He had thought Harvard College a torpid school, but it was
instinct with life compared with all that he could see of the
University of Berlin. The German students were strange animals, but
their professors were beyond pay. The mental attitude of the
university was not of an American world. What sort of instruction
prevailed in other branches, or in science, Adams had no occasion
to ask, but in the Civil Law he found only the lecture system in
its deadliest form as it flourished in the thirteenth century. The
professor mumbled his comments; the students made, or seemed to
make, notes; they could have learned from books or discussion in a
day more than they could learn from him in a month, but they must
pay his fees, follow his course, and be his scholars, if they
wanted a degree. To an American the result was worthless. He could
make no use of the Civil Law without some previous notion of the
Common Law; but the student who knew enough of the Common Law to
understand what he wanted, had only to read the Pandects or the
commentators at his ease in America, and be his own professor.
Neither the method nor the matter nor the manner could profit an
American education.
This discovery seemed to shock none of the students.
They went to the lectures, made notes, and read textbooks, but
never pretended to take their professor seriously. They were much
more serious in reading Heine. They knew no more than Heine what
good they were getting, beyond the Berlin accent - which was bad;
and the beer - which was not to compare with Munich; and the
dancing - which was better at Vienna. They enjoyed the beer and
music, but they refused to be responsible for the education.
Anyway, as they defended themselves, they were learning the
language.
So the young man fell back on the language, and
being slow at languages, he found himself falling behind all his
friends, which depressed his spirits, the more because the gloom of
a Berlin winter and of Berlin architecture seemed to him a
particular sort of gloom never attained elsewhere. One day on the
Linden he caught sight of Charles Sumner in a cab, and ran after
him. Sumner was then recovering from the blows of the South
Carolinian cane or club, and he was pleased to find a young
worshipper in the remote Prussian wilderness. They dined together
and went to hear "William Tell" at the Opera. Sumner tried to
encourage his friend about his difficulties of language: "I came to
Berlin," or Rome, or whatever place it was, as he said with his
grand air of mastery, "I came to Berlin, unable to say a word in
the language; and three months later when I went away, I talked it
to my cabman." Adams felt himself quite unable to attain in so
short a time such social advantages, and one day complained of his
trials to Mr. Robert Apthorp, of Boston, who was passing the winter
in Berlin for the sake of its music. Mr. Apthorp told of his own
similar struggle, and how he had entered a public school and sat
for months with ten-year-old-boys, reciting their lessons and
catching their phrases. The idea suited Adams's desperate frame of
mind. At least it ridded him of the university and the Civil Law
and American associations in beer-cellars. Mr. Apthorp took the
trouble to negotiate with the head-master of the
Friedrichs-Wilhelm-Werdersches Gymnasium for permission to Henry
Adams to attend the school as a member of the Ober-tertia, a class
of boys twelve or thirteen years old, and there Adams went for
three months as though he had not always avoided high schools with
singular antipathy. He never did anything else so foolish but he
was given a bit of education which served him some purpose in
life.
It was not merely the language, though three months
passed in such fashion would teach a poodle enough to talk with a
cabman, and this was all that foreign students could expect to do,
for they never by any chance would come in contact with German
society, if German society existed, about which they knew nothing.
Adams never learned to talk German well, but the same might be said
of his English, if he could believe Englishmen. He learned not to
annoy himself on this account. His difficulties with the language
gradually ceased. He thought himself quite Germanized in 1859. He
even deluded himself with the idea that he read it as though it
were English, which proved that he knew little about it; but
whatever success he had in his own experiment interested him less
than his contact with German education.
He had revolted at the American school and
university; he had instantly rejected the German university; and as
his last experience of education he tried the German high school.
The experiment was hazardous. In 1858 Berlin was a poor,
keen-witted, provincial town, simple, dirty, uncivilized, and in
most respects disgusting. Life was primitive beyond what an
American boy could have imagined. Overridden by military methods
and bureaucratic pettiness, Prussia was only beginning to free her
hands from internal bonds. Apart from discipline, activity scarcely
existed.
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