Tag: benjamin franklin poetry

  • “Epitaph In Bookish Style,” by Benjamin Franklin, Poet.

    "When Benjamin Franklin arrived in Paris, he was wearing a little fur cap to keep his bald head warm. To the French, the hat was the embodiment of the rugged American frontiersman and proof that Franklin was a true "natural man." In fact, Franklin sent back to America for a large supply of the caps, which he wore everywhere around Paris."
    Portrait of Ben Franklin, c. 1776, Paris. I can’t locate the artist’s name. I have read that in this picture, he is supposedly wearing a coonskin cap to communicate his rugged Americanness. 

    In observance of Independence Day, I will share a poem written by Benjamin Franklin. Of all the founding fathers, I know the least about him. I did know he wrote poems, though, and so I found and read a few of them today.

    Epitaph In Bookish Style
    by Benjamin Franklin

    The Body of Benjamin Franklin (Printer)
    (Like the cover of an old book
    Its contents torn out
    And stript of its lettering and gilding)
    Lies here, food for worms.
    But the work shall not be lost
    For it will (as he believed) appear once more
    In a new and more elegant edition
    Revised and corrected
    by
    The Author. 

    Happy Birthday, America. Please, please do not blow your — or anyone else’s — face off with a firecracker.