VOYAGE.ARRIVAL AT ST. PETERSBURG.PRESENTATION TO THE EMPEROR.
RESIDENCE AT THE IMPERIAL COURT.DIPLOMATIC INTERVIEWS.PRIVATE
STUDIES.APPOINTED ONE OF THE COMMISSIONERS TO TREAT FOR PEACE
WITH GREAT BRITAIN.LEAVES RUSSIA.
After resigning his professorship
at Harvard University, Mr. Adams embarked from Boston,
with Mrs. Adams and his youngest son, on the 5th of
August, 1809, in a merchant ship, bound to St. Petersburg.
During a boisterous and tedious voyage his classical
and diplomatic studies were pursued with characteristic
assiduity. The English were then at war with
Denmark; and, as they entered the Baltic, a British
cruiser sent an officer to examine their papers.
The same day they were boarded by a Danish officer,
who ordered the ship to Christiansand. The captain
thought it prudent to refuse, and to seek shelter from
an equinoctial gale in the harbor of Flecknoe.
The papers of the ship and Mr. Adams’ commission
were examined, and he afterwards went up to Christiansand,
where he found thirty-eight American vessels, which
had been brought in by privateers between the months
of May and August, and were detained for adjudication.
Sixteen had been condemned, and had appealed to the
higher tribunals of the country. The Americans
thus detained presented a memorial to Mr. Adams, to
be forwarded to the President of the United States.
The sight of so many of his countrymen in distress
was extremely painful, and he determined to make an
effort for their relief, without waiting for express
authority from his government.
On resuming their voyage, their course
was again impeded by a British squadron. An officer
was sent on board by Captain Dundas, of the Stately,
a sixty-four gun ship, to examine their papers.
He compared the personal appearance of each of the
seamen with his protection, threatening to take a
native of Charlestown because his person did not correspond
with the description, and finally ordered the ship
to return through the Cattegat.
Mr. Adams immediately went on board
the Stately, showed his commission, and remonstrated
with Captain Dundas, who referred him to Admiral Bertie,
the commander of the squadron, who was in his stateroom
on the quarter-deck. After a protracted opposition,
the admiral acknowledged the usage of nations, and,
as an ambassador, permitted him to pursue his voyage
by the usual course through the sound. From these
and similar difficulties, Mr. Adams did not land at
St. Petersburg until the 23d of October.
The Chancellor of the empire, Count
Romanzoff, received Mr. Adams in courtly state, and
requested a copy of his credential letter, with an
assurance of the pleasure his appointment had given
him personally. His presentation was postponed,
from the temporary indisposition of the emperor; but
he was immediately invited, by Count Romanzoff, to
a diplomatic dinner, in a style of the highest splendor.
Among the company was the French ambassador, M. de
Caulaincourt, Duke de Vicence, the foreign ministers
then at the Russian Court, and many of the nobility.
In the mansion of the Chancellor Mr. Adams had dined
in 1781, as secretary of Mr. Dana, in the same splendid
style, with the Marquis de Verac, at that time French
minister at the Russian Court. His mind was more
impressed with the recollection of the magnificence
he had then witnessed on the same spot, and with reflections
on the mutability of human fortune, than with the
gorgeous scene around him.
The Emperor Alexander received Mr.
Adams alone, in his cabinet, and expressed his pleasure
at seeing him at St. Petersburg. Mr. Adams, on
presenting his credentials, said that the President
of the United States had desired him to express the
hope that his mission would be considered as a proof
of respect for the person and character of his majesty,
as an acknowledgment of the many testimonies of good-will
he had already given to the United States, and of
a desire to strengthen commercial relations between
them and his provinces. The emperor replied,
that, in everything depending on him, he should be
happy to contribute to the increase of their friendly
relations; that it was his wish to establish a just
system of maritime rights, and that he should adhere
invariably to those he had declared. He then entered
into a confidential exposition of the obstacles then
existing to a general pacification, and of the policy
of the different European powers, and said that he
considered the system of the United States towards
them as wise and just. Mr. Adams replied, that
the United States, being a great commercial and pacific
nation, were deeply interested in a system which would
give security to commerce in time of war. It
was hoped this great blessing to humanity would be
accomplished by his imperial majesty himself; and that
the United States, by all means consistent with their
peace, and their separation from the political system
of Europe, would contribute to the support of the
liberal principles to which his majesty had expressed
so strong and just an attachment. The emperor
replied, that between Russia and the United States
there could be no interference of interests, no cause
for dissension; but that, by means of commerce, the
two states might be greatly useful to each other;
and his desire was to give the greatest extension
and facility to these means of mutual interest.
Passing to other topics, he made many inquiries relative
to the cities of the United States.
