Lefty universe - Left-handed products and curiosities
Phone 96 391 98 97
tonya@universozurdo.com
Search

results
  • product categories:
  • products:
follow us Follow Me on Instagram Follow Me on Pinterest facebookTwitter
actividades y noticias

Benjamin Franklin. The onset of tolerance with lefties

27/02/2013

With this article we begin a new series of literary and news notes Quotations. All written by famous people, and most importantly: left handers.

The choice for this occasion, belongs to the great illustrated BENJAMIN FRANKLIN. This article was published in a newspaper, about 1779, and is from the book: THE BOOK OF GOOD MAN.

We want to emphasize that it was the start handedness tolerance since caught the attention of a very significant to all educators in the nineteenth century, beginning ambidextrous education.

Here is the article in which Benjamin Franklin claimed tolerance for left-handed people:

I address myself to all the friends of youth, and conjure them to direct their compassionate regards to my unhappy fate, in order to remove the prejudices of which I am the victim.  There are twin sisters of us; and the two eyes of man do not more resemble, nor are capable of being upon better terms with each other, than my sister and myself, were it not for the partiality of our parents, who make the most injurious distinctions between us.  From my infancy, I have been led to consider my sister as a being of a more elevated rank.  I was suffered to grow up without the least instruction, while nothing was spared in her education.  She had masters to teach her writing, drawing, music, and other accomplishments; but if by chance I touched a pencil, a pen, or a needle, I was bitterly rebuked; and more than once I have been beaten for being awkward, and wanting a graceful manner.  It is true, my sister associated me with her upon some occasions; but she always made a point of taking the lead, calling upon me only from necessity, or to figure by her side.

But conceive not, Sirs, that my complaints are instigated merely by vanity.  No; my uneasiness is occasioned by an object much more serious.  It is the practice in our family, that the whole business of providing for its subsistence falls upon my sister and myself.  If any indisposition should attack my sister, -- and I mention it in confidence upon this occasion, that she is subject to the gout, the rheumatism, and cramp, without making mention of other accidents, -- what would be the fate of our poor family?  Must not the regret of our parents be excessive, at having placed so great a difference between sisters who are so perfectly equal?  Alas! we must perish from distress; for it would not be in my power even to scrawl a suppliant petition for relief, having been obliged to employ the hand of another in transcribing the request which I have now the honour to prefer to you.

Condescend, Sirs, to make my parents sensible of the injustice of an exclusive tenderness, and of the necessity of distributing their care and affection among all their children equally.  I am, with a profound respect, Sirs, your obedient servant, THE LEFT HAND.

volver