Benjamin Franklin Papers
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https://founders.archives.gov/documents/Franklin/01-43-02-0112

To Benjamin Franklin from William Temple Franklin, 12 October 1784

From William Temple Franklin

ALS: American Philosophical Society

London, 12. Oct. 1784.—

Dear & Hond Sir,

I this Instant receiv’d your Letter of the 2d.—7 It gives me inexpressible Grief to learn that you have been so long without receiving any Letter from me, & that you attribute it to my neglect! I can assure you—you wrong me,—for I have wrote, I think constantly every Week;—some of my Letters went by Private Hands, others by the Post: the former may have been long in getting to you or lost;—the latter must have reached you, if given to the Bell-man by the People here, as I directed, and which I cannot think was neglected.— I could not keep Copies of my Letters, but I wished I had taken down their several Dates,—and I will in future. To the best of my Recollection this is my 10th. Letter since I left home.—8 But enough of this—the Arrival of my Letters must have already justified me. Alexr9 indeed mentions your having recd one1 two days after your Letter— I wish therefore you had kept it back, it gave me great uneasiness!—but I suppose you had already sent it.

The Abbé & Ld Fitzmaurice arrived only last Night a 12 a Clock—& they set off this Morg at 9. for Bowood;— It was not ’till Eleven that I heard of their Arrival, so that I have not been able to see them.— The Abbé wrote me a Note, with the Prints &ca—mentioning the Reason for his not calling on me,—informing me that he purpos’d returning to Paris the beginning of next Month—& wishing me to let him know my Plan;2—which I shall do,—and shall be happy if we can arrange Matters so as to return together;—tho I doubt it: for unless I receive a farther Congé from you, I shall certainly sett off much sooner than the Abbé purposes doing.—

Mrs. Hewson has at length determined to accept your Proposal— I did not urge her to it:— The Friends she has consulted have advised her:— Mrs. Blount3 is the principal One; and would, I believe, herself be of the Party—did she understand French—but she does not even read it. Mrs. H. has some Arrangements to take, but we shall I believe be with you at the End of the Month—unless I receive Letters from you to detain me:— Mrs. Sargent, withom I have been spending 2 Days in the Country, hopes I shall,—& if I do, has made me promise to make her another Visit.— I never in my Life I think, on so short an Acquaintance, took so great a liking for any two Persons as for Mr. & Mrs. Sargent:— It is true I had often heard you speak of them—& their attachment for you cannot be surpass’d.— Their Sentiments for you have been imbib’d by all their Neighbourhood.— At the Houses we visited—I think I met with no less than three of your Busts—& two of your Portraits in Oil.—4 Lord Stanhope—& his Son Ld. Mahon, (who live at abt. 3 Miles from Mr. Sargents),—recd me very politely,—& express’d the greatest Respect for you.— I have a Book for you from Ld. Stanhope—& another for the Society at Philada.—5 I gave Mrs. Sargent several Pieces of your Writing, who was infinitely pleased with them, & thinks the Dialogue with Made la Goute,6—ought to be publish’d for the Benefit of Mankind.—

I have much more to tell you but must leave you for the present, it being 5 a Clock—and I am engag’d to dine at Pardises with Dr: Blagden, & others of the Rl. Society.— Charettier setts off tomorrow for Paris,7—I shall send you some Pamphlets by him, & if possible write again. Adieu for the present—& believe me as ever—my dearest Sir, Your most dutiful & affecte. Grandson

W. T. Franklin.

(Remember to all Friends.)
B Franklin Esqr.—

[Note numbering follows the Franklin Papers source.]

7Sent by Morellet from London on the morning of Oct. 12. The abbé had left Paris with Fitzmaurice c. Oct. 4, and, as WTF had just learned from Morellet’s cover letter, the pair arrived in London in the middle of the night of Oct. 11–12. After sending WTF the dispatches he brought from Passy, Morellet left with Fitzmaurice for Bowood, Shelburne’s Wiltshire estate: L’Air de Lamotte to WTF, Oct. 3, 1784 (APS); Morellet to WTF, [Oct. 12, 1784], in Medlin, Morellet, 1, 538; and see below.

8We are aware of only eight.

9Young Bob Alexander was called “Alexander” by the Franklin household.

1This must have been WTF to BF, Sept. 26, above.

2Morellet to WTF, [Oct. 12], cited above. That letter also enclosed the prints of BF that WTF had requested in his letter of Sept. 26.

3Dorothea Blunt.

4One of these must have been the David Martin portrait owned by the Sargents: Sellers, Franklin in Portraiture, pp. 333–4.

5These were probably copies of Opera quaedam reliqua (Glasgow, 1776), the posthumous work of the Scottish mathematician Robert Simson (VII, 184n). Lord Stanhope had underwritten its publication. Upon BF’s return to America, he donated the volume to the APS on Stanhope’s behalf: ODNB, under Simson; APS Trans., II (1786), [406].

6“Dialogue Entre La Goutte et M. F.” (XXXIV, 11–20) was the first bagatelle in BF’s series of them; see XLII, 127n.

7John Charretié, a London-based French merchant, had carried letters between the Sargents and BF: XXXIX, 93; XLI, 305–6, 368–9, 370, 483–4.

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