<h2><SPAN name="c16"></SPAN><span>16</span> <br/><span>A GLORIOUS OLD AGE</span></h2>
<p>On August 27, 1783, just a few days before the signing of
the peace treaty with England, a balloon ascension was held
at the Champ-de-Mars. It was the first in Paris; the first in
history had taken place near Lyons in the previous June. For
four days preceding the event, the great balloon of varnished
silk had been filling up with hydrogen gas under the direction
of the physicist Jacques-Alexandre-César Charles. Paris was
agog with excitement. Some 50,000 gathered to watch.</p>
<p>Franklin, who was present, reported that the balloon rose
rapidly “till it entered the clouds, when it seemed to me scarce
bigger than an orange and soon after became invisible.”</p>
<p>“What good is it?” a skeptic asked.</p>
<p>“What good is a newborn baby?” Franklin retorted, a
remark that went around the world.</p>
<p>He saw the first free balloon ascend with human passengers
on November 20, at the Château de la Muette in Passy. The
passengers, scientist Pilâtre de Rozier and the Marquis d’Arland,
were lifted some 500 feet, floated over the Seine, and
landed in Paris. A few weeks later he witnessed a balloon soar
upwards from the Paris Tuileries, taking its human cargo to
the incredible height of 2,000 feet.</p>
<p>He could not resist speculating as to what man’s triumph
over space might mean to the future. Would the balloon perhaps
become a common means of transportation? How delightful
that would be for one like himself for whom riding in a
carriage had become such agony. But he could hardly hope for
such comfort in his lifetime.</p>
<p>More to the point was the possibility that the actuality of
balloon flight might convince “sovereigns of the folly of
wars”:</p>
<blockquote>
<p>Five thousand balloons, capable of raising two men each, could
not cost more than five ships of the line; and where is the
prince who can afford so to cover his country with troops for
its defense as that ten thousand men descending from the clouds
might not in many places do an infinite deal of mischief before
a force could be brought together to repel them?</p>
</blockquote>
<p>Not even the wealthiest and most powerful ruler could
guard his dominions against such an air raid. The terrible
threat would mean an end to warfare. So Franklin reasoned,
happily unable to peer into the future.</p>
<p>Following the Treaty of Paris, Congress had retained his
services as ambassador to France for two years longer. He
served unofficially as United States ambassador for all of
Europe, and new honors rained down on him. He was elected
a member of Madrid’s Royal Academy of History, of Manchester’s
Literary and Philosophical Society, of the Academies
of Sciences and Arts in the French towns of Orléans and
Lyons. Through Admiral Lord Richard Howe, a staunch
friend still, the British Admiralty sent him Captain Cook’s
<i>Voyage to the Pacific Ocean</i>, a tribute to his instructions to
American cruisers to refrain from interfering with the explorer
and his crew.</p>
<p>His real and solid pleasures came not from such tokens of
recognition but from the circle of good friends he had acquired
in his years at Passy. He was on good terms with the
parish priest, the village tradesmen, and all the children of the
town. The Chaumont family, on whose estate he lived, were
deeply devoted to him, including the young daughter Sophie
whom he called “my little wife.”</p>
<p>He established strong bonds of friendship with his neighbor,
the lovely and talented young Madame Brillon, wife of an
elderly treasury official. For several years he called on her
nearly every Wednesday and Saturday, to play chess or to idle
on her terrace in the sun. Sometimes he played for her on his
armonica.</p>
<p>Once he spent a summer day with Madame Brillon and some
other companions on Moulin-Joli, an island on the Seine. Over
the river hovered a swarm of tiny May flies, known as <i>ephemera</i>
since their life span is but a few hours. As a souvenir of
this holiday, he wrote the “Ephemera,” one of his most
charming fables, a delicate satire about the trivia which make
up the thoughts and actions of many human souls during their
own comparatively brief period on earth.</p>
<p>“Papa,” Madame Brillon called Franklin. After she and her
husband left Passy, she sent him a plaintive note. “How am I
going to spend the Wednesdays and Saturdays?” Might they
perhaps be united in paradise? “We shall live on roast apples
only; the music will be made up of Scottish airs ... everyone
will speak the same language; the English will be neither unjust
nor wicked ... ambition, envy, pretensions, jealousy,
prejudices, all these will vanish at the sound of the trumpet.”</p>
<p>Young and old, French women lavished attention on the
American philosopher. In return, he gave them affection both
fatherly and gallant, told them amusing stories, and showed
that combination of respect for their mental capacities and
appreciation of their womanly charms which had won over
Catherine Ray Greene so many years before.</p>
<p>Among his many close women friends the most celebrated
was the elderly Madame Helvétius, widow of a wealthy landowner
and philosopher, who lived with her two daughters at
Auteuil, a village next to Passy, in the midst of a little park
planted with hortensias and rhododendron, and over-run with
cats, dogs, chickens, canaries, pigeons, and wild birds. “Our
Lady of Auteuil,” Franklin called her, while her daughters
were “<i>les étoiles</i>,” the stars.</p>
<p>Her salon was frequented by philosophers, statesmen, poets,
scientists, and mathematicians. Franklin first met her through
the French minister Turgot. When she knew him better she
told him she wished she had welcomed him as she had Voltaire,
whom she had greeted at her gate like a king.</p>
<p>One of the many scholars Franklin met at her salon was a
talented young doctor named Philippe Pinel. Franklin advised
him to come to America where doctors were badly needed.