The empress and the empress mother
each gave Mr. Adams a private audience; and, after
Mrs. Adams had also been presented to the imperial
family, they were invited to a succession of splendid
entertainments. “The formalities of these
court presentations,” Mr. Adams remarked, “are
so trifling and insignificant in themselves, and so
important in the eyes of princes and courtiers, that
they are much more embarrassing to an American than
business of greater importance. It is not safe
or prudent to despise them, nor practicable for a
person of rational understanding to value them.”
As the balls and parties given by
the emperor, the foreign ministers, and the nobility,
did not usually terminate until four o’clock
in the morning, they so essentially interfered with
the studies and official engagements of Mr. Adams,
that he determined, as far as his station permitted,
to relinquish attending them.
In December he requested the Chancellor
to solicit the emperor to interpose his good offices
with the Danish government for the restoration of
American property sequestrated in the ports of Holstein.
Count Romanzoff, in reply, stated that the emperor
took great pleasure in complying with that request,
and was gratified by this opportunity to show his
friendly disposition towards the United States, and
immediately ordered the Chancellor to represent to
the Danish government the wish of the emperor that
the American property might be examined and restored
as soon as possible. The Danish government acceded
at once to the emperor’s desire; and the effect
of his interposition was gratefully acknowledged by
the Americans whose property was liberated.
The residence of Mr. Adams in Russia
was during an eventful period. The Emperor Alexander
was at first endeavoring to avoid a collision with
Bonaparte, by yielding to his policy; and afterwards,
on his invasion, was engaged in driving him out of
Russia, bereft of his army and continental influence.
During these years the release or relief of American
vessels and seamen from the effects of the French emperor’s
Berlin and Milan decrees, and from other seizures and
séquestrations, were the chief objects to which
Mr. Adams directed his attention.
His subsequent attempts to establish
permanent commercial relations between the United
States and Russia were favorably received by that
government. The chancellor of the empire, Count
Romanzoff, acknowledged the importance of a treaty
between Russia and the United States, and intimated
that the only obstacle was the convulsed state of
opinion at that period throughout the commercial world,
which was such that “it hardly seemed possible
to agree to anything which had common sense in it.”
Count Romanzoff conducted towards Mr. Adams not only
with official respect, but with cordiality. On
one occasion he transmitted to him by his private
secretary a work relative to an armed neutrality,
which was preparing under his auspices for publication,
requesting the American minister to make such observations
upon it as he thought proper.
The courteous manners of the Emperor
Alexander, his apparent desire to conciliate the United
States, and the personal intercourse to which he admitted
its representative, were frequently acknowledged by
Mr. Adams. In the midst of the splendor of the
Russian Court, and the magnificent entertainments
of its ministers and of resident plenipotentiaries,
some of whom expended fifty thousand roubles a year,
and the ambassador from the French emperor over four
hundred thousand, he maintained the simplicity of
style suited at once to his salary and to the character
of the country he represented. Loans to an indefinite
amount were proffered to him by mercantile houses.
These he uniformly declined, though under circumstances
of great temptation to accept them. “The
opportunities,” he wrote, “of thus anticipating
my regular income, it is difficult to resist.
But I am determined to do it. The whole of my
life has been one continued experience of the difficulty
of a man’s adhering to the principle of living
within his income; the first and most important principle
of private economy. In this country beyond all
others, and in my situation more than any other, the
temptations to expense amount almost to compulsion.
I have withstood them hitherto, and hope for firmness
of character to withstand them in future.”
In connection with this topic, the
following anecdote was related by Mr. Adams:
“As I was walking, this morning (in May, 1811),
I was met by the emperor, who was also walking.
As he approached he said, ‘Monsieur Adams, il
y a cent ans que je ne vous
aï vu,’ and took me cordially by the hand.
After some common observations, he asked me whether
I intended to take a house in the country this summer.
I said ’No; that I had for some time that intention,
but I had given it up,’’And
why?’ said he. I was hesitating upon an
answer, when he relieved me from my embarrassment
by saying, ’Peut-être sont-ce
des considerations de finance.’ As
he said it in perfect good humor, and with a smile,
I replied, in the same manner, ’Mais, Sire,
elles y sont pour une bonne partie.’’Fort
bien,’ said he, ’vous avez
raison. Il faut toujours
proportionner la dépense a la recette;’
a maxim,” remarks Mr. Adams, “worthy of
an emperor, though few emperors practise upon it.”
The customs, manners, and habits,
of the nobility and the people; their public institutions,
edifices, monuments, and collections in the fine arts;
the overweening influence of the clergy, their power
and political subserviency; the character of the foreign
ministers, and the policy of the courts they represented,
were carefully observed and noted down for future
thought and illustration.
