The Education of Henry Adams by Adams, Henry - CHAPTER XIII

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The Education of Henry Adams

CHAPTER XIII

THE PER­FEC­TION OF HU­MAN SO­CI­ETY (1864)

MIN­IS­TER ADAMS’S suc­cess in stop­ping the rebel rams fixed his po­si­tion once for all in En­glish so­ci­ety. From that mo­ment he could af­ford to drop the char­ac­ter of diplo­ma­tist, and as­sume what, for an Amer­ican Min­is­ter in Lon­don, was an ex­clu­sive diplo­mat­ic ad­van­tage, the char­ac­ter of a kind of Amer­ican Peer of the Realm. The British nev­er did things by halves. Once they rec­og­nized a man’s right to so­cial priv­ileges, they ac­cept­ed him as one of them­selves. Much as Lord Der­by and Mr. Dis­raeli were ac­cept­ed as lead­ers of Her Majesty’s do­mes­tic Op­po­si­tion, Min­is­ter Adams had a rank of his own as a kind of lead­er of Her Majesty’s Amer­ican Op­po­si­tion. Even the Times con­ced­ed it. The years of strug­gle were over, and Min­is­ter Adams rapid­ly gained a po­si­tion which would have caused his fa­ther or grand­fa­ther to stare with in­cred­ulous en­vy.

This An­glo-​Amer­ican form of diplo­ma­cy was chiefly undiplo­mat­ic, and had the pe­cu­liar ef­fect of teach­ing a habit of diplo­ma­cy use­less or mis­chievous ev­ery­where but in Lon­don. Nowhere else in the world could one ex­pect to fig­ure in a role so un­pro­fes­sion­al. The young man knew no longer what char­ac­ter he bore. Pri­vate sec­re­tary in the morn­ing, son in the af­ter­noon, young man about town in the evening, the on­ly char­ac­ter he nev­er bore was that of diplo­ma­tist, ex­cept when he want­ed a card to some great func­tion. His diplo­mat­ic ed­uca­tion was at an end; he sel­dom met a diplo­mat, and nev­er had busi­ness with one; he could be of no use to them, or they to him; but he drift­ed in­evitably in­to so­ci­ety, and, do what he might, his next ed­uca­tion must be one of En­glish so­cial life. Tossed be­tween the horns of suc­ces­sive dilem­mas, he reached his twen­ty-​sixth birth­day with­out the pow­er of earn­ing five dol­lars in any oc­cu­pa­tion. His friends in the army were al­most as bad­ly off, but even army life ru­ined a young man less fa­tal­ly than Lon­don so­ci­ety. Had he been rich, this form of ru­in would have mat­tered noth­ing; but the young men of 1865 were none of them rich; all had to earn a liv­ing; yet they had reached high po­si­tions of re­spon­si­bil­ity and pow­er in camps and Courts, with­out a dol­lar of their own and with no tenure of of­fice.

Hen­ry Adams had failed to ac­quire any use­ful ed­uca­tion; he should at least have ac­quired so­cial ex­pe­ri­ence. Cu­ri­ous­ly enough, he failed here al­so. From the Eu­ro­pean or En­glish point of view, he had no so­cial ex­pe­ri­ence, and nev­er got it. Min­is­ter Adams hap­pened on a po­lit­ical in­ter­reg­num ow­ing to Lord Palmer­ston’s per­son­al in­flu­ence from 1860 to 1865; but this po­lit­ical in­ter­reg­num was less marked than the so­cial still-​stand dur­ing the same years. The Prince Con­sort was dead; the Queen had re­tired; the Prince of Wales was still a boy. In its best days, Vic­to­ri­an so­ci­ety had nev­er been “smart.” Dur­ing the for­ties, un­der the in­flu­ence of Louis Philippe, Courts af­fect­ed to be sim­ple, se­ri­ous and mid­dle class; and they suc­ceed­ed. The taste of Louis Philippe was bour­geois be­yond any taste ex­cept that of Queen Vic­to­ria. Style lin­gered in the back­ground with the pow­dered foot­man be­hind the yel­low char­iot, but speak­ing so­cial­ly the Queen had no style save what she in­her­it­ed. Bal­moral was a startling rev­ela­tion of roy­al taste. Noth­ing could be worse than the toi­lettes at Court un­less it were the way they were worn. One’s eyes might be daz­zled by jew­els, but they were heir­looms, and if any la­dy ap­peared well dressed, she was ei­ther a for­eign­er or “fast.” Fash­ion was not fash­ion­able in Lon­don un­til the Amer­icans and the Jews were let loose. The style of Lon­don toi­lette uni­ver­sal in 1864 was grotesque, like Mon­ck­ton Milnes on horse­back in Rot­ten Row.

