PDA

View Full Version : Adams: coming to terms with the dawning 20th century



Ron Price
08-31-2007, 12:19 AM
What I have done in my memoirs is not dissimilar to the autobiography of Henry Adams. Entitled The Education of Henry Adams it is much more a record of Adams's introspection than of his deeds. It is an extended meditation on the social, technological, political, and intellectual changes that occurred over Adams's lifetime. Adams concluded that his traditional education failed to help him come to terms with the rapid changes of his lifetime: hence his need for self-education. The organizing thread of the book is how the "proper" schooling and other aspects of his youth, was time wasted. His autobiography is a description of his search for self-education through experiences, friendships, and reading.

The Education of Henry Adams purports to be the autobiography of Henry Adams(1838-1918). It in fact records the author's struggle, in early old age, to come to terms with the dawning 20th century, so different from the world of his youth. It is also a sharp critique of 19th century educational theory and practice. In 1907, Adams began privately circulating copies of a limited edition of his work printed at his own expense. Commercial publication had to await its author's 1918 death, whereupon it won the 1919 Pulitzer Prize. I won't go into the comparisons and contrasts between my work and Adams. I leave that to interested readers. But I will say, before moving on, that in the same way that Henry Adams' s life story is rooted in the 19th century American political aristocracy that emerged from the American Revolution, my story is rooted in the international Bahá’í community over a period of four epochs(1944-2021), a community emerging from a spiritual, a global, revolution that had been initiated by two-prophetic figures, two-God-men in the nineteenth century.

The essence of this revolution was the search for the unifying agent, the unifying catalyst, that would help the planet survive the tempest of our times. The context for this seartch was an attachment to national, racial, cultural, class and political loyalties and an almost deafening withdrawal and apathy. The revolution of my time was out of human control; the process was giving birth to humanity, to a world community,a global society. My role was to help in the extension of the model of world fellowship that had emerged out of that spiritual revolution of the century preceding my birth, a model that had been born in Iran and in North Adams' book became an important and influential one in literary non-fiction in the next hundred years. It ranked first on the Modern Library's 1998 list of 100 best non-fiction books. It spread throughout America and the world in the years after the unveiling of the Tablets of the Divine Plan in 1919 and it is a useful comparison piece for this autobiographical work.
________________
Enough for now---in this my first post on henry Adams.;)

Ron Price
01-12-2008, 12:03 AM
Another personal and Baha'i perspective on Henry Adams--in this case his letters--some 5 months after my first post here.-Ron Price, Tasmania:)

TAKING ON IMMORTALITY

When One has given up One’s life
The parting with the rest
Feels easy, as when Day lets go
Entirely the West
-Emily Dickinson, number 853.

How many tears have fallen here,
how many little sighs.
There’s more to come of tragedy
and romance too beneath the skies.
They’re at the heart of human hearts,
as they wither and in time die.
They are the seed of solemn consciousness
without which joy would never come or fly.

Thank God for that joy; it rains
on some and washes sighs away.
For others sorrow dries them out.
Romance and tragedy lay their hands
on them and make them ready to depart:
they’ve died and can do no more,
but take on immortality.*


*I was thinking of Shoghi Effendi here. Ruhiyyih Rabbani, who knew the Guardian in an intimate sense that noone else did, says seven lines from the end of her Priceless Pearl that “The man had been called by sorrow and a strange desolation of hopes into quietness.” Henry Adams once said in one of his letters(1) that “The inevitable isolation and disillusionment of a really strong mind--one that combines force with elevation--is to me the romance and tragedy of statesmanship.”

(1) Letters of Henry Adams: 1835-1918, 2 Vols., Houghton Mifflin, 1930, Vol.1, p.314.

Ron Price
26 December 1995