Benjamin Franklin was born in Boston (1706).

Books were hard to come by when he was a young apprentice in his brother's printing shop, but he got hold of an odd volume of Addison and Steele's The Spectator and used it to teach himself how to write. He took notes on each of the pieces, then hid the book and tried to reconstruct the essays from the notes alone.

He toyed with the idea of becoming a poet, but his father assured him that "verse-makers were generally beggars," and he
turned his attention to the cultivation of virtue and the aid of humanity.

He became better known than any of the leaders of the Revolution except George Washington; he signed every document associated with the founding of the Republic, and took Paris by storm when he appeared at court to secure an alliance with France.

He invented bifocals and the glass harmonica, charted the Gulf Stream on his way across the Atlantic, and chased tornadoes on horseback. He was flirtatious on up into his seventies.

In 1731, Franklin founded America's first circulating library so that people could borrow books to read even though they might not have been able to afford to buy them. He was the author, printer, and publisher of Poor Richard's Almanac, an annually published book of useful encouragement, advice, and factual information, beginning in 1732. It contains maxims such as "Early to bed and early to rise, Makes a man healthy, wealthy, and wise" and "In this world nothing can said to be certain except death and taxes

Poor Richard's Almanac:

The annual publications (1733-87) written by Benjamin Franklin was a vehicle for commonsense philosophy.  Under the assumed name of Poor Richard, Franklin stirred up a rich and inviting brew of maxims and humorous observations on temperance,cleanliness,chastity and other virtues.  All of this was meant to leaad its many faithful readers to clean, ethical,frugal, sensible living.  Peppered with memorable proverbs old and new, it was one of the most popular publications of its day.  Even today, its wry humor, unashamed concerns for the goodness and decency of individual and communal conduct strike a responsive chord in the modern reader.


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