22 2006045706 A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library. The paper in this book meets the guidelines for permanence and durability of the Committee on Production Guidelines for Book Longevity of the Council on Library Resources. 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 frontispiece: Jean-Antoine Houdon, Portrait bust of Benjamin Franklin (detail), 1779 To Nan Elizabeth Norene Contents. Preface xi p a r t i The Man 1 1 The Young Man and the Old Man 5 Journal of a Voyage, 1726 To George Whately, 1785 2 Friendship and Flirtation 25 Rules for Making Oneself a Disagreeable Companion, 1750 To Catharine Ray, 1755 To Mary Stevenson, 1767 To Anna Mordaunt Shipley, 1771 To Madame Brillon, 1778 Abigail Adams on Madame Helvétius, 1784 To Emma Thompson, 1777 3 The Uses of Laughter 45 The Speech of Miss Polly Baker, 1747 Leaping Whales, 1765 Remarks Concerning the Savages of North-America, ca. 1783 4 Religion 58 To Josiah and Abiah Franklin, 1738 To Joseph Huey, 1753 To Jane Mecom, 1758 p a r t i i Nature Observed 67 5 Sickness and Health 71 On the Benefits of Moist Fresh Air, 1773 On Fresh Air, 1785 The Open Window: From the Autobiography of John Adams, 1776 To Benjamin Vaughan, 1786 Mesmerism, 1784 [viii] contents 6 Wind, Weather, and Air 79 To Jared Eliot, 1750 To Peter Collinson, 1755 To Edward Nairne, 1780–83 To James Bowdoin, 1758 To Sir Joseph Banks, 1783 7 Ships and the Sea 96 On the Motion of Vessels, 1784–85 The Gulf Stream, 1784–85 Advice for Travelers, 1784–85 8 Electric Fire 112 Note on the Similarities Between Electricity and Lightning, 1749 Experiment to Determine Whether the Clouds That Contain Lightning Are Electrified, 1750 Joseph Priestley’s Account of Franklin’s Kite Experiment, 1752 How to Secure Houses, &c. from Lightning, 1753 Of Lightning, and the Method . . . of Securing Buildings and Persons from Its Mischievous E√ects, 1767 To Peter Collinson, 1753 9 Geology and Cosmology 132 To the Abbé Soulavie, 1782 Loose Thoughts on a Universal Fluid, &c., 1784–88 p a r t i i i A Continental Vision 141 10 The Colonies and the Empire 143 On Transported Felons, 1751 Felons and Rattlesnakes, 1751 Thoughts on Immigrants, 1751 Observations Concerning the Increase of Mankind, 1751 11 Ethnic Pride and Prejudice 158 Indians and Germans, 1753 To Joshua Babcock, 1772 To John Waring, 1763 The Speech of Sidi Mehemet Ibrahim, 1790 12 Join or Die 170 To James Parker, 1751 The Albany Plan of Union, 1754 The Interest of Great Britain Considered [Canada Pamphlet], 1760 contents [ix] 13 The Vision Challenged 185 To Peter Collinson, 1764 To William Franklin, 1765 Peace Is Sought by War, 1766 Franklin’s Examination Before the Committee of the House of Commons, 1766 14 The Empire at Risk 199 To David Hall, 1766 To William Shirley, 1754 On the Disputes with America, 1767 New Fables, 1770 To Samuel Cooper, 1770 An Edict by the King of Prussia, 1773 To Joseph Galloway, 1775 To David Hartley, 1775 p a r t i v War, Peace, and Humanity 219 15 Independence 221 To Jonathan Shipley, 1775 To Joseph Priestley, 1775 To Admiral Lord Howe, 1776 Sketch of Propositions for a Peace, 1776 16 Poor Richard’s Diplomacy 232 Comparison of Great Britain and America as to Credit, 1777 John Adams’s Diplomatic Blunders, 1780 17 A Huckstered Peace 242 To James Hutton, 1778 Notes for a Conversation with Richard Oswald, 1782 Proposals for Diminishing the Occasions and Mischiefs of War, 1782 Thoughts on Privateering, 1782 Thoughts Concerning the Sugar Colonies, 1782 To William Strahan, 1784 The Costs of War, 1787 18 The Pretensions of Wealth 254 Thoughts on the House of Lords, 1775 Convention Speech on Salaries, 1787 Property Rights and Human Rights, 1785 The Moral Obligation of Taxes, 1783 Queries and Remarks on ‘‘Hints for the Members of the Pennsylvania Convention,’’ 1789 19 America 271 Arthur Lee’s Conversation with Franklin About the Miracle of the Revolution, 1777 To Sarah Bache, 1784 Information to Those

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