Pinel was tempted but refused—and became famous for his
courage and wisdom in removing chains from the insane at
the Paris hospitals of Bicêtre and Saltpêtrière.</p>
<p>While John Adams and his wife Abigail were at Passy,
Franklin invited Madame Helvétius to dinner. The worthy
Abigail was horrified when Madame Helvétius kissed Franklin’s
cheeks and forehead in greeting. Even more shocking in
her eyes, the guest held Franklin’s hand at dinner and now
and then let her arm rest on the back of John Adams’ chair.</p>
<p>“I should have been greatly astonished at this conduct,”
Abigail wrote afterwards, “if the good Doctor had not told
me that in this lady I should see a genuine Frenchwoman,
wholly free from affectation or stiffness of behaviour, and one
of the best women in the world. For this I must take the
Doctor’s word; but I should have set her down for a very
bad one.”</p>
<p>Whatever Abigail Adams thought, there is no doubt of
Franklin’s devotion. Sometime—no one knows just when—he
proposed marriage to Madame Helvétius. She refused him.
Perhaps she was too accustomed to her own way of life to
want to make a change. Perhaps she felt that his proposal was
only a form of gallantry. Neither the proposal nor her refusal
interfered with their friendship, which lasted as long as he
stayed in France and by correspondence afterward.</p>
<p>Since 1777 he had his own private press at Passy and a
foundry to cast his own type. His excuse was that the press
was useful with so many official forms to be prepared, but it
was also true that printing was still in his blood and always
would be.</p>
<p>One of the pamphlets that came off the Passy printing press
was “Information to Those who would Remove to America.”
He thought too many of the wrong people wanted to emigrate
to America for the wrong reasons, and he wanted to
correct their misapprehensions. He discouraged artists and
scholars who expected they would receive free transportation,
land, slaves, tools and livestock from a rich but ignorant
America. In America, a man who did not bring his fortune
“must work and be industrious to live.”</p>
<p>The chief resource of America was cheap land, he pointed
out. Farm laborers were needed. Skilled artisans could make a
good living and “provide for children and old age.” But “those
Europeans who have these or greater advantages at home
would do well to stay where they are.”</p>
<p>To answer those who besieged him with questions about
the Indians, he wrote “Remarks Concerning the Savages of
North America,” perhaps the first fair appraisal of America’s
original inhabitants to be printed:</p>
<blockquote>
<p>The Indian men, when young, are hunters and warriors; when
old, counsellors; for all their government is by counsel of the
sages; there is no force, there are no prisons, no officers to compel
obedience or inflict punishment.... The Indian women
till the ground, dress the food, nurse and bring up the children,
and preserve and hand down to posterity the memory of public
transactions. These employments of men and women are accounted
natural and honourable. Having few artificial wants
they have abundance of leisure for improvement by conversation.
