To Benjamin Franklin from John Bartram, 5 November 1768
From John Bartram6
ALS: American Philosophical Society
November the 5th 1768
Dear ould friend
I have often intended to have wrote to thee this several years but has often been tould that thee was soon to return to thy family and friends so I omitted it, but lately hearing that thee was likely to stay longer I now not onely write a letter of friendship but allso request a favour which the death of our warthy dear friend Peter Collinson hath obliged me to crave. He wrote to me last summer that the King desired me to send him some roots of arums but now I hear Peter is dead and I have not received a line from his son or any of my other Correspondents since ;7 so that now at present I have not any so intimate or capable as my dear Benjamin to take care of the Box I directed to the King at large on the lid it will oblige me much if thee will please to send or convey it to the King or to his order as thee thinks most suitable; I expect dayly to hear from his son or some of my Correspondents how my affairs stand and whether any is to succed in his room to receive the Kings bounty to me or whether I must send anualy more plants to the King and to whome I must direct them. Captain Falconor promiseth to take great care of the Kings Box.
Alltho I have been long deprived of thy agreeable conversation yet for several years I have had thy pretty exact picture8 hanging by my bed which gives a dayly fresh membrance of intimate frindship to thy sincear friend
John Bartram
Addressed: To / Doctor Benjamin Franklin / London
Endorsed: Bartram
6. For John Bartram (1699–1777), Quaker farmer and famous botanist, see above, II, 378 n.
7. Peter Collinson, a Quaker merchant of London and a distinguished naturalist, who had long collaborated with Bartram as well as with BF, had died on Aug. 11, 1768; he was survived by an only son, Michael (1727–95), for whom see Norman G. Brett-James, The Life of Peter Collinson, F.R.S., F.S.A., [London, 1926], pp. 206–16. The royal request for arum roots was a result of Bartram’s appointment in 1765 as botanist to the King, at an annual stipend of £50; see above, II, 378 n; XII, 61 n.
8. Probably the mezzotint print, after the portrait by Mason Chamberlain, that is reproduced above as the frontispiece to x.