2 Benjamin Franklin [1781 to become the terror of Europe,* and to exercise with impunity that insolence which is so natural to their nation, and which will increase enormously with the increase of their power. I am, with great respect, your Excellency’s, etc., B. FRANKLIN, 1 At a dinner given in Paris by the late Sir Henry Bulwer a few days after the news reached Europe of the surrender of Lee in 1865, Sir Henry’s brother, the late Lord Lytton, confessed to considerable disappointment that the war had terminated without a dismember- ment of the Union. He had hoped, he said, that it would have left two or three nations instead of one, for, he added, ‘by the close of the century you will number near a hundred million, and you will be a terror to Europe,” using singularly enough the very expression employed here by Franklin in forecasting the danger to the Old World of allowing the colonies to remain dependencies of England. 226