Benjamin Franklin: Autobiography, Poor Richard, and Later Writings (LOA #37b) by Benjamin Franklin - ISBN: 9781883011536
Hardcover
"Writing has been of Great Use to me in the Course of my Life," Benjamin Franklin said in his famous Autobiography. With characteristically calculated understatement, he attributed his enormous and varied successesto "my having learnt a little to scribble." This c…

Benjamin Franklin: Autobiography, Poor Richard, and Later Writings (LOA #37b)

Autobiography, Poor Richard, and Later Writings (LOA #37b)

$84.00

  • Hardcover

    816 pages

  • Release Date

    6 October 2005

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Summary

“Writing has been of Great Use to me in the Course of my Life,” Benjamin Franklin said in his famousAutobiography. With characteristically calculated understatement, he attributed his enormous and varied successes to “my having learnt a little to scribble.“This Library of America collection of Franklin’s works begins with letters sent from London (1757-1775) describing the events and diplomacy preceding the Revolutionary War. The volume also contains political satires, bagatelles, pamphlets, …

Book Details

ISBN-13:9781883011536
ISBN-10:1883011531
Author:Benjamin Franklin, J.A. Leo Lemay
Publisher:The Library of America
Imprint:The Library of America
Format:Hardcover
Number of Pages:816
Release Date:6 October 2005
Weight:692g
Dimensions:207mm x 130mm x 33mm
Series:Library of America Benjamin Franklin Edition
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Critics Review

The indispensable edition of Frankliniana.

The indispensable edition of Frankliniana.

About The Author

Benjamin Franklin

Benjamin Franklin, statesman, philosopher, and man of letters, was born in Boston in 1706 of Protestant parents. He entered Boston Grammar School when he was eight and later attended George Brown Ell’s school. When he was twelve his father apprenticed him to his half-brother James as a printer. James was later the publisher of the New England Courant, where Franklin’s first articles, The Dogood Papers, were published before he was seventeen. He went to Philadelphia in 1723 and pursued his trade of printer. He was befriended by William Keith, Governor of Pennsylvania, who offered to help the young man get started in business. Franklin left for England, where he hoped to arrange for the purchase of printing equipment. Arriving in London in 1724, he was soon deserted by Keith, and again turned to printing for a livelihood. His privately printed Dissertation on Liberty and Necessity, Pleasure and Pain (1725) introduced him to leading Deists and other intellectuals in London. A year later, he returned to Philadelphia, and by 1730 he had been appointed public printer for Pennsylvania. In 1731 he established the first circulation library in the United States; in 1743-44, The American Philosophical Society. In 1748 he retired from the trade of printer but continued to advise and back his partner and to draw profit from the business. Poor Richard’s Almanack was his most spectacular success as a publisher, having gone through numerous editions and been translated in many languages. During the next thirty-five years he devoted himself largely to politics and diplomacy, but still wrote and engaged in scientific ventures. He resigned as Minister to France in 1785, returned to America, and was elected President of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. Still concerned with the rights of the individual, he published papers encouraging the abolition of slavery. He died in Philadelphia in 1790.

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