<h2><SPAN name="c14"></SPAN><span>14</span> <br/><span>FRANCE FALLS IN LOVE WITH AN AMERICAN</span></h2>
<p>“The carriage was a miserable one,” Franklin wrote of the
trip from Auray to the French town of Nantes, where the
<i>Reprisal</i> would have brought them had it not been for the two
prizes. “With tired horses, the evening dark, scarce a traveler
but ourselves on the road; and, to make it more comfortable,
the driver stopped near a wood we were to pass through, to
tell us that a gang of eighteen robbers infested that wood who
but two weeks ago had murdered some travelers on that very
spot.”</p>
<p>The Nantes townspeople were expecting the celebrated
American and were waiting to greet him as he descended from
his carriage.</p>
<p>Instead of a curled and powdered wig, he wore a fur cap
over his thin gray straight hair, which he had adopted on shipboard
for reasons of comfort. His costume was of brown
homespun worsted, with white stockings and buckled shoes.
He wore spectacles, because at seventy vanity was less important
to him than seeing clearly. He carried a plain crabtree
cane, such as any man could have cut for himself.</p>
<p>“A <i>primitive</i>!” people exclaimed. His simple attire delighted
them all.</p>
<p>For his few days in Nantes he stayed with a commercial
agent, Monsieur Gruet. A string of visitors appeared afternoon
and evenings to pay their respects. He spoke little,
knowing his French was imperfect, and his silence made him
seem all the wiser. Everyone was filled with admiration. The
women of the town paid him their greatest tribute in a <i>Coiffure
à la Franklin</i>, dressing their hair in a high curly mass to
resemble his fur cap.</p>
<p>His welcome at Nantes was only a preview of what attended
him in Paris. His printer, Barbeu Dubourg, had prepared
the populace by distributing circulars about his visit.
For two days before his arrival, he was the sole subject of conversation
in Paris cafés. Wherever he went, admiring citizens
surrounded him, remarking on the simplicity of his costume
and his unaffected manners. Silas Deane, who had received no
such attention on his arrival, was amazed. But then, Deane had
little love for the French people, had made no effort to learn
their language, and was obviously unhappy in this foreign
environment.</p>
<p>From Deane, Franklin learned of a plan already under way
to help America. A dummy exporting house had been set up
under the name of Hortalez and Company, to which the
French and Spanish governments had each contributed a million
livres. (The livre is replaced by the franc in modern
French currency.) When Deane had reached Paris a few
months before, authorized to buy supplies, Foreign Minister
Vergennes had promptly sent him to the head of Hortalez, a
dashing adventurer named Caron de Beaumarchais (who
would later become known for his librettos of <i>The Marriage
of Figaro</i> and <i>The Barber of Séville</i>). The company was now
arranging to send arms and ammunition, uniforms, everything
the colonies needed.</p>
<p>Since this was Deane’s project, Franklin did not interfere.
Later, when Americans found they were receiving inferior
goods from Hortalez, when Congress was billed for what they
were told was a gift, when Beaumarchais unaccountably became
wealthy, and even Deane was accused of dishonesty, he
may have wished that he had kept a closer check. For the
moment, he had plenty of other work to do.</p>
<p>Silas Deane as well as Arthur Lee, the third commissioner,
both gave him advice on how to conduct himself. Deane, a
blunt and tactless man, was all for forcing the issue with
France. Arthur Lee, who had an intriguing nature, advocated
a devious approach. Franklin listened attentively to both of
them and went his own way.</p>
<p>On December 28, he and Deane were received at Versailles
by Vergennes, of whom Franklin had already heard so much.
