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

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The Education of Henry Adams

CHAPTER II

BOSTON (1848-1854)

PE­TER CHARDON BROOKS, the oth­er grand­fa­ther, died Jan­uary 1, 1849, be­queath­ing what was sup­posed to be the largest es­tate in Boston, about two mil­lion dol­lars, to his sev­en sur­viv­ing chil­dren: four sons — Ed­ward, Pe­ter Chardon, Gorham, and Syd­ney; three daugh­ters — Char­lotte, mar­ried to Ed­ward Ev­erett; Ann, mar­ried to Nathaniel Froth­ing­ham, min­is­ter of the First Church; and Abi­gail Brown, born April 25, 1808, mar­ried Septem­ber 3, 1829, to Charles Fran­cis Adams, hard­ly a year old­er than her­self. Their first child, born in 1830, was a daugh­ter, named Louisa Cather­ine, af­ter her John­son grand­moth­er; the sec­ond was a son, named John Quin­cy, af­ter his Pres­ident grand­fa­ther; the third took his fa­ther’s name, Charles Fran­cis; while the fourth, be­ing of less ac­count, was in a way giv­en to his moth­er, who named him Hen­ry Brooks, af­ter a fa­vorite broth­er just lost. More fol­lowed, but these, be­ing younger, had noth­ing to do with the ar­du­ous pro­cess of ed­ucat­ing.

The Adams con­nec­tion was sin­gu­lar­ly small in Boston, but the fam­ily of Brooks was sin­gu­lar­ly large and even bril­liant, and al­most whol­ly of cler­ical New Eng­land stock. One might have sought long in much larg­er and old­er so­ci­eties for three broth­ers-​in-​law more dis­tin­guished or more schol­ar­ly than Ed­ward Ev­erett, Dr. Froth­ing­ham, and Mr. Adams. One might have sought equal­ly long for sev­en broth­ers-​in-​law more un­like. No doubt they all bore more or less the stamp of Boston, or at least of Mas­sachusetts Bay, but the shades of dif­fer­ence amount­ed to con­trasts. Mr. Ev­erett be­longed to Boston hard­ly more than Mr. Adams. One of the most am­bi­tious of Bosto­ni­ans, he had bro­ken bounds ear­ly in life by leav­ing the Uni­tar­ian pul­pit to take a seat in Congress where he had giv­en valu­able sup­port to J. Q. Adams’s ad­min­is­tra­tion; sup­port which, as a so­cial con­se­quence, led to the mar­riage of the Pres­ident’s son, Charles Fran­cis, with Mr. Ev­erett’s youngest sis­ter-​in-​law, Abi­gail Brooks. The wreck of par­ties which marked the reign of An­drew Jack­son had in­ter­fered with many promis­ing ca­reers, that of Ed­ward Ev­erett among the rest, but he had risen with the Whig Par­ty to pow­er, had gone as Min­is­ter to Eng­land, and had re­turned to Amer­ica with the ha­lo of a Eu­ro­pean rep­uta­tion, and undis­put­ed rank sec­ond on­ly to Daniel Web­ster as the or­ator and rep­re­sen­ta­tive fig­ure of Boston. The oth­er broth­er-​in-​law, Dr. Froth­ing­ham, be­longed to the same cler­ical school, though in man­ner rather the less cler­ical of the two. Nei­ther of them had much in com­mon with Mr. Adams, who was a younger man, great­ly bi­assed by his fa­ther, and by the in­her­it­ed feud be­tween Quin­cy and State Street; but per­son­al re­la­tions were friend­ly as far as a boy could see, and the in­nu­mer­able cousins went reg­ular­ly to the First Church ev­ery Sun­day in win­ter, and slept through their un­cle’s ser­mons, with­out once think­ing to ask what the ser­mons were sup­posed to mean for them. For two hun­dred years the First Church had seen the same lit­tle boys, sleep­ing more or less sound­ly un­der the same or sim­ilar con­di­tions, and dim­ly con­scious of the same feuds; but the feuds had nev­er ceased, and the boys had al­ways grown up to in­her­it them. Those of the gen­er­ation of 1812 had most­ly dis­ap­peared in 1850; death had cleared that score; the quar­rels of John Adams, and those of John Quin­cy Adams were no longer acute­ly per­son­al; the game was con­sid­ered as drawn; and Charles Fran­cis Adams might then have tak­en his in­her­it­ed rights of po­lit­ical lead­er­ship in suc­ces­sion to Mr. Web­ster and Mr. Ev­erett, his se­niors. Be­tween him and State Street the re­la­tion was more nat­ural than be­tween Ed­ward Ev­erett and State Street; but in­stead of do­ing so, Charles Fran­cis Adams drew him­self aloof and re­newed the old war which had al­ready last­ed since 1700. He could not help it. With the record of J. Q. Adams fresh in the pop­ular mem­ory, his son and his on­ly rep­re­sen­ta­tive could not make terms with the slave-​pow­er, and the slave-​pow­er over­shad­owed all the great Boston in­ter­ests. No doubt Mr. Adams had prin­ci­ples of his own, as well as in­her­it­ed, but even his chil­dren, who as yet had no prin­ci­ples, could equal­ly lit­tle fol­low the lead of Mr. Web­ster or even of Mr. Se­ward. They would have lost in con­sid­er­ation more than they would have gained in pa­tron­age. They were an­ti-​slav­ery by birth, as their name was Adams and their home was Quin­cy. No mat­ter how much they had wished to en­ter State Street, they felt that State Street nev­er would trust them, or they it. Had State Street been Par­adise, they must hunger for it in vain, and it hard­ly need­ed Daniel Web­ster to act as archangel with the flam­ing sword, to or­der them away from the door.

