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From his beginnings as a journalist at age sixteen to his retirement from public affairs at eighty-two, there was no break in Benjamin Franklin's activity and accomplishments. A writer, inventor, and statesman, he remains unsurpassed in the range of his natural gifts and the important uses to which he put them.
In this Pulitzer Prize-winning biography, Carl Van Doren incorporates materials from Franklin's letters, manuscripts, journals, and published works to give the most accurate and comprehensive portrait ever written of this great American.
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First published January 1, 1938
Franklin’s reputation was more universal than that of Leibniz or Newton, Frederick or Voltaire; and his character more beloved and esteemed than any or all of them. [...] His name is familiar to government and people, to Kings, courtiers, nobility, clergy, and philosophers, as well as plebeians, to such a degree that there was scarcely a peasant or a citizen, a valet de chambre, coachman or footman, the lady’s chambermaid or a scullion in the kitchen who was not familiar with it and who did not consider him a friend a friend to human kind. [...] When they spoke of him they seemed to think he was to restore the golden age. [...] His plans and example were to abolish life monarchy, aristocrazy, and hierarchy throughout the world.
Franklin has treated every woman as if she were a person too, it made her feel more truly one than ever. Because he loved, valued, and studied women, they were no mystery to him and he had no instinctive fear of them.
"I told [Washington] that the world had drawn so broad a line between him and Dr. Franklin, on the one side, and the residue of mankind, on the other, that we might wear mourning for them, and the question still remain new and undecided as to all others."