<h2><SPAN name="c4"></SPAN><span>4</span> <br/><span>THE CIVIC-MINDED CITIZEN</span></h2>
<p>There were two children in the Franklin family now. The
first was William, the other, Francis Folger, whom the father
called Franky. He was proud of his sons. He had reason to
want to be a good example to them.</p>
<p>One day he drew up a list of thirteen “virtues” as follows:</p>
<div class="verse">
<p class="t0">Temperance (eat not to dullness; drink not to elevation)</p>
<p class="t0">Silence (speak not but what may benefit others or yourself)</p>
<p class="t0">Order</p>
<p class="t0">Resolution (perform without fail what you resolve)</p>
<p class="t0">Frugality</p>
<p class="t0">Industry</p>
<p class="t0">Sincerity</p>
<p class="t0">Justice (wrong none by doing injuries)</p>
<p class="t0">Moderation</p>
<p class="t0">Cleanliness</p>
<p class="t0">Tranquillity</p>
<p class="t0">Chastity</p>
<p class="t0">Humility (imitate Jesus and Socrates)</p>
</div>
<p>Franklin’s ambitious project was to try to achieve all these
virtues, thus to approach as near as possible moral perfection.
This was no New Year’s Resolution to be lightly made and
quickly forgotten. He purchased a small notebook, ruled the
pages with red ink, making seven vertical columns, one for
each day of the week, and thirteen horizontal columns, one
for each virtue.</p>
<p>Each time he felt he had failed to practice one of his virtues
he made a black mark in the proper square. Thus if he put a
cross in the Tuesday column opposite Silence, he judged he
had that day talked too much about trivial matters. The thirteenth
virtue, Humility, suggested by a Quaker friend, was a
check on the others; if he was proud of his mastery over any
of his virtues, he would be lacking in humility.</p>
<p>He kept this notebook regularly for a long time. The virtue
which gave him most trouble was Order (let all your things
have their places; let each part of your business have its time).
Eventually he had to decide that he was not an orderly person
and never would be. Nor did he ever claim that he achieved
anywhere near “moral perfection” in any of the others, although
he did give credit years later to his daily discipline for
“the constant felicity of my life.”</p>
<p>It is unlikely that in any other part of the world a grown
and prospering businessman would have resolved to make himself
more virtuous, with all the diligence of a schoolboy
attacking a problem in arithmetic. His act was typically
American. The colonies were young and growing and pliable,
not old and set in their ways like the European nations. Young
countries, like young people, harbor the seeds of idealism,
yearnings for greatness, deep-rooted desires to be better in
any or every sphere of activity than their predecessors or contemporaries.
The youthful spirit that was part and parcel of
America remained with Benjamin Franklin to the end of his
days.</p>
<p>He was always trying to enlarge his mental horizons. For
that aim he taught himself French, Italian, Spanish, and German,
not yet dreaming that he would ever have practical use
for these languages. He was at the same time widening his
business activities, starting a branch of his printing shop in
Charleston, South Carolina, on a partnership arrangement. It
was the first of many branches.</p>
<p>In 1733, after an absence of ten years, he went back to
Boston to see his family. His parents were well but there were
some sad changes. Four of his sisters and one of his brothers
had died. Jane, his beautiful young sister, closer to him than
anyone else in the family, had been married for six years to
a saddler named Edward Mecom, and had two boys, but her
husband was in poor health and her children were also sickly.
Tragedy had cast its first shadow over her. She would in the
years to come lose her husband and twelve children, two of
them dying insane, as the result of some unknown inherited
sickness.</p>
<p>James was living in Newport, and on his way back to
Philadelphia, Franklin paid this older brother a visit. Their reunion
was cordial and old differences were ignored if not
forgotten. James too was sick and knew that death was not
far away. His former apprentice promised to take care of
James’ son and teach him the printing business. When James
died two years later, Franklin sent the boy to school for five
years and then took him into his home as an apprentice, thus
making James “ample amends for the service I had depriv’d
him of by leaving him so early.”</p>
<p>All his life he would be giving aid—jobs, partnerships, loans,
gifts and, less welcome, advice—to his family, his in-laws, his
nieces, nephews, friends, and children of friends. The assistance
was sometimes unappreciated and seldom rewarded. It
played havoc with virtue number four, Frugality. Nor, as he
had omitted the virtue of generosity from his list, did he ever
give himself any good marks for such services.</p>
<p>Sorrow struck him personally on November 21, 1736, when
Francis Folger, a grave and sweet-faced lad of four, died of
smallpox. In the midst of his terrible grief, Franklin refuted a
false rumor. It was not true, he wrote in the <i>Gazette</i>, that his
boy had died as the result of smallpox inoculation. Had he
been inoculated, his life might have been spared. He felt it
important that his readers should know that he considered
inoculation “a safe and beneficial practice.”</p>
<p>The year of his son’s death, he was appointed clerk to the
Pennsylvania Assembly, and the following year he was made
postmaster of Philadelphia. These were his first official positions,
and there was pay and prestige attached to both. What
matter if the Assembly sessions were so tedious he worked out
mathematical puzzles to keep himself awake, and that his home
on High Street now housed the city post office in addition to
the Franklins, various relatives of both of them for varying
lengths of times, servants, apprentices, and on occasion
journeymen who had no other lodgings.</p>
<p>He had six of these workmen now, including a Swede and
a German, which made it possible to print in those languages.
