The thrust of John Taylor’s long-winded and much-delayed critique of Adams’s Defence was to argue that, apart from specific disagreements about the power of the presidency and the role of the Senate, Adams’s entire way of thinking about politics was hopelessly out of date and, in the end, fundamentally un-American. Taylor apologized for the twenty-year delay in getting his own thoughts into print, claiming that he had waited “until age had abated temporal interests and diminished youthful prejudices.” He acknowledged that, given his own and Adams’s advancing years, his published thoughts “are almost letters from the dead.” Although the tone of Taylor’s remarks was not personal—he was properly respectful toward one of the nation’s patriarchs and claimed to have “a high opinion of his virtue and talents”—the message of Taylor’s book was devastating. If Taylor was right, Adams was an intellectual anachronism who had missed the political significance and meaning of the American Revolution.18
For his part, Adams let it be known that he was not going to defer gracefully or apologetically, nor had age diminished his vaunted capacity to defend himself. “You must allow me twenty years to answer a book that cost you twenty years of meditation to compose,” he warned Taylor. One could hear the rounds clicking into Adams’s chambers and the salvo being aimed toward Caroline County. He expressed the hope that Taylor’s work would not burden him with “the absurd criticism, the stupid observations, the jesuitical subtleties, the stupid lies that have been printed concerning my writings, in this my dear, native country, for five and twenty years….” If so, Taylor should expect no quarter from the self-professed “Hermit of Quincy.”19
The core of Taylor’s critique was to charge that Adams was the prisoner of a classical way of thinking about politics that was no longer appropriate for post-revolutionary America. What Taylor called “the numerical analysis” was the classical assumption that all political arrangements were variations on the same eternal theme: namely, the proper balancing of the interests of the one, the few, and the many. In the Defence, this ancient formula had caused Adams to adopt the old classical categories of monarchy, aristocracy, and democracy. Because Adams’s mind remained trapped “within the magick circle of the numerical analysis,” he had failed to recognize that the American Revolution had changed everything. “Monarchy, aristocracy and democracy” were not timeless truths, but “rude, and almost savage political fabricks.” Constructing a new constitution for America with these elements was “like…erecting a palace with materials drawn from Indian cabins.” Adams might be excused for thinking in the old way and offering readers “a cloud of quotations…collected from the deepest tints of ancient obscurity.” After all, he had been abroad in France and England for most of the 1780s, when American political thinking “had advanced more rapidly…than the philosophy and policy comprising his references had in twenty centuries.” But, excuses aside, Adams continued to live and think within a classical paradigm that had been blown to pieces by the democratic and egalitarian implications of the very revolution he had done so much to foster.20
Although it is doubtful that Adams fully digested what Taylor was saying, from a historical perspective Taylor’s critique was important because it laid bare for the first time the underlying reasons for Adams’s alienation from the American political mainstream. The very language and categories of analysis Adams relied upon had become strange and nearly treasonable in American political culture. To talk calmly of monarchy and aristocracy as elemental ingredients in the social equation was to challenge implicitly the inherently democratic character of the new American government. To suggest by such language that there were enduring social divisions, orders, factions, or classes—Adams used all these terms—was to question the existence of a rough version of social equality in America and, even worse, to imply that the goal of equality was a pipedream.
