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

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The Education of Henry Adams

CHAPTER XXIV

IN­DI­AN SUM­MER (1898-1899)

The sum­mer of the Span­ish War be­gan the In­di­an sum­mer of life to one who had reached six­ty years of age, and cared on­ly to reap in peace such har­vest as these six­ty years had yield­ed. He had rea­son to be more than con­tent with it. Since 1864 he had felt no such sense of pow­er and mo­men­tum, and had seen no such num­ber of per­son­al friends wield­ing it. The sense of sol­idar­ity counts for much in one’s con­tent­ment, but the sense of win­ning one’s game counts for more; and in Lon­don, in 1898, the scene was sin­gu­lar­ly in­ter­est­ing to the last sur­vivor of the Lega­tion of 1861. He thought him­self per­haps the on­ly per­son liv­ing who could get full en­joy­ment of the dra­ma. He car­ried ev­ery scene of it, in a cen­tu­ry and a half since the Stamp Act, quite alive in his mind — all the in­ter­minable dis­putes of his dis­pu­ta­tious an­ces­tors as far back as the year 1750 — as well as his own in­signif­icance in the Civ­il War, ev­ery step in which had the ob­ject of bring­ing Eng­land in­to an Amer­ican sys­tem. For this they had writ­ten li­braries of ar­gu­ment and re­mon­strance, and had piled war on war, los­ing their tem­pers for life, and sour­ing the gen­tle and pa­tient Pu­ri­tan na­ture of their de­scen­dants, un­til even their pri­vate sec­re­taries at times used lan­guage al­most in­tem­per­ate; and sud­den­ly, by pure chance, the bless­ing fell on Hay. Af­ter two hun­dred years of stupid and greedy blun­der­ing, which no ar­gu­ment and no vi­olence af­fect­ed, the peo­ple of Eng­land learned their les­son just at the mo­ment when Hay would oth­er­wise have faced a flood of the old anx­ieties. Hay him­self scarce­ly knew how grate­ful he should be, for to him the change came al­most of course. He saw on­ly the nec­es­sary stages that had led to it, and to him they seemed nat­ural; but to Adams, still liv­ing in the at­mo­sphere of Palmer­ston and John Rus­sell, the sud­den ap­pear­ance of Ger­many as the griz­zly ter­ror which, in twen­ty years ef­fect­ed what Adamses had tried for two hun­dred in vain — fright­ened Eng­land in­to Amer­ica’s arms — seemed as melo­dra­mat­ic as any plot of Napoleon the Great. He could feel on­ly the sense of sat­is­fac­tion at see­ing the diplo­mat­ic tri­umph of all his fam­ily, since the breed ex­ist­ed, at last re­al­ized un­der his own eyes for the ad­van­tage of his old­est and clos­est al­ly.

This was his­to­ry, not ed­uca­tion, yet it taught some­thing ex­ceed­ing­ly se­ri­ous, if not ul­ti­mate, could one trust the les­son. For the first time in his life, he felt a sense of pos­si­ble pur­pose work­ing it­self out in his­to­ry. Prob­ably no one else on this earth­ly plan­et — not even Hay — could have come out on pre­cise­ly such ex­treme per­son­al sat­is­fac­tion, but as he sat at Hay’s ta­ble, lis­ten­ing to any mem­ber of the British Cab­inet, for all were alike now, dis­cuss the Philip­pines as a ques­tion of bal­ance of pow­er in the East, he could see that the fam­ily work of a hun­dred and fifty years fell at once in­to the grand per­spec­tive of true em­pire-​build­ing, which Hay’s work set off with artis­tic skill. The rough­ness of the ar­cha­ic foun­da­tions looked stronger and larg­er in scale for the re­fine­ment and cer­tain­ty of the ar­cade. In the long list of fa­mous Amer­ican Min­is­ters in Lon­don, none could have giv­en the work quite the com­plete­ness, the har­mo­ny, the per­fect ease of Hay.

Nev­er be­fore had Adams been able to dis­cern the work­ing of law in his­to­ry, which was the rea­son of his fail­ure in teach­ing it, for chaos can­not be taught; but he thought he had a per­son­al prop­er­ty by in­her­itance in this proof of se­quence and in­tel­li­gence in the af­fairs of man — a prop­er­ty which no one else had right to dis­pute; and this per­son­al tri­umph left him a lit­tle cold to­wards the oth­er diplo­mat­ic re­sults of the war. He knew that Por­to Ri­co must be tak­en, but he would have been glad to es­cape the Philip­pines. Apart from too in­ti­mate an ac­quain­tance with the val­ue of is­lands in the South Seas, he knew the West In­dies well enough to be as­sured that, what­ev­er the Amer­ican peo­ple might think or say about it, they would soon­er or lat­er have to po­lice those is­lands, not against Eu­rope, but for Eu­rope, and Amer­ica too. Ed­uca­tion on the out­skirts of civ­ilized life teach­es not very much, but it taught this; and one felt no call to shoul­der the load of archipela­goes in the an­tipodes when one was try­ing painful­ly to pluck up courage to face the la­bor of shoul­der­ing archipela­goes at home. The coun­try de­cid­ed oth­er­wise, and one ac­qui­esced read­ily enough since the mat­ter con­cerned on­ly the pub­lic will­ing­ness to car­ry loads; in Lon­don, the bal­ance of pow­er in the East came alone in­to dis­cus­sion; and in ev­ery point of view one had as much rea­son to be grat­ified with the re­sult as though one had shared in the dan­ger, in­stead of be­ing vig­or­ous­ly em­ployed in look­ing on from a great dis­tance. Af­ter all, friends had done the work, if not one’s self, and he too serves a cer­tain pur­pose who on­ly stands and cheers.

