summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
-rw-r--r--.gitattributes3
-rw-r--r--12099-0.txt5347
-rw-r--r--LICENSE.txt11
-rw-r--r--README.md2
-rw-r--r--old/12099-8.txt5766
-rw-r--r--old/12099-8.zipbin0 -> 109925 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/12099.txt5766
-rw-r--r--old/12099.zipbin0 -> 109887 bytes
8 files changed, 16895 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6833f05
--- /dev/null
+++ b/.gitattributes
@@ -0,0 +1,3 @@
+* text=auto
+*.txt text
+*.md text
diff --git a/12099-0.txt b/12099-0.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..ec6257e
--- /dev/null
+++ b/12099-0.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,5347 @@
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 12099 ***
+
+Caroline M. Morse, editor
+
+ JANE CUNNINGHAM CROLY
+ "JENNY JUNE"
+
+
+1904
+
+
+
+[Illustration: Portrait]
+
+[Illustration: Facsimile of signature
+ "With sincere affection
+ yours-ever
+ J.C. Croly"]
+
+
+
+ Memories of
+ Jane Cunningham Croly
+ "Jenny June"
+
+
+
+ TO THE
+ GENERAL FEDERATION OF WOMEN'S CLUBS
+ IN AMERICA
+ THIS BOOK IS AFFECTIONATELY DEDICATED
+
+ BY
+
+ THE WOMAN'S PRESS CLUB
+
+ OF
+ NEW YORK CITY
+
+Foreword
+
+
+On January 6, 1902, a Memorial Meeting was called by Sorosis jointly
+with the Woman's Press Club of New York City, and a month later the
+Press Club formally authorized the preparation of a Memorial Book to
+its Founder and continuous President to the day of her death, Jane
+Cunningham Croly.
+
+In addition to a biographical sketch to be prepared by her brother,
+the Rev. John Cunningham, this book, so it was planned, should contain
+such letters, or excerpts from letters, as would illustrate her
+lovable personality and her life philosophy.
+
+A Committee of Publication was appointed, consisting of Mrs. Caroline
+M. Morse, Chairman, Mrs. Mary Coffin Johnson, Mrs. Haryot Holt Dey,
+Mrs. Miriam Mason Greeley, Miss Anna Warren Story and Mrs. Margaret W.
+Ravenhill. These began their work by sending a printed slip to club
+members and to Mrs. Croly's known intimates, asking for her letters.
+But the response came almost without variation: "My letters from Mrs.
+Croly are of too personal a nature for publication." A few, however,
+were freely offered, and these it was decided should be used,
+depending for the bulk of the Memorial upon copious extracts from
+Mrs. Croly's "History of the Woman's Club Movement in America," from
+her editorial work on _The Cycle_, and from her miscellaneous
+writings. To this characteristic material her long cherished friends,
+Mr. and Mrs. Thaddeus B. Wakeman, added an account of the "Positivist
+Episode," that objective point in her career, with which her husband
+was closely identified.
+
+With these are: Mrs. Croly's Club Life, a sketch by Mrs. Haryot Holt
+Dey; the Sorosis-Press Club Memorial Meeting; the Resolutions of the
+Woman's Press Club of New York City, the General Federation of Clubs,
+and the Society of American Women in London; tributes from London
+clubwomen; Essays and Addresses; Letters and Stray Leaves and Notes,
+written by Mrs. Croly; tributes from many of her friends, and my own
+recollections.
+
+ CAROLINE M. MORSE,
+ Chairman.
+
+
+
+
+Contents
+
+
+ "JENNY JUNE."--Ethel Morse
+
+ A BROTHER'S MEMORIES.--John Cunningham, D.D.
+
+ SOROSIS-PRESS CLUB MEMORIAL MEETING ADDRESSES:
+ Dimies T.S. Denison
+ Charlotte B. Wilbour
+ Phebe A. Hanaford
+ Orlena A. Zabriskie
+ Carrie Louise Griffin
+ Cynthia Westover Alden
+ May Riley Smith
+ Fanny Hallock Carpenter
+
+ RESOLUTIONS AND TRIBUTES FROM CLUBS:
+ Resolutions of the New York State Federation
+ From the Croly Memorial Fund of the Pioneer Club of London
+
+ THE POSITIVIST EPISODE.--Thaddeus B. Wakeman
+
+ MRS. CROLY'S CLUB LIFE.--Haryot Holt Dey
+
+ ESSAYS AND ADDRESSES BY JANE CUNNINGHAM CROLY:
+ Beginnings of Organization
+ The Moral Awakening
+ The Advantages of a General Federation of Women's Clubs
+ The Clubwoman
+ The New Life
+ The Days That Are
+ A People's Church
+
+ NOTES, LETTERS, AND STRAY LEAVES.--Jane Cunningham Croly
+
+ THE TRIBUTES OF FRIENDS:
+ Miriam Mason Greeley
+ Marie Etienne Burns
+ Izora Chandler
+ Janie C.P. Jones
+ Catherine Weed Barnes Ward
+ Sara J. Lippincott--"Grace Greenwood"
+ Jennie de la M. Lozier
+ Genie H. Rosenfeld
+ S.A. Lattimore
+ Ellen M. Staples
+ Margaret W. Ravenhill
+ T.C. Evans
+ St. Clair McKelway
+ Laura Sedgwick Collins
+ Mary Coffin Johnson
+ Caroline M. Morse
+ Ella Wheeler Wilcox
+
+
+
+
+Illustrations
+
+
+ JANE CUNNINGHAM CROLY (JENNY JUNE) AT THE AGE OF 61
+
+ MRS. CROLY AT THE AGE OF 40 (ABOUT THE TIME
+ SOROSIS WAS INAUGURATED)
+
+ FACSIMILE OF RESOLUTIONS ADOPTED BY THE
+ WOMAN'S PRESS CLUB OF NEW YORK, JANUARY
+ 11, 1902
+
+ FACSIMILE OF RESOLUTIONS ADOPTED BY THE
+ SOCIETY OF AMERICAN WOMEN IN LONDON,
+ MARCH 24, 1902
+
+ DAVID GOODMAN CROLY
+
+ FACSIMILE OF A PORTION OF A LETTER WRITTEN
+ BY MRS. CROLY, OCTOBER, 1900
+
+ MRS. CROLY AT THE AGE OF 18
+
+
+
+
+Jenny June
+
+
+ The South Wind blows across the harrowed fields,
+ And lo! the young grain springs to happy birth;
+ His warm breath lingers where the granite shields
+ Intruding flowers, and the responsive Earth
+ Impartially her varied harvest yields.
+ Through long ensuing months with tender mirth
+ The South Wind laughs, rejoicing in the worth
+ Of the impellent energies he wields.
+
+ Within our minds the memory of a Name
+ Will move, and fires of inspiration that burned low
+ Among dead embers break in quickening flame;
+ Flowers of the soul, grain of the heart shall grow,
+ And burgeoned promises shall bravely blow
+ Beneath the sunny influence of Her fame.
+
+ETHEL MORSE.
+
+
+
+
+A Brother's Memories
+
+_By John Cunningham, D.D._
+
+
+The most interesting and potent fact within the range of human
+knowledge is personality, and in the person of Jane Cunningham Croly
+(Jenny June) a potency was apparent which has affected the social life
+of more women, perhaps, than any other single controlling factor of
+the same period.
+
+Jane Cunningham was born in Market Harborough, Leicestershire,
+England, December 19, 1829. She was the fourth child of Joseph H. and
+Jane Cunningham, and though small in stature and delicate in organism,
+was full of vivacity, and abounding in natural intelligence. Her rich
+brown hair, blue eyes and clear complexion proclaimed her of
+Anglo-Saxon origin. She was the idol of her parents and the admiration
+of her school teachers. Her comradeship with her father began early in
+life and was continued to the time of his death. The family came to
+the United States in 1841, making their home at first in Poughkeepsie,
+and afterwards in or near Wappinger's Falls, where the father bought a
+large building-lot and erected a neat and commodious house, which
+remained in the possession of the family until sold by Mrs.
+Cunningham after the death of her husband. The lot was soon converted
+into a garden by its owner who tilled it with the spade and allowed no
+plough to be used in his little Eden. It was characteristic of his
+generous spirit, too, that none of the surplus product was ever sold,
+but was freely given to less favored neighbors. Happy years were spent
+by Mr. Cunningham in his shop, in his garden, with his books, and in
+visiting his daughter Jennie in New York after her marriage when she
+became established there. It was as nearly an ideal life as a modest
+man could desire. He lived respected by the best people in the
+community, and died in peace, with his children around him.
+
+As I remember my sister in early life, the sunniness of her nature
+is the first and prevailing characteristic that I call to mind;
+occasional moods of reverie bordering on melancholy only made brighter
+the habitual radiance and buoyancy of a nature that diffused happiness
+all around her. She was a perfectly healthy girl in mind and body. A
+sound mind in a sound body was her noble heritage. She was always
+extremely temperate in food and drink, fastidious in all her tastes
+and personal habits, indulgent never beyond the dictates of perfect
+simplicity and sobriety. Proficient in all branches of housekeeping,
+her apparel was mostly of her own making. Good literature was a
+passion with her, and while never an omnivorous reader, she had a
+natural instinct for the best in language. A spirit of indomitable
+independence, courage and persistence in purpose characterized her
+from childhood. She must think her own thoughts, and mark out and
+follow her own path. Suffering from a degree of physical timidity that
+at times caused her much pain, she possessed a spirit that sometimes
+seemed to border on audacity in the assertion and maintenance of her
+own convictions. From childhood she developed a personality which
+charmed all with whom she came in contact. Persons of both sexes,
+young and old, the sober and the gay, alike fell under the influence
+of her magnetic power. Living for a time in the family of her brother,
+to whom she proffered her services as housekeeper when he was pastor
+of a Union church in Worcester County, Mass., she drew to her all
+sorts of people by the brightness and charm of her personality.
+Self-forgetful and genuine, interested in all about her, she lived
+only to serve others, valuing lightly all that she did. Here it was
+that her remarkable capacity for journalism first developed itself.
+One of the means by which she interested the community was the public
+reading of a semi-monthly paper, every line of which was written by
+herself and a fellow worker. The reading of that paper every
+fortnight, to an audience that crowded the church, was an event in her
+history.
+
+Jennie was no dreamer. She was no speculative theorist spinning
+impossible things out of the cobwebs of her brain. She was no Hypatia
+striving to restore the gods of the past, revelling in a brilliant
+cloudland of symbolisms and affinities. If she was caught in the mist
+at any time, she soon came out of it and found her footing in the
+practical realities of daily life. Never over-reverential, she never
+called in question the deeper realities of soul-life. She was no
+ascetic: she would have made a poor nun. But she was a born preacher
+if by preaching is meant the annunciation of a gospel to those who
+need it. Jennie was always an ardent devotee of her sex, and whatever
+else she believed in, she certainly believed in women, their instincts
+and capacities.
+
+In the year 1856, on February 14th, St. Valentine's Day, my sister
+Jennie was married to David G. Croly, a reporter for the New York
+_Herald,_ and they began life in the city on his meagre salary of
+fourteen dollars a week. The gifted young wife, however, soon found
+work for herself on the _World_, the _Tribune_, the _Times_, _Noah's
+Sunday Times_ and the _Messenger_. The first money she received for
+writing was in return for an article published in the New York
+_Tribune_. Their joint career in metropolitan journalism was
+interrupted however by a short term of residence in Rockford,
+Illinois, where Mr. Croly was invited to become editor of the Rockford
+_Register_, then owned by William Gore King, the husband of our
+sister Mary A. Cunningham. Mr. Croly was aided in the editorial
+management by his wife, and while the work was agreeable and
+successful, it was due to Mrs. Croly's ardent desire for a larger
+field, that at the end of a year they decided to return to New York.
+The results for both abundantly justified the change. As managing
+editor of the daily _World_ for a number of years, afterwards of the
+New York _Graphic_, and later of the _Real Estate Record and Guide_,
+Mr. Croly won an honorable position in New York journalism. He was a
+conservative democrat of the strictest sort, a radical in religion,
+and had but little appreciation of the deeper forces at work in
+society and in national life. But he was able and honest, and enjoyed
+the respect of his fellow-craftsmen.
+
+"Jenny June" was a person of very different mental and moral mould.
+Her work soon revealed a new, fresh, vigorous force in journalism. An
+examination of her editorial contributions to the _Sunday Times_ from
+March to December, 1861, suggests her mental vivacity, vigor, breadth
+of view, and uniform clearness and power of expression. The title
+of the whole series is unpretentious enough: "Parlor and Sidewalk
+Gossip." All through her journalistic career similar qualities of
+originality characterized her pen. She was editor of _Demorest's_
+magazine for twenty-seven years, and was both editor and owner of
+_Godey's_ magazine and _The Home-Maker_. _The Cycle_ was her own
+creation and property. In each of these publications the dominating
+thoughts are those which make for social elevation, the honor of
+womanhood and home comfort and happiness. In addition to this
+editorial work she was a regular contributor to several leading
+newspapers in Boston, Chicago, New Orleans, Baltimore and other
+cities. She inaugurated the system of syndicate correspondence, and
+was the author of several books--"For Better, For Worse"; "Talks on
+Women's Topics"; "Thrown on Her Own Resources"; three manuals; and
+"The History of the Woman's Club Movement," a large volume of nearly
+twelve hundred pages.
+
+During the most active years of my sister's literary life, she had
+also the care of a large household, and her home was always bright and
+hospitable. The Croly Sunday evening receptions were one of the social
+features of New York City.
+
+Five children were born to Mr. and Mrs. Croly. Minnie, the eldest, was
+happily married to Lieutenant Roper of the U. S. Navy; her early death
+was a grief hard to bear. The second child, a boy, died in infancy.
+The surviving children are: Herbert G. Croly, a man of letters in New
+York City; Vida Croly Sidney, the wife of the English playwright,
+Frederick Sidney, lives in London; and Alice Gary Mathot, the wife of
+a New York lawyer, William F. Mathot, resides in Brooklyn Hills, Long
+Island.
+
+Mrs. Croly, one of the founders of Sorosis, perhaps the most noted
+woman's club in existence, was its President for many years, and its
+Honorary President at the time of her death. The cause which led to
+the founding of Sorosis is an open secret. Women were ignored at the
+Charles Dickens reception; this was not to be tolerated, and in
+consequence of this affront Sorosis came into being, an effectual
+protest against any similar indifference in all time to come. Of the
+growth of the club movement in the United States, in Great Britain,
+France, Russia, and in far-off India, I do not propose to enter into
+detail. Suffice it to say that it is one of the marvels of the modern
+social and intellectual life of women.
+
+What was the secret of Jenny June's charm and power? Not
+scholarship--let this be said in all sincerity. How greatly she
+appreciated the scholar's advantages was well known to her intimate
+friends. But these advantages did not belong to her. Nor did it
+consist in inherited social rank or wealth; her earnings by her pen
+were large, but her patrimony was small. It should have been said
+before, that she received the degree of Doctor of Literature from
+Rutgers Women's College, and was appointed to a new chair of
+Journalism and Literature in that institution. She was also a
+lecturer in other women's schools of the first rank.
+
+Nor did Jenny June pattern her work according to the advice or after
+the example of any one man or woman. There was no example by which she
+could be guided. Woman was a new factor in journalism, and Jenny June
+was a new woman, a new creation, if I may so speak, fashioned after
+the type of woman in the beginning, when God created man and woman in
+His own image. I cannot too fully emphasize the fact that she was a
+new and original personality in journalism. No one understood this
+better than her husband. In matters of detail his counsel was of value
+to her, but the spirit and character of her work were her own; and
+happily for her and for womankind she could never be diverted from her
+chosen path. This, indeed, was one chief secret of her success. She
+was unalterably true to her divine womanly ideals of woman's nature,
+place in society and redemptive work. I say redemptive work, for it
+was one of her deepest convictions that woman's function, was to be
+the saving salt of all life. Sorosis was founded upon this idea;--not
+a literary club merely or mainly; not a political, social or religious
+club; but one founded on womanhood, on the divine nature of women of
+every class and degree.
+
+Jenny June's recognition of this vital truth brought her into sympathy
+with a world-wide movement. The new woman is no monstrosity, no
+sporadic creature born of intellectual fermentation and unrest, but
+the rise and development of a better, nobler type of womanhood the
+world over. Jenny June's eminent distinction was that she was a leader
+in this movement. It made her what her husband once said in my
+hearing: "a wonderful woman." Of course there was the capacity for
+bursts of feeling on occasion, which those who knew her best seldom
+cared to provoke. "I am not an amiable woman," she once said to the
+writer. Radiant as she was, there was a volcanic force in her nature
+which could be terrific against folly, frivolity and wrong.
+
+Thousands of gifted women are now making themselves heard in poetry,
+dissertation, fiction and journalism because Jenny June opened the
+path for them. Womanhood was her watchword, and God, duty, faith and
+hope the springs of her life. It may surprise even those who knew her
+well to learn that her physical timidity was great, and at times
+painful. But her moral and intellectual courage impelled her at times
+almost to the verge of audacity, and was held under restraint only by
+conscience and good sense. Humor and wit can hardly be said to have
+been marked traits in her mentality. There was something delphic and
+oracular often in her familiar conversation. Sentimentalism had no
+place in her nature, her reading or literary work. A soul full of
+healthy and noble sentiment left no room for sentimentalism.
+
+Was Jenny June a genius? Well, if a boundless capacity for good
+original work is genius, then she was a genius. Magnanimity was a
+marked trait in her character. Envy or jealousy of the gifts of
+another were foreign to her. Love of nature, and especially of fine
+trees, was one of her most noticeable characteristics. "There will be
+trees in my heaven," she once said to the writer. But works of art, of
+the chisel, the brush, the pencil and the loom were her delight. She
+loved the city, its crowding humanity, its stores and its galleries.
+She loved London even more than New York. Continental travel was her
+chief pleasure and diversion. A long period of physical suffering,
+caused by an accident, cast a cloud over the last years of my sister's
+honorable life. She sought relief from pain and weakness, at Ambleside
+in Derbyshire, England, and at a celebrated cure in Switzerland, but
+was only partially successful. The final release came on December 23,
+1901, and her remains were laid by the side of her husband in the
+cemetery at Lakewood, New Jersey.
+
+Noble Jenny June! Shall we ever see her like again!
+
+
+
+
+Sorosis-Press Club Memorial Meeting
+
+
+A memorial meeting, called by Sorosis jointly with the Woman's Press
+Club, was held at the Waldorf-Astoria on January 6, 1902, a fortnight
+after the death of Mrs. Croly. It was attended not alone by the
+members of these two clubs but also by representatives from every
+woman's club in New York and the vicinity. Letters from many clubs
+belonging to the General Federation were read, and from the
+secretary's report of the meeting have been gathered the following
+tributes of notable clubwomen to the beloved founder of both clubs.
+
+
+
+
+Address by Dimies T.S. Denison, President of Sorosis
+
+
+We have met this afternoon to pay a loving tribute to one of the
+departed of Sorosis, who was for many years its President, and for
+years its Honorary President.
+
+The loss is not ours alone, for our sorrow is shared by all clubwomen,
+from Australia around the world to Alaska. Her position will always
+remain unique. Whenever there comes a time for a great movement there
+has always been a leader. The Revolution had its Washington; the
+abolition of slavery its Lincoln; and so, when the time came for such
+a movement among women, there were also leaders. Mrs. Croly remained,
+throughout her life, an advocate of everything which was for the
+betterment of women, and she died in the heart of the movement.
+
+Her perception of the value of unity, of the advantage of organized
+effort, was remarkable. Perhaps the generations beyond ours will think
+of her most in that quality, but the women of our time will remember
+her, as they loved her, for her ready sympathy and her unfailing
+helpfulness to all women. Though departed, she is still with us, and
+the beauty of her life remains, in that its influence is imperative.
+
+Mrs. Croly had that particular sense of fellowship among women most
+unusual. If you will stop to think, in our language you will find that
+there are no words to express that thought, except those that are
+masculine--fellowship, brotherhood, fraternity. Mrs. Croly, perhaps
+more than any other woman in the world, had the sense of what
+fellowship or fraternity meant in women, and although she sometimes
+may have been called an idealist or sentimentalist, it is recognized
+by many women that this thought must be abiding, for in a federation
+it is the spirit that is current through it that keeps the federation
+alive.
+
+The last afternoon it was my privilege to be with Mrs. Croly we had a
+long talk, and it seems to me, in looking back, that Mrs. Croly was
+then leaving a message with me for all clubwomen. I never heard her
+speak so eloquently. We talked of some of the problems of the General
+Federation--its possible disruption. Mrs. Croly said: "It does not
+matter; if anything happens that the General Federation should be
+disrupted, another will be formed at once." She had absolute faith, if
+not in a Divine Providence, that there was a possibility it was part
+of the human scheme of development that must be carried on through the
+Divine Will. So, if she left any message for the General Federation,
+it was this: that whatever our personal opinions are, whatever we
+think of any question, we are to think first of the life of the
+General Federation; because in it is the great thought of the
+fellowship and fraternity among women that is to bring us closer and
+closer to the millennium.
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: MRS. CROLY at the age of 40. (About the time Sorosis
+was inaugurated)]
+
+
+
+
+Address by Charlotte B. Wilbour
+
+
+When a soul that has worn out its frail body in the work of the world
+crosses the threshold of eternity, the darkness that gathers around
+our hearts has in it a relief of light. Nature has suffered no
+violence; the power of the body has been exhausted in good service,
+and the tired spirit is set free from the encasement that can no
+longer serve it. A fond look backward, a hopeful look forward, and the
+portals close with our benediction.
+
+ "A life that dares send
+ A challenge to the end,
+ And, when it comes, say
+ 'Welcome, friend,'"
+
+inspires the wish that we may so fill the measure of our days with
+usefulness.
+
+The departure of such a spirit would be fittingly commemorated by the
+grand marches of Chopin and Beethoven, or the majestic requiems of
+Mozart, rather than by our simple words. And yet they are our hearts'
+testimony to her in whose name we are assembled and, let us hope, made
+worthy. To us who believe that life reels not back from the white
+charger of Death towards the gulf of inanity and oblivion, there is a
+vivid realization that our words may be spoken to the conscious
+spirit; and we desire that, in the sacred name of truth, and with the
+love that comprehends and overcomes, we may speak simply as "soul to
+soul."
+
+One of the most beautiful lessons I have learned of death is that
+after the departure of a friend, or even of an acquaintance, our
+memories retain and cherish their best and noblest qualities and
+deeds. We repeat their finest words and recount their generous works.
+The sunshine falls clear on their virtues, and the shadow lies kindly
+on their faults. It exalts our nature that our minds elect only the
+lovely and beautiful characteristics of the lost friend. This sublime
+power in us breaks the force of the bitter criticism of the obituary,
+the eulogy, and the epitaph--that they are false notes in a hymn of
+praise. And to us yet living, there is sweet comfort in the thought
+that our best and higher selves shall remain with those we love and
+honor. And so shall the good we do live after us. These purified
+remembrances are links of the chain that binds the humblest to the
+highest.
+
+In my early womanhood I knew our honored president, a fair, happy,
+healthy, active English woman; and she appeared to me (sobered by the
+loss of most of my family) to rejoice in a fulness of life. We were
+maidens, and her interests and activities were in domestic and social
+life. I have not lost the fresh memory of her in those days.
+
+She was our president for ten years, and afterwards our honorary
+president. The activity of her life has made the deepest impression
+upon me. Every member of our association and of sister associations
+will agree with me, that never a woman brought a more cheerful and
+willing spirit to her official duties than did she. She rejoiced in
+her place, delighted in her privilege, and fully enjoyed the
+recognition and good fellowship of other clubs. This cheerful service,
+rendered for years, made her widely known in the club world. She
+responded to personal influence and suggestions made directly to her.
+She was most receptive to practical ideas, and adopted methods
+readily, and her liberal service brought to her just recompense.
+
+For years it required sacrifice on her part to attend the regular
+meetings of Sorosis, for she had daily occupation, and a lost day must
+be redeemed. But when an officer she made the sacrifice cheerfully.
+She was social and hospitable. Freely her house was given to us for
+lectures, receptions to distinguished guests and business meetings.
+For years the Positivists held their meetings at her home. She found
+her pleasure in pleasing, and in helping others gave herself joy. She
+loved her work for clubs, and you will remember that she had several
+business enterprises connected with them, during the years that she
+was an active clubwoman.
+
+I was in this country while she was preparing her history of clubs
+(not the history of Sorosis), and she brought the interest and
+enthusiasm of a young woman to the work; with a satisfied pride she
+showed me the material she had collected for the history. Nothing else
+to her mind was more important, or to be thought of until that was
+accomplished. I believe that her usefulness to clubs has been
+commensurate with the interest and gratification she had in the
+service.
+
+During the years of our acquaintance our intercourse was genial and
+concordant, and the results of our early work in Sorosis cannot equal
+the sweet satisfaction that came with its performance.
+
+In the early life of the club many of us were young mothers, and our
+domestic duties had strong claims upon us, and one prominent thought
+in connection with the formation of Sorosis was that the attention of
+a large class of thinking women, directed in concert towards important
+domestic and social questions, could be secured; and, while the
+character of the club should be pre-eminently social, we hoped to
+quietly bring in important reforms, or at least some effective action
+on these questions, and, above all, to secure an intelligent social
+intercourse without increasing our domestic duties and responsibilities.
+Have we not accomplished this?
+
+As the smallest consoling thought is greater than the most eloquent
+expression of sorrow, so do we find some consolation in the fact that
+fate was kind to our friend, and led her away when she could no longer
+enjoy life, and that she went while with us whose hearts were warm
+with an active sympathy and tender helpfulness.
+
+Our kind purpose to her name lifts our acts above criticism, and
+fortifies them by our love and worthiness of intention. Let us live to
+live forever--so shall we never fear death; let our warm human love be
+the prophet of a union for greater benefits; and let us have faith in
+the love that lives in human bosoms still:
+
+ "Lives to renovate our earth
+ From the bondage of its birth,
+ And the long arrears of ill."
+
+
+
+
+Address by the Rev. Phebe A. Hanaford, Vice-President of the Woman's
+Press Club of New York City
+
+
+I am requested to speak of the excellent work done by its departed
+president, in and for the Woman's Press Club of New York City. To
+others is assigned the testimony in reference to the career and work
+of our departed president as a press woman, and her place in
+literature.
+
+We are not here to analyze her character, or to chronicle her work.
+Nor are we here to dwell on those biographical details which belong to
+the pen rather than the voice; to the book and the reader rather than
+the address and the hearer. We are here to testify our regard for one
+whose busy pen is laid aside, but whose example of industry we may
+well imitate; though in the journalistic field the women of to-day
+will never have opportunity to emulate her perseverance and
+fearlessness, since her entrance in times long gone by on this
+untrodden path bore an important part in opening the way and obtaining
+results for women with whom the pen to-day is a power.
+
+Mrs. Croly was the founder of this club in 1889, and for twelve years
+and to the day of her death, its only president. It started (as she
+tells us in the large quarto volume relating to clubs--which was the
+closing, if not the crowning, effort of her busy pen) with an
+invitation sent out by herself in November, 1889, to forty women, a
+number of whom were then engaged upon the press in New York City, to
+meet at her residence, and consider the advisability of forming a
+Woman's Press Club. It was eminently fitting that one who had been
+stirred in former years by the absence of social recognition in
+journalism as within woman's province, on the part of the men of the
+press, and moved to take a prominent part in the formation of Sorosis,
+should organize a club of women writers--women journalists
+especially--which should be known everywhere as distinctly a Woman's
+Press Club.
+
+The response to her call was most gratifying. Her ability as an
+organizer, and her social qualities which could attract and hold women
+together in strong bonds of mutual esteem and fellowship, were again
+evident, and on November 19, 1889, the organization was effected and a
+provisional constitution adopted.
+
+At first the literary features of the new club were considered
+secondary to the social and beneficiary, but gradually they grew to
+their present importance.
+
+In its early days, like most clubs this one was migratory, and its
+work incidental. Gradually it came to have a more permanent home, and
+its monthly programmes which, as Mrs. Croly herself stated, "are more
+in the form of a symposium than of a question for debate," came to be
+so attractive and varied, and in every way so excellent, that they are
+often declared to be unsurpassed in interest by any woman's club. This
+was a matter of exceeding satisfaction to its founder, who saw the
+club grow from its membership of fifty-two to two hundred. She was
+never weary of recounting its successes, literary, musical, artistic
+and social. The Press Club was her joy and pride from its organization
+to the very day when she last met with its members, devoting on that
+day her failing strength to a cause that was beyond expression dear to
+her heart. I think I shall only be saying very feebly what the members
+of the club, especially those who have been members from its
+organization, now feel--that they regard her presence with them on the
+recent day of installation of new officers as a benediction, though
+they little knew that in her feebleness she was bidding them a loving
+farewell. When the news of her departure reached them it was received
+with surprise and deep sorrow. By prompt action the officers at once
+came together, and immediate measures were taken for appropriate
+expression of the Press Club's loyalty and love.
+
+Its members are here to-day not only to express their own high regard
+for their departed founder and president, but also to unite with
+Sorosis, the London Pioneer Club, and other clubs in the State
+Federation, who, by their presence, speech, or song, indicate the
+sympathy they have with those who will hold in fadeless remembrance
+their ascended president, who has learned ere this, that
+
+ "Life is ever Lord of Death,
+ And Love can never lose its own."
+
+As members of the club she, who has now passed into the eternal light,
+founded may we seek earnestly to walk in the light of Truth, strenuous
+for that more than royal liberty of conscience, which means liberty
+under righteous law and seeking for the Unity which obeys the Golden
+Rule, and thus binds heart to heart. So shall the Woman's Press Club
+of New York City truly honor the memory of its founder and first
+president, Jane Cunningham Croly.
+
+
+
+
+Address by Orlena A. Zabriskie, President of the New York Federation
+
+
+That the New York State Federation should be called upon to attest its
+love, devotion, and admiration for Mrs. Croly and her wonderful work
+among women, is a privilege we appreciate, and I shall try in a few
+simple, honest words, to explain a little of what her influence has
+been to the New York State Federation. We all know she was an
+organizer and founder, but it is well to repeat those words, although
+I think there is little danger that we shall ever forget them. From
+all over the State have come messages to me from different members of
+the federation, expressing their love and obligation to Mrs. Croly for
+what she has done for them individually, and for the State. One letter
+said:
+
+ "I shall think of her always as that lovely, sweet-tempered
+ woman who, under the most trying circumstances, never lost
+ her temper, or felt she was at all aggrieved. She took it in
+ the right way, and was just as lovely and kind at the close
+ as at the beginning."
+
+I saw her at Friendship, a little town in the northwestern part of the
+State, before the meeting at Buffalo, and there we had a long talk
+about matters of Federation interest. She gave me some good advice in
+her own gentle way, that I shall never forget, and I am only too glad
+to have this opportunity of saying it helped me to carry through that
+convention as I could not have done otherwise.
+
+What was the secret of her power as an organizer? I think this--she
+saw the little spark of good in each woman, every woman she came in
+contact with, and even in those she did not come in personal contact
+with. She knew it was there and she had the ability to call it forth,
+and that magnetic influence drew them together, so that they realized
+that they could do more in large numbers than they could as
+individuals. Knowing our power, she urged and encouraged us to do our
+best. When with her we did not feel as though we had a "specked" side.
+I think it was just that that gave her power and influence in the
+clubs she founded, to make them live and be a greater power than ever
+they could have been without her memory and example set before them.
+
+She has done good work, and started us on a task that she saw had
+practical possibilities, and now we can carry out those ideas of hers,
+and give them force in years to come. It may take a long time, but we
+will keep on being patient, cheerful, kind-hearted, and considerate,
+as she was. Let us therefore be grateful we had her as long as we did.
+She was for us a grand inheritance, and let us appreciate it.
+
+
+
+
+Address by Carrie Louise Griffin, President of the Society of American
+Women in London
+
+
+If I could only command that physical self as I would like to, I would
+tell you how grateful I am to be privileged to speak, and how much I
+think we have to be thankful for to-day, in the life of our dear one,
+which was given us.
+
+I am new in this club, and, as most of you know, my friendship with
+Mrs. Croly is not yet three years old, but I have been singularly
+privileged and honored in loving her, and in the love which she gave
+me.
+
+She came into my life (I must be just a little personal for a moment)
+as our first luncheon, in our little Society of American Women in
+London, was about to be given. The president of Sorosis had written to
+London saying: "Do you know that Mrs. Croly and Mrs. Glynes are to be
+in London, and I think they would help you?" Bless her, and Mrs.
+Croly: she came as a benediction to the few of us who were then
+novices in what we were doing. I can never tell you what a benefit she
+was to us in the difficult work we had undertaken. You have given me
+exceptional privileges in coming among you, and I am grateful for the
+help you have been to me, but I would say to you--and you have given
+me this privilege--I have never met a woman who seemed to have
+recognized the birthright in women as the birthright in men, to create
+that link which binds our powers to our intellect. It seems to me that
+it was with Mrs. Croly as it was with our late Majesty, Queen
+Victoria, that she was an influence, perhaps, rather than a power. She
+conceived great ideas and passed them on for the executive work of
+others to fulfil. I can assure you she was everything to us. Her
+English birth gave her an instinctive insight into English character.
+English women seemed to know and understand her, as she knew and
+understood them, and there has been no finer link between the women of
+America and the women of the Old World than Mrs. Croly. It was my
+privilege to be with her personally a great deal while in London, not
+only when she stayed in my own house, but when I have gone back and
+forth with her as her guide to the many functions we attended
+together. We can all be proud of her. Wherever she went she was not
+only hailed as the pioneer woman, but also as one who did honor and
+credit to the name of American womanhood, for, although born in
+England, she still claimed that she was an American woman, as you
+know.
+
+I shall never forget a little picture she gave of herself one day.
+She told us of her life in her home in a little town in the north of
+England. Her father was a Unitarian, and often had classes in his
+house for teaching the working people. His views, as you may imagine,
+were quite contrary to the views of the orthodox Church of England,
+and the people there rebelled, stoned the house, and wanted to turn
+them out of the town. The mother said to the father: "I wish you would
+take little Jennie by the hand, in her white frock, and lead her out
+to the people; perhaps when they see her they will not throw stones."
+That was her earliest memory of that little English town. Later, I
+believe, they left in the night and came to America, in order that
+they might live out the courage of their faith.
+
+At our luncheon Mrs. Croly said: "I want English and American women to
+love each other. I remember with pride and honor my English birth. I
+can see my little room now--a small room with a lattice window over
+which the roses grew, and as I stood at the window on tiptoe, I could
+look into the old-fashioned garden below. I stood on an old chest. In
+the winter my summer frocks were kept there, and in the summer my red
+woollen dress. I loved it; it was beautiful, and it made me love
+England. When I am in England and I hear anything not quite kind about
+America, I am sorry and my heart aches, and if, when I am in America,
+I hear something not quite kind about England, my heart aches again,
+because I love it all."
+
+In talking with Mrs. Croly, she said to me, "I hope some day you will
+come to a General Federation." Quoting Matthew Arnold, she said: "If
+ever the world sees a time when women shall come together, purely and
+simply for the benefit and good of mankind, it will be a power such as
+the world has never known." And she said, "There you will find it." We
+had talked about it and looked forward to seeing it together, but that
+will never be. It was her hope and dream that there should be such a
+General Federation of clubs as to bring in the women of the Old World
+with the Federation of Clubs in the New, that we might stand hand in
+hand together. She said to me, "I think you are narrow in your
+society--its members are only Americans." We have often talked this
+over, and have decided that in order to strengthen our centre we must
+keep it, at present, to American woman; but it may be possible to have
+an associate membership--the thin edge of the wedge looking toward the
+realization of her dreams.
+
+
+
+
+Address by Cynthia Westover Alden, Vice-President of the Women's Press
+Club, and President of the International Sunshine Society
+
+
+Mrs. Croly has left us. Yet I cannot think of her work as ended, of
+her mission as closed. You may go over every line she ever wrote, you
+may recall with, microscopic exactness every word she ever spoke,
+without finding one single grain of bitterness towards any human
+creature. Her active life was such as must find the ripe continuance
+of its activity in the better country whither she has preceded us. I
+feel that there is no hyperbole in applying to her memory the striking
+words of Lowell's Elegy on Dr. Channing:
+
+ "I do not come to weep above thy pall
+ And mourn the dying-out of noble powers;
+ The poet's clearer eye should see in all
+ Earth's seeming woe, seed of immortal flowers.
+
+ "No power can die that ever wrought for truth;
+ Thereby a law of Nature it became,
+ And lives unwithered in its blithesome youth,
+ When he who called it forth is but a name.
+
+ "Therefore I cannot think thee wholly gone;
+ The better part of thee is with us still;
+ Thy soul its hampering clay aside hath thrown,
+ And only freer wrestles with the ill.
+
+ "Thou art not idle; in thy higher sphere
+ Thy spirit bends itself to loving tasks,
+ And strength to perfect what it dreamed of here
+ Is all the crown and glory that it asks."
+
+The women of America owe much to Jenny June. By example she showed
+them that the career of letters was open to them. Her style, cheerful
+and vivid, sometimes epigrammatic, always entertaining, was her own.
+It could not be copied, it could not be imitated, it stood by itself;
+her career, filled with a large measure of the courage of her success,
+belonged in the broadest sense to women as women. How many worthy
+ambitions that career has stimulated to fruition we know not, and
+never shall know. One thing, however, is certain--that if you deduct
+from the literature of America the names of women who have followed
+Mrs. Croly's example and have been cheered by the fact that she did
+not fall by the wayside, you leave a void that never could be filled.
+How consciously they have been affected by Mrs. Croly's blazing path I
+cannot tell; but the influence has been none the less real and none
+the less powerful.
+
+Woman's battle for literary recognition will not have to be fought
+over again: it belongs to the past. The old contempt of editors and
+publishers, aye, and of readers as well, has gone to join slavery and
+polygamy and human sacrifices in the chamber of horrors. But we can
+never forget the woman who braved that contempt, and faced it down by
+achievement that could not be ignored. Mrs. Croly belonged to the
+period of that early struggle. In her sweetness of temper she lent to
+its very asperities the charm of a tournament, overcoming evil with
+good, and triumphing at last over prejudice which thousands of women
+had feared to face. We loved her for herself. We are sad in spite of
+ourselves that she has gone. But we shall only remember her as one of
+the greatest benefactors of woman in literature; one of the most
+delightful of all the delightful characters that we have ever known.
+
+ "This laurel leaf I cast upon thy bier;
+ Let worthier hands than these thy wreath entwine;
+ Upon thy hearse I shed no useless tear--
+ For us weep rather thou, in calm divine."
+
+
+
+
+In the Silence
+
+_By May Riley Smith_
+
+
+ They are out of the chaos of living,
+ The wreck and debris of the years;
+ They have passed from the struggle and striving,
+ They have drained their goblet of tears.
+ They have ceased one by one from their labors,
+ So we clothed them in garments of rest,
+ And they entered the chamber of silence;--
+ God do for them now what is best!
+
+ We saw not the lift of the curtain,
+ Nor heard the invisible door,
+ As they passed where life's problems uncertain
+ Will follow and burthen no more.
+ We lingered and wept on the threshold--
+ The threshold each mortal must cross,--
+ Then we laid a new wreath down upon it,
+ To mark a new sorrow and loss.
+
+ Then back to our separate places
+ A little more lonely we creep,
+ A little more care in our faces,
+ The wrinkles a little more deep.
+ And we stagger, ah, God, how we stagger
+ As we lift the old load to our back!
+ A little more lonely to carry
+ Because of the comrade we lack.
+
+ But into our lives whether chidden
+ Or welcome, God's comforters come;
+ His sunshine waits not to be bidden,
+ His stars,--they are always at home.
+ His mornings are faithful,--His evenings
+ Allay the day's fever and fret;
+ And night--kind physician--entreats us
+ To slumber and dream and forget.
+
+ O Spirit of infinite kindness
+ And gentleness passing all speech!
+ Forgive when we miss in our blindness
+ The comforting hand them dost reach.
+ Thou sendest the Spring on Thine errand
+ To soften the grief of the world;
+ For us is the calm of the mountain,
+ For us is the rose-leaf uncurled.
+
+ Thou art tenderer, too, than a mother,
+ In the wonderful Book it is said;
+ O Pillow of Comfort! What other
+ So softly could cradle my head?
+ And though Thou hast darkened the portal
+ That leads where our vanished ones be;
+ We lean on our faith in Thy goodness,
+ And leave them to silence and Thee.
+
+
+
+
+Jenny June
+
+_By Fanny Hallock Carpenter_
+
+
+ A beautiful soul has journeyed
+ Out from the Now into Then.
+ Her voice echoes back to us, waiting,
+ The sound of the great Amen.
+
+ Her life was a song so winsome
+ It sung itself night and day
+ Into the hearts of the people
+ Who met her along the way.
+
+ Her life was a flower so fragrant
+ That every one passing her, knew
+ By the perfume from it exhaling,
+ The love out of which it grew.
+
+ Her life was a book so vivid
+ That all, though running, could read
+ The story of earnest endeavor
+ Written for woman's need.
+
+ Her life was a light whose radiance
+ Brightened all woman-kind,
+ As sunshine wakens the flowers,
+ Or genius illumines the mind.
+
+ Her life was a poem so tender
+ It thrilled with its cadence sweet
+ Many a life prosaic,
+ Which caught up the rhythmic beat.
+
+ Her life was a bell whose ringing
+ Gave no uncertain sound,
+ Its chiming rang out to the nations
+ And girdled the world around.
+
+ Her life was a deed so holy,
+ So noble, so brave, so true,
+ That it set all womanhood noting
+ The good one woman could do.
+
+ Her life was a brook, that swelling
+ Grew to a river wide,
+ That freshened the souls of the many
+ Touched by its flowing tide.
+
+ The song has trilled into silence,
+ The flower is faded and gone,
+ The book's strong story is ended,
+ The light is lost in the dawn.
+
+ The poem's sweet rhythm is ended,
+ The chiming has ceased to be,
+ The deed is fully accomplished,
+ The river has joined the sea.
+
+ She dropped the pebble whose ripples
+ To the shores of all time shall extend,
+ She has spoken the word into ether
+ Whose sound-waves never shall end.
+
+ She has started a light on its journey
+ Out into limitless space,
+ She has written a thought for women
+ Eternity cannot erase.
+
+ A wonderful soul has journeyed
+ Out from the Now into Then,
+ Her voice echoes back to us, waiting,
+ The sound of the great Amen.
+
+
+
+
+Resolutions and Tributes From Clubs
+
+
+[Illustration: Fac-simile of resolutions adopted by the Woman's Press
+Club of New York, January 11, 1902.]
+
+
+Resolutions of the New York State Federation of Women's Clubs
+
+
+In Memoriam
+
+_Mrs. Jane Cunningham Croly_
+
+
+We have tenderly laid away to rest our beloved honorary president,
+Jane Cunningham Croly, to sleep the blessed sleep that knows no waking
+in this toilsome, troublous world.
+
+Her gentle soul is at peace, her personal work is accomplished, her
+useful life is ended. She has been taken from further pain and further
+labor, to that existence where all is perfect peace, perfect rest,
+perfect rhythm.
+
+We wish to place upon our records, therefore, our appreciation of the
+fact, that this New York State Federation of Women's Clubs has
+suffered such a loss as can come but once to any, a loss like that of
+a loving mother to an affectionate child.
+
+We shall miss her at our meetings, at our larger gatherings, and at
+our conventions.
+
+We shall hold her, and the desires of her heart in relation to us, in
+loving and constant memory.
+
+And we purpose to take up her work, where she laid it down, and carry
+it on with the same unselfish aims, high ideals, and unremitting
+patience with which she labored, until we shall reach the goal upon
+which her farseeing eyes were fastened, and her great heart was set.
+
+ FANNY HALLOCK CARPENTER.
+ February 13, 1902.
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: Resolutions adopted by The Society of American Women in
+London, March 24th, 1902.]
+
+
+
+
+The Croly Memorial Fund of the Pioneer Club of London
+
+_First Annual Report_
+
+
+In July, 1900, a fund was raised by the exertions of Mrs. E.S.
+Willard, to present a life membership of the Pioneer Club to Mrs. Jane
+Cunningham Croly, known to all who are interested in woman's work as
+"Jenny June."
+
+Mrs. Croly had a special claim to this distinction, for she was the
+originator of women's clubs. The first woman's club was founded by her
+in New York, March, 1868, under the name of "Sorosis." The example was
+quickly followed elsewhere, and when, in 1889, Sorosis, to celebrate
+its majority, called a convention of women's clubs, ninety-seven were
+known to exist in the United States. This convention led to a
+Federation with biennial meetings. In 1896, the Federation included
+one thousand four hundred and twenty-five dubs. The Pioneer is the
+only English woman's club which belongs to the Federation.
+
+Mrs. Croly's activities were not confined to clubs, although up to the
+time of her death the movement owed much to her wisdom and energy. She
+was a journalist, a writer, an admirable critic, and all her life a
+devoted worker for every movement that could raise the position of
+women.
+
+She was a dear and valued friend of Mrs. Marsingberd, the president
+and founder of this club. It was a recognition of their unity of
+spirit and purpose that made the response of this club so ready that
+the only life-membership as yet presented, was offered to Mrs. Croly.
+She was deeply gratified, but unfortunately did not live long enough
+to enjoy a privilege which she highly esteemed. Her useful, loving,
+laborious life ended in December, 1901. But she had been among us from
+time to time. Her interest in us never flagged, and we prize some
+tokens of her regard. Nor shall we soon forget the stirring words she
+addressed to us on two occasions, pointing out the opportunities which
+our association gave for useful work and sympathy.
+
+When the life-membership fee had been paid, some money still remained,
+and when the question arose as to what should be done with it, Lady
+Hamilton made the valuable suggestion that it should be used as the
+foundation of a fund to be called "The Mrs. Croly Memorial Fund," to
+be applied in sisterly loving kindness to such cases as might arise
+within the club, where urgent material help was needed. This
+suggestion was heartily welcomed by a small provisional meeting called
+by Mrs. E.S. Willard, October 15, 1902, when preliminary steps were
+taken. At a second meeting, November 25, a definite constitution was
+formed for the administration of the fund.
+
+It is hoped that the members of the Pioneer Club will do all they can
+to support this fund, for it is an effort to give some tangible
+expression to the principles which governed the lives of both Mrs.
+Croly and our own president. They always unselfishly tried to give
+loving help to sister women.
+
+January 27, 1903.
+
+
+
+
+The Positivist Episode
+
+_By Thaddeus B. Wakeman_
+
+
+ "The Positivist Episode was a positive factor in my
+ life."--MRS. CROLY.
+
+Those were bright, sunny, happy, idyllic, and fruitful days of the
+Positivist Episode, when the first of the two following letters which
+my wife and I now contribute to the "Memories of Mrs. Croly," were
+written. That episode, of which these letters represent the beginning,
+and the end throws an explaining light not only over the life of her
+whom this memorial is to honor, but over that of her husband, who
+passed to the higher life in 1889; and largely also over the lives of
+others more or less associated with, or affected by, the introduction
+of the study and culture of Positivism into America, of which they may
+be regarded as the chief promoters.
+
+Yes, as friends of Mrs. Croly and of those dear to her, we may well
+recall, as she often did, this Positivist Episode as among the
+pleasantest of her--and may we not also add of ours?--earthly days.
+The first letter shows the movement well under way, when meetings had
+begun to be held, and visits to be made to the homes of those deeply
+interested. Never shall we forget the first of those visits made by
+Mrs. Croly to our then "almost out of town" home in 116th street,
+where our house, pleasantly overlooking the East River, was clothed
+with trees and vines. The Catawbas on a large trellis, trained in
+stories with upright canes, excited her admiration, and she assured us
+that she had "never seen nor eaten anybody's grapes with such
+delight." Naturally, a basket or two of grapes soon followed to her
+home away down and over to the other side of town at number 19 Bank
+street. Thus the "vines" and "fruit" referred to in her letter are
+explained; and with them was thus associated in holy sympathy her love
+with ours of "the kindly fruits of the earth." Mr. Croly also referred
+to gifts of this kind in the New York _World_--thirty varieties of
+grapes raised under and in proof of the "law of correlation, expounded
+by the raiser as the law which held us of the world together."
+
+But when our turn came as Positivist students to visit at their home,
+we found the cosey parlors well filled with the higher samples and
+fruits of human culture and intellect. Mrs. Croly's social position,
+sustained by the ability of Mr. Croly and his prominence as managing
+editor of the New York _World_, and afterwards of the _Graphic_,
+enabled her to call together the leaders, and many interested in the
+then (and now?) two leading schools of scientific and constructive
+thought; the Positivist school of Augusta Comte, represented by Henry
+Edgar and partly also by Mr. Croly and others; and also in contrast
+therewith, the Synthetic Philosophy of Herbert Spencer, represented by
+Edward L. Youmans, John Fiske and others. Nor were there wanting those
+who, like the present writer, would combine those two schools, and
+more, into the scientific and republican growth of our newer world and
+life in America.
+
+The initiative of these meetings was a course of lectures procured by
+Mr. Croly, to be delivered by Mr. Edgar at De Garmo Hall early in
+1868. Out of the interest thus excited, Mr. and Mrs. Croly called
+around them the elements above referred to, including, among
+miscellaneous attendants, perhaps a hundred earnest students of
+Positivism and of the higher religious and scientific philosophies.
+The meetings were not always held at the homes mentioned, but at the
+home of Mr. Courtlandt Palmer and of other participants. All the
+parties named, and many others, took part in the discussions of this
+unorganized circle, until its name and influence reached and
+interested generally the thinkers of the city. This interest, as the
+years rolled on, resulted in or influenced the forming of many
+societies, among which were a Positivist Society, the Society of
+Humanity, the New York and Manhattan Liberal Clubs, the Philosophic
+Society of Brooklyn, the Nineteenth Century Club, the Goethe Society,
+and indirectly a Dante Society and several others. All of the clubs
+and societies of women with which Mrs. Croly and her work have been
+associated may be thus included. Certain it is that this "positive
+factor" in her life was the source from which the new, altruistic
+inspiration originally came which made her finally recognized as the
+"Mother of Women's Clubs" and of their beneficent influences--the new
+life, light, and hope of women, of which they are the beginning.
+
+Nor less should be said for the literature that has sprung from the
+same source. It began with the "Positivist's Calendar," by Mr. Edgar,
+and Professor Youmans's admirable collection of articles, and the
+introduction, on "Correlation" of the physical and other forces,
+published by Appleton, and never to be outgrown. Then Professor Fiske
+published in the New York _World_ his able series of lectures on the
+"Positive Philosophy," which some think he weakened by turning into the
+"Cosmic Philosophy." Then (for further details are not in place here)
+Mr. and Mrs. Croly and Mr. Bell and most of us went into literature in
+some way, to an extent that made quite a library, now mostly lost or
+forgotten. Would that I could "lend continuance to the time" of those
+disputants, and show why and how they drifted apart instead of
+together! For the shadow of oblivion seems to be creeping over all;
+and against that I, as the last survivor, seem to be their only and
+yet their helpless protector. Yet we can now see, as they mostly did
+not, that their divergence was really a "differentiation process,"
+leading each to a higher integration of truth.
+
+Thus, what I cannot do for each, the volunteer seeding of time is
+doing silently for all, though they noticed not the good seed they
+scattered. For instance, Mr. Croly wished these words to be placed
+over his grave: "I meant well, tried a little, failed much." He saw
+not that the sound seed of which he was a real and great sower, were
+his well-meant and effective efforts to bring Positivism, as the sum
+and synthesis of science and humanity, before all thoughtful American
+people, as the real religion and basis of their modern life. That view
+of life was then new, but now it is replacing or changing all dogmatic
+or supernatural religions. In a word, modern scientific thought is
+becoming practical, constructive, and positive in religion; directed
+more and more toward advantages in the human future on this earth. The
+real basis of sentiment is the new science of Sociology and the new
+sense of altruism--first named by Auguste Comte and first brought to
+the American people in and by this "Positivist Episode."
+
+It is by the up-coming of such seed as was then sown, that the old
+issues and their old world have been replaced by the new; which we
+should gratefully inherit from those sowers. It is said that they
+seemed to look upon much of their life as failure because they did not
+see the harvest in their day as the direct result of their hands. How
+strange that the faith of evolution did not give them the "after
+sight" which is the crown and reward of those who "mean well," and who
+"work and hope!"
+
+To Mrs. Croly did come not only the well-wishing and the patient
+labor, but also a foretaste of her reward. Her days were extended
+until her purposes fulfilled met the gratitude of her successors. Even
+"the slings and arrows of outrageous fortune," referred to in her last
+letter to us, were warded off by the human providence which, in her
+own words, "realizes the eternal goodness of the perfection of the
+order which governs the universe."
+
+Thus her friendships with the many she loved and served have closed
+with unalloyed satisfaction--to me and mine a sincere friend for more
+than thirty years! And no words come that I might wish unsaid unless
+these: "Be careful now, for I have told more than one that you are my
+god-father!"
+
+
+
+
+From Mrs. Croly to Mr. Wakeman
+
+
+ 19 BANK STREET, NEW YORK,
+ Sept. 26, 1870.
+
+My dear Mr. Wakeman:
+
+Thank you very much for allowing us to share so largely in the
+luxuries of your pleasant home, and in the rewards of your labor. The
+grapes were a great treat to us, and we have enjoyed them exceedingly.
+The variety is wonderful; and the difference in the flavors, each one
+being perfect in itself, constantly excited our admiration.
+
+I hope by this time your term of bachelorhood is at an end, and that
+Mrs. Wakeman and the children are with you. If she has arrived, please
+convey to her my acknowledgments for the card she left for me, and say
+how much I regretted not seeing her. Please also to remind her that
+next Monday (first Monday in October) is the meeting of Sorosis, and
+that I shall expect to find her at Delmonico's, corner of 14th Street
+and Fifth Avenue, at 1 P.M., as my guest. She can walk straight
+upstairs, and a waiter will send in her name to me, so that she need
+not enter alone; or she can arrive a little earlier (I am always there
+early) and see the ladies as they come.
+
+As I have not many occasions for writing notes to you, Mr. Wakeman, I
+desire to say to you, with the deliberation with which one puts pen to
+paper, that I am thankful for having known so true a man, and happy
+that my husband can count him friend. One thing done is worth many
+words spoken, yet I am doubly glad when words and acts walk
+harmoniously together.
+
+ Always your obliged friend,
+ J.C. CROLY.
+
+
+
+From Mrs. Croly to Mrs. Wakeman
+
+
+ 7 BENTRICT TERRACE, REGENT'S PARK, N.W.,
+ LONDON, December 24, 1900.
+
+MY DEAR OLD FRIEND:
+
+I am sure that you have thought many times that I was forgetful and
+ungrateful, but indeed the first part of the indictment cannot be laid
+to my charge. I never forget you, and if I have not written, it is
+because I have suffered and enjoyed many things during the past two
+years, and have permanently lost the power of rapid movement, or of
+doing anything under great stress and pressure.
+
+But now that this wonderful year is ending, this Sabbath of the
+centuries, I feel that I must at least send my love and unforgetness
+to you; also my hope that you are finding on the other side of the
+continent of North America, compensation for all that you left behind
+in the east, and greater promise for the future.
+
+For all that I have gained for some years past I have to thank my
+losses. Chief among my gains is, I hope, a little realization of
+eternal goodness; of the perfection of the order which governs the
+universe, and the relation of every separate atom to the Divine Unity
+of the whole. I know Goethe proclaimed it a hundred years ago; but
+every separate part has to grow to its knowledge for itself.
+
+I wonder how you are spending Christmas. This year seems to me so
+remarkable that it is a privilege to live in it. I am trying to use
+its last days as if they were mine, in doing the things I should be
+most sorry to leave undone.
+
+I expect to return home soon--that is, in a few months. Or rather, as
+I have no home now, and a trustee has lost the money I had saved and
+entrusted to him in making provision for my old age, I shall only try
+to find a corner to rest in.
+
+I hope you have been dealt with more kindly in body and estate. Please
+remember that I never forget the union of the spirit we once
+enjoyed--that the Positivist Episode was a positive factor in my life,
+and that I shall always recall Mr. Wakeman as my chief helper in it.
+
+ With love to you and yours, I am unforgettingly,
+ J.C. CROLY.
+
+
+
+
+ (It has seemed pertinent and interesting as bearing upon the
+ "Positivist Episode" to here insert extracts from
+ testimonials to Mr. Croly published in the memorial issued
+ at the time of his death in May, 1889.)
+
+
+[Illustration: DAVID GOODMAN CROLY.]
+
+
+
+
+From a Testimonial to Mr. Croly, by T.B. Wakeman
+
+
+David G. Croly must not be forgotten. He rendered our country an
+invaluable service, not yet recognized. He was the man who _planted
+Positivism in America_. The many who have felt, the thousands who
+hereafter will feel its influence for good, should learn to bless, and
+to teach others to bless and continue his memory and influence.
+
+In 1867-68 he began his great work. Henry Edgar had the seed from
+Comte direct, and then tried to sow it in a course of lectures given
+in a hall chiefly paid for by Mr. Croly. But the seed would not take.
+After Edgar had gone, the sturdy brain and hand of D.G. Croly took the
+matter in charge and actually made the growth start. Then the _World_,
+with him at its head, evoked and published John Fiske's "Lectures on
+Positivism," far better in their first shape than when pared and
+cooked over into the "Cosmic Philosophy." Then came the "Modern
+Thinker" and "Positive Primer." Then Dr. McCosh came out, in reply,
+with his volume on "Positivism and Christianity." Then Positivist
+Societies and Liberal Clubs, one after another, were formed and some
+continue, whence John Elderkin, Henry Evans, James D. Bell, the writer
+of these lines, and not a few others commenced to ray out the new
+light, which never has been, and never will be extinguished. By the
+aid of that light let a distant posterity read with gratitude the
+names of _David G. and Jane Cunningham Croly_, for without them I know
+it would not have been.
+
+ T.B. WAKEMAN.
+
+
+
+
+From a Testimonial by Herbert D. Croly
+
+
+... I should like to relate one incident in the history of my father's
+relations with myself--an incident which was eminently characteristic
+of certain aspects of his nature.
+
+From my earliest years it was his endeavor to teach me to understand
+and believe in the religion of Auguste Comte. One of my first
+recollections is that of an excursion to Central Park on one bright
+Sunday afternoon in the spring; there, sitting under the trees, he
+talked to me on the theme which lay always nearest his heart--that of
+the solidarity of mankind. There never, indeed, was a time throughout
+my whole youth, when we were alone together, that he did not return to
+the same text and impress upon me that a selfish life was no life at
+all, that "no man liveth for himself, that no man dieth for himself."
+His teachings were as largely negative as positive. While never,
+perhaps, understanding the Christian religion as a man with a weaker
+faith in the truth of his own convictions might have understood it,
+his attitude was one, I judge, of sympathetic scepticism. He was
+always endeavoring to impress upon me that, while there must
+necessarily have been something great and good in a faith that had
+been the inspiration of so many souls, and comfort of mankind through
+so many centuries, yet at the same time it was incomplete; that very
+often the followers of Christ gave more to the doctrine than they
+received from it; and that the teaching of Auguste Comte supplied what
+was lacking in the teaching of Jesus Christ. His desire to impress
+upon me a belief which he held himself with all the force of religious
+conviction led him to attempt explanations which the mind of a child
+could neither grasp nor retain. He even discussed, for my benefit,
+theoretical questions as to the existence and nature of the Supreme
+Being; discussions, of course, that I could so little understand that
+it was like pouring water on a flat board. It was simply the fulness
+of his belief that led him to do this. His desire was that, surrounded
+as I was by people who burnt their candles at the altars of the
+Christian faith, I should have full opportunity to compare the
+Positivist _Grand Être_ with the Christian Cross. Under such
+instruction it was not strange that in time I dropped insensibly into
+his mode of thinking, or, more correctly, into his mode of believing.
+
+While I was at college I was surrounded by other influences, and while
+retaining everything that was positive and constructive in his
+teaching, I dropped the negative cloth in which it was shrouded. My
+change in opinion was a bitter disappointment to him, as several
+letters which he wrote at the time testify. But intense as was his
+disappointment, it never took the form of a reproach. This is very
+remarkable when we consider what an essential part of his character
+his beliefs constituted. Here was an end, for which he had striven
+through many years, failing at the very time when it should have
+become most fruitful. And his disappointment must have been all the
+more severe because he exaggerated the differences that existed
+between us. It was his opinion that his negative opinions were
+necessarily connected with those which were positive; and that it was
+impossible truly to hold the one without the other. Yet, as I said,
+his disappointment never took the form of a reproach. "It is your
+right; nay, it is even your duty," he used continually to say, "to
+work your own salvation. It has turned out to be different from mine.