For Adams, the balancing of power within the Constitution between the branches of government was a man-made response to the inherent divisions within society. But no such divisions existed within America, Taylor argued, and whatever inequalities or differences of wealth or status did remain were vestiges of the old European order, merely temporary and evanescent clusters of interest so numerous and so ephemeral that they effectively checked one another. In short, Taylor was telling Adams that the most important checks and balances, which in Adams’s classical scheme were performed by a government designed to control the boistrous energies of society, in America were naturally and efficiently performed by the dynamics of society itself. All of Adams’s endless prattling about the dangers of aristocracy only exposed how hopelessly trapped he remained in classical categories of analysis. Instead of being “natural and unavoidable,” aristocracies were in truth “artificial or factitious, and therefore avoidable.” A strong and active government was not necessary to constrain these pockets of power and privilege, because in America those that did exist disciplined themselves.21
Adams was ready with a response. “In fine, is it not humiliating,” Adams scolded Taylor, “to see a volume of six or seven hundred pages written by a gentleman of your rank, fortune, learning, genius and eloquence, in which my system, my sentiments…are totally misunderstood and misrepresented?” But as soon as Adams began training his verbal artillery on Caroline County, it became abundantly clear that he still did not fathom Taylor’s primary accusation. The charge that his entire way of thinking about politics was rooted in classical categories and an outdated vocabulary was translated in Adams’s mind to the charge that the art of shaping governments had not changed since the days of the Greeks and Romans. “I have said no such thing,” he retorted to Taylor. “I know the art of government has changed, and probably will change again.” Then, however, he added that “these arts are founded in certain principles of nature, which have never been known to change; and it is the duty of philosophers, legislators and artists to study these principles.” And the reiteration of these political principles quickly led Adams back to the one, the few, and the many, the abiding clash of monarchy, aristocracy, and democracy, the very categories Taylor identified as the problem. In response to Taylor’s charge that Adams had relegated the democratic element to an inferior status, when in fact it was the only element worthy of discussion in the American government, Adams denied the charge in a way that only confirmed its correctness: “That is not my doctrine, Mr. Taylor,” he wrote. “My opinion is, and always has been, that absolute power intoxicates alike despots, monarchs, aristocrats, and democrats, and jacobins, and sans culottes. I cannot say that democracy has been more pernicious, on the whole, than any of the others.”22
Ironically, it was precisely because Adams remained wedded to a classical conception of politics that he also remained immune to the seductive illusions that had established themselves as central assumptions in post-revolutionary American political culture. His most piercing insights derived from the fact that, in Taylor’s terms, he was an anachronism. Some of the crucial points of disagreement had revealed themselves in the exchange with Jefferson over the role of popular majorities, but the diplomacy demanded by that relationship prevented the kind of clear resolution possible with Taylor: “We make ourselves popular, Mr. Taylor, by telling our fellow citizens that we have made discoveries, conceived inventions and made improvements,” Adams observed with wry disdain for the presumption that America had somehow become an exception to the lessons of history. “We may boast that we are the chosen people; we may even thank God that we are not like other men; but, after all, it would be but flattery, and delusion, the self-deceit of the Pharisee.” If Taylor accused Adams of being irrelevant, Adams accused Taylor of being “an ideologian,” an Americanized version of those French dreamers whose rhapsodic romances led directly to Robespierre and then Napoleon.23
“That all men are born to equal rights is true,” Adams declared defiantly, rebuking Taylor for suggesting that he had ever thought otherwise. But to teach that “all men are born with equal powers and faculties, to equal influence in society
…is as gross a fraud…as ever was practised by monks, by Druids, by Brahmins, by priests of the immortal Lama, or by the self-styled philosophers of the French Revolution.” Taylor had also implied that Adams’s obsession with aristocracy masked an affection for European-styled titles and privileges in America. This too was ridiculous. “You seem to think aristocracy consists altogether in artificial titles, tinsel decorations of stars, garters, ribbons, golden eagles and golden fleeces, crosses and roses and lilies, exclusive privileges, hereditary descents, established by kings or by positive laws of society,” Adams lectured. But that was not the kind of aristocracy Americans needed to worry about and certainly not the kind of elite he had ever sanctioned.24
