登陆注册
20031600000114

第114章 CHAPTER XIX CHAOS (1870)(4)

The begonia is, or then was, a plant of such senatorial qualities as to make the simile, in intention, most flattering. Far from charming in its refinement, the begonia was remarkable for curious and showy foliage; it was conspicuous; it seemed to have no useful purpose; and it insisted on standing always in the most prominent positions. Adams would have greatly liked to be a begonia in Washington, for this was rather his ideal of the successful statesman, and he thought about it still more when the Westminster Review for October brought him his article on the Gold Conspiracy, which was also instantly pirated on a great scale. Piratical he was himself henceforth driven to be, and he asked only to be pirated, for he was sure not to be paid; but the honors of piracy resemble the colors of the begonia; they are showy but not useful. Here was a tour de force he had never dreamed himself equal to performing: two long, dry, quarterly, thirty or forty page articles, appearing in quick succession, and pirated for audiences running well into the hundred thousands; and not one person, man or woman, offering him so much as a congratulation, except to call him a begonia.

Had this been all, life might have gone on very happily as before, but the ways of America to a young person of literary and political tastes were such as the so-called evolution of civilized man had not before evolved.

No sooner had Adams made at Washington what he modestly hoped was a sufficient success, than his whole family set on him to drag him away. For the first time since 1861 his father interposed; his mother entreated; and his brother Charles argued and urged that he should come to Harvard College. Charles had views of further joint operations in a new field. He said that Henry had done at Washington all he could possibly do; that his position there wanted solidity; that he was, after all, an adventurer; that a few years in Cambridge would give him personal weight; that his chief function was not to be that of teacher, but that of editing the North American Review which was to be coupled with the professorship, and would lead to the daily press. In short, that he needed the university more than the university needed him.

Henry knew the university well enough to know that the department of history was controlled by one of the most astute and ideal administrators in the world -- Professor Gurney -- and that it was Gurney who had established the new professorship, and had cast his net over Adams to carry the double load of mediæval history and the Review . He could see no relation whatever between himself and a professorship. He sought education; he did not sell it. He knew no history; he knew only a few historians; his ignorance was mischievous because it was literary, accidental, indifferent. On the other hand he knew Gurney, and felt much influenced by his advice. One cannot take one's self quite seriously in such matters; it could not much affect the sum of solar energies whether one went on dancing with girls in Washington, or began talking to boys at Cambridge. The good people who thought it did matter had a sort of right to guide. One could not reject their advice; still less disregard their wishes.

The sum of the matter was that Henry went out to Cambridge and had a few words with President Eliot which seemed to him almost as American as the talk about diplomacy with his father ten years before. "But, Mr. President," urged Adams, "I know nothing about Mediæval History." With the courteous manner and bland smile so familiar for the next generation of Americans Mr. Eliot mildly but firmly replied, "If you will point out to me any one who knows more, Mr. Adams, I will appoint him." The answer was neither logical nor convincing, but Adams could not meet it without overstepping his privileges. He could not say that, under the circumstances, the appointment of any professor at all seemed to him unnecessary.

So, at twenty-four hours' notice, he broke his life in halves again in order to begin a new education, on lines he had not chosen, in subjects for which he cared less than nothing; in a place he did not love, and before a future which repelled. Thousands of men have to do the same thing, but his case was peculiar because he had no need to do it. He did it because his best and wisest friends urged it, and he never could make up his mind whether they were right or not. To him this kind of education was always false. For himself he had no doubts. He thought it a mistake; but his opinion did not prove that it was one, since, in all probability, whatever he did would be more or less a mistake. He had reached cross-roads of education which all led astray. What he could gain at Harvard College he did not know, but in any case it was nothing he wanted. What he lost at Washington he could partly see, but in any case it was not fortune. Grant's administration wrecked men by thousands, but profited few. Perhaps Mr. Fish was the solitary exception. One might search the whole list of Congress, Judiciary, and Executive during the twenty-five years 1870 to 1895, and find little but damaged reputation. The period was poor in purpose and barren in results.

Henry Adams, if not the rose, lived as near it as any politician, and knew, more or less, all the men in any way prominent at Washington, or knew all about them. Among them, in his opinion, the best equipped, the most active-minded, and most industrious was Abram Hewitt, who sat in Congress for a dozen years, between 1874 and 1886, sometimes leading the House and always wielding influence second to none. With nobody did Adams form closer or longer relations than with Mr. Hewitt, whom he regarded as the most useful public man in Washington; and he was the more struck by Hewitt's saying, at the end of his laborious career as legislator, that he left behind him no permanent result except the Act consolidating the Surveys.

