Winter and summer, town and country, law and
liberty, were hostile, and the man who pretended they were not, was
in his eyes a schoolmaster - that is, a man employed to tell lies
to little boys. Though Quincy was but two hours' walk from Beacon
Hill, it belonged in a different world. For two hundred years,
every Adams, from father to son, had lived within sight of State
Street, and sometimes had lived in it, yet none had ever taken
kindly to the town, or been taken kindly by it. The boy inherited
his double nature. He knew as yet nothing about his
great-grandfather, who had died a dozen years before his own birth:
he took for granted that any great-grandfather of his must have
always been good, and his enemies wicked; but he divined his
great-grandfather's character from his own. Never for a moment did
he connect the two ideas of Boston and John Adams; they were
separate and antagonistic; the idea of John Adams went with Quincy.
He knew his grandfather John Quincy Adams only as an old man of
seventy-five or eighty who was friendly and gentle with him, but
except that he heard his grandfather always called "the President,"
and his grandmother "the Madam," he had no reason to suppose that
his Adams grandfather differed in character from his Brooks
grandfather who was equally kind and benevolent. He liked the Adams
side best, but for no other reason than that it reminded him of the
country, the summer, and the absence of restraint. Yet he felt also
that Quincy was in a way inferior to Boston, and that socially
Boston looked down on Quincy. The reason was clear enough even to a
five-year old child. Quincy had no Boston style. Little enough
style had either; a simpler manner of life and thought could hardly
exist, short of cave-dwelling. The flint-and-steel with which his
grandfather Adams used to light his own fires in the early morning
was still on the mantelpiece of his study. The idea of a livery or
even a dress for servants, or of an evening toilette, was next to
blasphemy. Bathrooms, water-supplies, lighting, heating, and the
whole array of domestic comforts, were unknown at Quincy. Boston
had already a bathroom, a water-supply, a furnace, and gas. The
superiority of Boston was evident, but a child liked it no better
for that.
The magnificence of his grandfather Brooks's house
in Pearl Street or South Street has long ago disappeared, but
perhaps his country house at Medford may still remain to show what
impressed the mind of a boy in 1845 with the idea of city splendor.
The President's place at Quincy was the larger and older and far
the more interesting of the two; but a boy felt at once its
inferiority in fashion. It showed plainly enough its want of
wealth. It smacked of colonial age, but not of Boston style or
plush curtains. To the end of his life he never quite overcame the
prejudice thus drawn in with his childish breath. He never could
compel himself to care for nineteenth-century style. He was never
able to adopt it, any more than his father or grandfather or
great-grandfather had done. Not that he felt it as particularly
hostile, for he reconciled himself to much that was worse; but
because, for some remote reason, he was born an eighteenth-century
child. The old house at Quincy was eighteenth century. What style
it had was in its Queen Anne mahogany panels and its Louis Seize
chairs and sofas. The panels belonged to an old colonial Vassall
who built the house; the furniture had been brought back from Paris
in 1789 or 1801 or 1817, along with porcelain and books and much
else of old diplomatic remnants; and neither of the two
eighteenth-century styles - neither English Queen Anne nor French
Louis Seize - was cofortable for a boy, or for any one else. The
dark mahogany had been painted white to suit daily life in winter
gloom. Nothing seemed to favor, for a child's objects, the older
forms. On the contrary, most boys, as well as grown-up people,
preferred the new, with good reason, and the child felt himself
distinctly at a disadvantage for the taste.
Nor had personal preference any share in his bias.
The Brooks grandfather was as amiable and as sympathetic as the
Adams grandfather. Both were born in 1767, and both died in 1848.
Both were kind to children, and both belonged rather to the
eighteenth than to the nineteenth centuries. The child knew no
difference between them except that one was associated with winter
and the other with summer; one with Boston, the other with Quincy.
Even with Medford, the association was hardly easier.
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