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

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The Education of Henry Adams

CHAPTER XXV

THE DY­NAMO AND THE VIR­GIN (1900)

UN­TIL the Great Ex­po­si­tion of 1900 closed its doors in Novem­ber, Adams haunt­ed it, aching to ab­sorb knowl­edge, and help­less to find it. He would have liked to know how much of it could have been grasped by the best-​in­formed man in the world. While he was thus med­itat­ing chaos, Lan­gley came by, and showed it to him. At Lan­gley’s be­hest, the Ex­hi­bi­tion dropped its su­per­flu­ous rags and stripped it­self to the skin, for Lan­gley knew what to study, and why, and how; while Adams might as well have stood out­side in the night, star­ing at the Milky Way. Yet Lan­gley said noth­ing new, and taught noth­ing that one might not have learned from Lord Ba­con, three hun­dred years be­fore; but though one should have known the “Ad­vance­ment of Sci­ence” as well as one knew the “Com­edy of Er­rors,” the lit­er­ary knowl­edge count­ed for noth­ing un­til some teach­er should show how to ap­ply it. Ba­con took a vast deal of trou­ble in teach­ing King James I and his sub­jects, Amer­ican or oth­er, to­wards the year 1620, that true sci­ence was the de­vel­op­ment or econ­omy of forces; yet an el­der­ly Amer­ican in 1900 knew nei­ther the for­mu­la nor the forces; or even so much as to say to him­self that his his­tor­ical busi­ness in the Ex­po­si­tion con­cerned on­ly the economies or de­vel­op­ments of force since 1893, when he be­gan the study at Chica­go.

Noth­ing in ed­uca­tion is so as­ton­ish­ing as the amount of ig­no­rance it ac­cu­mu­lates in the form of in­ert facts. Adams had looked at most of the ac­cu­mu­la­tions of art in the store­hous­es called Art Mu­se­ums; yet he did not know how to look at the art ex­hibits of 1900. He had stud­ied Karl Marx and his doc­trines of his­to­ry with pro­found at­ten­tion, yet he could not ap­ply them at Paris. Lan­gley, with the ease of a great mas­ter of ex­per­iment, threw out of the field ev­ery ex­hib­it that did not re­veal a new ap­pli­ca­tion of force, and nat­ural­ly threw out, to be­gin with, al­most the whole art ex­hib­it. Equal­ly, he ig­nored al­most the whole in­dus­tri­al ex­hib­it. He led his pupil di­rect­ly to the forces. His chief in­ter­est was in new mo­tors to make his air­ship fea­si­ble, and he taught Adams the as­ton­ish­ing com­plex­ities of the new Daim­ler mo­tor, and of the au­to­mo­bile, which, since 1893, had be­come a night­mare at a hun­dred kilo­me­tres an hour, al­most as de­struc­tive as the elec­tric tram which was on­ly ten years old­er; and threat­en­ing to be­come as ter­ri­ble as the lo­co­mo­tive steam-​en­gine it­self, which was al­most ex­act­ly Adams’s own age.

Then he showed his schol­ar the great hall of dy­namos, and ex­plained how lit­tle he knew about elec­tric­ity or force of any kind, even of his own spe­cial sun, which spout­ed heat in in­con­ceiv­able vol­ume, but which, as far as he knew, might spout less or more, at any time, for all the cer­tain­ty he felt in it. To him, the dy­namo it­self was but an in­ge­nious chan­nel for con­vey­ing some­where the heat la­tent in a few tons of poor coal hid­den in a dirty en­gine-​house care­ful­ly kept out of sight; but to Adams the dy­namo be­came a sym­bol of in­fin­ity. As he grew ac­cus­tomed to the great gallery of ma­chines, he be­gan to feel the forty-​foot dy­namos as a moral force, much as the ear­ly Chris­tians felt the Cross. The plan­et it­self seemed less im­pres­sive, in its old-​fash­ioned, de­lib­er­ate, an­nu­al or dai­ly rev­olu­tion, than this huge wheel, re­volv­ing with­in arm’s length at some ver­tig­inous speed, and bare­ly mur­mur­ing — scarce­ly hum­ming an au­di­ble warn­ing to stand a hair’s-​breadth fur­ther for re­spect of pow­er — while it would not wake the ba­by ly­ing close against its frame. Be­fore the end, one be­gan to pray to it; in­her­it­ed in­stinct taught the nat­ural ex­pres­sion of man be­fore silent and in­fi­nite force. Among the thou­sand sym­bols of ul­ti­mate en­er­gy the dy­namo was not so hu­man as some, but it was the most ex­pres­sive.

