148apps.com BestAppEver: “Stanza has redefined how everyone thinks about reading on a mobile device.”
2008 Best Free App

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

(download Open eBook Format)

The Education of Henry Adams

CHAPTER XVII

PRES­IDENT GRANT (1869)

THE first ef­fect of this leap in­to the un­known was a fit of low spir­its new to the young man’s ed­uca­tion; due in part to the over­pow­er­ing beau­ty and sweet­ness of the Mary­land au­tumn, al­most un­en­durable for its strain on one who had toned his life down to the Novem­ber grays and browns of north­ern Eu­rope. Life could not go on so beau­ti­ful and so sad. Luck­ily, no one else felt it or knew it. He bore it as well as he could, and when he picked him­self up, win­ter had come, and he was set­tled in bach­elor’s quar­ters, as mod­est as those of a clerk in the De­part­ments, far out on G Street, to­wards George­town, where an old Finn named Dohna, who had come out with the Rus­sian Min­is­ter Stoeck­el long be­fore, had bought or built a new house. Congress had met. Two or three months re­mained to the old ad­min­is­tra­tion, but all in­ter­est cen­tred in the new one. The town be­gan to swarm with of­fice-​seek­ers, among whom a young writ­er was lost. He drift­ed among them, un­no­ticed, glad to learn his work un­der cov­er of the con­fu­sion. He nev­er as­pired to be­come a reg­ular re­porter; he knew he should fail in try­ing a ca­reer so am­bi­tious and en­er­get­ic; but he picked up friends on the press — Nord­hoff, Mu­rat Hal­stead, Hen­ry Wat­ter­son, Sam Bowles — all re­form­ers, and all mixed and jum­bled to­geth­er in a tidal wave of ex­pec­ta­tion, wait­ing for Gen­er­al Grant to give or­ders. No one seemed to know much about it. Even Sen­ators had noth­ing to say. One could on­ly make notes and study fi­nance.

In wait­ing, he amused him­self as he could. In the amuse­ments of Wash­ing­ton, ed­uca­tion had no part, but the sim­plic­ity of the amuse­ments proved the sim­plic­ity of ev­ery­thing else, am­bi­tions, in­ter­ests, thoughts, and knowl­edge. Prover­bial­ly Wash­ing­ton was a poor place for ed­uca­tion, and of course young diplo­mats avoid­ed or dis­liked it, but, as a rule, diplo­mats dis­liked ev­ery place ex­cept Paris, and the world con­tained on­ly one Paris. They abused Lon­don more vi­olent­ly than Wash­ing­ton; they praised no post un­der the sun; and they were mere­ly de­scrib­ing three-​fourths of their sta­tions when they com­plained that there were no the­atres, no restau­rants, no monde, no de­mi-​monde, no drives, no splen­dor, and, as Mme. de Struve used to say, no grandez­za. This was all true; Wash­ing­ton was a mere po­lit­ical camp, as tran­sient and tem­po­rary as a camp-​meet­ing for re­li­gious re­vival, but the diplo­mats had least rea­son to com­plain, since they were more sought for there than they would ev­er be else­where. For young men Wash­ing­ton was in one way par­adise, since they were few, and great­ly in de­mand. Af­ter watch­ing the ab­ject unim­por­tance of the young diplo­mat in Lon­don so­ci­ety, Adams found him­self a young duke in Wash­ing­ton. He had ten years of youth to make up, and a ravenous ap­petite. Wash­ing­ton was the eas­iest so­ci­ety he had ev­er seen, and even the Bosto­ni­an be­came sim­ple, good-​na­tured, al­most ge­nial, in the soft­ness of a Wash­ing­ton spring. So­ci­ety went on ex­cel­lent­ly well with­out hous­es, or car­riages, or jew­els, or toi­lettes, or pave­ments, or shops, or grandez­za of any sort; and the mar­ket was ex­cel­lent as well as cheap. One could not stay there a month with­out lov­ing the shab­by town. Even the Wash­ing­ton girl, who was nei­ther rich nor well-​dressed nor well-​ed­ucat­ed nor clever, had sin­gu­lar charm, and used it. Ac­cord­ing to Mr. Adams the fa­ther, this charm dat­ed back as far as Mon­roe’s ad­min­is­tra­tion, to his per­son­al knowl­edge.