So­ci­ety of this sort might fit a young man in some de­gree for edit­ing Shake­speare or Swift, but had lit­tle re­la­tion with the so­ci­ety of 1870, and none with that of 1900. Ow­ing to oth­er caus­es, young Adams nev­er got the full train­ing of such style as still ex­ist­ed. The em­bar­rass­ments of his first few sea­sons so­cial­ly ru­ined him. His own want of ex­pe­ri­ence pre­vent­ed his ask­ing in­tro­duc­tions to the ladies who ruled so­ci­ety; his want of friends pre­vent­ed his know­ing who these ladies were; and he had ev­ery rea­son to ex­pect snub­bing if he put him­self in ev­idence. This sen­si­tive­ness was thrown away on En­glish so­ci­ety, where men and wom­en treat­ed each oth­ers’ ad­vances much more bru­tal­ly than those of strangers, but young Adams was son and pri­vate sec­re­tary too; he could not be as thick-​skinned as an En­glish­man. He was not alone. Ev­ery young diplo­mat, and most of the old ones, felt awk­ward in an En­glish house from a cer­tain­ty that they were not pre­cise­ly want­ed there, and a pos­si­bil­ity that they might be told so.

If there was in those days a coun­try house in Eng­land which had a right to call it­self broad in views and large in tastes, it was Bret­ton in York­shire; and if there was a host­ess who had a right to con­sid­er her­self fash­ion­able as well as charm­ing, it was La­dy Mar­garet Beau­mont; yet one morn­ing at break­fast there, sit­ting by her side — not for his own mer­its — Hen­ry Adams heard her say to her­self in her lan­guid and lib­er­al way, with her rich voice and mus­ing man­ner, look­ing in­to her tea-​cup: “I don’t think I care for for­eign­ers!” Hor­ror-​strick­en, not so much on his own ac­count as on hers, the young man could on­ly ex­ecute him­self as gai­ly as he might: “But La­dy Mar­garet, please make one small ex­cep­tion for me!” Of course she replied what was ev­ident, that she did not call him a for­eign­er, and her ge­nial Irish charm made the slip of tongue a hap­py cour­tesy; but none the less she knew that, ex­cept for his mo­men­tary per­son­al in­tro­duc­tion, he was in fact a for­eign­er, and there was no imag­in­able rea­son why she should like him, or any oth­er for­eign­er, un­less it were be­cause she was bored by na­tives. She seemed to feel that her in­dif­fer­ence need­ed a rea­son to ex­cuse it­self in her own eyes, and she showed the sub­con­scious sym­pa­thy of the Irish na­ture which nev­er feels it­self per­fect­ly at home even in Eng­land. She, too, was some shad­owy shade un-​En­glish.

Al­ways con­scious of this bar­ri­er, while the war last­ed the pri­vate sec­re­tary hid him­self among the herd of for­eign­ers till he found his re­la­tions fixed and un­change­able. He nev­er felt him­self in so­ci­ety, and he nev­er knew def­inite­ly what was meant as so­ci­ety by those who were in it. He saw far enough to note a score of so­ci­eties which seemed quite in­de­pen­dent of each oth­er. The smartest was the small­est, and to him al­most whol­ly strange. The largest was the sport­ing world, al­so un­known to him ex­cept through the talk of his ac­quain­tances. Be­tween or be­yond these lay groups of neb­ulous so­ci­eties. His lawyer friends, like Evarts, fre­quent­ed le­gal cir­cles where one still sat over the wine and told anec­dotes of the bench and bar; but he him­self nev­er set eyes on a judge ex­cept when his fa­ther took him to call on old Lord Lyn­dhurst, where they found old Lord Camp­bell, both abus­ing old Lord Brougham. The Church and the Bish­ops formed sev­er­al so­ci­eties which no sec­re­tary ev­er saw ex­cept as an in­ter­lop­er. The Army; the Navy; the In­di­an Ser­vice; the med­ical and sur­gi­cal pro­fes­sions; City peo­ple; artists; coun­ty fam­ilies; the Scotch, and in­def­inite oth­er sub­di­vi­sions of so­ci­ety ex­ist­ed, which were as strange to each oth­er as they were to Adams. At the end of eight or ten sea­sons in Lon­don so­ci­ety he pro­fessed to know less about it, or how to en­ter it, than he did when he made his first ap­pear­ance at Miss Bur­dett Coutts’s in May, 1861.

