The Unitarian clergy
had given to the College a character of moderation, balance,
judgment, restraint, what the French called mesure; excellent
traits, which the College attained with singular success, so that
its graduates could commonly be recognized by the stamp, but such a
type of character rarely lent itself to autobiography. In effect,
the school created a type but not a will. Four years of Harvard
College, if successful, resulted in an autobiographical blank, a
mind on which only a water-mark had been stamped.
The stamp, as such things went, was a good one. The
chief wonder of education is that it does not ruin everybody
concerned in it, teachers and taught. Sometimes in after life,
Adams debated whether in fact it had not ruined him and most of his
companions, but, disappointment apart, Harvard College was probably
less hurtful than any other university then in existence. It taught
little, and that little ill, but it left the mind open, free from
bias, ignorant of facts, but docile. The graduate had few strong
prejudices. He knew little, but his mind remained supple, ready to
receive knowledge.
What caused the boy most disappointment was the
little he got from his mates. Speaking exactly, he got less than
nothing, a result common enough in education. Yet the College
Catalogue for the years 1854 to 1861 shows a list of names rather
distinguished in their time. Alexander Agassiz and Phillips Brooks
led it; H. H. Richardson and O. W. Holmes helped to close it. As a
rule the most promising of all die early, and never get their names
into a Dictionary of Contemporaries, which seems to be the only
popular standard of success. Many died in the war. Adams knew them
all, more or less; he felt as much regard, and quite as much
respect for them then, as he did after they won great names and
were objects of a vastly wider respect; but, as help towards
education, he got nothing whatever from them or they from him until
long after they had left college. Possibly the fault was his, but
one would like to know how many others shared it. Accident counts
for much in companionship as in marriage. Life offers perhaps only
a score of possible companions, and it is mere chance whether they
meet as early as school or college, but it is more than a chance
that boys brought up together under like conditions have nothing to
give each other. The Class of 1858, to which Henry Adams belonged,
was a typical collection of young New Englanders, quietly
penetrating and aggressively commonplace; free from meannesses,
jealousies, intrigues, enthusiasms, and passions; not exceptionally
quick; not consciously skeptical; singularly indifferent to
display, artifice, florid expression, but not hostile to it when it
amused them; distrustful of themselves, but little disposed to
trust any one else; with not much humor of their own, but full of
readiness to enjoy the humor of others; negative to a degree that
in the long run became positive and triumphant. Not harsh in
manners or judgment, rather liberal and open-minded, they were
still as a body the most formidable critics one would care to meet,
in a long life exposed to criticism. They never flattered, seldom
praised; free from vanity, they were not intolerant of it; but they
were objectiveness itself; their attitude was a law of nature;
their judgment beyond appeal, not an act either of intellect or
emotion or of will, but a sort of gravitation.
This was Harvard College incarnate, but even for
Harvard College, the Class of 1858 was somewhat extreme. Of unity
this band of nearly one hundred young men had no keen sense, but
they had equally little energy of repulsion. They were pleasant to
live with, and above the average of students - German, French,
English, or what not - but chiefly because each individual appeared
satisfied to stand alone. It seemed a sign of force; yet to stand
alone is quite natural when one has no passions; still easier when
one has no pains.
Into this unusually dissolvent medium, chance
insisted on enlarging Henry Adams's education by tossing a trio of
Virginians as little fitted for it as Sioux Indians to a treadmill.
By some further affinity, these three outsiders fell into relation
with the Bostonians among whom Adams as a schoolboy belonged, and
in the end with Adams himself, although they and he knew well how
thin an edge of friendship separated them in 1856 from mortal
enmity. One of the Virginians was the son of Colonel Robert E. Lee,
of the Second United States Cavalry; the two others who seemed
instinctively to form a staff for Lee, were town-Virginians from
Petersburg. A fourth outsider came from Cincinnati and was half
Kentuckian, N.
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