Seward's good sense - no
reason for changing his opinion about the views of the British
Government, he had no choice but to sit down again at his table,
and go on copying papers, filing letters, and reading newspaper
accounts of the incapacity of Mr. Lincoln and the brutality of Mr.
Seward - or vice versa. The heavy months dragged on and winter
slowly turned to spring without improving his position or spirits.
Socially he had but one relief; and, to the end of life, he never
forgot the keen gratitude he owed for it. During this tedious
winter and for many months afterwards, the only gleams of sunshine
were on the days he passed at Walton-on-Thames as the guest of Mr.
and Mrs. Russell Sturgis at Mount Felix.
His education had unfortunately little to do with
bankers, although old George Peabody and his partner, Junius
Morgan, were strong allies. Joshua Bates was devoted, and no one
could be kinder than Thomas Baring, whose little dinners in Upper
Grosvenor Street were certainly the best in London; but none
offered a refuge to compare with Mount Felix, and, for the first
time, the refuge was a liberal education. Mrs. Russell Sturgis was
one of the women to whom an intelligent boy attaches himself as
closely as he can. Henry Adams was not a very intelligent boy, and
he had no knowledge of the world, but he knew enough to understand
that a cub needed shape. The kind of education he most required was
that of a charming woman, and Mrs. Russell Sturgis, a dozen years
older than himself, could have good-naturedly trained a school of
such, without an effort, and with infinite advantage to them. Near
her he half forgot the anxieties of Portland Place. During two
years of miserable solitude, she was in this social polar winter,
the single source of warmth and light.
Of course the Legation itself was home, and, under
such pressure, life in it could be nothing but united. All the
inmates made common cause, but this was no education. One lived,
but was merely flayed alive. Yet, while this might be exactly true
of the younger members of the household, it was not quite so with
the Minister and Mrs. Adams. Very slowly, but quite steadily, they
gained foothold. For some reason partly connected with American
sources, British society had begun with violent social prejudice
against Lincoln, Seward, and all the Republican leaders except
Sumner. Familiar as the whole tribe of Adamses had been for three
generations with the impenetrable stupidity of the British mind,
and weary of the long struggle to teach it its own interests, the
fourth generation could still not quite persuade itself that this
new British prejudice was natural. The private secretary suspected
that Americans in New York and Boston had something to do with it.
The Copperhead was at home in Pall Mall. Naturally the Englishman
was a coarse animal and liked coarseness. Had Lincoln and Seward
been the ruffians supposed, the average Englishman would have liked
them the better. The exceedingly quiet manner and the unassailable
social position of Minister Adams in no way conciliated them. They
chose to ignore him, since they could not ridicule him. Lord John
Russell set the example. Personally the Minister was to be kindly
treated; politically he was negligible; he was there to be put
aside. London and Paris imitated Lord John. Every one waited to see
Lincoln and his hirelings disappear in one vast debacle. All
conceived that the Washington Government would soon crumble, and
that Minister Adams would vanish with the rest.
This situation made Minister Adams an exception
among diplomats.
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