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Essays of Benjamin Franklin

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Full text: Essays of Benjamin Franklin

Monograph

Identifikator:
1768152721
URN:
urn:nbn:de:zbw-retromon-148079
Document type:
Monograph
Title:
10 Jahre Wiederaufbau
Place of publication:
Wien
Publisher:
Wirtschaftszeitungs-Verlags-Ges. M.B.H.
Year of publication:
1928
Scope:
664 S.
Ill.
Digitisation:
2021
Collection:
Economics Books
Usage license:
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Chapter

Document type:
Monograph
Structure type:
Chapter
Title:
Die Entwicklung des Hochschulwesens im letzten Jahrzehnt / von Professor Dr. Richard Meister
Collection:
Economics Books

Contents

Table of contents

  • Essays of Benjamin Franklin
  • Title page
  • Contents
  • I. Plan for settling two western colonies in North America, with reason for the plan
  • II. The interest of Great Britain considered, with regard to her colonies and the acquisitions of Canada and Guadaloupe
  • III. Letter concerning the gratitude of America
  • IV. The examination of Dr. Benjamin Franklin in the british house of commons
  • V. Protective duties on imports and how they work
  • VI. Trade with England
  • VII. Causes of the american discontents before 1768
  • VIII. Positions to be examined, concerning national wealth
  • IX. To M. Dubourg
  • X. Plan for benefiting distant unprovided countries
  • XI. To Joseph Galloway
  • XII. Rules for reducing a Great Empire to a small one
  • XIII. An edict by the King of Prussia
  • XIV. Hints for conversation upon the subject of terms that might probably produce a durable ubion between Britain and the colonies
  • XV. To Mr. Strahan
  • XVI. To Joseph Priestley
  • XVII. The british nation, as it appeared to the colonists in 1775
  • XVIII. Vindication and offer from congress to parliament
  • XIX. Sketch of proposition for a peace
  • XX. Comparison of Great Britain and the United States in regard to the basis of credit in the two countries
  • XXI. To General Washington
  • XXII.From the count de Schaumbergh to the Baron Hohendorf, commanding the hessian troops in America
  • XXIII. To Gen. Washington
  • XXIV. A dialogue between Britain, France, Spain, Holland, Saxony, and America
  • XXV. To George Washington
  • XXVI. To Count de Vergennes
  • XXVII. To Benjamin Vaughan
  • XXVIII. To Mrs. Sarah Bache
  • XXIX. The international State of America; Being a true description of the interest and policy of that vast continent
  • XXX. To Bejamin Vaughan
  • XXXI.To Francis Maseres
  • XXXII. Proposales for consideration in the convention for forming the constitution of the United States
  • XXXIII. An adress to the public from the Pennsylvania Society for promoting the abolition of slavery, and the relief of free negroes unlawfully held in bondage

Full text

: Benjamin Franklin [1568 
England its plots against the present royal family; 
but America is untainted with those crimes; there is in 
it scarce a man, there is not a single native of our 
country, who is not firmly attached to his King by 
principle and by affection. 
“But a new kind of loyalty seems to be required 
of us, a loyalty to Parliament; a loyalty that is to ex- 
tend, it is said to a surrender of all our properties, 
whenever a House of Commons, in which there is not 
a single member of our choosing, shall think fit to 
grant them away without our consent; and to a pa- 
tient suffering the loss of our privileges as English- 
men, if we cannot submit to make such surrender. 
We were separated too far from Britain by the ocean, 
but we were united to it by respect and love; so that 
we could at any time freely have spent our lives and 
little fortunes in its cause; but this unhappy new sys- 
tem of politics tends to dissolve those bands of union, 
and to sever us for ever.” 
These are the wild ravings of the, at present, half- 
distracted Americans. To be sure, no reasonable 
man in England can approve of such sentiments, and, 
as I said before, I do not pretend to support or justify 
them; but I sincerely wish, for the sake of the manu- 
factures and commerce of Great Britain, and for the 
sake of the strength which a firm union with our 
growing colonies would give us, that these people had 
never been thus needlessly driven out of their senses. 
I am yours, &c., 
ES 
y 40
	        

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Essays of Benjamin Franklin. G. P. Putnam’s Sons, 1927.
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