In June, at the cri­sis of in­ter­est, the Camerons came over, and took the fine old house of Sur­ren­den De­ring in Kent which they made a sort of coun­try house to the Em­bassy. Kent has charms ri­valling those of Shrop­shire, and, even com­pared with the many beau­ti­ful places scat­tered along the Welsh bor­der, few are no­bler or more ge­nial than Sur­ren­den with its un­bro­ken de­scent from the Sax­ons, its av­enues, its ter­races, its deer-​park, its large re­pose on the Ken­tish hill­side, and its broad out­look over whet was once the for­est of An­deri­da. Filled with a con­stant stream of guests, the house seemed to wait for the chance to show its charms to the Amer­ican, with whose ac­tiv­ity the whole world was re­sound­ing; and nev­er since the bat­tle of Hast­ings could the lit­tle tele­graph of­fice of the Ken­tish vil­lage have done such work. There, on a hot Ju­ly 4, 1898, to an ex­pec­tant group un­der the shady trees, came the tele­gram an­nounc­ing the de­struc­tion of the Span­ish Ar­ma­da, as it might have come to Queen Eliz­abeth in 1588; and there, lat­er in the sea­son, came the or­der sum­mon­ing Hay to the State De­part­ment.

Hay had no wish to be Sec­re­tary of State. He much pre­ferred to re­main Am­bas­sador, and his friends were quite as cold about it as he. No one knew so well what sort of strain falls on Sec­re­taries of State, or how lit­tle strength he had in re­serve against it. Even at Sur­ren­den he showed none too much en­durance, and he would glad­ly have found a valid ex­cuse for re­fus­ing. The dis­cus­sion on both sides was earnest, but the de­cid­ed voice of the con­clave was that, though if he were a mere of­fice-​seek­er he might cer­tain­ly de­cline pro­mo­tion, if he were a mem­ber of the Gov­ern­ment he could not. No se­ri­ous states­man could ac­cept a fa­vor and refuse a ser­vice. Doubt­less he might refuse, but in that case he must re­sign. The amuse­ment of mak­ing Pres­idents has keen fas­ci­na­tion for idle Amer­ican hands, but these black arts have the old draw­back of all dev­il­try; one must serve the spir­it one evokes, even though the ser­vice were perdi­tion to body and soul. For him, no doubt, the ser­vice, though hard, might bring some share of prof­it, but for the friends who gave this un­selfish de­ci­sion, all would prove loss. For one, Adams on that sub­ject had be­come a lit­tle daft. No one in his ex­pe­ri­ence had ev­er passed un­scathed through that malar­ious marsh. In his fan­cy, of­fice was poi­son; it killed — body and soul — phys­ical­ly and so­cial­ly. Of­fice was more poi­sonous than priestcraft or ped­agogy in pro­por­tion as it held more pow­er; but the poi­son he com­plained of was not am­bi­tion; he shared none of Car­di­nal Wolsey’s be­lat­ed pen­itence for that healthy stim­ulant, as he had shared none of the fruits; his poi­son was that of the will — the dis­tor­tion of sight — the warp­ing of mind — the degra­da­tion of tis­sue — the coars­en­ing of taste — the nar­row­ing of sym­pa­thy to the emo­tions of a caged rat. Hay need­ed no of­fice in or­der to wield in­flu­ence. For him, in­flu­ence lay about the streets, wait­ing for him to stoop to it; he en­joyed more than enough pow­er with­out of­fice; no one of his po­si­tion, wealth, and po­lit­ical ex­pe­ri­ence, liv­ing at the cen­tre of pol­itics in con­tact with the ac­tive par­ty man­agers, could es­cape in­flu­ence. His on­ly am­bi­tion was to es­cape an­noy­ance, and no one knew bet­ter than he that, at six­ty years of age, sen­si­tive to phys­ical strain, still more sen­si­tive to bru­tal­ity, vin­dic­tive­ness, or be­tray­al, he took of­fice at cost of life.