There­fore, be­hind all the pro­cess­es of po­lit­ical or fi­nan­cial or news­pa­per train­ing, the so­cial side of Wash­ing­ton was to be tak­en for grant­ed as three-​fourths of ex­is­tence. Its de­tails mat­ter noth­ing. Life ceased to be stren­uous, and the vic­tim thanked God for it. Pol­itics and re­form be­came the de­tail, and waltz­ing the pro­fes­sion. Adams was not alone. Sen­ator Sum­ner had as pri­vate sec­re­tary a young man named Moor­field Storey, who be­came a dan­ger­ous ex­am­ple of frivoli­ty. The new At­tor­ney-​Gen­er­al, E. R. Hoar, brought with him from Con­cord a son, Sam Hoar, whose ex­am­ple ri­valled that of Storey. An­oth­er im­pen­itent was named Dewey, a young naval of­fi­cer. Adams came far down in the list. He wished he had been high­er. He could have spared a world of su­per­an­nu­at­ed his­to­ry, sci­ence, or pol­itics, to have re­versed bet­ter in waltz­ing.

He had no ad­equate no­tion how lit­tle he knew, es­pe­cial­ly of wom­en, and Wash­ing­ton of­fered no stan­dard of com­par­ison. All were pro­found­ly ig­no­rant to­geth­er, and as in­dif­fer­ent as chil­dren to ed­uca­tion. No one need­ed knowl­edge. Wash­ing­ton was hap­pi­er with­out style. Cer­tain­ly Adams was hap­pi­er with­out it; hap­pi­er than he had ev­er been be­fore; hap­pi­er than any one in the harsh world of stren­uous­ness could dream of. This must be tak­en as back­ground for such lit­tle ed­uca­tion as he gained; but the life be­longed to the eigh­teenth cen­tu­ry, and in no way con­cerned ed­uca­tion for the twen­ti­eth.

In such an at­mo­sphere, one made no great pres­ence of hard work. If the world wants hard work, the world must pay for it; and, if it will not pay, it has no fault to find with the work­er. Thus far, no one had made a sug­ges­tion of pay for any work that Adams had done or could do; if he worked at all, it was for so­cial con­sid­er­ation, and so­cial plea­sure was his pay. For this he was will­ing to go on work­ing, as an artist goes on paint­ing when no one buys his pic­tures. Artists have done it from the be­gin­ning of time, and will do it af­ter time has ex­pired, since they can­not help them­selves, and they find their re­turn in the pride of their so­cial su­pe­ri­or­ity as they feel it. So­ci­ety com­mon­ly abets them and en­cour­ages their at­ti­tude of con­tempt. The so­ci­ety of Wash­ing­ton was too sim­ple and South­ern as yet, to feel an­ar­chis­tic long­ings, and it nev­er read or saw what artists pro­duced else­where, but it good-​na­tured­ly abet­ted them when it had the chance, and re­spect­ed it­self the more for the frailty. Adams found even the Gov­ern­ment at his ser­vice, and ev­ery one will­ing to an­swer his ques­tions. He worked, af­ter a fash­ion; not very hard, but as much as the Gov­ern­ment would have re­quired of him for nine hun­dred dol­lars a year; and his work de­fied frivoli­ty. He got more plea­sure from writ­ing than the world ev­er got from read­ing him, for his work was not amus­ing, nor was he. One must not try to amuse mon­eylen­ders or in­vestors, and this was the class to which he be­gan by ap­peal­ing. He gave three months to an ar­ti­cle on the fi­nances of the Unit­ed States, just then a sub­ject great­ly need­ing treat­ment; and when he had fin­ished it, he sent it to Lon­don to his friend Hen­ry Reeve, the pon­der­ous ed­itor of the Ed­in­burgh Re­view. Reeve prob­ably thought it good; at all events, he said so; and he print­ed it in April. Of course it was reprint­ed in Amer­ica, but in Eng­land such ar­ti­cles were still anony­mous, and the au­thor re­mained un­known.

