Part 20 (1/2)

Fa, Bernard. ”Les debuts de Franklin en France,” _Revue de Paris_, 577-605 (Feb. 1, 1931).

Fa, Bernard. ”Les dernieres amours d'un philosophe,” _Correspondant_, 381-96 (May 10, 1930).

Fa, Bernard. ”Le triomphe de Franklin en France,” _Revue de Paris_, 872-96 (Feb. 15, 1931).

Ford, P. L. ”Franklin as Printer and Publisher,” _Century Magazine_, LVII, 803-17 (April, 1899).

Ford, W. C. ”Franklin and Chatham,” _Independent_, LX, 94-7 (Jan. 11, 1906).

Ford, W. C. ”Franklin's New England Courant,” _Proceedings of the Ma.s.sachusetts Historical Society_, LVII, 336-53 (April, 1924).

Ford, W. C. ”One of Franklin's Friends.h.i.+ps. From Hitherto Unpublished Correspondence between Madame de Brillon and Benjamin Franklin, 1776-1789,” _Harper's Magazine_, CXIII, 626-33 (Sept., 1906).

Foster, J. W. ”Franklin as a Diplomat,” _Independent_, LX, 84-9 (Jan.

11, 1906).

Fox, R. H. _Dr. John Fothergill and His Friends; Chapters in Eighteenth Century Life._ London: 1919. (Franklin and Fothergill, ”lovers of nature and keen students of physical science,” met in 1757. See also J. C. Lettsom, _Memoirs of John Fothergill_, 4th ed., London: 1786.)

Garrison, F. W. ”Franklin and the Physiocrats,” _Freeman_, VIII, 154-6 (Oct. 24, 1923). (Transcended by Carey's chapter in _Franklin's Economic Views_, but has quotation from Dupont de Nemours [1769]: ”Who does not know that the English have today their Benjamin Franklin, who has adopted the principles and the doctrines of our French economists?”)

Goggio, E. ”Benjamin Franklin and Italy,” _Romanic Review_, XIX, 302-8 (Oct., 1928). (Largely through the efforts of G. Beccaria, ”Benjamin Franklin was one of the first Americans to gain eminence and popularity among the people of Italy.”)

Goode, G. B. ”The Literary Labors of Benjamin Franklin,” _Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society_, XXVIII, 177-97 (1890).

Grandgent, C. H. ”Benjamin Franklin the Reformer,” in _Prunes and Prisms, with Other Odds and Ends_. Cambridge, Ma.s.s.: 1928, pp. 86-97.

(”The principles advocated in his unfinished exposition [on spelling reform] are those which phoneticians now advocate.”)

Greene, S. A. ”The Story of a Famous Book,” _Atlantic Monthly_, XXVII, 207-12 (Feb., 1871). (A kind of _precis_ of Bigelow's Introduction to _Autobiography_.)

Griswold, A. W. ”Three Puritans on Prosperity,” _New England Quarterly_, VII, 475-93 (Sept., 1934). (Cotton Mather, Timothy Dwight, and Franklin. One wonders by what right Franklin is dubbed the ”soul of Puritanism.”)

Guedalla, Philip. ”Dr. Franklin,” in _Fathers of the Revolution_. New York: 1926, pp. 215-34. (Chatty popular review of ”the first high-priest of the religion of efficiency.”)

Guillois, Antoine. _Le salon de Madame Helvetius._ Paris: 1894.

Gummere, R. M. ”Socrates at the Printing Press. Benjamin Franklin and the Cla.s.sics,” _Cla.s.sical Weekly_, XXVI, 57-9 (Dec. 5, 1932). (Survey of his references to the cla.s.sics, with occasional estimates of impact on his mind.)

Hale, E. E. ”Ben Franklin's Ballads,” _New England Magazine_, N. S.

XVIII, 505-7 (1898). (Thinks ”The Downfall of Piracy,” found in Ashton's _Real Sea-Songs_, is ”one of the two lost ballads” Franklin mentions in _Autobiography_.)

Hale, E. E. ”Franklin as Philosopher and Moralist,” _Independent_, LX, 89-93 (Jan. 11, 1906). (Does not go beyond terming Franklin's philosophy common sense.)

Harrison, Frederic. ”Benjamin Franklin,” in _Memories and Thoughts_. New York: 1906, pp. 119-23. (Keen appraisal.)

Hart, C. H. ”Benjamin Franklin in Allegory,” _Century Magazine_, XLI (N.

S. XIX), 197-204 (Dec., 1890). (The French sanctify Franklin in allegory.)

Hart, C. H. ”Who Was the Mother of Franklin's Son? An Inquiry Demonstrating that She Was Deborah Read, Wife of Benjamin Franklin,”

_Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography_, x.x.xV, 308-14 (July, 1911). (Plausible circ.u.mstantial evidence is offered.)

Hays, I. M. _The Chronology of Benjamin Franklin, Founder of the American Philosophical Society._ Philadelphia: 1904.