Ben franklin autobiography shmoop pride

          In The Autobiography of Benjamin Franklin, the hardest virtue to work on is humility (the opposite of pride), because even if you manage to be humble, that's.!

          Words From The Past

          In retrospect, I now find it strange how I was taught history.

          Being in debt is cause for worry, while managing accounts properly conveys a sense of pride.

          Instead of reading the writings of the people who lived during the times I studied, my teachers primarily instructed from history books. I would happily have read both works from the period of study and history books, but that never seemed to be a matter of much consideration.

          Admittedly, because its English is so remote from our time, Shakespeare is hard to read.

          Yet with a little practice, high school students still do it, but it seems to me they now do it less often. Franklin’s autobiography, however, is eminently readable.

          Franklin has to work on his morality himself.

        1. You've got to wonder why Franklin is always defending things like vanity and pride – perhaps because he recognizes his own tendency to have vain or proud.
        2. In The Autobiography of Benjamin Franklin, the hardest virtue to work on is humility (the opposite of pride), because even if you manage to be humble, that's.
        3. Everything you need to know about the tone of Benjamin Franklin's The Autobiography of Benjamin Franklin, written by experts with you in mind.
        4. Franklin then picks up the story of his life in , when he publishes the first edition of Poor Richard's Almanac.
        5. So for your enjoyment and edification, I offer a couple of passages from The Autobiography of Benjamin Franklin by Benjamin Franklin.

          The first is a list of virtues. Conscious that his character needed improvement, Franklin set about the task.

          He contrived a written plan, and in this plan he identified the virtues he thought important.

          These names of virtues