The au­thor was not then ask­ing for ad­ver­tise­ment, and made no claim for cred­it. His ob­ject was lit­er­ary. He want­ed to win a place on the staff of the Ed­in­burgh Re­view, un­der the vast shad­ow of Lord Macaulay; and, to a young Amer­ican in 1868, such rank seemed colos­sal — the high­est in the lit­er­ary world — as it had been on­ly five-​and-​twen­ty years be­fore. Time and tide had flowed since then, but the po­si­tion still flat­tered van­ity, though it brought no oth­er flat­tery or re­ward ex­cept the reg­ular thir­ty pounds of pay — fifty dol­lars a month, mea­sured in time and la­bor.

The Ed­in­burgh ar­ti­cle fin­ished, he set him­self to work on a scheme for the North Amer­ican Re­view. In Eng­land, Lord Robert Ce­cil had in­vent­ed for the Lon­don Quar­ter­ly an an­nu­al re­view of pol­itics which he called the “Ses­sion.” Adams stole the idea and the name — he thought he had been enough in Lord Robert’s house, in days of his strug­gle with ad­ver­si­ty, to ex­cuse the theft — and be­gan what he meant for a per­ma­nent se­ries of an­nu­al po­lit­ical re­views which he hoped to make, in time, a po­lit­ical au­thor­ity. With his sources of in­for­ma­tion, and his so­cial in­ti­ma­cies at Wash­ing­ton, he could not help say­ing some­thing that would com­mand at­ten­tion. He had the field to him­self, and he meant to give him­self a free hand, as he went on. Whether the news­pa­pers liked it or not, they would have to reck­on with him; for such a pow­er, once es­tab­lished, was more ef­fec­tive than all the speech­es in Congress or re­ports to the Pres­ident that could be crammed in­to the Gov­ern­ment press­es.

The first of these “Ses­sions” ap­peared in April, but it could not be con­densed in­to a sin­gle ar­ti­cle, and had to be sup­ple­ment­ed in Oc­to­ber by an­oth­er which bore the ti­tle of “Civ­il Ser­vice Re­form,” and was re­al­ly a part of the same re­view. A good deal of au­then­tic his­to­ry slipped in­to these pa­pers. Whether any one ex­cept his press as­so­ciates ev­er read them, he nev­er knew and nev­er great­ly cared. The dif­fer­ence is slight, to the in­flu­ence of an au­thor, whether he is read by five hun­dred read­ers, or by five hun­dred thou­sand; if he can se­lect the five hun­dred, he reach­es the five hun­dred thou­sand. The fate­ful year 1870 was near at hand, which was to mark the close of the lit­er­ary epoch, when quar­ter­lies gave way to month­lies; let­ter-​press to il­lus­tra­tion; vol­umes to pages. The out­burst was bril­liant. Bret Harte led, and Robert Louis Steven­son fol­lowed. Guy de Mau­pas­sant and Rud­yard Kipling brought up the rear, and daz­zled the world. As usu­al, Adams found him­self fifty years be­hind his time, but a num­ber of be­lat­ed wan­der­ers kept him com­pa­ny, and they pro­duced on each oth­er the ef­fect or il­lu­sion of a pub­lic opin­ion. They strag­gled apart, at longer and longer in­ter­vals, through the pro­ces­sion, but they were still with­in hear­ing dis­tance of each oth­er. The drift was still su­per­fi­cial­ly con­ser­va­tive. Just as the Church spoke with ap­par­ent au­thor­ity, of the quar­ter­lies laid down an ap­par­ent law, and no one could sure­ly say where the re­al au­thor­ity, or the re­al law, lay. Sci­ence lid not know. Truths a pri­ori held their own against truths sure­ly rel­ative. Ac­cord­ing to Low­ell, Right was for­ev­er on the scaf­fold, Wrong was for­ev­er on the Throne; and most peo­ple still thought they be­lieved it. Adams was not the on­ly rel­ic of the eigh­teenth cen­tu­ry, and he could still de­pend on a cer­tain num­ber of lis­ten­ers — most­ly re­spectable, and some rich.

