John Quincy Adams was the most
existentialist of US presidents, and one of the worst. He viewed his life as the consequence of a
choice -- to politick in the public interest.
For more than a half century, he chronicled his choice in a journal that
exceeded 10,000 pages. “Any day in which
he did not create an entry in his diary seemed like a day lost to the passage
of time,” writes his best biographer, Fred Kaplan. “Like ‘that irresistible current which
hurries and dashes over the cataract of Niagara…so am I hurried down the stream
of time, and day after day turns over the precipice and is lost.’”
If anything, Adams
took the consequences of choice a bit seriously. “I believe,” he wrote, “that moral principle
should be the alpha and omega of all literary composition, poetry or prose,
scientific or literary, written or spoken, and emphatically of every discourse….Pen
should never be put to paper but for the discharge of some duty to God or
man.” Mickey Spillane might have
demurred.
Like any existentialist, Adams
sought to expand his own freedom by decoupling the shackles on others. In 1844, after a decade of struggle,
including two attempts to censure him in the House of Representatives, Adams destroyed the gag rule that enabled Southern
congressmen to avoid all debate over slavery and indeed to avoid the sight of
an abolitionist petition. And before the
Supreme Court in 1841, he successfully defended the Africans aboard the Amistad who had been kidnapped for
slavery and who killed one of their captors.
Polk gave us Texas ;
Adams , the Smithsonian. When an Englishman, James Smithson, bestowed half
a million dollars on the US for the pursuit of knowledge, Democratic
Congressmen proposed to invest the money in Arkansas bonds in order to win the
state’s favor in the 1840 presidential elections. Adams saw to
it that impartial trustees would instead manage the money for a public museum. Existentialist politicians are not myopic,
not even the Whigs. -- Plautus
References
Walter R. Borneman. Polk:
The man who transformed the presidency and America. Random House.
2008.
Fred Kaplan. John
Quincy Adams :
American visionary.
Harper. 2014.
John F. Kennedy. Profiles
in courage. Harper. 1956.
Perhaps the worst history ever to win the Pulitzer.
Robert V. Remini. John
Quincy Adams . Times Books. 2002. Concise.
Harlow Giles Unger. John
Quincy Adams . De Capo Press. 2012.
A lively narrative.
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