+Well, then, mine is the loss."
+
+From an abstract point of view it may not seem to be so much of a
+virtue that a father should consider his son's intellectual honesty to
+be of more importance than his own opinions. But I am not writing from
+an abstract point of view. We are all but children of the earth; not
+good, but simply better than the bad. So it was with David G. Croly.
+His opinions, crystallized by the opposition which they met on every
+side, were so very much the truth to him that he wished his son to
+perceive them clearly and cherish them as devoutly as he did. That
+wish became impossible of fulfilment. Part of his life-work had
+failed. "Mine is the loss."
+
+ H.D. CROLY.
+
+
+
+
+From Mr. Croly to His Son Herbert at College
+
+
+ LOTOS CLUB, Oct. 31, 1886.
+
+My Dear Boy--You said something about the divergence between my ideas
+and those of the philosophers whose works you are reading at college.
+Let me beg of you to form your own judgment on all the higher
+themes--religion included--without any reference to what I may have
+said. All I ask is that you keep your mind open and unpredisposed. In
+the language of the Scripture, "prove all things and hold fast to that
+which is good." Be careful and do not allow first impressions to
+influence your maturer judgment. You say you are reading the
+controversy between Spencer and Harrison on religion. In doing so keep
+in mind the fact that Spencer's matter was revised, while that of
+Harrison was not; and that upon the latter's protest the work was
+withdrawn in England.
+
+I wish during your college year that you would read:
+
+(1) Miss Martineau's translation of Comte's "Positive Philosophy."
+(2) Mill's Estimate of Comte's Life and Works.
+(3) Bridges's Reply to Mill.
+(4) All of Frederic Harrison's writings that you can find.
+(5) All of Herbert Spencer's works that are not technical.
+(6) John Fiske's works.
+(7) The works of the English Positivists, such as Congreve, Bridges
+and Beasley.
+
+By noticing the dates I think you will find that Spencer appropriates
+a great deal from Comte and that he tries to shirk the obligation. It
+would be well to read the latter's "General View of Positivism"
+further along.
+
+My dear son, I shall die happy if I know that you are an earnest
+student of philosophic themes.
+
+Do cultivate all the religious emotions, reverence, awe, and
+aspiration, if for no better reason than as a means of self-culture.
+Educate, train every side of your mental and emotional nature. Read
+poetry and learn the secret of tears and ecstacy. Go to Catholic and
+Episcopal churches and surrender yourself to the inspiration of
+soul-inspiring religious music.
+
+ Ever your affectionate
+ FATHER.
+
+
+
+
+From a Testimonial by Edmund Clarence Stedman
+
+
+My intimacy with Mr. Croly began in 1860, when we were together upon
+the editorial staff of the New York _World_. We had many notions,
+socialistic and otherwise, in common. With these, however, we did not
+venture to imperil the circulation of that conservative newspaper. He
+was City Editor, and knew his business. I was struck by the activity
+of his mind, and his combination of shrewd executive ability with
+inventive skill. I found him a staunch friend, loyal to his
+allies, helpful to his subordinates; moreover, a man of strong
+convictions--which he asserted with a fine dogmatism; an idealist
+withal, quite unhampered by reverence for conventional usage and
+opinion. Absolute mental honesty was his chief characteristic.
+
+He was a humanitarian, in the Positivist sense of the word. All his
+aspirations were for the future glory and happiness of the human race.
+Faith in the reign of law, and a prophetic certainty of man's
+elevation--these were his religion. As a thinker and talker he
+certainly was of the same breed with Tennyson's poet, who
+
+ "Sings of what the world will be
+ When the years have died away."
+
+He bore good fortune and adversity with an equal mind, and he
+displayed stoical courage throughout prolonged illness of a most
+depressing type.
+
+Others will add to your own feeling statement of his varied labors.
+But let me say that, whether our paths came together or diverged, I
+always thought of him as in every sense a comrade. His loss makes the
+lessening roll of those with whom I touched elbows in the old
+newspaper days seem ominously faded.
+
+ EDMUND C. STEDMAN.
+
+
+
+
+From a Testimonial by J.D. Bell
+
+
+Mr. Croly was a great journalist. He was not a great editorial writer,
+but he was a great editor. He had the true executive temper and
+power--that is, the ability to obtain from others the work that was in
+them. He never made the mistake of endeavoring to do everything
+himself. He was just, as well as generous to his subordinates, and
+many of the younger journalists have reason to remember his kindness
+to them. In any company in which he was thrown he was sure to attract
+attention, and there were very few companies in which he did not take
+the leading part by virtue of his ability and not of his
+self-assertion. He never used tobacco in any form, and was otherwise a
+strictly temperate man. In his utterances he was often very radical,
+but in practice he was always thoroughly conservative.
+
+His social predilections led him to study the writings of Auguste
+Comte. He accepted his doctrines and endeavored to popularize them in
+writings and meetings, but with very limited success. Indeed, he often
+said that while intellectually Positivism was in the air, as a social
+doctrine it was too far in advance of the present age to become
+popular.
+
+He was essentially a family man and loved his home and household.
+During the greater part of his married life, however, the exacting
+editorial duties and literary labors of himself and his wife prevented
+them from enjoying the society of the home circle to the extent that
+each desired. Here, as in so many other cases, the individual was
+sacrificed for the benefit of the public.
+
+
+
+
+From a Testimonial by St. Clair McKelway
+
+
+... David G. Croly's personality was always healthy and hopeful. He
+commended with justice, he censured with consideration, he changed or
+cut out your copy with regard exclusively to the increased value of
+the article for newspaper purposes. The staff was like a large family
+under him. Every one's equal rights were regarded, every one's special
+talents were stimulated, every one's peculiar fads or foibles were
+genially borne with. Officially he had no favorites. Personally he
+chose his friends among the staff as freely as he would do among
+outsiders. The unrecorded kindnesses of the man were fragrant and not
+few. To newcomers he would intimate what were the prejudices or
+susceptibilities or limitations of those among whom they were cast. He
+would be just as careful to see that the old standbys did not make
+things rough or unfair for the newcomers. He had little respect for
+the gifts or views that could not be made interconvertible with
+newspaper results. He took a public view of party questions and rarely
+a personal view of any questions. Between what he thought and wished
+as an iconoclast, a reformer, or a reconstructor of foundations and
+what he was intrusted to say as an editor, he drew the line sharp and
+clear. While, as I have remarked, he was rarely a writer with his own
+hand, the articles which he suggested or poured into or pulled out of
+others were made so eminently characteristic of himself that they were
+stamped with his quality as truly as if he had written them himself.
+He was very proud of the success of the men in after life who started
+on their newspaper careers under him. He followed them with good
+wishes always, he spoke strong words for them when, where, and to whom
+they little suspected, and he rightly regarded their success as a
+vindication of his own prescience in having set them on their way, and
+also as a gratification not merely to his confidence in his own
+opinion concerning them, but to the wishes of his unselfish heart in
+desiring that they should take the pinnacles of achievement in
+whatsoever field of newspaper work inclination, necessity, opportunity
+or destiny marked out before them.
+
+ ST. CLAIR MCKELWAY.
+ The _Eagle_ Office, Brooklyn, May 14, 1889.
+
+
+
+
+From a Testimonial by John Elderkin
+
+
+David G. Croly was a strong man. He was strong in his convictions, his
+honesty, and his capacity to meet all the requirements of life in the
+most populous, enterprising, and brilliant city of the continent. His
+strength begot independence, and he was before all else independent in
+the formation and expression of his views, both on public affairs and
+those which are more personal and philosophical. He never apologized
+for his opinions, and his life needs no apology. His mind dwelt on
+that side of every question which involved the interest and welfare of
+the whole mass of mankind, and his religious philosophy was pure
+Humanitarianism. His reverence for Comte was the result of his
+intellectual conviction that in his altruistic teaching was to be
+found the only remedy for the wrongs and sufferings of the world.
+
+In personal intercourse Mr. Croly was suggestive, inspiring and
+encouraging. It was always with a slight shock to preconceived
+notions and prejudices that one listened to his comments on any
+current movement or event, for he was sure to take an original and
+characteristic view which could not be calculated.
+
+
+
+
+From Mrs. Croly's Contribution to Her Husband's Memorial
+
+
+Mr. Croly was in his twenty-seventh year when I first knew him, but as
+yet had made no mark in journalism. He had not found his place in it.
+He was employed as City Editor of the New York _Herald_--a position
+which had not then developed the importance which attaches to it
+to-day--and his duties consisted mainly of making out the "slate" for
+the staff of reporters, and doing such reportorial work as it was the
+province and habit of the City Editor to perform. This afforded little
+scope for a man of Mr. Croly's latent power; and his dissatisfaction
+and desire to find a new field was the cause of our going West within
+three years after our marriage and starting a daily paper in a Western
+town. Had the town been larger the story would have been different. As
+it was, we spent our money, not without result; for Mr. Croly
+discovered that his forte was not execution, but direction, and that
+his fertility of brain only needed a sufficiently wide field to
+develop powers capable of greater expansion.
+
+He was the most utterly destitute of the mechanical or "doing" faculty
+of any man I ever saw, and never used his own hands if he could
+possibly help it. But ideas flowed freely upon all subjects in which
+he was interested, and he distributed them as freely, knowing that the
+reservoir though forever emptied was always full. This amazing
+fertility was in some respects a detriment, for it led him into too
+many projects, and made him careless whom he enriched, while his
+dislike of the mechanism of his work made profit for others at his
+expense. I know no other journalist in New York City, during my own
+journalistic career of thirty-three years, who has made so many and
+such diverse publications, or put so much originality and force into
+the detail of his work. The _World_, and particularly the Sunday
+_World_, which was the foundation of the Sunday newspaper, the New
+York illustrated _Graphic_, the _Round Table_, and other journals were
+built up by his energy, and owed their most striking and successful
+features to his suggestiveness. He was particularly unselfish in his
+estimate of other men and his appreciation of their work. He was as
+proud of discovering the good qualities of a man on his staff as a
+miner of finding a nugget, and never wearied of expatiating upon them.
+Indeed, he did this more than once to his own disadvantage, thus
+furnishing an instrument to treachery.
+
+I am sure the "boys" of the old _World_ staff, St. Clair McKelway,
+A.C. Wheeler ("Nym Crinkle"), T.E. Wilson, H.G. Crickmore, Montgomery
+Schuyler, E.C. Stedman, and others, will look back with a little sigh
+for the "old times," and for the generous recognition they received
+from one who was never at a loss for a subject, or for the treatment
+of a topic, and was always a good comrade and heart and soul
+sympathizer in their work, its trials and its achievements.
+
+A chief quality with Mr. Croly was faithfulness to the interests he
+served. This was put to some severe tests; but they could not be
+called temptations, for disloyalty did not present itself as a
+possibility to him. His faults were those of a nervous temperament,
+combined with great intellectual force and a strength of feeling which
+in some directions and under certain circumstances became prejudice.
+He could never, in any case, be made to run a machine. He hated the
+obvious way of saying or doing a thing. He cultivated the "unexpected"
+almost to a fault, and always gave a touch of originality even to the
+commonplace. His pessimistic and unhopeful temperament was doubtless
+due to inherent and hereditary bodily weakness, and to the lack of
+muscular cultivation in his youth, which might have modified inherent
+tendencies. His mental lack was form not force; and he had enough
+original elemental ideas to have supplied a dozen men. In that respect
+he was superior to every other journalist I have ever known--not
+excepting Horace Greeley, Henry J. Raymond and Frederick Hudson.
+
+But the time has gone by for ideas. It is not that they are a drug in
+the market, but that there is no market for them. To-day is the
+apotheosis of the commonplace, the iteration of the cries of the
+street, the gabble of the sidewalk, and the gossip of the tea-table;
+neither originality nor force is needed for such journalism as this,
+and they may therefore well rest to the music of the pines.
+
+One of the strongest influences in Mr. Croly's life was his
+acquaintance with the Positivist movement in England, and his interest
+in the works of Auguste Comte. Up to this time he had experienced none
+of the undoubted benefit which accrues to every man and woman from the
+possession of an ideal standard, and settled convictions which inspire
+or take the place of religious aspiration. Positivism did all this for
+Mr. Croly, so far as anything could, and he became one of its most
+eager and devoted adherents.
+
+Mr. T.B. Wakeman, himself one of the earliest and most able leaders,
+credits Mr. Croly with being the "father" of the movement in this
+country, and in fact he was the first to make known that any
+representative of Positivist ideas existed in America. He invited and
+paid for the first lecture ever delivered in New York City upon the
+subject; it was given by Mr. Edgar, an unknown "apostle," in a little
+hall (De Garmo) on the corner of 14th street and Fifth avenue, on a
+certain Sunday some twenty or more years ago. The result of the
+lecture was that a dozen people formed a little society and engaged
+Mr. Edgar to give them a series of Sunday talks on the practical
+bearings of the religion of humanity. Mr. Edgar was not in himself an
+interesting exponent of his ideas, but his message inculcated duty,
+love to man, a life open and free from concealments, the possession of
+personal gifts or acquired property as trusts to be used for the good
+of others, and the recognition of value in all that has been and is.
+
+These ideas became more or less an actuating principle. They brought
+together a circle of men and women of the best quality, who endeavored
+to live up to their standard, and by work and daily life, rather than
+by active propagandism, to crystallize opinions into a vital force.
+For several years the regular meetings were held at our house, the
+"festivals" of the year being often given at the residences of other
+members of the society--Mr. T.B. Wakeman, or Mr. Courtlandt Palmer.
+There is still an "old guard" left, of as good, brave, and unselfish
+men and women as ever walked on this earth, and though some differed
+from. Mr. Croly, and from each other on some points, yet they all knew
+and acknowledged that he brought to them the beginning of the best
+inspiration of their lives.
+
+Mr. Croly's latest expressed wish was that all the usual forms should
+be disregarded in the event of his death, except the simplest service
+and the presence of flowers. "If any one thinks enough of me," he
+said, "to bring me flowers, let them; but have no elaborate mourning,
+and bury me close to the earth, near the pines, and facing the sea."
+The legend he left for his grave-stone was: "I meant well, tried a
+little, failed much." But this will not be the verdict of those who
+came under the influence of his strong and many-sided personality.
+
+
+
+
+Mrs. Croly's Club Life
+
+_By Haryot Holt Dey_
+
+
+There is a pleasant and not irrational fancy in the mind of the writer
+that somewhere in space there exists the abiding-place of ideas, and
+that as fast as earth-dwellers are ready for them they are released.
+Like a bird the idea takes flight and seeks a home in the brain of
+some one who is singled out to forward and exploit it for the benefit
+of humanity. Thenceforward, that person becomes the apostle of the
+idea. "We are not in the possession of our ideas," says Heine, "but
+are possessed by them; they master us and force us into the arena
+where like gladiators we must fight for them." But it is only to the
+elect that great ideas are assigned, one who either through heredity
+or by special development is qualified to carry the message. This
+fanciful reasoning applies admirably to the idea for women's
+clubs--organizations for women--and in its selection of Jenny June it
+made no mistake in the character of its agent.
+
+The first woman's club was organized in March, 1868, and was the
+outcome of feminine protest, because women were barred from the
+reception and banquet tendered to Charles Dickens by the Press Club of
+New York City. Among those who applied for tickets on equal grounds
+with men was Mrs. Croly, then an active, recognized force in
+journalism, and when the idea of a woman's club took possession of her
+she had become the most indignant and spirited woman ever locked out
+of a banquet hall.
+
+Forty years ago it required courage for a woman to step aside from the
+ranks of conservatism and organize a woman's club; it was regarded as
+a side issue of "woman's rights," a movement then in grave disrepute.
+But Mrs. Croly had dared untrodden paths once before when she stepped
+into the field of journalism, and her experience there had developed
+self-confidence. She had been writing for women for many years, and
+through her mission had acquired instinctive knowledge of their needs;
+and so when the affront was put upon her by her male colleagues of the
+press she conceived the idea of a club for women. It should be one
+that would manage its own affairs, represent as far as possible the
+active interests of women, and create a bond of fellowship between
+them, which many women as well as men thought at that time would be
+impossible of accomplishment. Mrs. Croly wrote in her "History of
+Clubs" thirty years later: "At this period no one of those connected
+with the undertaking had ever heard of a woman's club, or of any
+secular organization composed entirely of women for the purpose of
+bringing all kinds of women together to work out their objects in
+their own way." And then again: "When the history of the nineteenth
+century comes to be written women will appear as organizers and
+leaders of great organized movements among their own sex for the first
+time in the history of the world."
+
+"The originator specially disavowed any specific object, only asking
+for a representative woman's organization based on perfectly equal
+terms in which women might acquire methods, learn how to work together
+for general objects, not for charity or a propaganda."
+
+"This declaration of principles was the cause of much abusive
+criticism, as well as failure to obtain aid and sympathy. Had Sorosis
+started to _do_ any one thing, from building an asylum for aged and
+indigent 'females' to supplying the natives of Timbuctoo with pocket
+handkerchiefs, it would have found a public already made. But its
+attitude was frankly ignorant and inquiring. It laid no claims to
+wisdom or knowledge that could be of any use to anybody. It simply
+felt the stirring of an intense desire that women should come
+together--all together, not from one church, or one neighborhood, or
+one walk of life, but from all quarters, and take counsel together,
+find the cause of separations and failures, of ignorance and
+wrong-doing, and try to discover better ways, more intelligent
+methods."
+
+Under this banner Sorosis was launched. Alice Cary was its first
+president. The story of Sorosis from the beginning is a very
+interesting one; from the view-point of the press its doings and
+sayings and business affairs generally have always afforded
+subject-matter for comment and conjecture. Of its early days Mrs.
+Croly wrote: "The social events of the first year were memorable, for
+they were the first of their kind, and practically changed the custom
+of confining public dinner-giving to men. The first was offered as an
+_amende honorable_ on the part of the New York Press Club, and
+consisted of a 'breakfast' to which the Press Club invited Sorosis,
+but did not invite it to speak or do anything but sit still and eat,
+and be talked and sung to. The second was a 'tea' given by Sorosis to
+the Press Club at which it reversed the order, furnishing all the
+speakers and allowing the men no chance, not even to respond to their
+own toast. The third was a 'dinner,'--the brightest and best of the
+whole--at which the ladies and gentlemen each paid their own way and
+shared equally the honors and responsibilities." This is said to be
+the first public dinner at which men and women ever sat down on equal
+terms. A report of it in a daily newspaper closed as follows: "The
+entire affair was one of the most delightful events of the season, and
+will long be held in pleasantest memory by all who had the honor to
+participate in it. We believe we violate no secret when we say that
+the gentlemen were most agreeably surprised to find their rival club
+composed of charming women, representing the best aristocracy of the
+metropolis, an aristocracy of sterling good sense, earnest thought,
+aspiration and progressive intellect, with no perceptible taint of
+strong-mindedness."
+
+The growth and expansion of Sorosis were watched by Mrs. Croly with
+the same eager interest with which a mother contemplates the
+development of a child, not knowing just how its character will shape,
+guarding it always with love, for a potential force in its directing.
+It was her spirit that steered it over rough places; that brought
+harmony out of discord; that inspired, soothed, provided wise counsel,
+and that many times sacrificed personal feelings for the good of the
+whole. To do this required mental qualities of a high order--courage,
+foresight, judgment, and not a little of the martyr spirit. Women had
+never organized before, and the conditions to be met and the problems
+to be solved stood absolutely alone, with no precedent to build upon
+or decide even the simplest question. What firmness was required in
+the leader at that time, when, for example, women who had been her
+staunchest allies deserted the ranks because they could not select the
+club name! It was a firm hand that kept the unorganized body from
+going to pieces on the rocks of dissension, and it was at that time
+that the leader proved her inalienable right to her title. She had led
+women into the field of journalism, and now she was leading them into
+organization. Clubs began to form in all parts of the country, and
+when Sorosis arrived at its twenty-first birthday, it was Mrs. Croly's
+idea that they should all come together, and when the invitation was
+issued they came. Thus was formed the General Federation of Women's
+Clubs. At present there are 800,000 women belonging to that
+federation; each State has its own federation, New York forming first,
+at Mrs. Croly's suggestion, and now containing 32,000 enrolled
+members. The General Federation was formed in 1889. The writer recalls
+the triumph in Mrs. Croly's tone when she replied to the appeal of a
+man who came to her to beg to be given the names of the women
+belonging to the federation. "If you choose to send a woman to copy
+the names," she said, "you may do so, but it will take her more than a
+week." And the General Federation was less than three years old at the
+time.
+
+Mrs. Croly organized the Woman's Press Club of New York in 1889. It is
+due to her wisdom that it was carried through many crises. She was its
+president from the day it was founded to the day of her death; always
+its loving teacher, her enthusiasm regarding its development never
+flagged. She lived to see it firmly established, a harmonious and
+delightful organization, and she was satisfied.
+
+Mrs. Croly was neither parliamentarian, orator, nor politician, but
+she had a fund of good sense, wise judgment, and a power of expression
+which, could clarify an atmosphere when mere knowledge of the "Rules
+of Order" would have failed. She had spiritual vision, and by it she
+knew the soul of the club; no amount of dissension could shake her
+faith in its ultimate good, and in times of crisis she presided with a
+serenity only accountable in the fact that she viewed from the
+mountain summit what her associates saw only from the housetop. What
+years of development she enjoyed long before the club idea possessed
+her, endowing her with wisdom and mental breadth, and what
+associations that urged and demanded that she become a student of
+sociology! The seeds of thought planted in those early days of
+journalistic experience, inclusive of what she terms the "Positivist
+Episode," blossomed in her later, more mature years, and all the
+harvest she brought and applied to the organization of women. To the
+casual observer an organized body of women differed in no particular
+form from any ordinary assembly of women. What it was to her one can
+only realize by a careful perusal of her writings on club formation,
+and the moral awakening that sounded the bugle note of progress when
+women began to organize.
+
+Once it came to the hearing of this gentle apostle of development,
+that she had been said to represent a cult. The occasion was a
+reception given in her honor by one of her clubs on her seventieth
+birthday. There had been speeches and congratulations, and the scene
+was one of general rejoicing. "Oh, she is the leader of a cult,"
+whispered a guest, and the remark was repeated to Mrs. Croly. She
+received it with a sorry smile of regret that any one should so
+misinterpret the significance of the scene. As if the narrow and
+exclusive word "cult" could be applied to an assembly that stood for
+organization and human development, which, in her prophetic vision,
+only needed time to unite races, and ultimately to extend around the
+globe. To her it signified "the opening of the door, the stepping out
+into the freedom of the outer air, and the sweet sense of fellowship
+with the whole universe, that comes with liberty and light."
+
+Few women carry their enthusiasm till past three-score-and-ten, as
+Mrs. Croly did. With the failing of physical strength the wand of
+power passed into the hands of younger women whom she hailed as her
+successors, and whose growth and development were the blossoms
+springing from the seed she herself had planted; and in the last years
+of her noble life, when the glow of sunset was on the garden of her
+activities, the love she bore her fellow-women was her unfailing joy
+and inspiration.
+
+At the time of life when people recognize the fact that their forces
+are waning, and that a well-earned period of rest has arrived, Mrs.
+Croly set for herself the last task of her busy life. She felt she had
+something to tell about the success of her great idea, her message to
+women, and she wrote the "History of the Woman's Club Movement in
+America," a volume containing eleven hundred and eighty pages, which
+told the story of nearly all the clubs in the General Federation. This
+book will remain a monument to the founder of women's clubs. Into it
+she put the skill and experience of her long years of editorship,
+urging every faculty to the work, and applying herself with a degree
+of industry that characterized the zeal of her best working years. And
+it testifies to the martyr-like nature of her spirit, that she even
+rallied from the disappointment consequent upon the financial failure
+of the book. The dedication of the work reads as follows: "This book
+has been a labor of love, and it is lovingly dedicated to the
+Twentieth Century Woman by one who has seen and shared in the
+struggles of the Woman of the Nineteenth Century." But nothing that is
+good is lost, and the book testifies to the illimitable ideas, the
+trust in eternal goodness, and the strength of purpose of one who had
+a glorified estimate of latent feminine forces that require to be
+developed.
+
+
+
+
+Essays and Addresses by Jane Cunningham Croly
+
+
+
+
+Beginnings of Organization[1]
+
+Women in Religious Organization
+
+
+When the history of the Nineteenth Century comes to be written, women
+will appear for the first time in the history of the world as
+organizers, and leaders of great organized movements among their own
+sex.
+
+[Footnote 1: _History of the Woman's Club Movement in America._]
+
+The world of to-day, both for men and women, is a different world from
+that which furnished the outlook for the men and women of a hundred
+years ago. Science, invention, have changed its material aspects; and
+while retiring some individual activities and occupations, they have
+created new fields of industry that are rapidly changing the face of
+the world, and making new demands upon strength and energy.
+
+The world which man has conquered, and is still conquering, is no
+longer the purely physical. He is working now toward the discovery and
+control of the powers of the air, and has already harnessed some of
+them to do his bidding. The succession of great events and discoveries
+will mark this century as an epoch in the world's history, and is
+responsible for economic changes which create social disturbance, and
+to which both men and women must adjust themselves, often without
+knowing the why or wherefore of that which is so different from what
+has been. It is one of the paradoxes in human nature that women, while
+being made responsible for human conditions, have been condemned to
+individual isolation. It has been largely the result of general
+physical differentiation and the dependence that grew out of it, and,
+secondarily, the long ages required to produce settled social
+conditions and a reversal of that great unwritten law of kings and
+men--that might made right.
+
+It is true that there was a time, some traditions of which are still
+preserved among the Indian tribes of North America, when the woman
+possessed controlling influence and power. This matriarchal or mother
+age passed with the primitive period in which the energies of men were
+absorbed in hunting and fighting. It was a tribal effort through
+tribal women to formulate and give importance to family life, and it
+must have been accepted and more or less sanctioned by the men. This
+tribal leadership, at first domestic and social, disappeared with the
+development of military leaders, the acquisition of military powers,
+and the centralization of property in lands, houses, and personal
+belongings, that required constant and effective methods of protection
+and defence.
+
+Instances are not wanting of heroic women of those early days who were
+capable of holding and defending person and property against
+aggression and warfare. But the logic of events was strong then, as
+now, and the destiny of the woman was not that of military supremacy.
+
+The first step in associated life taken by women was a simple protest
+against the use and abuse of power on the part of men, wrought up by
+fear or loathing to the point of desperation. Women, usually of rank,
+fled to the desert with one or two companions, and encountered
+unheard-of hardships rather than submit to the fate to which they had
+been condemned by father, brother, or some other man who could
+exercise authority over them. The first Church-sisterhood grew out of
+such beginnings, and gradually obtained the sanction of the Church. A
+recent remarkable work, "Women in Monasticism," shows how wide and
+powerful the system of religious sisterhoods had become as early as
+the fifth century, and traces its growing strength and enlargement
+until its decline, which was coeval with the Reformation.
+
+The strength of this extraordinary development lay in the fact that it
+furnished women with a vocation; it gave employment to faculty. The
+sisterhoods of the convents and monasteries were the nurses, the
+teachers, the students, the caretakers of the poor, and the guardians
+of the orphaned rich. The Fathers of the Church--St. Jerome, St.
+Chrysostom, St. Augustine--all bear witness to the high character of
+these sisterhoods and to their individual members, to their virtues
+and lives of self-sacrificing devotion. Many of these women became
+learned by the exercise of memory alone, for they had no books. Many
+enriched their convents with manuscript books--the result of lives of
+painstaking labor. The Beguines, who founded hospitals and schools,
+were the best educated women of their day--the eleventh century. They
+read Tacitus and Virgil in the original, and were skilled in medicine.
+Disease often took loathsome forms, and only women whose lives were
+consecrated to self-denying labor could have been the patient
+ministers to the diseased poor.
+
+This is all the more noteworthy because the idea of vocation was not
+the early incentive to monastic life. It was sought as a refuge; it
+developed into a vocation; and it is a matter of interest to women
+to-day that these spontaneous vocations, growing out of an enforced
+life, were inspired by love of well-doing, desire for study, the
+acquisition of knowledge, its distribution, and the ever-ready spirit
+of helpfulness at the sacrifice of every personal indulgence.
+
+Naturally the monastic life of women was controlled by the Church, and
+could have continued to exist only by permission. A Spanish lady of
+rank who had befriended Ignatius Loyola as a young student of
+Barcelona, attracted by the odor of sanctity and scholarship which
+attached itself to the Order which he founded, gained reluctant
+permission to establish (1545) an Order of Jesuitesses, subject to the
+same strict rules and discipline. This was the beginning of a strictly
+woman's Jesuit "college," which flourished notwithstanding all the
+efforts Loyola himself made to get rid of it, and the restrictions put
+upon it. Many noble ladies joined it, and it became the foundation of
+a number of houses of the same name and character, extending into
+Flanders and England, when, without cause, except fear perhaps of
+their extent and influence, they were finally suppressed by a bull of
+Pope Urban VIII, bearing date, January 13, 1630. This Order of
+Jesuitesses existed for nearly a century. Their colleges were
+scholastic, and had given rise to preparatory schools, when they were
+summarily suppressed because of their independent life.
+
+Had this Order continued to exist it might have gained an educational
+ascendency throughout Europe which even the strong wave of the
+Reformation would have found it hard to overcome. But the convents and
+monasteries generally suffered at this time from the abuses which had
+crept into the Church, and the rage for power which possessed its
+prelates.
+
+The influence was mischievous also from a social and domestic point
+of view; from the sanctity and superiority attached to those who
+ignored natural ties and duties, thus lowering the social and domestic
+standard, and setting the nun's habit above the woman, the wife and
+the mother. Yet nature had asserted itself even in the convent. The
+motherhood in the monastic woman made her the mother, the caretaker,
+the nurse, the teacher, and the helper of all those who needed
+maternal care, while condemning and ignoring its common aspects and
+place in everyday life.
+
+This absence of domestic ties was not, however, obligatory upon all
+sisterhoods. An interesting story of the "First Council of Women,"
+told by Madame Lendier at the Congress of Women in Paris in 1889,
+bears upon this point.
+
+The monastic school out of which the Council grew, was founded in the
+early part of the seventh century, by Iduberge, wife of Pepin, mayor
+under the Frankish kings.
+
+Iduberge cleared a space in the forest, and built a house for the
+education and religious consecration (if they desired it) of the
+daughters of nobles, her daughter Gertrude becoming the abbess. No vow
+of celibacy was imposed. As long as they remained in the abbey they
+were to conform to the rules of the house, but if they desired to
+marry they were free to leave. The _chanoinesses_ of Nivelle spent
+their morning in religious duties, but the rest of the day they were
+at liberty to mix with the outer world. The abbess alone took upon
+herself the vow of perpetual virginity. A hundred and seventy passed
+away after the death of Gertrude. The abbey had grown in power, had
+gathered around itself a town with gates and towers and
+fortifications, but was independent of the French Government, being
+under the sole rule of the abbess, who was called the "Princess."
+
+This independence excited the jealousy of the Church, and in May, 820,
+Nivelle received a visit from Valcand, the reigning bishop of Liège.
+He was received by the lady abbess in the habit of her order, a cross
+of gold in her hand; mounted on a white horse she rode at the head of
+the procession that marched to meet him. Young girls of noble birth,
+clad in long white gowns trimmed with ermine, and mounted on palfreys,
+followed their abbess, and behind them the town authorities, feudal
+lords and administrators of justice.
+
+At the same time Valcand entered the town with every honor and
+courtesy due to his rank. He held a solemn service, and having given
+the benediction, he rose again and addressed the _chanoinesses_. He
+declared that it had been decided by the Council of Aix-la-Chapelle
+that he should be sent to Nivelle to enforce the rules of St. Benoit,
+which must be followed by all religious bodies; this rule being that
+all the devotees of Nivelle were required to take upon themselves the
+vow of perpetual virginity, to acknowledge themselves dependent upon
+their bishop in all secular matters, and finally to yield up to
+Valcand all temporal power at Nivelle.
+
+This solemn declaration was received in silence. For some moments no
+one moved or spoke, but a low murmur swept over the young sisters of
+Nivelle Abbey. The lady abbess, followed by her _chanoinesses_, rose
+and advanced to the rails of the choir stand. The abbess Hiltrude,
+daughter of Lyderic II, sovereign of Flanders under the emperor, then
+between thirty-five and forty years of age, was beautiful; of that
+calm, grave type which speaks of a quiet, well-regulated life.
+
+"In the name of the Cloister of St. Gertrude," she said, "we protest
+against any interference in the temporal power of this government. We
+claim the right of taking to ourselves husbands when it seems right to
+us so to do. We are therefore resolved to follow the rules of our
+patron saint, as we always have done heretofore, and if this protest
+is insufficient we will present our appeal to our Holy Father, the
+Pope."
+
+The bishop declared that he would maintain the rule given by the
+Council at Aix, and then descending from the pulpit, he ordered his
+people to follow him at once out of Nivelle, refusing to join in any
+of the festivities prepared in his honor.
+
+Hiltrude now took things seriously into her own hands, leaving nothing
+undone to secure the success of her appeal. She sent a courier to the
+Pope, and another to Louis le Debonaire; but the wise abbess took yet
+further precautions: she at once organized a council at Nivelle of all
+the abbesses of the French Empire, requiring silence from them, and
+assuring them of security in the town. The council could not be
+brought together for a year, but on the 1st of May, 821, Hiltrude
+inaugurated her "Concile de Femmes."
+
+She took advantage of the marriage of Count d'Albion with Regina,
+which was to take place at the abbey. Regina was a _chanoinesse_, and
+it was the custom when a member of the circle at the abbey married,
+that the marriage should be solemnized at Nivelle. Fifteen titled
+abbesses, all of aristocratic lineage, arrived with imposing suites.
+The council was a short one. They approved of all that Hiltrude had
+done, and signed the appeal. The document, written, signed, and sealed
+by all the abbesses present, was immediately sent to Rome, and to
+Valcand himself. Meantime the pope and the king, who were much
+perplexed, and the bishop, who was completely baffled by the logic,
+strength and force of appeal of the "Concile," were obliged to
+withdraw the opposition, and the _chanoinesses_ were left in peace to
+marry or not to marry, as they pleased.
+
+The ancient order of deaconesses imposed no vow, yet it was
+co-existent with the early church, and accepted by many of the fathers
+as part of the apostolic order. This position was strengthened by the
+high character of the women, many of them widows, or unprotected
+women, whom death or some other calamity had freed from natural ties.
+
+Ancient church history is full of the records of courage, devotion,
+and self-sacrifice on the part of these women, who were generally of
+high birth, but gave themselves to poverty and the most menial
+offices, and left names which have perpetuated the sanctity of their
+order, and come down to the present day as types of good women.
+
+The ceremonies used in the ordination of a deaconess were precisely
+the same as those used for a deacon. The deaconesses were not
+cloistered: they lived at home with children or relatives. But they
+wore a distinctive dress, and had their place in the church with the
+clergy. The "golden age" of the order is said to have been immediately
+following the apostolic era, before the spirit of monasticism had
+destroyed or limited activities, and shut off sympathy with the
+outside world.
+
+The royal and imperial order of the Hadraschin in Prague, Germany, is
+the most imposing relic remaining of the religious orders of women,
+though not the most numerous. There are about forty chapters still in
+existence of this ancient order, with a royal residence at Prague. The
+abbess possessed the right to crown the queen at coronation
+ceremonies, and exercised it as late as 1836, wearing all the
+magnificent insignia of her rank in the order.
+
+A more numerous order of consecrated women, presided over and governed
+by one "mother-general," is that of St. Joseph de Cluny. This was
+founded by a woman, Madame Javonbey, in the beginning of the present
+century, about ninety years ago. It has one hundred and twenty-eight
+houses in France, and two in the United States. It has others in South
+America, one in Italy, several in the West Indies and some in Africa.
+
+All its property is in community, and its membership--about six
+thousand women--teach in its schools, and care for the sick poor in
+hospitals and in their homes. Two hundred are assigned to the care of
+the insane, by the French Government.
+
+The mother-general administers, from the mother-house _(maison mère)_
+at Paris. She has two assistants and a council of six sisters. Under
+the mother-general there are mother-superiors, one to each estate,
+administering and governing it, but under this mother-superior at
+Paris. These lesser governing women send in weekly reports to the home
+convent at Paris, giving brief accounts of transactions and events,
+such as the entrance of pupils, the purchase of lands, and extra dole
+of food to the poor, the death of a member and the like. They are a
+prosperous, working sisterhood, and have preserved the integrity and
+independence of their beginning.
+
+It was the spirit of protest against church and monastic abuses,
+embodied in Martin Luther, which broke up the monastic system for both
+men and women. Doubtless also it had outlived its usefulness in any
+large or general sense. A more settled social and domestic life was
+becoming possible through the development of trades and industries,
+while the domestic virtues in women began to acquire a value, and
+furnish guarantees to the State.
+
+The discovery of printing gave a tremendous impulse to the spread of
+civilizing and educational influences, to the multiplication of
+schools, and the desire for knowledge. It was the dawn of intellectual
+freedom, and the school of the people was the open door for it.
+
+Spiritual freedom had to wait longer. It waited the unfolding of the
+woman. At the beginning of this century she was still under the
+dominion of the church and its leaders, and her efforts were
+controlled by sects and doctrines.
+
+The first associated work of women in this country, and in this
+century, was still religious and philanthropic. The "Sisters of
+Charity" in America owes its origin to a young and beautiful New York
+woman, Elizabeth Seton, who was born in 1774, married at twenty, but
+lost her husband by death in a very few years. Obliged to support
+herself, she opened a school in Baltimore. But her tendency was toward
+the devoted life of a _religieuse_, and the gift of a foundation fund
+enabled her to gratify this strong desire. She assumed the conventual
+habit, and opened a convent school on July 30, 1809, in Emmetsburg, of
+which she became mother-superior. The character of "Mother" Seton was
+considered saintly by Protestants and Roman Catholics alike. She died
+at her post in 1821, after a life the last half of which was entirely
+spent in self-denying work. Mrs. Seton was exceedingly lovely as a
+young woman; and her sweet, serene face and presence, as she grew
+older, was said to exert a magical influence upon all who came in
+contact with her. This was particularly seen in her care of the sick,
+and in dealing with turbulent spirits: they came immediately under her
+influence without any effort on her part.
+
+The first ten years of the present century saw the beginning of a
+number of religious societies of women, organized to create funds, and
+aid in church mission work. First among these were the "cent"
+societies, 1801 and 1804, and later the Woman's Auxiliaries to the
+Board of Foreign Missions. These grew in size and strength, until in
+1839 there were six hundred and eighty-eight of these societies. But,
+unfortunately, their limited and purely subjective character afforded
+small basis for the wider growth necessary to perpetuity, and they
+gradually declined, until in 1860 they had become nearly extinct.
+
+A little later, 1864, the first independent "Union" of women
+missionary workers was formed in New York by Mrs. Doremus, and within
+a few years every denomination, beginning with the Congregationalists,
+had its organized Woman's Auxiliary to the American Board of Home and
+Foreign Missions. The "Missionary Union" remains, however, the only
+independent society of women workers in this field, managing its own
+affairs, raising its own funds, and sending out its own missionaries,
+both men and women. Its very existence has been a great strength to
+the Woman's Auxiliaries, stimulating them to independent action, and
+especially to the demand for a voice in the disposal of the large sums
+they raise and turn over to the treasury of the American Board.
+
+The oldest purely women-societies in this country were also started
+for missionary and church work. The first is the "Female Charitable
+Society" of Baldwinsville, N.J., and is still existent.
+
+The object of the Baldwinsville society, as stated in the
+constitution, was "to obtain a more perfect view on the infinite
+excellence of the Christian religion in its own nature, the importance
+of making this religion the chief concern of our hearts, the necessity
+of promoting it in our families, and of diffusing it among our fellow
+sinners." A further object is "to afford aid to religious
+institutions, and for the carrying out of this purpose a contribution
+of twelve and a half cents is required at every quarterly meeting."
+
+Mrs. Jane Hamill presided at its first meeting; the Rev. John
+Davenport opened it with prayer. Mrs. Hamill was still the presiding
+officer at its jubilee anniversary in 1867. At its seventy-eighth
+annual meeting Mrs. Payn Bigelow was elected president.
+
+The "Piqua (Ohio) Female Bible Society" was founded in 1818. It
+consisted at first of nine women. In those early days the country was
+a wilderness. Other members were added later. It has had in all, over
+nine hundred members. Mrs. Elizabeth Pettit was its presiding officer
+from 1840 until 1881--forty-one years. The daughters and the
+granddaughters are all made members by right of inheritance, and in
+several instances four generations have been represented at one time.
+It held its seventy-fifth anniversary in 1893, when all the
+descendants of the early members were notified, and many were present.
+It has held a meeting on the first Monday afternoon of each month for
+seventy-eight years, and the records are preserved intact. The founder
+was Mrs. Rachael Johnston, wife of the Indian agent. It has sent over
+fifteen thousand dollars to the parent Bible Society in New York.
+
+It should be remembered that down to the last quarter of the present
+century, there was little sympathy with organizations of women, not
+expressly religious, charitable, or intended to promote charitable
+objects. "What is the object?" was the first question asked of any
+organization of women, and if it was not the making of garments, or
+the collection of funds for a church or philanthropic purpose, it was
+considered unworthy of attention, or injurious doubts were thrown upon
+its motives. In Germany, even yet, societies of women are not
+permitted, except such as have a distinctly religious, educational or
+charitable object.
+
+
+
+
+The Moral Awakening[1]
+
+
+The life of the world is continuous, morally and spiritually as well
+as materially. The individual sees it at short range and in fragments.
+That is the reason why it so often seems dislocated and out of joint.
+A thoughtful writer, Mrs. L.R. Zerbe, says: "When Goethe made his
+discovery of the unity of structure in organic life, he gave to the
+philosophers, who had long taught the value, the 'sovereignty' of the
+individual, a physiological argument against oppression and tyranny,
+and put the whole creation on an equal footing."
+
+[Footnote 1: _History of the Woman's Club Movement in America_.]
+
+The dignity of mind, and the right of the individual to its conscious
+use and possession, had been already clearly enunciated by Fichte,
+Herder, and others, who antedated Goethe. But Goethe went farther. He
+carried the discovery of the rights of the individual to its logical
+conclusion, which was, that the rights of every created thing should
+be given a hearing. This was absolutely new doctrine. It brought women
+and children within the pale of humanity. It moralized and humanized
+nature itself; bringing birds, trees, flowers, all animate life, into
+the "brotherhood" of creation.
+
+The writings of Rousseau and Châteaubriand extended the idea, and
+Madame de Staël and Mary Wollstonecraft were the natural outgrowths of
+it. It may be said indeed to have been the actuating principle of
+modern literature, especially of modern English poetry, which
+vitalizes and idealizes children and nature. Whatever credit may be
+given to others, it should never be forgotten that to Goethe we owe
+the discovery of structural unity, that the cell of all organic life
+is the same.
+
+The ideas that grew out of this discovery reached the higher, thinking
+class, and inspired the poets with a new enthusiasm for humanity long
+before it reached the masses. The French nobility were satiated with
+power. The "Little Trianon" was the only reaction possible to a queen,
+from the wearisome magnificence of Versailles, the gilded slavery of
+the court. The people recognized no sentiment of human sympathy in the
+so-called "whims" and "caprices" of the luxurious occupants of
+palaces; and maddened by countless wrongs, precipitated the French
+Revolution, which, it has been said, turned back the tide of progress
+for one hundred years.
+
+From this movement were developed all those reforms which have made
+the nineteenth century glorious, monumental in the history of
+progressive civilization. The abolition of slavery, the development
+of a spirit of mercy towards dumb animals, the recognition of the
+human rights of women and children--all these may be traced through
+many a winding way, back to the German scientists and philosophers,
+who rediscovered the inner life while working from its outer side.
+
+Yet, as in history there are no sporadic instances, no isolated facts,
+so this flower of our century--the recognition of the rights of all
+created things, with all that it involves--belongs to universal
+history. It is the product of the Reformation and the Renaissance,
+with roots only the records of Rome and Greece and Egypt may discover.
+
+The quickening of moral and spiritual life in our day, its accelerated
+movement, is not to be claimed by or traced to any one set of
+influences or propaganda. The awakening has been all along the line;
+and it has resulted in a new mental attitude toward the human life of
+the world, both as a whole and in its various parts. Its great outcome
+is the learning to live with, rather than for, others.
+
+This new view, this great advance of the moral and spiritual forces,
+addressed itself with singular significance to women. To those who
+were prepared, it came not only as an awakening, but as
+emancipation--emancipation of the soul, freedom from the tyranny of
+tradition and prejudice, and the acquisition of an intellectual
+outlook; a spiritual liberty achieved so quietly as to be unnoticed
+except by those who watched the progress of this bloodless revolution,
+and the falling away of the shackles that bind the spirit in its early
+and often painful effort to reach the light.
+
+The broadening of human sympathy, the freedom of will, gave rise to a
+thousand new forms of activity; some of these an expansion of those
+which had previously existed; others opening new channels of
+communication; all looking towards wider fields of effort, a larger
+unity, a more complete realization of the eternal ideal, the
+fatherhood of God, the motherhood of woman, the brotherhood of man.
+
+Realization of this ideal brought a new conception of duty to the mind
+of woman, unlocked the strong gates of theological and social
+tradition, and opened the windows of her soul to a new and more
+glorious world. The sense of duty is always strong in the woman. If
+she disregards it she never ceases to suffer. Her convictions of it
+have made her the most willing and joyful of martyrs, the most
+persistent and relentless of bigots, the most blind and devoted of
+partisans, the most faithful and believing of friends, and the only
+type out of which Nature could form the mother. This quality has made
+women the constructive force they are in the world, and gives all the
+more importance to the new departure, to the influences of the new
+sources of enlargement that have come into their lives.
+
+Thus it became a necessity that the quickening of conscience, the
+widening of sympathy, the influence of aggregations, the stimulus to
+desire and ambitions, should be accompanied by corresponding growth in
+knowledge and a love beyond the narrow confines of family and church.
+
+The cry of the woman emerging from a darkened past was "light, more
+light," and light was breaking. Gradually came the demand and the
+opportunity for education; for intellectual freedom for women as well
+as men; for cultivation of gifts and faculties. The early half of the
+century was marked by a crusade for the cause of the better education
+of women, as significant as that for the physical emancipation of the
+slave, and as devoted on the part of its leaders.
+
+Simultaneous with this were two other movements--the anti-slavery
+agitation, inspired by the new enthusiasm for human rights and carried
+on largely by the Quakers of both sexes. The woman's-rights movement
+was the natural outgrowth of the individual-sovereignty idea which the
+German philosophers had planted, and of which Mary Wollstonecraft was
+the first great woman-exponent.
+
+The keynote of the educational advance was struck by Emma Willard in
+1821. She was followed by Mary Lyon, Mary Mortimer, and other brave
+women who dared to ask for women the cultivation of such faculties as
+they possessed, without let or hindrance. This demand has taken the
+century to develop and enforce. The work was so gradual that it is not
+yet, by any means, accomplished. Schools and colleges exist, but not
+yet equally, except here and there. They are, however, giving us an
+army of trained women who are bringing the force of knowledge to bear
+upon questions which have heretofore only enlisted sympathies.
+
+Simultaneously with this question of educational opportunity, has
+arisen an eager seeking after knowledge on the part of women who have
+been debarred from its enjoyment, or lacked opportunity for its
+acquisition. The knowledge sought was not that of a limited, sectional
+geography, or a mathematical quantity as taught in schools, but the
+knowledge of the history and development of races and peoples, of the
+laws and principles that underlie this development, and the place of
+the woman in this grand march of the ages.
+
+The woman has been the one isolated fact in the universe. The outlook
+upon the world, the means of education, the opportunities for
+advancement, had all been denied her; and that "community of feeling
+and sense of distributive justice which grows out of cooperative
+interests in work and life, had found small opportunity for growth or
+activity."
+
+The opportunity came with the awakening of the communal spirit, the
+recognition of the law of the solidarity of interests, the
+sociological advance which established a basis of equality among a
+wide diversity of conditions and individuals, and opportunities for
+all capable of using them. This great advance was not confined to a
+society or a neighborhood; it did not require subscription to a tenet,
+or the giving up of one's mode of life. It was simply a change of a
+point of view, the opening of a door, the stepping out into the
+freedom of the outer air, and the sweet sense of fellowship with the
+whole universe that comes with liberty and light.
+
+The difference was only a point of view, but it changed the aspect of
+the world. This new note, which meant for the woman liberty, breadth
+and unity, was struck by the woman's club.
+
+To the term "club," as applied to and by women, may be fitly referred
+the words in which John Addington Symonds defines Renaissance. "This,"
+he remarks, "is not explained by this or that characteristic, but as
+an effort for which at length the time has come." It means the
+attainment of the conscious freedom of the woman spirit, and has been
+manifested first most strongly and most widely in this country,
+because here that spirit has attained the largest measure of freedom.
+
+The woman's club was not an echo; it was not the mere banding together
+for a social and economic purpose, like the clubs of men. It became
+at once, without deliberate intention or concerted action, a
+light-giving and seed-sowing centre of purely altruistic and
+democratic activity. It had no leaders. It brought together qualities
+rather than personages; and by a representation of all interests,
+moral, intellectual, and social, a natural and equal division of work
+and opportunity, created an ideal basis of organization, where every
+one has an equal right to whatever comes to the common centre; where
+the centre itself becomes a radiating medium for the diffusion of the
+best of that which is brought to it, and where, all being freely
+given, no material considerations enter.
+
+This is no ideal or imaginary picture. It is the simplest prose of
+every woman's club and every clubwoman's experience during the past
+thirty years.
+
+It has been in every sense an awakening to the full glory and meaning
+of life. It is also a very narrow and self-absorbed mind that sees in
+these openings only opportunities for its own pleasure, or chances for
+its own advancement on its own narrow and exclusive lines. The lesson
+of the hour is help for those that need it, in the shape in which they
+need it, and kinship with all and everything that exists on the face
+of God's earth. If we miss this we miss the spirit, the illuminating
+light of the whole movement, and lose it in the mire of our own
+selfishness.
+
+The tendency of association upon any broad human basis is to destroy
+the caste spirit, and this the club has done for women more than any
+other influence that as yet has come into existence. A club that is
+narrowed to a clique, a class, or a single object, is a contradiction
+in terms. It may be a society, or a congregation of societies, but it
+is not a club. The essence of a club is its many-sided character, its
+freedom in gathering together and expressing all shades of difference,
+its equal and independent terms of membership, which puts every one
+upon the same footing, and enables each one to find or make her own
+place. The most opposite ideas find equal claims to respect. Women
+widest apart in position and habits of life find much in common, and
+acquaintance and contact mutually helpful and advantageous. Club life
+teaches us that there are many kinds of wealth in the world--the
+wealth of ideas, of knowledge, of sympathy, of readiness to be put in
+any place and used in any way for the general good. These are given,
+and no price is or can be put upon them, yet they ennoble and enrich
+whatever comes within their influence.
+
+We are only at the threshold of a future that thrills us with its
+wonderful possibilities--possibilities of fellowship where separation
+was; of love where hatred was; of unity where division was; of peace
+where war was; of light--physical, mental and spiritual--where
+darkness was; of agreement and equality where differences and
+traditions had built up walls of distinction and lines of caste. This
+beautiful thing needs only to be realized in thought to become an
+actual fact in life, and those who do realize it are enriched by it
+beyond the power of words to express.
+
+Women have been God's own ministers everywhere and at all times. In
+varied ways they have worked for others until the name of woman stands
+for the spirit of self-sacrifice. Now He bids them bind their sheaves
+and show a new and more glorious womanhood; a new unit--the completed
+type of the mother-woman, working with all as well as for all.
+
+
+
+
+The Advantages of a General Federation of Women's Clubs[1]
+
+_Address by Mrs. Croly to the First Meeting of the First Federation of
+Women's Clubs, Held in Brooklyn, N.Y., April 23, 1890_
+
+
+The growth of the woman's club is one of the marvels of the last
+twenty-five years, so fruitful in the development of mental and
+material resources. What it was destined to become was, perhaps, far
+from the minds of those who aided its inception, but all the
+possibilities of the future lay in the germ that was thus planted, for
+it was formed by the marriage of two great elements--freedom and
+unity.
+
+[Footnote 1: _The Cycle._]
+
+The club has been called the "school of the middle-aged woman." It is
+so in a very broad sense. It begins by gratifying her desire for
+fellowship, her thirst for knowledge; by training her in business and
+parliamentary methods; and gradually develops in her the power of
+expressing her own ideas, of concentrating her faculties and focusing
+them upon the object to be attained, the purpose to be accomplished.
+At the same time she finds that a more subtle process has been going
+on in her own mind. An insensible alchemy has been widening her
+horizon, getting rid of prejudice, obliterating old, narrow lines,
+leaving in their place a willingness to see the good in Nazareth as
+well as in Galilee.
+
+This result shows that she is a clubable woman, for it is emphatically
+the club spirit. It is in this respect that the club differs from
+those societies that are devoted to a single purpose; which demand
+subscription to an idea, an opinion, a dogma, a belief, a single basis
+or principle, and do not admit of fellowship on any other terms.
+Doubtless those have their uses--they are the necessary and often
+powerful expression of an advancing public opinion; but they have
+always existed, usually and in past times, under the leadership of
+men, even when composed of women. But it remained for the nineteenth
+century to develop a moral, social, and intellectual force, made up of
+every shade of opinion and belief, of every degree of rank and
+scholastic attainment, of every kind of disposition and habit of
+thought, all moulded into form,--and though as yet only the promise of
+what will be, furnishing an outline of that beautiful united womanhood
+which was the dream with which the club was started, and has been the
+guiding star to its development up to the present time.
+
+The union of clubs in a federation is the natural outgrowth of the
+club idea. It is the recognition of the kinship of all women, of
+whatever creed, opinion, nationality or degree; and it is a sign of a
+bond that entitles every one to equal place;--not to charity or
+toleration alone, but to consideration and respect. Inside of the club
+we are equal sharers of each other's gifts. Each one brings her
+knowledge, her sympathy, her special aptitude, her personal charm of
+manner and disposition, and we are all enriched by this outflowing and
+inflowing, by this equal part and share in a fountain made up of such
+bountiful and diversified elements.
+
+But the tendency of a circle is to widen. This is natural and
+necessary to healthful life. Stop its currents, dam up its inlets and
+outlets, and it is reduced to stagnation, and soon becomes foul and
+mischievous instead of healthy and life-giving. The tendency of narrow
+ideas is to run to routine, to spend time and strength upon trivial
+details, and allow them to block and hinder the consideration of
+weightier matters. There is undoubtedly a use for practice in business
+methods, particularly for those women who have had no previous
+training in business life; but the club ought to be an evolution. Once
+acquired, the knowledge of business ways, methods, and tactics can be
+put to better use than to aid or hinder the transaction of routine
+affairs, which it is the function of a committee to dispose of.
+
+The direction which the enlargement of club life takes must depend in
+the first place upon local conditions and environment. Already in many
+cities it has made itself, as in Philadelphia, the centre of the
+active, moral and intellectual forces. In others, as in Milwaukee, by
+cooperation in spirit and practice, it has provided a home for
+literature and the arts. Whatever the woman's club does, is and ought
+to be done on the broadest human principles; for if it forgets this it
+ceases to be a club, and becomes merely a propaganda for the
+advancement of certain fixed and unchangeable ideas.
+
+But its own life, no matter how broad, is not enough. Whatever is
+vital is social. This is why a club when it comes to understand its
+own powers and sources of life, wishes for the companionship, the
+sympathy, the fellowship, the shaking hands with other clubs. It is
+said that corporations have no soul: clubs have souls, and they call
+loudly for the enlargement of club sympathies, the discussion of
+knotty club questions, the affirmation by others of what have become
+club convictions, and mutual congratulations on club successes.
+
+This is not all that a federation of clubs can accomplish, but it is
+enough for a starting point. It is the kindly, providential,
+sympathetic way in which we are always led from the smaller to the
+larger field of work. Just before descending from a crest in the
+Sierras into the valley of the Yosemite, you come suddenly upon a
+wonderful view; it is called "Inspiration Point," and it is like an
+open door, a revelation of the infinite, a promise in one gleam of
+transcendent beauty, of all the separate and divisible splendors that
+are to follow.
+
+This spirit of enlargement beckons us and leads us to the formation of
+the Federated Union of Clubs, and we cannot do better than follow its
+guidance. We all need, clubs as well as individuals, encouragement and
+counsel; we need to enlarge our knowledge of what other clubs are
+doing, of their extent, of their objects, of their ambitions. Above
+all, we need to enlarge our sympathies, to cultivate sympathy by
+knowledge; for our prejudices are born of ignorance, and we rarely
+dislike what we intimately know. As Charles Lamb said: "How can I
+dislike a man if I know him? Do we ever dislike anything if we know it
+very well?" With the growth of clubs the purely personal
+characteristics of them will disappear, or at least be subordinated to
+larger aims; and it is in the prosecution of these larger aims that
+the federation will find its reasons for existence.
+
+There is a vast work for clubs to do throughout the country in the
+investigation of moral and social questions, in the reformation of
+abuses, in the cultivation of best influences;--not the influence of
+class or clique or party, but a wide, liberalizing, educational
+influence which works for true goodness, for cleanliness, for order,
+for equal opportunities, for the recognition of God in man and nature,
+in whatever stage of unfolding the Divine in us may happen to be. It
+is in the last twenty-five years that village-improvement societies,
+first instigated by a woman--Miss Sallie Goodrich of Stockbridge,
+Mass.--have created a transformation in whole townships, and so
+enhanced the value of property as to drive out the original
+inhabitants and change farming communities into fashionable summer
+resorts. This result is of doubtful value. But every woman's club,
+especially in the newer sections, has in its power, by wise and
+careful action, to improve the conditions, elevate the tone, and
+crystallize the moral force of its community in such a way as to make
+it more desirable to live in, more beneficial to its own citizens,
+more of an example to others.
+
+All these questions of club life and work would naturally come up
+before a federated body, and these would as naturally lead to
+governmental questions; to contrasts and records of activities in
+different parts of the world, and to the investigation of the causes
+which bring about certain results.
+
+Women are naturally both receptive and constructive. The affirmative
+states of mind are those which, particularly belong to women; as
+iconoclasts they are mere echoes. This affirmative condition is most
+favorable to true development. Nothing good has ever come of mere
+negation. But we must look for our truths and our basis of true
+growth, in the light of the rising dawn--not, as heretofore, in the
+waning glory of the setting sun. The union of clubs is the natural
+outgrowth, of the planting of the true club idea. It was a little
+seed, but it contained the germ of a mighty growth in the kinship of
+all women--the women who differ as well as the women who agree; and
+the federation of clubs is the forerunner of that unity of the race of
+which philosophers have spoken, of which poets have dreamed, but which
+only the constructive motherhood and womanhood of the race can
+accomplish.
+
+
+
+
+The Clubwoman[1]
+
+
+The nineteenth century has been remarkable in many ways. It has
+developed a new material and social order; but the fact is not as yet
+fully recognized that it has developed a new woman--the woman who
+works with, other women; the woman in clubs, in societies; the woman
+who helps to form a body of women; who finds fellowship with her own
+sex, outside of the church, outside of any ism, or hobby, but simply
+on the ground of kinship and humanity.
+
+[Footnote 1: _The Cycle_.]
+
+It is not yet twenty-one years since a great daily in New York said
+that if a society composed wholly of women could hold together one
+year, a great many men would have to revise their opinion of women.
+The remark was made apropos of the formation of the first women's
+clubs in this country, and was echoed on all sides publicly and
+privately. It is only significant now as showing the isolated position
+of women, and the general impression which prevailed that they could
+not and would not work together, except, perhaps, for some common
+cause, religious or philanthropic, which for the time being absorbed
+their energies and made them lose sight of their personal jealousies
+and animosities. Why women should have been believed to be
+antagonistic to women it is hard to say. This idea seems to have been
+cultivated assiduously by men, and women have echoed it; for it cannot
+be denied that the new fellowship that has come with the century and
+with the awakening of women to the life which is theirs--the life of
+friendship, of sympathy, of enlargement, of interest in affairs, of
+common kinship with all that exists in a beautiful world--has in it
+something of the nature of a surprise. Is it possible that women may
+have a life of their own, may learn to know and honor each other, may
+find solace in companionship, and lose sight of small troubles in
+larger aims?