Soon­er or lat­er ev­ery young man dropped in­to a set or cir­cle, and fre­quent­ed the few hous­es that were will­ing to har­bor him. An Amer­ican who nei­ther hunt­ed nor raced, nei­ther shot nor fished nor gam­bled, and was not mar­riage­able, had no need to think of so­ci­ety at large. Nine­ty-​nine hous­es in ev­ery hun­dred were use­less to him, a greater bore to him than he to them. Thus the ques­tion of get­ting in­to — or get­ting out of — so­ci­ety which trou­bled young for­eign­ers great­ly, set­tled it­self af­ter three or four years of painful spec­ula­tion. So­ci­ety had no uni­ty; one wan­dered about in it like a mag­got in cheese; it was not a han­som cab, to be got in­to, or out of, at din­ner-​time.

There­fore he al­ways pro­fessed him­self ig­no­rant of so­ci­ety; he nev­er knew whether he had been in it or not, but from the ac­counts of his fu­ture friends, like Gen­er­al Dick Tay­lor or George Smal­ley, and of var­ious ladies who reigned in the sev­en­ties, he in­clined to think that he knew very lit­tle about it. Cer­tain great hous­es and cer­tain great func­tions of course he at­tend­ed, like ev­ery one else who could get cards, but even of these the num­ber was small that kept an in­ter­est or helped ed­uca­tion. In sev­en years he could re­mem­ber on­ly two that seemed to have any mean­ing for him, and he nev­er knew what that mean­ing was. Nei­ther of the two was of­fi­cial; nei­ther was En­glish in in­ter­est; and both were scan­dals to the philoso­pher while they scarce­ly en­light­ened men of the world.

One was at De­von­shire House, an or­di­nary, un­premed­itat­ed evening re­cep­tion. Nat­ural­ly ev­ery one went to De­von­shire House if asked, and the rooms that night were fair­ly full of the usu­al peo­ple. The pri­vate sec­re­tary was stand­ing among the rest, when Mme. de Cas­tiglione en­tered, the fa­mous beau­ty of the Sec­ond Em­pire. How beau­ti­ful she may have been, or in­deed what sort of beau­ty she was, Adams nev­er knew, be­cause the com­pa­ny, con­sist­ing of the most re­fined and aris­to­crat­ic so­ci­ety in the world, in­stant­ly formed a lane, and stood in ranks to stare at her, while those be­hind mount­ed on chairs to look over their neigh­bors’ heads; so that the la­dy walked through this po­lite mob, stared com­plete­ly out of coun­te­nance, and fled the house at once. This was all!

The oth­er strange spec­ta­cle was at Stafford House, April 13, 1864, when, in a palace gallery that re­called Pao­lo Veronese’s pic­tures of Christ in his scenes of mir­acle, Garibal­di, in his gray capote over his red shirt, re­ceived all Lon­don, and three duchess­es lit­er­al­ly wor­shipped at his feet. Here, at all events, a pri­vate sec­re­tary had sure­ly caught the last and high­est touch of so­cial ex­pe­ri­ence; but what it meant — what so­cial, moral, or men­tal de­vel­op­ment it point­ed out to the searcher of truth — was not a mat­ter to be treat­ed ful­ly by a lead­er in the Morn­ing Post or even by a ser­mon in West­min­ster Abbey. Mme. de Cas­tiglione and Garibal­di cov­ered, be­tween them, too much space for sim­ple mea­sure­ment; their curves were too com­plex for mere arith­metic. The task of bring­ing the two in­to any com­mon re­la­tion with an or­dered so­cial sys­tem tend­ing to or­der­ly de­vel­op­ment — in Lon­don or else­where — was well fit­ted for Al­ger­non Swin­burne or Vic­tor Hugo, but was be­yond any pro­cess yet reached by the ed­uca­tion of Hen­ry Adams, who would prob­ably, even then, have re­ject­ed, as su­per­fi­cial or su­per­nat­ural, all the views tak­en by any of the com­pa­ny who looked on with him at these two in­ter­est­ing and per­plex­ing sights.