Nor were his researches restricted
to subjects of diplomatic duty, or to objects immediately
connected with his foreign relations. He studied
the language and history of Russia, the course and
usages of its trade, especially in relation to China,
and made laborious inquiries into the proportions
of Russian, English, and French weights, measures,
and coins. In obtaining a minute accuracy in
these proportions, he employed many hours; on which
he observed, “I fear I shall never attain them,
and the usefulness of which is at least problematical;
but ’Trahit sua quemque ipsa voluntas;’
my studies generally command meI seldom
control them.”
The progress of the seasons in Russia,
the rising and the setting of the sun, were daily
noted, as also the variation of the climate, by the
thermometer. His thirst for knowledge, and his
desire of investigating causes and effects, were never
satiated.
Astronomy was with him a subject of
early and intense interest. He studied the works
of Schubert, Lalande, Biot, and Lacroix, and constantly
observed the heavens, and noticed their phenomena,
according to the calendar. By Langlet’s
and Dufresnoy’s tables he attempted to ascertain
with precision the Arabian and Turkish computations
of time, comparing them with those of Christian nations.
From astronomy and chronology he was drawn into the
study of mathematics, and the logarithms in the tables
of Collet.
Neither were the works of the ancient
philosophers and orators omitted in the sphere of
his studies. The works of Plato, the orations
of Demosthenes, Isocrates, AEschines, and Cicero,
were not only read, but made the subject of critical
analysis, comparison, and reflection.
Religion was also in his mind a predominating
element. A practice, which he prescribed to himself,
and never omitted, of reading daily five chapters
in the Bible, familiarized his mind with its pages.
In connection with these studies he read habitually
the works of Butler, Bossuet, Tillotson, Massillon,
Atterbury, and Watts. With such an ardor for
knowledge, and universality in its pursuit, it is not
surprising that he should say, as on one occasion
he did, “I feel nothing like the tediousness
of time. I suffer nothing like ennui.
Time is too short for me, rather than too long.
If the day was forty-eight hours, instead of twenty-four,
I could employ them all, if I had but eyes and hands
to read and write.”
In 1810, citizens of the United States,
who had formed a settlement on the north-west coast
of North America, were embarrassed in their intercourse
with China, by the Chinese mistaking American for Russian
vessels. In a conversation with Mr. Adams on the
means of avoiding this difficulty, Count Romanzoff
described the obstacles the Russians had experienced
in their commerce with China. He stated that in
the reign of Catharine II. the Emperor of China complained
of a governor of a province bordering on Russia, as
“a bad man;” in consequence of which,
the empress caused him to be removed. This concession
did not satisfy the Chinese emperor, who declared
the punishment insufficient, and demanded that “the
offender should be impaled alive by way of atonement.”
This demand so shocked Catharine that she issued an
edict prohibiting her subjects from all commercial
relations with China. This edict continued in
force until the Chinese themselves sought for a renewal
of their former intercourse, when the empress yielded
her resentment to policy.
The loss of time from the civilities
and visits of his numerous diplomatic associates was
annoying to Mr. Adams. “I have been engaged,”
he wrote, “the whole forenoon; and though I rise
at six o’clock, I am sometimes unable to find
time to write only part of a private letter in the
course of the day. These visits take up so much
of my time, that I sometimes think of taking a resolution
not to receive them; but, on the other hand, so much
information important to be possessed, and particularly
relative to current political events, is to be collected
from them, that they are rather to be encouraged than
discountenanced.”
“The French ambassador,”
writes Mr. Adams, “assured me that he hoped
the difference between his country and mine would soon
be settled, and requested me to inform my government
that it was the desire of the Emperor of France, and
of his ministers, to come to the best terms with the
United States; that they knew our interests were the
same, but he was perfectly persuaded that, if any
other person but Gen. Armstrong was there, our business
might be settled entirely to our satisfaction.
I told him that, as I was as desirous that we should
come to a good understanding, I regretted very much
that anything personal to General Armstrong should
be considered by his government as offensive; that
I was sure the government of the United States would
regret it also, and would wish, on learning it, to
be informed what were the occasions of displeasure
which he had given. ’C’est d’abord
un très galant homme,’ said
the ambassador; ’but he never shows himself,
and upon every little occasion, when by a verbal explanation
with the minister General Armstrong might obtain anything,
he writes peevish notes.’ This appears to
me,” observes Mr. Adams, “an intriguing
manoeuvre, of which the minister thinks I might be
made the dupe.”