They were all kept busy. He was public printer for Delaware,
New Jersey and Maryland. Besides the <i>Almanack</i> and
the <i>Gazette</i>, a number of books were coming off the High
Street presses: Cato’s <i>Moral Distichs; The Constitution of the
Free-Masons</i>, the first Masonic book printed in America;
Cadwallader Colden’s <i>An Explication of the First Causes of
Motion in Matter</i>; and Richardson’s <i>Pamela</i>, the first novel
printed in America.</p>
<p>Their stationer’s shop now sold books as well as an astounding
range of miscellany: goose quills, chocolate, cordials,
cheese, codfish, compasses, scarlet broadcloth, four-wheeled
chaises, Seneca rattlesnake root with directions on how to use
it for pleurisy, ointments and salves for the “itch” and other
ailments, made by the Widow Read, Debby’s mother, and fine
green Crown soap, unique in the colonies, produced by
Franklin’s brothers John and Peter who had learned the secret
of its composition from their father.</p>
<p>In all this hustle and bustle, Franklin reigned as instigator
and executor. He was a little heavier, his brown hair somewhat
thinner, his face more mature, and his manner more calm and
assured, but in his eyes was the same merriment of the Boston
youth. Around the house and shop, he dressed in working
clothes, red flannel shirt, leather breeches, and his old leather
apron.</p>
<p>For meetings of the Masons or for dinners with prominent
Philadelphians who were now demanding his company, he had
more elegant attire. On such occasions he might wear his best
black cloth breeches, velvet jacket, a Holland shirt with
ruffles at the wrist and neck, calfskin shoes, high-quality
worsted stockings, and a fashionable wig.</p>
<p>Debby never accompanied him to such affairs, nor would
she have been comfortable if she had done so. The years of
their marriage had put a wider social and intellectual gap
between them. While Franklin had cultivated his mental
powers and learned to speak as an equal to anyone, she was
the same Debby he had married, grown older and plumper.
Her voice was still rough, her language uncouth, her manners
hearty, and her taste in clothes flamboyant. He never tried to
change her. He appreciated her loyalty, her industry, her
warm heart, and asked for nothing more. “My plain Country
Joan,” he called her in a ballad he wrote and sang for the
members of the Junto:</p>
<div class="verse">
<p class="t0">Of their Chloes and Phyllises poets may prate,</p>
<p class="t">I sing my plain Country Joan,</p>
<p class="t0">These twelve years my wife, still the joy of my life,</p>
<p class="t">Blest day that I made her my own.</p>
</div>
<p>As for Debby, had anyone told her that her husband would
one day be among the most famous men in the world, she
would have laughed in his face. Not her “Pappy”—as she always
called him. Not that he wasn’t the best of husbands, a
good provider, and really handy at doing things around the
house.</p>
<p>She must have clapped her hands in delight at the stove he
set up in their common room in 1740. Houses then were
mostly heated by fireplaces. Large or small, they had in common
that one was scorched on approaching the fire too closely
and chilled at the far side of the room. It was impossible for a
woman to sit by the window to sew on a winter day. Her
fingers would be too stiff with cold to hold a needle. It was
taken for granted that everyone had colds during the winter
months, especially the women, who of necessity were indoors
more than the men. There was the problem of smoke too.
With the usual fireplace, most of the smoke came into the
room instead of going up the chimney, blackening curtains
and spreading soot everywhere.</p>
<p>Franklin’s Pennsylvania Fireplace, later called the Franklin
Stove, was made of cast iron, could be taken apart and moved
easily from room to room. It spread no smoke and, most
amazingly, heated the entire room an almost equal temperature.</p>
<p>Debby’s sole complaint about her husband had to do with
the way he spoiled his son William. Ever since the death of
little Franky, he humored the boy to excess. William had a
string of private schoolmasters—one of them decamped with
Franklin’s wardrobe when William was nine. He had his own
pony, like the sons of the rich. Whatever the boy wanted, he
managed to wangle from his indulgent father. “The greatest
villain on earth,” Debby once called this clever lad. The two
of them never did get along.</p>
<p>Even William had to take second place after their first and
only daughter, Sarah, was born in 1743. Sarah would bring to
her father joy and comfort to modify the pain caused by his
son.</p>
<p>He was busy that year with a new project. In May he
issued a circular letter headed “Proposal for Promoting Useful
Knowledge Among the British Plantations in North America,”
which be mailed to men of learning throughout the colonies.