Time and ex­pe­ri­ence, which al­ter all per­spec­tives, al­tered this among the rest, and taught the boy gen­tler judg­ment, but even when on­ly ten years old, his face was al­ready fixed, and his heart was stone, against State Street; his ed­uca­tion was warped be­yond re­cov­ery in the di­rec­tion of Pu­ri­tan pol­itics. Be­tween him and his pa­tri­ot grand­fa­ther at the same age, the con­di­tions had changed lit­tle. The year 1848 was like enough to the year 1776 to make a fair par­al­lel. The par­al­lel, as con­cerned bias of ed­uca­tion, was com­plete when, a few months af­ter the death of John Quin­cy Adams, a con­ven­tion of an­ti-​slav­ery del­egates met at Buf­fa­lo to or­ga­nize a new par­ty and named can­di­dates for the gen­er­al elec­tion in Novem­ber: for Pres­ident, Mar­tin Van Bu­ren; for Vice-​Pres­ident, Charles Fran­cis Adams.

For any Amer­ican boy the fact that his fa­ther was run­ning for of­fice would have dwarfed for the time ev­ery oth­er ex­cite­ment, but even apart from per­son­al bias, the year 1848, for a boy’s road through life, was de­ci­sive for twen­ty years to come. There was nev­er a side-​path of es­cape. The stamp of 1848 was al­most as in­deli­ble as the stamp of 1776, but in the eigh­teenth or any ear­li­er cen­tu­ry, the stamp mat­tered less be­cause it was stan­dard, and ev­ery one bore it; while men whose lives were to fall in the gen­er­ation be­tween 1865 and 1900 had, first of all, to get rid of it, and take the stamp that be­longed to their time. This was their ed­uca­tion. To out­siders, im­mi­grants, ad­ven­tur­ers, it was easy, but the old Pu­ri­tan na­ture re­belled against change. The rea­son it gave was forcible. The Pu­ri­tan thought his thought high­er and his moral stan­dards bet­ter than those of his suc­ces­sors. So they were. He could not be con­vinced that moral stan­dards had noth­ing to do with it, and that util­itar­ian moral­ity was good enough for him, as it was for the grace­less. Na­ture had giv­en to the boy Hen­ry a char­ac­ter that, in any pre­vi­ous cen­tu­ry, would have led him in­to the Church; he in­her­it­ed dog­ma and a pri­ori thought from the be­gin­ning of time; and he scarce­ly need­ed a vi­olent re­ac­tion like an­ti-​slav­ery pol­itics to sweep him back in­to Pu­ri­tanism with a vi­olence as great as that of a re­li­gious war.

Thus far he had noth­ing to do with it; his ed­uca­tion was chiefly in­her­itance, and dur­ing the next five or six years, his fa­ther alone count­ed for much. If he were to wor­ry suc­cess­ful­ly through life’s quick­sands, he must de­pend chiefly on his fa­ther’s pi­lotage; but, for his fa­ther, the chan­nel lay clear, while for him­self an un­known ocean lay be­yond. His fa­ther’s busi­ness in life was to get past the dan­gers of the slave-​pow­er, or to fix its bounds at least. The task done, he might be con­tent to let his sons pay for the pi­lotage; and it mat­tered lit­tle to his suc­cess whether they paid it with their lives wast­ed on bat­tle-​fields or in mis­di­rect­ed en­er­gies and lost op­por­tu­ni­ty. The gen­er­ation that lived from 1840 to 1870 could do very well with the old forms of ed­uca­tion; that which had its work to do be­tween 1870 and 1900 need­ed some­thing quite new.

