He held himself
naturally in the background. He was not jealous. He grasped power,
but not office. He distributed offices by handfuls without caring
to take them. He had the instinct of empire: he gave, but he did
not receive. This rare superiority to the politicians he
controlled, a trait that private secretaries never met in the
politicians themselves, excited Adams's wonder and curiosity, but
when he tried to get behind it, and to educate himself from the
stores of Mr. Weed's experience, he found the study still more
fascinating. Management was an instinct with Mr. Weed; an object to
be pursued for its own sake, as one plays cards; but he appeared to
play with men as though they were only cards; he seemed incapable
of feeling himself one of them. He took them and played them for
their face-value; but once, when he had told, with his usual humor,
some stories of his political experience which were strong even for
the Albany lobby, the private secretary made bold to ask him
outright: "Then, Mr. Weed, do you think that no politician can be
trusted? " Mr. Weed hesitated for a moment; then said in his mild
manner: "I never advise a young man to begin by thinking so."
This lesson, at the time, translated itself to Adams
in a moral sense, as though Mr. Weed had said: "Youth needs
illusions !" As he grew older he rather thought that Mr. Weed
looked on it as a question of how the game should be played. Young
men most needed experience. They could not play well if they
trusted to a general rule. Every card had a relative value.
Principles had better be left aside; values were enough. Adams knew
that he could never learn to play politics in so masterly a fashion
as this: his education and his nervous system equally forbade it,
although he admired all the more the impersonal faculty of the
political master who could thus efface himself and his temper in
the game. He noticed that most of the greatest politicians in
history had seemed to regard men as counters. The lesson was the
more interesting because another famous New Yorker came over at the
same time who liked to discuss the same problem. Secretary Seward
sent William M. Evarts to London as law counsel, and Henry began an
acquaintance with Mr. Evarts that soon became intimate. Evarts was
as individual as Weed was impersonal; like most men, he cared
little for the game, or how it was played, and much for the stakes,
but he played it in a large and liberal way, like Daniel Webster,
"a great advocate employed in politics." Evarts was also an
economist of morals, but with him the question was rather how much
morality one could afford. "The world can absorb only doses of
truth," he said; "too much would kill it." One sought education in
order to adjust the dose.
The teachings of Weed and Evarts were practical, and
the private secretary's life turned on their value. England's power
of absorbing truth was small. Englishmen, such as Palmerston,
Russell, Bethell, and the society represented by the Times and
Morning Post, as well as the Tories represented by Disraeli, Lord
Robert Cecil, and the Standard, offered a study in education that
sickened a young student with anxiety. He had begun - contrary to
Mr. Weed's advice - by taking their bad faith for granted. Was he
wrong? To settle this point became the main object of the
diplomatic education so laboriously pursued, at a cost already
stupendous, and promising to become ruinous.
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