Four Classes of Readers—Ben after Diamonds—Hungry Mind—Words of Thomas Hood—What Franklin Said—First Book Pilgrim's Progress—Talk with His Father—What Franklin Said of Narrative—Plutarch's Lives—Easy to Do Good—What They Were—Incident by Parton—Plan to Buy Burton's Historical Collections—Describes Them—Boyle's Lectures—Kind Offer of Matthew Adams—Borrowing Books of Booksellers' Clerks—Great Favor—Books Very Scarce Then—Greenwood's English Grammar—Talk with Collins—Other Books Read—Habit of Taking Notes—Letter of Franklin about It—Professor Atkinson's Words—Garfield Had Same Habit.
XIV. LEARNING THE ART OF COMPOSITION.
Began to Write Poetry at Seven—Had Practised Putting Thoughts
Together—James Praised His Pieces—Proposition to Write, Print,
and Sell Verses—Wrote Two—Sold Well—His Father's Severe Rebuke—
After-talk with James—Best Writers Deficient at First—Reporting to
James—Benefit to Ben—One of His Verses Preserved—What Franklin
Said of It in Manhood—How He Used the Spectator—Determined to
Improve—His Own Description of His Literary Work—How He Acquired
Socratic Method—Rhetoric and Logic—How a Single Book Made Wesley,
Martin, Pope, Casey, Lincoln, and Others What They Were—A Striking
Case.
XV. THE "COURANT" IN TROUBLE.
The Startling News from the Assembly—A Discussion—A Sarcastic Letter
the Cause—James and Benjamin Summoned before the Council—James
Defiant—Benjamin Dismissed—How Mather Assailed the Courant—How
James Answered Him—James in Prison—Benjamin Editing the Paper—
Quotation from Parton—Persecution of Printers in the Old Country—A
Horrible Case—James Released, and Still Defiant—Inoculation a Remedy
for Small Pox—The Mercury Denouncing James' Imprisonment—James
Still for Freedom of the Press—Secured It for All Time.
XVI. THE BOY EDITOR.
Attacking the Government—The Council Exasperated—Action of the
Courant Club—Plan to Evade Order of the Council—Benjamin, the
Boy-editor—His Address in Courant—Quotations from Courant of
January 14, 1723—Not Libelous—Extract from Parton's Life—When
Newspapers Ceased to be Carried Free—How Long Ben Was in Printing
Office—Remarks by Mr. Sparks—What He Says of General Court—How the
Experience Developed Benjamin—Right Boy in Right Place—Extract from
Courant about Bears.
XVII. THE YOUNG SKEPTIC.
Reading Shaftesbury's Work—Discussion with Collins—Ben's Orthodoxy in
Peril—Benjamin a Thinker—Saying Grace over the Pork Barrel—Reading
from Collins—Several Paragraphs Repugnant to Orthodoxy—Shaftesbury
Attacking Miracles—Ben's Influence over John—Charged with Being
Atheist—His Confession—Letter to His Father—Letter to Sister—Seeing
His Folly—His Prayer—Sad Experience with Infidel Books—Similar to
Lincoln's and Garfield's—Lincoln's Farewell.