Benjamin Franklin Papers
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“F.B.”: The Frenchman and the Poker, [February–March 1766]

“F.B.”: The Frenchman and the Poker

First printing not located; reprinted in The Pennsylvania Chronicle, And Universal Advertiser, March 16–23, 1767.

This is the second of two letters Goddard reprinted in the Pennsylvania Chronicle, March 16–23, 1767, the authorship of which he attributed to Franklin. In a letter to his sister, Jane Mecom, many years later, Franklin acknowledged that he had “told” the story.8 Goddard gave no source from which he reprinted the piece, though the fact that the first of the letters he reprinted in this issue came from the Gazetteer probably explains why Smyth (Writings, v, 14 n) stated that this one was also taken from that London paper. The editors have been unable to identify the journal from which Goddard took it.9

[February–March 17661]

To the Printer.

It is reported, I know not with what Foundation, that there is an Intention of obliging the Americans to pay for all the Stamps they ought to have used, between the Commencement of the Act, and the Day on which the Repeal takes Place, viz. from the first of November 1765, to the first of May 1766; that this is to make Part of an Act, which is to give Validity to the Writings and Law Proceedings, that contrary to Law have been executed without Stamps, and is to be the Condition on which they are to receive that Validity. Shall we then keep up for a Trifle the Heats and Animosities that have been occasioned by the Stamp-Act? and lose all the Benefit of Harmony and good Understanding between the different Parts of the Empire, which were expected from a generous total Repeal? Is this Pittance likely to be a Whit more easily collected than the whole Duty? Where are Officers to be found who will undertake to collect it? Who is to protect them while they are about it? In my Opinion, it will meet with the same Opposition, and be attended with the same Mischiefs that would have attended an Enforcement of the Act entire.

But I hear, that this is thought necessary, to raise a Fund for defraying the Expence that has been incurred by stamping so much Paper and Parchment for the Use of America, which they have refused to take and turn’d upon our Hands; and that since they are highly favour’d by the Repeal, they cannot with any Face of Decency refuse to make good the Charges we have been at on their Account. The whole Proceeding would put one in Mind of the Frenchman that used to accost English and other Strangers on the Pont-Neuf,* with many Compliments, and a red hot Iron in his Hand; Pray Monsieur Anglois, says he, Do me the Favour to let me have the Honour of thrusting this hot Iron into your Backside? Zoons, what does the Fellow mean! Begone with your Iron, or I’ll break your Head! Nay, Monsieur, replies he, if you do not chuse it, I do not insist upon it. But at least, you will in Justice have the Goodness to pay me something for the heating of my Iron.

F.B.

[Note numbering follows the Franklin Papers source.]

8The story was later reprinted several times with embellishments, the first apparently being in Matthew Carey’s American Museum, iv (Aug. 1788), 184, where the conversation was considerably expanded and where the Englishman twice ejaculated “damn your soul” and once “damn me.” After reading this version, Jane Mecom wrote her brother, Nov. 11, 1788, complaining of such additions. He replied, November 26, that “as you observe, there was no swearing in the story of the poker, when I told it. The late new dresser of it was, probably, the same, or perhaps akin to him” who related a conversation between Queen Anne and the Archbishop of Canterbury during which, he said in effect, they had engaged in a swearing match. When questioned, the narrator had admitted that “that is only my way of telling the story.” Van Doren, Franklin-Mecom, pp. 317, 319. Very similar but not identical versions of the poker story, with each “damn” discreetly changed to “d--n,” appeared in the Massachusetts Centinel, Nov. 1, 1788, and the Georgia State Gazette, March 28, 1789.

9Verner W. Crane has also indicated his inability to locate the initial printing. Letters to the Press, p. 76.

1BF could not have written this piece before February 22, when the critical vote in the Committee of the Whole House in favor of repealing the Stamp Act took place, and he is hardly likely to have written it before the 26th, when the repealing bill received its first reading and when, in consequence, the effective date of the proposed repeal, May 1, would have become public knowledge. It is quite possible that he wrote the piece between February 26 and March 18, when the bill was finally enacted, and he almost certainly wrote it before the May 1 date of repeal he mentions in the first sentence.

Authorial notes

[The following note(s) appeared in the margins or otherwise outside the text flow in the original source, and have been moved here for purposes of the digital edition.]

º *A Bridge over the River Siene, leading to Paris.

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