Nei­ther he nor any of the Sur­ren­den cir­cle made pres­ence of glad­ness at the new dig­ni­ty for, with all his gai­ety of man­ner and light­ness of wit, he took dark views of him­self, none the lighter for their hu­mor, and his obe­di­ence to the Pres­ident’s or­der was the gloomi­est ac­qui­es­cence he had ev­er smiled. Adams took dark views, too, not so much on Hay’s ac­count as on his own, for, while Hay had at least the hon­ors of of­fice, his friends would share on­ly the en­nuis of it; but, as usu­al with Hay, noth­ing was gained by tak­ing such mat­ters solemn­ly, and old habits of the Civ­il War left their mark of mil­itary drill on ev­ery one who lived through it. He shoul­dered his pack and start­ed for home. Adams had no mind to lose his friend with­out a strug­gle, though he had nev­er known such sort of strug­gle to avail. The chance was des­per­ate, but he could not af­ford to throw it away; so, as soon as the Sur­ren­den es­tab­lish­ment broke up, on Oc­to­ber 17, he pre­pared for re­turn home, and on Novem­ber 13, none too glad­ly, found him­self again gaz­ing in­to La Fayette Square.

He had made an­oth­er false start and lost two years more of ed­uca­tion; nor had he ex­cuse; for, this time, nei­ther pol­itics nor so­ci­ety drew him away from his trail. He had noth­ing to do with Hay’s pol­itics at home or abroad, and nev­er af­fect­ed agree­ment with his views or his meth­ods, nor did Hay care whether his friends agreed or dis­agreed. They all unit­ed in try­ing to help each oth­er to get along the best way they could, and all they tried to save was the per­son­al re­la­tion. Even there, Adams would have been beat­en had he not been helped by Mrs. Hay, who saw the ne­ces­si­ty of dis­trac­tion, and led her hus­band in­to the habit of stop­ping ev­ery af­ter­noon to take his friend off for an hour’s walk, fol­lowed by a cup of tea with Mrs. Hay af­ter­wards, and a chat with any one who called.

For the mo­ment, there­fore, the sit­ua­tion was saved, at least in out­ward ap­pear­ance, and Adams could go back to his own pur­suits which were slow­ly tak­ing a di­rec­tion. Per­haps they had no right to be called pur­suits, for in truth one con­scious­ly pur­sued noth­ing, but drift­ed as at­trac­tion of­fered it­self. The short ses­sion broke up the Wash­ing­ton cir­cle, so that, on March 22, Adams was able to sail with the Lodges for Eu­rope and to pass April in Sici­ly and Rome.

With the Lodges, ed­uca­tion al­ways be­gan afresh. Forty years had left lit­tle of the Paler­mo that Garibal­di had shown to the boy of 1860, but Sici­ly in all ages seems to have taught on­ly catas­tro­phe and vi­olence, run­ning ri­ot on that theme ev­er since Ulysses be­gan its study on the eye of Cy­clops. For a les­son in an­ar­chy, with­out a shade of se­quence, Sici­ly stands alone and de­fies evo­lu­tion. Syra­cuse teach­es more than Rome. Yet even Rome was not mute, and the church of Ara Coeli seemed more and more to draw all the threads of thought to a cen­tre, for ev­ery new jour­ney led back to its steps — Kar­nak, Eph­esus, Del­phi, My­cen­cae, Con­stantino­ple, Syra­cuse — all ly­ing on the road to the Capi­tol. What they had to bring by way of in­tel­lec­tu­al rich­es could not yet be dis­cerned, but they car­ried camel-​loads of moral; and New York sent most of all, for, in forty years, Amer­ica had made so vast a stride to em­pire that the world of 1860 stood al­ready on a dis­tant hori­zon some­where on the same plane with the re­pub­lic of Bru­tus and Cato, while school­boys read of Abra­ham Lin­coln as they did of Julius Cae­sar. Vast swarms of Amer­icans knew the Civ­il War on­ly by school his­to­ry, as they knew the sto­ry of Cromwell or Ci­cero, and were as fa­mil­iar with po­lit­ical as­sas­si­na­tion as though they had lived un­der Nero. The cli­max of em­pire could be seen ap­proach­ing, year af­ter year, as though Sul­la were a Pres­ident or McKin­ley a Con­sul.

Noth­ing an­noyed Amer­icans more than to be told this sim­ple and ob­vi­ous — in no way un­pleas­ant — truth; there­fore one sat silent as ev­er on the Capi­tol; but, by way of com­plet­ing the les­son, the Lodges added a pil­grim­age to As­sisi and an in­ter­view with St. Fran­cis, whose so­lu­tion of his­tor­ical rid­dles seemed the most sat­is­fac­to­ry — or suf­fi­cient — ev­er of­fered; worth ful­ly forty years’ more study, and bet­ter worth it than Gib­bon him­self, or even St. Au­gus­tine, St. Am­brose, or St. Jerome. The most be­wil­der­ing ef­fect of all these fresh cross-​lights on the old As­sis­tant Pro­fes­sor of 1874 was due to the as­ton­ish­ing con­trast be­tween what he had taught then and what he found him­self con­fus­ed­ly try­ing to learn five-​and-​twen­ty years af­ter­wards — be­tween the twelfth cen­tu­ry of his thir­ti­eth and that of his six­ti­eth years. At Har­vard Col­lege, weary of spir­it in the wastes of An­glo-​Sax­on law, he had oc­ca­sion­al­ly giv­en way to out­bursts of de­ri­sion at shed­ding his life-​blood for the sub­lime truths of Sac and Soc: –