His fa­ther’s char­ac­ter was there­fore the larg­er part of his ed­uca­tion, as far as any sin­gle per­son af­fect­ed it, and for that rea­son, if for no oth­er, the son was al­ways a much in­ter­est­ed crit­ic of his fa­ther’s mind and tem­per. Long af­ter his death as an old man of eighty, his sons con­tin­ued to dis­cuss this sub­ject with a good deal of dif­fer­ence in their points of view. To his son Hen­ry, the qual­ity that dis­tin­guished his fa­ther from all the oth­er fig­ures in the fam­ily group, was that, in his opin­ion, Charles Fran­cis Adams pos­sessed the on­ly per­fect­ly bal­anced mind that ev­er ex­ist­ed in the name. For a hun­dred years, ev­ery news­pa­per scrib­bler had, with more or less ob­vi­ous ex­cuse, de­rid­ed or abused the old­er Adamses for want of judg­ment. They abused Charles Fran­cis for his judg­ment. Nat­ural­ly they nev­er at­tempt­ed to as­sign val­ues to ei­ther; that was the chil­dren’s af­fair; but the traits were re­al. Charles Fran­cis Adams was sin­gu­lar for men­tal poise — ab­sence of self-​as­ser­tion or self-​con­scious­ness — the fac­ul­ty of stand­ing apart with­out seem­ing aware that he was alone — a bal­ance of mind and tem­per that nei­ther chal­lenged nor avoid­ed no­tice, nor ad­mit­ted ques­tion of su­pe­ri­or­ity or in­fe­ri­or­ity, of jeal­ousy, of per­son­al mo­tives, from any source, even un­der great pres­sure. This un­usu­al poise of judg­ment and tem­per, ripened by age, be­came the more strik­ing to his son Hen­ry as he learned to mea­sure the men­tal fac­ul­ties them­selves, which were in no way ex­cep­tion­al ei­ther for depth or range. Charles Fran­cis Adams’s mem­ory was hard­ly above the av­er­age; his mind was not bold like his grand­fa­ther’s or rest­less like his fa­ther’s, or imag­ina­tive or or­ator­ical — still less math­emat­ical; but it worked with sin­gu­lar per­fec­tion, ad­mirable self-​re­straint, and in­stinc­tive mas­tery of form. With­in its range it was a mod­el.

The stan­dards of Boston were high, much af­fect­ed by the old cler­ical self-​re­spect which gave the Uni­tar­ian cler­gy un­usu­al so­cial charm. Dr. Chan­ning, Mr. Ev­erett, Dr. Froth­ing­ham. Dr. Pal­frey, Pres­ident Walk­er, R. W. Emer­son, and oth­er Boston min­is­ters of the same school, would have com­mand­ed dis­tinc­tion in any so­ci­ety; but the Adamses had lit­tle or no affin­ity with the pul­pit, and still less with its ec­cen­tric off­shoots, like Theodore Park­er, or Brook Farm, or the phi­los­ophy of Con­cord. Be­sides its cler­gy, Boston showed a lit­er­ary group, led by Tic­knor, Prescott, Longfel­low, Mot­ley, O. W. Holmes; but Mr. Adams was not one of them; as a rule they were much too Web­ste­ri­an. Even in sci­ence Boston could claim a cer­tain em­inence, es­pe­cial­ly in medicine, but Mr. Adams cared very lit­tle for sci­ence. He stood alone. He had no mas­ter — hard­ly even his fa­ther. He had no schol­ars — hard­ly even his sons.

Al­most alone among his Boston con­tem­po­raries, he was not En­glish in feel­ing or in sym­pa­thies. Per­haps a hun­dred years of acute hos­til­ity to Eng­land had some­thing to do with this fam­ily trait; but in his case it went fur­ther and be­came in­dif­fer­ence to so­cial dis­tinc­tion. Nev­er once in forty years of in­ti­ma­cy did his son no­tice in him a trace of snob­bish­ness. He was one of the ex­ceed­ing­ly small num­ber of Amer­icans to whom an En­glish duke or duchess seemed to be in­dif­fer­ent, and roy­al­ty it­self noth­ing more than a slight­ly in­con­ve­nient pres­ence. This was, it is true, rather the tone of En­glish so­ci­ety in his time, but Amer­icans were large­ly re­spon­si­ble for chang­ing it, and Mr. Adams had ev­ery pos­si­ble rea­son for af­fect­ing the man­ner of a courtier even if he did not feel the sen­ti­ment. Nev­er did his son see him flat­ter or vil­ify, or show a sign of en­vy or jeal­ousy; nev­er a shade of van­ity or self-​con­ceit. Nev­er a tone of ar­ro­gance! Nev­er a ges­ture of pride!

The same thing might per­haps have been said of John Quin­cy Adams, but in him his as­so­ciates averred that it was ac­com­pa­nied by men­tal rest­less­ness and of­ten by lamentable want of judg­ment. No one ev­er charged Charles Fran­cis Adams with this fault. The crit­ics charged him with just the op­po­site de­fect. They called him cold. No doubt, such per­fect poise — such in­tu­itive self-​ad­just­ment — was not main­tained by na­ture with­out a sac­ri­fice of the qual­ities which would have up­set it. No doubt, too, that even his rest­less-​mind­ed, in­tro­spec­tive, self-​con­scious chil­dren who knew him best were much too ig­no­rant of the world and of hu­man na­ture to sus­pect how rare and com­plete was the mod­el be­fore their eyes. A coars­er in­stru­ment would have im­pressed them more. Av­er­age hu­man na­ture is very coarse, and its ide­als must nec­es­sar­ily be av­er­age. The world nev­er loved per­fect poise. What the world does love is com­mon­ly ab­sence of poise, for it has to be amused. Napoleons and An­drew Jack­sons amuse it, but it is not amused by per­fect bal­ance. Had Mr. Adams’s na­ture been cold, he would have fol­lowed Mr. Web­ster, Mr. Ev­erett, Mr. Se­ward, and Mr. Winthrop in the lines of par­ty dis­ci­pline and self-​in­ter­est. Had it been less bal­anced than it was, he would have gone with Mr. Gar­ri­son, Mr. Wen­dell Phillips, Mr. Ed­mund Quin­cy, and Theodore Park­er, in­to se­ces­sion. Be­tween the two paths he found an in­ter­me­di­ate one, dis­tinc­tive and char­ac­ter­is­tic — he set up a par­ty of his own.