On one occasion, Count Romanzoff requested
an interview with Mr. Adams, and, among other inquiries,
asked what could be done to restore freedom and security
to commerce. He replied, that, “setting
aside all official character and responsibility, and
speaking as an individual upon public affairs,”
as Count Romanzoff had requested, he thought the best
course towards peace was for his excellency to convince
the French government that the continental system,
as they called it, and as they managed it, was promoting
to the utmost extent the views of England, and, instead
of impairing her commerce, was securing to her that
of the whole world, and was pouring into her lap the
means of continuing the war just as long as her ministers
should consider it expedient. He could hardly
conceive that the Emperor Napoleon was so blind as
not to have made that discovery already. Three
years’ experience, with the effects of it becoming
every day more flagrant, had made the inference too
clear and unquestionable. The Emperor Napoleon,
with all his power, could neither control the elements
nor the passions of mankind. He had found his
own brother could not or would not carry his system
into execution, and had finally cast at his feet the
crown he had given him, rather than continue to be
his instrument any longer. Count Romanzoff gravely
questioned the statement of Mr. Adams respecting the
commercial prosperity of England, but admitted his
views in general to be correct, saying that, as long
as a system was agreed upon, he thought exceptions
from it ought not to be allowed. Mr. Adams then
asked him how that was possible, when the Emperor
Napoleon himself was the first to make such exceptions,
and to give licenses for a direct trade with England?
Count Romanzoff replied, that he thought all such licenses
wrong, and he believed that there were not so many
of them as was pretended. There was indeed one
case of a vessel coming to St. Petersburg both with
an English license and a license from the Emperor Napoleon.
He was of opinion that she ought to be confiscated
for having the English license. But the French
commercial and diplomatic agents were very desirous
that she might go free, on account of her French license;
and perhaps the Emperor, in consideration of his ally,
might so determine. Romanzoff complained bitterly
that all the ancient established principles, both
of commercial and political rectitude, had, in a manner,
vanished from the world; and observed that, with all
her faults, England had the advantage over her neighbors,
of having hitherto most successfully resisted all
the innovations upon ancient principles and establishments.
For his own part, since he had been at the head of
affairs, he could sincerely protest one wish had been
at the bottom of all his policy, and the aim of all
his labors,and that was universal peace.
In 1811 Mr. Adams received from the
Secretary of State a commission of an Associate Justice
of the Supreme Court of the United States; an appointment
which he immediately declined.
In 1812 the emperor directed Count
Romanzoff to inquire whether, if he should offer his
mediation to effect a pacification between the United
States and Great Britain, Mr. Adams was aware of any
objection on the part of his government. He replied,
that, speaking only from a general knowledge of its
sentiments, the proposal of the emperor would be considered
a new evidence of his regard and friendship for the
United States, whatever determination might be formed.
Under this assurance, the offer was made, transmitted,
and immediately accepted. In July, 1813, Mr.
Gallatin and Mr. Bayard, being associated with Mr.
Adams on this mission, arrived at St. Petersburg,
bringing credentials, for the purpose of commencing
a negotiation, under the mediation of the emperor.
On communicating these credentials
to Count Romanzoff, Mr. Adams informed him that he
had received instructions from the American government
to remain at St. Petersburg under the commission he
had heretofore held; and that he had been mistaken
in supposing that his colleagues had other destination,
independent of this mission. His conjecture had
been founded on the doubt whether the President would
have appointed this mission solely upon the supposition
that the mediation would be accepted by the British
government; but he was now instructed that the President,
considering the acceptance of the British government
as probable, though aware that if they should reject
it this measure might wear the appearance of precipitation,
thought it more advisable to incur that risk than the
danger of prolonging unnecessarily the war for six
or nine months, as might happen if the British should
immediately have accepted the mediation, and he should
have delayed this step until he was informed of it.
It was with the President a great object to manifest,
not only a cheerful acceptance on the part of the
United States, but in a signal manner his sentiments
of consideration and respect for the emperor, and to
do honor to the motives on which he offered his mediation.
After hearing these statements of Mr. Adams, the emperor
directed Count Romanzoff to express his particular
gratification with the honorable notice the American
government had taken of his offer to effect a pacification
between Great Britain and the United States.
In September Lord Cathcart delivered
to the emperor a memoir from the British government,
stating at length their reasons for declining any
mediation in their contest with the United States.
But, although the British government did not choose
that a third power should interfere in this controversy,
it had offered to treat directly with the American
envoys at Gottenburg, or in London.
This proposition having been accepted
by the United States, Mr. Adams was associated with
Bayard, Clay, and Russell, in the negotiation.
After taking leave of the empress and Count Romanzoff,the
emperor being then before Paris with the allied armies,he
quitted St. Petersburg on the 28th of April, 1814.
His family remained in that city, and he travelled
alone to Revel. There he received the news of
the taking of Paris, and the abdication of Napoleon.
From thence he embarked for Stockholm.