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

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The Education of Henry Adams

CHAPTER XXVIII

THE HEIGHT OF KNOWL­EDGE (1902)

AMER­ICA has al­ways tak­en tragedy light­ly. Too busy to stop the ac­tiv­ity of their twen­ty-​mil­lion-​horse-​pow­er so­ci­ety, Amer­icans ig­nore trag­ic mo­tives that would have over­shad­owed the Mid­dle Ages; and the world learns to re­gard as­sas­si­na­tion as a form of hys­te­ria, and death as neu­ro­sis, to be treat­ed by a rest-​cure. Three hideous po­lit­ical mur­ders, that would have fat­tened the Eu­menides with hor­ror, have thrown scarce­ly a shad­ow on the White House.

The year 1901 was a year of tragedy that seemed to Hay to cen­tre on him­self. First came, in sum­mer, the ac­ci­den­tal death of his son, Del Hay. Close on the tragedy of his son, fol­lowed that of his chief, “all the more hideous that we were so sure of his re­cov­ery.” The world turned sud­den­ly in­to a grave­yard. “I have ac­quired the fu­ner­al habit.” “Nico­lay is dy­ing. I went to see him yes­ter­day, and he did not know me.” Among the let­ters of con­do­lence show­ered up­on him was one from Clarence King at Pasade­na, “heart-​break­ing in grace and ten­der­ness — the old King man­ner”; and King him­self “sim­ply wait­ing till na­ture and the foe have done their strug­gle.” The tragedy of King im­pressed him in­tense­ly: “There you have it in the face!” he said — “the best and bright­est man of his gen­er­ation, with tal­ents im­mea­sur­ably be­yond any of his con­tem­po­raries; with in­dus­try that has of­ten sick­ened me to wit­ness it; with ev­ery­thing in his fa­vor but blind luck; hound­ed by dis­as­ter from his cra­dle, with none of the joy of life to which he was en­ti­tled, dy­ing at last, with name­less suf­fer­ing alone and un­car­ed-​for, in a Cal­ifor­nia tav­ern. Ca vous amuse, la vie?”

The first sum­mons that met Adams, be­fore he had even land­ed on the pier at New York, De­cem­ber 29, was to Clarence King’s fu­ner­al, and from the fu­ner­al ser­vice he had no gay­er road to trav­el than that which led to Wash­ing­ton, where a rev­olu­tion had oc­curred that must in any case have made the men of his age in­stant­ly old, but which, be­sides hur­ry­ing to the front the gen­er­ation that till then he had re­gard­ed as boys, could not fail to break the so­cial ties that had till then held them all to­geth­er.

Ca vous amuse, la vie? Hon­est­ly, the lessons of ed­uca­tion were be­com­ing too trite. Hay him­self, prob­ably for the first time, felt half glad that Roo­sevelt should want him to stay in of­fice, if on­ly to save him­self the trou­ble of quit­ting; but to Adams all was pure loss. On that side, his ed­uca­tion had been fin­ished at school. His friends in pow­er were lost, and he knew life too well to risk to­tal wreck by try­ing to save them.