From the Court, or Court so­ci­ety, a mere pri­vate sec­re­tary got noth­ing at all, or next to noth­ing, that could help him on his road through life. Roy­al­ty was in abeyance. One was tempt­ed to think in these years, 1860-65, that the nicest dis­tinc­tion be­tween the very best so­ci­ety and the sec­ond-​best, was their at­ti­tude to­wards roy­al­ty. The one re­gard­ed roy­al­ty as a bore, and avoid­ed it, or qui­et­ly said that the Queen had nev­er been in so­ci­ety. The same thing might have been said of ful­ly half the peer­age. Adams nev­er knew even the names of half the rest; he nev­er ex­changed ten words with any mem­ber of the roy­al fam­ily; he nev­er knew any one in those years who showed in­ter­est in any mem­ber of the roy­al fam­ily, or who would have giv­en five shillings for the opin­ion of any roy­al per­son on any sub­ject; or cared to en­ter any roy­al or no­ble pres­ence, un­less the house was made at­trac­tive by as much so­cial ef­fort as would have been nec­es­sary in oth­er coun­tries where no rank ex­ist­ed. No doubt, as one of a swarm, young Adams slight­ly knew var­ious gild­ed youth who fre­quent­ed balls and led such danc­ing as was most in vogue, but they seemed to set no val­ue on rank; their anx­iety was on­ly to know where to find the best part­ners be­fore mid­night, and the best sup­per af­ter mid­night. To the Amer­ican, as to Arthur Pen­den­nis or Barnes New­come, the val­ue of so­cial po­si­tion and knowl­edge was ev­ident enough; he val­ued it at rather more than it was worth to him; but it was a shad­owy thing which seemed to vary with ev­ery street cor­ner; a thing which had shift­ing stan­dards, and which no one could catch out­right. The half-​dozen lead­ers and beau­ties of his time, with great names and of the ut­most fash­ion, made some of the poor­est mar­riages, and the least showy ca­reers.

Tired of look­ing on at so­ci­ety from the out­side, Adams grew to loathe the sight of his Court dress; to groan at ev­ery an­nounce­ment of a Court ball; and to dread ev­ery in­vi­ta­tion to a for­mal din­ner. The great­est so­cial event gave not half the plea­sure that one could buy for ten shillings at the opera when Pat­ti sang Cheru­bi­no or Gretchen, and not a fourth of the ed­uca­tion. Yet this was not the opin­ion of the best judges. Lothrop Mot­ley, who stood among the very best, said to him ear­ly in his ap­pren­tice­ship that the Lon­don din­ner and the En­glish coun­try house were the per­fec­tion of hu­man so­ci­ety. The young man med­itat­ed over it, un­cer­tain of its mean­ing. Mot­ley could not have thought the din­ner it­self per­fect, since there was not then — out­side of a few bankers or for­eign­ers — a good cook or a good ta­ble in Lon­don, and nine out of ten of the din­ners that Mot­ley ate came from Gunter’s, and all were alike. Ev­ery one, es­pe­cial­ly in young so­ci­ety, com­plained bit­ter­ly that En­glish­men did not know a good din­ner when they ate it, and could not or­der one if they were giv­en carte blanche. Hen­ry Adams was not a judge, and knew no more than they, but he heard the com­plaints, and he could not think that Mot­ley meant to praise the En­glish cui­sine.

Equal­ly lit­tle could Mot­ley have meant that din­ners were good to look at. Noth­ing could be worse than the toi­lettes; noth­ing less artis­tic than the ap­pear­ance of the com­pa­ny. One’s eyes might be daz­zled by fam­ily di­amonds, but, if an Amer­ican wom­an were present, she was sure to make com­ments about the way the jew­els were worn. If there was a well-​dressed la­dy at ta­ble, she was ei­ther an Amer­ican or “fast.” She at­tract­ed as much no­tice as though she were on the stage. No one could pos­si­bly ad­mire an En­glish din­ner-​ta­ble.