+
+These questions have been answered by thousands of women, answered
+with tears, after the manner of women, but tears of joyful recognition
+of the new day which has dawned for them;--a day of larger
+opportunities, a day which comes after a night of ages; for the woman
+is for the first time finding her own place in the world. Heretofore
+she was only welcome if the man wanted her, and if he no longer wanted
+her she was again cast out. But she is now learning that the world
+exists for her also; that she is one half the human race; that life,
+liberty, and the pursuit of whatever is good are as desirable for her
+as for the man, and as necessary in order to put her in _rapport_
+with the eternal springs of all life and its varied forms of activity.
+
+The first impulse of the awakened woman is to unite herself with other
+women; her next to learn that which she does not know in regard to
+art, literature, peoples, races; the countries she has never visited,
+the kinsmen and kinswomen she has never seen, and the degree in which
+their progress has kept pace with or gone beyond her own. This
+knowledge comes to her through her club or literary society.
+
+The woman's club has become the school of the middle-aged woman. It
+has brought her up to the time. It has enabled her to keep pace with
+the better advantages given to her sons and daughters. It has put an
+interest into her life which it had never previously possessed, and
+made her more humanly companionable because better able to judge and
+more willing to suspend judgment. The clubs of women in America--the
+growth mainly of the past twenty years--can now be counted by the
+hundreds, and their membership by many thousands, and the history of
+them all is practically the same.
+
+It is this woman, born of women's clubs, who is the woman of to-day.
+She is the centre of the intellectual activity of townships and
+neighborhoods all over the country. She forms stock companies, and
+builds athenaeums; she is at the head of working guilds; she organizes
+classes, teaches what she knows, while she is being taught what she
+did not know; and in mental activity, and labor which is not routine,
+has renewed her youth, and added to her attractions. She is at the
+same time far removed from a lobbyist. She is able to look at
+different sides; she is socially at home with the best people in every
+sense of the word. She is a lady as well as a woman, and does not
+adopt what is _outre_ in order to obtain notoriety.
+
+
+
+
+The New Life[1]
+
+
+It is a very dull mind, whether belonging to man or woman, that does
+not feel stirred by recent movements--not here alone but all over the
+world--into some quickening sense of the deeper life, the broader
+human claims, the unifying and uniting influences which have sprung
+into activity, and which address, not the visionary, but the
+thoughtful and far-seeing, with prophetic gleams of a new heaven and a
+new earth.
+
+[Footnote 1: _The Cycle_.]
+
+It is also a very narrow and self-absorbed mind which, only sees in
+these openings opportunities for its own pleasure, or chances for its
+own advancement on its own narrow and exclusive lines. The lesson of
+the hour is help for those that need it, in the shape in which they
+need it, and kinship with all and everything that exists on the face
+of God's green earth. If we miss this, we miss the spirit, the
+illuminating light of the whole movement, and lose it in the mire of
+our own selfishness. To women this uplifting, these open doors, mean
+more than to men. They have been hedged about with so many
+restrictions, forced and held in such blind and narrow ways, that it
+is little wonder if sight and steps are feeble, and that they find it
+impossible to take it all in, or to recognize at once the full meaning
+of the day that is dawning for them.
+
+For we are only at the threshold of a future that thrills us with its
+wonderful possibilities;--possibilities of friendship where separation
+was; of love where hatred was; of unity where division was; of peace
+where war was; of light--physical, mental and spiritual--where
+darkness was; of agreement and equality where differences and
+traditions had built up walls of distinction and lines of caste. This
+beautiful thing needs only to be realized in thought to become an
+actual fact in life, and those who do realize it are enriched by it
+beyond the power of words to express. "I should like to wake up rich
+one morning just to see how it would feel," said one woman to another
+not long since. "I do wake up rich every morning now," said the other,
+"though I have still my living to earn, because my life is full of
+prized opportunities, of cherished friendships, of chances for
+acquiring knowledge that I had not in youth, and keeping myself in
+touch with broad human facts and forces. Everything is interesting to
+me, more interesting the closer my acquaintance with it, so that I am
+fast getting rid of those ugly things we call prejudices, and laying
+in a stock of appreciation instead, which is in itself enriching."
+
+The old feeling of patron and dependant--so irksome, so humiliating,
+so feudal, yet containing for many the whole moral law--is done away
+with, and in its place appears a spirit of true fellowship, a growing
+sense of mutual respect and helpfulness. Club life teaches us that
+there are many kinds of wealth in the world--the wealth of ideas, of
+knowledge, of sympathy, of readiness to be put in any place and used
+in any way for the general good. These are given, and no price is or
+can be put upon them; yet they ennoble and enrich whatever comes
+within their influence.
+
+Money is the only kind of wealth that is not common, that is not given
+freely; and for that reason it has a deadening and demoralizing effect
+upon the minds of those who cultivate and increase it for its own
+sake, or fail to put it to its larger and more human uses. Wise
+distribution is the only way in which money can be made valuable in
+the world: it is only as a developing power, as an aid to the worker,
+and a creator of instrumentalities by which good objects can be
+accomplished, that it is desirable. In the light of this view, what
+place do those men and women occupy who shut themselves up with their
+money, and shut out the wide human interests which educate the mind
+and heart to noble issues? Going to church does not help them, for it
+must be an exclusive church and an exclusive pew, under an exclusive
+pastor who patronizes Jesus Christ but does not sympathize with Him,
+and who talks about the "dregs of society" as if it were something
+far removed from the knowledge and consciousness of his hearers.
+
+The woman of the past has especially been cramped up, bound around,
+and blindfolded by her special form of belief, by her tradition, by
+her social customs, by her education, by her whole environment; and
+the effect will remain stamped more or less upon her individuality
+long after the predisposing causes have passed away and better
+influences and circumstances have taken their place.
+
+But the present is full of encouragement. The new life has begun: the
+woman is here;--not the martyred woman of the past; not the
+self-absorbed woman of the present, but the awakened woman of the
+future. That woman whose faculties have been cultivated, whose gifts
+have been trained, whose mind has been enlarged, whose heartbeats
+respond to the touch of the unseen human, and whose quickened insight
+recognizes father, brother, sister, and friend beneath the strange as
+well as the dilapidated robe.
+
+This woman whose face no artist has painted, who is not yet familiar,
+is among us, and will remain. Her work humanizes and reconciles, and
+the changes it will effect will come so noiselessly that the majority
+will not be aware of them till they are accomplished, and then each
+one will announce, and perhaps believe, that they themselves have
+brought these things about. But this will not matter, for when the
+work is done it is really of little consequence who did it, since all
+who do any good work at all are simply agents and ministers, charged
+with a task it is their business to perform, and happy only as they
+are able to execute it. It is those who are "let alone," who live for
+and in themselves, who are the unhappy ones; and for these, though
+they possess fine houses, much gold, stocks and bonds, the poorest
+worker may well fervently pray that the new life may come to these
+also.
+
+
+
+
+The Days That Are[1]
+
+
+We live in an age of discontent. Discontent has been deified. It has
+been called divine; and unrest, the seal as well as the sign of
+progress. Doubtless there is a time and a place even for discontent,
+for there is no faculty that has not its function. But discontent,
+which is a sacred fire when it burns within and is kept for home use,
+is a mischievous and destroying element when it is widely distributed
+and unthinkingly-employed by ignorance and short-sightedness.
+
+[Footnote 1: _The Cycle_.]
+
+Then it is certain that if discontent is good, content is far better,
+and thankfulness better yet. If time teaches us anything, it is to
+work and wait and trust; to be thankful for what is--for the digging
+and seeding time as well as for the harvest; for one must come before
+the other.
+
+Time brings only one regret--that we had not more joy in the things
+that were; more belief, more patience, more love; more knowledge of
+the way things work out; more willingness to help toward the final
+result. The preparation, the planting, the laying foundations, must be
+done in the dark; usually done with blind eyes as well, which see not
+what may or will be, but anticipate a harvest of pain from a
+spring-time of rain. Yet these showers may have been indispensable to
+the ground, and the seed may have expanded and sent its shoots up to
+the surface in consequence of them.
+
+But why use symbols? The days that are;--the days that are with us are
+the good days. Suppose it is hard work, and only the prospect of hard
+work? Work is the best thing we have got: it is salvation. It is the
+means by which we struggle up out of the darkness into the light. It
+is the law of life. It is the ministry of all that is good in the
+world; and the better it is the better for us, the better for every
+one. It is only those who do not know how to work that do not love it;
+to those who do, it is better than play--it is religion.
+
+But this is the mere influence of work itself. Suppose, besides your
+work, you have the blessing of a family to be cared for, and your work
+provides for them? This consecrates every part of it. It makes every
+movement of the hand a benediction, every heart-throb an unuttered
+prayer. Are not these days so full of labor best days? For about you
+are those you love. They are under the roof you provide; their voices
+furnish the music, their presence the sunshine of your life. Sometimes
+that which your discontent craves will come to you. The freedom from
+toil, the absence of "troubles" that now loom up so large to you; but
+with your troubles your joys will have vanished, and you will sit in
+the twilight waiting for the end, and wishing that you had cultivated
+the sweetness instead of the bitterness of the beginning, that you had
+not allowed the thorns to cover up your roses.
+
+Wisdom seems to have been the same always, but each one has to learn
+its lessons for himself. That is the reason why there is so little
+apparent progress in essential truths. There are always those who have
+grown into their realization; there are always those who are at the
+threshold, and who must travel over the same paths, for we can none of
+us acquire true wisdom for another; it must become a part of
+ourselves, of our own moral and spiritual consciousness.
+
+"It is all very well for you," says one; "you have never known the
+pinch of poverty." How do you know that? We none of us know how and
+where the shoe has pinched another person's foot. It is not our
+business to know, but it is our business to prevent our soreness from
+becoming sourness and bitterness. It is our business to make the
+pathway of others as pleasant as we can, so that their unseen corns
+shall irritate them as little as possible. All the wisdom of the days
+that have been, and the days that are, will be found in the following
+lines from Goethe's "Tasso":
+
+ "Would'st thou fashion for thyself a seemly life?
+ Then fret not over what is past and gone;
+ And spite of all thou mayest have lost behind,
+ Yet act as if thy life were just begun.
+ What each day wills, enough for thee to know,
+ What each day wills, the day itself will tell.
+ Do thine own task, and therewith be content;
+ What others do that shall thou fairly judge.
+ Be sure that thou no mortal brother hate,
+ Then all beside leave to the Master Power."
+
+
+
+
+A People's Church[1]
+
+
+"What would you do if you were rich?" This is a question often asked,
+and readily answered by those who have not wealth of their own to
+dispose of, for there is nothing easier than to give away other
+people's money. But it is more difficult to the conscientious, who
+feel that their unearned millions ought to inure in some way to the
+public benefit, yet do not always see the way to the reconciling of
+their own conditions and circumstances with that use of money which
+seems to them wisest and best.
+
+[Footnote 1: _The Cycle_.]
+
+As a rule it may safely be assumed that if all who are poor were
+suddenly made rich, they would do as the majority of our rich men do
+with their money--keep it. But it is at least pleasant to think how
+generous one might be, and as the rich occasionally are; and I propose
+to suggest one object that I hope will one day be realized in this
+great city, where everything good is possible, as well as everything
+evil, and which only needs to take vital root in some active mind to
+become a living reality.
+
+Within a certain area New York may be called a city of churches, but
+they are churches for the rich; solemn, imposing, cathedral-aisled,
+glass-stained, costly, munificently beneficed, elegantly pastored--God
+locked in, the poor locked out. I know there are "mothers'" meetings
+and "mite" societies, and all the rest of it, but all the same the
+poor woman in her old shawl and bonnet would not think of entering one
+of those expensive pews, nor does the man in his working suit feel
+that that is the place for him. Outside, the majority of churches take
+no account of the necessity for the consolation, the comfort, the
+upbuilding, the refreshment of religion, save and only for certain
+hours on Sunday, and then it must be in full toggery, and in company
+with, the eminently respectable.
+
+The most beautiful thing about the old churches abroad is not their
+splendor of carving and painting, but that they stand with, open doors
+week days and Sundays, for the people to enter; and they do enter. The
+market woman with her basket drops in for a moment on her way home
+from the labor of her weary day. The old woman totters in to say her
+"Ave Maria," the young woman to pray away her perplexities. Even the
+business man sometimes finds it a resource from his struggles and
+temptations. The poor, with their crowded houses and narrow quarters,
+have so little privacy as to make quiet, and even an opportunity for
+self-communion, a luxury. Then how often in the perplexities which
+fill their lives they desire for a little while a retreat, a refuge
+where they can think, perhaps receive a word of counsel, at least find
+an atmosphere of absolute peace and restfulness.
+
+The Monday prayer-meeting, the afternoon exhortation; the evening
+conference of the Baptists, the Methodists, the Presbyterians, or the
+Congregationalists, are not what is wanted; nor is it a cold and
+barn-like edifice which makes one feel, if one goes to call upon God,
+as though He were out, and could only be seen at stated times, and by
+the will of the sexton and the trustees.
+
+A people's church is wanted, where the people can come and go as they
+please; which asks no questions, which is always open, which has brief
+singing and organ services that all and any people of any kind and
+degree may attend and feel themselves welcome. A morning service of
+praise, a mid-day song of rejoicing, a vesper hymn of thankfulness. No
+word of condemnation, no word of controversy, no word of doubt, no
+word of assertion or denial; only unceasing love, continued and
+eternal recognition of human kinship and readiness to minister to any
+soul's need as far as it may be reached and helped.
+
+No one minister could perform its offices; its servants would have to
+be in a manner consecrated to its work, and they should be men and
+women who have suffered, and therefore know, but who would find more
+reason for rejoicing than lamentation; who would possess gifts of
+music and oratory, and whose personal influence would be strong for
+righteousness.
+
+There are great churches with scattered congregations, in Fifth
+avenue; there are a few poor churches, and small, for which no one
+cares, and which offer no attractions to the over-flowing population
+of Mott street. The spring and summer will soon come, and then these
+great churches will be closed, their pew-owners distributed over lake
+and mountain in all the different parts of the wide world. But the
+"people" will be here. People who work in foundries and shops, who
+live in tenement-houses; people who earn a hand-to-mouth living as
+clerks, book-keepers, seamstresses and petty store-keepers; people who
+have to stay in such homes as they can support because they cannot
+afford to break them up and go elsewhere.
+
+For these people and their children there is only the street. The
+children occupy the street. For four or five months in the year they
+make life hideous, especially on Sunday, by noise and exhibition of
+vandalism that would disgrace the savages of any age or nation. The
+police acknowledge themselves powerless to prevent it. It is simply
+the exercise of undirected faculty which might be turned to account,
+but which has only noise, confusion, and street warfare for its
+opportunity for exercise.
+
+There are possibilities in these congregations of the highways and
+byways, and when we have our people's church or churches, open all the
+year, and all the night as well as all the day, and the voices of the
+angels for sweetness, singing love and peace on earth, in an anthem
+that pierces the roof, and with the tones of a mighty organ to
+emphasize to all the world its message, and it is not a question of
+clothes, many people will be glad to listen, and will find an
+influence in the music, in the willingness, in the free-heartedness,
+in the sympathy, in the kindness, in the spirit of brotherhood, that
+they would not get out of preaching nor dogma.
+
+Whom are we waiting for to build this church? Is it a woman? Surely it
+is an opportunity that carries the two-fold blessing.
+
+
+
+
+Notes, Letters and Stray Leaves
+
+
+A "free lance" is less free than the organs of a party. In one case it
+means at least the opinions of a group; in the other, the dogmatism of
+the one who wields the lance. Nothing is less free than the
+self-styled freedom of the individual.
+
+Enthusiasm implies a certain narrowness of vision. When people can
+take a broad view they can see the elements of goodness or beauty
+everywhere, and they cease to be enthusiastic in regard to one. The
+great popular preachers are not university men, or those who are quiet
+and literary in style, but strong, dogmatic men.
+
+Perhaps the most noticeable difference between the so-called new woman
+and the new man is this, that she is seizing every opportunity that
+opens up new avenues of individual employment, while he is discovering
+and storing energy to save himself from doing any work at all. The old
+man made other men, and women too, work for him, the new man is making
+the hitherto uncontrolled forces his servants, locking them up in such
+small compass that a twist of the wrist will start the crash of
+worlds.
+
+The notes of the great god Pan, so "piercingly sweet by the river"--a
+far cry and a weary way from Pan to Handel and Beethoven; yet during
+all that time music has been the joy and the consolation of
+peoples,--all except the Quakers.
+
+If Poetry is the prophet of the future, music expresses all
+emotions,--love, joy, fear, above all, aspiration. Music is
+essentially religious, and has inspired the most perfect forms of
+emotional composition we know.
+
+I take off my hat to the new man--that is, I would if I wore one, but
+I wear a bonnet, and pin it on with long, sharp-pointed things which
+if they were not used voluntarily would be considered instruments of
+torture. Think of the man who is testing the force of dynamite--who is
+holding lightning bolts in his hand and forcing them to do the work
+which he has planned for them, who is taking the altitude of the
+mountains in Mars in his observatory in the air at midnight,--think of
+these men stopping to swear while they ran the murderous little weapon
+through six thicknesses of buckram, lining, velvet, lace, feathers,
+ribbon and hair--to fasten on their bonnets!
+
+
+
+
+Letter to the New York Woman's Press Club
+
+
+ October, 1900.
+
+My dear Friends and Fellow-Members:
+
+It was really a grief to me not to be able to meet you individually
+and collectively before leaving to be absent the entire season. The
+accident which disabled me for the summer, threatens to cripple me for
+the winter also, and in this condition of dependence and general
+disability, it seemed best to go where I could have seclusion, and the
+care of some member of my own family.
+
+I resign my place among you with less reluctance because the Woman's
+Press Club is now strong and well able to guard its own interests, and
+direct its own affairs. It will, I am sure, be all the better and
+stronger from being thrown upon its own resources, and made to depend
+wholly upon the potent efforts which have been evoked, and which may
+be still further developed on the part of its membership.
+
+It will be a source of the deepest satisfaction to me in my retirement
+to think of you in connection with the happy times we have had, and
+the good work done during the past three years, and also of the spirit
+of loving fellowship which has grown so strong and so deep. Nothing
+can give greater pleasure than to hear of your continued growth and
+prosperity, of continued endeavor to make the work effective, and the
+life of the Woman's Press Club beautiful and useful.
+
+Remember that a well-rounded club is an epitome of the world; that it
+never can and never ought to be perfect according to any one
+individual's idea of perfection, for every one's ideal is different;
+and it is the unity in this diversity which constitutes the spiritual
+life of the club, as the soul animates and inspires the body.
+
+Exalt the club. Bring your best to the front. Extinguish personal
+aims. Mind not at all the little picking and carping of human
+gadflies, whose desire to extract blood is perhaps a survival of their
+species, and an evidence of their unfitness for human companionship.
+
+I think of you at every gathering, and if you remember me, show it in
+your determination to make the Woman's Press Club of Greater New York
+an honor to the metropolis of the New World and to American womanhood.
+
+ J.C. CROLY.
+ Hill Farm, Hersham,
+ Walton-on-Thames, England.
+
+
+
+
+Letter to Sorosis
+
+
+ May, 1899.
+
+To my dear friends and fellow-members of Sorosis:
+
+On the eve of my departure from New York for a season, my heart turns
+towards Sorosis with a depth of affection I find it difficult to put
+into words. For thirty years it has held a large place in my life. It
+has represented the closest companionship, the dearest friendships,
+the most serious aspirations of my womanhood. The past is filled with
+delightful memories, social and intellectual, of which it was the
+happy instrument and inspiration. Its galleries are stored with living
+pictures of noble women who were with us, who are always of us, who
+have become a part of that eternal source of spiritual life from which
+the best things spring. What is the secret of the strength of Sorosis?
+What is its value to the community and the world at large? It is, as a
+centre of unity. This is our Holy Grail,--and this we are bound never
+to defame, or defile by thought, word or deed.
+
+We planted the seed not in Sorosis alone, but in the General
+Federation; and it is our duty to see that it is preserved in its
+integrity. Sorosis does not want place or power in the organization
+she created, but it is hers to see that the great principle it
+embodied is not lost sight of. That the limitless growth and
+expansion provided for in its foundations are always from centre to
+circumference, not in sections; and that as differences are not
+recognized in the local organization, so there can be no north, south,
+east, or west in the general organization, nor any separation or
+division of interests. This is the aim of Sorosis:--to perfect within
+its own membership that unity in diversity which is the basis of its
+life, and the source of its growth; and, as far as its strength and
+influence extend, preserve it as the foundation of a united womanhood.
+
+The consolation I feel in going away is that I shall find you here
+when I return; not, I hope, crippled and disabled as now, but able to
+be among you once more. I leave a monument of the woman's club in the
+"Women's Club History," which carries marvellous testimony to the
+ideals and aspirations of the woman of the home--for this is the woman
+of the club.
+
+God bless and keep you all! I wish I could look into your kind faces
+individually, and thank you for all that Sorosis past and present has
+been to me.
+
+ Faithfully yours,
+ J.C. CROLY.
+
+
+
+
+Letter to the Society of American Women in London
+
+
+ November, 1901.
+
+To the Society of American women in London:
+
+On the eve of my departure for America, I desire to express to the
+Society of American Women something of what I feel sure I owe it
+individually and collectively since its initial gathering in the
+beginning of March.
+
+My visit to England has been made under extremely trying and painful
+circumstances. I had expected no participation in any social
+functions. I had communicated with only a very few near and dear
+friends. Formal intercourse with comparative strangers seemed
+impossible.
+
+But there was nothing strange in the atmosphere of the American
+Society. It provided at once an atmosphere in which one could breathe
+freely, so kindly and so cordial were its tone and spirit.
+
+It formed at once a social centre in which the best elements
+contributed to the most varying attractions. It brought together many
+of the most charming and progressive women in English as well as
+American society, and also many of the brilliant women we read about,
+but rarely meet.
+
+In addition, it performed a most useful office in extending the hand
+of welcome from American women in London to the representative women
+who attended the International Council; and has a future of
+exceptional character in filling a social need which has never been
+filled by the official representatives in republican America.
+
+It is not too much to say that it has put life in London in quite a
+new and much more attractive aspect to American women, by focusing the
+best elements and bringing them in touch with each other. With time
+and development the highest results of the modern co-operative spirit
+should be attained, and the fulness of a life that will enrich each
+individual member, and reach out beyond to an ever widening sphere of
+happy influence.
+
+ J.C. CROLY.
+
+
+
+
+Letter to the Pioneer Club of London
+
+
+ June, 1901.
+
+To the Finance Committee of the Pioneer Club:
+
+I hope I shall not be considered as taking a liberty in presenting a
+subject of some importance for your consideration.
+
+There is a feeling in some clubs and among some clubwomen that the
+time has arrived for expanding the club idea and at the same time
+drawing closer the ties which unite women in the form of organized
+fellowship, which the modern clubwoman recognizes as a potent and most
+valued element of her club life. It is believed, in short, that the
+time has come for the initial steps to be taken for the formation of a
+European Federation of Women's Clubs.
+
+There are many reasons which seem to make it eminently proper that the
+Pioneer Club should be the one to take these initial steps. It is the
+oldest and best known woman's club in London. It was founded upon the
+broadest human lines by a woman who possessed in the highest degree
+that sixth sense which the nineteenth century contributes to the
+twentieth--the sense of the Universal. This led her to affiliate the
+Pioneer Club in the beginning with the General Federation of Women's
+Clubs in the United States, and should inspire it to progressive life
+and work.
+
+The initial step is not formidable. It is, if thought desirable,
+simply to address a circular letter to women's clubs on record,
+wherever they may be known to exist, proposing a basis of federated
+affiliation, and inviting them to unite in forming a grand Federation
+of organized bodies of women capable of realizing any purpose upon
+which they might bring their united forces to bear.
+
+If it is said, "Of what use is such a Federation?" I might point to
+many instances of educational and municipal progress, and social
+reform in America effected by this combined effort. But details are
+as nothing compared with the one great, glowing, ultimate aim of the
+solidarity of thoughtful, high-minded, intelligent, progressive women.
+It is written in the stars. It will surely become an accomplished
+fact; and there are other clubs willing to take the initiative; but it
+is fitting that the Pioneer Club should lead, and by its wisdom and
+judgment lend an added dignity to noble endeavor.
+
+ J.C. CROLY.
+
+
+
+
+Letters to Mrs. Dimies T.S. Denison, President of Sorosis
+
+
+ 22 AVENUE ROAD,
+ LONDON, NW., January 27, 1899.
+
+My dear Mrs. Denison:
+
+Thank you very much for your delightful letter. It was so good and
+heartening. Its spirit was so representative of the best that
+club-life has given us that it made me feel more than ever thankful
+for Sorosis and for that reserved strength and all-roundedness of
+resource and character which makes it able to successfully tide over
+any difficulties.
+
+I have not heard of any effort to form a London Sorosis, nor do I
+think it could be done successfully on precisely the same lines. If we
+were starting a club to-day it would differ considerably from the one
+started thirty-one years ago. That had to be formed out of such
+materials as were available at that time, and built as it knew and as
+it grew. Its virtue lay in its breadth, in the true and scientific
+character of its conception. It made a centre and worked from that to
+the radiating points of an illimitable circle, not knowing precisely
+where these would take it, but with all the faith of Columbus in
+results founded upon essential principles. We had no idea at the time,
+that at every one of these farther points other centres were being
+formed that also, in their own time and way, struck out feelers and
+shafts, and thus became part of that great system of creative force,
+which, still acting on its central and original idea of a larger
+unity, brought together the General Federation. This is the mother
+idea which Sorosis represents, and which needs no legal enactment to
+enforce. It stands for this as much in London as in New York, and in
+its own way has become unique. It lacks some of the elements of the
+newer clubs, but it contained the germ of them all, and is essentially
+a true growth, an aggregation of all the qualities of a diverse and
+unified womanhood;--not by making it something else, but by studying
+its own spirit and life, and the genius it has developed.
+
+First, it stands for a wide hospitality and the generous recognition
+of all other women; for high standards in literature, art, ethics, and
+all the interests belonging to and growing out of them. Above all, it
+stands for home duty; for honor, faithfulness, loyalty, courage and
+truth. Finally, it stands for subjection;--that highest subjection of
+the one will to the many; of that subordination of our own dominant
+desire to the spirit and will of God, represented by the spirit and
+will of the majority. For the voice of the people is in a real sense
+the voice of God, whether we recognize it or not.
+
+O my beloved Sorosis, you are the core of my heart! What have I said
+but that you represent an ideal of life and character, and that each
+member should hold herself responsible for its preservation and its
+increasing beauty and value?
+
+ Faithfully yours,
+ J.C. CROLY,
+ Honorary President.
+
+
+Dearest Mrs. Denison: When I began this letter it was intended for you
+alone; as I went on it seemed as if it might find a little place at
+the Breakfast. Use your own judgment in regard to having an extract
+made for that purpose...
+
+ Yours lovingly, J.C.C.
+
+
+
+
+ QUEEN'S ROAD, ST. JOHN'S WOOD,
+ LONDON, N.W., April 16, 1899.
+
+My dear President:
+
+What a lovely programme! I am so proud to show it, and so happy that
+Sorosis is going on so beautifully. Have I congratulated you? If not,
+let me do it now with all my heart. I always knew your time would
+come, and that you would make a popular as well as a wise president.
+You have a light touch, but a very appreciative one, and that good
+thing--a fine sense of humor. You do not take yourself too seriously,
+but you give the best of yourself unreservedly. God bless you for
+carrying the banner of Sorosis up to its highest level, and
+maintaining its dignity in a way worthy of its reputation.
+
+The London Club, or Society of American Women in London, is
+flourishing. The president comes often to see me, and in her address
+at the second luncheon, April 10th, said that she considered it a
+special providence that I was in London at the beginning; that I had
+been of the greatest help to her, and that she should always look upon
+me as their "Club Mother." I began to wonder if that was what my leg
+was broken for, and how many more times I might have to be cut to
+pieces to make "Mother" enough to go around.
+
+Mrs. Henry Norman (Muriel Dowie, author of "A Girl in the
+Carpathians") made a brilliant little speech. She is delightful, and
+very anxious to visit America. Her husband is the Englishman who of
+his own choice graduated from Harvard. He has written some very
+appreciative articles about America...
+
+I hope I shall know when Mrs. F. and Mrs. L. are coming, and something
+of their plans. At least how long they will stay in London. Won't you
+be so good as to tell them this and give them my address?
+
+I am endeavoring now to put myself under treatment for the pain and
+weakness I feel when I try to walk (with sticks) in the street...
+
+ Really yours,
+ J.C. CROLY.
+
+
+
+
+ 7 RUE D'ASSAS, PARIS, FRANCE,
+ October 3, 1900.
+
+My very dear President and Friend:
+
+Your letter was most welcome. I have been in a quiet little country
+place since coming from Ober-Ammergau, and know no one. I thought much
+of you in those quiet days, and wished to write, but waited to hear,
+and the echoes did come in a way I understood, for I had letters
+before leaving America which were an indication of the general trend
+of thought and desire. Of course I never for a moment misunderstood
+your attitude in the matter of the election... You could not help your
+election. [Referring to the first vice-presidency of the General
+Federation.]
+
+I am very, very sorry the color question has been raised again. It
+almost made a split six years ago. It was, at the best, premature. It
+was a sacrifice of the greater to the less, of the real good we had
+attained and the ideal towards which we were working, to a theoretical
+possibility which had not yet presented itself. We have yet a thousand
+obstacles to overcome within ourselves; a thousand problems to solve;
+an ideal to work towards capable of infinite expansion. But we should
+not strain the limits while the centre still lacks order and form, and
+depends upon the wisdom with which it is guided for permanence.
+
+We have made some dreadful blunders,... but ideals are not stones in
+the street; they are stars in the sky. They are always beyond us; we
+cannot wear them as breast-pins but we can work towards them...
+
+ Yours faithfully,
+ J. C. CROLY.
+
+
+
+
+ 82 GOWER STREET, BEDFORD SQUARE,
+ LONDON, W.C., April 10, 1901.
+
+My very dear Friend and President:
+
+How good it was of you to send me the beautiful souvenirs of the
+thirty-third Annual Breakfast. They took me straight back to you all
+through a mist of tears that were half pleasure, half pain; pleasure
+that I was not forgotten, pain that I was not there to see the loving
+glance, and share the hand-clasp. It is true I have many friends here,
+but none that seem quite like the old friends; and there is only one
+Sorosis--God's blessing be upon it for evermore! Yet wherever I go,
+God's blessing and His Spirit seem to me to have descended upon women.
+They show the most wonderful goodness and insight. They seem each one
+to be specially made; not the kind that are kept in stock, so to
+speak. Oh, I feel sometimes as if all my life had been partly a test,
+partly an experience of their goodness, and that it is a sufficient
+blessing, for nothing else has been left me.
+
+A writer remarked the other day, in an article on the South African
+war, that the best results of war were ties--the spirit of good
+comradeship that it established among men. This is what we
+preeminently get out of our club life, and without paying so fearful a
+price for it. I hope to see you all when you come together in the
+autumn.
+
+ With loving remembrance,
+ J.C. CROLY.
+
+
+
+
+Letters to Mrs. Charlotte Carmichael Stopes (London)
+
+
+ 11 BARTON STREET, WEST KENSINGTON,
+ Jan. 15, 1889.
+
+My Dear Mrs. Stopes:
+
+It is very kind of you to take this trouble to give us a pleasure, and
+I would not miss it on any account. But it is a little difficult for
+me to name the day. I am in the hands of the dentist this week; I
+shall hardly get through to go to the Writers' Club on Friday. These
+two circumstances have postponed my visit to Miss Genevieve Ward to
+whom it is now arranged that I go a week from to-morrow. I could make
+it any afternoon that week that would suit you. Mrs. Sidney will be
+delighted also to accept your invitation; and perhaps Miss Ward also.
+Please make the afternoon to suit yourself and Miss Blackburn.
+
+ Really yours,
+ J.C. CROLY.
+
+
+
+
+ Jan. 19.
+
+I go to Miss Ward's on Monday. It is her day at home, and therefore
+will be more or less fatiguing. Tuesday I have promised to dine at the
+Crescent Club with Mrs. Phillips and hear Mr. Felix Moscheles' lecture
+afterwards. Miss Ward and her brother, Col. Albert Lee Ward, go also.
+Three days of continuous going out would be too much for me, and
+something would have to give way. I would rather it would be any event
+than yours. Suppose you arrange it for the week following, and in the
+meantime call for me at Miss Ward's on Monday. You will find Miss Ward
+a very striking personality, and I particularly wish Col. Ward to
+accompany me to your house. I will see you on Friday, and you can tell
+me how you decide.
+
+ J.C. CROLY.
+
+
+
+
+ Jan. 20.
+
+Friday the 27th will suit me very well. I have been out-of-doors so
+little as yet, that I feared I might break down on the third day of
+trying. I do know Lady Roberts Austen; have been to luncheon at her
+house, but have not seen her since I came this time; I have
+communicated as yet with so few. I heard from her the other day
+however, and I know she will go to your house if she possibly can. I
+have to drive wherever I go. I move too slowly for crowds and public
+conveyances. I cannot risk weather.
+
+
+
+
+ Feb. 8.
+
+I want to thank you for the afternoon I spent at your house; I enjoyed
+it so very much. You will not consider me "pushing" if I say I am only
+half satisfied. There are so many sides to your house; I want to see
+the Queen of Scots portrait again, and the Donatello, and some of your
+rare cookery books. I expect to change my quarters in about three
+weeks to the North West; then you will let me come and browse, won't
+you. But first you must come and lunch with me. With kind regards to
+your delightful family,
+
+ I am, etc.
+
+
+
+
+ March 12.
+
+May I come up next Thursday afternoon and bring with me an American
+friend, Mrs. Stockber of Silverton, Colorado, who has just arrived by
+the _Umbria_. Mrs. Stockber is an unusually interesting woman. She is
+equal owner with her husband, an intelligent and large-minded German,
+of one of the largest silver mines in the States, and is one of the
+only two honorary women members of the great Association of Mining
+Engineers of the United States. Mrs. Griffin, the President of the new
+Society of American Women in London, also wants to come. I don't want
+to inundate you; and this is only to ask if you are better, and can
+receive a trio safely.
+
+ Yours, etc.
+
+
+
+
+ March 16.
+
+I am sorry to give you so much trouble. But I have a friend here just
+now, a woman of unusual character and ability. I remember I told you
+of her. The other is Mrs. Helen T. Richards of the Boston Institute of
+Technology. The only moment I can get her is on Monday afternoon, and
+I want her to see the collection of prints and your pictures. If it is
+all right I will bring her with me on Monday at 3 P.M. We must go to
+Miss Ward's at 4.30. Do not have tea at that primitive hour; for we
+shall be obliged to have a cup at Miss Ward's. I wish we might have a
+chance of seeing Mr. Stopes; but of course that is something that may
+be prayed for, but not what common people are made for. Dear, take
+care of yourself if you can. There is only one of you.
+
+ Yours,
+ J.C.C.
+
+
+
+
+ March 17.
+
+We will postpone. I cannot reach my two troublesome friends, and next
+week you will be busy and tired. "By-and-by" is coming with the sun
+and flowers. We will come too.
+
+ Yours lovingly and really,
+ J.C.C.
+
+
+
+
+ June 25, 1901,
+ 82 SOMERS' STREET, W.C.
+
+My very dear Friend:
+
+I have only time to thank you for your kind "welcome," and tell you
+how sorry I am not to see you to-day, and your precious Winnie, who I
+hope has really started on the road to recovery. Children are the
+richest boon vouchsafed us in this world, and the parents are the
+trustees of this wealth committed to their charge, but belonging to
+the world at large, and of which time only tells the value. I shall be
+very busy now for a few days, but will see you as soon as possible.
+
+ Affectionately,
+ J.C.C.
+
+
+[Illustration: Facsimile of a portion of a letter written by Mrs.
+Croly in October, 1900.]
+
+
+
+
+ 222 WEST 23D STREET,
+ NEW YORK, Jan. 16, 1901.
+
+My dear Friend:
+
+Thank you very much for your letter and card. It was a great pleasure
+to me to receive it, and to learn something about yourself and what
+you are doing. The news was long belated. The letter was to have been
+printed the week that I left, and I provided to have it sent to about
+a dozen friends as a good-bye. But it was so long delayed by Transvaal
+excitement and sad war news, that I did not expect it to appear at
+all.
+
+I had a wonderful celebration on my seventieth birthday in December;
+poems written, cakes with seventy candles sent, and a great
+spontaneous gathering in my honor, which really bothered me not a
+little, for I do not pose worth a cent, and do not know where to look
+or what to do when people compliment me.
+
+However, one thing gratified me above all others. It was a "birthday
+party" given me by the Daughters of 1812--the most exclusive of
+patriotic societies that is restricted to lineal descendants. The
+gathering was magnificent; the cake was brought in lighted by seventy
+candles borne on the shoulders of four men. By unanimous vote they
+conferred upon me honorary membership, and the insignia were
+conferred. The president in seconding the motion said, this departure
+from their rules (alluding to my English birth) was not in honor of
+"the club," nor of the "literary women," but of the woman who knew no
+line of separation, and whose work had been done for all women. Was
+not that a beautiful thing to say? Only that I intend to be cremated,
+I would have it put on my tombstone.
+
+We had a very bright and very beautiful beginning here to the "Holy
+Year," so far as weather is concerned, and it is also very gay, though
+my lameness prevents me from participating much in social doings. I am
+also grieved by the unexpected effects of the Boer war, in England.
+There must have been shocking blundering and mismanagement somewhere.
+The pitying way in which "poor, stupid, decrepit old England" is
+talked about is galling. Some military officers remarked recently that
+England was hardly worth having a "scrap" with, she would be so easy
+to beat.
+
+Our General Federation holds a Congress in Paris in June, and my
+passage is taken for May 19th. If nothing untoward prevents, I shall
+be in London for a week early in June, and then go to Paris and
+Ober-Ammergau. If you could go it would be very pleasant. Give my love
+to your daughters, and kind regards to Mr. Stopes.
+
+ Yours ever,
+ J.C. CROLY.
+
+
+
+
+Letter to Mrs. Carrie Louise Griffin
+
+ 82 GOWER STREET, BEDFORD SQUARE, W. C.
+ June 25, 1901.
+
+My dear Mrs. Griffin:
+
+Mr. Bell wants an article immediately, about the American Society, for
+the Chicago _Recorder_; and I am glad to write it, because it enables
+me to make it stand for what it does; and will, still more, in the
+very heart of western clubdom; and will be a John the Baptist for you
+if you should go over next summer. He wants some photographs, yours
+particularly; which please send. He left his card with address of
+_Recorder_ in Fleet Street, which I omitted to take up-stairs at the
+moment, and afterwards it could not be found. I am hoping that you
+have it and will give it to me, or that Mr. Griffin perhaps knows it.
+If you can drop in on Monday, A.M., I should be glad to ask you in
+regard to some members--what to say of them, etc. Would Mrs. Clarence
+Burns allow her picture to be used, and have you one of Mrs. De
+Friese?
+
+ Always faithfully yours,
+ J. C. CROLY.
+
+
+
+
+From a Letter to Mrs. May Riley Smith
+
+... I have never done anything that was not helpful to woman so far as
+it lay in my power. (April 2, 1886.)
+
+
+
+
+Letters to Miss Anna Warren Story (Chairman of Executive Committee of
+the Woman's Press Club of New York)
+
+
+ HILL FARM COTTAGE, HERSHAM,
+ WALTON-ON-THAMES, ENGLAND,
+ Oct. 29, 1900.
+
+My dear Executive:
+
+Your letter giving me all the news to date was most kind and welcome.
+It seems very strange to be away from you all in this secluded corner
+of Surrey, with nothing in sight but woods, a meadow in which cows are
+grazing, and one neighboring cottage. My morning walk, when the
+weather will admit of walking, is along the old post road lined with
+woods and at the foot of our little lane or entrance to farm. The
+other morning one solemn old cow put her head through the fence, and
+stared with amazement at my crutches. Four others walked over to see
+what she was looking at; and they all stood in a row, looking and
+making no sound as long as I could see them. It was very funny.
+
+It seems so odd after so many years of continuous and often hurried
+work, to be using days for walking, and little things that since I was
+a grown woman have been crowded into odds and ends of time, or omitted
+for want of enough of it. I am gaining strength, however, and realize
+how complete the prostration was, and how radical the reconstructive
+processes had to be. The seclusion in which I live, surrounded by pine
+woods, a mile and a half from the nearest post office (tho' a postman
+brings our letters) and an equal distance from such supplies as a
+village can afford, is a little trying in some ways, but a real boon
+to me in my present condition.
+
+It would have been very easy to plunge into the activities of women in
+London. Many invitations have reached me, but I have been nowhere but
+to one little dinner given by our only neighbor, the wife of a London
+editor, and herself a popular story writer.
+
+I can walk now with one crutch and a stick, and begin to hope for
+complete restoration, which at one time seemed to me impossible. But,
+oh, how tedious and wearing it is! We have an unusually fine October
+for England, but gray skies and almost daily rains now. But the Surrey
+country is beautiful, full of quaint old villages and objects of
+picturesque interest. I am longing for the time and the weather to
+explore it. I could write all day about my gradually growing desire to
+be "up and doing." But time and space do not admit. Let me say in one
+word how deeply I was touched by the action of the Executive
+Committee, the Governing Board, and club. But I am also disappointed.
+I wanted to leave the field clear, and have new energy put into the
+club by bringing into active and central circulation the young, best
+blood we possess. Thank you for your assurance that as far as possible
+that will be done; and thank every officer and every member in my
+behalf for the long and affectionate confidence they have reposed in
+me, and for the many acts of personal kindness I have received from
+them.
+
+I am sorry you have lost the Countess by removal, and other valuable
+members by death...
+
+ Yours faithfully and affectionately,
+ J.C. CROLY
+
+
+
+
+ NORFOLK VILLA, WEYBRIDGE, SURREY,
+ August 20, 1901.
+
+My dear Anna:
+
+Your letter came most opportunely. I had been thinking about you, the
+Press Club, and my dear friends at home; for somehow I have not felt
+the old pleasure in being in England, and if I had a home to come back
+to, and my goods and chattels were not so far off, I should have come
+back, I think, this autumn.
+
+For one thing, the weather has not been favorable. We had such warm
+weather in July; but every month has had a week or more of very cold
+and wet weather. In Ober-Ammergau on the 8th of July we perished with
+the cold, and the rain almost caked in ice upon us. Still, even such
+weather could not spoil Ober-Ammergau. It is the one thing of its kind
+on earth, and the nearest to an absolutely perfect thing I ever saw. A
+great charm is the unconsciousness of the performers. They do not play
+to an audience. There are no footlights, nothing theatrical; only the
+Great Tragedy wrought out as a living reality. I think of all the
+scenes; the one that made the deepest impression upon me was the one
+in which there were the fewest actors and least acting. That was the
+Garden of Gethsemane. So intense was the agony of spirit, that it
+seemed as if I myself should cry out if the disciples had not gone
+away and left the Saviour alone to his mortal struggle.
+
+It is a great thing, Anna, that these people have done. They have
+lived the Passion of Christ for nearly three hundred years. They are
+born in it; they are fed upon it. They have made a cult of religion;
+and they are absolutely religious, but not in the least sectarian. The
+Christ they have lifted up draws all men unto him.
+
+I have been in a quiet country place for four weeks, and shall stay
+two weeks longer... If I remain this winter we shall probably go back
+to Paris by November and to Italy in the spring. Now that I am here I
+might as well give myself this one more chance... I was very tired
+when I came back from our hurried trip, and was very glad of rest and
+quiet...
+
+Do not let my dear friends in the Press Club build upon me, or weaken
+their force by re-electing me. Elect a young, strong, press woman.
+Anna, do this without any reference to personal feeling or likes or
+dislikes. You are capable of acting impersonally. Beg the club to do
+this in my name, and to pick out their best for the chairmen of their
+representative committees.
+
+My own dear friends and fellow members; how I wish I could make them
+feel the strength of my desire for their growth in wisdom and honor.
+God bless them all!
+
+ Yours affectionately and faithfully,
+ J.C. CROLY.
+
+
+
+
+ ASHOVER, DERBYSHIRE,
+ May 30, 1901.
+
+My dear Anna:
+
+Your kind letter arrived this morning, forwarded by Mrs. Sidney to
+this remote village in Derbyshire. I left London ten days ago because
+I had to get fresh air and quiet. Ashover is a quiet little village; a
+paradise of meadows starred with flowers, and wooded and cultivated;
+hills in which all the treasures of one of the richest counties in
+England (in floral wealth) are to be found. When I came here there
+were still primroses, cowslips, violets, forget-me-nots, and fields
+white with small daisies and yellow with buttercups. Now there are
+masses of yarrow, marguerites, rhododendrons, bluebells, and great
+trees of white and purple lilacs. Roses, I am told, will cover
+everything by and by, but development is a little late this year. I
+wish you could spend a month here this summer: what a revelation of
+English beauty it would be to you!
+
+Thank you for your sympathy with my personal troubles. I am not
+unhappy... The goodness of women to me is always and everywhere
+miraculous. This alone makes life worth living...
+
+I am rejoiced to hear of the Press Club's prosperity. Nothing could
+give me greater pleasure than to know of its constant growth and
+advancement.
+
+ With love, ever yours,
+ J. C. CROLY.
+
+
+
+
+Letters to Mrs. Caroline M. Morse
+
+
+ HILL FARM COTTAGE, WALTON-ON-THAMES,
+ SURREY, ENGLAND, Dec. 13, 1898.
+
+My dear friend:
+
+I was sorry to know from Ethel's note, received day before yesterday,
+that you had been ill, and were still unable to the task of writing. I
+wished above all things that I could in some way help and comfort you,
+having always in mind the help and comfort you were to me during the
+trying days last summer that followed my accident, and the consequent
+long and tedious illness. There are many people who feel
+sympathetically, but so few are capable and who are ready or are
+permitted to apply the act of sympathy. It is the friend in need that
+is the friend we remember with a grateful, lasting love...
+
+At this moment we are on the eve of removal to London where we are
+taking rooms once occupied by the family of David Christie Murray. We
+go to-morrow, and begin a new chapter in this most disastrous of
+years. So many things seem to culminate toward the close of the
+century--good fortune for some, evil fortune for others; hopes dashed
+at the seeming moment of realization, as if all the forces in nature
+were aiding to make an end of the century's efforts in any way that
+would bring finality.
+
+For my part I feel as if I had been forcibly brought to a standstill.
+In a few days (the 19th) I shall have reached the milestone: I shall
+be seventy. Sorosis would have made an occasion of it if I had been in
+New York. As it is, I feel a little tinge of regret that my
+annihilation last June was not more complete; that I did not leave,
+along with my dear friend, Mrs. Demorest. Not that I am wholly
+unhappy; I only feel somehow brought to an unfinished close; left in a
+state of animated suspension. I seem to see everything from a
+distance; separated by my inability to participate in the goings and
+comings, the doings and pleasures of others. I feel the wall that
+stands between those who still live and those who have passed from
+this world; but alas, I still retain consciousness, and desire for
+sympathy, and can see and hear and feel, though my feet are chained.
+It is just three months since I arrived. A part of the time we had
+beautiful weather, and I could walk on the road a little on sunshiny
+days, leaning upon my two sticks. But during the past five weeks, my
+out-door exercise has been nil: the roads were too wet and rough. It
+has been almost constant fog, rain, wind; and the drip, drip, drip, of
+a mist that was wetter than rain. This, I think, has added a little
+rheumatism to give name to the pain and stiffness of joints and newly
+forming muscles. The change we are about to make will be a new
+departure for me--I shall have to try stairs... But I shall have the
+dear companionship of Marjorie,[1] who has lived an ideal out-of-door
+life here. She will there begin to have regular lessons at home, or go
+to kindergarten. I have been reading to her Mary Proctor's "Starland,"
+which by your thoughtful prompting she caused to be sent to me through
+her London publishers. I am so much obliged to you and to her for
+remembering the promise that I should have a copy. It is charming, and
+ought to have a wide sale...
+
+[Footnote 1: Her grandchild.]
+
+I must stop; Vida has come for my mail, and is going to the
+post-office on her bicycle. She and Mr. Sidney are never so happy as
+when taking long bicycle rides on these fine English country roads.
+
+With warmest greetings to Colonel Morse and Ethel, and ever loving
+remembrance to you, dear friend, I am, as always,
+
+ Ever yours,
+ J.C.C.
+
+
+
+
+ 11 BARTON STREET, WEST KENSINGTON,
+ LONDON, January 29, 1899.
+
+My dear friend:
+
+I have been wondering these many days where you are and how it is with
+you. How I have wished that you were near by, and that we could have
+taken some of my lonely, painful "duty" walks upon crutches together.
+I miss your sympathy and ever ready kindness... I suffer terribly now
+with sore and swollen feet--the result of pain, stiffness, strain in
+movement, and lack of exercise. But I am stronger. I can now lift my
+arms and brush my own hair...
+
+We are having beautiful weather just now. We have had sunshine for a
+week, and people go about announcing the fact with joy and surprise,
+as if a new Saviour had arisen; all but the Americans, newly come, who
+complain about everything, rain or shine...
+
+ J.C.C.
+
+
+
+
+
+ LONDON, Jan. 16, 1901.
+
+Dear friend:
+
+This letter is for the family. Poor as it will be, it will have to
+tell of all I would like to say to you, and for the thousand and one
+things I would like to tell of London and of the many kindnesses I
+have received. I had not expected to be here this winter, as you know,
+and ought not to be. The cold and the damp have developed rheumatism
+of a very severe type in my lame leg, and I suffer from pain and
+difficulty in walking... I could, of course, obtain some mitigation of
+these conditions, but the same reason that compelled my return to
+London, Mr. P.'s actual failure, has so encroached upon my
+income--without a prospect of even partial recovery for a long time to
+come--as to make it almost equally difficult to live either in
+Switzerland, where, at Schinznach-les-Bains, I could receive so much
+benefit; or in London, or New York. I wish, as I wished two years ago,
+that my accident had ended it, and saved all the pain and difficulty
+of solving a perpetual and insoluble problem... It seems sometimes as
+if there were only two kinds of people in the world--those who ride
+over others roughshod, and those who are ridden over. The cruel
+accident that shattered me on that June day shattered my world. Life
+since then seems in the nature of a resurrection; every day a special
+gift, and every pleasant thing an act of Divine Providence. Love to
+you all. This is about myself. Write soon and tell me all about
+yourselves.
+
+ Lovingly,
+ J.C.C.
+
+
+
+
+From a Letter to Mrs. Christina J. Higley
+
+
+ LONDON, July--, 1899.
+
+My dear friend:
+
+... It seems as if everything had been taken from me but the
+friendship, the affection of women; and that manifests itself here as
+well as at home. God bless them! They have made all the brightness of
+my life.
+
+ Affectionately,
+ J.C.C.
+
+
+
+
+From a Letter to Mrs. Catherine Young
+
+
+ LONDON, Sept. 3, 1895.
+
+Dearest Mrs. Young:
+
+Your letter has been before my eyes many times...
+
+Keep up your courage and your faith in women and in the _old flag_. I
+came across it the first time after I arrived, in a moment of extreme
+despondency. It did me a world of good... In three weeks, if all goes
+well, I shall see you. We sail for New York on the 12th of this month.
+
+ Affectionately,
+ J.C.C.
+
+
+
+
+From a Letter to Mrs. Harriet Nourse
+
+
+... Oh, yes, I have made my will many times; but some man always
+spoils it and I am obliged to make it over, I am not at all
+superstitious about making a will. My only trouble is having nothing
+to leave. I am fond of superstitions--the little ones. They give
+interest to life, if you have to spend it in one place. A little
+unreason is less monotonous than the eternally reasonable, and if it
+makes you happy for a minute to see the moon over your right shoulder,
+why not see it, and be unreasonably happy?
+
+
+
+
+From a Letter to Mrs. Margaret W. Lemon
+
+
+ 222 WEST 23RD STREET,
+ NEW YORK, Feb. 20, 1900.
+
+My dear Mrs. Lemon:
+
+I am very glad you are to formulate the resolution of thanks and
+appreciation of the work of the Reception Committees. Of course it
+goes without saying that it will be spread upon the minutes.
+
+The work was altogether so fine and painstaking, and showed such
+thought, care, taste and judgment, that, apart from my personal
+pleasure in it, I felt exceedingly proud, and happy at the complete
+and beautiful result... I am sorry you do not like "Current Events."
+To me "Current Topics" means the fag end of everything we know and
+have been obliged to read about in the papers. "Current Events" has a
+broader significance, and leaves out the trivial and vulgar.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ J. C. CROLY.
+
+
+
+
+From a Letter to Mrs. E. S. Willard
+
+
+ BELLA-VISTA, BOSTON HARBOR, MASS.,
+ August 28, 1901.
+
+... As yet I think I am still in London; or at least still in England.
+Crossing the Atlantic is not so much of an undertaking; less than
+taking a "trip" with "crossing" changes. Packing and unpacking, and
+the harassing "customs" are the worst features. There were only
+fifty-six passengers on the _Minneapolis_, but it took us from 8 A.M.
+to 1 P.M., in a pouring rain, to pass the argus-eyes of one hundred
+and eight inspectors, about two to each passenger.
+
+In my case it seemed a bit ironical,--one of Thomas Hardy's "Little
+Ironies," for a _rapid_ American trustee had lost my whole capital
+during my absence... The necessity for tying up the ragged ends and
+applying a test brought me home. But it is a trial, though I seem to
+have lost the power to be unhappy. Do you know what that means? Is
+that unarmed neutrality the serenity of Heaven?
+
+I am as yet living in England. My thoughts are there, and my desire. I
+see you and a few others whom I love come and go, and I exchange the
+loving word, the kindly smile, the sympathetic look.
+
+I am waiting for an indication of where I am to end my days. If my
+steps turn towards the isles of the sea, you will be a magnet to draw
+me, you with your spiritual beauty, and your constant, unfailing
+goodness. God bless you, and grant that I may see you again, and that
+we may gain the love, as well as the peace, that passeth all
+understanding.
+
+ Yours always,
+ J.C. CROLY.
+
+
+
+
+Resolutions of Protest Offered by Mrs. Croly Through the Woman's Press
+Club
+
+(From the Recording Secretary's Report)
+
+
+At a special meeting of the Governing Board, held in the club rooms,
+126 East 23rd street, Dec. 26, 1892, the following resolution
+proposed by the president was adopted.
+
+_Resolved_: That the Woman's Press Club has learned with deep regret
+of the backward action of the Columbian University of Washington, in
+deciding to exclude women from its Medical Department, after ten years
+of co-education.
+
+_Resolved_: That we unite with Pro-Re-Nata of Washington, D. C., in
+expressing an emphatic protest against this retrograde movement; that
+we earnestly hope that better counsels will prevail; that, at a time
+when so conservative an institution as the British Medical Association
+has voted to open its doors to women, the stigma of retrogression will
+not be allowed to rest upon the foremost school in the Capitol of the
+Nation.
+
+
+
+
+Tributes of Friends
+
+
+
+Jane Cunningham Croly
+
+An Appreciation from Miriam Mason Greeley
+
+
+In the joyful Christmas-tide of 1829, into the sweet influence of an
+English country home there came to life a blue-eyed, brown-haired
+maiden, whose sunny nature was destined to laugh with gladness of
+heart, or smile through falling tears, for more than seventy eventful
+years. "Jenny June" while yet a child came with her family to New York
+State, entering here an atmosphere well adapted to foster her
+activities and her power to work for the good of others. Her breadth
+of vision and her genial sympathy would have been evinced in any land
+or clime, but in the stimulating freedom of American thought her
+abilities developed to their best.
+
+She found opportunity to plant the seeds of earnest thought, of which
+later she was to gather such a rich harvest in the confidence of her
+fellow-women. Her eager mind was a rich soil for the growth of ideas
+springing from her fertile brain; which led her to be both
+conservative and impetuous, grave or vivacious, ever fearless and
+versatile, all pervaded with the wholesome balance of quick
+penetration.
+
+To her is due the tribute of praise for having borne the heat and
+burden of the day in the early development of women's clubs. Friends
+tried to persuade her to abandon her plans for organizing woman's
+varied abilities, ridicule assailed her most cherished hope, and the
+sarcasm of opponents barred the way. She lived to triumph in seeing
+her aims successful, and after thirty-five years of club life to be
+honored by one of the highest gifts in the power of the General
+Federation to offer--the honorary vice-presidency.
+
+Mrs. Croly formulated in 1890 her well-matured plan for a general
+federation of women's clubs, and with the cordial assistance of the
+"Mother Club, Sorosis," issued the first call for representatives of
+women's clubs of all the States to meet.
+
+Stimulated by the success of the General Federation, Mrs. Croly urged
+the formation of the New York State Federation, and assisted by
+Sorosis as the hostess, an invitation was issued to all the State
+clubs to be the guests of Sorosis at Sherry's, November, 1894.
+
+[Illustration: MRS. CROLY at the age of 18.]
+
+Mrs. Croly's life-work as a writer had gone forward hand in hand with
+her club interests, and, having finished the foundation work of the
+two federations, she devoted her time to the preparation of her
+massive volume on the "Growth of the Woman's Club Movement," which is
+a monument to her patient industry, and the only permanent record of
+the development of women's clubs in America.
+
+She sleeps--but each woman who to-day shares the benefit and the
+responsive pleasure of club life, should place a leaf in the garland
+for "Jenny June."
+
+
+
+
+From Marie Etienne Burns
+
+
+ "Work is a true savior, and the not knowing how is more the
+ cause of idleness than the love of it."--MRS. CROLY.
+
+The idea of a State Industrial School for Girls originated with Mrs.
+Croly, and at a spring meeting of the Executive Committee of the New
+York State Federation of Women's Clubs, held in 1898, she suggested
+that the first work of the Philanthropic Committee for the year be an
+endeavor to establish a State Industrial School for wayward, not
+criminal, young girls of tenement-house neighborhoods. Soon after this
+Mrs. Croly met with a serious accident and was obliged to give up all
+active work. She decided to go to Europe, hoping to be benefited by a
+stay abroad. Just before her departure Mrs. Croly wrote asking me to
+present the proposed industrial-school plan to the Convention for its
+endorsement. The next day I called upon her to discuss matters. I
+found her confined to her sofa with, a crutch beside her, and
+evidently suffering much pain; but she seemed to be thinking less
+about herself than about the work that was so close to her heart. She
+urged me to take up the work which, she was regretfully obliged to
+abandon, and was most enthusiastic over it.
+
+Mrs. Croly said: "Those who have worked among the poor in large cities
+are aware of the value of orderly and systematic industrial training
+for girls of irresponsible parentage, between the years of twelve and
+eighteen. These girls are often bright and attractive, but they are
+usually self-willed, lacking in judgment, and ignorant of every useful
+art, as well as of all social and domestic standards that lend
+themselves to the development of a true womanhood. Their homes are
+usually unworthy of the name, often scenes of disorder, not
+infrequently of violence, from which their only escape is the street.
+Their vanity and unbridled desire for low forms of pleasure expose
+them to all kinds of evil influences, and the first steps in a
+downward career are taken without at all knowing whither they lead.
+The most dangerous element in the lives of such girls is their
+ignorance. It bars all avenues to respectable employment and deprives
+them of self-respect, which grows with ability to maintain oneself and
+one's integrity in the face of adverse circumstances. In putting the
+knowledge of the simplest art or industry in possession of the
+untrained, unformed girl you supply an almost certain defence against
+that which lurks to destroy."
+
+I fully agreed with Mrs. Croly. My many years of experience as a
+worker among the poor of New York City had taught me the importance,
+and indeed the necessity of just such a school, and I gladly promised
+to carry forward the good work.
+
+Mrs. Croly said in parting: "I can truly say that during the whole of
+my working life in New York, a period of more than forty years, my
+heart has bled for these poor neglected, untrained girls, who yet have
+the elements of a divine womanhood and motherhood within them, though
+undeveloped and hidden by the rankest weeds and growth."
+
+At the Convention in New York City, held in 1901, I presented the
+Industrial School project, and the plan received the unanimous
+endorsement of all those present. It was, however, deemed wiser to
+omit the word "wayward," as the school was to be preventive and in no
+sense reformatory. A Committee was formed, of which Mrs. Croly was
+made Honorary Chairman; and the work upon a State Industrial School
+for Girls was begun.
+
+It was my desire as Acting Chairman of the Committee that the movement
+should carry at all times the banner bearing the name of its inceptor,
+a name that would always suggest not failure but success. While
+seemingly insurmountable obstacles at once arose, they were more or
+less overcome as the preparations and work of the Committee
+progressed. And at the time of Mrs. Croly's death the project had
+reached a point more hopeful than assured, resulting in the
+establishment of at least one school which should stimulate the State
+Legislature into a realization of the needs of the young girls of the
+tenement-house neighborhoods, so that some time in the future there
+might be provided through State legislation, on a broad plan, the
+State Industrial or Trade School for Girls, the idea of which was
+conceived by Jenny June.