As far as con­cerned Roo­sevelt, the chance was hope­less. To them at six­ty-​three, Roo­sevelt at forty-​three could not be tak­en se­ri­ous­ly in his old char­ac­ter, and could not be re­cov­ered in his new one. Pow­er when wield­ed by ab­nor­mal en­er­gy is the most se­ri­ous of facts, and all Roo­sevelt’s friends know that his rest­less and com­bat­ive en­er­gy was more than ab­nor­mal. Roo­sevelt, more than any oth­er man liv­ing with­in the range of no­to­ri­ety, showed the sin­gu­lar prim­itive qual­ity that be­longs to ul­ti­mate mat­ter — the qual­ity that me­di­ae­val the­ol­ogy as­signed to God — he was pure act. With him wield­ing un­mea­sured pow­er with im­mea­sur­able en­er­gy, in the White House, the re­la­tion of age to youth — of teach­er to pupil — was al­to­geth­er out of place; and no oth­er was pos­si­ble. Even Hay’s re­la­tion was a false one, while Adams’s ceased of it­self. His­to­ry’s truths are lit­tle valu­able now; but hu­man na­ture re­tains a few of its ar­cha­ic, prover­bial laws, and the wis­est courtier that ev­er lived — Lu­cius Seneca him­self — must have re­mained in some shade of doubt what ad­van­tage he should get from the pow­er of his friend and pupil Nero Claudius, un­til, as a gen­tle­man past six­ty, he re­ceived Nero’s fil­ial in­vi­ta­tion to kill him­self. Seneca closed the vast cir­cle of his knowl­edge by learn­ing that a friend in pow­er was a friend lost — a fact very much worth in­sist­ing up­on — while the gray-​head­ed moth that had flut­tered through many moth-​ad­min­is­tra­tions and had singed his wings more or less in them all, though he now slept nine months out of the twelve, ac­quired an in­stinct of self-​preser­va­tion that kept him to the north side of La Fayette Square, and, af­ter a suf­fi­cient habi­tude of Pres­idents and Sen­ators, de­terred him from hov­er­ing be­tween them.

Those who seek ed­uca­tion in the paths of du­ty are al­ways de­ceived by the il­lu­sion that pow­er in the hands of friends is an ad­van­tage to them. As far as Adams could teach ex­pe­ri­ence, he was bound to warn them that he had found it an in­vari­able dis­as­ter. Pow­er is poi­son. Its ef­fect on Pres­idents had been al­ways trag­ic, chiefly as an al­most in­sane ex­cite­ment at first, and a worse re­ac­tion af­ter­wards; but al­so be­cause no mind is so well bal­anced as to bear the strain of seiz­ing un­lim­it­ed force with­out habit or knowl­edge of it; and find­ing it dis­put­ed with him by hun­gry packs of wolves and hounds whose lives de­pend on snatch­ing the car­rion. Roo­sevelt en­joyed a sin­gu­lar­ly di­rect na­ture and hon­est in­tent, but he lived nat­ural­ly in rest­less ag­ita­tion that would have worn out most tem­pers in a month, and his first year of Pres­iden­cy showed chron­ic ex­cite­ment that made a friend trem­ble. The ef­fect of un­lim­it­ed pow­er on lim­it­ed mind is worth not­ing in Pres­idents be­cause it must rep­re­sent the same pro­cess in so­ci­ety, and the pow­er of self-​con­trol must have lim­it some­where in face of the con­trol of the in­fi­nite.

Here, ed­uca­tion seemed to see its first and last les­son, but this is a mat­ter of psy­chol­ogy which lies far down in the depths of his­to­ry and of sci­ence; it will re­cur in oth­er forms. The per­son­al les­son is dif­fer­ent. Roo­sevelt was lost, but this seemed no rea­son why Hay and Lodge should al­so be lost, yet the re­sult was math­emat­ical­ly cer­tain. With Hay, it was on­ly the steady de­cline of strength, and the nec­es­sary econ­omy of force; but with Lodge it was law of pol­itics. He could not help him­self, for his po­si­tion as the Pres­ident’s friend and in­de­pen­dent states­man at once was false, and he must be un­sure in both re­la­tions.