Yet the dy­namo, next to the steam-​en­gine, was the most fa­mil­iar of ex­hibits. For Adams’s ob­jects its val­ue lay chiefly in its oc­cult mech­anism. Be­tween the dy­namo in the gallery of ma­chines and the en­gine-​house out­side, the break of con­ti­nu­ity amount­ed to abysmal frac­ture for a his­to­ri­an’s ob­jects. No more re­la­tion could he dis­cov­er be­tween the steam and the elec­tric cur­rent than be­tween the Cross and the cathe­dral. The forces were in­ter­change­able if not re­versible, but he could see on­ly an ab­so­lute fi­at in elec­tric­ity as in faith. Lan­gley could not help him. In­deed, Lan­gley seemed to be wor­ried by the same trou­ble, for he con­stant­ly re­peat­ed that the new forces were an­ar­chi­cal, and es­pe­cial­ly that he was not re­spon­si­ble for the new rays, that were lit­tle short of par­ri­ci­dal in their wicked spir­it to­wards sci­ence. His own rays, with which he had dou­bled the so­lar spec­trum, were al­to­geth­er harm­less and benef­icent; but Ra­di­um de­nied its God — or, what was to Lan­gley the same thing, de­nied the truths of his Sci­ence. The force was whol­ly new.

A his­to­ri­an who asked on­ly to learn enough to be as fu­tile as Lan­gley or Kelvin, made rapid progress un­der this teach­ing, and mixed him­self up in the tan­gle of ideas un­til he achieved a sort of Par­adise of ig­no­rance vast­ly con­sol­ing to his fa­tigued sens­es. He wrapped him­self in vi­bra­tions and rays which were new, and he would have hugged Mar­coni and Bran­ly had he met them, as he hugged the dy­namo; while he lost his arith­metic in try­ing to fig­ure out the equa­tion be­tween the dis­cov­er­ies and the economies of force. The economies, like the dis­cov­er­ies, were ab­so­lute, su­per­sen­su­al, oc­cult; in­ca­pable of ex­pres­sion in horse-​pow­er. What math­emat­ical equiv­alent could he sug­gest as the val­ue of a Bran­ly co­her­er? Frozen air, or the elec­tric fur­nace, had some scale of mea­sure­ment, no doubt, if some­body could in­vent a ther­mome­ter ad­equate to the pur­pose; but X-​rays had played no part what­ev­er in man’s con­scious­ness, and the atom it­self had fig­ured on­ly as a fic­tion of thought. In these sev­en years man had trans­lat­ed him­self in­to a new uni­verse which had no com­mon scale of mea­sure­ment with the old. He had en­tered a su­per­sen­su­al world, in which he could mea­sure noth­ing ex­cept by chance col­li­sions of move­ments im­per­cep­ti­ble to his sens­es, per­haps even im­per­cep­ti­ble to his in­stru­ments, but per­cep­ti­ble to each oth­er, and so to some known ray at the end of the scale. Lan­gley seemed pre­pared for any­thing, even for an in­de­ter­minable num­ber of uni­vers­es in­ter­fused — physics stark mad in meta­physics.