Taylor, like Jefferson and the French ideologues, seemed to believe that enduring social inequalities were created by governments and man-made laws. They were, Adams declared, not created at all. They were inherent:
I have seen, in the Hospital of Foundlings…at Paris, fifty babes in one room;—all under four days old; all in cradles alike; all nursed and attended alike; all dressed alike; all equally neat. I went from one end to the other of the whole row, and attentively observed all their countenances. And I never saw a greater variety, or more striking inequalities…. They were all born to equal rights, but to very different fortunes; to very different success and influence in life.25
If America really was, as Taylor seemed to believe, the land of social equality, then the gods had arbitrarily conspired to suspend the laws of biology, the principles of history, and even the much-praised “power of the people.” For if it was true, as Taylor would surely concur, that “the supreme…power is placed by God and nature in the people, and they can never divest themselves of it,” then it was equally true that all popular movements in recorded history demonstrated a need “to distinguish the one and the few from their own average and level.” The more democratic the society, the stronger the desire to create social gradations. “You may depend upon it,” wrote Adams, anticipating Alexis de Tocqueville’s analysis of American democratic culture, “the people themselves, by their own observation and experience and feelings…made these distinctions before kingcraft, priestcraft, or noblecraft had anything to do with them.” After the enslaved blacks of Santo Domingo had overthrown their white masters, Adams noted, they immediately came under the power of despots of their own color. “Bananas and water they still enjoy,” he observed, “and a whole regiment would follow a leader who should hold a saltfish to their noses.”26
Finally, Adams chose to drive home his point about the illusory character of Taylor’s egalitarian ideology with the kind of personal attack he would never have made on Jefferson. How could it be, he asked rhetorically, that the loudest criticism of his writings on aristocracy should come from a slaveholder with vast estates and vast wealth, much of it inherited from his wife’s side of the family? Taylor was a distinguished Virginian, Adams noted wryly, who had then “married well, obtaining both an amiable consort, and a handsome fortune.” He was, in short, a perfect example of the kind of aristocrat Adams was talking about. “If you complain that this is personal,” Adams explained, “I confess it, and intend it should be personal, that it might be more striking to you.” If Taylor was offended by the analysis, Adams promised to “give you full leave to ask me any questions relative to myself, my ancestors, my posterity, my natural or political friends.” Although he did not say it outright, Adams clearly insinuated that celebrations of American social equality were hardly credible when they came from privileged leaders of the Virginia aristocracy whose status depended on inherited estates and a labor force of enslaved blacks.27
But then, Adams’s observations on the inevitability of social inequality created problems for his reputation that went beyond credibility. Adams kept insisting that he was not celebrating the enduring social divisions within America at all; he was only calling attention to their existence, refusing to believe the lovely lie that the American environment acted as a kind of solvent that dissolved away all social distinctions and class differences. Nor did he wish to stigmatize Virginia’s planter class. If one were to study the history of any New England town, he acknowledged, one would almost always discover that two or three families owned most of the good land and dominated the town government long before and again after the American Revolution. Whether one liked this state of affairs was beside the point. The real point was to recognize that social inequality and elite power were as much a part of the social fabric of America as Europe. Pretending that they did not exist was utter delusion. Believing that they could be eliminated altogether was utopian nonsense. “All that men can do,” he apprised Taylor, was to design governments that “modify, organize and arrange the powers of human society,” striving to achieve a political balance that would regulate social divisions “in the best manner to protect, secure, and cherish the…natural rights of mankind.” It served no purpose other than obfuscation to pretend that the endlessly challenging task of governing consisted solely in uttering magic words like “democracy.” As Adams was fond of explaining, democracy was like “a young rake who thinks himself handsome and well made…. Democracy is Lovelace, and the people are Clarissa.”28