HIC JACET HO­MUNCU­LUS SCRIP­TOR DOC­TOR BAR­BAR­ICUS HEN­RI­CUS ADAMS ADAE FIL­IUS ET EVAE PRI­MO EX­PLICUIT SOC­NAM

The Latin was as twelfth-​cen­tu­ry as the law, and he meant as satire the claim that he had been first to ex­plain the le­gal mean­ing of Sac and Soc, al­though any Ger­man pro­fes­sor would have scorned it as a shame­less and pre­sump­tu­ous bid for im­mor­tal­ity; but the whole point of view had van­ished in 1900. Not he, but Sir Hen­ry Maine and Rudolph Sohm, were the par­ents or cre­ators of Sac and Soc. Con­vinced that the clue of re­li­gion led to noth­ing, and that pol­itics led to chaos, one had turned to the law, as one’s schol­ars turned to the Law School, be­cause one could see no oth­er path to a pro­fes­sion.

The law had proved as fu­tile as pol­itics or re­li­gion, or any oth­er sin­gle thread spun by the hu­man spi­der; it of­fered no more con­ti­nu­ity than ar­chi­tec­ture or coinage, and no more force of its own. St. Fran­cis ex­pressed supreme con­tempt for them all, and solved the whole prob­lem by re­ject­ing it al­to­geth­er. Adams re­turned to Paris with a bro­ken and con­trite spir­it, pre­pared to ad­mit that his life had no mean­ing, and con­scious that in any case it no longer mat­tered. He passed a sum­mer of soli­tude con­trast­ing sad­ly with the last at Sur­ren­den; but the soli­tude did what the so­ci­ety did not — it forced and drove him in­to the study of his ig­no­rance in si­lence. Here at last he en­tered the prac­tice of his fi­nal pro­fes­sion. Hunt­ed by en­nui, he could no longer es­cape, and, by way of a sum­mer school, he be­gan a me­thod­ical sur­vey — a tri­an­gu­la­tion — of the twelfth cen­tu­ry. The pur­suit had a sin­gu­lar French charm which France had long lost — a calm­ness, lu­cid­ity, sim­plic­ity of ex­pres­sion, vig­or of ac­tion, com­plex­ity of lo­cal col­or, that made Paris flat. In the long sum­mer days one found a sort of sat­urat­ed green plea­sure in the forests, and gray in­fin­ity of rest in the lit­tle twelfth-​cen­tu­ry church­es that lined them, as unas­sum­ing as their own moss­es, and as sure of their pur­pose as their round arch­es; but church­es were many and sum­mer was short, so that he was at last driv­en back to the quays and pho­tographs. For weeks he lived in si­lence.

His soli­tude was bro­ken in Novem­ber by the chance ar­rival of John La Farge. At that mo­ment, con­tact with La Farge had a new val­ue. Of all the men who had deeply af­fect­ed their friends since 1850 John La Farge was cer­tain­ly the fore­most, and for Hen­ry Adams, who had sat at his feet since 1872, the ques­tion how much he owed to La Farge could be an­swered on­ly by ad­mit­ting that he had no stan­dard to mea­sure it by. Of all his friends La Farge alone owned a mind com­plex enough to con­trast against the com­mon­places of Amer­ican uni­for­mi­ty, and in the pro­cess had vast­ly per­plexed most Amer­icans who came in con­tact with it. The Amer­ican mind — the Bosto­ni­an as well as the South­ern or West­ern — likes to walk straight up to its ob­ject, and as­sert or de­ny some­thing that it takes for a fact; it has a con­ven­tion­al ap­proach, a con­ven­tion­al anal­ysis, and a con­ven­tion­al con­clu­sion, as well as a con­ven­tion­al ex­pres­sion, all the time loud­ly as­sert­ing its un­con­ven­tion­al­ity. The most dis­con­cert­ing trait of John La Farge was his re­ver­sal of the pro­cess. His ap­proach was qui­et and in­di­rect; he moved round an ob­ject, and nev­er sep­arat­ed it from its sur­round­ings; he prid­ed him­self on faith­ful­ness to tra­di­tion and con­ven­tion; he was nev­er abrupt and ab­horred dis­pute. His man­ners and at­ti­tude to­wards the uni­verse were the same, whether toss­ing in the mid­dle of the Pa­cif­ic Ocean sketch­ing the trade-​wind from a whale-​boat in the blast of sea-​sick­ness, or drink­ing the cha-​no-​yu in the for­mal rites of Japan, or sip­ping his co­coanut cup of ka­va in the cer­emo­ni­al of Samoan chiefs, or re­flect­ing un­der the sa­cred bo-​tree at Anarad­jpu­ra.