His­to­ri­ans un­der­take to ar­range se­quences, — called sto­ries, or his­to­ries — as­sum­ing in si­lence a re­la­tion of cause and ef­fect. These as­sump­tions, hid­den in the depths of dusty li­braries, have been as­tound­ing, but com­mon­ly un­con­scious and child­like; so much so, that if any cap­tious crit­ic were to drag them to light, his­to­ri­ans would prob­ably re­ply, with one voice, that they had nev­er sup­posed them­selves re­quired to know what they were talk­ing about. Adams, for one, had toiled in vain to find out what he meant. He had even pub­lished a dozen vol­umes of Amer­ican his­to­ry for no oth­er pur­pose than to sat­is­fy him­self whether, by sever­est pro­cess of stat­ing, with the least pos­si­ble com­ment, such facts as seemed sure, in such or­der as seemed rig­or­ous­ly con­se­quent, he could fix for a fa­mil­iar mo­ment a nec­es­sary se­quence of hu­man move­ment. The re­sult had sat­is­fied him as lit­tle as at Har­vard Col­lege. Where he saw se­quence, oth­er men saw some­thing quite dif­fer­ent, and no one saw the same unit of mea­sure. He cared lit­tle about his ex­per­iments and less about his states­men, who seemed to him quite as ig­no­rant as him­self and, as a rule, no more hon­est; but he in­sist­ed on a re­la­tion of se­quence, and if he could not reach it by one method, he would try as many meth­ods as sci­ence knew. Sat­is­fied that the se­quence of men led to noth­ing and that the se­quence of their so­ci­ety could lead no fur­ther, while the mere se­quence of time was ar­ti­fi­cial, and the se­quence of thought was chaos, he turned at last to the se­quence of force; and thus it hap­pened that, af­ter ten years’ pur­suit, he found him­self ly­ing in the Gallery of Ma­chines at the Great Ex­po­si­tion of 1900, his his­tor­ical neck bro­ken by the sud­den ir­rup­tion of forces to­tal­ly new.

Since no one else showed much con­cern, an el­der­ly per­son with­out oth­er cares had no need to be­tray alarm. The year 1900 was not the first to up­set school­mas­ters. Coper­ni­cus and Galileo had bro­ken many pro­fes­so­ri­al necks about 1600; Colum­bus had stood the world on its head to­wards 1500; but the near­est ap­proach to the rev­olu­tion of 1900 was that of 310, when Con­stan­tine set up the Cross. The rays that Lan­gley dis­owned, as well as those which he fa­thered, were oc­cult, su­per­sen­su­al, ir­ra­tional; they were a rev­ela­tion of mys­te­ri­ous en­er­gy like that of the Cross; they were what, in terms of me­di­ae­val sci­ence, were called im­me­di­ate modes of the di­vine sub­stance.

The his­to­ri­an was thus re­duced to his last re­sources. Clear­ly if he was bound to re­duce all these forces to a com­mon val­ue, this com­mon val­ue could have no mea­sure but that of their at­trac­tion on his own mind. He must treat them as they had been felt; as con­vert­ible, re­versible, in­ter­change­able at­trac­tions on thought. He made up his mind to ven­ture it; he would risk trans­lat­ing rays in­to faith. Such a re­versible pro­cess would vast­ly amuse a chemist, but the chemist could not de­ny that he, or some of his fel­low physi­cists, could feel the force of both. When Adams was a boy in Boston, the best chemist in the place had prob­ably nev­er heard of Venus ex­cept by way of scan­dal, or of the Vir­gin ex­cept as idol­atry; nei­ther had he heard of dy­namos or au­to­mo­biles or ra­di­um; yet his mind was ready to feel the force of all, though the rays were un­born and the wom­en were dead.

