Her husband was made Senator in 1803,
and in 1809 was appointed Minister to Russia. She went with him to
St. Petersburg, taking her baby, Charles Francis, born in 1807; but
broken-hearted at having to leave her two older boys behind. The
life at St. Petersburg was hardly gay for her; they were far too
poor to shine in that extravagant society; but she survived it,
though her little girl baby did not, and in the winter of 1814-15,
alone with the boy of seven years old, crossed Europe from St.
Petersburg to Paris, in her travelling-carriage, passing through
the armies, and reaching Paris in the Cent Jours after Napoleon's
return from Elba. Her husband next went to England as Minister, and
she was for two years at the Court of the Regent. In 1817 her
husband came home to be Secretary of State, and she lived for eight
years in F Street, doing her work of entertainer for President
Monroe's administration. Next she lived four miserable years in the
White House. When that chapter was closed in 1829, she had earned
the right to be tired and delicate, but she still had fifteen years
to serve as wife of a Member of the House, after her husband went
back to Congress in 1833. Then it was that the little Henry, her
grandson, first remembered her, from 1843 to 1848, sitting in her
panelled room, at breakfast, with her heavy silver teapot and
sugar-bowl and cream-jug, which still exist somewhere as an
heirloom of the modern safety-vault. By that time she was seventy
years old or more, and thoroughly weary of being beaten about a
stormy world. To the boy she seemed singularly peaceful, a vision
of silver gray, presiding over her old President and her Queen Anne
mahogany; an exotic, like her Sevres china; an object of deference
to every one, and of great affection to her son Charles; but hardly
more Bostonian than she had been fifty years before, on her
wedding-day, in the shadow of the Tower of London.
Such a figure was even less fitted than that of her
old husband, the President, to impress on a boy's mind, the
standards of the coming century. She was Louis Seize, like the
furniture. The boy knew nothing of her interior life, which had
been, as the venerable Abigail, long since at peace, foresaw, one
of severe stress and little pure satisfaction. He never dreamed
that from her might come some of those doubts and
self-questionings, those hesitations, those rebellions against law
and discipline, which marked more than one of her descendants; but
he might even then have felt some vague instinctive suspicion that
he was to inherit from her the seeds of the primal sin, the fall
from grace, the curse of Abel, that he was not of pure New England
stock, but half exotic. As a child of Quincy he was not a true
Bostonian, but even as a child of Quincy he inherited a quarter
taint of Maryland blood. Charles Francis, half Marylander by birth,
had hardly seen Boston till he was ten years old, when his parents
left him there at school in 1817, and he never forgot the
experience. He was to be nearly as old as his mother had been in
1845, before he quite accepted Boston, or Boston quite accepted
him.
A boy who began his education in these surroundings,
with physical strength inferior to that of his brothers, and with a
certain delicacy of mind and bone, ought rightly to have felt at
home in the eighteenth century and should, in proper self-respect,
have rebelled against the standards of the nineteenth. The
atmosphere of his first ten years must have been very like that of
his grandfather at the same age, from 1767 till 1776, barring the
battle of Bunker Hill, and even as late as 1846, the battle of
Bunker Hill remained actual. The tone of Boston society was
colonial. The true Bostonian always knelt in self-abasement before
the majesty of English standards; far from concealing it as a
weakness, he was proud of it as his strength. The eighteenth
century ruled society long after 1850. Perhaps the boy began to
shake it off rather earlier than most of his mates.
Indeed this prehistoric stage of education ended
rather abruptly with his tenth year. One winter morning he was
conscious of a certain confusion in the house in Mount Vernon
Street, and gathered, from such words as he could catch, that the
President, who happened to be then staying there, on his way to
Washington, had fallen and hurt himself. Then he heard the word
paralysis. After that day he came to associate the word with the
figure of his grandfather, in a tall-backed, invalid armchair, on
one side of the spare bedroom fireplace, and one of his old
friends, Dr. Parkman or P. P. F. Degrand, on the other side, both
dozing.
The end of this first, or ancestral and
Revolutionary, chapter came on February 21, 1848 - and the month of
February brought life and death as a family habit - when the
eighteenth century, as an actual and living companion, vanished.
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