Least of all did Mot­ley mean that the taste or the man­ners were per­fect. The man­ners of En­glish so­ci­ety were no­to­ri­ous, and the taste was worse. With­out ex­cep­tion ev­ery Amer­ican wom­an rose in re­bel­lion against En­glish man­ners. In fact, the charm of Lon­don which made most im­pres­sion on Amer­icans was the vi­olence of its con­trasts; the ex­treme bad­ness of the worst, mak­ing back­ground for the dis­tinc­tion, re­fine­ment, or wit of a few, just as the ex­treme beau­ty of a few su­perb wom­en was more ef­fec­tive against the plain­ness of the crowd. The re­sult was me­di­ae­val, and amus­ing; some­times coarse to a de­gree that might have star­tled a roustabout, and some­times cour­te­ous and con­sid­er­ate to a de­gree that sug­gest­ed King Arthur’s Round Ta­ble; but this artis­tic con­trast was sure­ly not the per­fec­tion that Mot­ley had in his mind. He meant some­thing schol­ar­ly, world­ly, and mod­ern; he was think­ing of his own tastes.

Prob­ably he meant that, in his fa­vorite hous­es, the tone was easy, the talk was good, and the stan­dard of schol­ar­ship was high. Even there he would have been forced to qual­ify his ad­jec­tives. No Ger­man would have ad­mit­ted that En­glish schol­ar­ship was high, or that it was schol­ar­ship at all, or that any wish for schol­ar­ship ex­ist­ed in Eng­land. Noth­ing that seemed to smell of the shop or of the lec­ture-​room was want­ed. One might as well have talked of Re­nan’s Christ at the ta­ble of the Bish­op of Lon­don, as talk of Ger­man philol­ogy at the ta­ble of an Ox­ford don. So­ci­ety, if a small lit­er­ary class could be called so­ci­ety, want­ed to be amused in its old way. Syd­ney Smith, who had amused, was dead; so was Macaulay, who in­struct­ed if he did not amuse; Thack­er­ay died at Christ­mas, 1863; Dick­ens nev­er felt at home, and sel­dom ap­peared, in so­ci­ety; Bul­wer Lyt­ton was not spright­ly; Ten­nyson de­test­ed strangers; Car­lyle was most­ly de­test­ed by them; Dar­win nev­er came to town; the men of whom Mot­ley must have been think­ing were such as he might meet at Lord Houghton’s break­fasts: Grote, Jowett, Mil­man, or Froude; Brown­ing, Matthew Arnold, or Swin­burne; Bish­op Wilber­force, Ven­ables, or Hay­ward; or per­haps Glad­stone, Robert Lowe, or Lord Granville. A rel­ative­ly small class, com­mon­ly iso­lat­ed, sup­pressed, and lost at the usu­al Lon­don din­ner, such so­ci­ety as this was fair­ly fa­mil­iar even to a pri­vate sec­re­tary, but to the lit­er­ary Amer­ican it might well seem per­fec­tion since he could find noth­ing of the sort in Amer­ica. With­in the nar­row lim­its of this class, the Amer­ican Lega­tion was fair­ly at home; pos­si­bly a score of hous­es, all lib­er­al, and all lit­er­ary, but per­fect on­ly in the eyes of a Har­vard Col­lege his­to­ri­an. They could teach lit­tle worth learn­ing, for their tastes were an­ti­quat­ed and their knowl­edge was ig­no­rance to the next gen­er­ation. What was al­to­geth­er fa­tal for fu­ture pur­pos­es, they were on­ly En­glish.

