Ridiculous as he knew himself about to be
in his new role, he was less ridiculous than his betters. He was at
least no public official, like the thousands of improvised
secretaries and generals who crowded their jealousies and intrigues
on the President. He was not a vulture of carrion - patronage. He
knew that his father's appointment was the result of Governor
Seward's personal friendship; he did not then know that Senator
Sumner had opposed it, or the reasons which Sumner alleged for
thinking it unfit; but he could have supplied proofs enough had
Sumner asked for them, the strongest and most decisive being that,
in his opinion, Mr. Adams had chosen a private secretary far more
unfit than his chief. That Mr. Adams was unfit might well be, since
it was hard to find a fit appointment in the list of possible
candidates, except Mr. Sumner himself; and no one knew so well as
this experienced Senator that the weakest of all Mr. Adams's proofs
of fitness was his consent to quit a safe seat in Congress for an
exceedingly unsafe seat in London with no better support than
Senator Sumner, at the head of the Foreign Relations Committee, was
likely to give him. In the family history, its members had taken
many a dangerous risk, but never before had they taken one so
desperate.
The private secretary troubled himself not at all
about the unfitness of any one; he knew too little; and, in fact,
no one, except perhaps Mr. Sumner, knew more. The President and
Secretary of State knew least of all. As Secretary of Legation the
Executive appointed the editor of a Chicago newspaper who had
applied for the Chicago Post-Office; a good fellow, universally
known as Charley Wilson, who had not a thought of staying in the
post, or of helping the Minister. The Assistant Secretary was
inherited from Buchanan's time, a hard worker, but socially
useless. Mr. Adams made no effort to find efficient help; perhaps
he knew no name to suggest; perhaps he knew too much of Washington,
but he could hardly have hoped to find a staff of strength in his
son.
The private secretary was more passive than his
father, for he knew not where to turn. Sumner alone could have
smoothed his path by giving him letters of introduction, but if
Sumner wrote letters, it was not with the effect of smoothing
paths. No one, at that moment, was engaged in smoothing either
paths or people. The private secretary was no worse off than his
neighbors except in being called earlier into service. On April 13
the storm burst and rolled several hundred thousand young men like
Henry Adams into the surf of a wild ocean, all helpless like
himself, to be beaten about for four years by the waves of war.
Adams still had time to watch the regiments form ranks before
Boston State House in the April evenings and march southward,
quietly enough, with the air of business they wore from their
cradles, but with few signs or sounds of excitement. He had time
also to go down the harbor to see his brother Charles quartered in
Fort Independence before being thrown, with a hundred thousand
more, into the furnace of the Army of the Potomac to get educated
in a fury of fire. Few things were for the moment so trivial in
importance as the solitary private secretary crawling down to the
wretched old Cunard steamer Niagara at East Boston to start again
for Liverpool. This time the pitcher of education had gone to the
fountain once too often; it was fairly broken; and the young man
had got to meet a hostile world without defence - or arms.
The situation did not seem even comic, so ignorant
was the world of its humors; yet Minister Adams sailed for England,
May 1, 1861, with much the same outfit as Admiral Dupont would have
enjoyed if the Government had sent him to attack Port Royal with
one cabin-boy in a rowboat. Luckily for the cabin-boy, he was
alone. Had Secretary Seward and Senator Sumner given to Mr. Adams
the rank of Ambassador and four times his salary, a palace in
London, a staff of trained secretaries, and personal letters of
introduction to the royal family and the whole peerage, the private
secretary would have been cabin-boy still, with the extra burden of
many masters; he was the most fortunate person in the party, having
for master only his father who never fretted, never dictated, never
disciplined, and whose idea of American diplomacy was that of the
eighteenth century. Minister Adams remembered how his grandfather
had sailed from Mount Wollaston in midwinter, 1778, on the little
frigate Boston, taking his eleven-year-old son John Quincy with
him, for secretary, on a diplomacy of adventure that had hardly a
parallel for success. He remembered how John Quincy, in 1809, had
sailed for Russia, with himself, a baby of two years old, to cope
with Napoleon and the Czar Alexander single-handed, almost as much
of an adventurer as John Adams before him, and almost as
successful. He thought it natural that the Government should send
him out as an adventurer also, with a twenty-three-year-old son,
and he did not even notice that he left not a friend behind him. No
doubt he could depend on Seward, but on whom could Seward depend?
Certainly not on the Chairman of the Committee of Foreign
Relations.
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