Part 16 (1/2)

Georgetown affords nothing. My rooms are very pleasant and warm whilst the doors of the hall are closed.

”You can scarce believe that here in this wilderness city, I should find my time so occupied as it is. My visitors, some of them, come three and four miles. The return of one of them is the work of one day; most of the ladies reside in Georgetown or in scattered parts of the city at two and three miles distance. Mrs.

Otis, my nearest neighbor, is at lodgings almost half a mile from me; Mrs. Senator Otis, two miles.

”We have all been very well as yet; if we can by any means get wood, we shall not let our fires go out, but it is at a price indeed; from four dollars it has risen to nine. Some say it will fall, but there must be more industry than is to be found here to bring half enough to the market for the consumption of the inhabitants.

”With kind remembrance to all friends,

”I am your truly affectionate mother, ”A. A.”

John Cotton Smith, Member of Congress from Connecticut, adds these details:

”One wing of the Capitol only had been erected, which with the President's House, a mile distant from it, both constructed with white sandstone, were striking objects in dismal contrast with the scene around them. Instead of recognizing the avenues and streets, pourtrayed on the plan of the city, not one was visible, unless we except a road with two buildings on each side of it, called the New Jersey Avenue. The Pennsylvania, leading, as laid down on paper, from the Capitol to the Presidential Mansion, was then nearly the whole distance a deep mora.s.s, covered with alder bushes, which were cut through the width of the intended avenue the then ensuing winter... . The roads in every direction were muddy and unimproved; a sidewalk was attempted in one instance by a covering formed of the chips of the stones which had been hewed from the Capitol. It extended but a little way, and was of little value, for in dry weather the sharp fragments cut our shoes, and in wet weather covered them with white mortar.”

Mrs. Adams was to have only four months of this disturbed existence. The climate of Was.h.i.+ngton, the general discomfort added to anxiety and distress of mind, made her ill, and she left the city before Mr. Adams did. During her short stay, however, she won the admiration of all by the dignity, grace and judgment with which she filled a most difficult position. She _never lost her cheerfulness_. ”I am a mortal enemy,” she said, ”to anything but a cheerful countenance and a merry heart, which Solomon tells us, does good like a medicine.” So in those dark days, when the tide of abuse and calumny raged around her beloved husband, she was more than ever the lamp that lighted and the fire that warmed him.

Whatever was said of him--and one fancies that ”hyena” and ”crocodile”

were mild epithets compared with those showered on the brave old statesman,--no one had anything but praise for Mrs. Adams. On January 1st, 1801, was held the first New Year's reception at the White House.

She received the guests with her own calm grace and dignity. No one would have guessed that the house was half finished, the princ.i.p.al stairs still lacking, her china stolen and her husband defeated; she was mistress, not only of the White House, but of the situation.

The closing days of the winter must have been painful to both Mr. and Mrs. Adams. They longed for the end, for the permanent return to ”calm, happy Braintree,” and before March came, Mrs. Adams was already there, ready to receive her dearest friend. One of Mr. Adams' last acts was the appointment of John Marshall as chief-justice of the supreme court; for this alone, he would deserve the lasting grat.i.tude of the American people. He could not meet Jefferson, whom he had once loved, with whom he had toiled, suffered, triumphed, by whom he was now defeated. On March 3rd, 1801, he labored far into the night, signing commissions, arranging papers in his own methodical way, closing, as it were, his accounts with a nation which he could not but think ungrateful. Early on the morning of the 4th, while the city was still wrapped in slumber, he entered his carriage and left Was.h.i.+ngton forever.

CHAPTER XII

AFTERNOON AND EVENING

IT was not in the little ”hut” of former days that Portia awaited her dearest friend. A statelier dwelling was theirs henceforth, the house built by Leonard Va.s.sall, a West India planter. It stood, and still stands, in its ample grounds, under its branching elms. The original building has received many additions, but it is the same house to which John Adams came on that spring day of 1801; the home of his later life, and of three generations of his descendants.