As usual, he wore his brown worsted suit and his head was
bare, with no wig to hide his gray locks. Though he did little
more than transmit expressions of good will and gratitude
from his country, the suave and polished French diplomat
summed him up as a great and good man. Henceforth, whenever
possible, Vergennes avoided dealing with any American
other than Benjamin Franklin.</p>
<p>The next night he attended a soiree held by Madame la
Marquise du Deffand. Her guests were the most important
personages in Europe. The Marquise was known to be
strongly pro-British. Everyone expected that Monsieur Franklin
from Philadelphia would be put in his place. How could he
compete in this brilliant company? He was much too clever
to try. All evening he sat quietly smiling, waiting for others
to do the talking, listening with interest to everything that was
said, even by the ladies. The company was enchanted. They
had believed all Americans to be bold and rude-mannered and
self-assertive. This Monsieur Franklin, who dressed like a
Quaker, was a sage, a patriarch! They had never known anyone
like him. From then on, the aristocracy gave him their
adoration, as did the scientific world and the common people.</p>
<p>A few days later there was a gift of two million livres, not
connected with the funds at Hortalez, presented for the American
cause in the name of the French King. Franklin had, without
resort to bullying or conniving, scored his first victory in
French diplomacy.</p>
<p>For fear of British retaliation, Vergennes dared not openly
sponsor him. Privately he was doing all in his power to convince
Louis XVI that the American rebellion, even though
against another king, should be supported to the hilt. This was
not easy, for the French ruler was not yet ready to show more
than a token interest in the Americans. Franklin understood
Vergennes’ position and did not press him for what he had
really come to get, an open alliance. His most important task,
from Vergennes’ viewpoint, was to win French public opinion
to his side. This he did without half trying.</p>
<p>His popularity mounted daily. For the French he was a
man of reason, like their Voltaire, and an advocate of the
equality of man and the virtues of rustic living, like their philosopher
Jean Jacques Rousseau. They saw him as the man
who had singlehandedly fomented the American Revolution,
a rumor carefully nourished by the British Ambassador in
Paris, Lord Stormont.</p>
<p>He was given credit for the Declaration of Independence
and the Pennsylvania Constitution. Not knowing yet of
Thomas Paine, people took it for granted that he was the
author of that marvelous pamphlet “Common Sense,” which
was reprinted in French with the omission of its attacks on
royalty. They admired him alike for his scientific achievements
and for “The Way of Wealth,” the proverbs of Poor
Richard as cited by Father Abraham, which they praised to the
skies as “sublime morality.”</p>
<p>It became the fashion of every home to have an engraving
of him above the mantel. Medallions with his image in enamel
adorned the lids of snuffboxes, and tiny ones were even set in
rings, selling in incredible numbers. In time his portrait was
reproduced on watches, clocks, vases, dishes, handkerchiefs,
pocket knives. There were paintings of him without end, and
busts in marble, bronze and plaster. “These,” Franklin wrote
to his daughter Sally, “with the pictures, busts, and prints (of
which copies upon copies are spread everywhere), have made
your father’s face as well known as that of the moon.”</p>
<p>The first of March he moved from the Paris hotel where he
and his grandsons had been staying to Passy, a beautiful spot
half a mile from Paris, less a village than a group of villas set
amidst forests and vineyards. Their house was on the great
estate of Le Ray de Chaumont, an ardent partisan of the
United States, who refused to accept rent from his distinguished
guest.</p>
<p>The grounds of the Chaumont estate were laid out in formal
gardens around an octagonal pond, with alleys of linden trees.
Often Franklin and his grandsons ate at the lavish Chaumont
table, or had their meals sent from the Chaumont kitchen for
a minimum charge. When he gave a large dinner party in his
own quarters, everything would be sent over by the Chaumont
staff. He had his own servants, including a coachman,
and kept a carriage and a pair of horses. Benjamin Bache went
to boarding school in the village, coming home for Sunday.
Temple acted as his secretary.</p>
<p>The British, who had spies everywhere, were well aware of
the reason for his presence in France. Vainly did British Ambassador
Lord Stormont try to belittle him or his country. He
could not match Franklin’s wit. Once Franklin learned that
Stormont was spreading a rumor that 4,000 Americans had
been lost in a battle and their general killed. “Truth is one
thing. Stormont is another,” he commented dryly. In Parisian
slang, the verb “to Stormont” became a synonym for “to lie.”</p>
<p>In truth, with the exception of Washington’s victory over
the Hessians at Trenton, the Christmas of 1776, news from
America was discouraging. Franklin refused to show any sign
of worry. “<i>Ça ira</i>,”—“it will go on”—he would say to anyone
who asked how the American Revolution was faring. In the
years of France’s own revolution, Franklin’s famous <i>Ça ira</i>
became the catchword of a popular war song.</p>
<p>Some time that summer, or so it is said, Franklin passed a
night at the same inn as Edward Gibbon, author of <i>Rise and
Fall of the Roman Empire</i>. Franklin sent up a note requesting
the pleasure of his company. Gibbon answered that though he
admired Franklin as a philosopher he could not, as a loyal
English subject, converse with a Rebel. Franklin promptly
sent him a second note. He had the greatest respect for the
historian, he wrote, and when Gibbon decided to write the
<i>Rise and Fall of the British Empire</i>, he would be happy to
supply all the needed data.</p>
<p>The revolt in America had enormous glamour for innumerable
European officers who were eager to offer their services,
for money, for the thrill of adventure, and perhaps less often
because they believed in the American cause. Franklin was
besieged with their requests for him to recommend them to
the American army. “My perpetual torment,” he called them:</p>
<blockquote>
<p>People will believe, notwithstanding my continually repeated
declaration to the contrary, that I am sent hither to engage
officers. You have no conception how I am harassed.... Great
officers of all ranks, in all departments; ladies, great and small,
besides professed solicitors, worry me from morning to night....