One was nev­er quite sure of his whole mean­ing un­til too late to re­spond, for he had no dif­fi­cul­ty in car­ry­ing dif­fer­ent shades of con­tra­dic­tion in his mind. As he said of his friend Okaku­ra, his thought ran as a stream runs through grass, hid­den per­haps but al­ways there; and one felt of­ten un­cer­tain in what di­rec­tion it flowed, for even a con­tra­dic­tion was to him on­ly a shade of dif­fer­ence, a com­ple­men­tary col­or, about which no in­tel­li­gent artist would dis­pute. Con­stant­ly he re­pulsed ar­gu­ment: “Adams, you rea­son too much!” was one of his stand­ing re­proach­es even in the mild dis­cus­sion of rice and man­goes in the warm night of Tahi­ti din­ners. He should have blamed Adams for be­ing born in Boston. The mind re­sorts to rea­son for want of train­ing, and Adams had nev­er met a per­fect­ly trained mind.

To La Farge, ec­cen­tric­ity meant con­ven­tion; a mind re­al­ly ec­cen­tric nev­er be­trayed it. True ec­cen­tric­ity was a tone — a shade — a nu­ance — and the fin­er the tone, the truer the ec­cen­tric­ity. Of course all artists hold more or less the same point of view in their art, but few car­ry it in­to dai­ly life, and of­ten the con­trast is ex­ces­sive be­tween their art and their talk. One evening Humphreys John­ston, who was de­vot­ed to La Farge, asked him to meet Whistler at din­ner. La Farge was ill — more ill than usu­al even for him — but he ad­mired and liked Whistler, and in­sist­ed on go­ing. By chance, Adams was so placed as to over­hear the con­ver­sa­tion of both, and had no choice but to hear that of Whistler, which en­grossed the ta­ble. At that mo­ment the Boer War was rag­ing, and, as ev­ery one knows, on that sub­ject Whistler raged worse than the Boers. For two hours he de­claimed against Eng­land — wit­ty, declam­ato­ry, ex­trav­agant, bit­ter, amus­ing, and noisy; but in sub­stance what he said was not mere­ly com­mon­place — it was true! That is to say, his hear­ers, in­clud­ing Adams and, as far as he knew, La Farge, agreed with it all, and most­ly as a mat­ter of course; yet La Farge was silent, and this dif­fer­ence of ex­pres­sion was a dif­fer­ence of art. Whistler in his art car­ried the sense of nu­ance and tone far be­yond any point reached by La Farge, or even at­tempt­ed; but in talk he showed, above or be­low his col­or-​in­stinct, a will­ing­ness to seem ec­cen­tric where no re­al ec­cen­tric­ity, un­less per­haps of tem­per, ex­ist­ed.

This ve­he­mence, which Whistler nev­er be­trayed in his paint­ing, La Farge seemed to lav­ish on his glass. With the rel­ative val­ue of La Farge’s glass in the his­to­ry of glass-​dec­ora­tion, Adams was too ig­no­rant to med­dle, and as a rule artists were if pos­si­ble more ig­no­rant than he; but what­ev­er it was, it led him back to the twelfth cen­tu­ry and to Chartres where La Farge not on­ly felt at home, but felt a sort of own­er­ship. No oth­er Amer­ican had a right there, un­less he too were a mem­ber of the Church and worked in glass. Adams him­self was an in­ter­lop­er, but long habit led La Farge to re­sign him­self to Adams as one who meant well, though de­plorably Bosto­ni­an; while Adams, though near six­ty years old be­fore he knew any­thing ei­ther of glass or of Chartres, asked no bet­ter than to learn, and on­ly La Farge could help him, for he knew enough at least to see that La Farge alone could use glass like a thir­teenth-​cen­tu­ry artist. In Eu­rope the art had been dead for cen­turies, and mod­ern glass was pitiable. Even La Farge felt the ear­ly glass rather as a doc­ument than as a his­tor­ical emo­tion, and in hun­dreds of win­dows at Chartres and Bourges and Paris, Adams knew bare­ly one or two that were meant to hold their own against a col­or-​scheme so strong as his. In con­ver­sa­tion La Farge’s mind was opa­line with in­fi­nite shades and re­frac­tions of light, and with col­or toned down to the finest gra­da­tions. In glass it was in­sub­or­di­nate; it was re­nais­sance; it as­sert­ed his per­son­al force with depth and ve­he­mence of tone nev­er be­fore seen. He seemed bent on crush­ing ri­val­ry.