Want of au­di­ence did not trou­ble him; he was well enough off in that re­spect, and would have suc­ceed­ed in all his cal­cu­la­tions if this had been his on­ly haz­ard. Where he broke down was at a point where he al­ways suf­fered wreck and where nine ad­ven­tur­ers out of ten make their er­rors. One may be more or less cer­tain of or­ga­nized forces; one can nev­er be cer­tain of men. He be­longed to the eigh­teenth cen­tu­ry, and the eigh­teenth cen­tu­ry up­set all his plans. For the mo­ment, Amer­ica was more eigh­teenth cen­tu­ry than him­self; it re­vert­ed to the stone age.

As ed­uca­tion — of a cer­tain sort — the sto­ry had prob­ably a cer­tain val­ue, though he could nev­er see it. One sel­dom can see much ed­uca­tion in the buck of a bron­cho; even less in the kick of a mule. The les­son it teach­es is on­ly that of get­ting out of the an­imal’s way. This was the les­son that Hen­ry Adams had learned over and over again in pol­itics since 1860.

At least four-​fifths of the Amer­ican peo­ple — Adams among the rest — had unit­ed in the elec­tion of Gen­er­al Grant to the Pres­iden­cy, and prob­ably had been more or less af­fect­ed in their choice by the par­al­lel they felt be­tween Grant and Wash­ing­ton. Noth­ing could be more ob­vi­ous. Grant rep­re­sent­ed or­der. He was a great sol­dier, and the sol­dier al­ways rep­re­sent­ed or­der. He might be as par­ti­san as he pleased, but a gen­er­al who had or­ga­nized and com­mand­ed half a mil­lion or a mil­lion men in the field, must know how to ad­min­is­ter. Even Wash­ing­ton, who was, in ed­uca­tion and ex­pe­ri­ence, a mere cave-​dweller, had known how to or­ga­nize a gov­ern­ment, and had found Jef­fer­sons and Hamil­tons to or­ga­nize his de­part­ments. The task of bring­ing the Gov­ern­ment back to reg­ular prac­tices, and of restor­ing moral and me­chan­ical or­der to ad­min­is­tra­tion, was not very dif­fi­cult; it was ready to do it it­self, with a lit­tle en­cour­age­ment. No doubt the con­fu­sion, es­pe­cial­ly in the old slave States and in the cur­ren­cy, was con­sid­er­able, but, the gen­er­al dis­po­si­tion was good, and ev­ery one had echoed that fa­mous phrase: “Let us have peace.”

Adams was young and eas­ily de­ceived, in spite of his diplo­mat­ic ad­ven­tures, but even at twice his age he could not see that this re­liance on Grant was un­rea­son­able. Had Grant been a Con­gress­man one would have been on one’s guard, for one knew the type. One nev­er ex­pect­ed from a Con­gress­man more than good in­ten­tions and pub­lic spir­it. News­pa­per-​men as a rule had no great re­spect for the low­er House; Sen­ators had less; and Cab­inet of­fi­cers had none at all. In­deed, one day when Adams was plead­ing with a Cab­inet of­fi­cer for pa­tience and tact in deal­ing with Rep­re­sen­ta­tives, the Sec­re­tary im­pa­tient­ly broke out: “You can’t use tact with a Con­gress­man! A Con­gress­man is a hog! You must take a stick and hit him on the snout!” Adams knew far too lit­tle, com­pared with the Sec­re­tary, to con­tra­dict him, though he thought the phrase some­what harsh even as ap­plied to the av­er­age Con­gress­man of 1869 — he saw lit­tle or noth­ing of lat­er ones — but he knew a short­er way of si­lenc­ing crit­icism. He had but to ask: “If a Con­gress­man is a hog, what is a Sen­ator?” This in­no­cent ques­tion, put in a can­did spir­it, pet­ri­fied any ex­ec­utive of­fi­cer that ev­er sat a week in his of­fice. Even Adams ad­mit­ted that Sen­ators passed be­lief. The com­ic side of their ego­tism part­ly dis­guised its ex­trav­agance, but fac­tion had gone so far un­der An­drew John­son that at times the whole Sen­ate seemed to catch hys­ter­ics of ner­vous buck­ing with­out ap­par­ent rea­son. Great lead­ers, like Sum­ner and Con­kling, could not be bur­lesqued; they were more grotesque than ridicule could make them; even Grant, who rarely sparkled in epi­gram, be­came wit­ty on their ac­count; but their ego­tism and fac­tious­ness were no laugh­ing mat­ter. They did per­ma­nent and ter­ri­ble mis­chief, as Garfield and Blaine, and even McKin­ley and John Hay, were to feel. The most trou­ble­some task of a re­form Pres­ident was that of bring­ing the Sen­ate back to de­cen­cy.

