Many people today are saying
that we should be teaching morals in our schools. They
could find support in the closing line of this section
of the Commonwealth Constitution, which speaks of the
necessity “to countenance and inculcate the principles
of humanity and general benevolence, public and private
charity, industry and frugality, honesty and punctuality
in their dealings, sincerity, good humor, and all social
affections, and generous sentiments among the people.”
Again, if Adams had done nothing but write this remarkable
document, he would be someone whose character would
deserve our attention. And no sooner had he finished
it than he was called upon again to go to France.
No Simpler Times
Let me say a word about Abigail Adams. She probably
had better political sense than her husband, and was
a better judge of people. And she loved politics. There
is a wonderful scene in the White House after Adams
had been defeated for re-election by Jefferson. Jefferson
was invited to come over and have dinner, as were many
members of the Senate and the House. He sat at the table
beside Abigail, asking “Who's that man over there?”
and “Who's this one over here?” And she
told him everything about them–where they came
from, what their constituency was, what their interests
were. She was as bright as can be and had a backbone
of iron. She probably didn't weigh 100 pounds, standing
only about five feet one. I think she's one of the greatest
Americans of all time. And you can discover her, too,
in her marvelous correspondence with her husband during
his long absences.
Something I always like to emphasize is that there never
was a simpler past. We hear often, “Oh, that was
a simpler time,” but it's always wrong. Imagine
Abigail's life. Up in the morning at about 5 to light
the fireplace that served as the kitchen, call to the
children to come down, cook the breakfast, tend the
stock, try to keep the farm solvent during the whole
war with her husband gone and with inflation and with
shortages of everything. Schools were closed, so she
had to educate the children at home. Her day didn't
end until 9 or 10 at night when the children would go
upstairs to their bedrooms, where it could be so cold
that the water in the bowls that they used to wash their
faces was iced over. And then she would sit down at
the kitchen table with a single candle and write some
of the greatest letters ever written by any American.
In one plaintive letter, she writes: “Posterity
who are to reap the blessings will scarcely be able
to conceive the hardships and sufferings of their ancestors.”
And we don't. We don't know what they went through–epidemics
of smallpox or dysentery, which could take the lives
of hundreds of people just in the little town of Quincy,
Massachusetts. It was by no means a simpler time. They
had to worry about things that we don't even think about
any more, and suffer discomforts and inconveniences
of a kind that we never even imagine. We have little
idea of how tough they were. Imagine John Adams setting
off in the middle of winter to ride nearly 400 miles
on horseback to get to Congress. Try riding even 40
miles sometime. John and Abigail were separated, in
all, more than ten years because of his service to the
country.
Much is written about Adams' vice presidency under Washington,
and about his presidency. But his diplomatic duties
were as important as anything else he did. Primarily,
he got the Dutch to give us massive loans, which really
saved our Revolution–we would probably have lost
the war with England had it not been for Holland. He
went to the Netherlands on his own, knowing nobody.
He didn't speak Dutch. He didn't have authorization
from Congress because he was out of touch with Congress.
But he succeeded. He once said that if anything were
written on his tombstone, it should be that he was the
man who got the Dutch to provide the loans to win the
war. Yet this fact is little known or understood by
most Americans.
Later on, Adams would say the same thing about being
the president who kept us out of war with France. His
presidency is often associated with the war frenzy that
led to the Alien and Sedition Acts, which Adams signed
and which would always stand, appropriately, as a black
mark against him. Adams was not a great president. But
he was a very good one and I think he should be judged
as more presidents should be judged–not just by
what he did, but what he didn't do. He didn't go to
war with France. Had he done so, he would have been
re-elected, and he knew it. As it was, the 1800 election
was extremely close. A change in about 300 votes in
New York City would have re-elected him. And let us
not forget that one of the most important turning points
in our country, even in the world, was that election,
because there was a peaceful transition, following a
bitter election, from one party to another. It was not
contested by armed opposition, which was the historical
norm. Adams went home to Quincy–having traveled
more in the service of his country than any other American
of that time–and never went anywhere ever again,
although he lived for 25 more years.
The Inward Journey
Writing a biography and realizing that your subject
is going to stay at home his final 25 years, you wonder
how you are going to sustain the rest of the book. But
there are all kinds of surprises in life, and to me
the great surprise of the last part of Adams' life is
that in many ways it's the most interesting. It's at
this point that the inward journey begins. He suffers
as he has never suffered before. He loses not only Abigail,
but their beloved daughter of the same name. Those who
say that people then lived in a simpler time should
imagine their daughter having a mastectomy in a bedroom
of their house with no anesthetic. Adams lost his wife
and daughter, he lost a son to alcoholism, he lost his
teeth and hair, he lost friends, he lost all of his
power, his prestige, his influence. But he kept going.
In fact, curiously, having in many ways been seen as
a pessimist, he became increasingly an optimist. It's
in this last part of his life especially that you feel
his real fiber.
John Adams, a farm boy, became the most widely and deeply
read of any American of that bookish time–more
so even than Jefferson. At the age of 80, he launched
into a 16-volume history of France in French, which
he had taught himself on his Atlantic crossings. And
he pours out his innermost feelings to a few remaining
friends and to some of his family, including John Quincy.
Let me read you two excerpts. The first deals with his
growing sense of wonder: