Minister Adams had no friend in the Senate; he could
hope for no favors, and he asked none. He thought it right to play
the adventurer as his father and grandfather had done before him,
without a murmur. This was a lofty view, and for him answered his
objects, but it bore hard on cabin-boys, and when, in time, the
young man realized what had happened, he felt it as a betrayal. He
modestly thought himself unfit for the career of adventurer, and
judged his father to be less fit than himself. For the first time
America was posing as the champion of legitimacy and order. Her
representatives should know how to play their role; they should
wear the costume; but, in the mission attached to Mr. Adams in
1861, the only rag of legitimacy or order was the private
secretary, whose stature was not sufficient to impose awe on the
Court and Parliament of Great Britain.
One inevitable effect of this lesson was to make a
victim of the scholar and to turn him into a harsh judge of his
masters. If they overlooked him, he could hardly overlook them,
since they stood with their whole weight on his body. By way of
teaching him quickly, they sent out their new Minister to Russia in
the same ship. Secretary Seward had occasion to learn the merits of
Cassius M. Clay in the diplomatic service, but Mr. Seward's
education profited less than the private secretary's, Cassius Clay
as a teacher having no equal though possibly some rivals. No young
man, not in Government pay, could be asked to draw, from such
lessons, any confidence in himself, and it was notorious that, for
the next two years, the persons were few indeed who felt, or had
reason to feel, any sort of confidence in the Government; fewest of
all among those who were in it. At home, for the most part, young
men went to the war, grumbled and died; in England they might
grumble or not; no one listened.
Above all, the private secretary could not grumble
to his chief. He knew surprisingly little, but that much he did
know. He never labored so hard to learn a language as he did to
hold his tongue, and it affected him for life. The habit of
reticence - of talking without meaning - is never effaced. He had
to begin it at once. He was already an adept when the party landed
at Liverpool, May 13, 1861, and went instantly up to London: a
family of early Christian martyrs about to be flung into an arena
of lions, under the glad eyes of Tiberius Palmerston. Though Lord
Palmerston would have laughed his peculiar Palmerston laugh at
figuring as Tiberius, he would have seen only evident resemblance
in the Christian martyrs, for he had already arranged the
ceremony.
Of what they had to expect, the Minister knew no
more than his son. What he or Mr. Seward or Mr. Sumner may have
thought is the affair of history and their errors concern
historians. The errors of a private secretary concerned no one but
himself, and were a large part of his education. He thought on May
12 that he was going to a friendly Government and people, true to
the anti-slavery principles which had been their steadiest
profession. For a hundred years the chief effort of his family had
aimed at bringing the Government of England into intelligent
cooperation with the objects and interests of America. His father
was about to make a new effort, and this time the chance of success
was promising. The slave States had been the chief apparent
obstacle to good understanding. As for the private secretary
himself, he was, like all Bostonians, instinctively English. He
could not conceive the idea of a hostile England.
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