I am afraid to accept an invitation to dine abroad, being
almost sure of meeting some officer or some officer’s friend
who, as soon as I am put in good humour with a glass of champagne,
begins his attack upon me.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>Only partly in jest, he composed a form letter:</p>
<blockquote>
<p>The bearer of this, who is going to America, presses me to
give him a letter of recommendation, though I know nothing
of him, not even his name. This may seem extraordinary, but I
assure you is not uncommon here. Sometimes, indeed, one unknown
person brings another, equally unknown, to recommend
him; and sometimes they recommend one another. As to this
gentleman, I must refer you to himself for his character and
merits, with which he is certainly better acquainted than I can
possibly be. I recommend him, however, to those civilities which
every stranger of whom one knows no harm has a right to; and
I request you will do him all the good offices, and show him all
the favour, that on further acquaintance you shall find him to
deserve.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>Temple later claimed that he actually used this letter on
occasion, though it has never been proved.</p>
<p>There was, however, one officer whom Franklin recommended
to George Washington without ever having met.
This was the nineteen-year-old Marquis de Lafayette, an
ardent youth set on revenging a father killed by the English.
“He is exceedingly beloved,” he wrote Washington early in
August after Lafayette had already left France, “and everybody’s
good wishes attend him; we cannot but hope he may
meet with such a reception as will make the country and his
expedition agreeable to him.”</p>
<p>Another valuable recruit Franklin sent to America was the
former Prussian officer Baron von Steuben, whose rigid training
of American troops at Valley Forge raised morale at a
moment when it had sunk to a new low.</p>
<p>In England, he still had friends in high places. Lord Rockingham
was praising his courage in crossing the Atlantic, risking
capture and being brought to an “implacable tribunal.”
Charles James Fox, a member of Lord North’s cabinet, was
quoting to his fellow cabinet members Franklin’s remark that
England’s war on America would be as costly and useless as
the Crusades. While to George III he had become “that insidious
man from Philadelphia,” Sir John Pringle, now president
of the Royal Society, supported him in one of the few comic
episodes of wartime.</p>
<p>During Franklin’s stay in England, he had given advice on
installing lightning rods on St. Paul’s Cathedral and other important
buildings. One member of the Royal Society, Benjamin
Wilson, an artist who had painted Franklin’s portrait,
argued that blunt lightning rods would be more effective than
pointed ones, but he had been over-ruled. The battle between
“the sharps and the flats” raged briefly and then subsided.</p>
<p>It was revived when the war was under way by George III,
who felt that since pointed lightning rods had been invented
by a Rebel, they must certainly be subversive. He ordered that
the rods on his palace and throughout the United Kingdom be
replaced by the blunt type and commanded Sir John Pringle
to back him. Sir John boldly retorted that the laws of nature
were not changeable at royal pleasure. He was thereupon informed
that the royal authority did not believe that a man of
his views should occupy the presidency of the Royal Society.