+
+
+
+
+From Mrs. Croly's Letter to Mrs. Burns, Relative to the Proposed
+Industrial School for Girls
+
+
+ 222 WEST 23RD STREET,
+ Feb. 28, 1900.
+
+My dear Mrs. Burns:
+
+There is only one point that I would have emphasized, and that I do
+not find included in your otherwise excellent statement. It is the
+moral influence of a training for self-support. Ignorance and idleness
+lead to vice and crime; and a Technical Training School would do more
+to remedy the Social Evil and raise the standard of morals than all
+other influences combined. The fact that work is the great purifier is
+what I wish could have been embodied in the plan presented.
+
+ Yours with real regard.
+ J.C.C.
+
+
+
+
+From Izora Chandler
+
+
+How can one picture all that this one woman was to the hundreds of
+other women who loved her: the gentle demeanor, the thoughtful
+conversation, the high thinking evidenced not less in her choice of
+subject than in the fitness of word and phrase which gave a
+distinctive charm to all her utterances, whether public or private?
+
+When first meeting Mrs. Croly one could hardly believe that so
+gentle-voiced, slight a creature could have accomplished the
+pioneering accredited to her in the enlargement of the mental life of
+women. Drawn to her at the first greeting one was soon convinced of
+the hidden forcefulness of her nature which could be likened to the
+resistless, unyielding under-current, rather than to the wave which
+visibly and noisily assails the shore.
+
+Present or absent, the thought of her was magnetic. While charming the
+heart she convinced the mind with argument. Her power did not absorb
+and minify; it enlarged, enlivened, and became a source of
+inspiration. After talking with her, impossibilities became possible
+to the timid, the diffident were encouraged to dare, and those who
+were strong at coming went away valorous. Her dignity and ready
+decision when presiding over a public assembly were noteworthy. She
+became a stateswoman in whatever concerned her sex; an earnest soul
+pleading for love among co-workers, and for more and yet more of love,
+for only in that atmosphere can the heart of woman come into its
+rightful sovereignty, urging that slights be forgotten, aggressions
+overlooked, and that the fair mantle of love be spread tenderly over
+all.
+
+An earnest devotee of the best and highest in art, she seemed to have
+an insatiable desire after the beautiful; and was never more serene
+and lucid of mind than when considering this scheme, and encouraging
+with rich appreciation those who were in the field.
+
+Her store of knowledge was phenomenal. She was a constant learner, an
+unwearied seeker after wisdom. When those who had given special study
+to any subject addressed the house over which she presided, they
+received her most flattering attention, and in the brief afterword of
+the chairman she indicated intimate knowledge of the matter in hand,
+often giving comprehensive data and suggesting fresh lines for
+consideration. No wonder that the finest minds were attracted to her;
+that thinkers desired her acceptance of their thoughts; that active
+workers sought her coöperation and leadership. Quiet and forceful;
+competent as a critic, but ready with encouragement; simple in manner,
+easily approached; patient with those who appealed to her, seeking
+rather than waiting to be sought; abundantly appreciative of others,
+her memory becomes an abiding impulse towards high and generous
+thought, towards simple, worthy living.
+
+
+
+
+From Janie C.P. Jones
+
+
+Before my friend's last trip to England I went to bid her good-bye,
+and among her parting words were the following which I never can
+forget:
+
+"I dislike going so far from my friends. To me they are the most
+precious things on earth, the greatest gift the world can bestow; to
+me they have been like flowers all along my path, and their sweet odor
+of influence has made me better every day. I cannot prize them too
+highly, for all I am I owe to them."
+
+To have known one who so highly appreciated the value of friendship,
+who knew the true meaning of the word "friend," and who possessed the
+rare gift of knowing how to retain friends, was an inspiration, and an
+influence which added to the value of life. I think of her now as
+having "gone into her garden to gather lilies for her Beloved."
+
+
+
+
+From Catherine Weed Barnes Ward
+
+
+My task is at once sad and pleasant: sad, because I speak of a dearly
+loved and lost friend; pleasant, because I am asked to bear my
+testimony as to her worth.
+
+Mrs. Croly's friendship and unselfish kindness began with my entrance
+over twenty years ago into club life, and from then onward she was
+continually urging and helping me towards increased intellectual
+effort. Through her active inspiration I joined Sorosis, the Woman's
+Press Club of New York, and other American organizations, as well as
+the Society of American Women in London, the Women Journalists of
+London, and various English organizations, besides taking part in the
+International Congress of Women held in London three or four years
+ago.
+
+Mrs. Croly lived constantly in two generations, her own and the next
+one; her wonderful mental vitality setting the paces of many pulses,
+besides those which stirred her own brain. I know much of the actual
+labor she accomplished for her sex, both here and in England, but even
+nobler than that was the high ideal she set them in her own life and
+the inspiration of her personality to younger women.
+
+To those she called special friends her loyalty was unswerving, true
+as the needle to the pole, and as one blest with such friendship I
+feel the influence of her beautiful, unselfish living will be ever
+with me, though something has gone out of my life, never to be
+replaced. Her daughter, Mrs. Vida Croly Sidney, worthily carries on
+the traditions and work of her noble mother, and her friends feel that
+in her there is a living tie between the untiring spirit laboring now,
+we may well believe, in another existence and the work so loved by
+that spirit while on earth.
+
+A true heart, a generous nature, a broad mind, and keen mental acumen
+are qualities that do not die with their possessor; they bless the
+world to which she has gone and that she left behind.
+
+We can best honor her memory by carrying on her work and by leaving
+the world better and happier for our having lived in it.
+
+
+
+
+From a Letter to the Memorial Committee from Sara J. Lippincott (Grace
+Greenwood)
+
+
+I feel Mrs. Croly's death very deeply. The sacred holiday season,
+dedicated from time immemorial to household joy and mirth, and calling
+for Christian gratitude and hope, was already saddened by
+bereavements, and her death--absolutely unlooked for by me--made it
+melancholy and mournful.
+
+"She should have died hereafter." I did not dream when I saw her last
+that she was to solve the great mystery before me. Though feeble,
+there seemed so much of the old energetic, enthusiastic self about
+her; and I parted from her hoping to see her soon in renewed health
+and strength.
+
+She always had a peculiar fascination for me: her soft, sweet voice;
+her strong though quiet will; her unfailing faith in all things good;
+her loyalty to her sex. I think her pass-word to the realm of rest and
+reward must have been, "I loved my fellow-woman."
+
+ 35 Lockwood Avenue, New Rochelle,
+ January 6, 1902.
+
+
+
+
+From a Letter to the Memorial Committee from Jennie de la M. Lozier
+
+
+Mrs. Croly was a woman of uncommon intuition and sympathy. She took
+wide and far-reaching views of woman's possible development and
+usefulness. She believed in organization as a factor in this
+development, and spared no effort to form and maintain, even at
+personal sacrifice, the woman's club or federation. She was always
+generous and warm-hearted, of boundless hospitality, never more
+genially herself than when her friends gathered about her in her
+attractive home and she could make them happy. I shall always recall
+with pleasure the rare moments when she talked with me of her real
+life, her hopes and her plans. I believe that she constantly exerted a
+noble influence, and that she stood for all that makes for woman's
+unselfish helpfulness, courage and independence.
+
+New York, February 10, 1902.
+
+
+
+
+From Genie H. Rosenfeld
+
+
+In the early days of the Woman's Press Club, when it was divided upon
+the question of a suitable meeting place, and undisciplined members
+were resigning in appreciable numbers, Mrs. Croly surprised me one day
+by declaring that the club had never been stronger than it was at that
+hour.
+
+"Why, Mrs. Croly!" I exclaimed, "we have only a handful of women
+left."
+
+"My dear," she said, "we have lopped off all our dead wood. The
+branches that remain may be few, but they are vigorous, and from them
+will spring up a tree that will be a glory to us."
+
+This little saying of Mrs. Croly's has come back to me and been of use
+many times, and it has often enabled me to understand the benefit of
+lopping off dead wood and starting anew.
+
+
+
+
+Contributed to the New York _Tribune_ by S. A. Lattimore
+
+
+The sad announcement of the death of Mrs. Jane Cunningham Croly
+recalls a delightful incident of several summers ago when I had the
+pleasure of meeting her at Long Branch.
+
+In the course of a most interesting conversation I ventured to ask her
+to give me the origin of her well-known _nom-de-plume_ of "Jenny
+June." In her bright, sympathetic way, which all who knew her can
+describe, she said:
+
+"Yes, I will tell you. In my early girlhood I knew a young clergyman
+who was in the habit of occasionally visiting our house. One day he
+came to bid us good-bye, saying that he was going to a Western city to
+reside. As he bid me goodbye he gave me a little book. It was a volume
+of B. F. Taylor's poems, called 'January and June.' The little book
+opened of itself at a page containing verses entitled 'The Beautiful
+River.' An introductory paragraph read thus: 'On such a night, in such
+a June, who has not sat side by side with somebody for all the world
+like Jenny June? Maybe it was years ago, but it was some time. Maybe
+you had quite forgotten it, but you will be the better for
+remembering. Maybe she has gone on before where it is June all the
+year, and never January at all,--that God forbid. There it was, and
+then it was, and thus it was.' This stanza was marked in pencil:
+
+ 'Jenny June,' then I said, 'let us linger no more
+ On the banks of the beautiful river;
+ Let the boat be unmoored, and muffled the oar,
+ And we'll steal into heaven together.
+ If the angel on duty our coming descries
+ You have nothing to do but throw off the disguise
+ That you wore when you wandered with me;
+ And the sentry will say: "Welcome back to the skies,
+ We long have been waiting for thee!"'
+
+On the margin was written, 'You are the Juniest Jenny I know.'
+
+"The years of my girlhood passed on, and with their passing faded away
+all memory of the young minister. Later there came to me, as I suppose
+there comes to every young girl, the impulse to write, and when some
+early efforts of mine were judged worthy to be published, I was
+confronted for the first time with the question of a signature.
+Shrinking from seeing my own name in print, by some witchery of memory
+the words 'Jenny June' suddenly occurred to me, and that, as you know,
+has been my name ever since."
+
+After a little pause Mrs. Croly said: "Now that I have answered your
+question I must tell you something else. Thirty years after I had
+assumed my _nom-de-plume_ a gray-haired stranger called at my house
+one day and asked to see me. The name he gave recalled no one I had
+ever known, and in meeting there was no recognition on either side.
+But he proceeded in a straightforward way to explain the object of his
+visit: 'For the last thirty years,' he said, 'since my removal from
+this city, I have lived in the West; naturally, I have been a constant
+reader of Eastern papers, and particularly have I read every article I
+have ever seen bearing the signature of "Jenny June." I have made many
+efforts, but always without success, to ascertain who she was, and
+whether the name was real or fictitious. Somehow I have never
+forgotten the little girl I knew before I went West, and to whom I
+gave a little volume of poems with something written on a page that
+contained a stanza that I greatly admired about "Jenny June." I have
+wondered if she had become the famous writer, and upon my return to my
+native city, after so long an absence, I have sought you simply to ask
+if you are that little girl.'"
+
+
+
+
+The Fairies' Gifts
+
+_By Ellen M. Staples_
+
+
+ To an English home one bright Yuletide
+ While Christmas bells rang loud and wide
+
+ Came a babe with the gentle eyes of a dove
+ And a face as fair as a thought of love.
+
+ "Now, God be thanked," the old nurse cried,
+ "That the child is born at Christmas-tide;
+
+ "For the blessed sake of Mary's Son
+ God's benison falls on lives begun
+
+ "When Christmas music fills the air
+ And men are joyful everywhere.
+
+ "And as to Him came Wise Men three
+ Offering gifts on bended knee
+
+ "So to one born at the Holy Time
+ On land or sea, in every clime,
+
+ "Come three Good Fairies, and each one bears
+ A gift to brighten the coming years."
+
+ The pallid mother gently smiled
+ And looked upon her tender child.
+
+ "Good nurse, the legend is full sweet;
+ And I lay my babe at His dear feet
+
+ "Whose human Sonhood is aware
+ Of the painful bliss that mothers bear.
+
+ "I can well believe that heaven may
+ Send gifts to the child of Christmas Day."
+
+ Tired by her flight from Paradise
+ The baby shut her wondering eyes,
+
+ Nor knew that 'round the cradle stood,
+ To bless the babe, three Fairies good.
+
+ The First bent over the cradle head;
+ "These are my gifts to her," she said:
+
+ "A sunny nature, a voice of song,
+ And may faithful friends uncounted throng!"
+
+ The Second murmured in accents low:
+ "The path will be steep and rough, I know,
+
+ "So I give her a heart that is brave and strong,
+ That will patiently work, though the way be long;
+
+ "And though life may fill them with toil and care
+ Her hands shall weaker ones' burdens share."
+
+ Then stood the Third for a moment's space
+ To thoughtfully gaze on the baby face,
+
+ And over her own a radiance came
+ As she softly said: "My gift is a name.
+
+ "Though born while the earth lies spread with
+ snow
+ The babe is a summer-child, and so
+
+ "The sunny nature, the voice of song,
+ The helpful hands, true heart and strong
+
+ "With Nature's self should be in tune,
+ Sweet child, I name thee Jenny June."
+
+
+
+
+From Margaret Ravenhill
+
+
+Jane Cunningham Croly left upon the last century an ineffaceable
+record. For industrious and successful work in journalism she probably
+had no peer. In a speech before the Woman's Press Club not long since,
+she said: "When a woman has written enough to fill a room, she feels
+like burning it instead of preserving it in scrap-books." Probably no
+woman of her day and generation has done more or better work than our
+"Jenny June." No woman had more diversity of gifts; she was equally at
+home in the editorial chair, or the reportorial office; as a speaker
+she excelled. In the old days we who knew her best would sometimes
+notice a hesitancy of speech that would occasionally cloud a brilliant
+idea; but if she hesitated she was never lost, and the idea was worth
+waiting for. She was always clear, logical, forceful in expression,
+and exhaustive in argument. Thoroughness seems the word to express the
+character of Mrs. Croly. She was quick to catch the meaning of the
+uttered thoughts of others, keen in analysis, and executive in all
+work. Witness the many organizations which she helped originate. Her
+long years of rule as president of Sorosis were of inestimable value
+to that "mother of women's clubs." Her great "History of the Club
+Movement" should be in the hands of every woman in the land.
+
+Of Mrs. Croly's personality it is a pleasure to speak. Every woman who
+enjoyed the privilege of her friendship felt the magnetism and charm
+of a rare nature; while, with all her force and power, there was a
+childishness about her that impressed one with the idea that the
+naïveté and innocence of childhood had never been wholly lost in the
+woman. I think it was in some measure owing to the fact that she was
+so near-sighted that there was a kind of appealing hesitancy about her
+movements that impelled you to her aid.
+
+Mrs. Croly's home was one of refinement and good taste in every
+detail, and there she was at her best. Always a charming hostess, she
+made every guest feel that he or she was the one most eagerly
+expected; there were the hearty greeting, the few low words of
+welcome, the sunny smile that transformed her face into positive
+beauty. Her Sunday evenings at home came nearer in character to the
+French salon than any others in New York. There were the most
+delightful people to be met: the gifted minds of our own land and
+Europe were among her guests. But Mrs. Croly's proudest boast was that
+she was a woman's woman.
+
+
+
+
+From T. C. Evans, in the New York _Times_
+
+
+When I joined the _World_ staff of writers, in 1860, a few weeks after
+the foundation of that journal, I found Jenny June already there. She
+did not often appear in the office in person, the lady auxiliary in
+journalism not being so familiar a figure as it now is, and she had
+not yet adopted her pretty _nom-de-plume,_ but her husband, David G.
+Croly, held an official post on the staff as city editor, and her
+contributions, which were invariably well written and interesting,
+appeared from the first in the _World_ columns, and as the years went
+on while she and Mr. Croly remained associated with it, with
+increasing frequency. They were written by a woman mainly for women,
+and the maids and matrons of her country over all its area from ocean
+to ocean and from "lands of sun to lands of snow" have never been
+addressed by one of their sex whom they came to know better or to hold
+in higher esteem. Her work assumed no pretentious or high importance,
+but was sweet and wholesome, sensible, and a mirror of the nature out
+of which it proceeded. The name Jenny June, which she adopted a few
+years later, became a beloved household word throughout the land,
+perhaps more widely known than that of any lady journalist who has
+ever wrought in it.
+
+Mrs. Croly's social dispositions and her aptitude for gathering
+interesting people around her were gracious endowments of nature's
+bestowal, as strongly marked in her youth as in her maturer years,
+when she gradually came to have a wider stage on which to display
+them. Her pretty little drawing-rooms, somewhere on the west side near
+Grove Street, are well remembered by me, and first and last I met in
+them a goodly number of people well worthy to be remembered, some with
+their trophies of success yet to win, but their merit divined by their
+clever hostess, perhaps before it had obtained any full recognition
+elsewhere. Many also came who had won their spurs and epaulets and
+shone bravely in the bright glitter of both. In her little
+unpretending salon of that day might be met the brilliant young Edmund
+Clarence Stedman, in the morning glow of his poetic fame; Bayard
+Taylor, risen into the mid-forenoon of his fame, with his Orient
+lyrics published and his translation of "Faust" well begun; perhaps
+Phoebe and Alice Cary, though on this point I cannot be certain, and
+many another of note and distinction in that time, her hospitality
+taking in all arts, and all the presentable workers in them, so that
+poets, painters, sculptors, singers, actors were equally welcome, as
+were those who brought to her only their bright young countenances
+and winning smiles. Her later drawing-rooms, when she had removed up
+town, nearer to the Mayfair of society, became widely celebrated, and
+she founded something perhaps as near to a salon modeled after the
+traditional Parisian standards as any that America has known.
+
+Mrs. Croly is recognized as the chief among the founders of Sorosis,
+the most celebrated woman's club in the world, and parent of the
+innumerable organizations of like sect which have sprung up since
+their renowned progenitor became with fewer vicissitudes and trials
+than might have been anticipated firmly planted on its feet and
+attested its self-supporting and self-reliant character. No social
+development of the modern period is more striking than the swift
+multiplication of women's clubs, not in this country alone, but in
+others, and they have shown a power of beneficent work most
+advantageous to the community at large, which even the most sanguine
+among their promoters could not have anticipated. They have also shown
+that women can legislate and administrate and rise to the point of
+order and lay things on the table in a manner as parliamentary and
+self-restrained as men. For such testimony the world should be
+thankful, as it never got anything of the kind before. Among the
+founders of this now most impressive group of social organizations no
+name stands out more brightly and conspicuously than that of Jane
+Cunningham Croly.
+
+Her recent death, though a surprise and shock to her innumerable
+friends, came when she had passed her seventy-second birthday, and it
+cannot therefore be said that she passed away with her work
+uncompleted. It was fully and most worthily performed, and was the
+fruit of a systematic diligence never remitted, and in which few of
+her sex in any period could have exceeded her. Her memory is fragrant
+as the month from which she took her _nom-de-plume_, and will at least
+be cherished by those whom her gentle discourse, continued for more
+than a generation, has entertained and instructed.
+
+
+
+
+From St. Clair McKelway, in the Brooklyn _Eagle_
+
+
+The death of Jane Cunningham Croly, noticed in Tuesday's _Eagle_,
+involves the loss of a woman of leadership who put a good deal of help
+into others' lives. Born in 1829, she began at seventeen to write for
+newspapers. Her topics were, for a wonder, practical, the young too
+generally beginning with abstract, academical or recondite subjects.
+Hers were "fashions" in dress, fads in food, fancies and foibles in
+decoration etc. From them she advanced to more philosophical or
+general fields, but on all she wrote was the stamp of applicability to
+contemporaneous life.
+
+In the middle, later, and more genial period of her life she did more
+talking than writing. And her talking was always earnest, direct,
+sincere, with a gleam of hope and a note of wisdom in it--the union of
+experience and reflection. Had it been reported it would have made for
+her a literary name: but she was content, or constrained, to limit her
+work to the platform, or to the circle of existence affected by it.
+
+As a clubwoman Mrs. Croly achieved the eminence almost of a pioneer.
+It can be shown that a club or two of women had a titular beginning
+before "Sorosis," but that was the original society started by her on
+the theory that there were opportunities and conditions in club life,
+on an educational or literary basis, of which women could well avail
+themselves. Mrs. Croly sympathized with the more earnest purposes
+entering into her idea, and was in little related to any sensational,
+spectacular, or faddish features that may here or there become
+attached to it. She was a believer in seriousness, an exemplar of
+industry, a devotee to system, and a very remarkably punctual,
+effective and straightforward writer. Her flight was never very high,
+but it was always progressive, and her regulation of her pen by the
+precise rules that govern presswork was entitled to distinct praise.
+She could always be trusted to keep within her topic and herself
+behind it, and she understood the art of putting things to her public
+in a way to discover to them their own thoughts as well as to denote
+her own.
+
+To David G. Croly, her husband, long a newspaper man of admitted power
+and executive force, Mrs. Croly was a constant help, as he too was to
+her. From him she learned not a little of her topical discernment and
+technical knack. He was never afraid of ability in whomever found, and
+he rejoiced that the sex of his wife, and the novel fact that she was
+the first woman in America to write daily for publication, gave to her
+and her subjects a vogue he and his could not command in a world of
+more and mainly personal work. She survived him twelve years. Their
+union was not made any less congenial by marked dissimilarity of
+convictions on cardinal subjects.
+
+Mrs. Croly was the recipient of many evidences of the honor and
+affection in which her own sex held her, and beyond doubt the
+organizations of which she was the inspiring force will pay to her
+memory the tributes her disinterestedness and abilities deserved,
+exercised as she always was for so long with projects nearly related
+to the better equipment of effective womanhood for the conditions and
+conduct of life. Her death at seventy-two, after not a little
+suffering and not a few sorrows, was not unexpected, though it will be
+sincerely and widely regretted. In her last years she was happily made
+aware of the love and tenderness towards her which she had richly
+earned by service, counsel, and example to the lives of others.
+
+
+
+
+From Laura Sedgwick Collins
+
+
+ Dear Friend, dear Helper, passed from earth
+ To heaven, in earthly grace, I here
+ Would give to thee homage sincere
+ And memory sweet. Thy ever kindly word
+ Has oft the sad heart warmed,
+ The drooped head raised, and thy sustaining hand
+ A fainting purpose thrilled
+ To better courage, firmer aim.
+
+ In that far realm where spirits meet
+ And greet with message mystic, there
+ Thou must, in sweet commune
+ Receive reward for earthly deeds.
+ Thy heart ne'er knew the unkind throb,
+ Was ever gentle, firm and true;
+ Whate'er the cause, if once espoused
+ Thou to thy watchword held thyself.
+
+ Throughout our land, in city, town,
+ Thy name beloved remains alive;
+ Alive in hearts, alive in minds,--
+ For thou hadst heart and brain as well
+ To touch the soul and win the thought.
+ Thy work for woman stands unspoiled;
+ Untouched by vanity or marred by pride,
+ Unsullied by a thought of self,
+
+ A generous impulse toward thy sex--
+ A woman's word for woman's need.
+ And so thy name in fragrance fine
+ Bespeaks again returning June,--
+ The spring of promise, budding hope!
+ The cypress changes to the rose,--
+ The rose of dawn, the rose of heaven;
+ And both are thine and thine the crown
+ All jewelled o'er with thy good deeds--
+ Deeds of mercy, deeds of love,
+ Are with us still though thou art gone!
+
+
+
+From Mary Coffin Johnson
+
+
+Many years before I personally knew Mrs. Croly she was at the height
+of her useful public life; the imprint of her hand and mind in
+contemporary literature was an evident fact, and she had become a
+conspicuous figure in the ranks of well-known women. It is therefore
+my privilege to speak of her last few years, when the golden light of
+achievement gilded the eventide of her eventful life.
+
+Having had the peculiar advantage of sitting beside her for six years
+as an officer of the Woman's Press Club I am thoroughly aware of her
+sincerity, and of the singleness of heart which, actuated her motives
+in behalf of women. She believed that every united effort that raises
+the personal standard of thought and purpose is of the utmost
+importance. It was her earnest desire that women should live lofty and
+useful lives. She frequently laid stress upon this manner of life, and
+at such times her temperament seemed charged with sympathetic interest
+in young women journalists. "Unity in Diversity," the motto adopted by
+the General Federation of Women's Clubs, is a fitting expression of
+the broad conceptions she brought into club life; indeed, her success
+in bringing women of unequal social position and essentially different
+callings, into harmonious relationship and unity of purpose was
+markedly characteristic.
+
+During her last years women's clubs became more than ever of absorbing
+interest to her, claiming the complete devotion of her broad mind. The
+untiring devotion she had already given to this part of her life's
+activities had established her fame, and this fame will ever be
+exceptionable, for her work can never be duplicated.
+
+The growing spirit of helpfulness and friendliness which inspires
+women's organizations, the manifold opportunities of various kinds
+which they afford, and the excellent results which follow could, she
+thought, scarcely be estimated. "Club life for women," she would say,
+"requires no justification. When we enter our club rooms we leave
+behind us much of the rubbish of the world. The richest, fullest
+development of life flows through the better social relations, and
+from times of old has been uplifting." "It is not merely that we need
+one another," she would declare, "but that the sense of kinship is
+healthful; it inspires the larger love, and creates a stronger
+relationship. It seems to be God's method of helping humankind to the
+higher and more perfect life."
+
+On various occasions, when only members of the dub were present, she
+would lay aside the formality of the presiding member, and, assuming
+the familiar manner of addressing us, pour forth her lofty ideals for
+women, unconsciously testifying that the secret spring of her actions
+was her love for her own sex. Though the words were always spoken with
+gentle calmness, and in a tone of womanly softness, something in her
+passionate sincerity would, like the effect of a magnet, attract every
+listener, and a spell of silence would fall upon us. In all that she
+said we discerned the Divine Principle.
+
+There were those who, from their own viewpoints, carped at what they
+heard and saw, but a person even of Mrs. Croly's temperament and
+courage, placed amid the recurring action and reaction of a life of
+much publicity, cannot, of course, please every one. It would be
+surprising if in her long career she had not manifested human
+imperfections, and had not sometimes made mistakes; she would have
+been more than human had she not.
+
+It was no easy task for her to stem the tide of difficulties and
+oppositions from without, for from first to last of her diligent life
+she had many trials to endure. Both sunbeam and shadow crossed her
+pathway; but her errors were not uncommon to humankind; moreover, she
+was very patient under misconception. "It is always fair," said Henry
+Ward Beecher, "to credit a man at his best,--let his enemies tell of
+his worst." Another writer remarks: "To get a true idea of any
+character we most seize upon its higher forming element, that to which
+it naturally tends."
+
+Hers was far from an impulsive nature, yet there were times when Mrs.
+Croly suddenly revealed in a marked way her true, deep instincts.
+While on a visit to this country on one occasion, Madame Antoinette
+Sterling, a concert singer in England, was a guest of the Woman's
+Press Club. She was asked to sing for us, and responded with "The Lost
+Chord." In answer to an encore she sang a ballad of her own
+composition, called "The Sheepfold." Mrs. Croly was visibly affected
+by the words; seldom had she ever manifested more feeling. When the
+song was ended she quickly rose, and in a tremulous voice exclaimed:
+"Does not this say to us that if even _one_ were outside, the whole
+strength of the universe would be brought to bear upon it, to bring it
+into the fold!"
+
+In 1897 Mrs. Croly was honored by the General Federation of Women's
+Clubs by the appointment to write the "History of the Woman's Club
+Movement in America," an undertaking that required exceptionable
+ability. The vast amount of mental energy and wearing labor she put
+into this work, added to the past years of constant application to
+literary and other interests, told seriously upon her health. Her
+nervous system had become exceedingly susceptible, and it was evident
+that her good constitution was beginning to break down.
+
+However, the indomitable energy she possessed, and her trained
+capacity for work enabled her to continue until the large volume was
+finished and given to the public.
+
+Early in June, 1898, Mrs. Croly had a serious fall in which she
+fractured her hip, and she was confined to her room for many weeks.
+Though she possessed unusual power of endurance, her lessening
+strength could no longer bear the strain upon the delicate frame, and
+her rallying power was perceptibly diminished. As the fracture slowly
+healed she but feebly met the physical exertion necessary to go about
+on crutches. Even then it was impossible for her to take life
+serenely; she was restlessly eager to be up and doing. When she could
+be removed with safety, which was not until the third of September,
+she went abroad with her daughter, Mrs. Vida Croly Sidney, who had
+come over from England for her, and she spent a year in London and the
+vicinity. In August, 1899, they were in Switzerland, and Mrs. Croly
+took the baths at Schinznach-les-Bains. She returned to America the
+following September, and remained in New York through the winter of
+1899-1900. The change agreed with, her, but her health cannot be said
+to have improved, and she was still very infirm. Her natural affection
+and interest in the Woman's Press Club led her to attend its meetings,
+whenever she was able, going there in the carriage sent for her. On
+the 12th of May she was present at a club meeting, and gave us an
+informal talk, which proved to be her parting address, though at the
+time we knew it not. That day her words were full of significance. She
+expressed herself with fervor, chiefly on the importance of clubwomen
+bearing a large measure of love and good-will towards one another, and
+of the cultivation of the tie of divine charity. With earnestness she
+urged again that we should stand "hand to hand to exercise patience in
+judgment, and to be slow in criticism." "It is God-like," she said,
+"to forgive. Remember," she continued, "that all that is good in this
+life emanates from love; that it is the very best thing that this life
+affords, and that there is nothing on earth that can take the place of
+its ministry. Love has no limitations, and if you give the best talent
+you possess to your club it will give it back to you. Club life is
+often misunderstood, it is true,--but," she slowly added, "there is
+nothing in this world _entirely_ perfect." She spoke touchingly of the
+personal sense of loneliness she felt; that although she was a woman
+among many women she lived many a lonely hour; and she wished it well
+understood that the love and friendship of clubwomen was to her the
+most precious thing in her life. In closing she emphasized the counsel
+she had given, to be "United and conciliatory in our relations with
+each other; to be just; to suspend judgment; and to wait long and
+trust God who knows all. He," she declared, "will not misunderstand
+you."
+
+At the end of May she returned to England. Though nature had not
+become victorious over her feebleness, and she was still almost
+helpless from the effect of the accident of 1898, she heroically
+overcame these physical conditions as far as she was able. Something
+continually impelled her onward. She attended the International
+Congress of Women held during the Paris Exposition of that year, and
+then went on to Ober-Ammergau to the Passion Play, accompanied by Mrs.
+Sidney; and then returned to England, where she stayed until the 27th
+of July, 1901, when she again sailed for New York, business matters
+requiring her presence in this country.
+
+On her arrival in August from the second visit abroad, the grave facts
+that her health was not established, and that her time here was not to
+be long, were soon evident to her friends. The struggle of nature not
+only had begun, the shadow was even now sweeping near. She appeared at
+the November business meeting of the Woman's Press Club, accompanied
+by an attendant, and took the chair, but she was so much exhausted by
+the effort that her nurse easily persuaded her to come away. During
+the following four weeks her prostration and decline were steady.
+
+As the final day of her human infirmity approached, she expressed to
+the close friend who sat beside her a timid shrinking, common to all
+human nature, from the passage out of this life. It may be counted a
+special mercy that, as it afterwards proved, she need not have had any
+disquietude concerning the inevitable moment, for a few hours before
+the closing scene she fell into a state of coma, and passed beyond so
+quietly and tranquilly that she did not herself know when the moment
+came. She entered the world of infinite repose in the forenoon of
+December 23, 1901.
+
+The funeral service was held in the Church of the Transfiguration,
+Mrs. Croly's friends gathering from far and near to pay their last
+tributes of love and regard. The women's clubs and societies of
+Manhattan, Brooklyn, and the suburbs, were represented in large
+numbers, and every seat in the church was filled.
+
+Mrs. Croly lies at rest beside her husband, David G. Croly, in the
+beautiful cemetery near Lakewood, New Jersey.
+
+"Yon's her step ... an' she's carryin' a licht in her hand; a see it
+through the door."
+
+
+
+
+From Caroline M. Morse
+
+
+As Chairman of the Memorial Committee it is my privilege to add my
+memories of Mrs. Croly to those which have preceded. Mine are not of
+her club interests, nor of her identification with the woman's club
+movement. So much has been written, and so well, regarding these
+public phases of her life that it would seem almost officious for me
+to add a stone to the already piled up cairn; I write rather of my
+friend as my family knew her in her home, surrounded by husband and
+children.
+
+It was in 1880 that we first knew Mr. and Mrs. Croly, and the
+acquaintance soon became an intimacy that lasted for twenty-three
+years. They were living in their own house in Seventy-first street, an
+artistically furnished house, an ideal home full of a sweet
+domesticity.
+
+Intimate as we were it was frequently our privilege to gather with the
+family at their Sunday evening supper, when Mrs. Croly was as
+completely the "house-mother" fulfilling the homely duties of the
+table, as, an hour later, she was the gracious, though more formal
+hostess receiving in her drawing-room the usual Sunday night throng of
+old friends and the strangers of distinction who, chancing to be in
+town, were fortunate enough to have letters of introduction to her. I
+see her slight figure moving from group to group, and the low English
+voice and sweet smile with which she encouraged her visitors to speak
+of themselves, and, if they were foreigners, of their missions to this
+country. A characteristic act of hers was to carry around a little
+silver tray on which there might be several glasses of a dainty punch,
+the base of which was a light, non-alcoholic wine. This she offered to
+friends whom she desired particularly to honor, and the act had all
+the significance of the Russian custom of breaking bread and eating
+salt with the host. These Sunday evenings at home, which were a
+feature of the society in which she moved, were continued until a
+short time before her death, or until she was incapacitated by
+illness.
+
+My friend had none of the usual failings of the traditionary
+"emancipated woman"; she would sit down to her basket on an afternoon
+and take up a bit of household sewing with the same spirit and
+aptitude that had guided her in the forenoon in the writing of an
+editorial article or the preparation of a paper to be read before a
+club.
+
+I recall with especial joy the long walks we used to take together.
+After a day of wearisome work, it was one of her great delights to
+leave the piled-up desk and find herself in the street, her arm linked
+in mine. At such times much of her talk was ravishing speculation upon
+things seen and unseen. It was as if, released for the moment from
+the pressure of work, her mind sprang into a world removed from the
+practical and immediate, to revel in contemplation of the divine. Yet
+she was no visionary, and the world of sight held her cheerful
+allegiance. Hers was never "the dyer's hand subdued to what it works
+in," and this is the more remarkable since she never relinquished
+work, even for our beloved walks, without a mild protest at laying
+aside her pen. One afternoon I called, intending to take her out for
+one of our "play-hours," but I failed to find her in her apartment.
+Next morning the post brought me this note:
+
+ "MY DEAR FRIEND:
+
+ "I was so glad to get your card, and so sorry to miss you.
+ It was just that hour out-of-doors with you that I was
+ longing for. I have been so long away, and since my return
+ have been so busy with much detail of correspondence that in
+ quantity is always more or less depressing, that I needed a
+ sight of you to tone me up and restore my standard. I have
+ also taken advantage of enforced quiet to brace up for an
+ heroic two weeks of dentistry, and have therefore been in
+ absolute retirement and upon baby diet of the most innocuous
+ description...
+
+ "I am afraid this recapitulation will take away all desire
+ to repeat your effort in my direction. But I trust that
+ this may find you in a missionary humor, and that you will
+ see that I need 'looking after'--a far stronger motive with
+ most women than friendship, isn't it? Anyway, come again
+ soon, won't you? Afternoon is our gadding time, you know.
+
+ "Really and lovingly your friend.
+
+ "P.S.--This note will show that I truly have not command of
+ all my faculties and need a human tonic."
+
+All out-of-doors was dear to her. Trees were to her as men--rooted,
+and she often naively talked to them as if to friends while we
+strolled in the twilight. Her love of nature even seemed to affect her
+choice of diet, for she preferred simply prepared dishes and the
+natural foods. This was doubtless due in part to her unmixed Old World
+nationality and to her early surroundings in rural England: as she was
+in girlhood, so, in spite of the complex life of this distracting New
+World, she remained to the last.
+
+My friend dwelt lovingly upon anniversaries; the true spirit of
+Christmas entered her heart at every Yuletide season, and her gifts
+showed generous care in selection and in the dainty wrappings in which
+they were sent to us. She delighted in the Christmas and Thanksgiving
+dinners, but St. Valentine's was the dearest, as it was the
+anniversary of her marriage. This the Woman's Press Club of New York
+has always observed as the date of its annual dinner.
+
+She had a keen sense of humor, yet never did she forget herself either
+in posing or pranks, for hers was the unerring sense of the fitness of
+things. An instance of her ready wit comes to me: Soon after her
+return from her last visit to England she came to us to stay for a few
+days. It was in September, three months before her death. On Sunday
+evening several friends dropped in, and from general conversation we
+drifted into singing some of the old songs. Now and then she would add
+her own low tones to our untrained vocalizing, crooning or
+cantillating the tune as if she were musing aloud. We had been singing
+for a full hour, she, with crutch near at hand, sitting apart from us
+at the open window. We had just sung one of her favorites, the old
+ballad "Far Away," and were beginning another with all the energy of
+amateurs when it occurred to me that Mrs. Croly might be tired and
+ready to go to her room for the night. Bending over I whispered,
+"Come, dear, you must be weary of all this." She turned slowly in her
+chair, and looking up into my face, smiling whimsically, said: "Oh,
+no, not yet! I am enjoying the music just as if it were good!"
+
+I have already intimated that the home life of the family was happy.
+There existed between husband and wife a genuine congeniality in
+tastes and pursuits; yet between any two minds when both are strong
+and original there will generally be a divergence; and it has always
+seemed to me that the origin of Sorosis might be traced by the
+psychological analyst to some such divergence between Mrs. Croly's
+lines of intellectual development and those of her equally gifted
+husband, David G. Croly. The power of initiative was strong in each of
+these two, and in each it produced excellent though differing results.
+
+It is cause for regret that Mrs. Croly did not write more in her
+latter years, when her native wisdom had ripened in the soil of a rich
+experience.
+
+Her philosophy was the fruit of a rightly-lived, useful life, and even
+after the distressing accident which lamed her, her enthusiasm never
+waned, but rather seemed intensified and glorified. Seldom do the
+heart and brain work together as did hers. She will ever stand to
+those who knew her as a fine specimen of a rare type. She had
+convictions, and she had the courage to uphold them. She hated shams
+and hypocrisy with the vigor of Carlyle. The bravery of her public
+life was matched by the beauty of her private life. Good and Truth
+were her watchwords. "Good has faculty," says Swedenborg, "but not
+determinate except by truth. Determinate faculty is actual power." In
+the dear friend whom we here commemorate, faculty was determinate.
+
+Brave and honest pleader for woman; true, tender, sincere friend, you
+fought the good fight well; the world is better for your work, and
+among your saddest survivors are those whom you smote with a deserved
+pen-stroke, or with spoken words, who have long since given you
+grateful thanks.
+
+ C.M.M.
+
+
+
+
+L'Envoi
+
+
+ She cut a path through tangled underwood
+ Of old traditions out to broader ways.
+ She lived to hear her work called brave and good,
+ But oh! the thorns, before the crown of bays.
+ The world gives lashes to its pioneers
+ Until the goal is reached--then deafening cheers.
+
+ELLA WHEELER WILCOX.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Memories of Jane Cunningham Croly,
+"Jenny June", by Various
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 12099 ***
diff --git a/LICENSE.txt b/LICENSE.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6312041
--- /dev/null
+++ b/LICENSE.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,11 @@
+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
diff --git a/README.md b/README.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..0a11de4
--- /dev/null
+++ b/README.md
@@ -0,0 +1,2 @@
+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #12099 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/12099)
diff --git a/old/12099-8.txt b/old/12099-8.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..4c4d6e6
--- /dev/null
+++ b/old/12099-8.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,5766 @@
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Memories of Jane Cunningham Croly, "Jenny
+June", by Various
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Memories of Jane Cunningham Croly, "Jenny June"
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: April 21, 2004 [EBook #12099]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK JANE CUNNINGHAM ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Ari J Joki and PG Distributed Proofreaders
+
+
+
+
+Caroline M. Morse, editor
+
+ JANE CUNNINGHAM CROLY
+ "JENNY JUNE"
+
+
+1904
+
+
+
+[Illustration: Portrait]
+
+[Illustration: Facsimile of signature
+ "With sincere affection
+ yours-ever
+ J.C. Croly"]
+
+
+
+ Memories of
+ Jane Cunningham Croly
+ "Jenny June"
+
+
+
+ TO THE
+ GENERAL FEDERATION OF WOMEN'S CLUBS
+ IN AMERICA
+ THIS BOOK IS AFFECTIONATELY DEDICATED
+
+ BY
+
+ THE WOMAN'S PRESS CLUB
+
+ OF
+ NEW YORK CITY
+
+Foreword
+
+
+On January 6, 1902, a Memorial Meeting was called by Sorosis jointly
+with the Woman's Press Club of New York City, and a month later the
+Press Club formally authorized the preparation of a Memorial Book to
+its Founder and continuous President to the day of her death, Jane
+Cunningham Croly.
+
+In addition to a biographical sketch to be prepared by her brother,
+the Rev. John Cunningham, this book, so it was planned, should contain
+such letters, or excerpts from letters, as would illustrate her
+lovable personality and her life philosophy.
+
+A Committee of Publication was appointed, consisting of Mrs. Caroline
+M. Morse, Chairman, Mrs. Mary Coffin Johnson, Mrs. Haryot Holt Dey,
+Mrs. Miriam Mason Greeley, Miss Anna Warren Story and Mrs. Margaret W.
+Ravenhill. These began their work by sending a printed slip to club
+members and to Mrs. Croly's known intimates, asking for her letters.
+But the response came almost without variation: "My letters from Mrs.
+Croly are of too personal a nature for publication." A few, however,
+were freely offered, and these it was decided should be used,
+depending for the bulk of the Memorial upon copious extracts from
+Mrs. Croly's "History of the Woman's Club Movement in America," from
+her editorial work on _The Cycle_, and from her miscellaneous
+writings. To this characteristic material her long cherished friends,
+Mr. and Mrs. Thaddeus B. Wakeman, added an account of the "Positivist
+Episode," that objective point in her career, with which her husband
+was closely identified.
+
+With these are: Mrs. Croly's Club Life, a sketch by Mrs. Haryot Holt
+Dey; the Sorosis-Press Club Memorial Meeting; the Resolutions of the
+Woman's Press Club of New York City, the General Federation of Clubs,
+and the Society of American Women in London; tributes from London
+clubwomen; Essays and Addresses; Letters and Stray Leaves and Notes,
+written by Mrs. Croly; tributes from many of her friends, and my own
+recollections.
+
+ CAROLINE M. MORSE,
+ Chairman.
+
+
+
+
+Contents
+
+
+ "JENNY JUNE."--Ethel Morse
+
+ A BROTHER'S MEMORIES.--John Cunningham, D.D.
+
+ SOROSIS-PRESS CLUB MEMORIAL MEETING ADDRESSES:
+ Dimies T.S. Denison
+ Charlotte B. Wilbour
+ Phebe A. Hanaford
+ Orlena A. Zabriskie
+ Carrie Louise Griffin
+ Cynthia Westover Alden
+ May Riley Smith
+ Fanny Hallock Carpenter
+
+ RESOLUTIONS AND TRIBUTES FROM CLUBS:
+ Resolutions of the New York State Federation
+ From the Croly Memorial Fund of the Pioneer Club of London
+
+ THE POSITIVIST EPISODE.--Thaddeus B. Wakeman
+
+ MRS. CROLY'S CLUB LIFE.--Haryot Holt Dey
+
+ ESSAYS AND ADDRESSES BY JANE CUNNINGHAM CROLY:
+ Beginnings of Organization
+ The Moral Awakening
+ The Advantages of a General Federation of Women's Clubs
+ The Clubwoman
+ The New Life
+ The Days That Are
+ A People's Church
+
+ NOTES, LETTERS, AND STRAY LEAVES.--Jane Cunningham Croly
+
+ THE TRIBUTES OF FRIENDS:
+ Miriam Mason Greeley
+ Marie Etienne Burns
+ Izora Chandler
+ Janie C.P. Jones
+ Catherine Weed Barnes Ward
+ Sara J. Lippincott--"Grace Greenwood"
+ Jennie de la M. Lozier
+ Genie H. Rosenfeld
+ S.A. Lattimore
+ Ellen M. Staples
+ Margaret W. Ravenhill
+ T.C. Evans
+ St. Clair McKelway
+ Laura Sedgwick Collins
+ Mary Coffin Johnson
+ Caroline M. Morse
+ Ella Wheeler Wilcox
+
+
+
+
+Illustrations
+
+
+ JANE CUNNINGHAM CROLY (JENNY JUNE) AT THE AGE OF 61
+
+ MRS. CROLY AT THE AGE OF 40 (ABOUT THE TIME
+ SOROSIS WAS INAUGURATED)
+
+ FACSIMILE OF RESOLUTIONS ADOPTED BY THE
+ WOMAN'S PRESS CLUB OF NEW YORK, JANUARY
+ 11, 1902
+
+ FACSIMILE OF RESOLUTIONS ADOPTED BY THE
+ SOCIETY OF AMERICAN WOMEN IN LONDON,
+ MARCH 24, 1902
+
+ DAVID GOODMAN CROLY
+
+ FACSIMILE OF A PORTION OF A LETTER WRITTEN
+ BY MRS. CROLY, OCTOBER, 1900
+
+ MRS. CROLY AT THE AGE OF 18
+
+
+
+
+Jenny June
+
+
+ The South Wind blows across the harrowed fields,
+ And lo! the young grain springs to happy birth;
+ His warm breath lingers where the granite shields
+ Intruding flowers, and the responsive Earth
+ Impartially her varied harvest yields.
+ Through long ensuing months with tender mirth
+ The South Wind laughs, rejoicing in the worth
+ Of the impellent energies he wields.
+
+ Within our minds the memory of a Name
+ Will move, and fires of inspiration that burned low
+ Among dead embers break in quickening flame;
+ Flowers of the soul, grain of the heart shall grow,
+ And burgeoned promises shall bravely blow
+ Beneath the sunny influence of Her fame.
+
+ETHEL MORSE.
+
+
+
+
+A Brother's Memories
+
+_By John Cunningham, D.D._
+
+
+The most interesting and potent fact within the range of human
+knowledge is personality, and in the person of Jane Cunningham Croly
+(Jenny June) a potency was apparent which has affected the social life
+of more women, perhaps, than any other single controlling factor of
+the same period.
+
+Jane Cunningham was born in Market Harborough, Leicestershire,
+England, December 19, 1829. She was the fourth child of Joseph H. and
+Jane Cunningham, and though small in stature and delicate in organism,
+was full of vivacity, and abounding in natural intelligence. Her rich
+brown hair, blue eyes and clear complexion proclaimed her of
+Anglo-Saxon origin. She was the idol of her parents and the admiration
+of her school teachers. Her comradeship with her father began early in
+life and was continued to the time of his death. The family came to
+the United States in 1841, making their home at first in Poughkeepsie,
+and afterwards in or near Wappinger's Falls, where the father bought a
+large building-lot and erected a neat and commodious house, which
+remained in the possession of the family until sold by Mrs.
+Cunningham after the death of her husband. The lot was soon converted
+into a garden by its owner who tilled it with the spade and allowed no
+plough to be used in his little Eden. It was characteristic of his
+generous spirit, too, that none of the surplus product was ever sold,
+but was freely given to less favored neighbors. Happy years were spent
+by Mr. Cunningham in his shop, in his garden, with his books, and in
+visiting his daughter Jennie in New York after her marriage when she
+became established there. It was as nearly an ideal life as a modest
+man could desire. He lived respected by the best people in the
+community, and died in peace, with his children around him.
+
+As I remember my sister in early life, the sunniness of her nature
+is the first and prevailing characteristic that I call to mind;
+occasional moods of reverie bordering on melancholy only made brighter
+the habitual radiance and buoyancy of a nature that diffused happiness
+all around her. She was a perfectly healthy girl in mind and body. A
+sound mind in a sound body was her noble heritage. She was always
+extremely temperate in food and drink, fastidious in all her tastes
+and personal habits, indulgent never beyond the dictates of perfect
+simplicity and sobriety. Proficient in all branches of housekeeping,
+her apparel was mostly of her own making. Good literature was a
+passion with her, and while never an omnivorous reader, she had a
+natural instinct for the best in language. A spirit of indomitable
+independence, courage and persistence in purpose characterized her
+from childhood. She must think her own thoughts, and mark out and
+follow her own path. Suffering from a degree of physical timidity that
+at times caused her much pain, she possessed a spirit that sometimes
+seemed to border on audacity in the assertion and maintenance of her
+own convictions. From childhood she developed a personality which
+charmed all with whom she came in contact. Persons of both sexes,
+young and old, the sober and the gay, alike fell under the influence
+of her magnetic power. Living for a time in the family of her brother,
+to whom she proffered her services as housekeeper when he was pastor
+of a Union church in Worcester County, Mass., she drew to her all
+sorts of people by the brightness and charm of her personality.
+Self-forgetful and genuine, interested in all about her, she lived
+only to serve others, valuing lightly all that she did. Here it was
+that her remarkable capacity for journalism first developed itself.
+One of the means by which she interested the community was the public
+reading of a semi-monthly paper, every line of which was written by
+herself and a fellow worker. The reading of that paper every
+fortnight, to an audience that crowded the church, was an event in her
+history.
+
+Jennie was no dreamer. She was no speculative theorist spinning
+impossible things out of the cobwebs of her brain. She was no Hypatia
+striving to restore the gods of the past, revelling in a brilliant
+cloudland of symbolisms and affinities. If she was caught in the mist
+at any time, she soon came out of it and found her footing in the
+practical realities of daily life. Never over-reverential, she never
+called in question the deeper realities of soul-life. She was no
+ascetic: she would have made a poor nun. But she was a born preacher
+if by preaching is meant the annunciation of a gospel to those who
+need it. Jennie was always an ardent devotee of her sex, and whatever
+else she believed in, she certainly believed in women, their instincts
+and capacities.
+
+In the year 1856, on February 14th, St. Valentine's Day, my sister
+Jennie was married to David G. Croly, a reporter for the New York
+_Herald,_ and they began life in the city on his meagre salary of
+fourteen dollars a week. The gifted young wife, however, soon found
+work for herself on the _World_, the _Tribune_, the _Times_, _Noah's
+Sunday Times_ and the _Messenger_. The first money she received for
+writing was in return for an article published in the New York
+_Tribune_. Their joint career in metropolitan journalism was
+interrupted however by a short term of residence in Rockford,
+Illinois, where Mr. Croly was invited to become editor of the Rockford
+_Register_, then owned by William Gore King, the husband of our
+sister Mary A. Cunningham. Mr. Croly was aided in the editorial
+management by his wife, and while the work was agreeable and
+successful, it was due to Mrs. Croly's ardent desire for a larger
+field, that at the end of a year they decided to return to New York.
+The results for both abundantly justified the change. As managing
+editor of the daily _World_ for a number of years, afterwards of the
+New York _Graphic_, and later of the _Real Estate Record and Guide_,
+Mr. Croly won an honorable position in New York journalism. He was a
+conservative democrat of the strictest sort, a radical in religion,
+and had but little appreciation of the deeper forces at work in
+society and in national life. But he was able and honest, and enjoyed
+the respect of his fellow-craftsmen.
+
+"Jenny June" was a person of very different mental and moral mould.
+Her work soon revealed a new, fresh, vigorous force in journalism. An
+examination of her editorial contributions to the _Sunday Times_ from
+March to December, 1861, suggests her mental vivacity, vigor, breadth
+of view, and uniform clearness and power of expression. The title
+of the whole series is unpretentious enough: "Parlor and Sidewalk
+Gossip." All through her journalistic career similar qualities of
+originality characterized her pen. She was editor of _Demorest's_
+magazine for twenty-seven years, and was both editor and owner of
+_Godey's_ magazine and _The Home-Maker_. _The Cycle_ was her own
+creation and property. In each of these publications the dominating
+thoughts are those which make for social elevation, the honor of
+womanhood and home comfort and happiness. In addition to this
+editorial work she was a regular contributor to several leading
+newspapers in Boston, Chicago, New Orleans, Baltimore and other
+cities. She inaugurated the system of syndicate correspondence, and
+was the author of several books--"For Better, For Worse"; "Talks on
+Women's Topics"; "Thrown on Her Own Resources"; three manuals; and
+"The History of the Woman's Club Movement," a large volume of nearly
+twelve hundred pages.
+
+During the most active years of my sister's literary life, she had
+also the care of a large household, and her home was always bright and
+hospitable. The Croly Sunday evening receptions were one of the social
+features of New York City.
+
+Five children were born to Mr. and Mrs. Croly. Minnie, the eldest, was
+happily married to Lieutenant Roper of the U. S. Navy; her early death
+was a grief hard to bear. The second child, a boy, died in infancy.
+The surviving children are: Herbert G. Croly, a man of letters in New
+York City; Vida Croly Sidney, the wife of the English playwright,
+Frederick Sidney, lives in London; and Alice Gary Mathot, the wife of
+a New York lawyer, William F. Mathot, resides in Brooklyn Hills, Long
+Island.
+
+Mrs. Croly, one of the founders of Sorosis, perhaps the most noted
+woman's club in existence, was its President for many years, and its
+Honorary President at the time of her death. The cause which led to
+the founding of Sorosis is an open secret. Women were ignored at the
+Charles Dickens reception; this was not to be tolerated, and in
+consequence of this affront Sorosis came into being, an effectual
+protest against any similar indifference in all time to come. Of the
+growth of the club movement in the United States, in Great Britain,
+France, Russia, and in far-off India, I do not propose to enter into
+detail. Suffice it to say that it is one of the marvels of the modern
+social and intellectual life of women.
+
+What was the secret of Jenny June's charm and power? Not
+scholarship--let this be said in all sincerity. How greatly she
+appreciated the scholar's advantages was well known to her intimate
+friends. But these advantages did not belong to her. Nor did it
+consist in inherited social rank or wealth; her earnings by her pen
+were large, but her patrimony was small. It should have been said
+before, that she received the degree of Doctor of Literature from
+Rutgers Women's College, and was appointed to a new chair of
+Journalism and Literature in that institution. She was also a
+lecturer in other women's schools of the first rank.
+
+Nor did Jenny June pattern her work according to the advice or after
+the example of any one man or woman. There was no example by which she
+could be guided. Woman was a new factor in journalism, and Jenny June
+was a new woman, a new creation, if I may so speak, fashioned after
+the type of woman in the beginning, when God created man and woman in
+His own image. I cannot too fully emphasize the fact that she was a
+new and original personality in journalism. No one understood this
+better than her husband. In matters of detail his counsel was of value
+to her, but the spirit and character of her work were her own; and
+happily for her and for womankind she could never be diverted from her
+chosen path. This, indeed, was one chief secret of her success. She
+was unalterably true to her divine womanly ideals of woman's nature,
+place in society and redemptive work. I say redemptive work, for it
+was one of her deepest convictions that woman's function, was to be
+the saving salt of all life. Sorosis was founded upon this idea;--not
+a literary club merely or mainly; not a political, social or religious
+club; but one founded on womanhood, on the divine nature of women of
+every class and degree.
+
+Jenny June's recognition of this vital truth brought her into sympathy
+with a world-wide movement. The new woman is no monstrosity, no
+sporadic creature born of intellectual fermentation and unrest, but
+the rise and development of a better, nobler type of womanhood the
+world over. Jenny June's eminent distinction was that she was a leader
+in this movement. It made her what her husband once said in my
+hearing: "a wonderful woman." Of course there was the capacity for
+bursts of feeling on occasion, which those who knew her best seldom
+cared to provoke. "I am not an amiable woman," she once said to the
+writer. Radiant as she was, there was a volcanic force in her nature
+which could be terrific against folly, frivolity and wrong.
+
+Thousands of gifted women are now making themselves heard in poetry,
+dissertation, fiction and journalism because Jenny June opened the
+path for them. Womanhood was her watchword, and God, duty, faith and
+hope the springs of her life. It may surprise even those who knew her
+well to learn that her physical timidity was great, and at times
+painful. But her moral and intellectual courage impelled her at times
+almost to the verge of audacity, and was held under restraint only by
+conscience and good sense. Humor and wit can hardly be said to have
+been marked traits in her mentality. There was something delphic and
+oracular often in her familiar conversation. Sentimentalism had no
+place in her nature, her reading or literary work. A soul full of
+healthy and noble sentiment left no room for sentimentalism.
+
+Was Jenny June a genius? Well, if a boundless capacity for good
+original work is genius, then she was a genius. Magnanimity was a
+marked trait in her character. Envy or jealousy of the gifts of
+another were foreign to her. Love of nature, and especially of fine
+trees, was one of her most noticeable characteristics. "There will be
+trees in my heaven," she once said to the writer. But works of art, of
+the chisel, the brush, the pencil and the loom were her delight. She
+loved the city, its crowding humanity, its stores and its galleries.
+She loved London even more than New York. Continental travel was her
+chief pleasure and diversion. A long period of physical suffering,
+caused by an accident, cast a cloud over the last years of my sister's
+honorable life. She sought relief from pain and weakness, at Ambleside
+in Derbyshire, England, and at a celebrated cure in Switzerland, but
+was only partially successful. The final release came on December 23,
+1901, and her remains were laid by the side of her husband in the
+cemetery at Lakewood, New Jersey.
+
+Noble Jenny June! Shall we ever see her like again!
+
+
+
+
+Sorosis-Press Club Memorial Meeting
+
+
+A memorial meeting, called by Sorosis jointly with the Woman's Press
+Club, was held at the Waldorf-Astoria on January 6, 1902, a fortnight
+after the death of Mrs. Croly. It was attended not alone by the
+members of these two clubs but also by representatives from every
+woman's club in New York and the vicinity. Letters from many clubs
+belonging to the General Federation were read, and from the
+secretary's report of the meeting have been gathered the following
+tributes of notable clubwomen to the beloved founder of both clubs.
+
+
+
+
+Address by Dimies T.S. Denison, President of Sorosis
+
+
+We have met this afternoon to pay a loving tribute to one of the
+departed of Sorosis, who was for many years its President, and for
+years its Honorary President.
+
+The loss is not ours alone, for our sorrow is shared by all clubwomen,
+from Australia around the world to Alaska. Her position will always
+remain unique. Whenever there comes a time for a great movement there
+has always been a leader. The Revolution had its Washington; the
+abolition of slavery its Lincoln; and so, when the time came for such
+a movement among women, there were also leaders. Mrs. Croly remained,
+throughout her life, an advocate of everything which was for the
+betterment of women, and she died in the heart of the movement.
+
+Her perception of the value of unity, of the advantage of organized
+effort, was remarkable. Perhaps the generations beyond ours will think
+of her most in that quality, but the women of our time will remember
+her, as they loved her, for her ready sympathy and her unfailing
+helpfulness to all women. Though departed, she is still with us, and
+the beauty of her life remains, in that its influence is imperative.
+
+Mrs. Croly had that particular sense of fellowship among women most
+unusual. If you will stop to think, in our language you will find that
+there are no words to express that thought, except those that are
+masculine--fellowship, brotherhood, fraternity. Mrs. Croly, perhaps
+more than any other woman in the world, had the sense of what
+fellowship or fraternity meant in women, and although she sometimes
+may have been called an idealist or sentimentalist, it is recognized
+by many women that this thought must be abiding, for in a federation
+it is the spirit that is current through it that keeps the federation
+alive.
+
+The last afternoon it was my privilege to be with Mrs. Croly we had a
+long talk, and it seems to me, in looking back, that Mrs. Croly was
+then leaving a message with me for all clubwomen. I never heard her
+speak so eloquently. We talked of some of the problems of the General
+Federation--its possible disruption. Mrs. Croly said: "It does not
+matter; if anything happens that the General Federation should be
+disrupted, another will be formed at once." She had absolute faith, if
+not in a Divine Providence, that there was a possibility it was part
+of the human scheme of development that must be carried on through the
+Divine Will. So, if she left any message for the General Federation,
+it was this: that whatever our personal opinions are, whatever we
+think of any question, we are to think first of the life of the
+General Federation; because in it is the great thought of the
+fellowship and fraternity among women that is to bring us closer and
+closer to the millennium.
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: MRS. CROLY at the age of 40. (About the time Sorosis
+was inaugurated)]
+
+
+
+
+Address by Charlotte B. Wilbour
+
+
+When a soul that has worn out its frail body in the work of the world
+crosses the threshold of eternity, the darkness that gathers around
+our hearts has in it a relief of light. Nature has suffered no
+violence; the power of the body has been exhausted in good service,
+and the tired spirit is set free from the encasement that can no
+longer serve it. A fond look backward, a hopeful look forward, and the
+portals close with our benediction.
