Benjamin Franklin [1710
they are to this nation in power and numbers of
people, are enemies to be still apprehended; and the
Highlanders of Scotland have been so for many ages,
by the greatest princes of Scotland and Britain. The
wild Irish were able to give a great deal of disturb-
ance even to Queen Elizabeth, and cost her more
blood and treasure than her war with Spain. Can-
ada, in the hands of France, has always stinted the
growth of our colonies, in the course of this war, and
indeed before it; has disturbed and vexed even the
best and strongest of them; has found means to
murder thousands of their people, and unsettle a
great part of their country. Much more able will it
be to starve the growth of an infant settlement.
Canada has also found means to make this nation
spend two or three millions a year in America; and
a people, how small soever, that in their present
situation can do this as often as we have a war with
them, is, methinks, “an enemy to be apprehended.”
Our North American colonies are to be considered
as the frontier of the British empire on that side. The
frontier of any dominion being attacked, it becomes
not merely “the cause’’ of the people immediately
attacked, the inhabitants of that frontier, but prop-
erly “the cause’ of the whole body. Where the
frontier people owe and pay obedience, there they
have a right to look for protection. No political
proposition is better established than this. It is
therefore invidious to represent the “blood and
treasure’’ spent in this war as spent in “the cause
of the colonies’ only; and that they are “absurd
and ungrateful,” if they think we have done nothing,
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