XIX SKETCH OF PROPOSITIONS FOR A PEACE ° There shall be a perpetual peace between Great Britain and the United States of America, on the following conditions. Great Britain shall renounce and disclaim all pre- tence of right or authority to govern in any of the United States of America. To prevent those occasions of misunderstanding, which are apt to arise where the territories of different powers border on each other, through the bad con- duct of frontier inhabitants on both sides, Britain shall cede to the United States the provinces or colonies of Quebec, St. John’s, Nova Scotia, Ber- muda, East and West Florida, and the Bahama Islands, with all their adjoining and intermediate territories now claimed by her. In return for this cession, the United States shall 1 On the 26th of September, 1776, Dr. Franklin was appointed one of the Commissioners from Congress to the Court of France. Before his departure he sketched a brief outline of the terms upon which he supposed a peace might be made with Creat Britain, in case an op- portunity for a negotiation should offer. His propositions were sub- mitted to the secret committee of Congress, but no occasion presented itself for using them. 106