A so­cial ed­uca­tion in such a medi­um was bound to be use­less in any oth­er, yet Adams had to learn it to the bot­tom. The one thing need­ful for a pri­vate sec­re­tary, was that he should not on­ly seem, but should ac­tu­al­ly be, at home. He stud­ied care­ful­ly, and prac­tised painful­ly, what seemed to be the fa­vorite ac­com­plish­ments of so­ci­ety. Per­haps his ner­vous­ness de­ceived him; per­haps he took for an ide­al of oth­ers what was on­ly his re­flect­ed im­age; but he con­ceived that the per­fec­tion of hu­man so­ci­ety re­quired that a man should en­ter a draw­ing-​room where he was a to­tal stranger, and place him­self on the hearth-​rug, his back to the fire, with an air of ex­pec­tant benev­olence, with­out cu­rios­ity, much as though he had dropped in at a char­ity con­cert, kind­ly dis­posed to ap­plaud the per­form­ers and to over­look mis­takes. This ide­al rarely suc­ceed­ed in youth, and to­wards thir­ty it took a form of mod­ified in­so­lence and of­fen­sive pa­tron­age; but about six­ty it mel­lowed in­to cour­tesy, kind­li­ness, and even def­er­ence to the young which had ex­traor­di­nary charm both in wom­en and in men. Un­for­tu­nate­ly Adams could not wait till six­ty for ed­uca­tion; he had his liv­ing to earn; and the En­glish air of pa­tron­age would earn no in­come for him any­where else.

Af­ter five or six years of con­stant prac­tice, any one can ac­quire the habit of go­ing from one strange com­pa­ny to an­oth­er with­out think­ing much of one’s self or of them, as though silent­ly re­flect­ing that “in a world where we are all in­sects, no in­sect is alien; per­haps they are hu­man in parts”; but the dreamy habit of mind which comes from soli­tude in crowds is not fit­ness for so­cial suc­cess ex­cept in Lon­don. Ev­ery­where else it is in­jury. Eng­land was a so­cial king­dom whose so­cial coinage had no cur­ren­cy else­where.

En­glish­wom­en, from the ed­uca­tion­al point of view, could give noth­ing un­til they ap­proached forty years old. Then they be­come very in­ter­est­ing — very charm­ing — to the man of fifty. The young Amer­ican was not worth the young En­glish­wom­an’s no­tice, and nev­er re­ceived it. Nei­ther un­der­stood the oth­er. On­ly in the do­mes­tic re­la­tion, in the coun­try — nev­er in so­ci­ety at large — a young Amer­ican might ac­ci­den­tal­ly make friends with an En­glish­wom­an of his own age, but it nev­er hap­pened to Hen­ry Adams. His sus­cep­ti­ble na­ture was left to the mer­cy of Amer­ican girls, which was pro­fes­sion­al du­ty rather than ed­uca­tion as long as diplo­ma­cy held its own.

Thus he found him­self launched on wa­ters where he had nev­er meant to sail, and float­ing along a stream which car­ried him far from his port. His third sea­son in Lon­don so­ci­ety saw the end of his diplo­mat­ic ed­uca­tion, and be­gan for him the so­cial life of a young man who felt at home in Eng­land — more at home there than any­where else. With this feel­ing, the mere habit of go­ing to gar­den-​par­ties, din­ners, re­cep­tions, and balls had noth­ing to do. One might go to scores with­out a sen­sa­tion of home. One might stay in no end of coun­try hous­es with­out for­get­ting that one was a to­tal stranger and could nev­er be any­thing else. One might bow to half the dukes and duchess­es in Eng­land, and feel on­ly the more strange. Hun­dreds of per­sons might pass with a nod and nev­er come near­er. Close re­la­tion in a place like Lon­don is a per­son­al mys­tery as pro­found as chem­ical affin­ity. Thou­sands pass, and one sep­arates him­self from the mass to at­tach him­self to an­oth­er, and so make, lit­tle by lit­tle, a group.