+
+ "A life that dares send
+ A challenge to the end,
+ And, when it comes, say
+ 'Welcome, friend,'"
+
+inspires the wish that we may so fill the measure of our days with
+usefulness.
+
+The departure of such a spirit would be fittingly commemorated by the
+grand marches of Chopin and Beethoven, or the majestic requiems of
+Mozart, rather than by our simple words. And yet they are our hearts'
+testimony to her in whose name we are assembled and, let us hope, made
+worthy. To us who believe that life reels not back from the white
+charger of Death towards the gulf of inanity and oblivion, there is a
+vivid realization that our words may be spoken to the conscious
+spirit; and we desire that, in the sacred name of truth, and with the
+love that comprehends and overcomes, we may speak simply as "soul to
+soul."
+
+One of the most beautiful lessons I have learned of death is that
+after the departure of a friend, or even of an acquaintance, our
+memories retain and cherish their best and noblest qualities and
+deeds. We repeat their finest words and recount their generous works.
+The sunshine falls clear on their virtues, and the shadow lies kindly
+on their faults. It exalts our nature that our minds elect only the
+lovely and beautiful characteristics of the lost friend. This sublime
+power in us breaks the force of the bitter criticism of the obituary,
+the eulogy, and the epitaph--that they are false notes in a hymn of
+praise. And to us yet living, there is sweet comfort in the thought
+that our best and higher selves shall remain with those we love and
+honor. And so shall the good we do live after us. These purified
+remembrances are links of the chain that binds the humblest to the
+highest.
+
+In my early womanhood I knew our honored president, a fair, happy,
+healthy, active English woman; and she appeared to me (sobered by the
+loss of most of my family) to rejoice in a fulness of life. We were
+maidens, and her interests and activities were in domestic and social
+life. I have not lost the fresh memory of her in those days.
+
+She was our president for ten years, and afterwards our honorary
+president. The activity of her life has made the deepest impression
+upon me. Every member of our association and of sister associations
+will agree with me, that never a woman brought a more cheerful and
+willing spirit to her official duties than did she. She rejoiced in
+her place, delighted in her privilege, and fully enjoyed the
+recognition and good fellowship of other clubs. This cheerful service,
+rendered for years, made her widely known in the club world. She
+responded to personal influence and suggestions made directly to her.
+She was most receptive to practical ideas, and adopted methods
+readily, and her liberal service brought to her just recompense.
+
+For years it required sacrifice on her part to attend the regular
+meetings of Sorosis, for she had daily occupation, and a lost day must
+be redeemed. But when an officer she made the sacrifice cheerfully.
+She was social and hospitable. Freely her house was given to us for
+lectures, receptions to distinguished guests and business meetings.
+For years the Positivists held their meetings at her home. She found
+her pleasure in pleasing, and in helping others gave herself joy. She
+loved her work for clubs, and you will remember that she had several
+business enterprises connected with them, during the years that she
+was an active clubwoman.
+
+I was in this country while she was preparing her history of clubs
+(not the history of Sorosis), and she brought the interest and
+enthusiasm of a young woman to the work; with a satisfied pride she
+showed me the material she had collected for the history. Nothing else
+to her mind was more important, or to be thought of until that was
+accomplished. I believe that her usefulness to clubs has been
+commensurate with the interest and gratification she had in the
+service.
+
+During the years of our acquaintance our intercourse was genial and
+concordant, and the results of our early work in Sorosis cannot equal
+the sweet satisfaction that came with its performance.
+
+In the early life of the club many of us were young mothers, and our
+domestic duties had strong claims upon us, and one prominent thought
+in connection with the formation of Sorosis was that the attention of
+a large class of thinking women, directed in concert towards important
+domestic and social questions, could be secured; and, while the
+character of the club should be pre-eminently social, we hoped to
+quietly bring in important reforms, or at least some effective action
+on these questions, and, above all, to secure an intelligent social
+intercourse without increasing our domestic duties and responsibilities.
+Have we not accomplished this?
+
+As the smallest consoling thought is greater than the most eloquent
+expression of sorrow, so do we find some consolation in the fact that
+fate was kind to our friend, and led her away when she could no longer
+enjoy life, and that she went while with us whose hearts were warm
+with an active sympathy and tender helpfulness.
+
+Our kind purpose to her name lifts our acts above criticism, and
+fortifies them by our love and worthiness of intention. Let us live to
+live forever--so shall we never fear death; let our warm human love be
+the prophet of a union for greater benefits; and let us have faith in
+the love that lives in human bosoms still:
+
+ "Lives to renovate our earth
+ From the bondage of its birth,
+ And the long arrears of ill."
+
+
+
+
+Address by the Rev. Phebe A. Hanaford, Vice-President of the Woman's
+Press Club of New York City
+
+
+I am requested to speak of the excellent work done by its departed
+president, in and for the Woman's Press Club of New York City. To
+others is assigned the testimony in reference to the career and work
+of our departed president as a press woman, and her place in
+literature.
+
+We are not here to analyze her character, or to chronicle her work.
+Nor are we here to dwell on those biographical details which belong to
+the pen rather than the voice; to the book and the reader rather than
+the address and the hearer. We are here to testify our regard for one
+whose busy pen is laid aside, but whose example of industry we may
+well imitate; though in the journalistic field the women of to-day
+will never have opportunity to emulate her perseverance and
+fearlessness, since her entrance in times long gone by on this
+untrodden path bore an important part in opening the way and obtaining
+results for women with whom the pen to-day is a power.
+
+Mrs. Croly was the founder of this club in 1889, and for twelve years
+and to the day of her death, its only president. It started (as she
+tells us in the large quarto volume relating to clubs--which was the
+closing, if not the crowning, effort of her busy pen) with an
+invitation sent out by herself in November, 1889, to forty women, a
+number of whom were then engaged upon the press in New York City, to
+meet at her residence, and consider the advisability of forming a
+Woman's Press Club. It was eminently fitting that one who had been
+stirred in former years by the absence of social recognition in
+journalism as within woman's province, on the part of the men of the
+press, and moved to take a prominent part in the formation of Sorosis,
+should organize a club of women writers--women journalists
+especially--which should be known everywhere as distinctly a Woman's
+Press Club.
+
+The response to her call was most gratifying. Her ability as an
+organizer, and her social qualities which could attract and hold women
+together in strong bonds of mutual esteem and fellowship, were again
+evident, and on November 19, 1889, the organization was effected and a
+provisional constitution adopted.
+
+At first the literary features of the new club were considered
+secondary to the social and beneficiary, but gradually they grew to
+their present importance.
+
+In its early days, like most clubs this one was migratory, and its
+work incidental. Gradually it came to have a more permanent home, and
+its monthly programmes which, as Mrs. Croly herself stated, "are more
+in the form of a symposium than of a question for debate," came to be
+so attractive and varied, and in every way so excellent, that they are
+often declared to be unsurpassed in interest by any woman's club. This
+was a matter of exceeding satisfaction to its founder, who saw the
+club grow from its membership of fifty-two to two hundred. She was
+never weary of recounting its successes, literary, musical, artistic
+and social. The Press Club was her joy and pride from its organization
+to the very day when she last met with its members, devoting on that
+day her failing strength to a cause that was beyond expression dear to
+her heart. I think I shall only be saying very feebly what the members
+of the club, especially those who have been members from its
+organization, now feel--that they regard her presence with them on the
+recent day of installation of new officers as a benediction, though
+they little knew that in her feebleness she was bidding them a loving
+farewell. When the news of her departure reached them it was received
+with surprise and deep sorrow. By prompt action the officers at once
+came together, and immediate measures were taken for appropriate
+expression of the Press Club's loyalty and love.
+
+Its members are here to-day not only to express their own high regard
+for their departed founder and president, but also to unite with
+Sorosis, the London Pioneer Club, and other clubs in the State
+Federation, who, by their presence, speech, or song, indicate the
+sympathy they have with those who will hold in fadeless remembrance
+their ascended president, who has learned ere this, that
+
+ "Life is ever Lord of Death,
+ And Love can never lose its own."
+
+As members of the club she, who has now passed into the eternal light,
+founded may we seek earnestly to walk in the light of Truth, strenuous
+for that more than royal liberty of conscience, which means liberty
+under righteous law and seeking for the Unity which obeys the Golden
+Rule, and thus binds heart to heart. So shall the Woman's Press Club
+of New York City truly honor the memory of its founder and first
+president, Jane Cunningham Croly.
+
+
+
+
+Address by Orlena A. Zabriskie, President of the New York Federation
+
+
+That the New York State Federation should be called upon to attest its
+love, devotion, and admiration for Mrs. Croly and her wonderful work
+among women, is a privilege we appreciate, and I shall try in a few
+simple, honest words, to explain a little of what her influence has
+been to the New York State Federation. We all know she was an
+organizer and founder, but it is well to repeat those words, although
+I think there is little danger that we shall ever forget them. From
+all over the State have come messages to me from different members of
+the federation, expressing their love and obligation to Mrs. Croly for
+what she has done for them individually, and for the State. One letter
+said:
+
+ "I shall think of her always as that lovely, sweet-tempered
+ woman who, under the most trying circumstances, never lost
+ her temper, or felt she was at all aggrieved. She took it in
+ the right way, and was just as lovely and kind at the close
+ as at the beginning."
+
+I saw her at Friendship, a little town in the northwestern part of the
+State, before the meeting at Buffalo, and there we had a long talk
+about matters of Federation interest. She gave me some good advice in
+her own gentle way, that I shall never forget, and I am only too glad
+to have this opportunity of saying it helped me to carry through that
+convention as I could not have done otherwise.
+
+What was the secret of her power as an organizer? I think this--she
+saw the little spark of good in each woman, every woman she came in
+contact with, and even in those she did not come in personal contact
+with. She knew it was there and she had the ability to call it forth,
+and that magnetic influence drew them together, so that they realized
+that they could do more in large numbers than they could as
+individuals. Knowing our power, she urged and encouraged us to do our
+best. When with her we did not feel as though we had a "specked" side.
+I think it was just that that gave her power and influence in the
+clubs she founded, to make them live and be a greater power than ever
+they could have been without her memory and example set before them.
+
+She has done good work, and started us on a task that she saw had
+practical possibilities, and now we can carry out those ideas of hers,
+and give them force in years to come. It may take a long time, but we
+will keep on being patient, cheerful, kind-hearted, and considerate,
+as she was. Let us therefore be grateful we had her as long as we did.
+She was for us a grand inheritance, and let us appreciate it.
+
+
+
+
+Address by Carrie Louise Griffin, President of the Society of American
+Women in London
+
+
+If I could only command that physical self as I would like to, I would
+tell you how grateful I am to be privileged to speak, and how much I
+think we have to be thankful for to-day, in the life of our dear one,
+which was given us.
+
+I am new in this club, and, as most of you know, my friendship with
+Mrs. Croly is not yet three years old, but I have been singularly
+privileged and honored in loving her, and in the love which she gave
+me.
+
+She came into my life (I must be just a little personal for a moment)
+as our first luncheon, in our little Society of American Women in
+London, was about to be given. The president of Sorosis had written to
+London saying: "Do you know that Mrs. Croly and Mrs. Glynes are to be
+in London, and I think they would help you?" Bless her, and Mrs.
+Croly: she came as a benediction to the few of us who were then
+novices in what we were doing. I can never tell you what a benefit she
+was to us in the difficult work we had undertaken. You have given me
+exceptional privileges in coming among you, and I am grateful for the
+help you have been to me, but I would say to you--and you have given
+me this privilege--I have never met a woman who seemed to have
+recognized the birthright in women as the birthright in men, to create
+that link which binds our powers to our intellect. It seems to me that
+it was with Mrs. Croly as it was with our late Majesty, Queen
+Victoria, that she was an influence, perhaps, rather than a power. She
+conceived great ideas and passed them on for the executive work of
+others to fulfil. I can assure you she was everything to us. Her
+English birth gave her an instinctive insight into English character.
+English women seemed to know and understand her, as she knew and
+understood them, and there has been no finer link between the women of
+America and the women of the Old World than Mrs. Croly. It was my
+privilege to be with her personally a great deal while in London, not
+only when she stayed in my own house, but when I have gone back and
+forth with her as her guide to the many functions we attended
+together. We can all be proud of her. Wherever she went she was not
+only hailed as the pioneer woman, but also as one who did honor and
+credit to the name of American womanhood, for, although born in
+England, she still claimed that she was an American woman, as you
+know.
+
+I shall never forget a little picture she gave of herself one day.
+She told us of her life in her home in a little town in the north of
+England. Her father was a Unitarian, and often had classes in his
+house for teaching the working people. His views, as you may imagine,
+were quite contrary to the views of the orthodox Church of England,
+and the people there rebelled, stoned the house, and wanted to turn
+them out of the town. The mother said to the father: "I wish you would
+take little Jennie by the hand, in her white frock, and lead her out
+to the people; perhaps when they see her they will not throw stones."
+That was her earliest memory of that little English town. Later, I
+believe, they left in the night and came to America, in order that
+they might live out the courage of their faith.
+
+At our luncheon Mrs. Croly said: "I want English and American women to
+love each other. I remember with pride and honor my English birth. I
+can see my little room now--a small room with a lattice window over
+which the roses grew, and as I stood at the window on tiptoe, I could
+look into the old-fashioned garden below. I stood on an old chest. In
+the winter my summer frocks were kept there, and in the summer my red
+woollen dress. I loved it; it was beautiful, and it made me love
+England. When I am in England and I hear anything not quite kind about
+America, I am sorry and my heart aches, and if, when I am in America,
+I hear something not quite kind about England, my heart aches again,
+because I love it all."
+
+In talking with Mrs. Croly, she said to me, "I hope some day you will
+come to a General Federation." Quoting Matthew Arnold, she said: "If
+ever the world sees a time when women shall come together, purely and
+simply for the benefit and good of mankind, it will be a power such as
+the world has never known." And she said, "There you will find it." We
+had talked about it and looked forward to seeing it together, but that
+will never be. It was her hope and dream that there should be such a
+General Federation of clubs as to bring in the women of the Old World
+with the Federation of Clubs in the New, that we might stand hand in
+hand together. She said to me, "I think you are narrow in your
+society--its members are only Americans." We have often talked this
+over, and have decided that in order to strengthen our centre we must
+keep it, at present, to American woman; but it may be possible to have
+an associate membership--the thin edge of the wedge looking toward the
+realization of her dreams.
+
+
+
+
+Address by Cynthia Westover Alden, Vice-President of the Women's Press
+Club, and President of the International Sunshine Society
+
+
+Mrs. Croly has left us. Yet I cannot think of her work as ended, of
+her mission as closed. You may go over every line she ever wrote, you
+may recall with, microscopic exactness every word she ever spoke,
+without finding one single grain of bitterness towards any human
+creature. Her active life was such as must find the ripe continuance
+of its activity in the better country whither she has preceded us. I
+feel that there is no hyperbole in applying to her memory the striking
+words of Lowell's Elegy on Dr. Channing:
+
+ "I do not come to weep above thy pall
+ And mourn the dying-out of noble powers;
+ The poet's clearer eye should see in all
+ Earth's seeming woe, seed of immortal flowers.
+
+ "No power can die that ever wrought for truth;
+ Thereby a law of Nature it became,
+ And lives unwithered in its blithesome youth,
+ When he who called it forth is but a name.
+
+ "Therefore I cannot think thee wholly gone;
+ The better part of thee is with us still;
+ Thy soul its hampering clay aside hath thrown,
+ And only freer wrestles with the ill.
+
+ "Thou art not idle; in thy higher sphere
+ Thy spirit bends itself to loving tasks,
+ And strength to perfect what it dreamed of here
+ Is all the crown and glory that it asks."
+
+The women of America owe much to Jenny June. By example she showed
+them that the career of letters was open to them. Her style, cheerful
+and vivid, sometimes epigrammatic, always entertaining, was her own.
+It could not be copied, it could not be imitated, it stood by itself;
+her career, filled with a large measure of the courage of her success,
+belonged in the broadest sense to women as women. How many worthy
+ambitions that career has stimulated to fruition we know not, and
+never shall know. One thing, however, is certain--that if you deduct
+from the literature of America the names of women who have followed
+Mrs. Croly's example and have been cheered by the fact that she did
+not fall by the wayside, you leave a void that never could be filled.
+How consciously they have been affected by Mrs. Croly's blazing path I
+cannot tell; but the influence has been none the less real and none
+the less powerful.
+
+Woman's battle for literary recognition will not have to be fought
+over again: it belongs to the past. The old contempt of editors and
+publishers, aye, and of readers as well, has gone to join slavery and
+polygamy and human sacrifices in the chamber of horrors. But we can
+never forget the woman who braved that contempt, and faced it down by
+achievement that could not be ignored. Mrs. Croly belonged to the
+period of that early struggle. In her sweetness of temper she lent to
+its very asperities the charm of a tournament, overcoming evil with
+good, and triumphing at last over prejudice which thousands of women
+had feared to face. We loved her for herself. We are sad in spite of
+ourselves that she has gone. But we shall only remember her as one of
+the greatest benefactors of woman in literature; one of the most
+delightful of all the delightful characters that we have ever known.
+
+ "This laurel leaf I cast upon thy bier;
+ Let worthier hands than these thy wreath entwine;
+ Upon thy hearse I shed no useless tear--
+ For us weep rather thou, in calm divine."
+
+
+
+
+In the Silence
+
+_By May Riley Smith_
+
+
+ They are out of the chaos of living,
+ The wreck and debris of the years;
+ They have passed from the struggle and striving,
+ They have drained their goblet of tears.
+ They have ceased one by one from their labors,
+ So we clothed them in garments of rest,
+ And they entered the chamber of silence;--
+ God do for them now what is best!
+
+ We saw not the lift of the curtain,
+ Nor heard the invisible door,
+ As they passed where life's problems uncertain
+ Will follow and burthen no more.
+ We lingered and wept on the threshold--
+ The threshold each mortal must cross,--
+ Then we laid a new wreath down upon it,
+ To mark a new sorrow and loss.
+
+ Then back to our separate places
+ A little more lonely we creep,
+ A little more care in our faces,
+ The wrinkles a little more deep.
+ And we stagger, ah, God, how we stagger
+ As we lift the old load to our back!
+ A little more lonely to carry
+ Because of the comrade we lack.
+
+ But into our lives whether chidden
+ Or welcome, God's comforters come;
+ His sunshine waits not to be bidden,
+ His stars,--they are always at home.
+ His mornings are faithful,--His evenings
+ Allay the day's fever and fret;
+ And night--kind physician--entreats us
+ To slumber and dream and forget.
+
+ O Spirit of infinite kindness
+ And gentleness passing all speech!
+ Forgive when we miss in our blindness
+ The comforting hand them dost reach.
+ Thou sendest the Spring on Thine errand
+ To soften the grief of the world;
+ For us is the calm of the mountain,
+ For us is the rose-leaf uncurled.
+
+ Thou art tenderer, too, than a mother,
+ In the wonderful Book it is said;
+ O Pillow of Comfort! What other
+ So softly could cradle my head?
+ And though Thou hast darkened the portal
+ That leads where our vanished ones be;
+ We lean on our faith in Thy goodness,
+ And leave them to silence and Thee.
+
+
+
+
+Jenny June
+
+_By Fanny Hallock Carpenter_
+
+
+ A beautiful soul has journeyed
+ Out from the Now into Then.
+ Her voice echoes back to us, waiting,
+ The sound of the great Amen.
+
+ Her life was a song so winsome
+ It sung itself night and day
+ Into the hearts of the people
+ Who met her along the way.
+
+ Her life was a flower so fragrant
+ That every one passing her, knew
+ By the perfume from it exhaling,
+ The love out of which it grew.
+
+ Her life was a book so vivid
+ That all, though running, could read
+ The story of earnest endeavor
+ Written for woman's need.
+
+ Her life was a light whose radiance
+ Brightened all woman-kind,
+ As sunshine wakens the flowers,
+ Or genius illumines the mind.
+
+ Her life was a poem so tender
+ It thrilled with its cadence sweet
+ Many a life prosaic,
+ Which caught up the rhythmic beat.
+
+ Her life was a bell whose ringing
+ Gave no uncertain sound,
+ Its chiming rang out to the nations
+ And girdled the world around.
+
+ Her life was a deed so holy,
+ So noble, so brave, so true,
+ That it set all womanhood noting
+ The good one woman could do.
+
+ Her life was a brook, that swelling
+ Grew to a river wide,
+ That freshened the souls of the many
+ Touched by its flowing tide.
+
+ The song has trilled into silence,
+ The flower is faded and gone,
+ The book's strong story is ended,
+ The light is lost in the dawn.
+
+ The poem's sweet rhythm is ended,
+ The chiming has ceased to be,
+ The deed is fully accomplished,
+ The river has joined the sea.
+
+ She dropped the pebble whose ripples
+ To the shores of all time shall extend,
+ She has spoken the word into ether
+ Whose sound-waves never shall end.
+
+ She has started a light on its journey
+ Out into limitless space,
+ She has written a thought for women
+ Eternity cannot erase.
+
+ A wonderful soul has journeyed
+ Out from the Now into Then,
+ Her voice echoes back to us, waiting,
+ The sound of the great Amen.
+
+
+
+
+Resolutions and Tributes From Clubs
+
+
+[Illustration: Fac-simile of resolutions adopted by the Woman's Press
+Club of New York, January 11, 1902.]
+
+
+Resolutions of the New York State Federation of Women's Clubs
+
+
+In Memoriam
+
+_Mrs. Jane Cunningham Croly_
+
+
+We have tenderly laid away to rest our beloved honorary president,
+Jane Cunningham Croly, to sleep the blessed sleep that knows no waking
+in this toilsome, troublous world.
+
+Her gentle soul is at peace, her personal work is accomplished, her
+useful life is ended. She has been taken from further pain and further
+labor, to that existence where all is perfect peace, perfect rest,
+perfect rhythm.
+
+We wish to place upon our records, therefore, our appreciation of the
+fact, that this New York State Federation of Women's Clubs has
+suffered such a loss as can come but once to any, a loss like that of
+a loving mother to an affectionate child.
+
+We shall miss her at our meetings, at our larger gatherings, and at
+our conventions.
+
+We shall hold her, and the desires of her heart in relation to us, in
+loving and constant memory.
+
+And we purpose to take up her work, where she laid it down, and carry
+it on with the same unselfish aims, high ideals, and unremitting
+patience with which she labored, until we shall reach the goal upon
+which her farseeing eyes were fastened, and her great heart was set.
+
+ FANNY HALLOCK CARPENTER.
+ February 13, 1902.
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: Resolutions adopted by The Society of American Women in
+London, March 24th, 1902.]
+
+
+
+
+The Croly Memorial Fund of the Pioneer Club of London
+
+_First Annual Report_
+
+
+In July, 1900, a fund was raised by the exertions of Mrs. E.S.
+Willard, to present a life membership of the Pioneer Club to Mrs. Jane
+Cunningham Croly, known to all who are interested in woman's work as
+"Jenny June."
+
+Mrs. Croly had a special claim to this distinction, for she was the
+originator of women's clubs. The first woman's club was founded by her
+in New York, March, 1868, under the name of "Sorosis." The example was
+quickly followed elsewhere, and when, in 1889, Sorosis, to celebrate
+its majority, called a convention of women's clubs, ninety-seven were
+known to exist in the United States. This convention led to a
+Federation with biennial meetings. In 1896, the Federation included
+one thousand four hundred and twenty-five dubs. The Pioneer is the
+only English woman's club which belongs to the Federation.
+
+Mrs. Croly's activities were not confined to clubs, although up to the
+time of her death the movement owed much to her wisdom and energy. She
+was a journalist, a writer, an admirable critic, and all her life a
+devoted worker for every movement that could raise the position of
+women.
+
+She was a dear and valued friend of Mrs. Marsingberd, the president
+and founder of this club. It was a recognition of their unity of
+spirit and purpose that made the response of this club so ready that
+the only life-membership as yet presented, was offered to Mrs. Croly.
+She was deeply gratified, but unfortunately did not live long enough
+to enjoy a privilege which she highly esteemed. Her useful, loving,
+laborious life ended in December, 1901. But she had been among us from
+time to time. Her interest in us never flagged, and we prize some
+tokens of her regard. Nor shall we soon forget the stirring words she
+addressed to us on two occasions, pointing out the opportunities which
+our association gave for useful work and sympathy.
+
+When the life-membership fee had been paid, some money still remained,
+and when the question arose as to what should be done with it, Lady
+Hamilton made the valuable suggestion that it should be used as the
+foundation of a fund to be called "The Mrs. Croly Memorial Fund," to
+be applied in sisterly loving kindness to such cases as might arise
+within the club, where urgent material help was needed. This
+suggestion was heartily welcomed by a small provisional meeting called
+by Mrs. E.S. Willard, October 15, 1902, when preliminary steps were
+taken. At a second meeting, November 25, a definite constitution was
+formed for the administration of the fund.
+
+It is hoped that the members of the Pioneer Club will do all they can
+to support this fund, for it is an effort to give some tangible
+expression to the principles which governed the lives of both Mrs.
+Croly and our own president. They always unselfishly tried to give
+loving help to sister women.
+
+January 27, 1903.
+
+
+
+
+The Positivist Episode
+
+_By Thaddeus B. Wakeman_
+
+
+ "The Positivist Episode was a positive factor in my
+ life."--MRS. CROLY.
+
+Those were bright, sunny, happy, idyllic, and fruitful days of the
+Positivist Episode, when the first of the two following letters which
+my wife and I now contribute to the "Memories of Mrs. Croly," were
+written. That episode, of which these letters represent the beginning,
+and the end throws an explaining light not only over the life of her
+whom this memorial is to honor, but over that of her husband, who
+passed to the higher life in 1889; and largely also over the lives of
+others more or less associated with, or affected by, the introduction
+of the study and culture of Positivism into America, of which they may
+be regarded as the chief promoters.
+
+Yes, as friends of Mrs. Croly and of those dear to her, we may well
+recall, as she often did, this Positivist Episode as among the
+pleasantest of her--and may we not also add of ours?--earthly days.
+The first letter shows the movement well under way, when meetings had
+begun to be held, and visits to be made to the homes of those deeply
+interested. Never shall we forget the first of those visits made by
+Mrs. Croly to our then "almost out of town" home in 116th street,
+where our house, pleasantly overlooking the East River, was clothed
+with trees and vines. The Catawbas on a large trellis, trained in
+stories with upright canes, excited her admiration, and she assured us
+that she had "never seen nor eaten anybody's grapes with such
+delight." Naturally, a basket or two of grapes soon followed to her
+home away down and over to the other side of town at number 19 Bank
+street. Thus the "vines" and "fruit" referred to in her letter are
+explained; and with them was thus associated in holy sympathy her love
+with ours of "the kindly fruits of the earth." Mr. Croly also referred
+to gifts of this kind in the New York _World_--thirty varieties of
+grapes raised under and in proof of the "law of correlation, expounded
+by the raiser as the law which held us of the world together."
+
+But when our turn came as Positivist students to visit at their home,
+we found the cosey parlors well filled with the higher samples and
+fruits of human culture and intellect. Mrs. Croly's social position,
+sustained by the ability of Mr. Croly and his prominence as managing
+editor of the New York _World_, and afterwards of the _Graphic_,
+enabled her to call together the leaders, and many interested in the
+then (and now?) two leading schools of scientific and constructive
+thought; the Positivist school of Augusta Comte, represented by Henry
+Edgar and partly also by Mr. Croly and others; and also in contrast
+therewith, the Synthetic Philosophy of Herbert Spencer, represented by
+Edward L. Youmans, John Fiske and others. Nor were there wanting those
+who, like the present writer, would combine those two schools, and
+more, into the scientific and republican growth of our newer world and
+life in America.
+
+The initiative of these meetings was a course of lectures procured by
+Mr. Croly, to be delivered by Mr. Edgar at De Garmo Hall early in
+1868. Out of the interest thus excited, Mr. and Mrs. Croly called
+around them the elements above referred to, including, among
+miscellaneous attendants, perhaps a hundred earnest students of
+Positivism and of the higher religious and scientific philosophies.
+The meetings were not always held at the homes mentioned, but at the
+home of Mr. Courtlandt Palmer and of other participants. All the
+parties named, and many others, took part in the discussions of this
+unorganized circle, until its name and influence reached and
+interested generally the thinkers of the city. This interest, as the
+years rolled on, resulted in or influenced the forming of many
+societies, among which were a Positivist Society, the Society of
+Humanity, the New York and Manhattan Liberal Clubs, the Philosophic
+Society of Brooklyn, the Nineteenth Century Club, the Goethe Society,
+and indirectly a Dante Society and several others. All of the clubs
+and societies of women with which Mrs. Croly and her work have been
+associated may be thus included. Certain it is that this "positive
+factor" in her life was the source from which the new, altruistic
+inspiration originally came which made her finally recognized as the
+"Mother of Women's Clubs" and of their beneficent influences--the new
+life, light, and hope of women, of which they are the beginning.
+
+Nor less should be said for the literature that has sprung from the
+same source. It began with the "Positivist's Calendar," by Mr. Edgar,
+and Professor Youmans's admirable collection of articles, and the
+introduction, on "Correlation" of the physical and other forces,
+published by Appleton, and never to be outgrown. Then Professor Fiske
+published in the New York _World_ his able series of lectures on the
+"Positive Philosophy," which some think he weakened by turning into the
+"Cosmic Philosophy." Then (for further details are not in place here)
+Mr. and Mrs. Croly and Mr. Bell and most of us went into literature in
+some way, to an extent that made quite a library, now mostly lost or
+forgotten. Would that I could "lend continuance to the time" of those
+disputants, and show why and how they drifted apart instead of
+together! For the shadow of oblivion seems to be creeping over all;
+and against that I, as the last survivor, seem to be their only and
+yet their helpless protector. Yet we can now see, as they mostly did
+not, that their divergence was really a "differentiation process,"
+leading each to a higher integration of truth.
+
+Thus, what I cannot do for each, the volunteer seeding of time is
+doing silently for all, though they noticed not the good seed they
+scattered. For instance, Mr. Croly wished these words to be placed
+over his grave: "I meant well, tried a little, failed much." He saw
+not that the sound seed of which he was a real and great sower, were
+his well-meant and effective efforts to bring Positivism, as the sum
+and synthesis of science and humanity, before all thoughtful American
+people, as the real religion and basis of their modern life. That view
+of life was then new, but now it is replacing or changing all dogmatic
+or supernatural religions. In a word, modern scientific thought is
+becoming practical, constructive, and positive in religion; directed
+more and more toward advantages in the human future on this earth. The
+real basis of sentiment is the new science of Sociology and the new
+sense of altruism--first named by Auguste Comte and first brought to
+the American people in and by this "Positivist Episode."
+
+It is by the up-coming of such seed as was then sown, that the old
+issues and their old world have been replaced by the new; which we
+should gratefully inherit from those sowers. It is said that they
+seemed to look upon much of their life as failure because they did not
+see the harvest in their day as the direct result of their hands. How
+strange that the faith of evolution did not give them the "after
+sight" which is the crown and reward of those who "mean well," and who
+"work and hope!"
+
+To Mrs. Croly did come not only the well-wishing and the patient
+labor, but also a foretaste of her reward. Her days were extended
+until her purposes fulfilled met the gratitude of her successors. Even
+"the slings and arrows of outrageous fortune," referred to in her last
+letter to us, were warded off by the human providence which, in her
+own words, "realizes the eternal goodness of the perfection of the
+order which governs the universe."
+
+Thus her friendships with the many she loved and served have closed
+with unalloyed satisfaction--to me and mine a sincere friend for more
+than thirty years! And no words come that I might wish unsaid unless
+these: "Be careful now, for I have told more than one that you are my
+god-father!"
+
+
+
+
+From Mrs. Croly to Mr. Wakeman
+
+
+ 19 BANK STREET, NEW YORK,
+ Sept. 26, 1870.
+
+My dear Mr. Wakeman:
+
+Thank you very much for allowing us to share so largely in the
+luxuries of your pleasant home, and in the rewards of your labor. The
+grapes were a great treat to us, and we have enjoyed them exceedingly.
+The variety is wonderful; and the difference in the flavors, each one
+being perfect in itself, constantly excited our admiration.
+
+I hope by this time your term of bachelorhood is at an end, and that
+Mrs. Wakeman and the children are with you. If she has arrived, please
+convey to her my acknowledgments for the card she left for me, and say
+how much I regretted not seeing her. Please also to remind her that
+next Monday (first Monday in October) is the meeting of Sorosis, and
+that I shall expect to find her at Delmonico's, corner of 14th Street
+and Fifth Avenue, at 1 P.M., as my guest. She can walk straight
+upstairs, and a waiter will send in her name to me, so that she need
+not enter alone; or she can arrive a little earlier (I am always there
+early) and see the ladies as they come.
+
+As I have not many occasions for writing notes to you, Mr. Wakeman, I
+desire to say to you, with the deliberation with which one puts pen to
+paper, that I am thankful for having known so true a man, and happy
+that my husband can count him friend. One thing done is worth many
+words spoken, yet I am doubly glad when words and acts walk
+harmoniously together.
+
+ Always your obliged friend,
+ J.C. CROLY.
+
+
+
+From Mrs. Croly to Mrs. Wakeman
+
+
+ 7 BENTRICT TERRACE, REGENT'S PARK, N.W.,
+ LONDON, December 24, 1900.
+
+MY DEAR OLD FRIEND:
+
+I am sure that you have thought many times that I was forgetful and
+ungrateful, but indeed the first part of the indictment cannot be laid
+to my charge. I never forget you, and if I have not written, it is
+because I have suffered and enjoyed many things during the past two
+years, and have permanently lost the power of rapid movement, or of
+doing anything under great stress and pressure.
+
+But now that this wonderful year is ending, this Sabbath of the
+centuries, I feel that I must at least send my love and unforgetness
+to you; also my hope that you are finding on the other side of the
+continent of North America, compensation for all that you left behind
+in the east, and greater promise for the future.
+
+For all that I have gained for some years past I have to thank my
+losses. Chief among my gains is, I hope, a little realization of
+eternal goodness; of the perfection of the order which governs the
+universe, and the relation of every separate atom to the Divine Unity
+of the whole. I know Goethe proclaimed it a hundred years ago; but
+every separate part has to grow to its knowledge for itself.
+
+I wonder how you are spending Christmas. This year seems to me so
+remarkable that it is a privilege to live in it. I am trying to use
+its last days as if they were mine, in doing the things I should be
+most sorry to leave undone.
+
+I expect to return home soon--that is, in a few months. Or rather, as
+I have no home now, and a trustee has lost the money I had saved and
+entrusted to him in making provision for my old age, I shall only try
+to find a corner to rest in.
+
+I hope you have been dealt with more kindly in body and estate. Please
+remember that I never forget the union of the spirit we once
+enjoyed--that the Positivist Episode was a positive factor in my life,
+and that I shall always recall Mr. Wakeman as my chief helper in it.
+
+ With love to you and yours, I am unforgettingly,
+ J.C. CROLY.
+
+
+
+
+ (It has seemed pertinent and interesting as bearing upon the
+ "Positivist Episode" to here insert extracts from
+ testimonials to Mr. Croly published in the memorial issued
+ at the time of his death in May, 1889.)
+
+
+[Illustration: DAVID GOODMAN CROLY.]
+
+
+
+
+From a Testimonial to Mr. Croly, by T.B. Wakeman
+
+
+David G. Croly must not be forgotten. He rendered our country an
+invaluable service, not yet recognized. He was the man who _planted
+Positivism in America_. The many who have felt, the thousands who
+hereafter will feel its influence for good, should learn to bless, and
+to teach others to bless and continue his memory and influence.
+
+In 1867-68 he began his great work. Henry Edgar had the seed from
+Comte direct, and then tried to sow it in a course of lectures given
+in a hall chiefly paid for by Mr. Croly. But the seed would not take.
+After Edgar had gone, the sturdy brain and hand of D.G. Croly took the
+matter in charge and actually made the growth start. Then the _World_,
+with him at its head, evoked and published John Fiske's "Lectures on
+Positivism," far better in their first shape than when pared and
+cooked over into the "Cosmic Philosophy." Then came the "Modern
+Thinker" and "Positive Primer." Then Dr. McCosh came out, in reply,
+with his volume on "Positivism and Christianity." Then Positivist
+Societies and Liberal Clubs, one after another, were formed and some
+continue, whence John Elderkin, Henry Evans, James D. Bell, the writer
+of these lines, and not a few others commenced to ray out the new
+light, which never has been, and never will be extinguished. By the
+aid of that light let a distant posterity read with gratitude the
+names of _David G. and Jane Cunningham Croly_, for without them I know
+it would not have been.
+
+ T.B. WAKEMAN.
+
+
+
+
+From a Testimonial by Herbert D. Croly
+
+
+... I should like to relate one incident in the history of my father's
+relations with myself--an incident which was eminently characteristic
+of certain aspects of his nature.
+
+From my earliest years it was his endeavor to teach me to understand
+and believe in the religion of Auguste Comte. One of my first
+recollections is that of an excursion to Central Park on one bright
+Sunday afternoon in the spring; there, sitting under the trees, he
+talked to me on the theme which lay always nearest his heart--that of
+the solidarity of mankind. There never, indeed, was a time throughout
+my whole youth, when we were alone together, that he did not return to
+the same text and impress upon me that a selfish life was no life at
+all, that "no man liveth for himself, that no man dieth for himself."
+His teachings were as largely negative as positive. While never,
+perhaps, understanding the Christian religion as a man with a weaker
+faith in the truth of his own convictions might have understood it,
+his attitude was one, I judge, of sympathetic scepticism. He was
+always endeavoring to impress upon me that, while there must
+necessarily have been something great and good in a faith that had
+been the inspiration of so many souls, and comfort of mankind through
+so many centuries, yet at the same time it was incomplete; that very
+often the followers of Christ gave more to the doctrine than they
+received from it; and that the teaching of Auguste Comte supplied what
+was lacking in the teaching of Jesus Christ. His desire to impress
+upon me a belief which he held himself with all the force of religious
+conviction led him to attempt explanations which the mind of a child
+could neither grasp nor retain. He even discussed, for my benefit,
+theoretical questions as to the existence and nature of the Supreme
+Being; discussions, of course, that I could so little understand that
+it was like pouring water on a flat board. It was simply the fulness
+of his belief that led him to do this. His desire was that, surrounded
+as I was by people who burnt their candles at the altars of the
+Christian faith, I should have full opportunity to compare the
+Positivist _Grand Être_ with the Christian Cross. Under such
+instruction it was not strange that in time I dropped insensibly into
+his mode of thinking, or, more correctly, into his mode of believing.
+
+While I was at college I was surrounded by other influences, and while
+retaining everything that was positive and constructive in his
+teaching, I dropped the negative cloth in which it was shrouded. My
+change in opinion was a bitter disappointment to him, as several
+letters which he wrote at the time testify. But intense as was his
+disappointment, it never took the form of a reproach. This is very
+remarkable when we consider what an essential part of his character
+his beliefs constituted. Here was an end, for which he had striven
+through many years, failing at the very time when it should have
+become most fruitful. And his disappointment must have been all the
+more severe because he exaggerated the differences that existed
+between us. It was his opinion that his negative opinions were
+necessarily connected with those which were positive; and that it was
+impossible truly to hold the one without the other. Yet, as I said,
+his disappointment never took the form of a reproach. "It is your
+right; nay, it is even your duty," he used continually to say, "to
+work your own salvation. It has turned out to be different from mine.
+Well, then, mine is the loss."
+
+From an abstract point of view it may not seem to be so much of a
+virtue that a father should consider his son's intellectual honesty to
+be of more importance than his own opinions. But I am not writing from
+an abstract point of view. We are all but children of the earth; not
+good, but simply better than the bad. So it was with David G. Croly.
+His opinions, crystallized by the opposition which they met on every
+side, were so very much the truth to him that he wished his son to
+perceive them clearly and cherish them as devoutly as he did. That
+wish became impossible of fulfilment. Part of his life-work had
+failed. "Mine is the loss."
+
+ H.D. CROLY.
+
+
+
+
+From Mr. Croly to His Son Herbert at College
+
+
+ LOTOS CLUB, Oct. 31, 1886.
+
+My Dear Boy--You said something about the divergence between my ideas
+and those of the philosophers whose works you are reading at college.
+Let me beg of you to form your own judgment on all the higher
+themes--religion included--without any reference to what I may have
+said. All I ask is that you keep your mind open and unpredisposed. In
+the language of the Scripture, "prove all things and hold fast to that
+which is good." Be careful and do not allow first impressions to
+influence your maturer judgment. You say you are reading the
+controversy between Spencer and Harrison on religion. In doing so keep
+in mind the fact that Spencer's matter was revised, while that of
+Harrison was not; and that upon the latter's protest the work was
+withdrawn in England.
+
+I wish during your college year that you would read:
+
+(1) Miss Martineau's translation of Comte's "Positive Philosophy."
+(2) Mill's Estimate of Comte's Life and Works.
+(3) Bridges's Reply to Mill.
+(4) All of Frederic Harrison's writings that you can find.
+(5) All of Herbert Spencer's works that are not technical.
+(6) John Fiske's works.
+(7) The works of the English Positivists, such as Congreve, Bridges
+and Beasley.
+
+By noticing the dates I think you will find that Spencer appropriates
+a great deal from Comte and that he tries to shirk the obligation. It
+would be well to read the latter's "General View of Positivism"
+further along.
+
+My dear son, I shall die happy if I know that you are an earnest
+student of philosophic themes.
+
+Do cultivate all the religious emotions, reverence, awe, and
+aspiration, if for no better reason than as a means of self-culture.
+Educate, train every side of your mental and emotional nature. Read
+poetry and learn the secret of tears and ecstacy. Go to Catholic and
+Episcopal churches and surrender yourself to the inspiration of
+soul-inspiring religious music.
+
+ Ever your affectionate
+ FATHER.
+
+
+
+
+From a Testimonial by Edmund Clarence Stedman
+
+
+My intimacy with Mr. Croly began in 1860, when we were together upon
+the editorial staff of the New York _World_. We had many notions,
+socialistic and otherwise, in common. With these, however, we did not
+venture to imperil the circulation of that conservative newspaper. He
+was City Editor, and knew his business. I was struck by the activity
+of his mind, and his combination of shrewd executive ability with
+inventive skill. I found him a staunch friend, loyal to his
+allies, helpful to his subordinates; moreover, a man of strong
+convictions--which he asserted with a fine dogmatism; an idealist
+withal, quite unhampered by reverence for conventional usage and
+opinion. Absolute mental honesty was his chief characteristic.
+
+He was a humanitarian, in the Positivist sense of the word. All his
+aspirations were for the future glory and happiness of the human race.
+Faith in the reign of law, and a prophetic certainty of man's
+elevation--these were his religion. As a thinker and talker he
+certainly was of the same breed with Tennyson's poet, who
+
+ "Sings of what the world will be
+ When the years have died away."
+
+He bore good fortune and adversity with an equal mind, and he
+displayed stoical courage throughout prolonged illness of a most
+depressing type.
+
+Others will add to your own feeling statement of his varied labors.
+But let me say that, whether our paths came together or diverged, I
+always thought of him as in every sense a comrade. His loss makes the
+lessening roll of those with whom I touched elbows in the old
+newspaper days seem ominously faded.
+
+ EDMUND C. STEDMAN.
+
+
+
+
+From a Testimonial by J.D. Bell
+
+
+Mr. Croly was a great journalist. He was not a great editorial writer,
+but he was a great editor. He had the true executive temper and
+power--that is, the ability to obtain from others the work that was in
+them. He never made the mistake of endeavoring to do everything
+himself. He was just, as well as generous to his subordinates, and
+many of the younger journalists have reason to remember his kindness
+to them. In any company in which he was thrown he was sure to attract
+attention, and there were very few companies in which he did not take
+the leading part by virtue of his ability and not of his
+self-assertion. He never used tobacco in any form, and was otherwise a
+strictly temperate man. In his utterances he was often very radical,
+but in practice he was always thoroughly conservative.
+
+His social predilections led him to study the writings of Auguste
+Comte. He accepted his doctrines and endeavored to popularize them in
+writings and meetings, but with very limited success. Indeed, he often
+said that while intellectually Positivism was in the air, as a social
+doctrine it was too far in advance of the present age to become
+popular.
+
+He was essentially a family man and loved his home and household.
+During the greater part of his married life, however, the exacting
+editorial duties and literary labors of himself and his wife prevented
+them from enjoying the society of the home circle to the extent that
+each desired. Here, as in so many other cases, the individual was
+sacrificed for the benefit of the public.
+
+
+
+
+From a Testimonial by St. Clair McKelway
+
+
+... David G. Croly's personality was always healthy and hopeful. He
+commended with justice, he censured with consideration, he changed or
+cut out your copy with regard exclusively to the increased value of
+the article for newspaper purposes. The staff was like a large family
+under him. Every one's equal rights were regarded, every one's special
+talents were stimulated, every one's peculiar fads or foibles were
+genially borne with. Officially he had no favorites. Personally he
+chose his friends among the staff as freely as he would do among
+outsiders. The unrecorded kindnesses of the man were fragrant and not
+few. To newcomers he would intimate what were the prejudices or
+susceptibilities or limitations of those among whom they were cast. He
+would be just as careful to see that the old standbys did not make
+things rough or unfair for the newcomers. He had little respect for
+the gifts or views that could not be made interconvertible with
+newspaper results. He took a public view of party questions and rarely
+a personal view of any questions. Between what he thought and wished
+as an iconoclast, a reformer, or a reconstructor of foundations and
+what he was intrusted to say as an editor, he drew the line sharp and
+clear. While, as I have remarked, he was rarely a writer with his own
+hand, the articles which he suggested or poured into or pulled out of
+others were made so eminently characteristic of himself that they were
+stamped with his quality as truly as if he had written them himself.
+He was very proud of the success of the men in after life who started
+on their newspaper careers under him. He followed them with good
+wishes always, he spoke strong words for them when, where, and to whom
+they little suspected, and he rightly regarded their success as a
+vindication of his own prescience in having set them on their way, and
+also as a gratification not merely to his confidence in his own
+opinion concerning them, but to the wishes of his unselfish heart in
+desiring that they should take the pinnacles of achievement in
+whatsoever field of newspaper work inclination, necessity, opportunity
+or destiny marked out before them.
+
+ ST. CLAIR MCKELWAY.
+ The _Eagle_ Office, Brooklyn, May 14, 1889.
+
+
+
+
+From a Testimonial by John Elderkin
+
+
+David G. Croly was a strong man. He was strong in his convictions, his
+honesty, and his capacity to meet all the requirements of life in the
+most populous, enterprising, and brilliant city of the continent. His
+strength begot independence, and he was before all else independent in
+the formation and expression of his views, both on public affairs and
+those which are more personal and philosophical. He never apologized
+for his opinions, and his life needs no apology. His mind dwelt on
+that side of every question which involved the interest and welfare of
+the whole mass of mankind, and his religious philosophy was pure
+Humanitarianism. His reverence for Comte was the result of his
+intellectual conviction that in his altruistic teaching was to be
+found the only remedy for the wrongs and sufferings of the world.
+
+In personal intercourse Mr. Croly was suggestive, inspiring and
+encouraging. It was always with a slight shock to preconceived
+notions and prejudices that one listened to his comments on any
+current movement or event, for he was sure to take an original and
+characteristic view which could not be calculated.
+
+
+
+
+From Mrs. Croly's Contribution to Her Husband's Memorial
+
+
+Mr. Croly was in his twenty-seventh year when I first knew him, but as
+yet had made no mark in journalism. He had not found his place in it.
+He was employed as City Editor of the New York _Herald_--a position
+which had not then developed the importance which attaches to it
+to-day--and his duties consisted mainly of making out the "slate" for
+the staff of reporters, and doing such reportorial work as it was the
+province and habit of the City Editor to perform. This afforded little
+scope for a man of Mr. Croly's latent power; and his dissatisfaction
+and desire to find a new field was the cause of our going West within
+three years after our marriage and starting a daily paper in a Western
+town. Had the town been larger the story would have been different. As
+it was, we spent our money, not without result; for Mr. Croly
+discovered that his forte was not execution, but direction, and that
+his fertility of brain only needed a sufficiently wide field to
+develop powers capable of greater expansion.
+
+He was the most utterly destitute of the mechanical or "doing" faculty
+of any man I ever saw, and never used his own hands if he could
+possibly help it. But ideas flowed freely upon all subjects in which
+he was interested, and he distributed them as freely, knowing that the
+reservoir though forever emptied was always full. This amazing
+fertility was in some respects a detriment, for it led him into too
+many projects, and made him careless whom he enriched, while his
+dislike of the mechanism of his work made profit for others at his
+expense. I know no other journalist in New York City, during my own
+journalistic career of thirty-three years, who has made so many and
+such diverse publications, or put so much originality and force into
+the detail of his work. The _World_, and particularly the Sunday
+_World_, which was the foundation of the Sunday newspaper, the New
+York illustrated _Graphic_, the _Round Table_, and other journals were
+built up by his energy, and owed their most striking and successful
+features to his suggestiveness. He was particularly unselfish in his
+estimate of other men and his appreciation of their work. He was as
+proud of discovering the good qualities of a man on his staff as a
+miner of finding a nugget, and never wearied of expatiating upon them.
+Indeed, he did this more than once to his own disadvantage, thus
+furnishing an instrument to treachery.
+
+I am sure the "boys" of the old _World_ staff, St. Clair McKelway,
+A.C. Wheeler ("Nym Crinkle"), T.E. Wilson, H.G. Crickmore, Montgomery
+Schuyler, E.C. Stedman, and others, will look back with a little sigh
+for the "old times," and for the generous recognition they received
+from one who was never at a loss for a subject, or for the treatment
+of a topic, and was always a good comrade and heart and soul
+sympathizer in their work, its trials and its achievements.
+
+A chief quality with Mr. Croly was faithfulness to the interests he
+served. This was put to some severe tests; but they could not be
+called temptations, for disloyalty did not present itself as a
+possibility to him. His faults were those of a nervous temperament,
+combined with great intellectual force and a strength of feeling which
+in some directions and under certain circumstances became prejudice.
+He could never, in any case, be made to run a machine. He hated the
+obvious way of saying or doing a thing. He cultivated the "unexpected"
+almost to a fault, and always gave a touch of originality even to the
+commonplace. His pessimistic and unhopeful temperament was doubtless
+due to inherent and hereditary bodily weakness, and to the lack of
+muscular cultivation in his youth, which might have modified inherent
+tendencies. His mental lack was form not force; and he had enough
+original elemental ideas to have supplied a dozen men. In that respect
+he was superior to every other journalist I have ever known--not
+excepting Horace Greeley, Henry J. Raymond and Frederick Hudson.
+
+But the time has gone by for ideas. It is not that they are a drug in
+the market, but that there is no market for them. To-day is the
+apotheosis of the commonplace, the iteration of the cries of the
+street, the gabble of the sidewalk, and the gossip of the tea-table;
+neither originality nor force is needed for such journalism as this,
+and they may therefore well rest to the music of the pines.
+
+One of the strongest influences in Mr. Croly's life was his
+acquaintance with the Positivist movement in England, and his interest
+in the works of Auguste Comte. Up to this time he had experienced none
+of the undoubted benefit which accrues to every man and woman from the
+possession of an ideal standard, and settled convictions which inspire
+or take the place of religious aspiration. Positivism did all this for
+Mr. Croly, so far as anything could, and he became one of its most
+eager and devoted adherents.
+
+Mr. T.B. Wakeman, himself one of the earliest and most able leaders,
+credits Mr. Croly with being the "father" of the movement in this
+country, and in fact he was the first to make known that any
+representative of Positivist ideas existed in America. He invited and
+paid for the first lecture ever delivered in New York City upon the
+subject; it was given by Mr. Edgar, an unknown "apostle," in a little
+hall (De Garmo) on the corner of 14th street and Fifth avenue, on a
+certain Sunday some twenty or more years ago. The result of the
+lecture was that a dozen people formed a little society and engaged
+Mr. Edgar to give them a series of Sunday talks on the practical
+bearings of the religion of humanity. Mr. Edgar was not in himself an
+interesting exponent of his ideas, but his message inculcated duty,
+love to man, a life open and free from concealments, the possession of
+personal gifts or acquired property as trusts to be used for the good
+of others, and the recognition of value in all that has been and is.
+
+These ideas became more or less an actuating principle. They brought
+together a circle of men and women of the best quality, who endeavored
+to live up to their standard, and by work and daily life, rather than
+by active propagandism, to crystallize opinions into a vital force.
+For several years the regular meetings were held at our house, the
+"festivals" of the year being often given at the residences of other
+members of the society--Mr. T.B. Wakeman, or Mr. Courtlandt Palmer.
+There is still an "old guard" left, of as good, brave, and unselfish
+men and women as ever walked on this earth, and though some differed
+from. Mr. Croly, and from each other on some points, yet they all knew
+and acknowledged that he brought to them the beginning of the best
+inspiration of their lives.
+
+Mr. Croly's latest expressed wish was that all the usual forms should
+be disregarded in the event of his death, except the simplest service
+and the presence of flowers. "If any one thinks enough of me," he
+said, "to bring me flowers, let them; but have no elaborate mourning,
+and bury me close to the earth, near the pines, and facing the sea."
+The legend he left for his grave-stone was: "I meant well, tried a
+little, failed much." But this will not be the verdict of those who
+came under the influence of his strong and many-sided personality.
+
+
+
+
+Mrs. Croly's Club Life
+
+_By Haryot Holt Dey_
+
+
+There is a pleasant and not irrational fancy in the mind of the writer
+that somewhere in space there exists the abiding-place of ideas, and
+that as fast as earth-dwellers are ready for them they are released.
+Like a bird the idea takes flight and seeks a home in the brain of
+some one who is singled out to forward and exploit it for the benefit
+of humanity. Thenceforward, that person becomes the apostle of the
+idea. "We are not in the possession of our ideas," says Heine, "but
+are possessed by them; they master us and force us into the arena
+where like gladiators we must fight for them." But it is only to the
+elect that great ideas are assigned, one who either through heredity
+or by special development is qualified to carry the message. This
+fanciful reasoning applies admirably to the idea for women's
+clubs--organizations for women--and in its selection of Jenny June it
+made no mistake in the character of its agent.
+
+The first woman's club was organized in March, 1868, and was the
+outcome of feminine protest, because women were barred from the
+reception and banquet tendered to Charles Dickens by the Press Club of
+New York City. Among those who applied for tickets on equal grounds
+with men was Mrs. Croly, then an active, recognized force in
+journalism, and when the idea of a woman's club took possession of her
+she had become the most indignant and spirited woman ever locked out
+of a banquet hall.
+
+Forty years ago it required courage for a woman to step aside from the
+ranks of conservatism and organize a woman's club; it was regarded as
+a side issue of "woman's rights," a movement then in grave disrepute.
+But Mrs. Croly had dared untrodden paths once before when she stepped
+into the field of journalism, and her experience there had developed
+self-confidence. She had been writing for women for many years, and
+through her mission had acquired instinctive knowledge of their needs;
+and so when the affront was put upon her by her male colleagues of the
+press she conceived the idea of a club for women. It should be one
+that would manage its own affairs, represent as far as possible the
+active interests of women, and create a bond of fellowship between
+them, which many women as well as men thought at that time would be
+impossible of accomplishment. Mrs. Croly wrote in her "History of
+Clubs" thirty years later: "At this period no one of those connected
+with the undertaking had ever heard of a woman's club, or of any
+secular organization composed entirely of women for the purpose of
+bringing all kinds of women together to work out their objects in
+their own way." And then again: "When the history of the nineteenth
+century comes to be written women will appear as organizers and
+leaders of great organized movements among their own sex for the first
+time in the history of the world."
+
+"The originator specially disavowed any specific object, only asking
+for a representative woman's organization based on perfectly equal
+terms in which women might acquire methods, learn how to work together
+for general objects, not for charity or a propaganda."
+
+"This declaration of principles was the cause of much abusive
+criticism, as well as failure to obtain aid and sympathy. Had Sorosis
+started to _do_ any one thing, from building an asylum for aged and
+indigent 'females' to supplying the natives of Timbuctoo with pocket
+handkerchiefs, it would have found a public already made. But its
+attitude was frankly ignorant and inquiring. It laid no claims to
+wisdom or knowledge that could be of any use to anybody. It simply
+felt the stirring of an intense desire that women should come
+together--all together, not from one church, or one neighborhood, or
+one walk of life, but from all quarters, and take counsel together,
+find the cause of separations and failures, of ignorance and
+wrong-doing, and try to discover better ways, more intelligent
+methods."
+
+Under this banner Sorosis was launched. Alice Cary was its first
+president. The story of Sorosis from the beginning is a very
+interesting one; from the view-point of the press its doings and
+sayings and business affairs generally have always afforded
+subject-matter for comment and conjecture. Of its early days Mrs.
+Croly wrote: "The social events of the first year were memorable, for
+they were the first of their kind, and practically changed the custom
+of confining public dinner-giving to men. The first was offered as an
+_amende honorable_ on the part of the New York Press Club, and
+consisted of a 'breakfast' to which the Press Club invited Sorosis,
+but did not invite it to speak or do anything but sit still and eat,
+and be talked and sung to. The second was a 'tea' given by Sorosis to
+the Press Club at which it reversed the order, furnishing all the
+speakers and allowing the men no chance, not even to respond to their
+own toast. The third was a 'dinner,'--the brightest and best of the
+whole--at which the ladies and gentlemen each paid their own way and
+shared equally the honors and responsibilities." This is said to be
+the first public dinner at which men and women ever sat down on equal
+terms. A report of it in a daily newspaper closed as follows: "The
+entire affair was one of the most delightful events of the season, and
+will long be held in pleasantest memory by all who had the honor to
+participate in it. We believe we violate no secret when we say that
+the gentlemen were most agreeably surprised to find their rival club
+composed of charming women, representing the best aristocracy of the
+metropolis, an aristocracy of sterling good sense, earnest thought,
+aspiration and progressive intellect, with no perceptible taint of
+strong-mindedness."
+
+The growth and expansion of Sorosis were watched by Mrs. Croly with
+the same eager interest with which a mother contemplates the
+development of a child, not knowing just how its character will shape,
+guarding it always with love, for a potential force in its directing.
+It was her spirit that steered it over rough places; that brought
+harmony out of discord; that inspired, soothed, provided wise counsel,
+and that many times sacrificed personal feelings for the good of the
+whole. To do this required mental qualities of a high order--courage,
+foresight, judgment, and not a little of the martyr spirit. Women had
+never organized before, and the conditions to be met and the problems
+to be solved stood absolutely alone, with no precedent to build upon
+or decide even the simplest question. What firmness was required in
+the leader at that time, when, for example, women who had been her
+staunchest allies deserted the ranks because they could not select the
+club name! It was a firm hand that kept the unorganized body from
+going to pieces on the rocks of dissension, and it was at that time
+that the leader proved her inalienable right to her title. She had led
+women into the field of journalism, and now she was leading them into
+organization. Clubs began to form in all parts of the country, and
+when Sorosis arrived at its twenty-first birthday, it was Mrs. Croly's
+idea that they should all come together, and when the invitation was
+issued they came. Thus was formed the General Federation of Women's
+Clubs. At present there are 800,000 women belonging to that
+federation; each State has its own federation, New York forming first,
+at Mrs. Croly's suggestion, and now containing 32,000 enrolled
+members. The General Federation was formed in 1889. The writer recalls
+the triumph in Mrs. Croly's tone when she replied to the appeal of a
+man who came to her to beg to be given the names of the women
+belonging to the federation. "If you choose to send a woman to copy
+the names," she said, "you may do so, but it will take her more than a
+week." And the General Federation was less than three years old at the
+time.
+
+Mrs. Croly organized the Woman's Press Club of New York in 1889. It is
+due to her wisdom that it was carried through many crises. She was its
+president from the day it was founded to the day of her death; always
+its loving teacher, her enthusiasm regarding its development never
+flagged. She lived to see it firmly established, a harmonious and
+delightful organization, and she was satisfied.