Here opened an­oth­er to­tal­ly new ed­uca­tion, which promised to be by far the most haz­ardous of all. The knife-​edge along which he must crawl, like Sir Lancelot in the twelfth cen­tu­ry, di­vid­ed two king­doms of force which had noth­ing in com­mon but at­trac­tion. They were as dif­fer­ent as a mag­net is from grav­ita­tion, sup­pos­ing one knew what a mag­net was, or grav­ita­tion, or love. The force of the Vir­gin was still felt at Lour­des, and seemed to be as po­tent as X-​rays; but in Amer­ica nei­ther Venus nor Vir­gin ev­er had val­ue as force — at most as sen­ti­ment. No Amer­ican had ev­er been tru­ly afraid of ei­ther.

This prob­lem in dy­nam­ics grave­ly per­plexed an Amer­ican his­to­ri­an. The Wom­an had once been supreme; in France she still seemed po­tent, not mere­ly as a sen­ti­ment, but as a force. Why was she un­known in Amer­ica? For ev­ident­ly Amer­ica was ashamed of her, and she was ashamed of her­self, oth­er­wise they would not have strewn fig-​leaves so pro­fuse­ly all over her. When she was a true force, she was ig­no­rant of fig-​leaves, but the month­ly-​mag­azine-​made Amer­ican fe­male had not a fea­ture that would have been rec­og­nized by Adam. The trait was no­to­ri­ous, and of­ten hu­mor­ous, but any one brought up among Pu­ri­tans knew that sex was sin. In any pre­vi­ous age, sex was strength. Nei­ther art nor beau­ty was need­ed. Ev­ery one, even among Pu­ri­tans, knew that nei­ther Di­ana of the Eph­esians nor any of the Ori­en­tal god­dess­es was wor­shipped for her beau­ty. She was god­dess be­cause of her force; she was the an­imat­ed dy­namo; she was re­pro­duc­tion — the great­est and most mys­te­ri­ous of all en­er­gies; all she need­ed was to be fe­cund. Sin­gu­lar­ly enough, not one of Adams’s many schools of ed­uca­tion had ev­er drawn his at­ten­tion to the open­ing lines of Lu­cretius, though they were per­haps the finest in all Latin lit­er­ature, where the po­et in­voked Venus ex­act­ly as Dante in­voked the Vir­gin: –

“Quae quon­dam re­rum nat­uram so­la gu­ber­nas.”

The Venus of Epi­cure­an phi­los­ophy sur­vived in the Vir­gin of the Schools: –

“Don­na, sei tan­to grande, e tan­to vali, Che qual vuol grazia, e a te non ri­corre, Sua disian­za vuol volar senz’ ali.”

All this was to Amer­ican thought as though it had nev­er ex­ist­ed. The true Amer­ican knew some­thing of the facts, but noth­ing of the feel­ings; he read the let­ter, but he nev­er felt the law. Be­fore this his­tor­ical chasm, a mind like that of Adams felt it­self help­less; he turned from the Vir­gin to the Dy­namo as though he were a Bran­ly co­her­er. On one side, at the Lou­vre and at Chartres, as he knew by the record of work ac­tu­al­ly done and still be­fore his eyes, was the high­est en­er­gy ev­er known to man, the cre­ator four-​fifths of his no­blest art, ex­er­cis­ing vast­ly more at­trac­tion over the hu­man mind than all the steam-​en­gines and dy­namos ev­er dreamed of; and yet this en­er­gy was un­known to the Amer­ican mind. An Amer­ican Vir­gin would nev­er dare com­mand; an Amer­ican Venus would nev­er dare ex­ist.