This po­lit­ical par­ty be­came a chief in­flu­ence in the ed­uca­tion of the boy Hen­ry in the six years 1848 to 1854, and vi­olent­ly af­fect­ed his char­ac­ter at the mo­ment when char­ac­ter is plas­tic. The group of men with whom Mr. Adams as­so­ci­at­ed him­self, and whose so­cial cen­tre was the house in Mount Ver­non Street, num­bered on­ly three: Dr. John G. Pal­frey, Richard H. Dana, and Charles Sum­ner. Dr. Pal­frey was the old­est, and in spite of his cler­ical ed­uca­tion, was to a boy of­ten the most agree­able, for his talk was lighter and his range wider than that of the oth­ers; he had wit, or hu­mor, and the give-​and-​take of din­ner-​ta­ble ex­change. Born to be a man of the world, he forced him­self to be cler­gy­man, pro­fes­sor, or states­man, while, like ev­ery oth­er true Bosto­ni­an, he yearned for the ease of the Athenaeum Club in Pall Mall or the Com­bi­na­tion Room at Trin­ity. Dana at first sug­gest­ed the op­po­site; he af­fect­ed to be still be­fore the mast, a di­rect, rather bluff, vig­or­ous sea­man, and on­ly as one got to know him bet­ter one found the man of rather ex­ces­sive re­fine­ment try­ing with suc­cess to work like a day-​la­bor­er, de­lib­er­ate­ly hard­en­ing his skin to the bur­den, as though he were still car­ry­ing hides at Mon­terey. Un­doubt­ed­ly he suc­ceed­ed, for his mind and will were ro­bust, but he might have said what his life­long friend William M. Evarts used to say: “I pride my­self on my suc­cess in do­ing not the things I like to do, but the things I don’t like to do.” Dana’s ide­al of life was to be a great En­glish­man, with a seat on the front bench­es of the House of Com­mons un­til he should be pro­mot­ed to the wool­sack; be­yond all, with a so­cial sta­tus that should place him above the scuf­fle of provin­cial and un­pro­fes­sion­al an­noy­ances; but he forced him­self to take life as it came, and he suf­fo­cat­ed his long­ings with grim self-​dis­ci­pline, by mere force of will. Of the four men, Dana was the most marked. With­out dog­ma­tism or self-​as­ser­tion, he seemed al­ways to be ful­ly in sight, a fig­ure that com­plete­ly filled a well-​de­fined space. He, too, talked well, and his mind worked close to its sub­ject, as a lawyer’s should; but dis­guise and si­lence it as he liked, it was aris­to­crat­ic to the tenth gen­er­ation.

In that re­spect, and in that on­ly, Charles Sum­ner was like him, but Sum­ner, in al­most ev­ery oth­er qual­ity, was quite dif­fer­ent from his three as­so­ciates — al­to­geth­er out of line. He, too, adored En­glish stan­dards, but his am­bi­tion led him to ri­val the ca­reer of Ed­mund Burke. No young Bosto­ni­an of his time had made so bril­liant a start, but rather in the steps of Ed­ward Ev­erett than of Daniel Web­ster. As an or­ator he had achieved a tri­umph by his ora­tion against war; but Boston ad­mired him chiefly for his so­cial suc­cess in Eng­land and on the Con­ti­nent; suc­cess that gave to ev­ery Bosto­ni­an who en­joyed it a ha­lo nev­er ac­quired by do­mes­tic sanc­ti­ty. Mr. Sum­ner, both by in­ter­est and in­stinct, felt the val­ue of his En­glish con­nec­tion, and cul­ti­vat­ed it the more as he be­came so­cial­ly an out­cast from Boston so­ci­ety by the pas­sions of pol­itics. He was rarely with­out a pock­et-​full of let­ters from duchess­es or no­ble­men in Eng­land. Hav­ing sac­ri­ficed to prin­ci­ple his so­cial po­si­tion in Amer­ica, he clung the more close­ly to his for­eign at­tach­ments. The Free Soil Par­ty fared ill in Bea­con Street. The so­cial ar­biters of Boston — George Tic­knor and the rest — had to ad­mit, how­ev­er un­will­ing­ly, that the Free Soil lead­ers could not min­gle with the friends and fol­low­ers of Mr. Web­ster. Sum­ner was so­cial­ly os­tra­cized, and so, for that mat­ter, were Pal­frey, Dana, Rus­sell, Adams, and all the oth­er avowed an­ti-​slav­ery lead­ers, but for them it mat­tered less, be­cause they had hous­es and fam­ilies of their own; while Sum­ner had nei­ther wife nor house­hold, and, though the most so­cial­ly am­bi­tious of all, and the most hun­gry for what used to be called po­lite so­ci­ety, he could en­ter hard­ly half-​a-​dozen hous­es in Boston. Longfel­low stood by him in Cam­bridge, and even in Bea­con Street he could al­ways take refuge in the house of Mr. Lodge, but few days passed when he did not pass some time in Mount Ver­non Street. Even with that, his soli­tude was glacial, and re­act­ed on his char­ac­ter. He had noth­ing but him­self to think about. His su­pe­ri­or­ity was, in­deed, re­al and in­con­testable; he was the clas­si­cal or­na­ment of the an­ti-​slav­ery par­ty; their pride in him was un­bound­ed, and their ad­mi­ra­tion out­spo­ken.