If Adams was correct in accusing Taylor and other proponents of democracy of using the magic word in a misleading way, he himself had a maddening tendency to expand and contract his definition of aristocracy without warning, sometimes referring to the oligarchic segment of the government, sometimes referring to elite members of society, sometimes referring to any constellation of political or economic power, sometimes even referring to beautiful and articulate women at a dinner party. Since the problem of aristocracy was his favorite political obsession, he seemed to see it wherever he looked: “Every government is an aristocracy in fact,” he wrote Rush. “The despotism of Genghis Kahn was an aristocracy. The government of the most popular French convention…was an aristocracy. The most democratical canton in Switzerland was an aristocracy. The most leveling town meeting in New England is an aristocracy.” If six women were to gather together, he explained to Taylor, and four of them were beautiful and talented while the other two were ugly and ill-tempered, it was extremely likely that the former would succeed at marriage, improve their station, and therefore illustrate the principle of aristocracy. In the political realm, it was even easier to identify an aristocrat: “I will tell you in a few words what I mean by an aristocrat,” he told Taylor. “By an aristocrat, I mean every man who can command or influence TWO VOTES; ONE BESIDES HIS OWN.” Nor did it make any difference how the influence was achieved. It could be “by his virtues, his talents, his learning, his loquacity, his taciturnity, his frankness, his reserve”—Adams was in mid-flight now, just warming up—it could also be “his face, figure, eloquence, air, attitude, movements, wealth, birth, art, address, intrigue, good fellowship”—now the conclusion of the litany would drive home the darker side of aristocratic power—it could even be “drunkenness debauchery, fraud, perjury, violence, treachery, pyrrhonism, deism or atheism, for by every one of these instruments have votes been obtained or will be obtained.” Taylor could hardly be faulted for wondering how such a sprawling, all-inclusive version of aristocracy retained any coherent meaning at all.29
On the other hand, Adams could hardly be faulted for the elusiveness of his American aristocracy, since it now seems clear that it was a concept that he employed in response to the equally protean, many-faceted, and elusive concept of American democracy. Aristocracy had become Adams’s antidote for exuberant liberal expectations in several forms: the notion that popular majorities invariably elected the best representatives; the notion that legislative assemblies represented the considered will of the people; the notion that equality of opportunity would usually lead to at least a semblance of social equality; the notion that economic competition in the marketplace would generate a roughly equitable distribution of goods; the notion, first formulated by Madison in Federalist 10, that the vastness of the American continent assured
the interaction of so many factions and interest groups that no monopoly of economic and political power was likely to develop or to require government supervision. Each of Adams’s different explications of aristocracy was a counter to these liberal assumptions—Adams thought them presumptions. If he often shifted his ground or the angle of his argument about the role of aristocracy, it was because his target—the emergent liberal values of nineteenth-century America—was devilishly difficult to pin down. It was hard to be precise when questioning a set of convictions whose credibility derived in part from being so self-evident as to require no defense.
If Adams’s aristocracy was a many-faceted creature that kept changing its character in order to counter the protean illusions about democracy, the nub of his argument was more straightforward; namely, that in all societies for which there was any kind of historical record, political power and wealth tended to go hand in hand; and a few people invariably accumulated more wealth and power than the others. The central problem of American politics was to make political use of the aristocracy while still controlling its influence, to design governments and then use government’s authority to assure that the energies of the elite flowed toward public ends. One way to assure that this did not happen, indeed one way to assure domination by a plutocracy or oligarchy, was to pretend that aristocracy had become extinct in America.
Fortunately, specific manifestations of aristocracy kept popping up on the national landscape, offering Adams the opportunity to define his “aristocratic principle” in practical terms. The Essex Junto was one of his favorite examples. This was a collection of conservative leaders, the spiritual heirs to the Hamiltonian wing of the Federalist Party, which was based in Essex County, Massachusetts, and saw itself as the chief defender of New England mercantile values. During his presidency this was the powerful faction that had opposed his policies toward France and contributed to his defeat in 1800. Adams noted that these High Federalists “are possessed of so much Wealth and so great a Portion of the Talents of the Country” that they embodied “an exclusive and monopolizing Spirit.” On the other hand, many of these die-hard Federalists also possessed “so many Virtues, and good Principles, and are so nearly right…that I am convinced, without them, the People of America cannot preserve themselves from Anarchy,” a concession Adams offered despite his personal distaste for Fisher Ames, their titular leader, and his keen sense that “of all Men in the World, I have the least obligation to them.”30
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