The ques­tion, which to any plain Amer­ican of the nine­teenth cen­tu­ry seemed as re­mote as it did to Adams, drew him al­most vi­olent­ly to study, once it was posed; and on this point Lan­gleys were as use­less as though they were Her­bert Spencers or dy­namos. The idea sur­vived on­ly as art. There one turned as nat­ural­ly as though the artist were him­self a wom­an. Adams be­gan to pon­der, ask­ing him­self whether he knew of any Amer­ican artist who had ev­er in­sist­ed on the pow­er of sex, as ev­ery clas­sic had al­ways done; but he could think on­ly of Walt Whit­man; Bret Harte, as far as the mag­azines would let him ven­ture; and one or two painters, for the flesh-​tones. All the rest had used sex for sen­ti­ment, nev­er for force; to them, Eve was a ten­der flow­er, and Hero­dias an un­fem­inine hor­ror. Amer­ican art, like the Amer­ican lan­guage and Amer­ican ed­uca­tion, was as far as pos­si­ble sex­less. So­ci­ety re­gard­ed this vic­to­ry over sex as its great­est tri­umph, and the his­to­ri­an read­ily ad­mit­ted it, since the moral is­sue, for the mo­ment, did not con­cern one who was study­ing the re­la­tions of un­moral force. He cared noth­ing for the sex of the dy­namo un­til he could mea­sure its en­er­gy.

Vague­ly seek­ing a clue, he wan­dered through the art ex­hib­it, and, in his stroll, stopped al­most ev­ery day be­fore St. Gau­dens’s Gen­er­al Sher­man, which had been giv­en the cen­tral post of hon­or. St. Gau­dens him­self was in Paris, putting on the work his usu­al in­ter­minable last touch­es, and lis­ten­ing to the usu­al con­tra­dic­to­ry sug­ges­tions of broth­er sculp­tors. Of all the Amer­ican artists who gave to Amer­ican art what­ev­er life it breathed in the sev­en­ties, St. Gau­dens was per­haps the most sym­pa­thet­ic, but cer­tain­ly the most inar­tic­ulate. Gen­er­al Grant or Don Cameron had scarce­ly less in­stinct of rhetoric than he. All the oth­ers — the Hunts, Richard­son, John La Farge, Stan­ford White — were ex­uber­ant; on­ly St. Gau­dens could nev­er dis­cuss or di­late on an emo­tion, or sug­gest artis­tic ar­gu­ments for giv­ing to his work the forms that he felt. He nev­er laid down the law, or af­fect­ed the despot, or be­came bru­tal­ized like Whistler by the bru­tal­ities of his world. He re­quired no in­cense; he was no ego­ist; his sim­plic­ity of thought was ex­ces­sive; he could not im­itate, or give any form but his own to the cre­ations of his hand. No one felt more strong­ly than he the strength of oth­er men, but the idea that they could af­fect him nev­er stirred an im­age in his mind.

This sum­mer his health was poor and his spir­its were low. For such a tem­per, Adams was not the best com­pan­ion, since his own gai­ety was not folle; but he risked go­ing now and then to the stu­dio on Mont Par­nasse to draw him out for a stroll in the Bois de Boulogne, or din­ner as pleased his moods, and in re­turn St. Gau­dens some­times let Adams go about in his com­pa­ny.