There­fore no one, and Hen­ry Adams less than most, felt hope that any Pres­ident cho­sen from the ranks of pol­itics or politi­cians would raise the char­ac­ter of gov­ern­ment; and by in­stinct if not by rea­son, all the world unit­ed on Grant. The Sen­ate un­der­stood what the world ex­pect­ed, and wait­ed in si­lence for a strug­gle with Grant more se­ri­ous than that with An­drew John­son. News­pa­per-​men were alive with ea­ger­ness to sup­port the Pres­ident against the Sen­ate. The news­pa­per-​man is, more than most men, a dou­ble per­son­al­ity; and his per­son feels best sat­is­fied in its dou­ble in­stincts when writ­ing in one sense and think­ing in an­oth­er. All news­pa­per-​men, what­ev­er they wrote, felt alike about the Sen­ate. Adams float­ed with the stream. He was ea­ger to join in the fight which he fore­saw as soon­er or lat­er in­evitable. He meant to sup­port the Ex­ec­utive in at­tack­ing the Sen­ate and tak­ing away its two-​thirds vote and pow­er of con­fir­ma­tion, nor did he much care how it should be done, for he thought it safer to ef­fect the rev­olu­tion in 1870 than to wait till 1920..

With this thought in his mind, he went to the Capi­tol to hear the names an­nounced which should re­veal the care­ful­ly guard­ed se­cret of Grant’s Cab­inet. To the end of his life, he won­dered at the sud­den­ness of the rev­olu­tion which ac­tu­al­ly, with­in five min­utes, changed his in­tend­ed fu­ture in­to an ab­sur­di­ty so laugh­able as to make him ashamed of it. He was to hear a long list of Cab­inet an­nounce­ments not much weak­er or more fu­tile than that of Grant, and none of them made him blush, while Grant’s nom­ina­tions had the sin­gu­lar ef­fect of mak­ing the hear­er ashamed, not so much of Grant, as of him­self. He had made an­oth­er to­tal mis­con­cep­tion of life — an­oth­er in­con­ceiv­able false start. Yet, un­like­ly as it seemed, he had missed his mo­tive nar­row­ly, and his in­ten­tion had been more than sound, for the Sen­ators made no se­cret of say­ing with sen­ato­ri­al frank­ness that Grant’s nom­ina­tions be­trayed his in­tent as plain­ly as they be­trayed his in­com­pe­tence. A great sol­dier might be a ba­by politi­cian.

