The boy
might ignore, as a mere historical puzzle, the question how to
deduce George Washington from the sum of all wickedness, but he had
himself helped to deduce Charles Sumner from the sum of political
corruption. On that line, too, education could go no further.
Tammany Hall stood at the end of the vista.
Mr. Alley, one of the strictest of moralists, held
that his object in making the bargain was to convert the Democratic
Party to anti-slavery principles, and that he did it. Henry Adams
could rise to no such moral elevation. He was only a boy, and his
object in supporting the coalition was that of making his friend a
Senator. It was as personal as though he had helped to make his
friend a millionaire. He could never find a way of escaping immoral
conclusions, except by admitting that he and his father and Sumner
were wrong, and this he was never willing to do, for the
consequences of this admission were worse than those of the other.
Thus, before he was fifteen years old, he had managed to get
himself into a state of moral confusion from which he never
escaped. As a politician, he was already corrupt, and he never
could see how any practical politician could be less corrupt than
himself.
Apology, as he understood himself, was cant or
cowardice. At the time he never even dreamed that he needed to
apologize, though the press shouted it at him from every corner,
and though the Mount Vernon Street conclave agreed with the press;
yet he could not plead ignorance, and even in the heat of the
conflict, he never cared to defend the coalition. Boy as he was, he
knew enough to know that something was wrong, but his only interest
was the election. Day after day, the General Court balloted; and
the boy haunted the gallery, following the roll-call, and wondered
what Caleb Cushing meant by calling Mr. Sumner a "one-eyed
abolitionist." Truly the difference in meaning with the phrase
"one-ideaed abolitionist," which was Mr. Cushing's actual
expression, is not very great, but neither the one nor the other
seemed to describe Mr. Sumner to the boy, who never could have made
the error of classing Garrison and Sumner together, or mistaking
Caleb Cushing's relation to either. Temper ran high at that moment,
while Sumner every day missed his election by only one or two
votes. At last, April 24, 1851, standing among the silent crowd in
the gallery, Henry heard the vote announced which gave Sumner the
needed number. Slipping under the arms of the bystanders, he ran
home as hard as he could, and burst into the dining-room where Mr.
Sumner was seated at table with the family. He enjoyed the glory of
telling Sumner that he was elected; it was probably the proudest
moment in the life of either.
The next day, when the boy went to school, he
noticed numbers of boys and men in the streets wearing black crepe
on their arm. He knew few Free Soil boys in Boston; his
acquaintances were what he called pro-slavery; so he thought proper
to tie a bit of white silk ribbon round his own arm by way of
showing that his friend Mr. Sumner was not wholly alone. This
little piece of bravado passed unnoticed; no one even cuffed his
ears; but in later life he was a little puzzled to decide which
symbol was the more correct. No one then dreamed of four years'
war, but every one dreamed of secession. The symbol for either
might well be matter of doubt.
This triumph of the Mount Vernon Street conclave
capped the political climax. The boy, like a million other American
boys, was a politician, and what was worse, fit as yet to be
nothing else. He should have been, like his grandfather, a protege
of George Washington, a statesman designated by destiny, with
nothing to do but look directly ahead, follow orders, and march. On
the contrary, he was not even a Bostonian; he felt himself shut out
of Boston as though he were an exile; he never thought of himself
as a Bostonian; he never looked about him in Boston, as boys
commonly do wherever they are, to select the street they like best,
the house they want to live in, the profession they mean to
practise. Always he felt himself somewhere else; perhaps in
Washington with its social ease; perhaps in Europe; and he watched
with vague unrest from the Quincy hills the smoke of the Cunard
steamers stretching in a long line to the horizon, and disappearing
every other Saturday or whatever the day might be, as though the
steamers were offering to take him away, which was precisely what
they were doing.
Had these ideas been unreasonable, influences enough
were at hand to correct them; but the point of the whole story,
when Henry Adams came to look back on it, seemed to be that the
ideas were more than reasonable; they were the logical, necessary,
mathematical result of conditions old as history and fixed as fate
- invariable sequence in man's experience. The only idea which
would have been quite unreasonable scarcely entered his mind. This
was the thought of going westward and growing up with the country.
That he was not in the least fitted for going West made no
objection whatever, since he was much better fitted than most of
the persons that went. The convincing reason for staying in the
East was that he had there every advantage over the West.
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