Our laborious manner of life, compared with theirs, they
esteem slavish and base; and the learning on which we value
ourselves they regard as frivolous and useless....</p>
</blockquote>
<p>So he continued, by illustration and by example, to show
that while Indian ways and customs were quite different from
those of the white men, there was much to be said for them,
and they were by no means always inferior. In fact, there was
much which men who called themselves civilized could learn
by studying the nature of those called savages.</p>
<p>Some pieces in lighter vein were also run off his press, which
Franklin wrote partly as an exercise in French, partly to entertain
himself and his friends. In one of these bagatelles, as such
pieces are known, he told Parisians of a discovery he had made
whereby they could make great savings in the cost of candles
and oil lamps. He had gone to bed one night, as usual at three
or four hours after midnight, and had been awakened by a
sudden noise at six, to find that his room was flooded with
light! His servant had forgotten to close the shutters before he
retired. Looking into his almanac, he learned what few others
could know—that the sun rises early and “<i>that he gives light
as soon as he rises</i>.”</p>
<p>Another of his bagatelles was “Dialogue between Franklin
and the Gout,” in which Gout explains his frequent and unwelcome
visits as due simply to Franklin’s indolence; he plays
chess too much and exercises too little. The “Ephemera” was
printed as a bagatelle, and so was “The Whistle,” an expanded
version of the little story he had once told his son William.</p>
<p>His intellectual curiosity had not slackened during his years
in France. War or no war, he continued to observe natural
phenomenon, write and reflect on scientific matters, and keep
up with the newest discoveries and inventions.</p>
<p>He attended meetings of the Royal Society of Medicine,
to which he had been elected in 1777, and of the French Academy
of Science. In 1782, he watched Antoine-Laurent Lavoisier
perform an experiment with the gas he had named oxygen—Joseph
Priestley’s “dephlogistated air.” He wrote to Jan
Ingenhousz, a Dutch scientist, about differences between the
Leyden jar and Volta’s new electrophorus, and to Edward
Nairne, an English friend, about the comparative humidity
of the air in London, Philadelphia and Passy.</p>
<p>To a French friend, Count de Gebelin, he discoursed on the
characteristics of the various Indian languages. When de
Gebelin commented that some Indian words sounded Phoenician,
Franklin dived into archaeological speculations:</p>
<blockquote>
<p>If any Phoenicians arrived in America, I should rather think it
was not by the accident of a storm but in the course of their
long and adventurous voyages; and that they coasted from
Denmark and Norway over to Greenland, and down southward
by Newfoundland, Nova Scotia, etc., to New England; as the
Danes themselves certainly did some ages before Columbus.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>He wrote a paper on the phenomenon of the aurora borealis
(the northern lights) for the French Academy of Science, sent
notes to Marie Antoinette’s physician, Felix Vicq d’Azyr, on
the length of time infection could remain in the body after
death, and investigated a story of some workmen in the Passy
quarry who claimed to have found living toads shut up in
solid stone.</p>
<p>In a letter to another friend, the Abbé Soulavie, he pondered
on why there were coal mines under the sea at Whitehaven
and oyster shells in the Derbyshire mountains—indications of
great geological changes in the past. Was it possible that the
surface of the earth was a shell “capable of being broken and
disordered by the violent movements of the fluid on which it
rested?” Admittedly, this was only a guess: “I approve much
more your method of philosophizing, which proceeds upon
actual observations....”</p>
<p>He still tinkered with inventions, and for his own comfort
devised the first bifocal glasses, so he could see both near and
far without changing his spectacles.</p>
<p>He was old enough to be serious all the time, but he never
could resist a hoax, even with his scientific friends. To the
eminent French physician Georges Cabanis he confided that
in the forests of North America he had observed a bird which
“like the horned screamer or the horned lapwing, carries two
horned tubercles at the joints of the wings. These two tubercles
at the death of the bird become the sprouts of two vegetable
stalks, which grow at first in sucking the juice from its
cadaver and which subsequently attach themselves to the earth
in order to live in the manner of plants and trees.”</p>
<p>The inspiration for this weird creation of his imagination
was perhaps the “vegetable animal” he thought he saw on the
gulf weed he had fished out of the Gulf Stream at the age
of twenty. His friend Cabanis, suspecting nothing, dutifully
reported it in one of his books, taking only the precaution
to note that “in spite of the great veracity of Franklin, I cite it
with a great deal of reserve.”</p>
<p>What endless marvels the world offered and how much
there was to know about them! One lifetime was not nearly
