Even the greatest
Senators seemed to inspire little personal affection in each other,
and betrayed none at all. Sumner had a number of rivals who held
his judgment in no high esteem, and one of these was Senator
Seward. The two men would have disliked each other by instinct had
they lived in different planets. Each was created only for
exasperating the other; the virtues of one were the faults of his
rival, until no good quality seemed to remain of either. That the
public service must suffer was certain, but what were the
sufferings of the public service compared with the risks run by a
young mosquito - a private secretary - trying to buzz admiration in
the ears of each, and unaware that each would impatiently slap at
him for belonging to the other? Innocent and unsuspicious beyond
what was permitted even in a nursery, the private secretary courted
both.
Private secretaries are servants of a rather low
order, whose business is to serve sources of power. The first news
of a professional kind, imparted to private secretary Adams on
reaching Washington, was that the President-elect, Abraham Lincoln,
had selected Mr. Seward for his Secretary of State, and that Seward
was to be the medium for communicating his wishes to his followers.
Every young man naturally accepted the wishes of Mr. Lincoln as
orders, the more because he could see that the new President was
likely to need all the help that several million young men would be
able to give, if they counted on having any President at all to
serve. Naturally one waited impatiently for the first meeting with
the new Secretary of State.
Governor Seward was an old friend of the family. He
professed to be a disciple and follower of John Quincy Adams. He
had been Senator since 1849, when his responsibilities as leader
had separated him from the Free Soil contingent, for, in the dry
light of the first Free Soil faith, the ways of New York politics
Thurlow Weed had not won favor; but the fierce heat which welded
the Republican Party in 1856 melted many such barriers, and when
Mr. Adams came to Congress in December, 1859, Governor Seward
instantly renewed his attitude of family friend, became a daily
intimate in the household, and lost no chance of forcing his fresh
ally to the front.
A few days after their arrival in December, 1860,
the Governor, as he was always called, came to dinner, alone, as
one of the family, and the private secretary had the chance he
wanted to watch him as carefully as one generally watches men who
dispose of one's future. A slouching, slender figure; a head like a
wise macaw; a beaked nose; shaggy eyebrows; unorderly hair and
clothes; hoarse voice; offhand manner; free talk, and perpetual
cigar, offered a new type - of western New York - to fathom; a type
in one way simple because it was only double - political and
personal; but complex because the political had become nature, and
no one could tell which was the mask and which the features. At
table, among friends, Mr. Seward threw off restraint, or seemed to
throw it off, in reality, while in the world he threw it off, like
a politician, for effect. In both cases he chose to appear as a
free talker, who loathed pomposity and enjoyed a joke; but how much
was nature and how much was mask, he was himself too simple a
nature to know. Underneath the surface he was conventional after
the conventions of western New York and Albany. Politicians thought
it unconventionality. Bostonians thought it provincial. Henry Adams
thought it charming. From the first sight, he loved the Governor,
who, though sixty years old, had the youth of his sympathies. He
noticed that Mr. Seward was never petty or personal; his talk was
large; he generalized; he never seemed to pose for statesmanship;
he did not require an attitude of prayer. What was more unusual -
almost singular and quite eccentric - he had some means, unknown to
other Senators, of producing the effect of unselfishness.
Superficially Mr. Seward and Mr. Adams were
contrasts; essentially they were much alike. Mr. Adams was taken to
be rigid, but the Puritan character in all its forms could be
supple enough when it chose; and in Massachusetts all the Adamses
had been attacked in succession as no better than political
mercenaries. Mr. Hildreth, in his standard history, went so far as
to echo with approval the charge that treachery was hereditary in
the family.
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