One morn­ing, April 27, 1863, he was asked to break­fast with Sir Hen­ry Hol­land, the old Court physi­cian who had been ac­quaint­ed with ev­ery Amer­ican Min­is­ter since Ed­ward Ev­erett, and was a valu­able so­cial al­ly, who had the courage to try to be of use to ev­ery­body, and who, while ask­ing the pri­vate sec­re­tary to break­fast one day, was too dis­creet to be­tray what he might have learned about rebel do­ings at his break­fast-​ta­ble the day be­fore. He had been friend­ly with the Lega­tion, in the teeth of so­ci­ety, and was still bear­ing up against the weight of opin­ion, so that young Adams could not de­cline his in­vi­ta­tions, al­though they obliged him to break­fast in Brook Street at nine o’clock in the morn­ing, al­ter­nate­ly with Mr. James M. Ma­son. Old Dr. Hol­land was him­self as hale as a hawk, driv­ing all day bare-​head­ed about Lon­don, and eat­ing Welsh rarebit ev­ery night be­fore bed; he thought that any young man should be pleased to take his ear­ly muf­fin in Brook Street, and sup­ply a few crumbs of war news for the dai­ly peck­ings of em­inent pa­tients. Meek­ly, when sum­moned, the pri­vate sec­re­tary went, and on reach­ing the front door, this par­tic­ular morn­ing, he found there an­oth­er young man in the act of rap­ping the knock­er. They en­tered the break­fas­troom to­geth­er, where they were in­tro­duced to each oth­er, and Adams learned that the oth­er guest was a Cam­bridge un­der­grad­uate, Charles Milnes Gaskell, son of James Milnes Gaskell, the Mem­ber for Wen­lock; an­oth­er of the York­shire Mil­ne­ses, from Thornes near Wake­field. Fate had fixed Adams to York­shire. By an­oth­er chance it hap­pened that young Milnes Gaskell was in­ti­mate at Cam­bridge with William Ev­erett who was al­so about to take his de­gree. A third chance in­spired Mr. Evarts with a fan­cy for vis­it­ing Cam­bridge, and led William Ev­erett to of­fer his ser­vices as host. Adams act­ed as couri­er to Mr. Evarts, and at the end of May they went down for a few days, when William Ev­erett did the hon­ors as host with a kind­ness and at­ten­tion that made his cousin sore­ly con­scious of his own so­cial short­com­ings. Cam­bridge was pret­ty, and the dons were kind. Mr. Evarts en­joyed his vis­it but this was mere­ly a part of the pri­vate sec­re­tary’s day’s work. What af­fect­ed his whole life was the in­ti­ma­cy then be­gun with Milnes Gaskell and his cir­cle of un­der­grad­uate friends, just about to en­ter the world.

In­ti­mates are pre­des­tined. Adams met in Eng­land a thou­sand peo­ple, great and small; jos­tled against ev­ery one, from roy­al princes to gin-​shop loafers; at­tend­ed end­less of­fi­cial func­tions and pri­vate par­ties; vis­it­ed ev­ery part of the Unit­ed King­dom and was not quite a stranger at the Lega­tions in Paris and Rome; he knew the so­ci­eties of cer­tain coun­try hous­es, and ac­quired habits of Sun­day-​af­ter­noon calls; but all this gave him noth­ing to do, and was life wast­ed. For him noth­ing what­ev­er could be gained by es­cort­ing Amer­ican ladies to draw­ing-​rooms or Amer­ican gen­tle­men to lev­ees at St. James’s Palace, or bow­ing solemn­ly to peo­ple with great ti­tles, at Court balls, or even by awk­ward­ly jostling roy­al­ty at gar­den-​par­ties; all this was done for the Gov­ern­ment, and nei­ther Pres­ident Lin­coln nor Sec­re­tary Se­ward would ev­er know enough of their busi­ness to thank him for do­ing what they did not know how to get prop­er­ly done by their own ser­vants; but for Hen­ry Adams — not pri­vate sec­re­tary — all the time tak­en up by such du­ties was wast­ed. On the oth­er hand, his few per­son­al in­ti­ma­cies con­cerned him alone, and the chance that made him al­most a York­shire­man was one that must have start­ed un­der the Hep­tarchy.