To a stu­dent, the im­por­tance of Cabot Lodge was great — much greater than that of the usu­al Sen­ator — but it hung on his po­si­tion in Mas­sachusetts rather than on his con­trol of Ex­ec­utive pa­tron­age; and his stand­ing in Mas­sachusetts was high­ly in­se­cure. Nowhere in Amer­ica was so­ci­ety so com­plex or change so rapid. No doubt the Bosto­ni­an had al­ways been not­ed for a cer­tain chron­ic ir­ri­tabil­ity — a sort of Bostoni­tis — which, in its prim­itive Pu­ri­tan forms, seemed due to know­ing too much of his neigh­bors, and think­ing too much of him­self. Many years ear­li­er William M. Evarts had point­ed out to Adams the im­pos­si­bil­ity of unit­ing New Eng­land be­hind a New Eng­land lead­er. The trait led to good ends — such as ad­mi­ra­tion of Abra­ham Lin­coln and George Wash­ing­ton — but the virtue was ex­act­ing; for New Eng­land stan­dards were var­ious, scarce­ly rec­on­cil­able with each oth­er, and con­stant­ly mul­ti­ply­ing in num­ber, un­til bal­ance be­tween them threat­ened to be­come im­pos­si­ble. The old ones were quite dif­fi­cult enough — State Street and the banks ex­act­ed one stamp; the old Con­gre­ga­tion­al cler­gy an­oth­er; Har­vard Col­lege, poor in votes, but rich in so­cial in­flu­ence, a third; the for­eign el­ement, es­pe­cial­ly the Irish, held aloof, and sel­dom con­sent­ed to ap­prove any one; the new so­cial­ist class, rapid­ly grow­ing, promised to be­come more ex­clu­sive than the Irish. New pow­er was dis­in­te­grat­ing so­ci­ety, and set­ting in­de­pen­dent cen­tres of force to work, un­til mon­ey had all it could do to hold the ma­chine to­geth­er. No one could rep­re­sent it faith­ful­ly as a whole.

Nat­ural­ly, Adams’s sym­pa­thies lay strong­ly with Lodge, but the task of ap­pre­ci­ation was much more dif­fi­cult in his case than in that of his chief friend and schol­ar, the Pres­ident. As a type for study, or a stan­dard for ed­uca­tion, Lodge was the more in­ter­est­ing of the two. Roo­sevelts are born and nev­er can be taught; but Lodge was a crea­ture of teach­ing — Boston in­car­nate — the child of his lo­cal parent­age; and while his am­bi­tion led him to be more, the in­tent, though vir­tu­ous, was — as Adams ad­mit­ted in his own case — rest­less. An ex­cel­lent talk­er, a vo­ra­cious read­er, a ready wit, an ac­com­plished or­ator, with a clear mind and a pow­er­ful mem­ory, he could nev­er feel per­fect­ly at ease what­ev­er leg he stood on, but shift­ed, some­times with painful strain of tem­per, from one sen­si­tive mus­cle to an­oth­er, un­cer­tain whether to pose as an un­com­pro­mis­ing Yan­kee; or a pure Amer­ican; or a pa­tri­ot in the still pur­er at­mo­sphere of Irish, Ger­mans, or Jews; or a schol­ar and his­to­ri­an of Har­vard Col­lege. En­glish to the last fi­bre of his thought — sat­urat­ed with En­glish lit­er­ature, En­glish tra­di­tion, En­glish taste — re­volt­ed by ev­ery vice and by most virtues of French­men and Ger­mans, or any oth­er Con­ti­nen­tal stan­dards, but at home and hap­py among the vices and ex­trav­agances of Shake­speare — stand­ing first on the so­cial, then on the po­lit­ical foot; now wor­ship­ping, now ban­ning; shocked by the wan­ton dis­play of im­moral­ity, but prac­tic­ing the li­cense of po­lit­ical us­age; some­times bit­ter, of­ten ge­nial, al­ways in­tel­li­gent — Lodge had the sin­gu­lar mer­it of in­ter­est­ing. The usu­al states­men flocked in swarms like crows, black and monotonous. Lodge’s plumage was var­ied, and, like his flight, harked back to race. He be­trayed the con­scious­ness that he and his peo­ple had a past, if they dared but avow it, and might have a fu­ture, if they could but di­vine it.