Once St. Gau­dens took him down to Amiens, with a par­ty of French­men, to see the cathe­dral. Not un­til they found them­selves ac­tu­al­ly study­ing the sculp­ture of the west­ern por­tal, did it dawn on Adams’s mind that, for his pur­pos­es, St. Gau­dens on that spot had more in­ter­est to him than the cathe­dral it­self. Great men be­fore great mon­uments ex­press great truths, pro­vid­ed they are not tak­en too solemn­ly. Adams nev­er tired of quot­ing the supreme phrase of his idol Gib­bon, be­fore the Goth­ic cathe­drals: “I dart­ed a con­temp­tu­ous look on the state­ly mon­uments of su­per­si­tion.” Even in the foot­notes of his his­to­ry, Gib­bon had nev­er in­sert­ed a bit of hu­mor more hu­man than this, and one would have paid large­ly for a pho­to­graph of the fat lit­tle his­to­ri­an, on the back­ground of Notre Dame of Amiens, try­ing to per­suade his read­ers — per­haps him­self — that he was dart­ing a con­temp­tu­ous look on the state­ly mon­ument, for which he felt in fact the re­spect which ev­ery man of his vast study and ac­tive mind al­ways feels be­fore ob­jects wor­thy of it; but be­sides the hu­mor, one felt al­so the re­la­tion. Gib­bon ig­nored the Vir­gin, be­cause in 1789 re­li­gious mon­uments were out of fash­ion. In 1900 his re­mark sound­ed fresh and sim­ple as the green fields to ears that had heard a hun­dred years of oth­er re­marks, most­ly no more fresh and cer­tain­ly less sim­ple. With­out mal­ice, one might find it more in­struc­tive than a whole lec­ture of Ruskin. One sees what one brings, and at that mo­ment Gib­bon brought the French Rev­olu­tion. Ruskin brought re­ac­tion against the Rev­olu­tion. St. Gau­dens had passed be­yond all. He liked the state­ly mon­uments much more than he liked Gib­bon or Ruskin; he loved their dig­ni­ty; their uni­ty; their scale; their lines; their lights and shad­ows; their dec­ora­tive sculp­ture; but he was even less con­scious than they of the force that cre­at­ed it all — the Vir­gin, the Wom­an — by whose ge­nius “the state­ly mon­uments of su­per­sti­tion” were built, through which she was ex­pressed. He would have seen more mean­ing in Isis with the cow’s horns, at Ed­foo, who ex­pressed the same thought. The art re­mained, but the en­er­gy was lost even up­on the artist.

Yet in mind and per­son St. Gau­dens was a sur­vival of the 1500; he bore the stamp of the Re­nais­sance, and should have car­ried an im­age of the Vir­gin round his neck, or stuck in his hat, like Louis XI. In mere time he was a lost soul that had strayed by chance to the twen­ti­eth cen­tu­ry, and for­got­ten where it came from. He writhed and cursed at his ig­no­rance, much as Adams did at his own, but in the op­po­site sense. St. Gau­dens was a child of Ben­venu­to Celli­ni, smoth­ered in an Amer­ican cra­dle. Adams was a quintessence of Boston, de­voured by cu­rios­ity to think like Ben­venu­to. St. Gau­dens’s art was starved from birth, and Adams’s in­stinct was blight­ed from baby­hood. Each had but half of a na­ture, and when they came to­geth­er be­fore the Vir­gin of Amiens they ought both to have felt in her the force that made them one; but it was not so. To Adams she be­came more than ev­er a chan­nel of force; to St. Gau­dens she re­mained as be­fore a chan­nel of taste.

For a sym­bol of pow­er, St. Gau­dens in­stinc­tive­ly pre­ferred the horse, as was plain in his horse and Vic­to­ry of the Sher­man mon­ument. Doubt­less Sher­man al­so felt it so. The at­ti­tude was so Amer­ican that, for at least forty years, Adams had nev­er re­al­ized that any oth­er could be in sound taste. How many years had he tak­en to ad­mit a no­tion of what Michael An­ge­lo and Rubens were driv­ing at? He could not say; but he knew that on­ly since 1895 had he be­gun to feel the Vir­gin or Venus as force, and not ev­ery­where even so. At Chartres — per­haps at Lour­des — pos­si­bly at Cnidos if one could still find there the di­vine­ly naked Aphrodite of Prax­ite­les — but oth­er­wise one must look for force to the god­dess­es of In­di­an mythol­ogy. The idea died out long ago in the Ger­man and En­glish stock. St. Gau­dens at Amiens was hard­ly less sen­si­tive to the force of the fe­male en­er­gy than Matthew Arnold at the Grande Chartreuse. Nei­ther of them felt god­dess­es as pow­er — on­ly as re­flect­ed emo­tion, hu­man ex­pres­sion, beau­ty, pu­ri­ty, taste, scarce­ly even as sym­pa­thy. They felt a rail­way train as pow­er, yet they, and all oth­er artists, con­stant­ly com­plained that the pow­er em­bod­ied in a rail­way train could nev­er be em­bod­ied in art. All the steam in the world could not, like the Vir­gin, build Chartres.