John Adams was now seventy-six years old, still in the fullness of vigorous manhood. I seem to see him entering that door, a defeated and disappointed man, yet holding his head as high, and looking forward with as clear and steadfast a gaze as if he were come home in triumph. He might be angry, he might be hurt; but no injury could bow the head, or bend the broad shoulders, of him who had once been acclaimed as the Atlas of Independence. Thus seeing him, I cannot but recall the summing up of his character by another strong man, Theodore Parker, the preacher.

”The judgment of posterity will be, that he was a brave man, deep-sighted, conscientious, patriotic, and possessed of Integrity which nothing ever shook, but which stood firm as the granite of his Quincy Hills. While American Inst.i.tutions continue, the People will honor _brave, honest old John Adams_, who never failed his country in her hour of need, and who, in his life of more than ninety years, though both pa.s.sionate and ambitious, wronged no man nor any woman.

”And all the people shall say Amen!”

In this peaceful and pleasant home, Mr. and Mrs. Adams were to pa.s.s the rest of their days. They wasted no time in repining; they were thankful to be at home, eager to enjoy the fruits of leisure and the quiet mind.

By early May, Mrs. Adams was setting out raspberry bushes and strawberry vines, and working daily in her dairy. She sends word to her daughter that she might see her at five o'clock in the morning, skimming her milk.

She was not the only busy one. ”You will find your father,” she writes to her son Thomas, ”in his fields, attending to his hay-makers... .

The crops of hay have been abundant; upon this spot, where eight years ago we cut scarcely six tons, we now have thirty.”

Mr. Josiah Quincy, in his ”Figures of the Past,” gives us delightful glimpses of Mr. and Mrs. Adams. He was a child of five when he used to gaze in wonder at the second President in Quincy meeting-house.

”The President's pew was conspicuous in the reconstructed edifice, and there the old man was to be seen at every service. An air of respectful deference to John Adams seemed to pervade the building. The ministers brought their best sermons when they came to exchange, and had a certain consciousness in their manner, as if officiating before royalty. The medley of stringed and wind instruments in the gallery--a survival of the sacred trumpets and shawms mentioned by King David--seemed to the imagination of a child to be making discord together in honor of the venerable chief who was the centre of interest.”

As Josiah Quincy recalls his childhood, so the old President loved to recall his own. ”I shall never forget,” he would say, ”the rows of venerable heads ranged along those front benches which, as a young fellow, I used to gaze upon. They were as old and gray as mine is now.”

When he was six, Josiah Quincy was put to school to the Reverend Peter Whitney, and, while there, was often asked to dine at the Adams house of a Sunday. ”This was at first,” he says, ”somewhat of an ordeal for a boy; but the genuine kindness of the President, who had not the smallest chip of an iceberg in his composition, soon made me perfectly at ease in his society.” With Mrs. Adams, he found ”a shade more formality”; but this wore off, and he became much attached to her. ”She always dressed handsomely, and her rich silks and laces seemed appropriate to a lady of her dignified position in the town.” He adds:

”I well remember the modest dinner at the President's, to which I brought a school-boy's appet.i.te. The pudding, generally composed of boiled cornmeal, always const.i.tuted the first course. This was the custom of the time,--it being thought desirable to take the edge off one's hunger before reaching the joint. Indeed, it was considered wise to stimulate the young to fill themselves with pudding, by the a.s.surance that the boy who managed to eat the most of it should be helped most abundantly to the meat, which was to follow. It need not be said that neither the winner nor his compet.i.tors found much room for meat at the close of their contest; and so the domestic economy of the arrangement was very apparent. Miss Smith, a niece of Mrs. Adams, was an inmate of the President's family, and one of these ladies always carved. Mr. Adams made his contribution to the service of the table in the form of that good-humoured, easy banter, which makes a dinner of herbs more digestible than is a stalled ox without it. At a late period of our acquaintance, I find preserved in my journals frequent though too meagre reports of his conversation. But of the time of which I am writing there is not a word discoverable. I can distinctly picture to myself a certain iron spoon which the old gentleman once fished up from the depths of a pudding in which it had been unwittingly cooked; but of the pleasant things he said in those easy dinner-talks no trace remains.”