The boy Hen­ry wor­shipped him, and if he ev­er re­gard­ed any old­er man as a per­son­al friend, it was Mr. Sum­ner. The re­la­tion of Mr. Sum­ner in the house­hold was far clos­er than any re­la­tion of blood. None of the un­cles ap­proached such in­ti­ma­cy. Sum­ner was the boy’s ide­al of great­ness; the high­est prod­uct of na­ture and art. The on­ly fault of such a mod­el was its su­pe­ri­or­ity which de­fied im­ita­tion. To the twelve-​year-​old boy, his fa­ther, Dr. Pal­frey, Mr. Dana, were men, more or less like what he him­self might be­come; but Mr. Sum­ner was a dif­fer­ent or­der — hero­ic.

As the boy grew up to be ten or twelve years old, his fa­ther gave him a writ­ing-​ta­ble in one of the al­coves of his Boston li­brary, and there, win­ter af­ter win­ter, Hen­ry worked over his Latin Gram­mar and lis­tened to these four gen­tle­men dis­cussing the course of an­ti-​slav­ery pol­itics. The dis­cus­sions were al­ways se­ri­ous; the Free Soil Par­ty took it­self quite se­ri­ous­ly; and they were ha­bit­ual be­cause Mr. Adams had un­der­tak­en to ed­it a news­pa­per as the or­gan of these gen­tle­men, who came to dis­cuss its pol­icy and ex­pres­sion. At the same time Mr. Adams was edit­ing the “Works” of his grand­fa­ther John Adams, and made the boy read texts for proof-​cor­rec­tion. In af­ter years his fa­ther some­times com­plained that, as a read­er of No­van­glus and Mas­sachuset­ten­sis, Hen­ry had shown very lit­tle con­scious­ness of punc­tu­ation; but the boy re­gard­ed this part of school life on­ly as a warn­ing, if he ev­er grew up to write dull dis­cus­sions in the news­pa­pers, to try to be dull in some dif­fer­ent way from that of his great-​grand­fa­ther. Yet the dis­cus­sions in the Boston Whig were car­ried on in much the same style as those of John Adams and his op­po­nent, and ap­pealed to much the same so­ci­ety and the same habit of mind. The boy got as lit­tle ed­uca­tion, fit­ting him for his own time, from the one as from the oth­er, and he got no more from his con­tact with the gen­tle­men them­selves who were all types of the past.

Down to 1850, and even lat­er, New Eng­land so­ci­ety was still di­rect­ed by the pro­fes­sions. Lawyers, physi­cians, pro­fes­sors, mer­chants were class­es, and act­ed not as in­di­vid­uals, but as though they were cler­gy­men and each pro­fes­sion were a church. In pol­itics the sys­tem re­quired com­pe­tent ex­pres­sion; it was the old Ci­cero­ni­an idea of gov­ern­ment by the best that pro­duced the long line of New Eng­land states­men. They chose men to rep­re­sent them be­cause they want­ed to be well rep­re­sent­ed, and they chose the best they had. Thus Boston chose Daniel Web­ster, and Web­ster took, not as pay, but as hon­orar­ium, the cheques raised for him by Pe­ter Har­vey from the Ap­ple­tons, Perkins­es, Amorys, Sears­es, Brook­ses, Lawrences, and so on, who begged him to rep­re­sent them. Ed­ward Ev­erett held the rank in reg­ular suc­ces­sion to Web­ster. Robert C. Winthrop claimed suc­ces­sion to Ev­erett. Charles Sum­ner as­pired to break the suc­ces­sion, but not the sys­tem. The Adamses had nev­er been, for any length of time, a part of this State suc­ces­sion; they had pre­ferred the na­tion­al ser­vice, and had won all their dis­tinc­tion out­side the State, but they too had re­quired State sup­port and had com­mon­ly re­ceived it. The lit­tle group of men in Mount Ver­non Street were an off­shoot of this sys­tem; they were states­men, not politi­cians; they guid­ed pub­lic opin­ion, but were lit­tle guid­ed by it.

The boy nat­ural­ly learned on­ly one les­son from his sat­ura­tion in such air. He took for grant­ed that this sort of world, more or less the same that had al­ways ex­ist­ed in Boston and Mas­sachusetts Bay, was the world which he was to fit. Had he known Eu­rope he would have learned no bet­ter. The Paris of Louis Philippe, Guizot, and de Toc­queville, as well as the Lon­don of Robert Peel, Macaulay, and John Stu­art Mill, were but va­ri­eties of the same up­per-​class bour­geoisie that felt in­stinc­tive cousin­ship with the Boston of Tic­knor, Prescott, and Mot­ley. Even the typ­ical grum­bler Car­lyle, who cast doubts on the re­al ca­pac­ity of the mid­dle class, and who at times thought him­self ec­cen­tric, found friend­ship and al­liances in Boston — still more in Con­cord. The sys­tem had proved so suc­cess­ful that even Ger­many want­ed to try it, and Italy yearned for it. Eng­land’s mid­dle-​class gov­ern­ment was the ide­al of hu­man progress.

Even the vi­olent re­ac­tion af­ter 1848, and the re­turn of all Eu­rope to mil­itary prac­tices, nev­er for a mo­ment shook the true faith. No one, ex­cept Karl Marx, fore­saw rad­ical change. What an­nounced it? The world was pro­duc­ing six­ty or sev­en­ty mil­lion tons of coal, and might be us­ing near­ly a mil­lion steam-​horse­pow­er, just be­gin­ning to make it­self felt. All ex­pe­ri­ence since the cre­ation of man, all di­vine rev­ela­tion or hu­man sci­ence, con­spired to de­ceive and be­tray a twelve-​year-​old boy who took for grant­ed that his ideas, which were alone re­spectable, would be alone re­spect­ed.

Viewed from Mount Ver­non Street, the prob­lem of life was as sim­ple as it was clas­sic. Pol­itics of­fered no dif­fi­cul­ties, for there the moral law was a sure guide. So­cial per­fec­tion was al­so sure, be­cause hu­man na­ture worked for Good, and three in­stru­ments were all she asked — Suf­frage, Com­mon Schools, and Press. On these points doubt was for­bid­den. Ed­uca­tion was di­vine, and man need­ed on­ly a cor­rect knowl­edge of facts to reach per­fec­tion:

“Were half the pow­er that fills the world with ter­ror, Were half the wealth be­stowed on camps and courts, Giv­en to re­deem the hu­man mind from er­ror, There were no need of ar­se­nals nor forts.”

Noth­ing qui­et­ed doubt so com­plete­ly as the men­tal calm of the Uni­tar­ian cler­gy. In uni­form ex­cel­lence of life and char­ac­ter, moral and in­tel­lec­tu­al, the score of Uni­tar­ian cler­gy­men about Boston, who con­trolled so­ci­ety and Har­vard Col­lege, were nev­er ex­celled. They pro­claimed as their mer­it that they in­sist­ed on no doc­trine, but taught, or tried to teach, the means of lead­ing a vir­tu­ous, use­ful, un­selfish life, which they held to be suf­fi­cient for sal­va­tion. For them, dif­fi­cul­ties might be ig­nored; doubts were waste of thought; noth­ing ex­act­ed so­lu­tion. Boston had solved the uni­verse; or had of­fered and re­al­ized the best so­lu­tion yet tried. The prob­lem was worked out.

Of all the con­di­tions of his youth which af­ter­wards puz­zled the grown-​up man, this dis­ap­pear­ance of re­li­gion puz­zled him most. The boy went to church twice ev­ery Sun­day; he was taught to read his Bible, and he learned re­li­gious po­et­ry by heart; he be­lieved in a mild deism; he prayed; he went through all the forms; but nei­ther to him nor to his broth­ers or sis­ters was re­li­gion re­al. Even the mild dis­ci­pline of the Uni­tar­ian Church was so irk­some that they all threw it off at the first pos­si­ble mo­ment, and nev­er af­ter­wards en­tered a church. The re­li­gious in­stinct had van­ished, and could not be re­vived, al­though one made in lat­er life many ef­forts to re­cov­er it. That the most pow­er­ful emo­tion of man, next to the sex­ual, should dis­ap­pear, might be a per­son­al de­fect of his own; but that the most in­tel­li­gent so­ci­ety, led by the most in­tel­li­gent cler­gy, in the most moral con­di­tions he ev­er knew, should have solved all the prob­lems of the uni­verse so thor­ough­ly as to have quite ceased mak­ing it­self anx­ious about past or fu­ture, and should have per­suad­ed it­self that all the prob­lems which had con­vulsed hu­man thought from ear­li­est record­ed time, were not worth dis­cussing, seemed to him the most cu­ri­ous so­cial phe­nomenon he had to ac­count for in a long life. The fac­ul­ty of turn­ing away one’s eyes as one ap­proach­es a chasm is not un­usu­al, and Boston showed, un­der the lead of Mr. Web­ster, how suc­cess­ful­ly it could be done in pol­itics; but in pol­itics a cer­tain num­ber of men did at least protest. In re­li­gion and phi­los­ophy no one protest­ed. Such protest as was made took forms more sim­ple than the si­lence, like the deism of Theodore Park­er, and of the boy’s own cousin Oc­tavius Froth­ing­ham, who dis­tressed his fa­ther and scan­dal­ized Bea­con Street by avow­ing scep­ti­cism that seemed to solve no old prob­lems, and to raise many new ones. The less ag­gres­sive protest of Ralph Wal­do Emer­son, was, from an old-​world point of view, less se­ri­ous. It was naif.