More than any oth­er coun­ty in Eng­land, York­shire re­tained a sort of so­cial in­de­pen­dence of Lon­don. Scot­land it­self was hard­ly more dis­tinct. The York­shire type had al­ways been the strongest of the British strains; the Nor­we­gian and the Dane were a dif­fer­ent race from the Sax­on. Even Lan­cashire had not the mass and the cul­ti­va­tion of the West Rid­ing. Lon­don could nev­er quite ab­sorb York­shire, which, in its turn had no great love for Lon­don and freely showed it. To a cer­tain de­gree, ev­ident enough to York­shire­men, York­shire was not En­glish — or was all Eng­land, as they might choose to ex­press it. This must have been the rea­son why young Adams was drawn there rather than else­where. Mon­ck­ton Milnes alone took the trou­ble to draw him, and pos­si­bly Milnes was the on­ly man in Eng­land with whom Hen­ry Adams, at that mo­ment, had a chance of call­ing out such an un-​En­glish ef­fort. Nei­ther Ox­ford nor Cam­bridge nor any re­gion south of the Hum­ber con­tained a con­sid­er­able house where a young Amer­ican would have been sought as a friend. Ec­cen­tric­ity alone did not ac­count for it. Mon­ck­ton Milnes was a sin­gu­lar type, but his dis­tant cousin, James Milnes Gaskell, was an­oth­er, quite as marked, in an op­po­site sense. Milnes nev­er seemed will­ing to rest; Milnes Gaskell nev­er seemed will­ing to move. In his youth one of a very fa­mous group — Arthur Hal­lam, Ten­nyson, Man­ning, Glad­stone, Fran­cis Doyle — and re­gard­ed as one of the most promis­ing; an ador­er of George Can­ning; in Par­lia­ment since com­ing of age; mar­ried in­to the pow­er­ful con­nec­tion of the Wynns of Wyn­stay; rich ac­cord­ing to York­shire stan­dards; in­ti­mate with his po­lit­ical lead­ers; he was one of the nu­mer­ous En­glish­men who refuse of­fice rather than make the ef­fort of car­ry­ing it, and want pow­er on­ly to make it a source of in­do­lence. He was a vo­ra­cious read­er and an ad­mirable crit­ic; he had forty years of par­lia­men­tary tra­di­tion on his mem­ory; he liked to talk and to lis­ten; he liked his din­ner and, in spite of George Can­ning, his dry cham­pagne; he liked wit and anec­dote; but he be­longed to the gen­er­ation of 1830, a gen­er­ation which could not sur­vive the tele­graph and rail­way, and which even York­shire could hard­ly pro­duce again. To an Amer­ican he was a char­ac­ter even more un­usu­al and more fas­ci­nat­ing than his dis­tant cousin Lord Houghton.

Mr. Milnes Gaskell was kind to the young Amer­ican whom his son brought to the house, and Mrs. Milnes Gaskell was kinder, for she thought the Amer­ican per­haps a less dan­ger­ous friend than some En­glish­man might be, for her son, and she was prob­ably right. The Amer­ican had the sense to see that she was her­self one of the most in­tel­li­gent and sym­pa­thet­ic wom­en in Eng­land; her sis­ter, Miss Char­lotte Wynn, was an­oth­er; and both were of an age and a po­si­tion in so­ci­ety that made their friend­ship a com­plir­nent as well as a plea­sure. Their con­sent and ap­proval set­tled the mat­ter. In Eng­land, the fam­ily is a se­ri­ous fact; once ad­mit­ted to it, one is there for life. Lon­don might ut­ter­ly van­ish from one’s hori­zon, but as long as life last­ed, York­shire lived for its friends.

In the year 1857, Mr. James Milnes Gaskell, who had sat for thir­ty years in Par­lia­ment as one of the Mem­bers for the bor­ough of Wen­lock in Shrop­shire, bought Wen­lock Abbey and the es­tate that in­clud­ed the old monas­tic build­ings. This new, or old, play­thing amused Mrs. Milnes Gaskell. The Pri­or’s house, a charm­ing spec­imen of fif­teenth-​cen­tu­ry ar­chi­tec­ture, had been long left to de­cay as a farm­house. She put it in or­der, and went there to spend a part of the au­tumn of 1864. Young Adams was one of her first guests, and drove about Wen­lock Edge and the Wrekin with her, learn­ing the love­li­ness of this exquisite coun­try, and its stores of cu­ri­ous an­tiq­ui­ty. It was a new and charm­ing ex­is­tence; an ex­pe­ri­ence great­ly to be en­vied — ide­al re­pose and ru­ral Shake­spear­ian peace — but a few years of it were like­ly to com­plete his ed­uca­tion, and fit him to act a fair­ly use­ful part in life as an En­glish­man, an ec­cle­si­as­tic, and a con­tem­po­rary of Chaucer.