Happy Birthday, Ben
Born today 302 years ago in Boston, it's Benjamin Franklin, "inventor of the stove" — which he never patented because he created it for the good of society. Also, inventor of the fire company, fire insurance, bifocals, a flexible urinary catheter, swim fins, the glass armonica, the odometer, the lightning rod, and - boon to all us vertically challenged readers - the "long arm" — a long wooden pole with a grasping claw at the end — to reach the books we want to read. Also, a very quotable man, one way or another. Here's Adams on Franklin:
“Franklin did this, Franklin did that, Franklin did some other damned thing. . . . Franklin smote the ground and out sprang George Washington, full grown and on his horse. . . . Franklin then electrified him with his miraculous lightning rod and the three of them--Franklin, Washington, and the horse--conducted the entire Revolution by themselves.”And here's Franklin himself:
If you would not be forgotten as soon as you are dead and rotten, either write something worth reading or do things worth the writing.
They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety. (attributed to him)
Labels: birthdays
2 Comments:
I've looked everywhere for a good source of the noted liberty-vs-safety quote. So far I've only found it attributed to him generally with no meaningful specifics.
I found in Poor Richard's Almanac a pretty close bit of advice that could have spawned the various versions warning against the dangers of surrendering freedom.
Sell not virtue to purchase wealth
nor liberty to purchase power.
I wrote about these ideas a couple years ago. It was one of my early rambling posts (here).
Thanks! I've amended the post.
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