Adams left the Capi­tol, much in the same misty men­tal con­di­tion that he re­called as mark­ing his rail­way jour­ney to Lon­don on May 13, 1861; he felt in him­self what Glad­stone be­wailed so sad­ly, “the in­ca­pac­ity of view­ing things all round.” He knew, with­out ab­so­lute­ly say­ing it, that Grant had cut short the life which Adams had laid out for him­self in the fu­ture. Af­ter such a mis­car­riage, no thought of ef­fec­tu­al re­form could re­vive for at least one gen­er­ation, and he had no fan­cy for in­ef­fec­tu­al pol­itics. What course could he sail next? He had tried so many, and so­ci­ety had barred them all! For the mo­ment, he saw no hope but in fol­low­ing the stream on which he had launched him­self. The new Cab­inet, as in­di­vid­uals, were not hos­tile. Sub­se­quent­ly Grant made changes in the list which were most­ly wel­come to a Bosto­ni­an — or should have been — al­though fa­tal to Adams. The name of Hamil­ton Fish, as Sec­re­tary of State, sug­gest­ed ex­treme con­ser­vatism and prob­able def­er­ence to Sum­ner. The name of George S. Boutwell, as Sec­re­tary of the Trea­sury, sug­gest­ed on­ly a some­what lugubri­ous joke; Mr. Boutwell could be de­scribed on­ly as the op­po­site of Mr. Mc­Cul­loch, and meant in­er­tia; or, in plain words, to­tal ex­tinc­tion for any one re­sem­bling Hen­ry Adams. On the oth­er hand, the name of Ja­cob D. Cox, as Sec­re­tary of the In­te­ri­or, sug­gest­ed help and com­fort; while that of Judge Hoar, as At­tor­ney-​Gen­er­al, promised friend­ship. On the whole, the per­son­al out­look, mere­ly for lit­er­ary pur­pos­es, seemed fair­ly cheer­ful, and the po­lit­ical out­look, though hazy, still de­pend­ed on Grant him­self. No one doubt­ed that Grant’s in­ten­tion had been one of re­form; that his aim had been to place his ad­min­is­tra­tion above pol­itics; and un­til he should ac­tu­al­ly drive his sup­port­ers away, one might hope to sup­port him. One’s lit­tle lantern must there­fore be turned on Grant. One seemed to know him so well, and re­al­ly knew so lit­tle.

By chance it hap­pened that Adam Badeau took the low­er suite of rooms at Dohna’s, and, as it was con­ve­nient to have one ta­ble, the two men dined to­geth­er and be­came in­ti­mate. Badeau was ex­ceed­ing­ly so­cial, though not in ap­pear­ance im­pos­ing. He was stout; his face was red, and his habits were reg­ular­ly ir­reg­ular; but he was very in­tel­li­gent, a good news­pa­per-​man, and an ex­cel­lent mil­itary his­to­ri­an. His life of Grant was no or­di­nary book. Un­like most news­pa­per-​men, he was a friend­ly crit­ic of Grant, as suit­ed an of­fi­cer who had been on the Gen­er­al’s staff. As a rule, the news­pa­per cor­re­spon­dents in Wash­ing­ton were un­friend­ly, and the lob­by scep­ti­cal. From that side one heard tales that made one’s hair stand on end, and the old West Point army of­fi­cers were no more flat­ter­ing. All de­scribed him as vi­cious, nar­row, dull, and vin­dic­tive. Badeau, who had come to Wash­ing­ton for a con­sulate which was slow to reach him, re­sort­ed more or less to whiskey for en­cour­age­ment, and be­came ir­ri­ta­ble, be­sides be­ing lo­qua­cious. He talked much about Grant, and showed a cer­tain artis­tic feel­ing for anal­ysis of char­ac­ter, as a true lit­er­ary crit­ic would nat­ural­ly do. Loy­al to Grant, and still more so to Mrs. Grant, who act­ed as his pa­troness, he said noth­ing, even when far gone, that was of­fen­sive about ei­ther, but he held that no one ex­cept him­self and Rawl­ins un­der­stood the Gen­er­al. To him, Grant ap­peared as an in­ter­mit­tent en­er­gy, im­mense­ly pow­er­ful when awake, but pas­sive and plas­tic in re­pose. He said that nei­ther he nor the rest of the staff knew why Grant suc­ceed­ed; they be­lieved in him be­cause of his suc­cess. For stretch­es of time, his mind seemed tor­pid. Rawl­ins and the oth­ers would sys­tem­at­ical­ly talk their ideas in­to it, for weeks, not di­rect­ly, but by dis­cus­sion among them­selves, in his pres­ence. In the end, he would an­nounce the idea as his own, with­out seem­ing con­scious of the dis­cus­sion; and would give the or­ders to car­ry it out with all the en­er­gy that be­longed to his na­ture. They could nev­er mea­sure his char­ac­ter or be sure when he would act. They could nev­er fol­low a men­tal pro­cess in his thought. They were not sure that he did think.