同类推荐
  • 图经集注衍义本草序例

    图经集注衍义本草序例

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 夏日青龙寺寻僧二首

    夏日青龙寺寻僧二首

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • The Prime Minister

    The Prime Minister

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 明季遗闻

    明季遗闻

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 春秋诗话

    春秋诗话

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 缘起缘灭:回眸生

    缘起缘灭:回眸生

    陛下,愿您百年安生不离笑,即使身边的人不是我。陛下,您一定没有注意过我满脸微笑说不介意时,眼里的绝望。陛下,好想见您一面,哪怕很远很远。陛下,您从不拒绝我,也不让我离开,又不叫我留下来。陛下,不爱了,就是不爱了,何必那么多借口。夜千殇,我恨,恨我自己,为何非要痴痴的爱着你,明明知道是替身,却舍不得离去……浮生叹,轮回散,有情人,终会散?【结局需要,你的守候】
  • 恶魔超市

    恶魔超市

    想要无尽财富吗?想要永生不死吗?拿你最珍贵的东西来换吧。钱、生命、女人?只有你想不到,没有我没有的,我叫苏天,一个恶魔的代言人……
  • 孤星尘剑

    孤星尘剑

    这条路,是你自己选择的,就算你双脚已断,也要爬下去。没有人会一生在你身旁扶持着你,你就是你,也只有你,纵使千山万水,也要自己咬牙坚持下去。
  • 重生之如此奔三

    重生之如此奔三

    小沈阳说:双眼一睁一闭一天就过去了。但是,苏安安也就只是一闭一睁,便华丽丽地换了一个人生。昨天还是双十年华,今天却成了奔三女人,不仅多了个丈夫,还成了“小三”?
  • 火爆兵王

    火爆兵王

    昔日兵王回归都市,守护亲人。谁知美女身边麻烦不断,怒举铁拳统统摆平;在这个弱肉强食的社会,看谁拳头硬!
  • 我的傻瓜相公:比翼双飞

    我的傻瓜相公:比翼双飞

    她爹大寿那天,意外得知自己将要嫁出去,还是嫁给一个傻子!好吧,嫁就嫁吧!反正嫁给谁不都一样嘛……不过,没想到嫁过去之后,却每天都要为自己的脑袋担惊受怕……咦?她这个相公,好像有点儿奇怪呢?什么!?原来他不是一个傻瓜啊?那难道是在暗处弄着什么事情不成?结果,啥都不是啊!他没什么暗地的势力,也没有那腹黑的心思,有的,就只有那单纯与善良!而那单纯,恰巧就让他这个小傻瓜装傻装的很成功……
  • 杂着

    杂着

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 花连枝

    花连枝

    花连枝,原本一家祖孙三姐妹,本是同根生,长孙女花吟梦在三个孙女中长得最美貌,最漂亮,天生丽质,明艳动人,气质超凡脱俗,却因为祖母的偏心,令花吟梦受尽屈辱,在被花家逼死爹娘后,绝望、悲惨的跳了万丈悬崖,在她死之前,曾经立下毒誓,不会放过害她的花家的所有人!她一定要以牙还牙,血债血偿!仇恨让她念念不忘前世的深仇大恨,转世重生后的她保留了前世所有的记忆,一场惊心动魄,蓄谋已久的复仇大戏就这样拉开了帷幕......“我好恨!好恨!不杀他们难解我心头之恨!我要为爹娘报仇雪恨!”“他们都得到了应有的报应,几千年了,还不能消除你心中的仇恨吗?”“你爱过我吗?你恨我吗?”欢迎加入读者群34522912
  • 超级生物改造器

    超级生物改造器

    当一个平凡的大三学生,获得了一个来自未来,可以改变生物基因的生物改造器后,他才发现原来这个世界并不是他所想的那么简单。通过生物改造器,他改造出了磨盘大的蚂蚁,几十米长的巨蟒,甚至于华夏的神龙和西方的巨龙。为了守护华夏,与全世界七大最顶尖的强者大战。为了心爱的女人独身闯入岛国,被全岛国的阴阳师和忍者围攻。为了追求至高的境界,他踏遍了全世界的所有神秘之地。他,就是陆佳轩!
  • 世界经典智慧故事全集:明事知情的故事

    世界经典智慧故事全集:明事知情的故事

    本套丛书图文并茂,格调高雅,具有很强的系统性、代表性、趣味性和可读性,是中小学生培养阅读与写作能力的配套系列读物,非常适合广大中小学生学习和收藏,也是各级图书馆收藏的最佳版本。