Even the gloom of a Paris De­cem­ber at the El­ysee Palace Ho­tel was some­what re­lieved by this com­pan­ion­ship, and ed­uca­tion made a step back­wards to­wards Chartres, but La Farge’s health be­came more and more alarm­ing, and Adams was glad to get him safe­ly back to New York, Jan­uary 15, 1900, while he him­self went at once to Wash­ing­ton to find out what had be­come of Hay. Noth­ing good could be hoped, for Hay’s trou­bles had be­gun, and were quite as great as he had fore­seen. Adams saw as lit­tle en­cour­age­ment as Hay him­self did, though he dared not say so. He doubt­ed Hay’s en­durance, the Pres­ident’s firm­ness in sup­port­ing him, and the loy­al­ty of his par­ty friends; but all this wor­ry on Hay’s ac­count fret­ted him not near­ly so much as the Boer War did on his own. Here was a prob­lem in his po­lit­ical ed­uca­tion that passed all ex­pe­ri­ence since the Trea­son win­ter of 1860-61! Much to his as­ton­ish­ment, very few Amer­icans seemed to share his point of view; their hos­til­ity to Eng­land seemed mere tem­per; but to Adams the war be­came al­most a per­son­al out­rage. He had been taught from child­hood, even in Eng­land, that his for­bears and their as­so­ciates in 1776 had set­tled, once for all, the lib­er­ties of the British free colonies, and he very strong­ly ob­ject­ed to be­ing thrown on the de­fen­sive again, and forced to sit down, a hun­dred and fifty years af­ter John Adams had be­gun the task, to prove, by ap­peal to law and fact, that George Wash­ing­ton was not a felon, what­ev­er might be the case with George III. For rea­sons still more per­son­al, he de­clined peremp­to­ri­ly to en­ter­tain ques­tion of the felony of John Adams. He felt obliged to go even fur­ther, and avow the opin­ion that if at any time Eng­land should take to­wards Cana­da the po­si­tion she took to­wards her Boer colonies, the Unit­ed States would be bound, by their record, to in­ter­pose, and to in­sist on the ap­pli­ca­tion of the prin­ci­ples of 1776. To him the at­ti­tude of Mr. Cham­ber­lain and his col­leagues seemed ex­ceed­ing­ly un-​Amer­ican, and ter­ri­bly em­bar­rass­ing to Hay.

Trained ear­ly, in the stress of civ­il war, to hold his tongue, and to help make the po­lit­ical ma­chine run some­how, since it could nev­er be made to run well, he would not both­er Hay with the­oret­ical ob­jec­tions which were ev­ery day fret­ting him in prac­ti­cal forms. Hay’s chance lay in pa­tience and good-​tem­per till the luck should turn, and to him the on­ly ob­ject was time; but as po­lit­ical ed­uca­tion the point seemed vi­tal to Adams, who nev­er liked shut­ting his eyes or deny­ing an ev­ident fact. Prac­ti­cal pol­itics con­sists in ig­nor­ing facts, but ed­uca­tion and pol­itics are two dif­fer­ent and of­ten con­tra­dic­to­ry things. In this case, the con­tra­dic­tion seemed crude.

With Hay’s pol­itics, at home or abroad, Adams had noth­ing what­ev­er to do. Hay be­longed to the New York school, like Abram He­witt, Evarts, W. C. Whit­ney, Samuel J. Tilden — men who played the game for am­bi­tion or amuse­ment, and played it, as a rule, much bet­ter than the pro­fes­sion­als, but whose aims were con­sid­er­ably larg­er than those of the usu­al play­er, and who felt no great love for the cheap drudgery of the work. In re­turn, the pro­fes­sion­als felt no great love for them, and set them aside when they could. On­ly their con­trol of mon­ey made them in­evitable, and even this did not al­ways car­ry their points. The sto­ry of Abram He­witt would of­fer one type of this states­man se­ries, and that of Hay an­oth­er. Pres­ident Cleve­land set aside the one; Pres­ident Har­ri­son set aside the oth­er. “There is no pol­itics in it,” was his com­ment on Hay’s ap­point­ment to of­fice. Hay held a dif­fer­ent opin­ion and turned to McKin­ley whose judg­ment of men was fin­er than com­mon in Pres­idents. Mr. McKin­ley brought to the prob­lem of Amer­ican gov­ern­ment a so­lu­tion which lay very far out­side of Hen­ry Adams’s ed­uca­tion, but which seemed to be at least prac­ti­cal and Amer­ican. He un­der­took to pool in­ter­ests in a gen­er­al trust in­to which ev­ery in­ter­est should be tak­en, more or less at its own val­ua­tion, and whose mass should, un­der his man­age­ment, cre­ate ef­fi­cien­cy. He achieved very re­mark­able re­sults. How much they cost was an­oth­er mat­ter; if the pub­lic is ev­er driv­en to its last re­sources and the usu­al reme­dies of chaos, the re­sult will prob­ably cost more.

Him­self a mar­vel­lous man­ag­er of men, McKin­ley found sev­er­al ma­nip­ula­tors to help him, al­most as re­mark­able as him­self, one of whom was Hay; but un­for­tu­nate­ly Hay’s strength was weak­est and his task hard­est. At home, in­ter­ests could be eas­ily com­bined by sim­ply pay­ing their price; but abroad what­ev­er helped on one side, hurt him on an­oth­er. Hay thought Eng­land must be brought first in­to the com­bine; but at that time Ger­many, Rus­sia, and France were all com­bin­ing against Eng­land, and the Boer War helped them. For the mo­ment Hay had no al­ly, abroad or at home, ex­cept Paunce­fote, and Adams al­ways main­tained that Paunce­fote alone pulled him through.