In all this, Adams took deep in­ter­est, for al­though he was not, like Badeau, wait­ing for Mrs. Grant’s pow­er of sug­ges­tion to act on the Gen­er­al’s mind in or­der to ger­mi­nate in a con­sulate or a lega­tion, his por­trait gallery of great men was be­com­ing large, and it amused him to add an au­then­tic like­ness of the great­est gen­er­al the world had seen since Napoleon. Badeau’s anal­ysis was rather del­icate; in­finite­ly su­pe­ri­or to that of Sam Ward or Charles Nord­hoff.

Badeau took Adams to the White House one evening and in­tro­duced him to the Pres­ident and Mrs. Grant. First and last, he saw a dozen Pres­idents at the White House, and the most fa­mous were by no means the most agree­able, but he found Grant the most cu­ri­ous ob­ject of study among them all. About no one did opin­ions dif­fer so wide­ly. Adams had no opin­ion, or oc­ca­sion to make one. A sin­gle word with Grant sat­is­fied him that, for his own good, the few­er words he risked, the bet­ter. Thus far in life he had met with but one man of the same in­tel­lec­tu­al or un­in­tel­lec­tu­al type — Garibal­di. Of the two, Garibal­di seemed to him a tri­fle the more in­tel­lec­tu­al, but, in both, the in­tel­lect count­ed for noth­ing; on­ly the en­er­gy count­ed. The type was pre-​in­tel­lec­tu­al, ar­cha­ic, and would have seemed so even to the cave-​dwellers. Adam, ac­cord­ing to leg­end, was such a man.

In time one came to rec­og­nize the type in oth­er men, with dif­fer­ences and vari­ations, as nor­mal; men whose en­er­gies were the greater, the less they wast­ed on thought; men who sprang from the soil to pow­er; apt to be dis­trust­ful of them­selves and of oth­ers; shy; jeal­ous; some­times vin­dic­tive; more or less dull in out­ward ap­pear­ance; al­ways need­ing stim­ulants, but for whom ac­tion was the high­est stim­ulant — the in­stinct of fight. Such men were forces of na­ture, en­er­gies of the prime, like the Pteraspis , but they made short work of schol­ars. They had com­mand­ed thou­sands of such and saw no more in them than in oth­ers. The fact was cer­tain; it crushed ar­gu­ment and in­tel­lect at once.

Adams did not feel Grant as a hos­tile force; like Badeau he saw on­ly an un­cer­tain one. When in ac­tion he was su­perb and safe to fol­low; on­ly when tor­pid he was dan­ger­ous. To deal with him one must stand near, like Rawl­ins, and prac­tice more or less sym­pa­thet­ic habits. Sim­ple-​mind­ed be­yond the ex­pe­ri­ence of Wall Street or State Street, he re­sort­ed, like most men of the same in­tel­lec­tu­al cal­ibre, to com­mon­places when at a loss for ex­pres­sion: “Let us have peace!” or, “The best way to treat a bad law is to ex­ecute it”; or a score of such re­versible sen­tences gen­er­al­ly to be gauged by their sen­ten­tious­ness; but some­times he made one doubt his good faith; as when he se­ri­ous­ly re­marked to a par­tic­ular­ly bright young wom­an that Venice would be a fine city if it were drained. In Mark Twain, this sug­ges­tion would have tak­en rank among his best wit­ti­cisms; in Grant it was a mea­sure of sim­plic­ity not sin­gu­lar. Robert E. Lee be­trayed the same in­tel­lec­tu­al com­mon­place, in a Vir­gini­an form, not to the same de­gree, but quite dis­tinct­ly enough for one who knew the Amer­ican. What wor­ried Adams was not the com­mon­place; it was, as usu­al, his own ed­uca­tion. Grant fret­ted and ir­ri­tat­ed him, like the Ter­ebrat­ula, as a de­fi­ance of first prin­ci­ples. He had no right to ex­ist. He should have been ex­tinct for ages. The idea that, as so­ci­ety grew old­er, it grew one-​sid­ed, up­set evo­lu­tion, and made of ed­uca­tion a fraud. That, two thou­sand years af­ter Alexan­der the Great and Julius Cae­sar, a man like Grant should be called — and should ac­tu­al­ly and tru­ly be — the high­est prod­uct of the most ad­vanced evo­lu­tion, made evo­lu­tion lu­di­crous. One must be as com­mon­place as Grant’s own com­mon­places to main­tain such an ab­sur­di­ty. The progress of evo­lu­tion from Pres­ident Wash­ing­ton to Pres­ident Grant, was alone ev­idence enough to up­set Dar­win.

