ing December, before William Whately had opened
or looked over the packet of letters from Hutchin-
son and his friends, it was found that they had
been purloined by some person unknown. It is
not certain that the letters had ever really passed
into William Whately's hands. They may have
been left lying in some place w^here they might
have attracted the notice of some curious busy-
body, who forthwith laid hands upon them. This
point has never been satisfactorily cleared up. At
all events, they were bi-ought to Franklin as con-
taining political -intelligence that might prove im-
portant. At this time Massachusetts was furiously
excited over the attempt of Lord, North's govern-
ment to have the salaries of the judges fixed and
paid by the crown instead of the colonial assembly.
The judges had been threatened with impeachment
should they dare to receive a penny from the royal
treasury, and at the head of the threatened judges
was Oliver's younger brother, the chief justice of
Massachusetts. As agent for the colony, Frank-
lin felt it to be his duty to give information of the
dangerous contents of the letters now laid before
him. Although they purported to be merely a
private and confidential correspondence, they were
not really " of the nature of private letters between
friends." As Franklin said, " they were written
by public officers to persons in public station, on
public affairs, and intended to procure public
measures " ; they were therefore handed to other
public persons, who might be influenced by them to
produce those measures ; their tendency was to in-
cense the mother country against her colonies, and,
by the steps recommended, to widen the breach,
which they effected. The chief caution " from the
writers to Thomas Whately " with respect to pri-
vacy was, to keep their contents from " the knowl-
edge of the colonial agents in London," who, the
writers apprehended, " might return them, or
copies of them, to America." Franklin felt as
Walsingham might have felt on suddenly discover-
ing, in private and confidential papers, the incon-
trovertible proof of some popish plot against the
life of Queen Elizabeth. From the person that
brought him the letters he got permission to send
them to Massachusetts, on condition that they
should be shown only to a few people in authority,
that they should not be copied or printed, that they
should presently be returned, and that the name
of the person from whom they were obtained should
never be disclosed. This last condition was most
thoroughly fulfilled. The others must have been
felt to be mainly a matter of form ; it was obvious
that, though they might be literally complied with,
their spirit would inevitably be violated. As Or-
lando Hutchinson writes, " we all know what this
sort of secrecy means, and what will be the end of
it " ; and, as Franklin himself observed, " there
was no restraint proposed to talking of them, but
only to copying." The letters were sent to the
proper person, Thomas Gushing, speaker of the
Massachusetts assembly, and he showed them to
Hancock, Hawley, and the two Adamses. To these
gentlemen it could have been no new discovery
that Hutchinson and Oliver held such opinions as
were expressed in the lettei's ; but the documents
seemed to furnish tangible proof of what had long
been suspected, that the governor and his lieuten-
ant were plotting against the liberties of Massa-
chusetts. They were soon talked about at every
town-meeting and on every street-corner. The
assembly twitted Hutchinson with them, and asked
for copies of these and other such papers as he
might see fit to communicate. He replied, some-
what sarcastically, " It you desire copies with a
view to make them public, the originals ai'e more
proper for the purpose than any copies." Mis-
taken and dangerous as Hutchinson's policy was, his
conscience acquitted him of any treasonable pur-
pose, and he must naturally have preferred to have
the people judge him by what he had really writ-
ten rather than by vague and distorted rumors.
His reply was taken as sufficient warrant for print-
ing the letters, and they were soon in the posses-
sion of every reader in England or America who
could afford sixpence for a political tract. On the
other side of the Atlantic they aroused as much
excitement as on this, and William Whately be-
came concerned to know who could have purloined
the letters. On slight evidence he charged a Mr.
Temple with the theft, and a duel ensued in which
Whately was wounded. Hearing of this affair,
Franklin published a card in which he avowed his
own share in the transaction, and in a measure
screened all others by drawing the full torrent of
wrath and abuse upon himself. All the ill-sup-
pressed spleen of the king's friends was at once
discharged upon him. Meanwhile the Massachu-
setts assembly formally censured the letters, as
evidence of a -scheme for subverting the constitu-
tion of the colony, and petitioned the king to
remove Hutchinson and Oliver from office. In
January, 1774, the petition was duly brought before
the privy council in the presence of a large and
brilliant gathering of spectators. The solicitor-
general, David Wedderburn, instead of discussing
the question on its merits, broke out with a violent
and scurrilous invective against Franklin, whom
he derided as a man of letters, calling him a " man
of three letters," the Roman slang expression for
f-u-r, a thief. Of the members of government
present, Lord North alone preserved decorum ; the
others laughed and clapped their hands, while
Franklin stood as unmoved as the moon at the
baying of dogs. He could afford to disregard the
sneers of a man like Wedderburn, whom the king,
though fain to use him as a tool, called the greatest
knave in the realm. The Massachusetts petition
was rejected as scandalous, and next day Franklin
was dismissed from his office of postmaster-general.
They are in error who think it was this personal
insult that led Franklin to favor the revolt of the
colpnies, as they are also wrong who suppose that
his object in sending home the Hutchinson letters
was to stir up dissension. His conduct imme-
diately after passing through this ordeal is sufficient
proof of the unabated sincerity of his desire for
conciliation. The news of the Boston tea-party
arriving in England about this time, led presently
to the acts of April, 1774, for closing the port of
Boston and remodelling the government of Massa-
chusetts. The only way in which Massachusetts
could escape these penalties was by indemnifying
the East India company for the tea that had been
destroyed ; and Franklin, seeing that the attempt
to enforce the new acts must almost inevitably lead
to war, actually went so far as to advise Massachu-
setts to pay for the tea. Samuel Adams, on hear-
ing of this, is said to have observed : " Franklin
may be a good philosopher, but he is a bungling
politician." Certainly in this instance Franklin
showed himself less far-sighted than Adams and the
people of Massachusetts. The moment had come
when compromise was no longer possible. To have
yielded now, in the face of the arrogant and tyran-
nical acts of April, would have been not only to
stultify the heroic deeds of the patriots in the last
December, but it would have broken up the nascent
union of the colonies ; it would virtually have sur-
rendered them, bound hand and foot, to the tender
Page:Appletons' Cyclopædia of American Biography (1900, volume 2).djvu/560
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
This page needs to be proofread.
530
FRANKLIN
FRANKLIN