The chil­dren reached man­hood with­out know­ing re­li­gion, and with the cer­tain­ty that dog­ma, meta­physics, and ab­stract phi­los­ophy were not worth know­ing. So one-​sid­ed an ed­uca­tion could have been pos­si­ble in no oth­er coun­try or time, but it be­came, al­most of ne­ces­si­ty, the more lit­er­ary and po­lit­ical. As the chil­dren grew up, they ex­ag­ger­at­ed the lit­er­ary and the po­lit­ical in­ter­ests. They joined in the din­ner-​ta­ble dis­cus­sions and from child­hood the boys were ac­cus­tomed to hear, al­most ev­ery day, ta­ble-​talk as good as they were ev­er like­ly to hear again. The el­dest child, Louisa, was one of the most sparkling crea­tures her broth­er met in a long and var­ied ex­pe­ri­ence of bright wom­en. The old­est son, John, was af­ter­wards re­gard­ed as one of the best talk­ers in Boston so­ci­ety, and per­haps the most pop­ular man in the State, though apt to be on the un­pop­ular side. Pal­frey and Dana could be en­ter­tain­ing when they pleased, and though Charles Sum­ner could hard­ly be called light in hand, he was will­ing to be amused, and smiled grand­ly from time to time; while Mr. Adams, who talked rel­ative­ly lit­tle, was al­ways a good lis­ten­er, and laughed over a wit­ti­cism till he choked.

By way of ed­ucat­ing and amus­ing the chil­dren, Mr. Adams read much aloud, and was sure to read po­lit­ical lit­er­ature, es­pe­cial­ly when it was satir­ical, like the speech­es of Ho­race Mann and the “Epis­tles” of “Hosea Biglow,” with great de­light to the youth. So he read Longfel­low and Ten­nyson as their po­ems ap­peared, but the chil­dren took pos­ses­sion of Dick­ens and Thack­er­ay for them­selves. Both were too mod­ern for tastes found­ed on Pope and Dr. John­son. The boy Hen­ry soon be­came a desul­to­ry read­er of ev­ery book he found read­able, but these were com­mon­ly eigh­teenth-​cen­tu­ry his­to­ri­ans be­cause his fa­ther’s li­brary was full of them. In the want of pos­itive in­stincts, he drift­ed in­to the men­tal in­do­lence of his­to­ry. So too, he read shelves of eigh­teenth-​cen­tu­ry po­et­ry, but when his fa­ther of­fered his own set of Wordsworth as a gift on con­di­tion of read­ing it through, he de­clined. Pope and Gray called for no men­tal ef­fort; they were easy read­ing; but the boy was thir­ty years old be­fore his ed­uca­tion reached Wordsworth.

This is the sto­ry of an ed­uca­tion, and the per­son or per­sons who fig­ure in it are sup­posed to have val­ues on­ly as ed­uca­tors or ed­ucat­ed. The sur­round­ings con­cern it on­ly so far as they af­fect ed­uca­tion. Sum­ner, Dana, Pal­frey, had val­ues of their own, like Hume, Pope, and Wordsworth, which any one may study in their works; here all ap­pear on­ly as in­flu­ences on the mind of a boy very near­ly the av­er­age of most boys in phys­ical and men­tal stature. The in­flu­ence was whol­ly po­lit­ical and lit­er­ary. His fa­ther made no ef­fort to force his mind, but left him free play, and this was per­haps best. On­ly in one way his fa­ther ren­dered him a great ser­vice by try­ing to teach him French and giv­ing him some idea of a French ac­cent. Oth­er­wise the fam­ily was rather an at­mo­sphere than an in­flu­ence. The boy had a large and over­pow­er­ing set of broth­ers and sis­ters, who were modes or repli­cas of the same type, get­ting the same ed­uca­tion, strug­gling with the same prob­lems, and solv­ing the ques­tion, or leav­ing it un­solved much in the same way. They knew no more than he what they want­ed or what to do for it, but all were con­scious that they would like to con­trol pow­er in some form; and the same thing could be said of an ant or an ele­phant. Their form was tied to pol­itics or lit­er­ature. They amount­ed to one in­di­vid­ual with half-​a-​dozen sides or facets; their tem­per­aments re­act­ed on each oth­er and made each child more like the oth­er. This was al­so ed­uca­tion, but in the type, and the Boston or New Eng­land type was well enough known. What no one knew was whether the in­di­vid­ual who thought him­self a rep­re­sen­ta­tive of this type, was fit to deal with life.

