A collection of sayings from many different editions of Bens Poor Richards Almanack. 64-page hardcover pocket gift book with dust jacket, 3-1/4'' wide by 5-3/8'' high.
Benjamin Franklin was a writer, a philosopher, a scientist, a politician, a patriot, a Founding Father, an inventor, and publisher. He helped with the founding of the United States of America and changed the world with his discoveries about electricity. His writings such as Poor Richards' Almanac have provided wisdom for 17 years to the colonies.
The Wit and Wisdom of Benjamin Franklin was erratic at best. Tidbits taken from Franklin's "Poor Richard's Almanac" are splattered throughout the book and they range from enlightening snippets such as:
"He's a fool that cannot conceal his wisdom."
to mundane sayings bordering on obtuse such as:
"If your head is wax, don't walk in the sun."
Overall this has some interesting thoughts I found amusing but didn't think it was worth the read in the end. What it did do for me was make me want to read Poor Richard's Almanac. If you're considering picking this up to get a feel for Franklin, don't bother. Just skip to the real thing.
I got this little book of quotes from my grandfather It is quotes from "Poor Richards Says" I don't get many of the quotes but I love the book and love the notes my grandfather put in the book.
Came across this book in my local library and have finished it within 30min without buying it. Benjamin Franklin lays each morsel of wisdom blended with a dash of irony. He used Shakespeare’s pronouns which I found a bit annoying. Here is a glimpse of wisdom, casted the irony aside to not spoil the book for you. - Fish and Visitors stink after three days - A traveller should have a Hog’s nose, a deer’s leg and an Ass’s back - Great good nature, without prudence is a great misfortune - Late children, early orphans - Anger and folly walk cheek by jowl, repentance treads on both their heels. - The traveller that is struck by lightning, seldom gets home to tell his widow - In marriage without love, there will be love without marriage - The tongue offends and the ears get the cuffing - great talkers, little doers - The proof of gold is fire, the proof of woman, gold. The proof of man, a women
Found this in the back of my moms crusty bookshelf. Made me feel smart for the most part. Also gave me a massive headache. I had to use every brain cell that I have to decipher what was going on but I eventually figured it out. Pretty good for being so old and out of date.
The Wit & Wisdom of Benjamin Franklin by Benjamin Franklin - The founding fathers may not have trusted him to keep jokes out of the final copy of important documents, but we still appreciate his one liners today! Happy Reading!
A fun read with more than a few quotes and, of couse Benjamin Franklin's Wisdom..."If you would not be forgotten, as soon as you are dead and rotten. Either write things worth reading, or do things worth the writing." I think he's accomplised just this!
Rather eccentric and erratic compilation.....all over the place. Love Ben Franklin but this volume is disconnected at best. Mainly checked it out to expose my young adult reader to Franklin, so I think it will work out for that. It is like a scrapbook of Franklin.
One of my all-time favorite books. It's a lovely little coffee table book; short, sweet, and to the point. He has a lot of zinger-quotes; words I try to live by.