Yet the dif­fi­cul­ty abroad was far less trou­ble­some than the ob­sta­cles at home. The Sen­ate had grown more and more un­man­age­able, even since the time of An­drew John­son, and this was less the fault of the Sen­ate than of the sys­tem. “A treaty of peace, in any nor­mal state of things,” said Hay, “ought to be rat­ified with una­nim­ity in twen­ty-​four hours. They wast­ed six weeks in wran­gling over this one, and rat­ified it with one vote to spare. We have five or six mat­ters now de­mand­ing set­tle­ment. I can set­tle them all, hon­or­ably and ad­van­ta­geous­ly to our own side; and I am as­sured by lead­ing men in the Sen­ate that not one of these treaties, if ne­go­ti­at­ed, will pass the Sen­ate. I should have a ma­jor­ity in ev­ery case, but a mal­con­tent third would cer­tain­ly dish ev­ery one of them. To such mon­strous shape has the orig­inal mis­take of the Con­sti­tu­tion grown in the evo­lu­tion of our pol­itics. You must un­der­stand, it is not mere­ly my so­lu­tion the Sen­ate will re­ject. They will re­ject, for in­stance, any treaty, what­ev­er, on any sub­ject, with Eng­land. I doubt if they would ac­cept any treaty of con­se­quence with Rus­sia or Ger­many. The re­cal­ci­trant third would be dif­fer­ent­ly com­posed, but it would be on hand. So that the re­al du­ties of a Sec­re­tary of State seem to be three: to fight claims up­on us by oth­er States; to press more or less fraud­ulent claims of our own cit­izens up­on oth­er coun­tries; to find of­fices for the friends of Sen­ators when there are none. Is it worth while — for me — to keep up this use­less la­bor?”

To Adams, who, like Hay, had seen a dozen ac­quain­tances strug­gling with the same en­emies, the ques­tion had scarce­ly the in­ter­est of a new study. He had said all he had to say about it in a dozen or more vol­umes re­lat­ing to the pol­itics of a hun­dred years be­fore. To him, the spec­ta­cle was so fa­mil­iar as to be hu­mor­ous. The in­trigue was too open to be in­ter­est­ing. The in­ter­fer­ence of the Ger­man and Rus­sian lega­tions, and of the Clan-​na-​Gael, with the press and the Sen­ate was in­no­cent­ly undis­guised. The charm­ing Rus­sian Min­is­ter, Count Cassi­ni, the ide­al of diplo­mat­ic man­ners and train­ing, let few days pass with­out ap­peal­ing through the press to the pub­lic against the gov­ern­ment. The Ger­man Min­is­ter, Von Holleben, more cau­tious­ly did the same thing, and of course ev­ery whis­per of theirs was brought in­stant­ly to the De­part­ment. These three forces, act­ing with the reg­ular op­po­si­tion and the nat­ural ob­struc­tion­ists, could al­ways stop ac­tion in the Sen­ate. The fa­thers had in­tend­ed to neu­tral­ize the en­er­gy of gov­ern­ment and had suc­ceed­ed, but their ma­chine was nev­er meant to do the work of a twen­ty-​mil­lion horse-​pow­er so­ci­ety in the twen­ti­eth cen­tu­ry, where much work need­ed to be quick­ly and ef­fi­cient­ly done. The on­ly de­fence of the sys­tem was that, as Gov­ern­ment did noth­ing well, it had best do noth­ing; but the Gov­ern­ment, in truth, did per­fect­ly well all it was giv­en to do; and even if the charge were true, it ap­plied equal­ly to hu­man so­ci­ety al­to­geth­er, if one chose to treat mankind from that point of view. As a mat­ter of me­chan­ics, so much work must be done; bad ma­chin­ery mere­ly added to fric­tion.

Al­ways un­selfish, gen­er­ous, easy, pa­tient, and loy­al, Hay had treat­ed the world as some­thing to be tak­en in block with­out pulling it to pieces to get rid of its de­fects; he liked it all: he laughed and ac­cept­ed; he had nev­er known un­hap­pi­ness and would have glad­ly lived his en­tire life over again ex­act­ly as it hap­pened. In the whole New York school, one met a sim­ilar dash of hu­mor and cyn­icism more or less pro­nounced but sel­dom bit­ter. Yet even the gayest of tem­pers suc­cumbs at last to con­stant fric­tion The old friend was rapid­ly fad­ing. The habit re­mained, but the easy in­ti­ma­cy, the care­less gai­ety, the ca­su­al hu­mor, the equal­ity of in­dif­fer­ence, were sink­ing in­to the rou­tine of of­fice; the mind lin­gered in the De­part­ment; the thought failed to re­act; the wit and hu­mor shrank with­in the blank walls of pol­itics, and the ir­ri­ta­tions mul­ti­plied. To a head of bu­reau, the re­sult seemed en­nobling.

