登陆注册
26260700000008

第8章 CHAPTER I QUINCY (1838-1848)(6)

She stayed much in her own room with the Dutch tiles, looking out on her garden with the box walks, and seemed a fragile creature to a boy who sometimes brought her a note or a message, and took distinct pleasure in looking at her delicate face under what seemed to him very becoming caps. He liked her refined figure; her gentle voice and manner; her vague effect of not belonging there, but to Washington or to Europe, like her furniture, and writing-desk with little glass doors above and little eighteenth-century volumes in old binding, labelled "Peregrine Pickle" or "Tom Jones" or "Hannah More." Try as she might, the Madam could never be Bostonian, and it was her cross in life, but to the boy it was her charm. Even at that age, he felt drawn to it. The Madam's life had been in truth far from Boston. She was born in London in 1775, daughter of Joshua Johnson, an American merchant, brother of Governor Thomas Johnson of Maryland; and Catherine Nuth, of an English family in London. Driven from England by the Revolutionary War, Joshua Johnson took his family to Nantes, where they remained till the peace. The girl Louisa Catherine was nearly ten years old when brought back to London, and her sense of nationality must have been confused; but the influence of the Johnsons and the services of Joshua obtained for him from President Washington the appointment of Consul in London on the organization of the Government in 1790. In 1794 President Washington appointed John Quincy Adams Minister to The Hague. He was twenty-seven years old when he returned to London, and found the Consul's house a very agreeable haunt.

Louisa was then twenty.

At that time, and long afterwards, the Consul's house, far more than the Minister's, was the centre of contact for travelling Americans, either official or other. The Legation was a shifting point, between 1785 and 1815; but the Consulate, far down in the City, near the Tower, was convenient and inviting; so inviting that it proved fatal to young Adams. Louisa was charming, like a Romney portrait, but among her many charms that of being a New England woman was not one. The defect was serious. Her future mother-in-law, Abigail, a famous New England woman whose authority over her turbulent husband, the second President, was hardly so great as that which she exercised over her son, the sixth to be, was troubled by the fear that Louisa might not be made of stuff stern enough, or brought up in conditions severe enough, to suit a New England climate, or to make an efficient wife for her paragon son, and Abigail was right on that point, as on most others where sound judgment was involved; but sound judgment is sometimes a source of weakness rather than of force, and John Quincy already had reason to think that his mother held sound judgments on the subject of daughters-in-law which human nature, since the fall of Eve, made Adams helpless to realize. Being three thousand miles away from his mother, and equally far in love, he married Louisa in London, July 26, 1797, and took her to Berlin to be the head of the United States Legation. During three or four exciting years, the young bride lived in Berlin; whether she was happy or not, whether she was content or not, whether she was socially successful or not, her descendants did not surely know; but in any case she could by no chance have become educated there for a life in Quincy or Boston. In 1801 the overthrow of the Federalist Party drove her and her husband to America, and she became at last a member of the Quincy household, but by that time her children needed all her attention, and she remained there with occasional winters in Boston and Washington, till 1809. 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 Sèvres 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.

同类推荐
  • 正法念处经

    正法念处经

    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。
  • 佛说成具光明定意经

    佛说成具光明定意经

    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。
  • 律宗会元

    律宗会元

    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。
  • 问辨录

    问辨录

    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。
  • Cast Upon the Breakers

    Cast Upon the Breakers

    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
  • 重生之星女王

    重生之星女王

    万物女神为救众生轮回九世,第一世她是一名特工
  • 清姬婉

    清姬婉

    时光静好与君语,细水流年与君同,繁华落尽与君老。这一世的你爱的太过辛苦,若有来世换我来爱你。生不能同眠,愿死可同穴落花有意随流水,流水无心念落花,原来只是我的痴心错付罢了一曲情殇,一舞情殇,一世情殇一曲情心,一舞情心,一世倾心
  • 获取财富的智慧宝典(犹太人的货币战争)

    获取财富的智慧宝典(犹太人的货币战争)

    犹太人对金钱有独特的看法,对赚钱也有独到之处。他们认为,不管方式方法如何,只要是通过自己努力经营赚来的钱,就受之我愧。他们善于开动自己的脑筋,通过各种方式让钱生钱,有时甚至还会冒着巨大的商业风险,因为他们知道风险和利润是成正比的。另外,犹太人赚钱还会遵守严格的原则,他们坚守君子爱财,取之有道的信念,不该赚一钱一分也不取,因为他们知道拿了一分本不属于自己的钱,必定会用十分的代价来补偿。
  • 巅武道

    巅武道

    倾身站万死,泣血残魂生,武道巅峰帝,我命终可归。有一种人生来就是为了成就不凡,所以夺阴阳之造化,窥天地之运势,聚五行凝魂,转乾坤造魄三世轮回炼骨,九转涅槃塑体,上攻苍穹,下伐黄泉,以战止戈,以武悟道。
  • 柔弱娇妻,老公轻轻爱

    柔弱娇妻,老公轻轻爱

    他是m国权利最大,金钱最多,当然长的也最帅,不少女人的梦中情人,可惜是妻管严;她是一个孤儿,从小被人唾弃,直到那天的一次相遇,她失去了第一次,而他却幸灾乐祸,于是他开始了疯狂追妻之路……
  • 扬州乱(千种豆瓣高分原创作品·看小说)

    扬州乱(千种豆瓣高分原创作品·看小说)

    豆瓣阅读征文大赛入围作品所属组别:小说组南明弘光元年,清军南下,直迫扬州。守城监军高歧风之女高若凰,为重见心上人一面,历经艰险,迎来的却是无法预料的结局。传统武侠,以十日屠城前的扬州为背景。家国情仇,英雄儿女,俱往于尘埃之中。男,属马,山东人。避乱职场,藏身大学。
  • 末世神经病

    末世神经病

    一个神经病的末日经历。
  • 妃天下:拆了王府踢掉妾

    妃天下:拆了王府踢掉妾

    她神经大条且刁蛮霸道,一心拒嫁却被爹爹出卖,嫁进王府后才发现,她这个正牌王妃居然并不是想象中那么回事儿,特别是那个冰山脸王爷,为什么一直冷冰冰的,前辈子是块冰吧?
  • 洛阳正值芳菲节

    洛阳正值芳菲节

    “其美顾盼生辉,若朝霞初出,完美无瑕。我如那残云半卷,终不得圆满。”她说。如果心植根在一座城,那座城里又有谁搅乱了心湖?当离歌奏响,是选择身骑白马,逍遥于天际;还是披上红妆,拥一帘幽梦?时光会让想留的人留不下,让留下的人执意望着不该留下的地方···
  • 十皇传说之轮回

    十皇传说之轮回

    自天地初开,宇宙永远是人类所要追求的目标。它神秘而浩瀚,无数的种族诞生,在命运的长河之中挣扎,渴望得到问题的答案......