long enough. “The rapid progress true science now makes
occasions my regretting sometimes that I was born so soon,”
he wrote Joseph Priestley after their countries were at peace
once more. “It is impossible to imagine the height to which
may be carried, in a thousand years, the power of man over
matter.... O that moral science were in as fair a way of
improvement that men would cease to be wolves to one another,
and that human beings would at length learn what they
now improperly call humanity.” He could not guess that his
fervent cry would still be echoed, in one form or another,
more than a hundred and seventy-five years after his death.</p>
<p>In 1784, the King of France chose him to serve on a commission
of five to investigate the work of Dr. Franz Anton
Mesmer, who claimed to effect cures through “animal magnetism,”—a
universal fluid which flowed to his patients from
the healer, or from some object “magnetized” by the healer,
such as a tree. All fashionable Paris was flocking to Mesmer’s
seances; his following was enormous throughout France.</p>
<p>With Franklin on this commission served Joseph-Ignace
Guillotin (whose name would survive in the French Revolution’s
chief instrument of execution) and the scientist Lavoisier
(whom the guillotine would claim as a victim). After
many months of study, the commission concluded that “animal
magnetism” did not exist, and that Mesmer’s cures were the
result of “imagination.” The importance of imagination in
physical illness was as yet unrecognized. Privately Franklin
commented that Mesmer’s treatments certainly did some good—at
least they kept some from taking injurious drugs.</p>
<p>On the whole the findings of the commission brought both
Mesmer and mesmerism into disrepute. Indirectly the shadow
of its disapproval fell on a phenomenon first discovered by a
Mesmer disciple, the Marquis de Puysegur—that some persons,
in a state of trance and apparently asleep, are able to obey
simple commands. Hypnotism, for many years after de Puysegur’s
observations, was relegated to quacks rather than
physicians and scientists.</p>
<p>In August of 1784 Thomas Jefferson arrived from America
to help negotiate treaties with European and North African
powers. Franklin introduced him to his French scientific
friends and found in his company the same harmony as when
they were both members of the Second Continental Congress.
His last winter in France, Polly Hewson and her children
also joined him at Passy. Mrs. Stevenson, Polly’s mother, had
died in England during the war. Franklin welcomed these
members of his “English family” with joy and affection.</p>
<p>He still had his two grandsons with him. There had been
some objections from Congress to his making Temple his
secretary, on the grounds that he was the son of a traitor.
Franklin had been highly indignant: “Methinks it is rather
some merit that I have rescued a valuable young man from the
danger of being a Tory, and fixed him in honest republican
Whig principles.”</p>
<p>Yet there was some justification in the fears of Congress. At
twenty-six, Temple was charming, handsome and spoiled. He
spent his evenings at music halls and, wearing red heels, an
embroidered coat, and with an Angora cat on a leash, paraded
the boulevards with aristocratic young friends. Mockingly
the Parisians dubbed him “Franklinet.” While Franklin was
trying to kill a clause in the peace treaty conceding special
privileges to Tories, Temple, without his knowledge, wrote to
Lord Shelburne pleading a government post for his Tory
father.</p>
<p>Different as could be was Benjamin Bache, now sixteen, a
husky wholesome youngster much like Franklin at his age. He
wanted no more than to be a printer as his grandfather had
been. Franklin taught him how to cast type, and in April 1785
persuaded the best printer in France to make him an apprentice.
The arrangement was of short duration.</p>
<p>In May, Franklin at last received permission from Congress
to come home. Jefferson was appointed ambassador to France
in his stead. “I am not replacing Franklin,” Jefferson said loyally.
“No one could do that. I am only his successor.”</p>
<p>He left Passy on July 12, 1785, traveling to Havre in a
royal litter drawn by mules, which the King had provided for
his comfort. His personal goods—128 boxes in all—went by
barge down the Seine. He took with him Louis XVI’s personal
gift—the King’s miniature, set with 408 diamonds. The
whole population of Passy watched him leave, silent except
for occasional outbursts of sobs.</p>
<p>“All the days of my life I shall remember that a great man,
a sage, wished to be my friend,” wrote Madame Brillon just
before his departure. A farewell note from Madame Helvétius
was waiting for him at Havre: “I see you in your litter, every
step taking you further from us, lost to me and all my friends
who love you so much and to whom you leave such long
regrets.”</p>
<p>He and his grandsons spent four days at Southampton, England.
William Franklin came down from London, where he
was now living, to see them, but the meeting with his father
was brief and strained. Then Benjamin Franklin set off for his
eighth crossing of the Atlantic. He knew it would be his last.</p>
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