Al­though, as ed­uca­tion, this branch of study was more fa­mil­iar and old­er than the twelfth cen­tu­ry, the task of bring­ing the two pe­ri­ods in­to a com­mon re­la­tion was new. Ig­no­rance re­quired that these po­lit­ical and so­cial and sci­en­tif­ic val­ues of the twelfth and twen­ti­eth cen­turies should be cor­re­lat­ed in some re­la­tion of move­ment that could be ex­pressed in math­emat­ics, nor did one care in the least that all the world said it could not be done, or that one knew not enough math­emat­ics even to fig­ure a for­mu­la be­yond the school­boy s = gt^2/2. If Ke­pler and New­ton could take lib­er­ties with the sun and moon, an ob­scure per­son in a re­mote wilder­ness like La Fayette Square could take lib­er­ties with Congress, and ven­ture to mul­ti­ply half its at­trac­tion in­to the square of its time. He had on­ly to find a val­ue, even in­finites­imal, for its at­trac­tion at any giv­en time. A his­tor­ical for­mu­la that should sat­is­fy the con­di­tions of the stel­lar uni­verse weighed heav­ily on his mind; but a tri­fling mat­ter like this was one in which he could look for no help from any­body — he could look on­ly for de­ri­sion at best.

All his as­so­ciates in his­to­ry con­demned such an at­tempt as fu­tile and al­most im­moral — cer­tain­ly hos­tile to sound his­tor­ical sys­tem. Adams tried it on­ly be­cause of its hos­til­ity to all that he had taught for his­to­ry, since he start­ed afresh from the new point that, what­ev­er was right, all he had ev­er taught was wrong. He had pur­sued ig­no­rance thus far with suc­cess, and had swept his mind clear of knowl­edge. In be­gin­ning again, from the start­ing-​point of Sir Isaac New­ton, he looked about him in vain for a teach­er. Few men in Wash­ing­ton cared to over­step the school con­ven­tions, and the most dis­tin­guished of them, Si­mon New­comb, was too sound a math­emati­cian to treat such a scheme se­ri­ous­ly. The great­est of Amer­icans, judged by his rank in sci­ence, Willard Gibbs, nev­er came to Wash­ing­ton, and Adams nev­er en­joyed a chance to meet him. Af­ter Gibbs, one of the most dis­tin­guished was Lan­gley, of the Smith­so­ni­an, who was more ac­ces­si­ble, to whom Adams had been much in the habit of turn­ing when­ev­er he want­ed an out­let for his vast reser­voirs of ig­no­rance. Lan­gley lis­tened with out­ward pa­tience to his dis­pu­ta­tious ques­tion­ings; but he too nour­ished a sci­en­tif­ic pas­sion for doubt, and sen­ti­men­tal at­tach­ment for its avow­al. He had the physi­cist’s heinous fault of pro­fess­ing to know noth­ing be­tween flash­es of in­tense per­cep­tion. Like so many oth­er great ob­servers, Lan­gley was not a math­emati­cian, and like most physi­cists, he be­lieved in physics. Rigid­ly deny­ing him­self the amuse­ment of phi­los­ophy, which con­sists chiefly in sug­gest­ing un­in­tel­li­gi­ble an­swers to in­sol­uble prob­lems, he still knew the prob­lems, and liked to wan­der past them in a cour­te­ous tem­per, even bow­ing to them dis­tant­ly as though rec­og­niz­ing their ex­is­tence, while doubt­ing their re­spectabil­ity. He gen­er­ous­ly let oth­ers doubt what he felt obliged to af­firm; and ear­ly put in­to Adams’s hands the “Con­cepts of Mod­ern Sci­ence,” a vol­ume by Judge Stal­lo, which had been treat­ed for a dozen years by the schools with a con­spir­acy of si­lence such as in­evitably meets ev­ery rev­olu­tion­ary work that up­sets the stock and ma­chin­ery of in­struc­tion. Adams read and failed to un­der­stand; then he asked ques­tions and failed to get an­swers.

Prob­ably this was ed­uca­tion. Per­haps it was the on­ly sci­en­tif­ic ed­uca­tion open to a stu­dent six­ty-​odd years old, who asked to be as ig­no­rant as an as­tronomer. For him the de­tails of sci­ence meant noth­ing: he want­ed to know its mass. So­lar heat was not enough, or was too much. Ki­net­ic atoms led on­ly to mo­tion; nev­er to di­rec­tion or progress. His­to­ry had no use for mul­ti­plic­ity; it need­ed uni­ty; it could study on­ly mo­tion, di­rec­tion, at­trac­tion, re­la­tion. Ev­ery­thing must be made to move to­geth­er; one must seek new worlds to mea­sure; and so, like Ras­se­las, Adams set out once more, and found him­self on May 12 set­tled in rooms at the very door of the Tro­cadero.