Europe was
waiting to see them go. So certain was the end that no one cared to
hurry it.
So far as a private secretary could see, this was
all that saved his father. For many months he looked on himself as
lost or finished in the character of private secretary; and as
about to begin, without further experiment, a final education in
the ranks of the Army of the Potomac where he would find most of
his friends enjoying a much pleasanter life than his own. With this
idea uppermost in his mind, he passed the summer and the autumn,
and began the winter. Any winter in London is a severe trial; one's
first winter is the most trying; but the month of December, 1861,
in Mansfield Street, Portland Place, would have gorged a glutton of
gloom.
One afternoon when he was struggling to resist
complete nervous depression in the solitude of Mansfield Street,
during the absence of the Minister and Mrs. Adams on a country
visit, Reuter's telegram announcing the seizure of Mason and
Slidell from a British mail-steamer was brought to the office. All
three secretaries, public and private were there - nervous as wild
beasts under the long strain on their endurance - and all three,
though they knew it to be not merely their order of departure - not
merely diplomatic rupture - but a declaration of war - broke into
shouts of delight. They were glad to face the end. They saw it and
cheered it! Since England was waiting only for its own moment to
strike, they were eager to strike first.
They telegraphed the news to the Minister, who was
staying with Monckton Milnes at Fryston in Yorkshire. How Mr. Adams
took it, is told in the "Lives" of Lord Houghton and William E.
Forster who was one of the Fryston party. The moment was for him
the crisis of his diplomatic career; for the secretaries it was
merely the beginning of another intolerable delay, as though they
were a military outpost waiting orders to quit an abandoned
position. At the moment of sharpest suspense, the Prince Consort
sickened and died. Portland Place at Christmas in a black fog was
never a rosy landscape, but in 1861 the most hardened Londoner lost
his ruddiness. The private secretary had one source of comfort
denied to them - he should not be private secretary long.
He was mistaken - of course! He had been mistaken at
every point of his education, and, on this point, he kept up the
same mistake for nearly seven years longer, always deluded by the
notion that the end was near. To him the Trent Affair was nothing
but one of many affairs which he had to copy in a delicate round
hand into his books, yet it had one or two results personal to him
which left no trace on the Legation records. One of these, and to
him the most important, was to put an end forever to the idea of
being "useful." Hitherto, as an independent and free citizen, not
in the employ of the Government, he had kept up his relations with
the American press. He had written pretty frequently to Henry J.
Raymond, and Raymond had used his letters in the New York Times. He
had also become fairly intimate with the two or three friendly
newspapers in London, the Daily News, the Star, the weekly
Spectator; and he had tried to give them news and views that should
have a certain common character, and prevent clash. He had even
gone down to Manchester to study the cotton famine, and wrote a
long account of his visit which his brother Charles had published
in the Boston Courier. Unfortunately it was printed with his name,
and instantly came back upon him in the most crushing shape
possible - that of a long, satirical leader in the London Times.
Luckily the Times did not know its victim to be a part, though not
an official, of the Legation, and lost the chance to make its
satire fatal; but he instantly learned the narrowness of his escape
from old Joe Parkes, one of the traditional busy-bodies of
politics, who had haunted London since 1830, and who, after rushing
to the Times office, to tell them all they did not know about Henry
Adams, rushed to the Legation to tell Adams all he did not want to
know about the Times. For a moment Adams thought his "usefulness"
at an end in other respects than in the press, but a day or two
more taught him the value of obscurity. He was totally unknown; he
had not even a club; London was empty; no one thought twice about
the Times article; no one except Joe Parkes ever spoke of it; and
the world had other persons - such as President Lincoln, Secretary
Seward, and Commodore Wilkes - for constant and favorite objects of
ridicule. Henry Adams escaped, but he never tried to be useful
again. The Trent Affair dwarfed individual effort. His education at
least had reached the point of seeing its own proportions. "Surtout
point de zele!" Zeal was too hazardous a profession for a
Minister's son to pursue, as a volunteer manipulator, among Trent
Affairs and rebel cruisers. He wrote no more letters and meddled
with no more newspapers, but he was still young, and felt unkindly
towards the editor of the London Times.
Mr. Delane lost few opportunities of embittering
him, and he felt little or no hope of repaying these attentions;
but the Trent Affair passed like a snowstorm, leaving the Legation,
to its surprise, still in place. Although the private secretary saw
in this delay - which he attributed to Mr.
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