+
+Mrs. Croly was neither parliamentarian, orator, nor politician, but
+she had a fund of good sense, wise judgment, and a power of expression
+which, could clarify an atmosphere when mere knowledge of the "Rules
+of Order" would have failed. She had spiritual vision, and by it she
+knew the soul of the club; no amount of dissension could shake her
+faith in its ultimate good, and in times of crisis she presided with a
+serenity only accountable in the fact that she viewed from the
+mountain summit what her associates saw only from the housetop. What
+years of development she enjoyed long before the club idea possessed
+her, endowing her with wisdom and mental breadth, and what
+associations that urged and demanded that she become a student of
+sociology! The seeds of thought planted in those early days of
+journalistic experience, inclusive of what she terms the "Positivist
+Episode," blossomed in her later, more mature years, and all the
+harvest she brought and applied to the organization of women. To the
+casual observer an organized body of women differed in no particular
+form from any ordinary assembly of women. What it was to her one can
+only realize by a careful perusal of her writings on club formation,
+and the moral awakening that sounded the bugle note of progress when
+women began to organize.
+
+Once it came to the hearing of this gentle apostle of development,
+that she had been said to represent a cult. The occasion was a
+reception given in her honor by one of her clubs on her seventieth
+birthday. There had been speeches and congratulations, and the scene
+was one of general rejoicing. "Oh, she is the leader of a cult,"
+whispered a guest, and the remark was repeated to Mrs. Croly. She
+received it with a sorry smile of regret that any one should so
+misinterpret the significance of the scene. As if the narrow and
+exclusive word "cult" could be applied to an assembly that stood for
+organization and human development, which, in her prophetic vision,
+only needed time to unite races, and ultimately to extend around the
+globe. To her it signified "the opening of the door, the stepping out
+into the freedom of the outer air, and the sweet sense of fellowship
+with the whole universe, that comes with liberty and light."
+
+Few women carry their enthusiasm till past three-score-and-ten, as
+Mrs. Croly did. With the failing of physical strength the wand of
+power passed into the hands of younger women whom she hailed as her
+successors, and whose growth and development were the blossoms
+springing from the seed she herself had planted; and in the last years
+of her noble life, when the glow of sunset was on the garden of her
+activities, the love she bore her fellow-women was her unfailing joy
+and inspiration.
+
+At the time of life when people recognize the fact that their forces
+are waning, and that a well-earned period of rest has arrived, Mrs.
+Croly set for herself the last task of her busy life. She felt she had
+something to tell about the success of her great idea, her message to
+women, and she wrote the "History of the Woman's Club Movement in
+America," a volume containing eleven hundred and eighty pages, which
+told the story of nearly all the clubs in the General Federation. This
+book will remain a monument to the founder of women's clubs. Into it
+she put the skill and experience of her long years of editorship,
+urging every faculty to the work, and applying herself with a degree
+of industry that characterized the zeal of her best working years. And
+it testifies to the martyr-like nature of her spirit, that she even
+rallied from the disappointment consequent upon the financial failure
+of the book. The dedication of the work reads as follows: "This book
+has been a labor of love, and it is lovingly dedicated to the
+Twentieth Century Woman by one who has seen and shared in the
+struggles of the Woman of the Nineteenth Century." But nothing that is
+good is lost, and the book testifies to the illimitable ideas, the
+trust in eternal goodness, and the strength of purpose of one who had
+a glorified estimate of latent feminine forces that require to be
+developed.
+
+
+
+
+Essays and Addresses by Jane Cunningham Croly
+
+
+
+
+Beginnings of Organization[1]
+
+Women in Religious Organization
+
+
+When the history of the Nineteenth Century comes to be written, women
+will appear for the first time in the history of the world as
+organizers, and leaders of great organized movements among their own
+sex.
+
+[Footnote 1: _History of the Woman's Club Movement in America._]
+
+The world of to-day, both for men and women, is a different world from
+that which furnished the outlook for the men and women of a hundred
+years ago. Science, invention, have changed its material aspects; and
+while retiring some individual activities and occupations, they have
+created new fields of industry that are rapidly changing the face of
+the world, and making new demands upon strength and energy.
+
+The world which man has conquered, and is still conquering, is no
+longer the purely physical. He is working now toward the discovery and
+control of the powers of the air, and has already harnessed some of
+them to do his bidding. The succession of great events and discoveries
+will mark this century as an epoch in the world's history, and is
+responsible for economic changes which create social disturbance, and
+to which both men and women must adjust themselves, often without
+knowing the why or wherefore of that which is so different from what
+has been. It is one of the paradoxes in human nature that women, while
+being made responsible for human conditions, have been condemned to
+individual isolation. It has been largely the result of general
+physical differentiation and the dependence that grew out of it, and,
+secondarily, the long ages required to produce settled social
+conditions and a reversal of that great unwritten law of kings and
+men--that might made right.
+
+It is true that there was a time, some traditions of which are still
+preserved among the Indian tribes of North America, when the woman
+possessed controlling influence and power. This matriarchal or mother
+age passed with the primitive period in which the energies of men were
+absorbed in hunting and fighting. It was a tribal effort through
+tribal women to formulate and give importance to family life, and it
+must have been accepted and more or less sanctioned by the men. This
+tribal leadership, at first domestic and social, disappeared with the
+development of military leaders, the acquisition of military powers,
+and the centralization of property in lands, houses, and personal
+belongings, that required constant and effective methods of protection
+and defence.
+
+Instances are not wanting of heroic women of those early days who were
+capable of holding and defending person and property against
+aggression and warfare. But the logic of events was strong then, as
+now, and the destiny of the woman was not that of military supremacy.
+
+The first step in associated life taken by women was a simple protest
+against the use and abuse of power on the part of men, wrought up by
+fear or loathing to the point of desperation. Women, usually of rank,
+fled to the desert with one or two companions, and encountered
+unheard-of hardships rather than submit to the fate to which they had
+been condemned by father, brother, or some other man who could
+exercise authority over them. The first Church-sisterhood grew out of
+such beginnings, and gradually obtained the sanction of the Church. A
+recent remarkable work, "Women in Monasticism," shows how wide and
+powerful the system of religious sisterhoods had become as early as
+the fifth century, and traces its growing strength and enlargement
+until its decline, which was coeval with the Reformation.
+
+The strength of this extraordinary development lay in the fact that it
+furnished women with a vocation; it gave employment to faculty. The
+sisterhoods of the convents and monasteries were the nurses, the
+teachers, the students, the caretakers of the poor, and the guardians
+of the orphaned rich. The Fathers of the Church--St. Jerome, St.
+Chrysostom, St. Augustine--all bear witness to the high character of
+these sisterhoods and to their individual members, to their virtues
+and lives of self-sacrificing devotion. Many of these women became
+learned by the exercise of memory alone, for they had no books. Many
+enriched their convents with manuscript books--the result of lives of
+painstaking labor. The Beguines, who founded hospitals and schools,
+were the best educated women of their day--the eleventh century. They
+read Tacitus and Virgil in the original, and were skilled in medicine.
+Disease often took loathsome forms, and only women whose lives were
+consecrated to self-denying labor could have been the patient
+ministers to the diseased poor.
+
+This is all the more noteworthy because the idea of vocation was not
+the early incentive to monastic life. It was sought as a refuge; it
+developed into a vocation; and it is a matter of interest to women
+to-day that these spontaneous vocations, growing out of an enforced
+life, were inspired by love of well-doing, desire for study, the
+acquisition of knowledge, its distribution, and the ever-ready spirit
+of helpfulness at the sacrifice of every personal indulgence.
+
+Naturally the monastic life of women was controlled by the Church, and
+could have continued to exist only by permission. A Spanish lady of
+rank who had befriended Ignatius Loyola as a young student of
+Barcelona, attracted by the odor of sanctity and scholarship which
+attached itself to the Order which he founded, gained reluctant
+permission to establish (1545) an Order of Jesuitesses, subject to the
+same strict rules and discipline. This was the beginning of a strictly
+woman's Jesuit "college," which flourished notwithstanding all the
+efforts Loyola himself made to get rid of it, and the restrictions put
+upon it. Many noble ladies joined it, and it became the foundation of
+a number of houses of the same name and character, extending into
+Flanders and England, when, without cause, except fear perhaps of
+their extent and influence, they were finally suppressed by a bull of
+Pope Urban VIII, bearing date, January 13, 1630. This Order of
+Jesuitesses existed for nearly a century. Their colleges were
+scholastic, and had given rise to preparatory schools, when they were
+summarily suppressed because of their independent life.
+
+Had this Order continued to exist it might have gained an educational
+ascendency throughout Europe which even the strong wave of the
+Reformation would have found it hard to overcome. But the convents and
+monasteries generally suffered at this time from the abuses which had
+crept into the Church, and the rage for power which possessed its
+prelates.
+
+The influence was mischievous also from a social and domestic point
+of view; from the sanctity and superiority attached to those who
+ignored natural ties and duties, thus lowering the social and domestic
+standard, and setting the nun's habit above the woman, the wife and
+the mother. Yet nature had asserted itself even in the convent. The
+motherhood in the monastic woman made her the mother, the caretaker,
+the nurse, the teacher, and the helper of all those who needed
+maternal care, while condemning and ignoring its common aspects and
+place in everyday life.
+
+This absence of domestic ties was not, however, obligatory upon all
+sisterhoods. An interesting story of the "First Council of Women,"
+told by Madame Lendier at the Congress of Women in Paris in 1889,
+bears upon this point.
+
+The monastic school out of which the Council grew, was founded in the
+early part of the seventh century, by Iduberge, wife of Pepin, mayor
+under the Frankish kings.
+
+Iduberge cleared a space in the forest, and built a house for the
+education and religious consecration (if they desired it) of the
+daughters of nobles, her daughter Gertrude becoming the abbess. No vow
+of celibacy was imposed. As long as they remained in the abbey they
+were to conform to the rules of the house, but if they desired to
+marry they were free to leave. The _chanoinesses_ of Nivelle spent
+their morning in religious duties, but the rest of the day they were
+at liberty to mix with the outer world. The abbess alone took upon
+herself the vow of perpetual virginity. A hundred and seventy passed
+away after the death of Gertrude. The abbey had grown in power, had
+gathered around itself a town with gates and towers and
+fortifications, but was independent of the French Government, being
+under the sole rule of the abbess, who was called the "Princess."
+
+This independence excited the jealousy of the Church, and in May, 820,
+Nivelle received a visit from Valcand, the reigning bishop of Liège.
+He was received by the lady abbess in the habit of her order, a cross
+of gold in her hand; mounted on a white horse she rode at the head of
+the procession that marched to meet him. Young girls of noble birth,
+clad in long white gowns trimmed with ermine, and mounted on palfreys,
+followed their abbess, and behind them the town authorities, feudal
+lords and administrators of justice.
+
+At the same time Valcand entered the town with every honor and
+courtesy due to his rank. He held a solemn service, and having given
+the benediction, he rose again and addressed the _chanoinesses_. He
+declared that it had been decided by the Council of Aix-la-Chapelle
+that he should be sent to Nivelle to enforce the rules of St. Benoit,
+which must be followed by all religious bodies; this rule being that
+all the devotees of Nivelle were required to take upon themselves the
+vow of perpetual virginity, to acknowledge themselves dependent upon
+their bishop in all secular matters, and finally to yield up to
+Valcand all temporal power at Nivelle.
+
+This solemn declaration was received in silence. For some moments no
+one moved or spoke, but a low murmur swept over the young sisters of
+Nivelle Abbey. The lady abbess, followed by her _chanoinesses_, rose
+and advanced to the rails of the choir stand. The abbess Hiltrude,
+daughter of Lyderic II, sovereign of Flanders under the emperor, then
+between thirty-five and forty years of age, was beautiful; of that
+calm, grave type which speaks of a quiet, well-regulated life.
+
+"In the name of the Cloister of St. Gertrude," she said, "we protest
+against any interference in the temporal power of this government. We
+claim the right of taking to ourselves husbands when it seems right to
+us so to do. We are therefore resolved to follow the rules of our
+patron saint, as we always have done heretofore, and if this protest
+is insufficient we will present our appeal to our Holy Father, the
+Pope."
+
+The bishop declared that he would maintain the rule given by the
+Council at Aix, and then descending from the pulpit, he ordered his
+people to follow him at once out of Nivelle, refusing to join in any
+of the festivities prepared in his honor.
+
+Hiltrude now took things seriously into her own hands, leaving nothing
+undone to secure the success of her appeal. She sent a courier to the
+Pope, and another to Louis le Debonaire; but the wise abbess took yet
+further precautions: she at once organized a council at Nivelle of all
+the abbesses of the French Empire, requiring silence from them, and
+assuring them of security in the town. The council could not be
+brought together for a year, but on the 1st of May, 821, Hiltrude
+inaugurated her "Concile de Femmes."
+
+She took advantage of the marriage of Count d'Albion with Regina,
+which was to take place at the abbey. Regina was a _chanoinesse_, and
+it was the custom when a member of the circle at the abbey married,
+that the marriage should be solemnized at Nivelle. Fifteen titled
+abbesses, all of aristocratic lineage, arrived with imposing suites.
+The council was a short one. They approved of all that Hiltrude had
+done, and signed the appeal. The document, written, signed, and sealed
+by all the abbesses present, was immediately sent to Rome, and to
+Valcand himself. Meantime the pope and the king, who were much
+perplexed, and the bishop, who was completely baffled by the logic,
+strength and force of appeal of the "Concile," were obliged to
+withdraw the opposition, and the _chanoinesses_ were left in peace to
+marry or not to marry, as they pleased.
+
+The ancient order of deaconesses imposed no vow, yet it was
+co-existent with the early church, and accepted by many of the fathers
+as part of the apostolic order. This position was strengthened by the
+high character of the women, many of them widows, or unprotected
+women, whom death or some other calamity had freed from natural ties.
+
+Ancient church history is full of the records of courage, devotion,
+and self-sacrifice on the part of these women, who were generally of
+high birth, but gave themselves to poverty and the most menial
+offices, and left names which have perpetuated the sanctity of their
+order, and come down to the present day as types of good women.
+
+The ceremonies used in the ordination of a deaconess were precisely
+the same as those used for a deacon. The deaconesses were not
+cloistered: they lived at home with children or relatives. But they
+wore a distinctive dress, and had their place in the church with the
+clergy. The "golden age" of the order is said to have been immediately
+following the apostolic era, before the spirit of monasticism had
+destroyed or limited activities, and shut off sympathy with the
+outside world.
+
+The royal and imperial order of the Hadraschin in Prague, Germany, is
+the most imposing relic remaining of the religious orders of women,
+though not the most numerous. There are about forty chapters still in
+existence of this ancient order, with a royal residence at Prague. The
+abbess possessed the right to crown the queen at coronation
+ceremonies, and exercised it as late as 1836, wearing all the
+magnificent insignia of her rank in the order.
+
+A more numerous order of consecrated women, presided over and governed
+by one "mother-general," is that of St. Joseph de Cluny. This was
+founded by a woman, Madame Javonbey, in the beginning of the present
+century, about ninety years ago. It has one hundred and twenty-eight
+houses in France, and two in the United States. It has others in South
+America, one in Italy, several in the West Indies and some in Africa.
+
+All its property is in community, and its membership--about six
+thousand women--teach in its schools, and care for the sick poor in
+hospitals and in their homes. Two hundred are assigned to the care of
+the insane, by the French Government.
+
+The mother-general administers, from the mother-house _(maison mère)_
+at Paris. She has two assistants and a council of six sisters. Under
+the mother-general there are mother-superiors, one to each estate,
+administering and governing it, but under this mother-superior at
+Paris. These lesser governing women send in weekly reports to the home
+convent at Paris, giving brief accounts of transactions and events,
+such as the entrance of pupils, the purchase of lands, and extra dole
+of food to the poor, the death of a member and the like. They are a
+prosperous, working sisterhood, and have preserved the integrity and
+independence of their beginning.
+
+It was the spirit of protest against church and monastic abuses,
+embodied in Martin Luther, which broke up the monastic system for both
+men and women. Doubtless also it had outlived its usefulness in any
+large or general sense. A more settled social and domestic life was
+becoming possible through the development of trades and industries,
+while the domestic virtues in women began to acquire a value, and
+furnish guarantees to the State.
+
+The discovery of printing gave a tremendous impulse to the spread of
+civilizing and educational influences, to the multiplication of
+schools, and the desire for knowledge. It was the dawn of intellectual
+freedom, and the school of the people was the open door for it.
+
+Spiritual freedom had to wait longer. It waited the unfolding of the
+woman. At the beginning of this century she was still under the
+dominion of the church and its leaders, and her efforts were
+controlled by sects and doctrines.
+
+The first associated work of women in this country, and in this
+century, was still religious and philanthropic. The "Sisters of
+Charity" in America owes its origin to a young and beautiful New York
+woman, Elizabeth Seton, who was born in 1774, married at twenty, but
+lost her husband by death in a very few years. Obliged to support
+herself, she opened a school in Baltimore. But her tendency was toward
+the devoted life of a _religieuse_, and the gift of a foundation fund
+enabled her to gratify this strong desire. She assumed the conventual
+habit, and opened a convent school on July 30, 1809, in Emmetsburg, of
+which she became mother-superior. The character of "Mother" Seton was
+considered saintly by Protestants and Roman Catholics alike. She died
+at her post in 1821, after a life the last half of which was entirely
+spent in self-denying work. Mrs. Seton was exceedingly lovely as a
+young woman; and her sweet, serene face and presence, as she grew
+older, was said to exert a magical influence upon all who came in
+contact with her. This was particularly seen in her care of the sick,
+and in dealing with turbulent spirits: they came immediately under her
+influence without any effort on her part.
+
+The first ten years of the present century saw the beginning of a
+number of religious societies of women, organized to create funds, and
+aid in church mission work. First among these were the "cent"
+societies, 1801 and 1804, and later the Woman's Auxiliaries to the
+Board of Foreign Missions. These grew in size and strength, until in
+1839 there were six hundred and eighty-eight of these societies. But,
+unfortunately, their limited and purely subjective character afforded
+small basis for the wider growth necessary to perpetuity, and they
+gradually declined, until in 1860 they had become nearly extinct.
+
+A little later, 1864, the first independent "Union" of women
+missionary workers was formed in New York by Mrs. Doremus, and within
+a few years every denomination, beginning with the Congregationalists,
+had its organized Woman's Auxiliary to the American Board of Home and
+Foreign Missions. The "Missionary Union" remains, however, the only
+independent society of women workers in this field, managing its own
+affairs, raising its own funds, and sending out its own missionaries,
+both men and women. Its very existence has been a great strength to
+the Woman's Auxiliaries, stimulating them to independent action, and
+especially to the demand for a voice in the disposal of the large sums
+they raise and turn over to the treasury of the American Board.
+
+The oldest purely women-societies in this country were also started
+for missionary and church work. The first is the "Female Charitable
+Society" of Baldwinsville, N.J., and is still existent.
+
+The object of the Baldwinsville society, as stated in the
+constitution, was "to obtain a more perfect view on the infinite
+excellence of the Christian religion in its own nature, the importance
+of making this religion the chief concern of our hearts, the necessity
+of promoting it in our families, and of diffusing it among our fellow
+sinners." A further object is "to afford aid to religious
+institutions, and for the carrying out of this purpose a contribution
+of twelve and a half cents is required at every quarterly meeting."
+
+Mrs. Jane Hamill presided at its first meeting; the Rev. John
+Davenport opened it with prayer. Mrs. Hamill was still the presiding
+officer at its jubilee anniversary in 1867. At its seventy-eighth
+annual meeting Mrs. Payn Bigelow was elected president.
+
+The "Piqua (Ohio) Female Bible Society" was founded in 1818. It
+consisted at first of nine women. In those early days the country was
+a wilderness. Other members were added later. It has had in all, over
+nine hundred members. Mrs. Elizabeth Pettit was its presiding officer
+from 1840 until 1881--forty-one years. The daughters and the
+granddaughters are all made members by right of inheritance, and in
+several instances four generations have been represented at one time.
+It held its seventy-fifth anniversary in 1893, when all the
+descendants of the early members were notified, and many were present.
+It has held a meeting on the first Monday afternoon of each month for
+seventy-eight years, and the records are preserved intact. The founder
+was Mrs. Rachael Johnston, wife of the Indian agent. It has sent over
+fifteen thousand dollars to the parent Bible Society in New York.
+
+It should be remembered that down to the last quarter of the present
+century, there was little sympathy with organizations of women, not
+expressly religious, charitable, or intended to promote charitable
+objects. "What is the object?" was the first question asked of any
+organization of women, and if it was not the making of garments, or
+the collection of funds for a church or philanthropic purpose, it was
+considered unworthy of attention, or injurious doubts were thrown upon
+its motives. In Germany, even yet, societies of women are not
+permitted, except such as have a distinctly religious, educational or
+charitable object.
+
+
+
+
+The Moral Awakening[1]
+
+
+The life of the world is continuous, morally and spiritually as well
+as materially. The individual sees it at short range and in fragments.
+That is the reason why it so often seems dislocated and out of joint.
+A thoughtful writer, Mrs. L.R. Zerbe, says: "When Goethe made his
+discovery of the unity of structure in organic life, he gave to the
+philosophers, who had long taught the value, the 'sovereignty' of the
+individual, a physiological argument against oppression and tyranny,
+and put the whole creation on an equal footing."
+
+[Footnote 1: _History of the Woman's Club Movement in America_.]
+
+The dignity of mind, and the right of the individual to its conscious
+use and possession, had been already clearly enunciated by Fichte,
+Herder, and others, who antedated Goethe. But Goethe went farther. He
+carried the discovery of the rights of the individual to its logical
+conclusion, which was, that the rights of every created thing should
+be given a hearing. This was absolutely new doctrine. It brought women
+and children within the pale of humanity. It moralized and humanized
+nature itself; bringing birds, trees, flowers, all animate life, into
+the "brotherhood" of creation.
+
+The writings of Rousseau and Châteaubriand extended the idea, and
+Madame de Staël and Mary Wollstonecraft were the natural outgrowths of
+it. It may be said indeed to have been the actuating principle of
+modern literature, especially of modern English poetry, which
+vitalizes and idealizes children and nature. Whatever credit may be
+given to others, it should never be forgotten that to Goethe we owe
+the discovery of structural unity, that the cell of all organic life
+is the same.
+
+The ideas that grew out of this discovery reached the higher, thinking
+class, and inspired the poets with a new enthusiasm for humanity long
+before it reached the masses. The French nobility were satiated with
+power. The "Little Trianon" was the only reaction possible to a queen,
+from the wearisome magnificence of Versailles, the gilded slavery of
+the court. The people recognized no sentiment of human sympathy in the
+so-called "whims" and "caprices" of the luxurious occupants of
+palaces; and maddened by countless wrongs, precipitated the French
+Revolution, which, it has been said, turned back the tide of progress
+for one hundred years.
+
+From this movement were developed all those reforms which have made
+the nineteenth century glorious, monumental in the history of
+progressive civilization. The abolition of slavery, the development
+of a spirit of mercy towards dumb animals, the recognition of the
+human rights of women and children--all these may be traced through
+many a winding way, back to the German scientists and philosophers,
+who rediscovered the inner life while working from its outer side.
+
+Yet, as in history there are no sporadic instances, no isolated facts,
+so this flower of our century--the recognition of the rights of all
+created things, with all that it involves--belongs to universal
+history. It is the product of the Reformation and the Renaissance,
+with roots only the records of Rome and Greece and Egypt may discover.
+
+The quickening of moral and spiritual life in our day, its accelerated
+movement, is not to be claimed by or traced to any one set of
+influences or propaganda. The awakening has been all along the line;
+and it has resulted in a new mental attitude toward the human life of
+the world, both as a whole and in its various parts. Its great outcome
+is the learning to live with, rather than for, others.
+
+This new view, this great advance of the moral and spiritual forces,
+addressed itself with singular significance to women. To those who
+were prepared, it came not only as an awakening, but as
+emancipation--emancipation of the soul, freedom from the tyranny of
+tradition and prejudice, and the acquisition of an intellectual
+outlook; a spiritual liberty achieved so quietly as to be unnoticed
+except by those who watched the progress of this bloodless revolution,
+and the falling away of the shackles that bind the spirit in its early
+and often painful effort to reach the light.
+
+The broadening of human sympathy, the freedom of will, gave rise to a
+thousand new forms of activity; some of these an expansion of those
+which had previously existed; others opening new channels of
+communication; all looking towards wider fields of effort, a larger
+unity, a more complete realization of the eternal ideal, the
+fatherhood of God, the motherhood of woman, the brotherhood of man.
+
+Realization of this ideal brought a new conception of duty to the mind
+of woman, unlocked the strong gates of theological and social
+tradition, and opened the windows of her soul to a new and more
+glorious world. The sense of duty is always strong in the woman. If
+she disregards it she never ceases to suffer. Her convictions of it
+have made her the most willing and joyful of martyrs, the most
+persistent and relentless of bigots, the most blind and devoted of
+partisans, the most faithful and believing of friends, and the only
+type out of which Nature could form the mother. This quality has made
+women the constructive force they are in the world, and gives all the
+more importance to the new departure, to the influences of the new
+sources of enlargement that have come into their lives.
+
+Thus it became a necessity that the quickening of conscience, the
+widening of sympathy, the influence of aggregations, the stimulus to
+desire and ambitions, should be accompanied by corresponding growth in
+knowledge and a love beyond the narrow confines of family and church.
+
+The cry of the woman emerging from a darkened past was "light, more
+light," and light was breaking. Gradually came the demand and the
+opportunity for education; for intellectual freedom for women as well
+as men; for cultivation of gifts and faculties. The early half of the
+century was marked by a crusade for the cause of the better education
+of women, as significant as that for the physical emancipation of the
+slave, and as devoted on the part of its leaders.
+
+Simultaneous with this were two other movements--the anti-slavery
+agitation, inspired by the new enthusiasm for human rights and carried
+on largely by the Quakers of both sexes. The woman's-rights movement
+was the natural outgrowth of the individual-sovereignty idea which the
+German philosophers had planted, and of which Mary Wollstonecraft was
+the first great woman-exponent.
+
+The keynote of the educational advance was struck by Emma Willard in
+1821. She was followed by Mary Lyon, Mary Mortimer, and other brave
+women who dared to ask for women the cultivation of such faculties as
+they possessed, without let or hindrance. This demand has taken the
+century to develop and enforce. The work was so gradual that it is not
+yet, by any means, accomplished. Schools and colleges exist, but not
+yet equally, except here and there. They are, however, giving us an
+army of trained women who are bringing the force of knowledge to bear
+upon questions which have heretofore only enlisted sympathies.
+
+Simultaneously with this question of educational opportunity, has
+arisen an eager seeking after knowledge on the part of women who have
+been debarred from its enjoyment, or lacked opportunity for its
+acquisition. The knowledge sought was not that of a limited, sectional
+geography, or a mathematical quantity as taught in schools, but the
+knowledge of the history and development of races and peoples, of the
+laws and principles that underlie this development, and the place of
+the woman in this grand march of the ages.
+
+The woman has been the one isolated fact in the universe. The outlook
+upon the world, the means of education, the opportunities for
+advancement, had all been denied her; and that "community of feeling
+and sense of distributive justice which grows out of cooperative
+interests in work and life, had found small opportunity for growth or
+activity."
+
+The opportunity came with the awakening of the communal spirit, the
+recognition of the law of the solidarity of interests, the
+sociological advance which established a basis of equality among a
+wide diversity of conditions and individuals, and opportunities for
+all capable of using them. This great advance was not confined to a
+society or a neighborhood; it did not require subscription to a tenet,
+or the giving up of one's mode of life. It was simply a change of a
+point of view, the opening of a door, the stepping out into the
+freedom of the outer air, and the sweet sense of fellowship with the
+whole universe that comes with liberty and light.
+
+The difference was only a point of view, but it changed the aspect of
+the world. This new note, which meant for the woman liberty, breadth
+and unity, was struck by the woman's club.
+
+To the term "club," as applied to and by women, may be fitly referred
+the words in which John Addington Symonds defines Renaissance. "This,"
+he remarks, "is not explained by this or that characteristic, but as
+an effort for which at length the time has come." It means the
+attainment of the conscious freedom of the woman spirit, and has been
+manifested first most strongly and most widely in this country,
+because here that spirit has attained the largest measure of freedom.
+
+The woman's club was not an echo; it was not the mere banding together
+for a social and economic purpose, like the clubs of men. It became
+at once, without deliberate intention or concerted action, a
+light-giving and seed-sowing centre of purely altruistic and
+democratic activity. It had no leaders. It brought together qualities
+rather than personages; and by a representation of all interests,
+moral, intellectual, and social, a natural and equal division of work
+and opportunity, created an ideal basis of organization, where every
+one has an equal right to whatever comes to the common centre; where
+the centre itself becomes a radiating medium for the diffusion of the
+best of that which is brought to it, and where, all being freely
+given, no material considerations enter.
+
+This is no ideal or imaginary picture. It is the simplest prose of
+every woman's club and every clubwoman's experience during the past
+thirty years.
+
+It has been in every sense an awakening to the full glory and meaning
+of life. It is also a very narrow and self-absorbed mind that sees in
+these openings only opportunities for its own pleasure, or chances for
+its own advancement on its own narrow and exclusive lines. The lesson
+of the hour is help for those that need it, in the shape in which they
+need it, and kinship with all and everything that exists on the face
+of God's earth. If we miss this we miss the spirit, the illuminating
+light of the whole movement, and lose it in the mire of our own
+selfishness.
+
+The tendency of association upon any broad human basis is to destroy
+the caste spirit, and this the club has done for women more than any
+other influence that as yet has come into existence. A club that is
+narrowed to a clique, a class, or a single object, is a contradiction
+in terms. It may be a society, or a congregation of societies, but it
+is not a club. The essence of a club is its many-sided character, its
+freedom in gathering together and expressing all shades of difference,
+its equal and independent terms of membership, which puts every one
+upon the same footing, and enables each one to find or make her own
+place. The most opposite ideas find equal claims to respect. Women
+widest apart in position and habits of life find much in common, and
+acquaintance and contact mutually helpful and advantageous. Club life
+teaches us that there are many kinds of wealth in the world--the
+wealth of ideas, of knowledge, of sympathy, of readiness to be put in
+any place and used in any way for the general good. These are given,
+and no price is or can be put upon them, yet they ennoble and enrich
+whatever comes within their influence.
+
+We are only at the threshold of a future that thrills us with its
+wonderful possibilities--possibilities of fellowship where separation
+was; of love where hatred was; of unity where division was; of peace
+where war was; of light--physical, mental and spiritual--where
+darkness was; of agreement and equality where differences and
+traditions had built up walls of distinction and lines of caste. This
+beautiful thing needs only to be realized in thought to become an
+actual fact in life, and those who do realize it are enriched by it
+beyond the power of words to express.
+
+Women have been God's own ministers everywhere and at all times. In
+varied ways they have worked for others until the name of woman stands
+for the spirit of self-sacrifice. Now He bids them bind their sheaves
+and show a new and more glorious womanhood; a new unit--the completed
+type of the mother-woman, working with all as well as for all.
+
+
+
+
+The Advantages of a General Federation of Women's Clubs[1]
+
+_Address by Mrs. Croly to the First Meeting of the First Federation of
+Women's Clubs, Held in Brooklyn, N.Y., April 23, 1890_
+
+
+The growth of the woman's club is one of the marvels of the last
+twenty-five years, so fruitful in the development of mental and
+material resources. What it was destined to become was, perhaps, far
+from the minds of those who aided its inception, but all the
+possibilities of the future lay in the germ that was thus planted, for
+it was formed by the marriage of two great elements--freedom and
+unity.
+
+[Footnote 1: _The Cycle._]
+
+The club has been called the "school of the middle-aged woman." It is
+so in a very broad sense. It begins by gratifying her desire for
+fellowship, her thirst for knowledge; by training her in business and
+parliamentary methods; and gradually develops in her the power of
+expressing her own ideas, of concentrating her faculties and focusing
+them upon the object to be attained, the purpose to be accomplished.
+At the same time she finds that a more subtle process has been going
+on in her own mind. An insensible alchemy has been widening her
+horizon, getting rid of prejudice, obliterating old, narrow lines,
+leaving in their place a willingness to see the good in Nazareth as
+well as in Galilee.
+
+This result shows that she is a clubable woman, for it is emphatically
+the club spirit. It is in this respect that the club differs from
+those societies that are devoted to a single purpose; which demand
+subscription to an idea, an opinion, a dogma, a belief, a single basis
+or principle, and do not admit of fellowship on any other terms.
+Doubtless those have their uses--they are the necessary and often
+powerful expression of an advancing public opinion; but they have
+always existed, usually and in past times, under the leadership of
+men, even when composed of women. But it remained for the nineteenth
+century to develop a moral, social, and intellectual force, made up of
+every shade of opinion and belief, of every degree of rank and
+scholastic attainment, of every kind of disposition and habit of
+thought, all moulded into form,--and though as yet only the promise of
+what will be, furnishing an outline of that beautiful united womanhood
+which was the dream with which the club was started, and has been the
+guiding star to its development up to the present time.
+
+The union of clubs in a federation is the natural outgrowth of the
+club idea. It is the recognition of the kinship of all women, of
+whatever creed, opinion, nationality or degree; and it is a sign of a
+bond that entitles every one to equal place;--not to charity or
+toleration alone, but to consideration and respect. Inside of the club
+we are equal sharers of each other's gifts. Each one brings her
+knowledge, her sympathy, her special aptitude, her personal charm of
+manner and disposition, and we are all enriched by this outflowing and
+inflowing, by this equal part and share in a fountain made up of such
+bountiful and diversified elements.
+
+But the tendency of a circle is to widen. This is natural and
+necessary to healthful life. Stop its currents, dam up its inlets and
+outlets, and it is reduced to stagnation, and soon becomes foul and
+mischievous instead of healthy and life-giving. The tendency of narrow
+ideas is to run to routine, to spend time and strength upon trivial
+details, and allow them to block and hinder the consideration of
+weightier matters. There is undoubtedly a use for practice in business
+methods, particularly for those women who have had no previous
+training in business life; but the club ought to be an evolution. Once
+acquired, the knowledge of business ways, methods, and tactics can be
+put to better use than to aid or hinder the transaction of routine
+affairs, which it is the function of a committee to dispose of.
+
+The direction which the enlargement of club life takes must depend in
+the first place upon local conditions and environment. Already in many
+cities it has made itself, as in Philadelphia, the centre of the
+active, moral and intellectual forces. In others, as in Milwaukee, by
+cooperation in spirit and practice, it has provided a home for
+literature and the arts. Whatever the woman's club does, is and ought
+to be done on the broadest human principles; for if it forgets this it
+ceases to be a club, and becomes merely a propaganda for the
+advancement of certain fixed and unchangeable ideas.
+
+But its own life, no matter how broad, is not enough. Whatever is
+vital is social. This is why a club when it comes to understand its
+own powers and sources of life, wishes for the companionship, the
+sympathy, the fellowship, the shaking hands with other clubs. It is
+said that corporations have no soul: clubs have souls, and they call
+loudly for the enlargement of club sympathies, the discussion of
+knotty club questions, the affirmation by others of what have become
+club convictions, and mutual congratulations on club successes.
+
+This is not all that a federation of clubs can accomplish, but it is
+enough for a starting point. It is the kindly, providential,
+sympathetic way in which we are always led from the smaller to the
+larger field of work. Just before descending from a crest in the
+Sierras into the valley of the Yosemite, you come suddenly upon a
+wonderful view; it is called "Inspiration Point," and it is like an
+open door, a revelation of the infinite, a promise in one gleam of
+transcendent beauty, of all the separate and divisible splendors that
+are to follow.
+
+This spirit of enlargement beckons us and leads us to the formation of
+the Federated Union of Clubs, and we cannot do better than follow its
+guidance. We all need, clubs as well as individuals, encouragement and
+counsel; we need to enlarge our knowledge of what other clubs are
+doing, of their extent, of their objects, of their ambitions. Above
+all, we need to enlarge our sympathies, to cultivate sympathy by
+knowledge; for our prejudices are born of ignorance, and we rarely
+dislike what we intimately know. As Charles Lamb said: "How can I
+dislike a man if I know him? Do we ever dislike anything if we know it
+very well?" With the growth of clubs the purely personal
+characteristics of them will disappear, or at least be subordinated to
+larger aims; and it is in the prosecution of these larger aims that
+the federation will find its reasons for existence.
+
+There is a vast work for clubs to do throughout the country in the
+investigation of moral and social questions, in the reformation of
+abuses, in the cultivation of best influences;--not the influence of
+class or clique or party, but a wide, liberalizing, educational
+influence which works for true goodness, for cleanliness, for order,
+for equal opportunities, for the recognition of God in man and nature,
+in whatever stage of unfolding the Divine in us may happen to be. It
+is in the last twenty-five years that village-improvement societies,
+first instigated by a woman--Miss Sallie Goodrich of Stockbridge,
+Mass.--have created a transformation in whole townships, and so
+enhanced the value of property as to drive out the original
+inhabitants and change farming communities into fashionable summer
+resorts. This result is of doubtful value. But every woman's club,
+especially in the newer sections, has in its power, by wise and
+careful action, to improve the conditions, elevate the tone, and
+crystallize the moral force of its community in such a way as to make
+it more desirable to live in, more beneficial to its own citizens,
+more of an example to others.
+
+All these questions of club life and work would naturally come up
+before a federated body, and these would as naturally lead to
+governmental questions; to contrasts and records of activities in
+different parts of the world, and to the investigation of the causes
+which bring about certain results.
+
+Women are naturally both receptive and constructive. The affirmative
+states of mind are those which, particularly belong to women; as
+iconoclasts they are mere echoes. This affirmative condition is most
+favorable to true development. Nothing good has ever come of mere
+negation. But we must look for our truths and our basis of true
+growth, in the light of the rising dawn--not, as heretofore, in the
+waning glory of the setting sun. The union of clubs is the natural
+outgrowth, of the planting of the true club idea. It was a little
+seed, but it contained the germ of a mighty growth in the kinship of
+all women--the women who differ as well as the women who agree; and
+the federation of clubs is the forerunner of that unity of the race of
+which philosophers have spoken, of which poets have dreamed, but which
+only the constructive motherhood and womanhood of the race can
+accomplish.
+
+
+
+
+The Clubwoman[1]
+
+
+The nineteenth century has been remarkable in many ways. It has
+developed a new material and social order; but the fact is not as yet
+fully recognized that it has developed a new woman--the woman who
+works with, other women; the woman in clubs, in societies; the woman
+who helps to form a body of women; who finds fellowship with her own
+sex, outside of the church, outside of any ism, or hobby, but simply
+on the ground of kinship and humanity.
+
+[Footnote 1: _The Cycle_.]
+
+It is not yet twenty-one years since a great daily in New York said
+that if a society composed wholly of women could hold together one
+year, a great many men would have to revise their opinion of women.
+The remark was made apropos of the formation of the first women's
+clubs in this country, and was echoed on all sides publicly and
+privately. It is only significant now as showing the isolated position
+of women, and the general impression which prevailed that they could
+not and would not work together, except, perhaps, for some common
+cause, religious or philanthropic, which for the time being absorbed
+their energies and made them lose sight of their personal jealousies
+and animosities. Why women should have been believed to be
+antagonistic to women it is hard to say. This idea seems to have been
+cultivated assiduously by men, and women have echoed it; for it cannot
+be denied that the new fellowship that has come with the century and
+with the awakening of women to the life which is theirs--the life of
+friendship, of sympathy, of enlargement, of interest in affairs, of
+common kinship with all that exists in a beautiful world--has in it
+something of the nature of a surprise. Is it possible that women may
+have a life of their own, may learn to know and honor each other, may
+find solace in companionship, and lose sight of small troubles in
+larger aims?
+
+These questions have been answered by thousands of women, answered
+with tears, after the manner of women, but tears of joyful recognition
+of the new day which has dawned for them;--a day of larger
+opportunities, a day which comes after a night of ages; for the woman
+is for the first time finding her own place in the world. Heretofore
+she was only welcome if the man wanted her, and if he no longer wanted
+her she was again cast out. But she is now learning that the world
+exists for her also; that she is one half the human race; that life,
+liberty, and the pursuit of whatever is good are as desirable for her
+as for the man, and as necessary in order to put her in _rapport_
+with the eternal springs of all life and its varied forms of activity.
+
+The first impulse of the awakened woman is to unite herself with other
+women; her next to learn that which she does not know in regard to
+art, literature, peoples, races; the countries she has never visited,
+the kinsmen and kinswomen she has never seen, and the degree in which
+their progress has kept pace with or gone beyond her own. This
+knowledge comes to her through her club or literary society.
+
+The woman's club has become the school of the middle-aged woman. It
+has brought her up to the time. It has enabled her to keep pace with
+the better advantages given to her sons and daughters. It has put an
+interest into her life which it had never previously possessed, and
+made her more humanly companionable because better able to judge and
+more willing to suspend judgment. The clubs of women in America--the
+growth mainly of the past twenty years--can now be counted by the
+hundreds, and their membership by many thousands, and the history of
+them all is practically the same.
+
+It is this woman, born of women's clubs, who is the woman of to-day.
+She is the centre of the intellectual activity of townships and
+neighborhoods all over the country. She forms stock companies, and
+builds athenaeums; she is at the head of working guilds; she organizes
+classes, teaches what she knows, while she is being taught what she
+did not know; and in mental activity, and labor which is not routine,
+has renewed her youth, and added to her attractions. She is at the
+same time far removed from a lobbyist. She is able to look at
+different sides; she is socially at home with the best people in every
+sense of the word. She is a lady as well as a woman, and does not
+adopt what is _outre_ in order to obtain notoriety.
+
+
+
+
+The New Life[1]
+
+
+It is a very dull mind, whether belonging to man or woman, that does
+not feel stirred by recent movements--not here alone but all over the
+world--into some quickening sense of the deeper life, the broader
+human claims, the unifying and uniting influences which have sprung
+into activity, and which address, not the visionary, but the
+thoughtful and far-seeing, with prophetic gleams of a new heaven and a
+new earth.
+
+[Footnote 1: _The Cycle_.]
+
+It is also a very narrow and self-absorbed mind which, only sees in
+these openings opportunities for its own pleasure, or chances for its
+own advancement on its own narrow and exclusive lines. The lesson of
+the hour is help for those that need it, in the shape in which they
+need it, and kinship with all and everything that exists on the face
+of God's green earth. If we miss this, we miss the spirit, the
+illuminating light of the whole movement, and lose it in the mire of
+our own selfishness. To women this uplifting, these open doors, mean
+more than to men. They have been hedged about with so many
+restrictions, forced and held in such blind and narrow ways, that it
+is little wonder if sight and steps are feeble, and that they find it
+impossible to take it all in, or to recognize at once the full meaning
+of the day that is dawning for them.
+
+For we are only at the threshold of a future that thrills us with its
+wonderful possibilities;--possibilities of friendship where separation
+was; of love where hatred was; of unity where division was; of peace
+where war was; of light--physical, mental and spiritual--where
+darkness was; of agreement and equality where differences and
+traditions had built up walls of distinction and lines of caste. This
+beautiful thing needs only to be realized in thought to become an
+actual fact in life, and those who do realize it are enriched by it
+beyond the power of words to express. "I should like to wake up rich
+one morning just to see how it would feel," said one woman to another
+not long since. "I do wake up rich every morning now," said the other,
+"though I have still my living to earn, because my life is full of
+prized opportunities, of cherished friendships, of chances for
+acquiring knowledge that I had not in youth, and keeping myself in
+touch with broad human facts and forces. Everything is interesting to
+me, more interesting the closer my acquaintance with it, so that I am
+fast getting rid of those ugly things we call prejudices, and laying
+in a stock of appreciation instead, which is in itself enriching."
+
+The old feeling of patron and dependant--so irksome, so humiliating,
+so feudal, yet containing for many the whole moral law--is done away
+with, and in its place appears a spirit of true fellowship, a growing
+sense of mutual respect and helpfulness. Club life teaches us that
+there are many kinds of wealth in the world--the wealth of ideas, of
+knowledge, of sympathy, of readiness to be put in any place and used
+in any way for the general good. These are given, and no price is or
+can be put upon them; yet they ennoble and enrich whatever comes
+within their influence.
+
+Money is the only kind of wealth that is not common, that is not given
+freely; and for that reason it has a deadening and demoralizing effect
+upon the minds of those who cultivate and increase it for its own
+sake, or fail to put it to its larger and more human uses. Wise
+distribution is the only way in which money can be made valuable in
+the world: it is only as a developing power, as an aid to the worker,
+and a creator of instrumentalities by which good objects can be
+accomplished, that it is desirable. In the light of this view, what
+place do those men and women occupy who shut themselves up with their
+money, and shut out the wide human interests which educate the mind
+and heart to noble issues? Going to church does not help them, for it
+must be an exclusive church and an exclusive pew, under an exclusive
+pastor who patronizes Jesus Christ but does not sympathize with Him,
+and who talks about the "dregs of society" as if it were something
+far removed from the knowledge and consciousness of his hearers.
+
+The woman of the past has especially been cramped up, bound around,
+and blindfolded by her special form of belief, by her tradition, by
+her social customs, by her education, by her whole environment; and
+the effect will remain stamped more or less upon her individuality
+long after the predisposing causes have passed away and better
+influences and circumstances have taken their place.
+
+But the present is full of encouragement. The new life has begun: the
+woman is here;--not the martyred woman of the past; not the
+self-absorbed woman of the present, but the awakened woman of the
+future. That woman whose faculties have been cultivated, whose gifts
+have been trained, whose mind has been enlarged, whose heartbeats
+respond to the touch of the unseen human, and whose quickened insight
+recognizes father, brother, sister, and friend beneath the strange as
+well as the dilapidated robe.
+
+This woman whose face no artist has painted, who is not yet familiar,
+is among us, and will remain. Her work humanizes and reconciles, and
+the changes it will effect will come so noiselessly that the majority
+will not be aware of them till they are accomplished, and then each
+one will announce, and perhaps believe, that they themselves have
+brought these things about. But this will not matter, for when the
+work is done it is really of little consequence who did it, since all
+who do any good work at all are simply agents and ministers, charged
+with a task it is their business to perform, and happy only as they
+are able to execute it. It is those who are "let alone," who live for
+and in themselves, who are the unhappy ones; and for these, though
+they possess fine houses, much gold, stocks and bonds, the poorest
+worker may well fervently pray that the new life may come to these
+also.
+
+
+
+
+The Days That Are[1]
+
+
+We live in an age of discontent. Discontent has been deified. It has
+been called divine; and unrest, the seal as well as the sign of
+progress. Doubtless there is a time and a place even for discontent,
+for there is no faculty that has not its function. But discontent,
+which is a sacred fire when it burns within and is kept for home use,
+is a mischievous and destroying element when it is widely distributed
+and unthinkingly-employed by ignorance and short-sightedness.
+
+[Footnote 1: _The Cycle_.]
+
+Then it is certain that if discontent is good, content is far better,
+and thankfulness better yet. If time teaches us anything, it is to
+work and wait and trust; to be thankful for what is--for the digging
+and seeding time as well as for the harvest; for one must come before
+the other.
+
+Time brings only one regret--that we had not more joy in the things
+that were; more belief, more patience, more love; more knowledge of
+the way things work out; more willingness to help toward the final
+result. The preparation, the planting, the laying foundations, must be
+done in the dark; usually done with blind eyes as well, which see not
+what may or will be, but anticipate a harvest of pain from a
+spring-time of rain. Yet these showers may have been indispensable to
+the ground, and the seed may have expanded and sent its shoots up to
+the surface in consequence of them.
+
+But why use symbols? The days that are;--the days that are with us are
+the good days. Suppose it is hard work, and only the prospect of hard
+work? Work is the best thing we have got: it is salvation. It is the
+means by which we struggle up out of the darkness into the light. It
+is the law of life. It is the ministry of all that is good in the
+world; and the better it is the better for us, the better for every
+one. It is only those who do not know how to work that do not love it;
+to those who do, it is better than play--it is religion.
+
+But this is the mere influence of work itself. Suppose, besides your
+work, you have the blessing of a family to be cared for, and your work
+provides for them? This consecrates every part of it. It makes every
+movement of the hand a benediction, every heart-throb an unuttered
+prayer. Are not these days so full of labor best days? For about you
+are those you love. They are under the roof you provide; their voices
+furnish the music, their presence the sunshine of your life. Sometimes
+that which your discontent craves will come to you. The freedom from
+toil, the absence of "troubles" that now loom up so large to you; but
+with your troubles your joys will have vanished, and you will sit in
+the twilight waiting for the end, and wishing that you had cultivated
+the sweetness instead of the bitterness of the beginning, that you had
+not allowed the thorns to cover up your roses.
+
+Wisdom seems to have been the same always, but each one has to learn
+its lessons for himself. That is the reason why there is so little
+apparent progress in essential truths. There are always those who have
+grown into their realization; there are always those who are at the
+threshold, and who must travel over the same paths, for we can none of
+us acquire true wisdom for another; it must become a part of
+ourselves, of our own moral and spiritual consciousness.
+
+"It is all very well for you," says one; "you have never known the
+pinch of poverty." How do you know that? We none of us know how and
+where the shoe has pinched another person's foot. It is not our
+business to know, but it is our business to prevent our soreness from
+becoming sourness and bitterness. It is our business to make the
+pathway of others as pleasant as we can, so that their unseen corns
+shall irritate them as little as possible. All the wisdom of the days
+that have been, and the days that are, will be found in the following
+lines from Goethe's "Tasso":
+
+ "Would'st thou fashion for thyself a seemly life?
+ Then fret not over what is past and gone;
+ And spite of all thou mayest have lost behind,
+ Yet act as if thy life were just begun.
+ What each day wills, enough for thee to know,
+ What each day wills, the day itself will tell.
+ Do thine own task, and therewith be content;
+ What others do that shall thou fairly judge.
+ Be sure that thou no mortal brother hate,
+ Then all beside leave to the Master Power."
+
+
+
+
+A People's Church[1]
+
+
+"What would you do if you were rich?" This is a question often asked,
+and readily answered by those who have not wealth of their own to
+dispose of, for there is nothing easier than to give away other
+people's money. But it is more difficult to the conscientious, who
+feel that their unearned millions ought to inure in some way to the
+public benefit, yet do not always see the way to the reconciling of
+their own conditions and circumstances with that use of money which
+seems to them wisest and best.
+
+[Footnote 1: _The Cycle_.]
+
+As a rule it may safely be assumed that if all who are poor were
+suddenly made rich, they would do as the majority of our rich men do
+with their money--keep it. But it is at least pleasant to think how
+generous one might be, and as the rich occasionally are; and I propose
+to suggest one object that I hope will one day be realized in this
+great city, where everything good is possible, as well as everything
+evil, and which only needs to take vital root in some active mind to
+become a living reality.
+
+Within a certain area New York may be called a city of churches, but
+they are churches for the rich; solemn, imposing, cathedral-aisled,
+glass-stained, costly, munificently beneficed, elegantly pastored--God
+locked in, the poor locked out. I know there are "mothers'" meetings
+and "mite" societies, and all the rest of it, but all the same the
+poor woman in her old shawl and bonnet would not think of entering one
+of those expensive pews, nor does the man in his working suit feel
+that that is the place for him. Outside, the majority of churches take
+no account of the necessity for the consolation, the comfort, the
+upbuilding, the refreshment of religion, save and only for certain
+hours on Sunday, and then it must be in full toggery, and in company
+with, the eminently respectable.
+
+The most beautiful thing about the old churches abroad is not their
+splendor of carving and painting, but that they stand with, open doors
+week days and Sundays, for the people to enter; and they do enter. The
+market woman with her basket drops in for a moment on her way home
+from the labor of her weary day. The old woman totters in to say her
+"Ave Maria," the young woman to pray away her perplexities. Even the
+business man sometimes finds it a resource from his struggles and
+temptations. The poor, with their crowded houses and narrow quarters,
+have so little privacy as to make quiet, and even an opportunity for
+self-communion, a luxury. Then how often in the perplexities which
+fill their lives they desire for a little while a retreat, a refuge
+where they can think, perhaps receive a word of counsel, at least find
+an atmosphere of absolute peace and restfulness.
+
+The Monday prayer-meeting, the afternoon exhortation; the evening
+conference of the Baptists, the Methodists, the Presbyterians, or the
+Congregationalists, are not what is wanted; nor is it a cold and
+barn-like edifice which makes one feel, if one goes to call upon God,
+as though He were out, and could only be seen at stated times, and by
+the will of the sexton and the trustees.
+
+A people's church is wanted, where the people can come and go as they
+please; which asks no questions, which is always open, which has brief
+singing and organ services that all and any people of any kind and
+degree may attend and feel themselves welcome. A morning service of
+praise, a mid-day song of rejoicing, a vesper hymn of thankfulness. No
+word of condemnation, no word of controversy, no word of doubt, no
+word of assertion or denial; only unceasing love, continued and
+eternal recognition of human kinship and readiness to minister to any
+soul's need as far as it may be reached and helped.
+
+No one minister could perform its offices; its servants would have to
+be in a manner consecrated to its work, and they should be men and
+women who have suffered, and therefore know, but who would find more
+reason for rejoicing than lamentation; who would possess gifts of
+music and oratory, and whose personal influence would be strong for
+righteousness.
+
+There are great churches with scattered congregations, in Fifth
+avenue; there are a few poor churches, and small, for which no one
+cares, and which offer no attractions to the over-flowing population
+of Mott street. The spring and summer will soon come, and then these
+great churches will be closed, their pew-owners distributed over lake
+and mountain in all the different parts of the wide world. But the
+"people" will be here. People who work in foundries and shops, who
+live in tenement-houses; people who earn a hand-to-mouth living as
+clerks, book-keepers, seamstresses and petty store-keepers; people who
+have to stay in such homes as they can support because they cannot
+afford to break them up and go elsewhere.
+
+For these people and their children there is only the street. The
+children occupy the street. For four or five months in the year they
+make life hideous, especially on Sunday, by noise and exhibition of
+vandalism that would disgrace the savages of any age or nation. The
+police acknowledge themselves powerless to prevent it. It is simply
+the exercise of undirected faculty which might be turned to account,
+but which has only noise, confusion, and street warfare for its
+opportunity for exercise.
+
+There are possibilities in these congregations of the highways and
+byways, and when we have our people's church or churches, open all the
+year, and all the night as well as all the day, and the voices of the
+angels for sweetness, singing love and peace on earth, in an anthem
+that pierces the roof, and with the tones of a mighty organ to
+emphasize to all the world its message, and it is not a question of
+clothes, many people will be glad to listen, and will find an
+influence in the music, in the willingness, in the free-heartedness,
+in the sympathy, in the kindness, in the spirit of brotherhood, that
+they would not get out of preaching nor dogma.
+
+Whom are we waiting for to build this church? Is it a woman? Surely it
+is an opportunity that carries the two-fold blessing.
+
+
+
+
+Notes, Letters and Stray Leaves
+
+
+A "free lance" is less free than the organs of a party. In one case it
+means at least the opinions of a group; in the other, the dogmatism of
+the one who wields the lance. Nothing is less free than the
+self-styled freedom of the individual.
+
+Enthusiasm implies a certain narrowness of vision. When people can
+take a broad view they can see the elements of goodness or beauty
+everywhere, and they cease to be enthusiastic in regard to one. The
+great popular preachers are not university men, or those who are quiet
+and literary in style, but strong, dogmatic men.
+
+Perhaps the most noticeable difference between the so-called new woman
+and the new man is this, that she is seizing every opportunity that
+opens up new avenues of individual employment, while he is discovering
+and storing energy to save himself from doing any work at all. The old
+man made other men, and women too, work for him, the new man is making
+the hitherto uncontrolled forces his servants, locking them up in such
+small compass that a twist of the wrist will start the crash of
+worlds.
+
+The notes of the great god Pan, so "piercingly sweet by the river"--a
+far cry and a weary way from Pan to Handel and Beethoven; yet during
+all that time music has been the joy and the consolation of
+peoples,--all except the Quakers.
+
+If Poetry is the prophet of the future, music expresses all
+emotions,--love, joy, fear, above all, aspiration. Music is
+essentially religious, and has inspired the most perfect forms of
+emotional composition we know.
+
+I take off my hat to the new man--that is, I would if I wore one, but
+I wear a bonnet, and pin it on with long, sharp-pointed things which
+if they were not used voluntarily would be considered instruments of
+torture. Think of the man who is testing the force of dynamite--who is
+holding lightning bolts in his hand and forcing them to do the work
+which he has planned for them, who is taking the altitude of the
+mountains in Mars in his observatory in the air at midnight,--think of
+these men stopping to swear while they ran the murderous little weapon
+through six thicknesses of buckram, lining, velvet, lace, feathers,
+ribbon and hair--to fasten on their bonnets!
+
+
+
+
+Letter to the New York Woman's Press Club
+
+
+ October, 1900.
+
+My dear Friends and Fellow-Members:
+
+It was really a grief to me not to be able to meet you individually
+and collectively before leaving to be absent the entire season. The
+accident which disabled me for the summer, threatens to cripple me for
+the winter also, and in this condition of dependence and general
+disability, it seemed best to go where I could have seclusion, and the
+care of some member of my own family.
+
+I resign my place among you with less reluctance because the Woman's
+Press Club is now strong and well able to guard its own interests, and
+direct its own affairs. It will, I am sure, be all the better and
+stronger from being thrown upon its own resources, and made to depend
+wholly upon the potent efforts which have been evoked, and which may
+be still further developed on the part of its membership.
+
+It will be a source of the deepest satisfaction to me in my retirement
+to think of you in connection with the happy times we have had, and
+the good work done during the past three years, and also of the spirit
+of loving fellowship which has grown so strong and so deep. Nothing
+can give greater pleasure than to hear of your continued growth and
+prosperity, of continued endeavor to make the work effective, and the
+life of the Woman's Press Club beautiful and useful.
+
+Remember that a well-rounded club is an epitome of the world; that it
+never can and never ought to be perfect according to any one
+individual's idea of perfection, for every one's ideal is different;
+and it is the unity in this diversity which constitutes the spiritual
+life of the club, as the soul animates and inspires the body.
+
+Exalt the club. Bring your best to the front. Extinguish personal
+aims. Mind not at all the little picking and carping of human
+gadflies, whose desire to extract blood is perhaps a survival of their
+species, and an evidence of their unfitness for human companionship.
+
+I think of you at every gathering, and if you remember me, show it in
+your determination to make the Woman's Press Club of Greater New York
+an honor to the metropolis of the New World and to American womanhood.
+
+ J.C. CROLY.
+ Hill Farm, Hersham,
+ Walton-on-Thames, England.
+
+
+
+
+Letter to Sorosis
+
+
+ May, 1899.
+
+To my dear friends and fellow-members of Sorosis:
+
+On the eve of my departure from New York for a season, my heart turns
+towards Sorosis with a depth of affection I find it difficult to put
+into words. For thirty years it has held a large place in my life. It
+has represented the closest companionship, the dearest friendships,
+the most serious aspirations of my womanhood. The past is filled with
+delightful memories, social and intellectual, of which it was the
+happy instrument and inspiration. Its galleries are stored with living
+pictures of noble women who were with us, who are always of us, who
+have become a part of that eternal source of spiritual life from which
+the best things spring. What is the secret of the strength of Sorosis?
+What is its value to the community and the world at large? It is, as a
+centre of unity. This is our Holy Grail,--and this we are bound never
+to defame, or defile by thought, word or deed.
+
+We planted the seed not in Sorosis alone, but in the General
+Federation; and it is our duty to see that it is preserved in its
+integrity. Sorosis does not want place or power in the organization
+she created, but it is hers to see that the great principle it
+embodied is not lost sight of. That the limitless growth and
+expansion provided for in its foundations are always from centre to
+circumference, not in sections; and that as differences are not
+recognized in the local organization, so there can be no north, south,
+east, or west in the general organization, nor any separation or
+division of interests. This is the aim of Sorosis:--to perfect within
+its own membership that unity in diversity which is the basis of its
+life, and the source of its growth; and, as far as its strength and
+influence extend, preserve it as the foundation of a united womanhood.
+
+The consolation I feel in going away is that I shall find you here
+when I return; not, I hope, crippled and disabled as now, but able to
+be among you once more. I leave a monument of the woman's club in the
+"Women's Club History," which carries marvellous testimony to the
+ideals and aspirations of the woman of the home--for this is the woman
+of the club.
+
+God bless and keep you all! I wish I could look into your kind faces
+individually, and thank you for all that Sorosis past and present has
+been to me.
+
+ Faithfully yours,
+ J.C. CROLY.
+
+
+
+
+Letter to the Society of American Women in London
+
+
+ November, 1901.
+
+To the Society of American women in London:
+
+On the eve of my departure for America, I desire to express to the
+Society of American Women something of what I feel sure I owe it
+individually and collectively since its initial gathering in the
+beginning of March.
+
+My visit to England has been made under extremely trying and painful
+circumstances. I had expected no participation in any social
+functions. I had communicated with only a very few near and dear
+friends. Formal intercourse with comparative strangers seemed
+impossible.