Adams, too, was Bosto­ni­an, and the Bosto­ni­an’s un­cer­tain­ty of at­ti­tude was as nat­ural to him as to Lodge. On­ly Bosto­ni­ans can un­der­stand Bosto­ni­ans and thor­ough­ly sym­pa­thize with the in­con­se­quences of the Boston mind. His the­ory and prac­tice were al­so at vari­ance. He pro­fessed in the­ory equal dis­trust of En­glish thought, and called it a huge rag-​bag of bric-​a-​brac, some­times pre­cious but nev­er sure. For him, on­ly the Greek, the Ital­ian or the French stan­dards had claims to re­spect, and the bar­barism of Shake­speare was as fla­grant as to Voltaire; but his the­ory nev­er af­fect­ed his prac­tice. He knew that his artis­tic stan­dard was the il­lu­sion of his own mind; that En­glish dis­or­der ap­proached near­er to truth, if truth ex­ist­ed, than French mea­sure or Ital­ian line, or Ger­man log­ic; he read his Shake­speare as the Evan­gel of con­ser­va­tive Chris­tian an­ar­chy, nei­ther very con­ser­va­tive nor very Chris­tian, but stu­pen­dous­ly an­ar­chis­tic. He loved the atroc­ities of En­glish art and so­ci­ety, as he loved Charles Dick­ens and Miss Austen, not be­cause of their ex­am­ple, but be­cause of their hu­mor. He made no scru­ple of de­fy­ing se­quence and deny­ing con­sis­ten­cy — but he was not a Sen­ator.

Dou­ble stan­dards are in­spi­ra­tion to men of let­ters, but they are apt to be fa­tal to politi­cians. Adams had no rea­son to care whether his stan­dards were pop­ular or not, and no one else cared more than he; but Roo­sevelt and Lodge were play­ing a game in which they were al­ways li­able to find the shifty sands of Amer­ican opin­ion yield sud­den­ly un­der their feet. With this game an el­der­ly friend had long be­fore car­ried ac­quain­tance as far as he wished. There was noth­ing in it for him but the amuse­ment of the pugilist or ac­ro­bat. The larg­er study was lost in the di­vi­sion of in­ter­ests and the am­bi­tions of fifth-​rate men; but for­eign af­fairs dealt on­ly with large units, and made per­son­al re­la­tion pos­si­ble with Hay which could not be main­tained with Roo­sevelt or Lodge. As an af­fair of pure ed­uca­tion the point is worth no­tice from young men who are drawn in­to pol­itics. The work of do­mes­tic progress is done by mass­es of me­chan­ical pow­er — steam, elec­tric, fur­nace, or oth­er — which have to be con­trolled by a score or two of in­di­vid­uals who have shown ca­pac­ity to man­age it. The work of in­ter­nal gov­ern­ment has be­come the task of con­trol­ling these men, who are so­cial­ly as re­mote as hea­then gods, alone worth know­ing, but nev­er known, and who could tell noth­ing of po­lit­ical val­ue if one skinned them alive. Most of them have noth­ing to tell, but are forces as dumb as their dy­namos, ab­sorbed in the de­vel­op­ment or econ­omy of pow­er. They are trustees for the pub­lic, and when­ev­er so­ci­ety as­sumes the prop­er­ty, it must con­fer on them that ti­tle; but the pow­er will re­main as be­fore, who­ev­er man­ages it, and will then con­trol so­ci­ety with­out ap­peal, as it con­trols its stok­ers and pit-​men. Mod­ern pol­itics is, at bot­tom, a strug­gle not of men but of forces. The men be­come ev­ery year more and more crea­tures of force, massed about cen­tral pow­er-​hous­es. The con­flict is no longer be­tween the men, but be­tween the mo­tors that drive the men, and the men tend to suc­cumb to their own mo­tive forces.

This is a moral that man strong­ly ob­jects to ad­mit, es­pe­cial­ly in me­di­ae­val pur­suits like pol­itics and po­et­ry, nor is it worth while for a teach­er to in­sist up­on it. What he in­sists up­on is on­ly that in do­mes­tic pol­itics, ev­ery one works for an im­me­di­ate ob­ject, com­mon­ly for some pri­vate job, and in­vari­ably in a near hori­zon, while in for­eign af­fairs the out­look is far ahead, over a field as wide as the world. There the mer­est schol­ar could see what he was do­ing. For his­to­ry, in­ter­na­tion­al re­la­tions are the on­ly sure stan­dards of move­ment; the on­ly foun­da­tion for a map. For this rea­son, Adams had al­ways in­sist­ed that in­ter­na­tion­al re­la­tion was the on­ly sure base for a chart of his­to­ry.