As far as out­ward bear­ing went, such a fam­ily of tur­bu­lent chil­dren, giv­en free rein by their par­ents, or in­dif­fer­ent to check, should have come to more or less grief. Cer­tain­ly no one was strong enough to con­trol them, least of all their moth­er, the queen-​bee of the hive, on whom nine-​tenths of the bur­den fell, on whose strength they all de­pend­ed, but whose chil­dren were much too self-​willed and self-​con­fi­dent to take guid­ance from her, or from any one else, un­less in the di­rec­tion they fan­cied. Fa­ther and moth­er were about equal­ly help­less. Al­most ev­ery large fam­ily in those days pro­duced at least one black sheep, and if this gen­er­ation of Adamses es­caped, it was as much a mat­ter of sur­prise to them as to their neigh­bors. By some hap­py chance they grew up to be de­cent cit­izens, but Hen­ry Adams, as a brand es­caped from the burn­ing, al­ways looked back with as­ton­ish­ment at their luck. The fact seemed to prove that they were born, like birds, with a cer­tain in­nate bal­ance. Home in­flu­ences alone nev­er saved the New Eng­land boy from ru­in, though some­times they may have helped to ru­in him; and the in­flu­ences out­side of home were neg­ative. If school helped, it was on­ly by re­ac­tion. The dis­like of school was so strong as to be a pos­itive gain. The pas­sion­ate ha­tred of school meth­ods was al­most a method in it­self. Yet the day-​school of that time was re­spectable, and the boy had noth­ing to com­plain of. In fact, he nev­er com­plained. He hat­ed it be­cause he was here with a crowd of oth­er boys and com­pelled to learn by mem­ory a quan­ti­ty of things that did not amuse him. His mem­ory was slow, and the ef­fort painful. For him to con­ceive that his mem­ory could com­pete for school prizes with ma­chines of two or three times its pow­er, was to prove him­self want­ing not on­ly in mem­ory, but fla­grant­ly in mind. He thought his mind a good enough ma­chine, if it were giv­en time to act, but it act­ed wrong if hur­ried. School­mas­ters nev­er gave time.

In any and all its forms, the boy de­test­ed school, and the prej­udice be­came deep­er with years. He al­ways reck­oned his school-​days, from ten to six­teen years old, as time thrown away. Per­haps his needs turned out to be ex­cep­tion­al, but his ex­is­tence was ex­cep­tion­al. Be­tween 1850 and 1900 near­ly ev­ery one’s ex­is­tence was ex­cep­tion­al. For suc­cess in the life im­posed on him he need­ed, as af­ter­wards ap­peared, the facile use of on­ly four tools: Math­emat­ics, French, Ger­man, and Span­ish. With these, he could mas­ter in very short time any spe­cial branch of in­quiry, and feel at home in any so­ci­ety. Latin and Greek, he could, with the help of the mod­ern lan­guages, learn more com­plete­ly by the in­tel­li­gent work of six weeks than in the six years he spent on them at school. These four tools were nec­es­sary to his suc­cess in life, but he nev­er con­trolled any one of them.

Thus, at the out­set, he was con­demned to fail­ure more or less com­plete in the life await­ing him, but not more so than his com­pan­ions. In­deed, had his fa­ther kept the boy at home, and giv­en him half an hour’s di­rec­tion ev­ery day, he would have done more for him than school ev­er could do for them. Of course, school-​taught men and boys looked down on home-​bred boys, and rather prid­ed them­selves on their own ig­no­rance, but the man of six­ty can gen­er­al­ly see what he need­ed in life, and in Hen­ry Adams’s opin­ion it was not school.

Most school ex­pe­ri­ence was bad. Boy as­so­ci­ations at fif­teen were worse than none. Boston at that time of­fered few healthy re­sources for boys or men. The bar-​room and bil­liard-​room were more fa­mil­iar than par­ents knew. As a rule boys could skate and swim and were sent to danc­ing-​school; they played a rudi­men­ta­ry game of base­ball, foot­ball, and hock­ey; a few could sail a boat; still few­er had been out with a gun to shoot yel­low-​legs or a stray wild duck; one or two may have learned some­thing of nat­ural his­to­ry if they came from the neigh­bor­hood of Con­cord; none could ride across coun­try, or knew what shoot­ing with dogs meant. Sport as a pur­suit was un­known. Boat-​rac­ing came af­ter 1850. For horse-​rac­ing, on­ly the trot­ting-​course ex­ist­ed. Of all plea­sures, win­ter sleigh­ing was still the gayest and most pop­ular. From none of these amuse­ments could the boy learn any­thing like­ly to be of use to him in the world. Books re­mained as in the eigh­teenth cen­tu­ry, the source of life, and as they came out — Thack­er­ay, Dick­ens, Bul­wer, Ten­nyson, Macaulay, Car­lyle, and the rest — they were de­voured; but as far as hap­pi­ness went, the hap­pi­est hours of the boy’s ed­uca­tion were passed in sum­mer ly­ing on a musty heap of Con­gres­sion­al Doc­uments in the old farm­house at Quin­cy, read­ing “Quentin Dur­ward,” “Ivan­hoe,” and ” The Tal­is­man,” and raid­ing the gar­den at in­ter­vals for peach­es and pears. On the whole he learned most then.