+
+But there was nothing strange in the atmosphere of the American
+Society. It provided at once an atmosphere in which one could breathe
+freely, so kindly and so cordial were its tone and spirit.
+
+It formed at once a social centre in which the best elements
+contributed to the most varying attractions. It brought together many
+of the most charming and progressive women in English as well as
+American society, and also many of the brilliant women we read about,
+but rarely meet.
+
+In addition, it performed a most useful office in extending the hand
+of welcome from American women in London to the representative women
+who attended the International Council; and has a future of
+exceptional character in filling a social need which has never been
+filled by the official representatives in republican America.
+
+It is not too much to say that it has put life in London in quite a
+new and much more attractive aspect to American women, by focusing the
+best elements and bringing them in touch with each other. With time
+and development the highest results of the modern co-operative spirit
+should be attained, and the fulness of a life that will enrich each
+individual member, and reach out beyond to an ever widening sphere of
+happy influence.
+
+ J.C. CROLY.
+
+
+
+
+Letter to the Pioneer Club of London
+
+
+ June, 1901.
+
+To the Finance Committee of the Pioneer Club:
+
+I hope I shall not be considered as taking a liberty in presenting a
+subject of some importance for your consideration.
+
+There is a feeling in some clubs and among some clubwomen that the
+time has arrived for expanding the club idea and at the same time
+drawing closer the ties which unite women in the form of organized
+fellowship, which the modern clubwoman recognizes as a potent and most
+valued element of her club life. It is believed, in short, that the
+time has come for the initial steps to be taken for the formation of a
+European Federation of Women's Clubs.
+
+There are many reasons which seem to make it eminently proper that the
+Pioneer Club should be the one to take these initial steps. It is the
+oldest and best known woman's club in London. It was founded upon the
+broadest human lines by a woman who possessed in the highest degree
+that sixth sense which the nineteenth century contributes to the
+twentieth--the sense of the Universal. This led her to affiliate the
+Pioneer Club in the beginning with the General Federation of Women's
+Clubs in the United States, and should inspire it to progressive life
+and work.
+
+The initial step is not formidable. It is, if thought desirable,
+simply to address a circular letter to women's clubs on record,
+wherever they may be known to exist, proposing a basis of federated
+affiliation, and inviting them to unite in forming a grand Federation
+of organized bodies of women capable of realizing any purpose upon
+which they might bring their united forces to bear.
+
+If it is said, "Of what use is such a Federation?" I might point to
+many instances of educational and municipal progress, and social
+reform in America effected by this combined effort. But details are
+as nothing compared with the one great, glowing, ultimate aim of the
+solidarity of thoughtful, high-minded, intelligent, progressive women.
+It is written in the stars. It will surely become an accomplished
+fact; and there are other clubs willing to take the initiative; but it
+is fitting that the Pioneer Club should lead, and by its wisdom and
+judgment lend an added dignity to noble endeavor.
+
+ J.C. CROLY.
+
+
+
+
+Letters to Mrs. Dimies T.S. Denison, President of Sorosis
+
+
+ 22 AVENUE ROAD,
+ LONDON, NW., January 27, 1899.
+
+My dear Mrs. Denison:
+
+Thank you very much for your delightful letter. It was so good and
+heartening. Its spirit was so representative of the best that
+club-life has given us that it made me feel more than ever thankful
+for Sorosis and for that reserved strength and all-roundedness of
+resource and character which makes it able to successfully tide over
+any difficulties.
+
+I have not heard of any effort to form a London Sorosis, nor do I
+think it could be done successfully on precisely the same lines. If we
+were starting a club to-day it would differ considerably from the one
+started thirty-one years ago. That had to be formed out of such
+materials as were available at that time, and built as it knew and as
+it grew. Its virtue lay in its breadth, in the true and scientific
+character of its conception. It made a centre and worked from that to
+the radiating points of an illimitable circle, not knowing precisely
+where these would take it, but with all the faith of Columbus in
+results founded upon essential principles. We had no idea at the time,
+that at every one of these farther points other centres were being
+formed that also, in their own time and way, struck out feelers and
+shafts, and thus became part of that great system of creative force,
+which, still acting on its central and original idea of a larger
+unity, brought together the General Federation. This is the mother
+idea which Sorosis represents, and which needs no legal enactment to
+enforce. It stands for this as much in London as in New York, and in
+its own way has become unique. It lacks some of the elements of the
+newer clubs, but it contained the germ of them all, and is essentially
+a true growth, an aggregation of all the qualities of a diverse and
+unified womanhood;--not by making it something else, but by studying
+its own spirit and life, and the genius it has developed.
+
+First, it stands for a wide hospitality and the generous recognition
+of all other women; for high standards in literature, art, ethics, and
+all the interests belonging to and growing out of them. Above all, it
+stands for home duty; for honor, faithfulness, loyalty, courage and
+truth. Finally, it stands for subjection;--that highest subjection of
+the one will to the many; of that subordination of our own dominant
+desire to the spirit and will of God, represented by the spirit and
+will of the majority. For the voice of the people is in a real sense
+the voice of God, whether we recognize it or not.
+
+O my beloved Sorosis, you are the core of my heart! What have I said
+but that you represent an ideal of life and character, and that each
+member should hold herself responsible for its preservation and its
+increasing beauty and value?
+
+ Faithfully yours,
+ J.C. CROLY,
+ Honorary President.
+
+
+Dearest Mrs. Denison: When I began this letter it was intended for you
+alone; as I went on it seemed as if it might find a little place at
+the Breakfast. Use your own judgment in regard to having an extract
+made for that purpose...
+
+ Yours lovingly, J.C.C.
+
+
+
+
+ QUEEN'S ROAD, ST. JOHN'S WOOD,
+ LONDON, N.W., April 16, 1899.
+
+My dear President:
+
+What a lovely programme! I am so proud to show it, and so happy that
+Sorosis is going on so beautifully. Have I congratulated you? If not,
+let me do it now with all my heart. I always knew your time would
+come, and that you would make a popular as well as a wise president.
+You have a light touch, but a very appreciative one, and that good
+thing--a fine sense of humor. You do not take yourself too seriously,
+but you give the best of yourself unreservedly. God bless you for
+carrying the banner of Sorosis up to its highest level, and
+maintaining its dignity in a way worthy of its reputation.
+
+The London Club, or Society of American Women in London, is
+flourishing. The president comes often to see me, and in her address
+at the second luncheon, April 10th, said that she considered it a
+special providence that I was in London at the beginning; that I had
+been of the greatest help to her, and that she should always look upon
+me as their "Club Mother." I began to wonder if that was what my leg
+was broken for, and how many more times I might have to be cut to
+pieces to make "Mother" enough to go around.
+
+Mrs. Henry Norman (Muriel Dowie, author of "A Girl in the
+Carpathians") made a brilliant little speech. She is delightful, and
+very anxious to visit America. Her husband is the Englishman who of
+his own choice graduated from Harvard. He has written some very
+appreciative articles about America...
+
+I hope I shall know when Mrs. F. and Mrs. L. are coming, and something
+of their plans. At least how long they will stay in London. Won't you
+be so good as to tell them this and give them my address?
+
+I am endeavoring now to put myself under treatment for the pain and
+weakness I feel when I try to walk (with sticks) in the street...
+
+ Really yours,
+ J.C. CROLY.
+
+
+
+
+ 7 RUE D'ASSAS, PARIS, FRANCE,
+ October 3, 1900.
+
+My very dear President and Friend:
+
+Your letter was most welcome. I have been in a quiet little country
+place since coming from Ober-Ammergau, and know no one. I thought much
+of you in those quiet days, and wished to write, but waited to hear,
+and the echoes did come in a way I understood, for I had letters
+before leaving America which were an indication of the general trend
+of thought and desire. Of course I never for a moment misunderstood
+your attitude in the matter of the election... You could not help your
+election. [Referring to the first vice-presidency of the General
+Federation.]
+
+I am very, very sorry the color question has been raised again. It
+almost made a split six years ago. It was, at the best, premature. It
+was a sacrifice of the greater to the less, of the real good we had
+attained and the ideal towards which we were working, to a theoretical
+possibility which had not yet presented itself. We have yet a thousand
+obstacles to overcome within ourselves; a thousand problems to solve;
+an ideal to work towards capable of infinite expansion. But we should
+not strain the limits while the centre still lacks order and form, and
+depends upon the wisdom with which it is guided for permanence.
+
+We have made some dreadful blunders,... but ideals are not stones in
+the street; they are stars in the sky. They are always beyond us; we
+cannot wear them as breast-pins but we can work towards them...
+
+ Yours faithfully,
+ J. C. CROLY.
+
+
+
+
+ 82 GOWER STREET, BEDFORD SQUARE,
+ LONDON, W.C., April 10, 1901.
+
+My very dear Friend and President:
+
+How good it was of you to send me the beautiful souvenirs of the
+thirty-third Annual Breakfast. They took me straight back to you all
+through a mist of tears that were half pleasure, half pain; pleasure
+that I was not forgotten, pain that I was not there to see the loving
+glance, and share the hand-clasp. It is true I have many friends here,
+but none that seem quite like the old friends; and there is only one
+Sorosis--God's blessing be upon it for evermore! Yet wherever I go,
+God's blessing and His Spirit seem to me to have descended upon women.
+They show the most wonderful goodness and insight. They seem each one
+to be specially made; not the kind that are kept in stock, so to
+speak. Oh, I feel sometimes as if all my life had been partly a test,
+partly an experience of their goodness, and that it is a sufficient
+blessing, for nothing else has been left me.
+
+A writer remarked the other day, in an article on the South African
+war, that the best results of war were ties--the spirit of good
+comradeship that it established among men. This is what we
+preeminently get out of our club life, and without paying so fearful a
+price for it. I hope to see you all when you come together in the
+autumn.
+
+ With loving remembrance,
+ J.C. CROLY.
+
+
+
+
+Letters to Mrs. Charlotte Carmichael Stopes (London)
+
+
+ 11 BARTON STREET, WEST KENSINGTON,
+ Jan. 15, 1889.
+
+My Dear Mrs. Stopes:
+
+It is very kind of you to take this trouble to give us a pleasure, and
+I would not miss it on any account. But it is a little difficult for
+me to name the day. I am in the hands of the dentist this week; I
+shall hardly get through to go to the Writers' Club on Friday. These
+two circumstances have postponed my visit to Miss Genevieve Ward to
+whom it is now arranged that I go a week from to-morrow. I could make
+it any afternoon that week that would suit you. Mrs. Sidney will be
+delighted also to accept your invitation; and perhaps Miss Ward also.
+Please make the afternoon to suit yourself and Miss Blackburn.
+
+ Really yours,
+ J.C. CROLY.
+
+
+
+
+ Jan. 19.
+
+I go to Miss Ward's on Monday. It is her day at home, and therefore
+will be more or less fatiguing. Tuesday I have promised to dine at the
+Crescent Club with Mrs. Phillips and hear Mr. Felix Moscheles' lecture
+afterwards. Miss Ward and her brother, Col. Albert Lee Ward, go also.
+Three days of continuous going out would be too much for me, and
+something would have to give way. I would rather it would be any event
+than yours. Suppose you arrange it for the week following, and in the
+meantime call for me at Miss Ward's on Monday. You will find Miss Ward
+a very striking personality, and I particularly wish Col. Ward to
+accompany me to your house. I will see you on Friday, and you can tell
+me how you decide.
+
+ J.C. CROLY.
+
+
+
+
+ Jan. 20.
+
+Friday the 27th will suit me very well. I have been out-of-doors so
+little as yet, that I feared I might break down on the third day of
+trying. I do know Lady Roberts Austen; have been to luncheon at her
+house, but have not seen her since I came this time; I have
+communicated as yet with so few. I heard from her the other day
+however, and I know she will go to your house if she possibly can. I
+have to drive wherever I go. I move too slowly for crowds and public
+conveyances. I cannot risk weather.
+
+
+
+
+ Feb. 8.
+
+I want to thank you for the afternoon I spent at your house; I enjoyed
+it so very much. You will not consider me "pushing" if I say I am only
+half satisfied. There are so many sides to your house; I want to see
+the Queen of Scots portrait again, and the Donatello, and some of your
+rare cookery books. I expect to change my quarters in about three
+weeks to the North West; then you will let me come and browse, won't
+you. But first you must come and lunch with me. With kind regards to
+your delightful family,
+
+ I am, etc.
+
+
+
+
+ March 12.
+
+May I come up next Thursday afternoon and bring with me an American
+friend, Mrs. Stockber of Silverton, Colorado, who has just arrived by
+the _Umbria_. Mrs. Stockber is an unusually interesting woman. She is
+equal owner with her husband, an intelligent and large-minded German,
+of one of the largest silver mines in the States, and is one of the
+only two honorary women members of the great Association of Mining
+Engineers of the United States. Mrs. Griffin, the President of the new
+Society of American Women in London, also wants to come. I don't want
+to inundate you; and this is only to ask if you are better, and can
+receive a trio safely.
+
+ Yours, etc.
+
+
+
+
+ March 16.
+
+I am sorry to give you so much trouble. But I have a friend here just
+now, a woman of unusual character and ability. I remember I told you
+of her. The other is Mrs. Helen T. Richards of the Boston Institute of
+Technology. The only moment I can get her is on Monday afternoon, and
+I want her to see the collection of prints and your pictures. If it is
+all right I will bring her with me on Monday at 3 P.M. We must go to
+Miss Ward's at 4.30. Do not have tea at that primitive hour; for we
+shall be obliged to have a cup at Miss Ward's. I wish we might have a
+chance of seeing Mr. Stopes; but of course that is something that may
+be prayed for, but not what common people are made for. Dear, take
+care of yourself if you can. There is only one of you.
+
+ Yours,
+ J.C.C.
+
+
+
+
+ March 17.
+
+We will postpone. I cannot reach my two troublesome friends, and next
+week you will be busy and tired. "By-and-by" is coming with the sun
+and flowers. We will come too.
+
+ Yours lovingly and really,
+ J.C.C.
+
+
+
+
+ June 25, 1901,
+ 82 SOMERS' STREET, W.C.
+
+My very dear Friend:
+
+I have only time to thank you for your kind "welcome," and tell you
+how sorry I am not to see you to-day, and your precious Winnie, who I
+hope has really started on the road to recovery. Children are the
+richest boon vouchsafed us in this world, and the parents are the
+trustees of this wealth committed to their charge, but belonging to
+the world at large, and of which time only tells the value. I shall be
+very busy now for a few days, but will see you as soon as possible.
+
+ Affectionately,
+ J.C.C.
+
+
+[Illustration: Facsimile of a portion of a letter written by Mrs.
+Croly in October, 1900.]
+
+
+
+
+ 222 WEST 23D STREET,
+ NEW YORK, Jan. 16, 1901.
+
+My dear Friend:
+
+Thank you very much for your letter and card. It was a great pleasure
+to me to receive it, and to learn something about yourself and what
+you are doing. The news was long belated. The letter was to have been
+printed the week that I left, and I provided to have it sent to about
+a dozen friends as a good-bye. But it was so long delayed by Transvaal
+excitement and sad war news, that I did not expect it to appear at
+all.
+
+I had a wonderful celebration on my seventieth birthday in December;
+poems written, cakes with seventy candles sent, and a great
+spontaneous gathering in my honor, which really bothered me not a
+little, for I do not pose worth a cent, and do not know where to look
+or what to do when people compliment me.
+
+However, one thing gratified me above all others. It was a "birthday
+party" given me by the Daughters of 1812--the most exclusive of
+patriotic societies that is restricted to lineal descendants. The
+gathering was magnificent; the cake was brought in lighted by seventy
+candles borne on the shoulders of four men. By unanimous vote they
+conferred upon me honorary membership, and the insignia were
+conferred. The president in seconding the motion said, this departure
+from their rules (alluding to my English birth) was not in honor of
+"the club," nor of the "literary women," but of the woman who knew no
+line of separation, and whose work had been done for all women. Was
+not that a beautiful thing to say? Only that I intend to be cremated,
+I would have it put on my tombstone.
+
+We had a very bright and very beautiful beginning here to the "Holy
+Year," so far as weather is concerned, and it is also very gay, though
+my lameness prevents me from participating much in social doings. I am
+also grieved by the unexpected effects of the Boer war, in England.
+There must have been shocking blundering and mismanagement somewhere.
+The pitying way in which "poor, stupid, decrepit old England" is
+talked about is galling. Some military officers remarked recently that
+England was hardly worth having a "scrap" with, she would be so easy
+to beat.
+
+Our General Federation holds a Congress in Paris in June, and my
+passage is taken for May 19th. If nothing untoward prevents, I shall
+be in London for a week early in June, and then go to Paris and
+Ober-Ammergau. If you could go it would be very pleasant. Give my love
+to your daughters, and kind regards to Mr. Stopes.
+
+ Yours ever,
+ J.C. CROLY.
+
+
+
+
+Letter to Mrs. Carrie Louise Griffin
+
+ 82 GOWER STREET, BEDFORD SQUARE, W. C.
+ June 25, 1901.
+
+My dear Mrs. Griffin:
+
+Mr. Bell wants an article immediately, about the American Society, for
+the Chicago _Recorder_; and I am glad to write it, because it enables
+me to make it stand for what it does; and will, still more, in the
+very heart of western clubdom; and will be a John the Baptist for you
+if you should go over next summer. He wants some photographs, yours
+particularly; which please send. He left his card with address of
+_Recorder_ in Fleet Street, which I omitted to take up-stairs at the
+moment, and afterwards it could not be found. I am hoping that you
+have it and will give it to me, or that Mr. Griffin perhaps knows it.
+If you can drop in on Monday, A.M., I should be glad to ask you in
+regard to some members--what to say of them, etc. Would Mrs. Clarence
+Burns allow her picture to be used, and have you one of Mrs. De
+Friese?
+
+ Always faithfully yours,
+ J. C. CROLY.
+
+
+
+
+From a Letter to Mrs. May Riley Smith
+
+... I have never done anything that was not helpful to woman so far as
+it lay in my power. (April 2, 1886.)
+
+
+
+
+Letters to Miss Anna Warren Story (Chairman of Executive Committee of
+the Woman's Press Club of New York)
+
+
+ HILL FARM COTTAGE, HERSHAM,
+ WALTON-ON-THAMES, ENGLAND,
+ Oct. 29, 1900.
+
+My dear Executive:
+
+Your letter giving me all the news to date was most kind and welcome.
+It seems very strange to be away from you all in this secluded corner
+of Surrey, with nothing in sight but woods, a meadow in which cows are
+grazing, and one neighboring cottage. My morning walk, when the
+weather will admit of walking, is along the old post road lined with
+woods and at the foot of our little lane or entrance to farm. The
+other morning one solemn old cow put her head through the fence, and
+stared with amazement at my crutches. Four others walked over to see
+what she was looking at; and they all stood in a row, looking and
+making no sound as long as I could see them. It was very funny.
+
+It seems so odd after so many years of continuous and often hurried
+work, to be using days for walking, and little things that since I was
+a grown woman have been crowded into odds and ends of time, or omitted
+for want of enough of it. I am gaining strength, however, and realize
+how complete the prostration was, and how radical the reconstructive
+processes had to be. The seclusion in which I live, surrounded by pine
+woods, a mile and a half from the nearest post office (tho' a postman
+brings our letters) and an equal distance from such supplies as a
+village can afford, is a little trying in some ways, but a real boon
+to me in my present condition.
+
+It would have been very easy to plunge into the activities of women in
+London. Many invitations have reached me, but I have been nowhere but
+to one little dinner given by our only neighbor, the wife of a London
+editor, and herself a popular story writer.
+
+I can walk now with one crutch and a stick, and begin to hope for
+complete restoration, which at one time seemed to me impossible. But,
+oh, how tedious and wearing it is! We have an unusually fine October
+for England, but gray skies and almost daily rains now. But the Surrey
+country is beautiful, full of quaint old villages and objects of
+picturesque interest. I am longing for the time and the weather to
+explore it. I could write all day about my gradually growing desire to
+be "up and doing." But time and space do not admit. Let me say in one
+word how deeply I was touched by the action of the Executive
+Committee, the Governing Board, and club. But I am also disappointed.
+I wanted to leave the field clear, and have new energy put into the
+club by bringing into active and central circulation the young, best
+blood we possess. Thank you for your assurance that as far as possible
+that will be done; and thank every officer and every member in my
+behalf for the long and affectionate confidence they have reposed in
+me, and for the many acts of personal kindness I have received from
+them.
+
+I am sorry you have lost the Countess by removal, and other valuable
+members by death...
+
+ Yours faithfully and affectionately,
+ J.C. CROLY
+
+
+
+
+ NORFOLK VILLA, WEYBRIDGE, SURREY,
+ August 20, 1901.
+
+My dear Anna:
+
+Your letter came most opportunely. I had been thinking about you, the
+Press Club, and my dear friends at home; for somehow I have not felt
+the old pleasure in being in England, and if I had a home to come back
+to, and my goods and chattels were not so far off, I should have come
+back, I think, this autumn.
+
+For one thing, the weather has not been favorable. We had such warm
+weather in July; but every month has had a week or more of very cold
+and wet weather. In Ober-Ammergau on the 8th of July we perished with
+the cold, and the rain almost caked in ice upon us. Still, even such
+weather could not spoil Ober-Ammergau. It is the one thing of its kind
+on earth, and the nearest to an absolutely perfect thing I ever saw. A
+great charm is the unconsciousness of the performers. They do not play
+to an audience. There are no footlights, nothing theatrical; only the
+Great Tragedy wrought out as a living reality. I think of all the
+scenes; the one that made the deepest impression upon me was the one
+in which there were the fewest actors and least acting. That was the
+Garden of Gethsemane. So intense was the agony of spirit, that it
+seemed as if I myself should cry out if the disciples had not gone
+away and left the Saviour alone to his mortal struggle.
+
+It is a great thing, Anna, that these people have done. They have
+lived the Passion of Christ for nearly three hundred years. They are
+born in it; they are fed upon it. They have made a cult of religion;
+and they are absolutely religious, but not in the least sectarian. The
+Christ they have lifted up draws all men unto him.
+
+I have been in a quiet country place for four weeks, and shall stay
+two weeks longer... If I remain this winter we shall probably go back
+to Paris by November and to Italy in the spring. Now that I am here I
+might as well give myself this one more chance... I was very tired
+when I came back from our hurried trip, and was very glad of rest and
+quiet...
+
+Do not let my dear friends in the Press Club build upon me, or weaken
+their force by re-electing me. Elect a young, strong, press woman.
+Anna, do this without any reference to personal feeling or likes or
+dislikes. You are capable of acting impersonally. Beg the club to do
+this in my name, and to pick out their best for the chairmen of their
+representative committees.
+
+My own dear friends and fellow members; how I wish I could make them
+feel the strength of my desire for their growth in wisdom and honor.
+God bless them all!
+
+ Yours affectionately and faithfully,
+ J.C. CROLY.
+
+
+
+
+ ASHOVER, DERBYSHIRE,
+ May 30, 1901.
+
+My dear Anna:
+
+Your kind letter arrived this morning, forwarded by Mrs. Sidney to
+this remote village in Derbyshire. I left London ten days ago because
+I had to get fresh air and quiet. Ashover is a quiet little village; a
+paradise of meadows starred with flowers, and wooded and cultivated;
+hills in which all the treasures of one of the richest counties in
+England (in floral wealth) are to be found. When I came here there
+were still primroses, cowslips, violets, forget-me-nots, and fields
+white with small daisies and yellow with buttercups. Now there are
+masses of yarrow, marguerites, rhododendrons, bluebells, and great
+trees of white and purple lilacs. Roses, I am told, will cover
+everything by and by, but development is a little late this year. I
+wish you could spend a month here this summer: what a revelation of
+English beauty it would be to you!
+
+Thank you for your sympathy with my personal troubles. I am not
+unhappy... The goodness of women to me is always and everywhere
+miraculous. This alone makes life worth living...
+
+I am rejoiced to hear of the Press Club's prosperity. Nothing could
+give me greater pleasure than to know of its constant growth and
+advancement.
+
+ With love, ever yours,
+ J. C. CROLY.
+
+
+
+
+Letters to Mrs. Caroline M. Morse
+
+
+ HILL FARM COTTAGE, WALTON-ON-THAMES,
+ SURREY, ENGLAND, Dec. 13, 1898.
+
+My dear friend:
+
+I was sorry to know from Ethel's note, received day before yesterday,
+that you had been ill, and were still unable to the task of writing. I
+wished above all things that I could in some way help and comfort you,
+having always in mind the help and comfort you were to me during the
+trying days last summer that followed my accident, and the consequent
+long and tedious illness. There are many people who feel
+sympathetically, but so few are capable and who are ready or are
+permitted to apply the act of sympathy. It is the friend in need that
+is the friend we remember with a grateful, lasting love...
+
+At this moment we are on the eve of removal to London where we are
+taking rooms once occupied by the family of David Christie Murray. We
+go to-morrow, and begin a new chapter in this most disastrous of
+years. So many things seem to culminate toward the close of the
+century--good fortune for some, evil fortune for others; hopes dashed
+at the seeming moment of realization, as if all the forces in nature
+were aiding to make an end of the century's efforts in any way that
+would bring finality.
+
+For my part I feel as if I had been forcibly brought to a standstill.
+In a few days (the 19th) I shall have reached the milestone: I shall
+be seventy. Sorosis would have made an occasion of it if I had been in
+New York. As it is, I feel a little tinge of regret that my
+annihilation last June was not more complete; that I did not leave,
+along with my dear friend, Mrs. Demorest. Not that I am wholly
+unhappy; I only feel somehow brought to an unfinished close; left in a
+state of animated suspension. I seem to see everything from a
+distance; separated by my inability to participate in the goings and
+comings, the doings and pleasures of others. I feel the wall that
+stands between those who still live and those who have passed from
+this world; but alas, I still retain consciousness, and desire for
+sympathy, and can see and hear and feel, though my feet are chained.
+It is just three months since I arrived. A part of the time we had
+beautiful weather, and I could walk on the road a little on sunshiny
+days, leaning upon my two sticks. But during the past five weeks, my
+out-door exercise has been nil: the roads were too wet and rough. It
+has been almost constant fog, rain, wind; and the drip, drip, drip, of
+a mist that was wetter than rain. This, I think, has added a little
+rheumatism to give name to the pain and stiffness of joints and newly
+forming muscles. The change we are about to make will be a new
+departure for me--I shall have to try stairs... But I shall have the
+dear companionship of Marjorie,[1] who has lived an ideal out-of-door
+life here. She will there begin to have regular lessons at home, or go
+to kindergarten. I have been reading to her Mary Proctor's "Starland,"
+which by your thoughtful prompting she caused to be sent to me through
+her London publishers. I am so much obliged to you and to her for
+remembering the promise that I should have a copy. It is charming, and
+ought to have a wide sale...
+
+[Footnote 1: Her grandchild.]
+
+I must stop; Vida has come for my mail, and is going to the
+post-office on her bicycle. She and Mr. Sidney are never so happy as
+when taking long bicycle rides on these fine English country roads.
+
+With warmest greetings to Colonel Morse and Ethel, and ever loving
+remembrance to you, dear friend, I am, as always,
+
+ Ever yours,
+ J.C.C.
+
+
+
+
+ 11 BARTON STREET, WEST KENSINGTON,
+ LONDON, January 29, 1899.
+
+My dear friend:
+
+I have been wondering these many days where you are and how it is with
+you. How I have wished that you were near by, and that we could have
+taken some of my lonely, painful "duty" walks upon crutches together.
+I miss your sympathy and ever ready kindness... I suffer terribly now
+with sore and swollen feet--the result of pain, stiffness, strain in
+movement, and lack of exercise. But I am stronger. I can now lift my
+arms and brush my own hair...
+
+We are having beautiful weather just now. We have had sunshine for a
+week, and people go about announcing the fact with joy and surprise,
+as if a new Saviour had arisen; all but the Americans, newly come, who
+complain about everything, rain or shine...
+
+ J.C.C.
+
+
+
+
+
+ LONDON, Jan. 16, 1901.
+
+Dear friend:
+
+This letter is for the family. Poor as it will be, it will have to
+tell of all I would like to say to you, and for the thousand and one
+things I would like to tell of London and of the many kindnesses I
+have received. I had not expected to be here this winter, as you know,
+and ought not to be. The cold and the damp have developed rheumatism
+of a very severe type in my lame leg, and I suffer from pain and
+difficulty in walking... I could, of course, obtain some mitigation of
+these conditions, but the same reason that compelled my return to
+London, Mr. P.'s actual failure, has so encroached upon my
+income--without a prospect of even partial recovery for a long time to
+come--as to make it almost equally difficult to live either in
+Switzerland, where, at Schinznach-les-Bains, I could receive so much
+benefit; or in London, or New York. I wish, as I wished two years ago,
+that my accident had ended it, and saved all the pain and difficulty
+of solving a perpetual and insoluble problem... It seems sometimes as
+if there were only two kinds of people in the world--those who ride
+over others roughshod, and those who are ridden over. The cruel
+accident that shattered me on that June day shattered my world. Life
+since then seems in the nature of a resurrection; every day a special
+gift, and every pleasant thing an act of Divine Providence. Love to
+you all. This is about myself. Write soon and tell me all about
+yourselves.
+
+ Lovingly,
+ J.C.C.
+
+
+
+
+From a Letter to Mrs. Christina J. Higley
+
+
+ LONDON, July--, 1899.
+
+My dear friend:
+
+... It seems as if everything had been taken from me but the
+friendship, the affection of women; and that manifests itself here as
+well as at home. God bless them! They have made all the brightness of
+my life.
+
+ Affectionately,
+ J.C.C.
+
+
+
+
+From a Letter to Mrs. Catherine Young
+
+
+ LONDON, Sept. 3, 1895.
+
+Dearest Mrs. Young:
+
+Your letter has been before my eyes many times...
+
+Keep up your courage and your faith in women and in the _old flag_. I
+came across it the first time after I arrived, in a moment of extreme
+despondency. It did me a world of good... In three weeks, if all goes
+well, I shall see you. We sail for New York on the 12th of this month.
+
+ Affectionately,
+ J.C.C.
+
+
+
+
+From a Letter to Mrs. Harriet Nourse
+
+
+... Oh, yes, I have made my will many times; but some man always
+spoils it and I am obliged to make it over, I am not at all
+superstitious about making a will. My only trouble is having nothing
+to leave. I am fond of superstitions--the little ones. They give
+interest to life, if you have to spend it in one place. A little
+unreason is less monotonous than the eternally reasonable, and if it
+makes you happy for a minute to see the moon over your right shoulder,
+why not see it, and be unreasonably happy?
+
+
+
+
+From a Letter to Mrs. Margaret W. Lemon
+
+
+ 222 WEST 23RD STREET,
+ NEW YORK, Feb. 20, 1900.
+
+My dear Mrs. Lemon:
+
+I am very glad you are to formulate the resolution of thanks and
+appreciation of the work of the Reception Committees. Of course it
+goes without saying that it will be spread upon the minutes.
+
+The work was altogether so fine and painstaking, and showed such
+thought, care, taste and judgment, that, apart from my personal
+pleasure in it, I felt exceedingly proud, and happy at the complete
+and beautiful result... I am sorry you do not like "Current Events."
+To me "Current Topics" means the fag end of everything we know and
+have been obliged to read about in the papers. "Current Events" has a
+broader significance, and leaves out the trivial and vulgar.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ J. C. CROLY.
+
+
+
+
+From a Letter to Mrs. E. S. Willard
+
+
+ BELLA-VISTA, BOSTON HARBOR, MASS.,
+ August 28, 1901.
+
+... As yet I think I am still in London; or at least still in England.
+Crossing the Atlantic is not so much of an undertaking; less than
+taking a "trip" with "crossing" changes. Packing and unpacking, and
+the harassing "customs" are the worst features. There were only
+fifty-six passengers on the _Minneapolis_, but it took us from 8 A.M.
+to 1 P.M., in a pouring rain, to pass the argus-eyes of one hundred
+and eight inspectors, about two to each passenger.
+
+In my case it seemed a bit ironical,--one of Thomas Hardy's "Little
+Ironies," for a _rapid_ American trustee had lost my whole capital
+during my absence... The necessity for tying up the ragged ends and
+applying a test brought me home. But it is a trial, though I seem to
+have lost the power to be unhappy. Do you know what that means? Is
+that unarmed neutrality the serenity of Heaven?
+
+I am as yet living in England. My thoughts are there, and my desire. I
+see you and a few others whom I love come and go, and I exchange the
+loving word, the kindly smile, the sympathetic look.
+
+I am waiting for an indication of where I am to end my days. If my
+steps turn towards the isles of the sea, you will be a magnet to draw
+me, you with your spiritual beauty, and your constant, unfailing
+goodness. God bless you, and grant that I may see you again, and that
+we may gain the love, as well as the peace, that passeth all
+understanding.
+
+ Yours always,
+ J.C. CROLY.
+
+
+
+
+Resolutions of Protest Offered by Mrs. Croly Through the Woman's Press
+Club
+
+(From the Recording Secretary's Report)
+
+
+At a special meeting of the Governing Board, held in the club rooms,
+126 East 23rd street, Dec. 26, 1892, the following resolution
+proposed by the president was adopted.
+
+_Resolved_: That the Woman's Press Club has learned with deep regret
+of the backward action of the Columbian University of Washington, in
+deciding to exclude women from its Medical Department, after ten years
+of co-education.
+
+_Resolved_: That we unite with Pro-Re-Nata of Washington, D. C., in
+expressing an emphatic protest against this retrograde movement; that
+we earnestly hope that better counsels will prevail; that, at a time
+when so conservative an institution as the British Medical Association
+has voted to open its doors to women, the stigma of retrogression will
+not be allowed to rest upon the foremost school in the Capitol of the
+Nation.
+
+
+
+
+Tributes of Friends
+
+
+
+Jane Cunningham Croly
+
+An Appreciation from Miriam Mason Greeley
+
+
+In the joyful Christmas-tide of 1829, into the sweet influence of an
+English country home there came to life a blue-eyed, brown-haired
+maiden, whose sunny nature was destined to laugh with gladness of
+heart, or smile through falling tears, for more than seventy eventful
+years. "Jenny June" while yet a child came with her family to New York
+State, entering here an atmosphere well adapted to foster her
+activities and her power to work for the good of others. Her breadth
+of vision and her genial sympathy would have been evinced in any land
+or clime, but in the stimulating freedom of American thought her
+abilities developed to their best.
+
+She found opportunity to plant the seeds of earnest thought, of which
+later she was to gather such a rich harvest in the confidence of her
+fellow-women. Her eager mind was a rich soil for the growth of ideas
+springing from her fertile brain; which led her to be both
+conservative and impetuous, grave or vivacious, ever fearless and
+versatile, all pervaded with the wholesome balance of quick
+penetration.
+
+To her is due the tribute of praise for having borne the heat and
+burden of the day in the early development of women's clubs. Friends
+tried to persuade her to abandon her plans for organizing woman's
+varied abilities, ridicule assailed her most cherished hope, and the
+sarcasm of opponents barred the way. She lived to triumph in seeing
+her aims successful, and after thirty-five years of club life to be
+honored by one of the highest gifts in the power of the General
+Federation to offer--the honorary vice-presidency.
+
+Mrs. Croly formulated in 1890 her well-matured plan for a general
+federation of women's clubs, and with the cordial assistance of the
+"Mother Club, Sorosis," issued the first call for representatives of
+women's clubs of all the States to meet.
+
+Stimulated by the success of the General Federation, Mrs. Croly urged
+the formation of the New York State Federation, and assisted by
+Sorosis as the hostess, an invitation was issued to all the State
+clubs to be the guests of Sorosis at Sherry's, November, 1894.
+
+[Illustration: MRS. CROLY at the age of 18.]
+
+Mrs. Croly's life-work as a writer had gone forward hand in hand with
+her club interests, and, having finished the foundation work of the
+two federations, she devoted her time to the preparation of her
+massive volume on the "Growth of the Woman's Club Movement," which is
+a monument to her patient industry, and the only permanent record of
+the development of women's clubs in America.
+
+She sleeps--but each woman who to-day shares the benefit and the
+responsive pleasure of club life, should place a leaf in the garland
+for "Jenny June."
+
+
+
+
+From Marie Etienne Burns
+
+
+ "Work is a true savior, and the not knowing how is more the
+ cause of idleness than the love of it."--MRS. CROLY.
+
+The idea of a State Industrial School for Girls originated with Mrs.
+Croly, and at a spring meeting of the Executive Committee of the New
+York State Federation of Women's Clubs, held in 1898, she suggested
+that the first work of the Philanthropic Committee for the year be an
+endeavor to establish a State Industrial School for wayward, not
+criminal, young girls of tenement-house neighborhoods. Soon after this
+Mrs. Croly met with a serious accident and was obliged to give up all
+active work. She decided to go to Europe, hoping to be benefited by a
+stay abroad. Just before her departure Mrs. Croly wrote asking me to
+present the proposed industrial-school plan to the Convention for its
+endorsement. The next day I called upon her to discuss matters. I
+found her confined to her sofa with, a crutch beside her, and
+evidently suffering much pain; but she seemed to be thinking less
+about herself than about the work that was so close to her heart. She
+urged me to take up the work which, she was regretfully obliged to
+abandon, and was most enthusiastic over it.
+
+Mrs. Croly said: "Those who have worked among the poor in large cities
+are aware of the value of orderly and systematic industrial training
+for girls of irresponsible parentage, between the years of twelve and
+eighteen. These girls are often bright and attractive, but they are
+usually self-willed, lacking in judgment, and ignorant of every useful
+art, as well as of all social and domestic standards that lend
+themselves to the development of a true womanhood. Their homes are
+usually unworthy of the name, often scenes of disorder, not
+infrequently of violence, from which their only escape is the street.
+Their vanity and unbridled desire for low forms of pleasure expose
+them to all kinds of evil influences, and the first steps in a
+downward career are taken without at all knowing whither they lead.
+The most dangerous element in the lives of such girls is their
+ignorance. It bars all avenues to respectable employment and deprives
+them of self-respect, which grows with ability to maintain oneself and
+one's integrity in the face of adverse circumstances. In putting the
+knowledge of the simplest art or industry in possession of the
+untrained, unformed girl you supply an almost certain defence against
+that which lurks to destroy."
+
+I fully agreed with Mrs. Croly. My many years of experience as a
+worker among the poor of New York City had taught me the importance,
+and indeed the necessity of just such a school, and I gladly promised
+to carry forward the good work.
+
+Mrs. Croly said in parting: "I can truly say that during the whole of
+my working life in New York, a period of more than forty years, my
+heart has bled for these poor neglected, untrained girls, who yet have
+the elements of a divine womanhood and motherhood within them, though
+undeveloped and hidden by the rankest weeds and growth."
+
+At the Convention in New York City, held in 1901, I presented the
+Industrial School project, and the plan received the unanimous
+endorsement of all those present. It was, however, deemed wiser to
+omit the word "wayward," as the school was to be preventive and in no
+sense reformatory. A Committee was formed, of which Mrs. Croly was
+made Honorary Chairman; and the work upon a State Industrial School
+for Girls was begun.
+
+It was my desire as Acting Chairman of the Committee that the movement
+should carry at all times the banner bearing the name of its inceptor,
+a name that would always suggest not failure but success. While
+seemingly insurmountable obstacles at once arose, they were more or
+less overcome as the preparations and work of the Committee
+progressed. And at the time of Mrs. Croly's death the project had
+reached a point more hopeful than assured, resulting in the
+establishment of at least one school which should stimulate the State
+Legislature into a realization of the needs of the young girls of the
+tenement-house neighborhoods, so that some time in the future there
+might be provided through State legislation, on a broad plan, the
+State Industrial or Trade School for Girls, the idea of which was
+conceived by Jenny June.
+
+
+
+
+From Mrs. Croly's Letter to Mrs. Burns, Relative to the Proposed
+Industrial School for Girls
+
+
+ 222 WEST 23RD STREET,
+ Feb. 28, 1900.
+
+My dear Mrs. Burns:
+
+There is only one point that I would have emphasized, and that I do
+not find included in your otherwise excellent statement. It is the
+moral influence of a training for self-support. Ignorance and idleness
+lead to vice and crime; and a Technical Training School would do more
+to remedy the Social Evil and raise the standard of morals than all
+other influences combined. The fact that work is the great purifier is
+what I wish could have been embodied in the plan presented.
+
+ Yours with real regard.
+ J.C.C.
+
+
+
+
+From Izora Chandler
+
+
+How can one picture all that this one woman was to the hundreds of
+other women who loved her: the gentle demeanor, the thoughtful
+conversation, the high thinking evidenced not less in her choice of
+subject than in the fitness of word and phrase which gave a
+distinctive charm to all her utterances, whether public or private?
+
+When first meeting Mrs. Croly one could hardly believe that so
+gentle-voiced, slight a creature could have accomplished the
+pioneering accredited to her in the enlargement of the mental life of
+women. Drawn to her at the first greeting one was soon convinced of
+the hidden forcefulness of her nature which could be likened to the
+resistless, unyielding under-current, rather than to the wave which
+visibly and noisily assails the shore.
+
+Present or absent, the thought of her was magnetic. While charming the
+heart she convinced the mind with argument. Her power did not absorb
+and minify; it enlarged, enlivened, and became a source of
+inspiration. After talking with her, impossibilities became possible
+to the timid, the diffident were encouraged to dare, and those who
+were strong at coming went away valorous. Her dignity and ready
+decision when presiding over a public assembly were noteworthy. She
+became a stateswoman in whatever concerned her sex; an earnest soul
+pleading for love among co-workers, and for more and yet more of love,
+for only in that atmosphere can the heart of woman come into its
+rightful sovereignty, urging that slights be forgotten, aggressions
+overlooked, and that the fair mantle of love be spread tenderly over
+all.
+
+An earnest devotee of the best and highest in art, she seemed to have
+an insatiable desire after the beautiful; and was never more serene
+and lucid of mind than when considering this scheme, and encouraging
+with rich appreciation those who were in the field.
+
+Her store of knowledge was phenomenal. She was a constant learner, an
+unwearied seeker after wisdom. When those who had given special study
+to any subject addressed the house over which she presided, they
+received her most flattering attention, and in the brief afterword of
+the chairman she indicated intimate knowledge of the matter in hand,
+often giving comprehensive data and suggesting fresh lines for
+consideration. No wonder that the finest minds were attracted to her;
+that thinkers desired her acceptance of their thoughts; that active
+workers sought her coöperation and leadership. Quiet and forceful;
+competent as a critic, but ready with encouragement; simple in manner,
+easily approached; patient with those who appealed to her, seeking
+rather than waiting to be sought; abundantly appreciative of others,
+her memory becomes an abiding impulse towards high and generous
+thought, towards simple, worthy living.
+
+
+
+
+From Janie C.P. Jones
+
+
+Before my friend's last trip to England I went to bid her good-bye,
+and among her parting words were the following which I never can
+forget:
+
+"I dislike going so far from my friends. To me they are the most
+precious things on earth, the greatest gift the world can bestow; to
+me they have been like flowers all along my path, and their sweet odor
+of influence has made me better every day. I cannot prize them too
+highly, for all I am I owe to them."
+
+To have known one who so highly appreciated the value of friendship,
+who knew the true meaning of the word "friend," and who possessed the
+rare gift of knowing how to retain friends, was an inspiration, and an
+influence which added to the value of life. I think of her now as
+having "gone into her garden to gather lilies for her Beloved."
+
+
+
+
+From Catherine Weed Barnes Ward
+
+
+My task is at once sad and pleasant: sad, because I speak of a dearly
+loved and lost friend; pleasant, because I am asked to bear my
+testimony as to her worth.
+
+Mrs. Croly's friendship and unselfish kindness began with my entrance
+over twenty years ago into club life, and from then onward she was
+continually urging and helping me towards increased intellectual
+effort. Through her active inspiration I joined Sorosis, the Woman's
+Press Club of New York, and other American organizations, as well as
+the Society of American Women in London, the Women Journalists of
+London, and various English organizations, besides taking part in the
+International Congress of Women held in London three or four years
+ago.
+
+Mrs. Croly lived constantly in two generations, her own and the next
+one; her wonderful mental vitality setting the paces of many pulses,
+besides those which stirred her own brain. I know much of the actual
+labor she accomplished for her sex, both here and in England, but even
+nobler than that was the high ideal she set them in her own life and
+the inspiration of her personality to younger women.
+
+To those she called special friends her loyalty was unswerving, true
+as the needle to the pole, and as one blest with such friendship I
+feel the influence of her beautiful, unselfish living will be ever
+with me, though something has gone out of my life, never to be
+replaced. Her daughter, Mrs. Vida Croly Sidney, worthily carries on
+the traditions and work of her noble mother, and her friends feel that
+in her there is a living tie between the untiring spirit laboring now,
+we may well believe, in another existence and the work so loved by
+that spirit while on earth.
+
+A true heart, a generous nature, a broad mind, and keen mental acumen
+are qualities that do not die with their possessor; they bless the
+world to which she has gone and that she left behind.
+
+We can best honor her memory by carrying on her work and by leaving
+the world better and happier for our having lived in it.
+
+
+
+
+From a Letter to the Memorial Committee from Sara J. Lippincott (Grace
+Greenwood)
+
+
+I feel Mrs. Croly's death very deeply. The sacred holiday season,
+dedicated from time immemorial to household joy and mirth, and calling
+for Christian gratitude and hope, was already saddened by
+bereavements, and her death--absolutely unlooked for by me--made it
+melancholy and mournful.
+
+"She should have died hereafter." I did not dream when I saw her last
+that she was to solve the great mystery before me. Though feeble,
+there seemed so much of the old energetic, enthusiastic self about
+her; and I parted from her hoping to see her soon in renewed health
+and strength.
+
+She always had a peculiar fascination for me: her soft, sweet voice;
+her strong though quiet will; her unfailing faith in all things good;
+her loyalty to her sex. I think her pass-word to the realm of rest and
+reward must have been, "I loved my fellow-woman."
+
+ 35 Lockwood Avenue, New Rochelle,
+ January 6, 1902.
+
+
+
+
+From a Letter to the Memorial Committee from Jennie de la M. Lozier
+
+
+Mrs. Croly was a woman of uncommon intuition and sympathy. She took
+wide and far-reaching views of woman's possible development and
+usefulness. She believed in organization as a factor in this
+development, and spared no effort to form and maintain, even at
+personal sacrifice, the woman's club or federation. She was always
+generous and warm-hearted, of boundless hospitality, never more
+genially herself than when her friends gathered about her in her
+attractive home and she could make them happy. I shall always recall
+with pleasure the rare moments when she talked with me of her real
+life, her hopes and her plans. I believe that she constantly exerted a
+noble influence, and that she stood for all that makes for woman's
+unselfish helpfulness, courage and independence.
+
+New York, February 10, 1902.
+
+
+
+
+From Genie H. Rosenfeld
+
+
+In the early days of the Woman's Press Club, when it was divided upon
+the question of a suitable meeting place, and undisciplined members
+were resigning in appreciable numbers, Mrs. Croly surprised me one day
+by declaring that the club had never been stronger than it was at that
+hour.
+
+"Why, Mrs. Croly!" I exclaimed, "we have only a handful of women
+left."
+
+"My dear," she said, "we have lopped off all our dead wood. The
+branches that remain may be few, but they are vigorous, and from them
+will spring up a tree that will be a glory to us."
+
+This little saying of Mrs. Croly's has come back to me and been of use
+many times, and it has often enabled me to understand the benefit of
+lopping off dead wood and starting anew.
+
+
+
+
+Contributed to the New York _Tribune_ by S. A. Lattimore
+
+
+The sad announcement of the death of Mrs. Jane Cunningham Croly
+recalls a delightful incident of several summers ago when I had the
+pleasure of meeting her at Long Branch.
+
+In the course of a most interesting conversation I ventured to ask her
+to give me the origin of her well-known _nom-de-plume_ of "Jenny
+June." In her bright, sympathetic way, which all who knew her can
+describe, she said:
+
+"Yes, I will tell you. In my early girlhood I knew a young clergyman
+who was in the habit of occasionally visiting our house. One day he
+came to bid us good-bye, saying that he was going to a Western city to
+reside. As he bid me goodbye he gave me a little book. It was a volume
+of B. F. Taylor's poems, called 'January and June.' The little book
+opened of itself at a page containing verses entitled 'The Beautiful
+River.' An introductory paragraph read thus: 'On such a night, in such
+a June, who has not sat side by side with somebody for all the world
+like Jenny June? Maybe it was years ago, but it was some time. Maybe
+you had quite forgotten it, but you will be the better for
+remembering. Maybe she has gone on before where it is June all the
+year, and never January at all,--that God forbid. There it was, and
+then it was, and thus it was.' This stanza was marked in pencil:
+
+ 'Jenny June,' then I said, 'let us linger no more
+ On the banks of the beautiful river;
+ Let the boat be unmoored, and muffled the oar,
+ And we'll steal into heaven together.
+ If the angel on duty our coming descries
+ You have nothing to do but throw off the disguise
+ That you wore when you wandered with me;
+ And the sentry will say: "Welcome back to the skies,
+ We long have been waiting for thee!"'
+
+On the margin was written, 'You are the Juniest Jenny I know.'
+
+"The years of my girlhood passed on, and with their passing faded away
+all memory of the young minister. Later there came to me, as I suppose
+there comes to every young girl, the impulse to write, and when some
+early efforts of mine were judged worthy to be published, I was
+confronted for the first time with the question of a signature.
+Shrinking from seeing my own name in print, by some witchery of memory
+the words 'Jenny June' suddenly occurred to me, and that, as you know,
+has been my name ever since."
+
+After a little pause Mrs. Croly said: "Now that I have answered your
+question I must tell you something else. Thirty years after I had
+assumed my _nom-de-plume_ a gray-haired stranger called at my house
+one day and asked to see me. The name he gave recalled no one I had
+ever known, and in meeting there was no recognition on either side.
+But he proceeded in a straightforward way to explain the object of his
+visit: 'For the last thirty years,' he said, 'since my removal from
+this city, I have lived in the West; naturally, I have been a constant
+reader of Eastern papers, and particularly have I read every article I
+have ever seen bearing the signature of "Jenny June." I have made many
+efforts, but always without success, to ascertain who she was, and
+whether the name was real or fictitious. Somehow I have never
+forgotten the little girl I knew before I went West, and to whom I
+gave a little volume of poems with something written on a page that
+contained a stanza that I greatly admired about "Jenny June." I have
+wondered if she had become the famous writer, and upon my return to my
+native city, after so long an absence, I have sought you simply to ask
+if you are that little girl.'"
+
+
+
+
+The Fairies' Gifts
+
+_By Ellen M. Staples_
+
+
+ To an English home one bright Yuletide
+ While Christmas bells rang loud and wide
+
+ Came a babe with the gentle eyes of a dove
+ And a face as fair as a thought of love.
+
+ "Now, God be thanked," the old nurse cried,
+ "That the child is born at Christmas-tide;
+
+ "For the blessed sake of Mary's Son
+ God's benison falls on lives begun
+
+ "When Christmas music fills the air
+ And men are joyful everywhere.
+
+ "And as to Him came Wise Men three
+ Offering gifts on bended knee
+
+ "So to one born at the Holy Time
+ On land or sea, in every clime,
+
+ "Come three Good Fairies, and each one bears
+ A gift to brighten the coming years."
+
+ The pallid mother gently smiled
+ And looked upon her tender child.
+
+ "Good nurse, the legend is full sweet;
+ And I lay my babe at His dear feet
+
+ "Whose human Sonhood is aware
+ Of the painful bliss that mothers bear.
+
+ "I can well believe that heaven may
+ Send gifts to the child of Christmas Day."
+
+ Tired by her flight from Paradise
+ The baby shut her wondering eyes,
+
+ Nor knew that 'round the cradle stood,
+ To bless the babe, three Fairies good.
+
+ The First bent over the cradle head;
+ "These are my gifts to her," she said:
+
+ "A sunny nature, a voice of song,
+ And may faithful friends uncounted throng!"
+
+ The Second murmured in accents low:
+ "The path will be steep and rough, I know,
+
+ "So I give her a heart that is brave and strong,
+ That will patiently work, though the way be long;
+
+ "And though life may fill them with toil and care
+ Her hands shall weaker ones' burdens share."
+
+ Then stood the Third for a moment's space
+ To thoughtfully gaze on the baby face,
+
+ And over her own a radiance came
+ As she softly said: "My gift is a name.
+
+ "Though born while the earth lies spread with
+ snow
+ The babe is a summer-child, and so
+
+ "The sunny nature, the voice of song,
+ The helpful hands, true heart and strong
+
+ "With Nature's self should be in tune,
+ Sweet child, I name thee Jenny June."
+
+
+
+
+From Margaret Ravenhill
+
+
+Jane Cunningham Croly left upon the last century an ineffaceable
+record. For industrious and successful work in journalism she probably
+had no peer. In a speech before the Woman's Press Club not long since,
+she said: "When a woman has written enough to fill a room, she feels
+like burning it instead of preserving it in scrap-books." Probably no
+woman of her day and generation has done more or better work than our
+"Jenny June." No woman had more diversity of gifts; she was equally at
+home in the editorial chair, or the reportorial office; as a speaker
+she excelled. In the old days we who knew her best would sometimes
+notice a hesitancy of speech that would occasionally cloud a brilliant
+idea; but if she hesitated she was never lost, and the idea was worth
+waiting for. She was always clear, logical, forceful in expression,
+and exhaustive in argument. Thoroughness seems the word to express the
+character of Mrs. Croly. She was quick to catch the meaning of the
+uttered thoughts of others, keen in analysis, and executive in all
+work. Witness the many organizations which she helped originate. Her
+long years of rule as president of Sorosis were of inestimable value
+to that "mother of women's clubs." Her great "History of the Club
+Movement" should be in the hands of every woman in the land.
+
+Of Mrs. Croly's personality it is a pleasure to speak. Every woman who
+enjoyed the privilege of her friendship felt the magnetism and charm
+of a rare nature; while, with all her force and power, there was a
+childishness about her that impressed one with the idea that the
+naïveté and innocence of childhood had never been wholly lost in the
+woman. I think it was in some measure owing to the fact that she was
+so near-sighted that there was a kind of appealing hesitancy about her
+movements that impelled you to her aid.
+
+Mrs. Croly's home was one of refinement and good taste in every
+detail, and there she was at her best. Always a charming hostess, she
+made every guest feel that he or she was the one most eagerly
+expected; there were the hearty greeting, the few low words of
+welcome, the sunny smile that transformed her face into positive
+beauty. Her Sunday evenings at home came nearer in character to the
+French salon than any others in New York. There were the most
+delightful people to be met: the gifted minds of our own land and
+Europe were among her guests. But Mrs. Croly's proudest boast was that
+she was a woman's woman.
+
+
+
+
+From T. C. Evans, in the New York _Times_
+
+
+When I joined the _World_ staff of writers, in 1860, a few weeks after
+the foundation of that journal, I found Jenny June already there. She
+did not often appear in the office in person, the lady auxiliary in
+journalism not being so familiar a figure as it now is, and she had
+not yet adopted her pretty _nom-de-plume,_ but her husband, David G.
+Croly, held an official post on the staff as city editor, and her
+contributions, which were invariably well written and interesting,
+appeared from the first in the _World_ columns, and as the years went
+on while she and Mr. Croly remained associated with it, with
+increasing frequency. They were written by a woman mainly for women,
+and the maids and matrons of her country over all its area from ocean
+to ocean and from "lands of sun to lands of snow" have never been
+addressed by one of their sex whom they came to know better or to hold
+in higher esteem. Her work assumed no pretentious or high importance,
+but was sweet and wholesome, sensible, and a mirror of the nature out
+of which it proceeded. The name Jenny June, which she adopted a few
+years later, became a beloved household word throughout the land,
+perhaps more widely known than that of any lady journalist who has
+ever wrought in it.
+
+Mrs. Croly's social dispositions and her aptitude for gathering
+interesting people around her were gracious endowments of nature's
+bestowal, as strongly marked in her youth as in her maturer years,
+when she gradually came to have a wider stage on which to display
+them. Her pretty little drawing-rooms, somewhere on the west side near
+Grove Street, are well remembered by me, and first and last I met in
+them a goodly number of people well worthy to be remembered, some with
+their trophies of success yet to win, but their merit divined by their
+clever hostess, perhaps before it had obtained any full recognition
+elsewhere. Many also came who had won their spurs and epaulets and
+shone bravely in the bright glitter of both. In her little
+unpretending salon of that day might be met the brilliant young Edmund
+Clarence Stedman, in the morning glow of his poetic fame; Bayard
+Taylor, risen into the mid-forenoon of his fame, with his Orient
+lyrics published and his translation of "Faust" well begun; perhaps
+Phoebe and Alice Cary, though on this point I cannot be certain, and
+many another of note and distinction in that time, her hospitality
+taking in all arts, and all the presentable workers in them, so that
+poets, painters, sculptors, singers, actors were equally welcome, as
+were those who brought to her only their bright young countenances
+and winning smiles. Her later drawing-rooms, when she had removed up
+town, nearer to the Mayfair of society, became widely celebrated, and
+she founded something perhaps as near to a salon modeled after the
+traditional Parisian standards as any that America has known.
+
+Mrs. Croly is recognized as the chief among the founders of Sorosis,
+the most celebrated woman's club in the world, and parent of the
+innumerable organizations of like sect which have sprung up since
+their renowned progenitor became with fewer vicissitudes and trials
+than might have been anticipated firmly planted on its feet and
+attested its self-supporting and self-reliant character. No social
+development of the modern period is more striking than the swift
+multiplication of women's clubs, not in this country alone, but in
+others, and they have shown a power of beneficent work most
+advantageous to the community at large, which even the most sanguine
+among their promoters could not have anticipated. They have also shown
+that women can legislate and administrate and rise to the point of
+order and lay things on the table in a manner as parliamentary and
+self-restrained as men. For such testimony the world should be
+thankful, as it never got anything of the kind before. Among the
+founders of this now most impressive group of social organizations no
+name stands out more brightly and conspicuously than that of Jane
+Cunningham Croly.
+
+Her recent death, though a surprise and shock to her innumerable
+friends, came when she had passed her seventy-second birthday, and it
+cannot therefore be said that she passed away with her work
+uncompleted. It was fully and most worthily performed, and was the
+fruit of a systematic diligence never remitted, and in which few of
+her sex in any period could have exceeded her. Her memory is fragrant
+as the month from which she took her _nom-de-plume_, and will at least
+be cherished by those whom her gentle discourse, continued for more
+than a generation, has entertained and instructed.
+
+
+
+
+From St. Clair McKelway, in the Brooklyn _Eagle_
+
+
+The death of Jane Cunningham Croly, noticed in Tuesday's _Eagle_,
+involves the loss of a woman of leadership who put a good deal of help
+into others' lives. Born in 1829, she began at seventeen to write for
+newspapers. Her topics were, for a wonder, practical, the young too
+generally beginning with abstract, academical or recondite subjects.
+Hers were "fashions" in dress, fads in food, fancies and foibles in
+decoration etc. From them she advanced to more philosophical or
+general fields, but on all she wrote was the stamp of applicability to
+contemporaneous life.
+
+In the middle, later, and more genial period of her life she did more
+talking than writing. And her talking was always earnest, direct,
+sincere, with a gleam of hope and a note of wisdom in it--the union of
+experience and reflection. Had it been reported it would have made for
+her a literary name: but she was content, or constrained, to limit her
+work to the platform, or to the circle of existence affected by it.
+
+As a clubwoman Mrs. Croly achieved the eminence almost of a pioneer.
+It can be shown that a club or two of women had a titular beginning
+before "Sorosis," but that was the original society started by her on
+the theory that there were opportunities and conditions in club life,
+on an educational or literary basis, of which women could well avail
+themselves. Mrs. Croly sympathized with the more earnest purposes
+entering into her idea, and was in little related to any sensational,
+spectacular, or faddish features that may here or there become
+attached to it. She was a believer in seriousness, an exemplar of
+industry, a devotee to system, and a very remarkably punctual,
+effective and straightforward writer. Her flight was never very high,
+but it was always progressive, and her regulation of her pen by the
+precise rules that govern presswork was entitled to distinct praise.
+She could always be trusted to keep within her topic and herself
+behind it, and she understood the art of putting things to her public
+in a way to discover to them their own thoughts as well as to denote
+her own.
+
+To David G. Croly, her husband, long a newspaper man of admitted power
+and executive force, Mrs. Croly was a constant help, as he too was to
+her. From him she learned not a little of her topical discernment and
+technical knack. He was never afraid of ability in whomever found, and
+he rejoiced that the sex of his wife, and the novel fact that she was
+the first woman in America to write daily for publication, gave to her
+and her subjects a vogue he and his could not command in a world of
+more and mainly personal work. She survived him twelve years. Their
+union was not made any less congenial by marked dissimilarity of
+convictions on cardinal subjects.