Yet in me­chan­ics, what­ev­er the me­chani­cians might think, both en­er­gies act­ed as in­ter­change­able force on man, and by ac­tion on man all known force may be mea­sured. In­deed, few men of sci­ence mea­sured force in any oth­er way. Af­ter once ad­mit­ting that a straight line was the short­est dis­tance be­tween two points, no se­ri­ous math­emati­cian cared to de­ny any­thing that suit­ed his con­ve­nience, and re­ject­ed no sym­bol, un­proved or un­prove­able, that helped him to ac­com­plish work. The sym­bol was force, as a com­pass-​nee­dle or a tri­an­gle was force, as the mech­anist might prove by los­ing it, and noth­ing could be gained by ig­nor­ing their val­ue. Sym­bol or en­er­gy, the Vir­gin had act­ed as the great­est force the West­ern world ev­er felt, and had drawn man’s ac­tiv­ities to her­self more strong­ly than any oth­er pow­er, nat­ural or su­per­nat­ural, had ev­er done; the his­to­ri­an’s busi­ness was to fol­low the track of the en­er­gy; to find where it came from and where it went to; its com­plex source and shift­ing chan­nels; its val­ues, equiv­alents, con­ver­sions. It could scarce­ly be more com­plex than ra­di­um; it could hard­ly be de­flect­ed, di­vert­ed, po­lar­ized, ab­sorbed more per­plex­ing­ly than oth­er ra­di­ant mat­ter. Adams knew noth­ing about any of them, but as a math­emat­ical prob­lem of in­flu­ence on hu­man progress, though all were oc­cult, all re­act­ed on his mind, and he rather in­clined to think the Vir­gin eas­iest to han­dle.

The pur­suit turned out to be long and tor­tu­ous, lead­ing at last to the vast forests of scholas­tic sci­ence. From Zeno to Descartes, hand in hand with Thomas Aquinas, Mon­taigne, and Pas­cal, one stum­bled as stupid­ly as though one were still a Ger­man stu­dent of 1860. On­ly with the in­stinct of de­spair could one force one’s self in­to this old thick­et of ig­no­rance af­ter hav­ing been re­pulsed a score of en­trances more promis­ing and more pop­ular. Thus far, no path had led any­where, un­less per­haps to an ex­ceed­ing­ly mod­est liv­ing. Forty-​five years of study had proved to be quite fu­tile for the pur­suit of pow­er; one con­trolled no more force in 1900 than in 1850, al­though the amount of force con­trolled by so­ci­ety had enor­mous­ly in­creased. The se­cret of ed­uca­tion still hid it­self some­where be­hind ig­no­rance, and one fum­bled over it as fee­bly as ev­er. In such labyrinths, the staff is a force al­most more nec­es­sary than the legs; the pen be­comes a sort of blind-​man’s dog, to keep him from falling in­to the gut­ters. The pen works for it­self, and acts like a hand, mod­elling the plas­tic ma­te­ri­al over and over again to the form that suits it best. The form is nev­er ar­bi­trary, but is a sort of growth like crys­tal­liza­tion, as any artist knows too well; for of­ten the pen­cil or pen runs in­to side-​paths and shape­less­ness, los­es its re­la­tions, stops or is bogged. Then it has to re­turn on its trail, and re­cov­er, if it can, its line of force. The re­sult of a year’s work de­pends more on what is struck out than on what is left in; on the se­quence of the main lines of thought, than on their play or va­ri­ety. Com­pelled once more to lean heav­ily on this sup­port, Adams cov­ered more thou­sands of pages with fig­ures as for­mal as though they were al­ge­bra, la­bo­ri­ous­ly strik­ing out, al­ter­ing, burn­ing, ex­per­iment­ing, un­til the year had ex­pired, the Ex­po­si­tion had long been closed, and win­ter draw­ing to its end, be­fore he sailed from Cher­bourg, on Jan­uary 19, 1901, for home.