Robert K Landers, To the White House Born; Adams proposed paying for his agenda by selling public land, urging lawmakers not to be ‘palsied by the will of our constituents.’ Wall Street Journal, May 27, 2014
online.wsj.com/news/articles/SB10001424052702304178104579537873284536970
(book review on Fred Kaplan, John Quincy Adams; American visionary. Harper, 2014)
Note:
(a) John Quincy Adams
(1767-1949; named for his mother's maternal grandfather, Colonel John Quincy; president 1825-1829; House of Representatives 1831-1848) Wikipedia
The English (of Norman origin) surname Quincy came “from any of several places in France deriving their names from the Gallo-Roman personal name Quintus, meaning ‘fifth(-born)’ + the locative suffix -acum.”
(b) The title is a wordplay on the phrase “to the manor born” (this is the way you see in US), which actually came from Shakespear’s “to the manner born.”
(i) The nouns “manner” and “Manor”ar homophones. Compare homonym
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Homonym
(ii) to the manner/manor born. The Word Detective, Oct 23, 2011
www.word-detective.com/2011/10/to-the-manner-manor-born/
(“the original phrase was definitely “to the manner born.” It was coined, as many of our best idioms were, by William Shakespeare, in this case in Hamlet, Act I, Scene iv * * * In the mid-19th century, however, a variant of 'to the manner born' appeared. 'To the manor born,' meaning 'born into, or naturally suited to, upper-class life'")
(iii) To the manner born. The Phrase Finder, undated
www.phrases.org.uk/meanings/to-the-manner-born.html
(“Hamlet was written in or around 1600 and published in 1603. The 'manor' version comes much later. The earliest reference I've found so far is in The Times, July 1859, in a story about the Emperor of France's visit to Austria: 'Before Solferino, Austria was only an intruder in Italy; now she is as one "to the manor born"'")
(c) "’The failure, if that is the word,’ historian Robert V Remini remarked in his brief 2002 biography, ‘was really brought on by his own inadequacies as a leader and politician.’ Adams's stiff personality—’I am a man of reserved, cold austere and forbidding manners,’ he admitted—worked against him, but it was not just that. The sixth president, a privileged son of the second, failed to adapt himself to ‘the democratic ferment of the 1820s,’ as the historian Sean Wilentz has written. ‘He appeared as if he wanted to impose his benevolent will on the people, instead of heeding the people's will.’”
(i) Robert V Remini, John Quincy Adams. Times Books, 2002 (part of The American Presidents Series).
(ii) austere (adj): "stern and cold in appearance or manner"
www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/austere
(iii) Sean Wilentz, The Rise of American Democracy; Jefferson to Lincoln. The Nation, 2005.
(d) “He [John Quincy Adams] also called for a national university, a naval academy, a Pacific exploratory expedition and even an astronomical observatory.”
(i) US has not established a national university, but there is a private one with that name:
National University (California)
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_University_(California)
(San Diego)
(ii) United States Naval Academy (in Annapolis, Maryland, Established 1845)
(e) “Critics of the Iraq war who invoked Adams's assertion, in a July 4 speech in 1821, that America 'goes not abroad, in search of monsters to destroy" certainly thought that his outlook remained pertinent. When Adams delivered that speech, he was secretary of state."
He wa secretary of state (1817-1825), under president James Monroe (who served in the same period). |