Benjamin Franklins selvbiografi
Read Autobiography of Benjamin Franklin by Benjamin Franklin in Danish and English, a parallel text graded reader with audio. Available in CEFR levels A2, B1, B2, and C2.
About this book
A poor candlemaker's son sets his life down on paper for his own son, opening not with grand claims but with the warmth of a father talking across a table: "Dear son: I have always enjoyed learning little stories about my ancestors." What follows traces a boyhood in Boston, an apprenticeship to a hot-tempered brother, and nights spent teaching himself to write by lamplight over borrowed books returned clean by morning.
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Kære søn, jeg har altid nydt at lære små historier om mine forfædre.
Dear son, I have always enjoyed learning small stories about my ancestors.
Du husker måske de spørgsmål, jeg stillede vores slægtninge, da du var med mig i England.
You may remember the questions I asked our relatives when you were with me in England.
Jeg rejste også for at finde ud af mere om vores familie.
I also made a trip to find out more about our family.
Jeg tror, du gerne vil vide noget om mit liv, herunder mange ting, du endnu ikke kender.
I think you would like to know about my life, including many things you do not know yet.
Jeg har en uge fri her på landet, så jeg sætter mig ned for at skrive dette til dig.
I have a week of free time here in the country, so I am sitting down to write this for you.
Jeg har også et par andre grunde til at skrive.
I have a few other reasons to write as well.
Jeg blev født i fattigdom og ukendte kår, men jeg nåede frem til et behageligt liv med et godt ry.
I was born into poverty and obscurity, but I rose to a comfortable life with some good reputation.
About the author
Benjamin Franklin (1706–1790) was a printer before he was anything else — and he was nearly everything else besides: writer, scientist, inventor, diplomat, and a founder of the American republic. He began this account of his life in 1771 as a letter to his son and worked at it, between revolutions, for the rest of his days. He never finished it; it became the most widely read memoir in American letters anyway.
The Autobiography is where the self-improvement book begins — the thirteen virtues, the daily schedule, the famous arrival in Philadelphia with three puffy rolls. Franklin’s plain, good-humoured prose has stood as a model of clear English for two and a half centuries, which is precisely what makes it a fine book to learn the language by.