Now that the first drudgery of settling was over, he wrote,
the time had come “to cultivate the finer arts and improve the
common stock.”</p>
<p>For this purpose, he proposed formation of an organization
whose members, through meetings or by correspondence,
would exchange information on all new scientific discoveries
or inventions, and he offered his own services as secretary “till
they shall be provided with one more capable.” From this
letter grew the American Philosophical Society, which came
into being the following year. (The words “philosophical”
and “scientific” were then used as synonyms.) Its activities
were parallel to those of the famous Royal Society in London.</p>
<p>One of Franklin’s first contributions to the new society was
a paper on his “Pennsylvania Fireplace,” which he and Debby
had been enjoying several years, including diagrams and instructions
on how to install it. He refused to patent his invention:
“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.”</p>
<p>Also in 1743 he printed his “Proposal Relating to the Education
of Youth in Pennsylvania,” a pamphlet suggesting an
academy of learning to match Yale, Harvard, and William
and Mary College at Williamsburg. He launched this plan not
as his own but as coming from some “public-spirited gentlemen,”
a tactical approach he had figured out to be more
effective than using his own name.</p>
<p>The academy, he wrote, should be “not far from a river,
having a garden, orchard, meadow, and a field or two.” It
should have a library. The students—youths from eight to
sixteen—should “diet together plainly, temperately, and frugally.”
They should be trained in running, leaping, wrestling,
and swimming.</p>
<p>Subjects studied should be “those things that are likely to
be most useful and most ornamental.” All should be taught
to “write a fair hand” and to learn drawing, “a universal
language, understood by all nations.” They should learn grammar,
with Addison, Pope, and Cato’s <i>Letters</i> as models. He
stressed the importance of elocution: “pronouncing properly,
distinctly, emphatically.” The curriculum should include
mathematics, astronomy, history, geography, ancient customs,
morality, but not Latin and Greek, unless a student had “an
ardent desire to learn them.”</p>
<p>Franklin’s ideal and surprisingly modern academy was also
to teach practical matters: invention, manufactures, trade,
mechanics, “that art by which weak men perform such wonders
...,” planting and grafting. There should be “now
and then excursions made to the neighboring plantations of
the best farmers, their methods observed and reasoned upon
for the information of youth.”</p>
<p>This “Proposal” was the genesis of the University of Pennsylvania,
which in six years’ time—1749—became a reality.
(Franklin was elected first president, a post he held seven
years.)</p>
<p>Philadelphia had as yet no regular police force. Its dark and
narrow streets were in theory guarded by the local citizens,
appointed in rotation by the ward constables. Often citizens
preferred to pay the six shillings required to hire a substitute,
money which might be dissipated in drink, leaving streets unguarded,
or to pay the very ruffians against whom protection
was needed. To abolish such abuses, Franklin persuaded his
Junto members to campaign for a paid police force, which
was voted a few years later.</p>
<p>Also through the Junto, he called public attention to Philadelphia’s
fire hazards and means of avoiding them. From this
effort came the Union Fire Company, the first organized firemen
in the colonies. Subsequently, he was responsible for the
first fire insurance company in the colonies.</p>
<p>Since 1739, England had been at war with Spain, and in
1744, war with France erupted. The struggle involved the
colonies when, in July 1747, French and Spanish privateers
plundered two plantations on the Delaware River, a little
below New Castle. There were rumors of a French plan to
sack Philadelphia. The city had no defenses. The Quaker-dominated
Assembly had refused to vote money for war
purposes.</p>
<p>Seeing danger threaten, Franklin published “Plain Truth,”
a pamphlet which succeeded in convincing even the Quakers
of the need for preparedness. Under his leadership, Pennsylvania’s
first volunteer militia, with some 10,000 members,
was formed. He was offered the post of colonel in the Philadelphia
branch. He declined, preferring to serve as a common
soldier. William, now sixteen, was also in service, not in the
militia but in a company raised by the British for a campaign
against French Canada.</p>
<p>In 1748, France, Spain and England settled their difficulties
temporarily in the peace treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle. For the
time being, the colonies were free from danger of invasion or
attack. At last the Franklin family could return to normal
life.</p>
<p>He was forty-two and by the standards of the time a rich
man. Since his income was sufficient for his needs, he made up
his mind to retire. A fellow printer named David Hall took
over the management of his printing shop. Franklin moved to
a quiet part of town, at Race and Second streets, and bought a
300-acre farm in Burlington, New Jersey, where he could
practice the art of a gentleman farmer.</p>
<p>It was time, he believed, to devote the remaining years of
his life to his friends, to his writing, to the pursuit of learning.
Particularly a branch of learning that had occupied his attention
on and off for the past several years—the study of
electricity.</p>
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