Ed­uca­tion be­came more per­plex­ing at ev­ery phase. No the­ory was worth the pen that wrote it. Amer­ica had no use for Adams be­cause he was eigh­teenth-​cen­tu­ry, and yet it wor­shipped Grant be­cause he was ar­cha­ic and should have lived in a cave and worn skins. Dar­win­ists ought to con­clude that Amer­ica was re­vert­ing to the stone age, but the the­ory of re­ver­sion was more ab­surd than that of evo­lu­tion. Grant’s ad­min­is­tra­tion re­vert­ed to noth­ing. One could not catch a trait of the past, still less of the fu­ture. It was not even sen­si­bly Amer­ican. Not an of­fi­cial in it, ex­cept per­haps Rawl­ins whom Adams nev­er met, and who died in Septem­ber, sug­gest­ed an Amer­ican idea.

Yet this ad­min­is­tra­tion, which up­set Adams’s whole life, was not un­friend­ly; it was made up large­ly of friends. Sec­re­tary Fish was al­most kind; he kept the tra­di­tion of New York so­cial val­ues; he was hu­man and took no plea­sure in giv­ing pain. Adams felt no prej­udice what­ev­er in his fa­vor, and he had noth­ing in mind or per­son to at­tract re­gard; his so­cial gifts were not re­mark­able; he was not in the least mag­net­ic; he was far from young; but he won con­fi­dence from the start and re­mained a friend to the fin­ish. As far as con­cerned Mr. Fish, one felt rather hap­pi­ly suit­ed, and one was still bet­ter off in the In­te­ri­or De­part­ment with J. D. Cox. In­deed, if Cox had been in the Trea­sury and Boutwell in the In­te­ri­or, one would have been quite sat­is­fied as far as per­son­al re­la­tions went, while, in the At­tor­ney-​Gen­er­al’s Of­fice, Judge Hoar seemed to fill ev­ery pos­si­ble ide­al, both per­son­al and po­lit­ical.

The dif­fi­cul­ty was not the want of friends, and had the whole gov­ern­ment been filled with them, it would have helped lit­tle with­out the Pres­ident and the Trea­sury. Grant avowed from the start a pol­icy of drift; and a pol­icy of drift at­tach­es on­ly bar­na­cles. At thir­ty, one has no in­ter­est in be­com­ing a bar­na­cle, but even in that char­ac­ter Hen­ry Adams would have been ill-​seen. His friends were re­form­ers, crit­ics, doubt­ful in par­ty al­le­giance, and he was him­self an ob­ject of sus­pi­cion. Grant had no ob­jects, want­ed no help, wished for no cham­pi­ons. The Ex­ec­utive asked on­ly to be let alone. This was his mean­ing when he said: “Let us have peace! “

No one want­ed to go in­to op­po­si­tion. As for Adams, all his hopes of suc­cess in life turned on his find­ing an ad­min­is­tra­tion to sup­port. He knew well enough the rules of self-​in­ter­est. He was for sale. He want­ed to be bought. His price was ex­ces­sive­ly cheap, for he did not even ask an of­fice, and had his eye, not on the Gov­ern­ment, but on New York. All he want­ed was some­thing to sup­port; some­thing that would let it­self be sup­port­ed. Luck went dead against him. For once, he was fifty years in ad­vance of his time.