登陆注册
19618800000043

第43章 CHAPTER VII TREASON (1860-1861)(5)

Going over the experience again, long after all the great actors were dead, he struggled to see where he had blundered. In the effort to make acquaintances, he lost friends, but he would have liked much to know whether he could have helped it. He had necessarily followed Seward and his father; he took for granted that his business was obedience, discipline, and silence; he supposed the party to require it, and that the crisis overruled all personal doubts. He was thunderstruck to learn that Senator Sumner privately denounced the course, regarded Mr. Adams as betraying the principles of his life, and broke off relations with his family.

Many a shock was Henry Adams to meet in the course of a long life passed chiefly near politics and politicians, but the profoundest lessons are not the lessons of reason; they are sudden strains that permanently warp the mind. He cared little or nothing about the point in discussion; he was even willing to admit that Sumner might be right, though in all great emergencies he commonly found that every one was more or less wrong; he liked lofty moral principle and cared little for political tactics; he felt a profound respect for Sumner himself; but the shock opened a chasm in life that never closed, and as long as life lasted, he found himself invariably taking for granted, as a political instinct, with out waiting further experiment -- as he took for granted that arsenic poisoned -- the rule that a friend in power is a friend lost.

On his own score, he never admitted the rupture, and never exchanged a word with Mr. Sumner on the subject, then or afterwards, but his education -- for good or bad -- made an enormous stride. One has to deal with all sorts of unexpected morals in life, and, at this moment, he was looking at hundreds of Southern gentlemen who believed themselves singularly honest, but who seemed to him engaged in the plainest breach of faith and the blackest secret conspiracy, yet they did not disturb his education. History told of little else; and not one rebel defection -- not even Robert E. Lee's -- cost young Adams a personal pang; but Sumner's struck home.

This, then, was the result of the new attempt at education, down to March 4, 1861; this was all; and frankly, it seemed to him hardly what he wanted. The picture of Washington in March, 1861, offered education, but not the kind of education that led to good. The process that Matthew Arnold described as wandering between two worlds, one dead, the other powerless to be born, helps nothing. Washington was a dismal school. Even before the traitors had flown, the vultures descended on it in swarms that darkened the ground, and tore the carrion of political patronage into fragments and gobbets of fat and lean, on the very steps of the White House. Not a man there knew what his task was to be, or was fitted for it; every one without exception, Northern or Southern, was to learn his business at the cost of the public. Lincoln, Seward, Sumner, and the rest, could give no help to the young man seeking education; they knew less than he; within six weeks they were all to be taught their duties by the uprising of such as he, and their education was to cost a million lives and ten thousand million dollars, more or less, North and South, before the country could recover its balance and movement. Henry was a helpless victim, and, like all the rest, he could only wait for he knew not what, to send him he knew not where.

With the close of the session, his own functions ended. Ceasing to be private secretary he knew not what else to do but return with his father and mother to Boston in the middle of March, and, with childlike docility, sit down at a desk in the law-office of Horace Gray in Court Street, to begin again: "My Lords and Gentlemen"; dozing after a two o'clock dinner, or waking to discuss politics with the future Justice. There, in ordinary times, he would have remained for life, his attempt at education in treason having, like all the rest, disastrously failed.

同类推荐
  • 书博鸡者事

    书博鸡者事

    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。
  • 西圃词说

    西圃词说

    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。
  • 明伦汇编宫闱典公主驸马部

    明伦汇编宫闱典公主驸马部

    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。
  • 罗湖野录

    罗湖野录

    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。
  • 大乘二十二问本

    大乘二十二问本

    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
  • 九幽使

    九幽使

    豪门公子,神秘女侠,江洋大盗。一群不相干的人因为一座荒岛被联系在一起。生存之战,谁能笑到最后。
  • 嫡女赋

    嫡女赋

    研姐儿偶做黄粱梦。梦里她无才无颜无德。无奈嫁那寒门子弟为妻。终日算计那柴米油盐。日夜作息不停,只为那持家金银。待到夫君金榜题名,却被无情弃。平生不过是个“生得荒唐,死地窝囊”的命醒来后,她决定绝不会走梦里的路子,哪怕是生生世世做畜生,她也要把要害她的人送入地狱。简单文案:夕研只知一个真理:女人就是要狠,嘴狠,面狠,心狠。
  • 国企生存实录

    国企生存实录

    最可怕的是人心,最难防的是人心,人心似鬼
  • 戚继光传

    戚继光传

    本书反映了戚继光从战争准备到战争实施,或说从军队建设到战争指导,对古代军事思想都有发展,而尤以对军队建设思想发展更突出。
  • 无上龙帝

    无上龙帝

    地球一位古学研究博士,因一颗龙珠穿越重生异世,从此走上了一条修炼之路。人族与妖族共存,对立,竞争。斗人,斗妖,斗魔,逆行伐天,成为十绝武帝之一。上古龙族为何消失?一颗龙珠究竟埋葬了怎样的秘密?
  • 现代渡劫专家

    现代渡劫专家

    起点四组的签约作品,希望大家能够多多收藏。从5月9日至6月14日已经更新了20万字,都不知道刷票,都不知道新人榜,不取得了如此惨淡的推荐成绩都难,哎,啥都不说了,还希望大大们支持。“记者就不能农民么?记者就不能小白么?记者就不能财迷么?”仁丹本身是名记者,虽是首次写YY文,但是也会适当加入工作经历,在某些情节方面以飨对记者职业有些好奇的读者。“不重修、不转世,就要一点点傻傻地成长。主人公易天是名记者,由于一次采访任务,为了活命,杀了化蛇修成亘古无一的妖人丹,也引发了隔三差五降下来的妖人劫,通过各种手段和机敏的头脑,当然少不了的还有运气,修炼成了双胞胎元婴,更发现自己是某人的传人,于是挑战冥王、阎罗王、蜀山、昆仑甚至仙帝,终于发现世界原来是……本书书友群11387959,欢迎加入
  • 菜叶金枝

    菜叶金枝

    没有特异功能,没有千金万银,没有法宝无敌,没有心计智谋……身为小奴一枚,咱一样可以翻手云覆手雨:卖夫入青楼,经营夫婿风生水起,邂逅极品腹黑小侯爷,拳脚相向也能俘获爷心,别说姐没心没肺,君子爱财就要剑走偏锋,即使是囧态百出的苦菜叶,咱也要活出金枝的风范!)))))))))))))))))))))))))))一句话总结:倒霉孩子的精彩生活全纪录,各种囧……
  • 书法秘诀

    书法秘诀

    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。
  • 圣经中的人生智慧

    圣经中的人生智慧

    本书作者从《圣经》中选出一些充满人生智慧的“论语”式的句子,并给出其个人的理解与感悟。本书分为家庭篇、人生篇、处事篇、公义篇。
  • 古惑仔之道亦有道

    古惑仔之道亦有道

    一个人只有一条命,混的好命是自己的,混的不好命是别人的……我叫凡星,你得叫我星哥!