He cared lit­tle to con­vince any one of the cor­rect­ness of his view, but as teach­er he was bound to ex­plain it, and as friend he found it con­ve­nient. The Sec­re­tary of State has al­ways stood as much alone as the his­to­ri­an. Re­quired to look far ahead and round hm, he mea­sures forces un­known to par­ty man­agers, and has found Congress more or less hos­tile ev­er since Congress first sat. The Sec­re­tary of State ex­ists on­ly to rec­og­nize the ex­is­tence of a world which Congress would rather ig­nore; of obli­ga­tions which Congress re­pu­di­ates when­ev­er it can; of bar­gains which Congress dis­trusts and tries to turn to its ad­van­tage or to re­ject. Since the first day the Sen­ate ex­ist­ed, it has al­ways in­trigued against the Sec­re­tary of State when­ev­er the Sec­re­tary has been obliged to ex­tend his func­tions be­yond the ap­point­ment of Con­suls in Sen­ators’ ser­vice.

This is a mat­ter of his­to­ry which any one may ap­prove or dis­pute as he will; but as ed­uca­tion it gave new re­sources to an old schol­ar, for it made of Hay the best school­mas­ter since 1865. Hay had be­come the most im­pos­ing fig­ure ev­er known in the of­fice. He had an in­flu­ence that no oth­er Sec­re­tary of State ev­er pos­sessed, as he had a na­tion be­hind him such as his­to­ry had nev­er imag­ined. He need­ed to write no state pa­pers; he want­ed no help, and he stood far above coun­sel or ad­vice; but he could in­struct an at­ten­tive schol­ar as no oth­er teach­er in the world could do; and Adams sought on­ly in­struc­tion — want­ed on­ly to chart the in­ter­na­tion­al chan­nel for fifty years to come; to tri­an­gu­late the fu­ture; to ob­tain his di­men­sion, and fix the ac­cel­er­ation of move­ment in pol­itics since the year 1200, as he was try­ing to fix it in phi­los­ophy and physics; in fi­nance and force.

Hay had been so long at the head of for­eign af­fairs that at last the stream of events fa­vored him. With in­fi­nite ef­fort he had achieved the as­ton­ish­ing diplo­mat­ic feat of in­duc­ing the Sen­ate, with on­ly six neg­ative votes, to per­mit Great Britain to re­nounce, with­out equiv­alent, treaty rights which she had for fifty years de­fend­ed tooth and nail. This un­prece­dent­ed tri­umph in his ne­go­ti­ations with the Sen­ate en­abled him to car­ry one step fur­ther his mea­sures for gen­er­al peace. About Eng­land the Sen­ate could make no fur­ther ef­fec­tive op­po­si­tion, for Eng­land was won, and Cana­da alone could give trou­ble. The next dif­fi­cul­ty was with France, and there the Sen­ate blocked ad­vance, but Eng­land as­sumed the task, and, ow­ing to po­lit­ical changes in France, ef­fect­ed the ob­ject — a com­bi­na­tion which, as late as 1901, had been vi­sion­ary. The next, and far more dif­fi­cult step, was to bring Ger­many in­to the com­bine; while, at the end of the vista, most un­man­age­able of all, Rus­sia re­mained to be sat­is­fied and dis­armed. This was the in­stinct of what might be named McKin­ley­ism; the sys­tem of com­bi­na­tions, con­sol­ida­tions, trusts, re­al­ized at home, and re­al­iz­able abroad.