Sir John, loyal to Franklin to the end, promptly resigned.</p>
<p>As for Franklin, he remained an objective observer: “I have
never entered into any controversy in defense of my philosophical
opinions,” he wrote in October 1777. “I leave them
to take their chances in the world. If they are <i>right</i>, truth and
experience will support them; if <i>wrong</i>, they ought to be
refuted and rejected. Disputes are apt to sour one’s temper,
and disturb one’s quiet.”</p>
<p>In November a visitor to Passy informed him that General
Howe had taken Philadelphia. (Congress had fled to York,
Pennsylvania, which became temporarily the capital of the
United States.) Calm and smiling, Franklin countered, “I beg
your pardon, sir. Philadelphia has taken Howe.”</p>
<p>Inwardly, he was gravely concerned. His daughter and her
family, his home, those he loved, and everything he owned
was in Philadelphia. But he could not afford to let his anxiety
show.</p>
<p>He considered at this time telling Vergennes that unless
America could count on a French alliance, they would have
to make terms with England, but decided the threat might
boomerang and force the French to abandon them. Best wait
until the news was better. It so happened he had not long to
wait.</p>
<p>On December 4, a messenger from Boston arrived at Passy,
to announce that General John Burgoyne, whom the British
had sent to Canada to lead an army to invade the colonies from
the north, had been defeated at Saratoga. Beaumarchais, who
was present when this news came, drove off to Paris so recklessly
that his carriage upset and his arm was broken.</p>
<p>Franklin and his two commissioners promptly drew up a
dispatch for Vergennes. Two days later Conrad-Alexandre
Gérard of the foreign office arrived at Passy with Vergennes’
congratulations—and a request that the Americans renew their
proposal for an alliance.</p>
<p>Franklin drafted the proposal on December 7 and Temple
delivered it the next day. On the 12th, the commissioners met
secretly with Vergennes. Franklin hoped the matter could be
settled there and then but the French minister said France
could not agree to an alliance without Spain. It took three
weeks for a courier to make the trip and bring back an answer
from Spain. It was negative. Temporarily negotiations were at
a standstill.</p>
<p>In the meantime England had sent an envoy named Paul
Wentworth to parley with the Americans. He passed himself
off as a stock speculator though he was actually chief of the
British espionage. Silas Deane saw him several times. Wentworth
told him that the British ministry was ready to return to
the imperial status of before 1763, suggested a general armistice
with all British troops withdrawn except those on the
New York islands, and added, insinuatingly, that any Americans
who helped to bring about an understanding would be
rewarded with wealth and titles and high administrative posts.</p>
<p>Franklin knew about Wentworth but refused to see him
until January 6, a week after the news of Spain’s rejection
of the alliance. That day he conferred two hours with Wentworth,
devoting the whole time to a recital of England’s
crimes against America. After that he and Wentworth had
dinner with Silas Deane and his assistant Edward Bancroft
(who was also an English spy).</p>
<p>The results of this dinner were exactly what Franklin anticipated.
It was duly reported to Vergennes, who could only
judge that negotiations for a reconciliation between England
and America were under way, which was the last thing in the
world he wanted. The very next day the French King’s council
voted formally on a treaty and an alliance with the United
States of America.</p>
<p>The signing of the treaty took place on Friday, February 7,
1778, at the office of the ministry for foreign affairs in the
Hotel de Lautrec, Paris. For this all important occasion Franklin
donned an old costume, somewhat old-fashioned and rather
too tight for him, of figured Manchester velvet. Someone asked
him why. “To get it a little revenge,” Franklin said. “I wore
this coat on the day Wedderburn abused me.”</p>
<p>The ceremony was simple. Gérard signed first, then Franklin,
after which Arthur Lee and Silas Deane added their names.
A magnificent diplomatic campaign had been won.</p>
<p>On March 20, Louis XVI avowed the treaty by receiving
the three commissioners in his private quarters at Versailles.
Franklin wore a brown velvet suit, white hose, and carried
a white hat under his arm. He had neither wig nor sword, and
his spectacles were on his nose. The courtiers claimed they had
never seen anything so striking as this “republican simplicity.”</p>
<p>To the commissioners, the King said, “Firmly assure Congress
of my friendship. I hope that this will be for the good
of the two nations.”</p>
<p>Franklin responded for his fellow envoys. “Your Majesty
may count on the gratitude of Congress and its faithful observance
of the pledges it now takes.”</p>
<p>That evening Vergennes gave a great dinner in their honor
at Versailles. Later they made a call on the royal family. The
charming and beautiful Marie Antoinette, who was at her
gambling table, insisted that Franklin stand by her, and talked
to him in between making her bids at exceedingly high stakes.
It was certainly the first time in history that the son of an
American candlemaker kept company with a queen.</p>
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