L. Anderson, Longworth on the mother's side. For the
first time Adams's education brought him in contact with new types
and taught him their values. He saw the New England type measure
itself with another, and he was part of the process.
Lee, known through life as "Roony," was a Virginian
of the eighteenth century, much as Henry Adams was a Bostonian of
the same age. Roony Lee had changed little from the type of his
grandfather, Light Horse Harry. Tall, largely built, handsome,
genial, with liberal Virginian openness towards all he liked, he
had also the Virginian habit of command and took leadership as his
natural habit. No one cared to contest it. None of the New
Englanders wanted command. For a year, at least, Lee was the most
popular and prominent young man in his class, but then seemed
slowly to drop into the background. The habit of command was not
enough, and the Virginian had little else. He was simple beyond
analysis; so simple that even the simple New England student could
not realize him. No one knew enough to know how ignorant he was;
how childlike; how helpless before the relative complexity of a
school. As an animal, the Southerner seemed to have every
advantage, but even as an animal he steadily lost ground.
The lesson in education was vital to these young
men, who, within ten years, killed each other by scores in the act
of testing their college conclusions. Strictly, the Southerner had
no mind; he had temperament He was not a scholar; he had no
intellectual training; he could not analyze an idea, and he could
not even conceive of admitting two; but in life one could get along
very well without ideas, if one had only the social instinct.
Dozens of eminent statesmen were men of Lee's type, and maintained
themselves well enough in the legislature, but college was a
sharper test. The Virginian was weak in vice itself, though the
Bostonian was hardly a master of crime. The habits of neither were
good; both were apt to drink hard and to live low lives; but the
Bostonian suffered less than the Virginian. Commonly the Bostonian
could take some care of himself even in his worst stages, while the
Virginian became quarrelsome and dangerous. When a Virginian had
brooded a few days over an imaginary grief and substantial whiskey,
none of his Northern friends could be sure that he might not be
waiting, round the corner, with a knife or pistol, to revenge
insult by the dry light of delirium tremens; and when things
reached this condition, Lee had to exhaust his authority over his
own staff. Lee was a gentleman of the old school, and, as every one
knows, gentlemen of the old school drank almost as much as
gentlemen of the new school; but this was not his trouble. He was
sober even in the excessive violence of political feeling in those
years; he kept his temper and his friends under control.
Adams liked the Virginians. No one was more
obnoxious to them, by name and prejudice; yet their friendship was
unbroken and even warm. At a moment when the immediate future posed
no problem in education so vital as the relative energy and
endurance of North and South, this momentary contact with Southern
character was a sort of education for its own sake; but this was
not all. No doubt the self-esteem of the Yankee, which tended
naturally to self-distrust, was flattered by gaining the slow
conviction that the Southerner, with his slave-owning limitations,
was as little fit to succeed in the struggle of modern life as
though he were still a maker of stone axes, living in caves, and
hunting the bos primigenius, and that every quality in which he was
strong, made him weaker; but Adams had begun to fear that even in
this respect one eighteenth-century type might not differ deeply
from another. Roony Lee had changed little from the Virginian of a
century before; but Adams was himself a good deal nearer the type
of his great-grandfather than to that of a railway superintendent.
He was little more fit than the Virginians to deal with a future
America which showed no fancy for the past. Already Northern
society betrayed a preference for economists over diplomats or
soldiers - one might even call it a jealousy - against which two
eighteenth-century types had little chance to live, and which they
had in common to fear.
Nothing short of this curious sympathy could have
brought into close relations two young men so hostile as Roony Lee
and Henry Adams, but the chief difference between them as
collegians consisted only in their difference of scholarship: Lee
was a total failure; Adams a partial one. Both failed, but Lee felt
his failure more sensibly, so that he gladly seized the chance of
escape by accepting a commission offered him by General Winfield
Scott in the force then being organized against the Mormons. He
asked Adams to write his letter of acceptance, which flattered
Adams's vanity more than any Northern compliment could do, because,
in days of violent political bitterness, it showed a certain amount
of good temper. The diplomat felt his profession.
If the student got little from his mates, he got
little more from his masters. The four years passed at college
were, for his purposes, wasted. Harvard College was a good school,
but at bottom what the boy disliked most was any school at all.
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