With the sys­tem, a stu­dent nur­tured in ideas of the eigh­teenth cen­tu­ry, had noth­ing to do, and made not the least pres­ence of med­dling; but noth­ing for­bade him to study, and he no­ticed to his as­ton­ish­ment that this cap­ital­is­tic scheme of com­bin­ing gov­ern­ments, like rail­ways or fur­naces, was in ef­fect pre­cise­ly the so­cial­ist scheme of Jau­res and Bebel. That John Hay, of all men, should adopt a so­cial­ist pol­icy seemed an idea more ab­surd than con­ser­va­tive Chris­tian an­ar­chy, but para­dox had be­come the on­ly or­tho­doxy in pol­itics as in sci­ence. When one saw the field, one re­al­ized that Hay could not help him­self, nor could Bebel. Ei­ther Ger­many must de­stroy Eng­land and France to cre­ate the next in­evitable uni­fi­ca­tion as a sys­tem of con­ti­nent against con­ti­nent — or she must pool in­ter­ests. Both schemes in turn were at­tribut­ed to the Kaiser; one or the oth­er he would have to choose; opin­ion was bal­anced doubt­ful­ly on their mer­its; but, grant­ing both to be fea­si­ble, Hay’s and McKin­ley’s states­man­ship turned on the point of per­suad­ing the Kaiser to join what might be called the Coal-​pow­er com­bi­na­tion, rather than build up the on­ly pos­si­ble al­ter­na­tive, a Gun-​pow­er com­bi­na­tion by merg­ing Ger­many in Rus­sia. Thus Bebel and Jau­res, McKin­ley and Hay, were part­ners.

The prob­lem was pret­ty — even fas­ci­nat­ing — and, to an old Civ­il-​War pri­vate sol­dier in diplo­ma­cy, as rig­or­ous as a ge­omet­ri­cal demon­stra­tion. As the last pos­si­ble les­son in life, it had all sorts of ul­ti­mate val­ues. Un­less ed­uca­tion march­es on both feet — the­ory and prac­tice — it risks go­ing astray; and Hay was prob­ably the most ac­com­plished mas­ter of both then liv­ing. He knew not on­ly the forces but al­so the men, and he had no oth­er thought than his pol­icy.

Prob­ably this was the mo­ment of high­est knowl­edge that a schol­ar could ev­er reach. He had un­der his eyes the whole ed­uca­tion­al staff of the Gov­ern­ment at a time when the Gov­ern­ment had just reached the heights of high­est ac­tiv­ity and in­flu­ence. Since 1860, ed­uca­tion had done its worst, un­der the great­est mas­ters and at enor­mous ex­pense to the world, to train these two minds to catch and com­pre­hend ev­ery spring of in­ter­na­tion­al ac­tion, not to speak of per­son­al in­flu­ence; and the en­tire ma­chin­ery of pol­itics in sev­er­al great coun­tries had lit­tle to do but sup­ply the last and best in­for­ma­tion. Ed­uca­tion could be car­ried no fur­ther.

With its ef­fects on Hay, Adams had noth­ing to do; but its ef­fects on him­self were grotesque. Nev­er had the pro­por­tions of his ig­no­rance looked so ap­palling. He seemed to know noth­ing — to be grop­ing in dark­ness — to be falling for­ev­er in space; and the worst depth con­sist­ed in the as­sur­ance, in­cred­ible as it seemed, that no one knew more. He had, at least, the me­chan­ical as­sur­ance of cer­tain val­ues to guide him — like the rel­ative in­ten­si­ties of his Coal-​pow­ers, and rel­ative in­er­tia of his Gun-​pow­ers — but he con­ceived that had he known, be­sides the me­chan­ics, ev­ery rel­ative val­ue of per­sons, as well as he knew the in­most thoughts of his own Gov­ern­ment — had the Czar and the Kaiser and the Mika­do turned school­mas­ters, like Hay, and taught him all they knew, he would still have known noth­ing. They knew noth­ing them­selves. On­ly by com­par­ison of their ig­no­rance could the stu­dent mea­sure his own.