+
+Mrs. Croly was the recipient of many evidences of the honor and
+affection in which her own sex held her, and beyond doubt the
+organizations of which she was the inspiring force will pay to her
+memory the tributes her disinterestedness and abilities deserved,
+exercised as she always was for so long with projects nearly related
+to the better equipment of effective womanhood for the conditions and
+conduct of life. Her death at seventy-two, after not a little
+suffering and not a few sorrows, was not unexpected, though it will be
+sincerely and widely regretted. In her last years she was happily made
+aware of the love and tenderness towards her which she had richly
+earned by service, counsel, and example to the lives of others.
+
+
+
+
+From Laura Sedgwick Collins
+
+
+ Dear Friend, dear Helper, passed from earth
+ To heaven, in earthly grace, I here
+ Would give to thee homage sincere
+ And memory sweet. Thy ever kindly word
+ Has oft the sad heart warmed,
+ The drooped head raised, and thy sustaining hand
+ A fainting purpose thrilled
+ To better courage, firmer aim.
+
+ In that far realm where spirits meet
+ And greet with message mystic, there
+ Thou must, in sweet commune
+ Receive reward for earthly deeds.
+ Thy heart ne'er knew the unkind throb,
+ Was ever gentle, firm and true;
+ Whate'er the cause, if once espoused
+ Thou to thy watchword held thyself.
+
+ Throughout our land, in city, town,
+ Thy name beloved remains alive;
+ Alive in hearts, alive in minds,--
+ For thou hadst heart and brain as well
+ To touch the soul and win the thought.
+ Thy work for woman stands unspoiled;
+ Untouched by vanity or marred by pride,
+ Unsullied by a thought of self,
+
+ A generous impulse toward thy sex--
+ A woman's word for woman's need.
+ And so thy name in fragrance fine
+ Bespeaks again returning June,--
+ The spring of promise, budding hope!
+ The cypress changes to the rose,--
+ The rose of dawn, the rose of heaven;
+ And both are thine and thine the crown
+ All jewelled o'er with thy good deeds--
+ Deeds of mercy, deeds of love,
+ Are with us still though thou art gone!
+
+
+
+From Mary Coffin Johnson
+
+
+Many years before I personally knew Mrs. Croly she was at the height
+of her useful public life; the imprint of her hand and mind in
+contemporary literature was an evident fact, and she had become a
+conspicuous figure in the ranks of well-known women. It is therefore
+my privilege to speak of her last few years, when the golden light of
+achievement gilded the eventide of her eventful life.
+
+Having had the peculiar advantage of sitting beside her for six years
+as an officer of the Woman's Press Club I am thoroughly aware of her
+sincerity, and of the singleness of heart which, actuated her motives
+in behalf of women. She believed that every united effort that raises
+the personal standard of thought and purpose is of the utmost
+importance. It was her earnest desire that women should live lofty and
+useful lives. She frequently laid stress upon this manner of life, and
+at such times her temperament seemed charged with sympathetic interest
+in young women journalists. "Unity in Diversity," the motto adopted by
+the General Federation of Women's Clubs, is a fitting expression of
+the broad conceptions she brought into club life; indeed, her success
+in bringing women of unequal social position and essentially different
+callings, into harmonious relationship and unity of purpose was
+markedly characteristic.
+
+During her last years women's clubs became more than ever of absorbing
+interest to her, claiming the complete devotion of her broad mind. The
+untiring devotion she had already given to this part of her life's
+activities had established her fame, and this fame will ever be
+exceptionable, for her work can never be duplicated.
+
+The growing spirit of helpfulness and friendliness which inspires
+women's organizations, the manifold opportunities of various kinds
+which they afford, and the excellent results which follow could, she
+thought, scarcely be estimated. "Club life for women," she would say,
+"requires no justification. When we enter our club rooms we leave
+behind us much of the rubbish of the world. The richest, fullest
+development of life flows through the better social relations, and
+from times of old has been uplifting." "It is not merely that we need
+one another," she would declare, "but that the sense of kinship is
+healthful; it inspires the larger love, and creates a stronger
+relationship. It seems to be God's method of helping humankind to the
+higher and more perfect life."
+
+On various occasions, when only members of the dub were present, she
+would lay aside the formality of the presiding member, and, assuming
+the familiar manner of addressing us, pour forth her lofty ideals for
+women, unconsciously testifying that the secret spring of her actions
+was her love for her own sex. Though the words were always spoken with
+gentle calmness, and in a tone of womanly softness, something in her
+passionate sincerity would, like the effect of a magnet, attract every
+listener, and a spell of silence would fall upon us. In all that she
+said we discerned the Divine Principle.
+
+There were those who, from their own viewpoints, carped at what they
+heard and saw, but a person even of Mrs. Croly's temperament and
+courage, placed amid the recurring action and reaction of a life of
+much publicity, cannot, of course, please every one. It would be
+surprising if in her long career she had not manifested human
+imperfections, and had not sometimes made mistakes; she would have
+been more than human had she not.
+
+It was no easy task for her to stem the tide of difficulties and
+oppositions from without, for from first to last of her diligent life
+she had many trials to endure. Both sunbeam and shadow crossed her
+pathway; but her errors were not uncommon to humankind; moreover, she
+was very patient under misconception. "It is always fair," said Henry
+Ward Beecher, "to credit a man at his best,--let his enemies tell of
+his worst." Another writer remarks: "To get a true idea of any
+character we most seize upon its higher forming element, that to which
+it naturally tends."
+
+Hers was far from an impulsive nature, yet there were times when Mrs.
+Croly suddenly revealed in a marked way her true, deep instincts.
+While on a visit to this country on one occasion, Madame Antoinette
+Sterling, a concert singer in England, was a guest of the Woman's
+Press Club. She was asked to sing for us, and responded with "The Lost
+Chord." In answer to an encore she sang a ballad of her own
+composition, called "The Sheepfold." Mrs. Croly was visibly affected
+by the words; seldom had she ever manifested more feeling. When the
+song was ended she quickly rose, and in a tremulous voice exclaimed:
+"Does not this say to us that if even _one_ were outside, the whole
+strength of the universe would be brought to bear upon it, to bring it
+into the fold!"
+
+In 1897 Mrs. Croly was honored by the General Federation of Women's
+Clubs by the appointment to write the "History of the Woman's Club
+Movement in America," an undertaking that required exceptionable
+ability. The vast amount of mental energy and wearing labor she put
+into this work, added to the past years of constant application to
+literary and other interests, told seriously upon her health. Her
+nervous system had become exceedingly susceptible, and it was evident
+that her good constitution was beginning to break down.
+
+However, the indomitable energy she possessed, and her trained
+capacity for work enabled her to continue until the large volume was
+finished and given to the public.
+
+Early in June, 1898, Mrs. Croly had a serious fall in which she
+fractured her hip, and she was confined to her room for many weeks.
+Though she possessed unusual power of endurance, her lessening
+strength could no longer bear the strain upon the delicate frame, and
+her rallying power was perceptibly diminished. As the fracture slowly
+healed she but feebly met the physical exertion necessary to go about
+on crutches. Even then it was impossible for her to take life
+serenely; she was restlessly eager to be up and doing. When she could
+be removed with safety, which was not until the third of September,
+she went abroad with her daughter, Mrs. Vida Croly Sidney, who had
+come over from England for her, and she spent a year in London and the
+vicinity. In August, 1899, they were in Switzerland, and Mrs. Croly
+took the baths at Schinznach-les-Bains. She returned to America the
+following September, and remained in New York through the winter of
+1899-1900. The change agreed with, her, but her health cannot be said
+to have improved, and she was still very infirm. Her natural affection
+and interest in the Woman's Press Club led her to attend its meetings,
+whenever she was able, going there in the carriage sent for her. On
+the 12th of May she was present at a club meeting, and gave us an
+informal talk, which proved to be her parting address, though at the
+time we knew it not. That day her words were full of significance. She
+expressed herself with fervor, chiefly on the importance of clubwomen
+bearing a large measure of love and good-will towards one another, and
+of the cultivation of the tie of divine charity. With earnestness she
+urged again that we should stand "hand to hand to exercise patience in
+judgment, and to be slow in criticism." "It is God-like," she said,
+"to forgive. Remember," she continued, "that all that is good in this
+life emanates from love; that it is the very best thing that this life
+affords, and that there is nothing on earth that can take the place of
+its ministry. Love has no limitations, and if you give the best talent
+you possess to your club it will give it back to you. Club life is
+often misunderstood, it is true,--but," she slowly added, "there is
+nothing in this world _entirely_ perfect." She spoke touchingly of the
+personal sense of loneliness she felt; that although she was a woman
+among many women she lived many a lonely hour; and she wished it well
+understood that the love and friendship of clubwomen was to her the
+most precious thing in her life. In closing she emphasized the counsel
+she had given, to be "United and conciliatory in our relations with
+each other; to be just; to suspend judgment; and to wait long and
+trust God who knows all. He," she declared, "will not misunderstand
+you."
+
+At the end of May she returned to England. Though nature had not
+become victorious over her feebleness, and she was still almost
+helpless from the effect of the accident of 1898, she heroically
+overcame these physical conditions as far as she was able. Something
+continually impelled her onward. She attended the International
+Congress of Women held during the Paris Exposition of that year, and
+then went on to Ober-Ammergau to the Passion Play, accompanied by Mrs.
+Sidney; and then returned to England, where she stayed until the 27th
+of July, 1901, when she again sailed for New York, business matters
+requiring her presence in this country.
+
+On her arrival in August from the second visit abroad, the grave facts
+that her health was not established, and that her time here was not to
+be long, were soon evident to her friends. The struggle of nature not
+only had begun, the shadow was even now sweeping near. She appeared at
+the November business meeting of the Woman's Press Club, accompanied
+by an attendant, and took the chair, but she was so much exhausted by
+the effort that her nurse easily persuaded her to come away. During
+the following four weeks her prostration and decline were steady.
+
+As the final day of her human infirmity approached, she expressed to
+the close friend who sat beside her a timid shrinking, common to all
+human nature, from the passage out of this life. It may be counted a
+special mercy that, as it afterwards proved, she need not have had any
+disquietude concerning the inevitable moment, for a few hours before
+the closing scene she fell into a state of coma, and passed beyond so
+quietly and tranquilly that she did not herself know when the moment
+came. She entered the world of infinite repose in the forenoon of
+December 23, 1901.
+
+The funeral service was held in the Church of the Transfiguration,
+Mrs. Croly's friends gathering from far and near to pay their last
+tributes of love and regard. The women's clubs and societies of
+Manhattan, Brooklyn, and the suburbs, were represented in large
+numbers, and every seat in the church was filled.
+
+Mrs. Croly lies at rest beside her husband, David G. Croly, in the
+beautiful cemetery near Lakewood, New Jersey.
+
+"Yon's her step ... an' she's carryin' a licht in her hand; a see it
+through the door."
+
+
+
+
+From Caroline M. Morse
+
+
+As Chairman of the Memorial Committee it is my privilege to add my
+memories of Mrs. Croly to those which have preceded. Mine are not of
+her club interests, nor of her identification with the woman's club
+movement. So much has been written, and so well, regarding these
+public phases of her life that it would seem almost officious for me
+to add a stone to the already piled up cairn; I write rather of my
+friend as my family knew her in her home, surrounded by husband and
+children.
+
+It was in 1880 that we first knew Mr. and Mrs. Croly, and the
+acquaintance soon became an intimacy that lasted for twenty-three
+years. They were living in their own house in Seventy-first street, an
+artistically furnished house, an ideal home full of a sweet
+domesticity.
+
+Intimate as we were it was frequently our privilege to gather with the
+family at their Sunday evening supper, when Mrs. Croly was as
+completely the "house-mother" fulfilling the homely duties of the
+table, as, an hour later, she was the gracious, though more formal
+hostess receiving in her drawing-room the usual Sunday night throng of
+old friends and the strangers of distinction who, chancing to be in
+town, were fortunate enough to have letters of introduction to her. I
+see her slight figure moving from group to group, and the low English
+voice and sweet smile with which she encouraged her visitors to speak
+of themselves, and, if they were foreigners, of their missions to this
+country. A characteristic act of hers was to carry around a little
+silver tray on which there might be several glasses of a dainty punch,
+the base of which was a light, non-alcoholic wine. This she offered to
+friends whom she desired particularly to honor, and the act had all
+the significance of the Russian custom of breaking bread and eating
+salt with the host. These Sunday evenings at home, which were a
+feature of the society in which she moved, were continued until a
+short time before her death, or until she was incapacitated by
+illness.
+
+My friend had none of the usual failings of the traditionary
+"emancipated woman"; she would sit down to her basket on an afternoon
+and take up a bit of household sewing with the same spirit and
+aptitude that had guided her in the forenoon in the writing of an
+editorial article or the preparation of a paper to be read before a
+club.
+
+I recall with especial joy the long walks we used to take together.
+After a day of wearisome work, it was one of her great delights to
+leave the piled-up desk and find herself in the street, her arm linked
+in mine. At such times much of her talk was ravishing speculation upon
+things seen and unseen. It was as if, released for the moment from
+the pressure of work, her mind sprang into a world removed from the
+practical and immediate, to revel in contemplation of the divine. Yet
+she was no visionary, and the world of sight held her cheerful
+allegiance. Hers was never "the dyer's hand subdued to what it works
+in," and this is the more remarkable since she never relinquished
+work, even for our beloved walks, without a mild protest at laying
+aside her pen. One afternoon I called, intending to take her out for
+one of our "play-hours," but I failed to find her in her apartment.
+Next morning the post brought me this note:
+
+ "MY DEAR FRIEND:
+
+ "I was so glad to get your card, and so sorry to miss you.
+ It was just that hour out-of-doors with you that I was
+ longing for. I have been so long away, and since my return
+ have been so busy with much detail of correspondence that in
+ quantity is always more or less depressing, that I needed a
+ sight of you to tone me up and restore my standard. I have
+ also taken advantage of enforced quiet to brace up for an
+ heroic two weeks of dentistry, and have therefore been in
+ absolute retirement and upon baby diet of the most innocuous
+ description...
+
+ "I am afraid this recapitulation will take away all desire
+ to repeat your effort in my direction. But I trust that
+ this may find you in a missionary humor, and that you will
+ see that I need 'looking after'--a far stronger motive with
+ most women than friendship, isn't it? Anyway, come again
+ soon, won't you? Afternoon is our gadding time, you know.
+
+ "Really and lovingly your friend.
+
+ "P.S.--This note will show that I truly have not command of
+ all my faculties and need a human tonic."
+
+All out-of-doors was dear to her. Trees were to her as men--rooted,
+and she often naively talked to them as if to friends while we
+strolled in the twilight. Her love of nature even seemed to affect her
+choice of diet, for she preferred simply prepared dishes and the
+natural foods. This was doubtless due in part to her unmixed Old World
+nationality and to her early surroundings in rural England: as she was
+in girlhood, so, in spite of the complex life of this distracting New
+World, she remained to the last.
+
+My friend dwelt lovingly upon anniversaries; the true spirit of
+Christmas entered her heart at every Yuletide season, and her gifts
+showed generous care in selection and in the dainty wrappings in which
+they were sent to us. She delighted in the Christmas and Thanksgiving
+dinners, but St. Valentine's was the dearest, as it was the
+anniversary of her marriage. This the Woman's Press Club of New York
+has always observed as the date of its annual dinner.
+
+She had a keen sense of humor, yet never did she forget herself either
+in posing or pranks, for hers was the unerring sense of the fitness of
+things. An instance of her ready wit comes to me: Soon after her
+return from her last visit to England she came to us to stay for a few
+days. It was in September, three months before her death. On Sunday
+evening several friends dropped in, and from general conversation we
+drifted into singing some of the old songs. Now and then she would add
+her own low tones to our untrained vocalizing, crooning or
+cantillating the tune as if she were musing aloud. We had been singing
+for a full hour, she, with crutch near at hand, sitting apart from us
+at the open window. We had just sung one of her favorites, the old
+ballad "Far Away," and were beginning another with all the energy of
+amateurs when it occurred to me that Mrs. Croly might be tired and
+ready to go to her room for the night. Bending over I whispered,
+"Come, dear, you must be weary of all this." She turned slowly in her
+chair, and looking up into my face, smiling whimsically, said: "Oh,
+no, not yet! I am enjoying the music just as if it were good!"
+
+I have already intimated that the home life of the family was happy.
+There existed between husband and wife a genuine congeniality in
+tastes and pursuits; yet between any two minds when both are strong
+and original there will generally be a divergence; and it has always
+seemed to me that the origin of Sorosis might be traced by the
+psychological analyst to some such divergence between Mrs. Croly's
+lines of intellectual development and those of her equally gifted
+husband, David G. Croly. The power of initiative was strong in each of
+these two, and in each it produced excellent though differing results.
+
+It is cause for regret that Mrs. Croly did not write more in her
+latter years, when her native wisdom had ripened in the soil of a rich
+experience.
+
+Her philosophy was the fruit of a rightly-lived, useful life, and even
+after the distressing accident which lamed her, her enthusiasm never
+waned, but rather seemed intensified and glorified. Seldom do the
+heart and brain work together as did hers. She will ever stand to
+those who knew her as a fine specimen of a rare type. She had
+convictions, and she had the courage to uphold them. She hated shams
+and hypocrisy with the vigor of Carlyle. The bravery of her public
+life was matched by the beauty of her private life. Good and Truth
+were her watchwords. "Good has faculty," says Swedenborg, "but not
+determinate except by truth. Determinate faculty is actual power." In
+the dear friend whom we here commemorate, faculty was determinate.
+
+Brave and honest pleader for woman; true, tender, sincere friend, you
+fought the good fight well; the world is better for your work, and
+among your saddest survivors are those whom you smote with a deserved
+pen-stroke, or with spoken words, who have long since given you
+grateful thanks.
+
+ C.M.M.
+
+
+
+
+L'Envoi
+
+
+ She cut a path through tangled underwood
+ Of old traditions out to broader ways.
+ She lived to hear her work called brave and good,
+ But oh! the thorns, before the crown of bays.
+ The world gives lashes to its pioneers
+ Until the goal is reached--then deafening cheers.
+
+ELLA WHEELER WILCOX.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Memories of Jane Cunningham Croly,
+"Jenny June", by Various
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK JANE CUNNINGHAM ***
+
+***** This file should be named 12099-8.txt or 12099-8.zip *****
+This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
+ https://www.gutenberg.org/1/2/0/9/12099/
+
+Produced by Ari J Joki and PG Distributed Proofreaders
+
+Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions
+will be renamed.
+
+Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no
+one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation
+(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without
+permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules,
+set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to
+copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to
+protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project
+Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you
+charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. If you
+do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the
+rules is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose
+such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and
+research. They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do
+practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks. Redistribution is
+subject to the trademark license, especially commercial
+redistribution.
+
+
+
+*** START: FULL LICENSE ***
+
+THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
+PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
+
+To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
+distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
+(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License (available with this file or online at
+https://gutenberg.org/license).
+
+
+Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic works
+
+1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
+and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
+(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
+the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy
+all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession.
+If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the
+terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or
+entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
+
+1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
+used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
+agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
+things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
+even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
+paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement
+and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works. See paragraph 1.E below.
+
+1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation"
+or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the
+collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an
+individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are
+located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from
+copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative
+works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg
+are removed. Of course, we hope that you will support the Project
+Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by
+freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of
+this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with
+the work. You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by
+keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others.
+
+1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
+what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in
+a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check
+the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement
+before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or
+creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project
+Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning
+the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United
+States.
+
+1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
+
+1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate
+access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently
+whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the
+phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed,
+copied or distributed:
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived
+from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is
+posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied
+and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees
+or charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work
+with the phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the
+work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1
+through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the
+Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or
+1.E.9.
+
+1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
+with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
+must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional
+terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked
+to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the
+permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work.
+
+1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
+work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
+
+1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
+electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
+prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
+active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm License.
+
+1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
+compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any
+word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or
+distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than
+"Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version
+posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org),
+you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a
+copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon
+request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other
+form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
+
+1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
+performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
+unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
+
+1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
+access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided
+that
+
+- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
+ the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
+ you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is
+ owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he
+ has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the
+ Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments
+ must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you
+ prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax
+ returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and
+ sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the
+ address specified in Section 4, "Information about donations to
+ the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."
+
+- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
+ you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
+ does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+ License. You must require such a user to return or
+ destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium
+ and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of
+ Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any
+ money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
+ electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days
+ of receipt of the work.
+
+- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
+ distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set
+forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from
+both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael
+Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the
+Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
+
+1.F.
+
+1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
+effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
+public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm
+collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain
+"Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or
+corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual
+property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a
+computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by
+your equipment.
+
+1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
+of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
+liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
+fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
+LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
+PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH F3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
+TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
+LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
+INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
+DAMAGE.
+
+1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
+defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
+receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
+written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
+received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with
+your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you with
+the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a
+refund. If you received the work electronically, the person or entity
+providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to
+receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If the second copy
+is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further
+opportunities to fix the problem.
+
+1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
+in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS' WITH NO OTHER
+WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO
+WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
+
+1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
+warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages.
+If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the
+law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be
+interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by
+the applicable state law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any
+provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions.
+
+1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
+trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
+providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance
+with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production,
+promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works,
+harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees,
+that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do
+or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm
+work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any
+Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause.
+
+
+Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
+electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers
+including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists
+because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from
+people in all walks of life.
+
+Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
+assistance they need, is critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
+goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
+remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
+and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations.
+To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
+and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4
+and the Foundation web page at https://www.pglaf.org.
+
+
+Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive
+Foundation
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
+501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
+state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
+Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
+number is 64-6221541. Its 501(c)(3) letter is posted at
+https://pglaf.org/fundraising. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent
+permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
+
+The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S.
+Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered
+throughout numerous locations. Its business office is located at
+809 North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887, email
+business@pglaf.org. Email contact links and up to date contact
+information can be found at the Foundation's web site and official
+page at https://pglaf.org
+
+For additional contact information:
+ Dr. Gregory B. Newby
+ Chief Executive and Director
+ gbnewby@pglaf.org
+
+Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
+spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
+increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
+freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
+array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
+($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
+status with the IRS.
+
+The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
+charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
+States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
+considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
+with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
+where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To
+SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any
+particular state visit https://pglaf.org
+
+While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
+have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
+against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
+approach us with offers to donate.
+
+International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
+any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
+outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
+
+Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
+methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
+ways including including checks, online payments and credit card
+donations. To donate, please visit: https://pglaf.org/donate
+
+
+Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works.
+
+Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm
+concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared
+with anyone. For thirty years, he produced and distributed Project
+Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support.
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
+editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S.
+unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily
+keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
+
+Each eBook is in a subdirectory of the same number as the eBook's
+eBook number, often in several formats including plain vanilla ASCII,
+compressed (zipped), HTML and others.
+
+Corrected EDITIONS of our eBooks replace the old file and take over
+the old filename and etext number. The replaced older file is renamed.
+VERSIONS based on separate sources are treated as new eBooks receiving
+new filenames and etext numbers.
+
+Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility:
+
+ https://www.gutenberg.org
+
+This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
+including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
+subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
+
+EBooks posted prior to November 2003, with eBook numbers BELOW #10000,
+are filed in directories based on their release date. If you want to
+download any of these eBooks directly, rather than using the regular
+search system you may utilize the following addresses and just
+download by the etext year.
+
+ https://www.gutenberg.org/etext06
+
+ (Or /etext 05, 04, 03, 02, 01, 00, 99,
+ 98, 97, 96, 95, 94, 93, 92, 92, 91 or 90)
+
+EBooks posted since November 2003, with etext numbers OVER #10000, are
+filed in a different way. The year of a release date is no longer part
+of the directory path. The path is based on the etext number (which is
+identical to the filename). The path to the file is made up of single
+digits corresponding to all but the last digit in the filename. For
+example an eBook of filename 10234 would be found at:
+
+ https://www.gutenberg.org/1/0/2/3/10234
+
+or filename 24689 would be found at:
+ https://www.gutenberg.org/2/4/6/8/24689
+
+An alternative method of locating eBooks:
+ https://www.gutenberg.org/GUTINDEX.ALL
+
+
diff --git a/old/12099-8.zip b/old/12099-8.zip
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..c004278
--- /dev/null
+++ b/old/12099-8.zip
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/12099.txt b/old/12099.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..be1266a
--- /dev/null
+++ b/old/12099.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,5766 @@
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Memories of Jane Cunningham Croly, "Jenny
+June", by Various
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Memories of Jane Cunningham Croly, "Jenny June"
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: April 21, 2004 [EBook #12099]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK JANE CUNNINGHAM ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Ari J Joki and PG Distributed Proofreaders
+
+
+
+
+Caroline M. Morse, editor
+
+ JANE CUNNINGHAM CROLY
+ "JENNY JUNE"
+
+
+1904
+
+
+
+[Illustration: Portrait]
+
+[Illustration: Facsimile of signature
+ "With sincere affection
+ yours-ever
+ J.C. Croly"]
+
+
+
+ Memories of
+ Jane Cunningham Croly
+ "Jenny June"
+
+
+
+ TO THE
+ GENERAL FEDERATION OF WOMEN'S CLUBS
+ IN AMERICA
+ THIS BOOK IS AFFECTIONATELY DEDICATED
+
+ BY
+
+ THE WOMAN'S PRESS CLUB
+
+ OF
+ NEW YORK CITY
+
+Foreword
+
+
+On January 6, 1902, a Memorial Meeting was called by Sorosis jointly
+with the Woman's Press Club of New York City, and a month later the
+Press Club formally authorized the preparation of a Memorial Book to
+its Founder and continuous President to the day of her death, Jane
+Cunningham Croly.
+
+In addition to a biographical sketch to be prepared by her brother,
+the Rev. John Cunningham, this book, so it was planned, should contain
+such letters, or excerpts from letters, as would illustrate her
+lovable personality and her life philosophy.
+
+A Committee of Publication was appointed, consisting of Mrs. Caroline
+M. Morse, Chairman, Mrs. Mary Coffin Johnson, Mrs. Haryot Holt Dey,
+Mrs. Miriam Mason Greeley, Miss Anna Warren Story and Mrs. Margaret W.
+Ravenhill. These began their work by sending a printed slip to club
+members and to Mrs. Croly's known intimates, asking for her letters.
+But the response came almost without variation: "My letters from Mrs.
+Croly are of too personal a nature for publication." A few, however,
+were freely offered, and these it was decided should be used,
+depending for the bulk of the Memorial upon copious extracts from
+Mrs. Croly's "History of the Woman's Club Movement in America," from
+her editorial work on _The Cycle_, and from her miscellaneous
+writings. To this characteristic material her long cherished friends,
+Mr. and Mrs. Thaddeus B. Wakeman, added an account of the "Positivist
+Episode," that objective point in her career, with which her husband
+was closely identified.
+
+With these are: Mrs. Croly's Club Life, a sketch by Mrs. Haryot Holt
+Dey; the Sorosis-Press Club Memorial Meeting; the Resolutions of the
+Woman's Press Club of New York City, the General Federation of Clubs,
+and the Society of American Women in London; tributes from London
+clubwomen; Essays and Addresses; Letters and Stray Leaves and Notes,
+written by Mrs. Croly; tributes from many of her friends, and my own
+recollections.
+
+ CAROLINE M. MORSE,
+ Chairman.
+
+
+
+
+Contents
+
+
+ "JENNY JUNE."--Ethel Morse
+
+ A BROTHER'S MEMORIES.--John Cunningham, D.D.
+
+ SOROSIS-PRESS CLUB MEMORIAL MEETING ADDRESSES:
+ Dimies T.S. Denison
+ Charlotte B. Wilbour
+ Phebe A. Hanaford
+ Orlena A. Zabriskie
+ Carrie Louise Griffin
+ Cynthia Westover Alden
+ May Riley Smith
+ Fanny Hallock Carpenter
+
+ RESOLUTIONS AND TRIBUTES FROM CLUBS:
+ Resolutions of the New York State Federation
+ From the Croly Memorial Fund of the Pioneer Club of London
+
+ THE POSITIVIST EPISODE.--Thaddeus B. Wakeman
+
+ MRS. CROLY'S CLUB LIFE.--Haryot Holt Dey
+
+ ESSAYS AND ADDRESSES BY JANE CUNNINGHAM CROLY:
+ Beginnings of Organization
+ The Moral Awakening
+ The Advantages of a General Federation of Women's Clubs
+ The Clubwoman
+ The New Life
+ The Days That Are
+ A People's Church
+
+ NOTES, LETTERS, AND STRAY LEAVES.--Jane Cunningham Croly
+
+ THE TRIBUTES OF FRIENDS:
+ Miriam Mason Greeley
+ Marie Etienne Burns
+ Izora Chandler
+ Janie C.P. Jones
+ Catherine Weed Barnes Ward
+ Sara J. Lippincott--"Grace Greenwood"
+ Jennie de la M. Lozier
+ Genie H. Rosenfeld
+ S.A. Lattimore
+ Ellen M. Staples
+ Margaret W. Ravenhill
+ T.C. Evans
+ St. Clair McKelway
+ Laura Sedgwick Collins
+ Mary Coffin Johnson
+ Caroline M. Morse
+ Ella Wheeler Wilcox
+
+
+
+
+Illustrations
+
+
+ JANE CUNNINGHAM CROLY (JENNY JUNE) AT THE AGE OF 61
+
+ MRS. CROLY AT THE AGE OF 40 (ABOUT THE TIME
+ SOROSIS WAS INAUGURATED)
+
+ FACSIMILE OF RESOLUTIONS ADOPTED BY THE
+ WOMAN'S PRESS CLUB OF NEW YORK, JANUARY
+ 11, 1902
+
+ FACSIMILE OF RESOLUTIONS ADOPTED BY THE
+ SOCIETY OF AMERICAN WOMEN IN LONDON,
+ MARCH 24, 1902
+
+ DAVID GOODMAN CROLY
+
+ FACSIMILE OF A PORTION OF A LETTER WRITTEN
+ BY MRS. CROLY, OCTOBER, 1900
+
+ MRS. CROLY AT THE AGE OF 18
+
+
+
+
+Jenny June
+
+
+ The South Wind blows across the harrowed fields,
+ And lo! the young grain springs to happy birth;
+ His warm breath lingers where the granite shields
+ Intruding flowers, and the responsive Earth
+ Impartially her varied harvest yields.
+ Through long ensuing months with tender mirth
+ The South Wind laughs, rejoicing in the worth
+ Of the impellent energies he wields.
+
+ Within our minds the memory of a Name
+ Will move, and fires of inspiration that burned low
+ Among dead embers break in quickening flame;
+ Flowers of the soul, grain of the heart shall grow,
+ And burgeoned promises shall bravely blow
+ Beneath the sunny influence of Her fame.
+
+ETHEL MORSE.
+
+
+
+
+A Brother's Memories
+
+_By John Cunningham, D.D._
+
+
+The most interesting and potent fact within the range of human
+knowledge is personality, and in the person of Jane Cunningham Croly
+(Jenny June) a potency was apparent which has affected the social life
+of more women, perhaps, than any other single controlling factor of
+the same period.
+
+Jane Cunningham was born in Market Harborough, Leicestershire,
+England, December 19, 1829. She was the fourth child of Joseph H. and
+Jane Cunningham, and though small in stature and delicate in organism,
+was full of vivacity, and abounding in natural intelligence. Her rich
+brown hair, blue eyes and clear complexion proclaimed her of
+Anglo-Saxon origin. She was the idol of her parents and the admiration
+of her school teachers. Her comradeship with her father began early in
+life and was continued to the time of his death. The family came to
+the United States in 1841, making their home at first in Poughkeepsie,
+and afterwards in or near Wappinger's Falls, where the father bought a
+large building-lot and erected a neat and commodious house, which
+remained in the possession of the family until sold by Mrs.
+Cunningham after the death of her husband. The lot was soon converted
+into a garden by its owner who tilled it with the spade and allowed no
+plough to be used in his little Eden. It was characteristic of his
+generous spirit, too, that none of the surplus product was ever sold,
+but was freely given to less favored neighbors. Happy years were spent
+by Mr. Cunningham in his shop, in his garden, with his books, and in
+visiting his daughter Jennie in New York after her marriage when she
+became established there. It was as nearly an ideal life as a modest
+man could desire. He lived respected by the best people in the
+community, and died in peace, with his children around him.
+
+As I remember my sister in early life, the sunniness of her nature
+is the first and prevailing characteristic that I call to mind;
+occasional moods of reverie bordering on melancholy only made brighter
+the habitual radiance and buoyancy of a nature that diffused happiness
+all around her. She was a perfectly healthy girl in mind and body. A
+sound mind in a sound body was her noble heritage. She was always
+extremely temperate in food and drink, fastidious in all her tastes
+and personal habits, indulgent never beyond the dictates of perfect
+simplicity and sobriety. Proficient in all branches of housekeeping,
+her apparel was mostly of her own making. Good literature was a
+passion with her, and while never an omnivorous reader, she had a
+natural instinct for the best in language. A spirit of indomitable
+independence, courage and persistence in purpose characterized her
+from childhood. She must think her own thoughts, and mark out and
+follow her own path. Suffering from a degree of physical timidity that
+at times caused her much pain, she possessed a spirit that sometimes
+seemed to border on audacity in the assertion and maintenance of her
+own convictions. From childhood she developed a personality which
+charmed all with whom she came in contact. Persons of both sexes,
+young and old, the sober and the gay, alike fell under the influence
+of her magnetic power. Living for a time in the family of her brother,
+to whom she proffered her services as housekeeper when he was pastor
+of a Union church in Worcester County, Mass., she drew to her all
+sorts of people by the brightness and charm of her personality.
+Self-forgetful and genuine, interested in all about her, she lived
+only to serve others, valuing lightly all that she did. Here it was
+that her remarkable capacity for journalism first developed itself.
+One of the means by which she interested the community was the public
+reading of a semi-monthly paper, every line of which was written by
+herself and a fellow worker. The reading of that paper every
+fortnight, to an audience that crowded the church, was an event in her
+history.
+
+Jennie was no dreamer. She was no speculative theorist spinning
+impossible things out of the cobwebs of her brain. She was no Hypatia
+striving to restore the gods of the past, revelling in a brilliant
+cloudland of symbolisms and affinities. If she was caught in the mist
+at any time, she soon came out of it and found her footing in the
+practical realities of daily life. Never over-reverential, she never
+called in question the deeper realities of soul-life. She was no
+ascetic: she would have made a poor nun. But she was a born preacher
+if by preaching is meant the annunciation of a gospel to those who
+need it. Jennie was always an ardent devotee of her sex, and whatever
+else she believed in, she certainly believed in women, their instincts
+and capacities.
+
+In the year 1856, on February 14th, St. Valentine's Day, my sister
+Jennie was married to David G. Croly, a reporter for the New York
+_Herald,_ and they began life in the city on his meagre salary of
+fourteen dollars a week. The gifted young wife, however, soon found
+work for herself on the _World_, the _Tribune_, the _Times_, _Noah's
+Sunday Times_ and the _Messenger_. The first money she received for
+writing was in return for an article published in the New York
+_Tribune_. Their joint career in metropolitan journalism was
+interrupted however by a short term of residence in Rockford,
+Illinois, where Mr. Croly was invited to become editor of the Rockford
+_Register_, then owned by William Gore King, the husband of our
+sister Mary A. Cunningham. Mr. Croly was aided in the editorial
+management by his wife, and while the work was agreeable and
+successful, it was due to Mrs. Croly's ardent desire for a larger
+field, that at the end of a year they decided to return to New York.
+The results for both abundantly justified the change. As managing
+editor of the daily _World_ for a number of years, afterwards of the
+New York _Graphic_, and later of the _Real Estate Record and Guide_,
+Mr. Croly won an honorable position in New York journalism. He was a
+conservative democrat of the strictest sort, a radical in religion,
+and had but little appreciation of the deeper forces at work in
+society and in national life. But he was able and honest, and enjoyed
+the respect of his fellow-craftsmen.
+
+"Jenny June" was a person of very different mental and moral mould.
+Her work soon revealed a new, fresh, vigorous force in journalism. An
+examination of her editorial contributions to the _Sunday Times_ from
+March to December, 1861, suggests her mental vivacity, vigor, breadth
+of view, and uniform clearness and power of expression. The title
+of the whole series is unpretentious enough: "Parlor and Sidewalk
+Gossip." All through her journalistic career similar qualities of
+originality characterized her pen. She was editor of _Demorest's_
+magazine for twenty-seven years, and was both editor and owner of
+_Godey's_ magazine and _The Home-Maker_. _The Cycle_ was her own
+creation and property. In each of these publications the dominating
+thoughts are those which make for social elevation, the honor of
+womanhood and home comfort and happiness. In addition to this
+editorial work she was a regular contributor to several leading
+newspapers in Boston, Chicago, New Orleans, Baltimore and other
+cities. She inaugurated the system of syndicate correspondence, and
+was the author of several books--"For Better, For Worse"; "Talks on
+Women's Topics"; "Thrown on Her Own Resources"; three manuals; and
+"The History of the Woman's Club Movement," a large volume of nearly
+twelve hundred pages.
+
+During the most active years of my sister's literary life, she had
+also the care of a large household, and her home was always bright and
+hospitable. The Croly Sunday evening receptions were one of the social
+features of New York City.
+
+Five children were born to Mr. and Mrs. Croly. Minnie, the eldest, was
+happily married to Lieutenant Roper of the U. S. Navy; her early death
+was a grief hard to bear. The second child, a boy, died in infancy.
+The surviving children are: Herbert G. Croly, a man of letters in New
+York City; Vida Croly Sidney, the wife of the English playwright,
+Frederick Sidney, lives in London; and Alice Gary Mathot, the wife of
+a New York lawyer, William F. Mathot, resides in Brooklyn Hills, Long
+Island.
+
+Mrs. Croly, one of the founders of Sorosis, perhaps the most noted
+woman's club in existence, was its President for many years, and its
+Honorary President at the time of her death. The cause which led to
+the founding of Sorosis is an open secret. Women were ignored at the
+Charles Dickens reception; this was not to be tolerated, and in
+consequence of this affront Sorosis came into being, an effectual
+protest against any similar indifference in all time to come. Of the
+growth of the club movement in the United States, in Great Britain,
+France, Russia, and in far-off India, I do not propose to enter into
+detail. Suffice it to say that it is one of the marvels of the modern
+social and intellectual life of women.
+
+What was the secret of Jenny June's charm and power? Not
+scholarship--let this be said in all sincerity. How greatly she
+appreciated the scholar's advantages was well known to her intimate
+friends. But these advantages did not belong to her. Nor did it
+consist in inherited social rank or wealth; her earnings by her pen
+were large, but her patrimony was small. It should have been said
+before, that she received the degree of Doctor of Literature from
+Rutgers Women's College, and was appointed to a new chair of
+Journalism and Literature in that institution. She was also a
+lecturer in other women's schools of the first rank.
+
+Nor did Jenny June pattern her work according to the advice or after
+the example of any one man or woman. There was no example by which she
+could be guided. Woman was a new factor in journalism, and Jenny June
+was a new woman, a new creation, if I may so speak, fashioned after
+the type of woman in the beginning, when God created man and woman in
+His own image. I cannot too fully emphasize the fact that she was a
+new and original personality in journalism. No one understood this
+better than her husband. In matters of detail his counsel was of value
+to her, but the spirit and character of her work were her own; and
+happily for her and for womankind she could never be diverted from her
+chosen path. This, indeed, was one chief secret of her success. She
+was unalterably true to her divine womanly ideals of woman's nature,
+place in society and redemptive work. I say redemptive work, for it
+was one of her deepest convictions that woman's function, was to be
+the saving salt of all life. Sorosis was founded upon this idea;--not
+a literary club merely or mainly; not a political, social or religious
+club; but one founded on womanhood, on the divine nature of women of
+every class and degree.
+
+Jenny June's recognition of this vital truth brought her into sympathy
+with a world-wide movement. The new woman is no monstrosity, no
+sporadic creature born of intellectual fermentation and unrest, but
+the rise and development of a better, nobler type of womanhood the
+world over. Jenny June's eminent distinction was that she was a leader
+in this movement. It made her what her husband once said in my
+hearing: "a wonderful woman." Of course there was the capacity for
+bursts of feeling on occasion, which those who knew her best seldom
+cared to provoke. "I am not an amiable woman," she once said to the
+writer. Radiant as she was, there was a volcanic force in her nature
+which could be terrific against folly, frivolity and wrong.
+
+Thousands of gifted women are now making themselves heard in poetry,
+dissertation, fiction and journalism because Jenny June opened the
+path for them. Womanhood was her watchword, and God, duty, faith and
+hope the springs of her life. It may surprise even those who knew her
+well to learn that her physical timidity was great, and at times
+painful. But her moral and intellectual courage impelled her at times
+almost to the verge of audacity, and was held under restraint only by
+conscience and good sense. Humor and wit can hardly be said to have
+been marked traits in her mentality. There was something delphic and
+oracular often in her familiar conversation. Sentimentalism had no
+place in her nature, her reading or literary work. A soul full of
+healthy and noble sentiment left no room for sentimentalism.
+
+Was Jenny June a genius? Well, if a boundless capacity for good
+original work is genius, then she was a genius. Magnanimity was a
+marked trait in her character. Envy or jealousy of the gifts of
+another were foreign to her. Love of nature, and especially of fine
+trees, was one of her most noticeable characteristics. "There will be
+trees in my heaven," she once said to the writer. But works of art, of
+the chisel, the brush, the pencil and the loom were her delight. She
+loved the city, its crowding humanity, its stores and its galleries.
+She loved London even more than New York. Continental travel was her
+chief pleasure and diversion. A long period of physical suffering,
+caused by an accident, cast a cloud over the last years of my sister's
+honorable life. She sought relief from pain and weakness, at Ambleside
+in Derbyshire, England, and at a celebrated cure in Switzerland, but
+was only partially successful. The final release came on December 23,
+1901, and her remains were laid by the side of her husband in the
+cemetery at Lakewood, New Jersey.
+
+Noble Jenny June! Shall we ever see her like again!
+
+
+
+
+Sorosis-Press Club Memorial Meeting
+
+
+A memorial meeting, called by Sorosis jointly with the Woman's Press
+Club, was held at the Waldorf-Astoria on January 6, 1902, a fortnight
+after the death of Mrs. Croly. It was attended not alone by the
+members of these two clubs but also by representatives from every
+woman's club in New York and the vicinity. Letters from many clubs
+belonging to the General Federation were read, and from the
+secretary's report of the meeting have been gathered the following
+tributes of notable clubwomen to the beloved founder of both clubs.
+
+
+
+
+Address by Dimies T.S. Denison, President of Sorosis
+
+
+We have met this afternoon to pay a loving tribute to one of the
+departed of Sorosis, who was for many years its President, and for
+years its Honorary President.
+
+The loss is not ours alone, for our sorrow is shared by all clubwomen,
+from Australia around the world to Alaska. Her position will always
+remain unique. Whenever there comes a time for a great movement there
+has always been a leader. The Revolution had its Washington; the
+abolition of slavery its Lincoln; and so, when the time came for such
+a movement among women, there were also leaders. Mrs. Croly remained,
+throughout her life, an advocate of everything which was for the
+betterment of women, and she died in the heart of the movement.
+
+Her perception of the value of unity, of the advantage of organized
+effort, was remarkable. Perhaps the generations beyond ours will think
+of her most in that quality, but the women of our time will remember
+her, as they loved her, for her ready sympathy and her unfailing
+helpfulness to all women. Though departed, she is still with us, and
+the beauty of her life remains, in that its influence is imperative.
+
+Mrs. Croly had that particular sense of fellowship among women most
+unusual. If you will stop to think, in our language you will find that
+there are no words to express that thought, except those that are
+masculine--fellowship, brotherhood, fraternity. Mrs. Croly, perhaps
+more than any other woman in the world, had the sense of what
+fellowship or fraternity meant in women, and although she sometimes
+may have been called an idealist or sentimentalist, it is recognized
+by many women that this thought must be abiding, for in a federation
+it is the spirit that is current through it that keeps the federation
+alive.
+
+The last afternoon it was my privilege to be with Mrs. Croly we had a
+long talk, and it seems to me, in looking back, that Mrs. Croly was
+then leaving a message with me for all clubwomen. I never heard her
+speak so eloquently. We talked of some of the problems of the General
+Federation--its possible disruption. Mrs. Croly said: "It does not
+matter; if anything happens that the General Federation should be
+disrupted, another will be formed at once." She had absolute faith, if
+not in a Divine Providence, that there was a possibility it was part
+of the human scheme of development that must be carried on through the
+Divine Will. So, if she left any message for the General Federation,
+it was this: that whatever our personal opinions are, whatever we
+think of any question, we are to think first of the life of the
+General Federation; because in it is the great thought of the
+fellowship and fraternity among women that is to bring us closer and
+closer to the millennium.
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: MRS. CROLY at the age of 40. (About the time Sorosis
+was inaugurated)]
+
+
+
+
+Address by Charlotte B. Wilbour
+
+
+When a soul that has worn out its frail body in the work of the world
+crosses the threshold of eternity, the darkness that gathers around
+our hearts has in it a relief of light. Nature has suffered no
+violence; the power of the body has been exhausted in good service,
+and the tired spirit is set free from the encasement that can no
+longer serve it. A fond look backward, a hopeful look forward, and the
+portals close with our benediction.
+
+ "A life that dares send
+ A challenge to the end,
+ And, when it comes, say
+ 'Welcome, friend,'"
+
+inspires the wish that we may so fill the measure of our days with
+usefulness.
+
+The departure of such a spirit would be fittingly commemorated by the
+grand marches of Chopin and Beethoven, or the majestic requiems of
+Mozart, rather than by our simple words. And yet they are our hearts'
+testimony to her in whose name we are assembled and, let us hope, made
+worthy. To us who believe that life reels not back from the white
+charger of Death towards the gulf of inanity and oblivion, there is a
+vivid realization that our words may be spoken to the conscious
+spirit; and we desire that, in the sacred name of truth, and with the
+love that comprehends and overcomes, we may speak simply as "soul to
+soul."
+
+One of the most beautiful lessons I have learned of death is that
+after the departure of a friend, or even of an acquaintance, our
+memories retain and cherish their best and noblest qualities and
+deeds. We repeat their finest words and recount their generous works.
+The sunshine falls clear on their virtues, and the shadow lies kindly
+on their faults. It exalts our nature that our minds elect only the
+lovely and beautiful characteristics of the lost friend. This sublime
+power in us breaks the force of the bitter criticism of the obituary,
+the eulogy, and the epitaph--that they are false notes in a hymn of
+praise. And to us yet living, there is sweet comfort in the thought
+that our best and higher selves shall remain with those we love and
+honor. And so shall the good we do live after us. These purified
+remembrances are links of the chain that binds the humblest to the
+highest.
+
+In my early womanhood I knew our honored president, a fair, happy,
+healthy, active English woman; and she appeared to me (sobered by the
+loss of most of my family) to rejoice in a fulness of life. We were
+maidens, and her interests and activities were in domestic and social
+life. I have not lost the fresh memory of her in those days.
+
+She was our president for ten years, and afterwards our honorary
+president. The activity of her life has made the deepest impression
+upon me. Every member of our association and of sister associations
+will agree with me, that never a woman brought a more cheerful and
+willing spirit to her official duties than did she. She rejoiced in
+her place, delighted in her privilege, and fully enjoyed the
+recognition and good fellowship of other clubs. This cheerful service,
+rendered for years, made her widely known in the club world. She
+responded to personal influence and suggestions made directly to her.
+She was most receptive to practical ideas, and adopted methods
+readily, and her liberal service brought to her just recompense.
+
+For years it required sacrifice on her part to attend the regular
+meetings of Sorosis, for she had daily occupation, and a lost day must
+be redeemed. But when an officer she made the sacrifice cheerfully.
+She was social and hospitable. Freely her house was given to us for
+lectures, receptions to distinguished guests and business meetings.
+For years the Positivists held their meetings at her home. She found
+her pleasure in pleasing, and in helping others gave herself joy. She
+loved her work for clubs, and you will remember that she had several
+business enterprises connected with them, during the years that she
+was an active clubwoman.
+
+I was in this country while she was preparing her history of clubs
+(not the history of Sorosis), and she brought the interest and
+enthusiasm of a young woman to the work; with a satisfied pride she
+showed me the material she had collected for the history. Nothing else
+to her mind was more important, or to be thought of until that was
+accomplished. I believe that her usefulness to clubs has been
+commensurate with the interest and gratification she had in the
+service.
+
+During the years of our acquaintance our intercourse was genial and
+concordant, and the results of our early work in Sorosis cannot equal
+the sweet satisfaction that came with its performance.
+
+In the early life of the club many of us were young mothers, and our
+domestic duties had strong claims upon us, and one prominent thought
+in connection with the formation of Sorosis was that the attention of
+a large class of thinking women, directed in concert towards important
+domestic and social questions, could be secured; and, while the
+character of the club should be pre-eminently social, we hoped to
+quietly bring in important reforms, or at least some effective action
+on these questions, and, above all, to secure an intelligent social
+intercourse without increasing our domestic duties and responsibilities.
+Have we not accomplished this?
+
+As the smallest consoling thought is greater than the most eloquent
+expression of sorrow, so do we find some consolation in the fact that
+fate was kind to our friend, and led her away when she could no longer
+enjoy life, and that she went while with us whose hearts were warm
+with an active sympathy and tender helpfulness.
+
+Our kind purpose to her name lifts our acts above criticism, and
+fortifies them by our love and worthiness of intention. Let us live to
+live forever--so shall we never fear death; let our warm human love be
+the prophet of a union for greater benefits; and let us have faith in
+the love that lives in human bosoms still:
+
+ "Lives to renovate our earth
+ From the bondage of its birth,
+ And the long arrears of ill."
+
+
+
+
+Address by the Rev. Phebe A. Hanaford, Vice-President of the Woman's
+Press Club of New York City
+
+
+I am requested to speak of the excellent work done by its departed
+president, in and for the Woman's Press Club of New York City. To
+others is assigned the testimony in reference to the career and work
+of our departed president as a press woman, and her place in
+literature.
+
+We are not here to analyze her character, or to chronicle her work.
+Nor are we here to dwell on those biographical details which belong to
+the pen rather than the voice; to the book and the reader rather than
+the address and the hearer. We are here to testify our regard for one
+whose busy pen is laid aside, but whose example of industry we may
+well imitate; though in the journalistic field the women of to-day
+will never have opportunity to emulate her perseverance and
+fearlessness, since her entrance in times long gone by on this
+untrodden path bore an important part in opening the way and obtaining
+results for women with whom the pen to-day is a power.
+
+Mrs. Croly was the founder of this club in 1889, and for twelve years
+and to the day of her death, its only president. It started (as she
+tells us in the large quarto volume relating to clubs--which was the
+closing, if not the crowning, effort of her busy pen) with an
+invitation sent out by herself in November, 1889, to forty women, a
+number of whom were then engaged upon the press in New York City, to
+meet at her residence, and consider the advisability of forming a
+Woman's Press Club. It was eminently fitting that one who had been
+stirred in former years by the absence of social recognition in
+journalism as within woman's province, on the part of the men of the
+press, and moved to take a prominent part in the formation of Sorosis,
+should organize a club of women writers--women journalists
+especially--which should be known everywhere as distinctly a Woman's
+Press Club.
+
+The response to her call was most gratifying. Her ability as an
+organizer, and her social qualities which could attract and hold women
+together in strong bonds of mutual esteem and fellowship, were again
+evident, and on November 19, 1889, the organization was effected and a
+provisional constitution adopted.
+
+At first the literary features of the new club were considered
+secondary to the social and beneficiary, but gradually they grew to
+their present importance.
+
+In its early days, like most clubs this one was migratory, and its
+work incidental. Gradually it came to have a more permanent home, and
+its monthly programmes which, as Mrs. Croly herself stated, "are more
+in the form of a symposium than of a question for debate," came to be
+so attractive and varied, and in every way so excellent, that they are
+often declared to be unsurpassed in interest by any woman's club. This
+was a matter of exceeding satisfaction to its founder, who saw the
+club grow from its membership of fifty-two to two hundred. She was
+never weary of recounting its successes, literary, musical, artistic
+and social. The Press Club was her joy and pride from its organization
+to the very day when she last met with its members, devoting on that
+day her failing strength to a cause that was beyond expression dear to
+her heart. I think I shall only be saying very feebly what the members
+of the club, especially those who have been members from its
+organization, now feel--that they regard her presence with them on the
+recent day of installation of new officers as a benediction, though
+they little knew that in her feebleness she was bidding them a loving
+farewell. When the news of her departure reached them it was received
+with surprise and deep sorrow. By prompt action the officers at once
+came together, and immediate measures were taken for appropriate
+expression of the Press Club's loyalty and love.
+
+Its members are here to-day not only to express their own high regard
+for their departed founder and president, but also to unite with
+Sorosis, the London Pioneer Club, and other clubs in the State
+Federation, who, by their presence, speech, or song, indicate the
+sympathy they have with those who will hold in fadeless remembrance
+their ascended president, who has learned ere this, that
+
+ "Life is ever Lord of Death,
+ And Love can never lose its own."
+
+As members of the club she, who has now passed into the eternal light,
+founded may we seek earnestly to walk in the light of Truth, strenuous
+for that more than royal liberty of conscience, which means liberty
+under righteous law and seeking for the Unity which obeys the Golden
+Rule, and thus binds heart to heart. So shall the Woman's Press Club
+of New York City truly honor the memory of its founder and first
+president, Jane Cunningham Croly.
+
+
+
+
+Address by Orlena A. Zabriskie, President of the New York Federation
+
+
+That the New York State Federation should be called upon to attest its
+love, devotion, and admiration for Mrs. Croly and her wonderful work
+among women, is a privilege we appreciate, and I shall try in a few
+simple, honest words, to explain a little of what her influence has
+been to the New York State Federation. We all know she was an
+organizer and founder, but it is well to repeat those words, although
+I think there is little danger that we shall ever forget them. From
+all over the State have come messages to me from different members of
+the federation, expressing their love and obligation to Mrs. Croly for
+what she has done for them individually, and for the State. One letter
+said:
+
+ "I shall think of her always as that lovely, sweet-tempered
+ woman who, under the most trying circumstances, never lost
+ her temper, or felt she was at all aggrieved. She took it in
+ the right way, and was just as lovely and kind at the close
+ as at the beginning."
+
+I saw her at Friendship, a little town in the northwestern part of the
+State, before the meeting at Buffalo, and there we had a long talk
+about matters of Federation interest. She gave me some good advice in
+her own gentle way, that I shall never forget, and I am only too glad
+to have this opportunity of saying it helped me to carry through that
+convention as I could not have done otherwise.
+
+What was the secret of her power as an organizer? I think this--she
+saw the little spark of good in each woman, every woman she came in
+contact with, and even in those she did not come in personal contact
+with. She knew it was there and she had the ability to call it forth,
+and that magnetic influence drew them together, so that they realized
+that they could do more in large numbers than they could as
+individuals. Knowing our power, she urged and encouraged us to do our
+best. When with her we did not feel as though we had a "specked" side.
+I think it was just that that gave her power and influence in the
+clubs she founded, to make them live and be a greater power than ever
+they could have been without her memory and example set before them.
+
+She has done good work, and started us on a task that she saw had
+practical possibilities, and now we can carry out those ideas of hers,
+and give them force in years to come. It may take a long time, but we
+will keep on being patient, cheerful, kind-hearted, and considerate,
+as she was. Let us therefore be grateful we had her as long as we did.
+She was for us a grand inheritance, and let us appreciate it.
+
+
+
+
+Address by Carrie Louise Griffin, President of the Society of American
+Women in London
+
+
+If I could only command that physical self as I would like to, I would
+tell you how grateful I am to be privileged to speak, and how much I
+think we have to be thankful for to-day, in the life of our dear one,
+which was given us.
+
+I am new in this club, and, as most of you know, my friendship with
+Mrs. Croly is not yet three years old, but I have been singularly
+privileged and honored in loving her, and in the love which she gave
+me.
+
+She came into my life (I must be just a little personal for a moment)
+as our first luncheon, in our little Society of American Women in
+London, was about to be given. The president of Sorosis had written to
+London saying: "Do you know that Mrs. Croly and Mrs. Glynes are to be
+in London, and I think they would help you?" Bless her, and Mrs.
+Croly: she came as a benediction to the few of us who were then
+novices in what we were doing. I can never tell you what a benefit she
+was to us in the difficult work we had undertaken. You have given me
+exceptional privileges in coming among you, and I am grateful for the
+help you have been to me, but I would say to you--and you have given
+me this privilege--I have never met a woman who seemed to have
+recognized the birthright in women as the birthright in men, to create
+that link which binds our powers to our intellect. It seems to me that
+it was with Mrs. Croly as it was with our late Majesty, Queen
+Victoria, that she was an influence, perhaps, rather than a power. She
+conceived great ideas and passed them on for the executive work of
+others to fulfil. I can assure you she was everything to us. Her
+English birth gave her an instinctive insight into English character.
+English women seemed to know and understand her, as she knew and
+understood them, and there has been no finer link between the women of
+America and the women of the Old World than Mrs. Croly. It was my
+privilege to be with her personally a great deal while in London, not
+only when she stayed in my own house, but when I have gone back and
+forth with her as her guide to the many functions we attended
+together. We can all be proud of her. Wherever she went she was not
+only hailed as the pioneer woman, but also as one who did honor and
+credit to the name of American womanhood, for, although born in
+England, she still claimed that she was an American woman, as you
+know.
+
+I shall never forget a little picture she gave of herself one day.
+She told us of her life in her home in a little town in the north of
+England. Her father was a Unitarian, and often had classes in his
+house for teaching the working people. His views, as you may imagine,
+were quite contrary to the views of the orthodox Church of England,
+and the people there rebelled, stoned the house, and wanted to turn
+them out of the town. The mother said to the father: "I wish you would
+take little Jennie by the hand, in her white frock, and lead her out
+to the people; perhaps when they see her they will not throw stones."
+That was her earliest memory of that little English town. Later, I
+believe, they left in the night and came to America, in order that
+they might live out the courage of their faith.
+
+At our luncheon Mrs. Croly said: "I want English and American women to
+love each other. I remember with pride and honor my English birth. I
+can see my little room now--a small room with a lattice window over
+which the roses grew, and as I stood at the window on tiptoe, I could
+look into the old-fashioned garden below. I stood on an old chest. In
+the winter my summer frocks were kept there, and in the summer my red
+woollen dress. I loved it; it was beautiful, and it made me love
+England. When I am in England and I hear anything not quite kind about
+America, I am sorry and my heart aches, and if, when I am in America,
+I hear something not quite kind about England, my heart aches again,
+because I love it all."
+
+In talking with Mrs. Croly, she said to me, "I hope some day you will
+come to a General Federation." Quoting Matthew Arnold, she said: "If
+ever the world sees a time when women shall come together, purely and
+simply for the benefit and good of mankind, it will be a power such as
+the world has never known." And she said, "There you will find it." We
+had talked about it and looked forward to seeing it together, but that
+will never be. It was her hope and dream that there should be such a
+General Federation of clubs as to bring in the women of the Old World
+with the Federation of Clubs in the New, that we might stand hand in
+hand together. She said to me, "I think you are narrow in your
+society--its members are only Americans." We have often talked this
+over, and have decided that in order to strengthen our centre we must
+keep it, at present, to American woman; but it may be possible to have
+an associate membership--the thin edge of the wedge looking toward the
+realization of her dreams.
+
+
+
+
+Address by Cynthia Westover Alden, Vice-President of the Women's Press
+Club, and President of the International Sunshine Society
+
+
+Mrs. Croly has left us. Yet I cannot think of her work as ended, of
+her mission as closed. You may go over every line she ever wrote, you
+may recall with, microscopic exactness every word she ever spoke,
+without finding one single grain of bitterness towards any human
+creature. Her active life was such as must find the ripe continuance
+of its activity in the better country whither she has preceded us. I
+feel that there is no hyperbole in applying to her memory the striking
+words of Lowell's Elegy on Dr. Channing:
+
+ "I do not come to weep above thy pall
+ And mourn the dying-out of noble powers;
+ The poet's clearer eye should see in all
+ Earth's seeming woe, seed of immortal flowers.
+
+ "No power can die that ever wrought for truth;
+ Thereby a law of Nature it became,
+ And lives unwithered in its blithesome youth,
+ When he who called it forth is but a name.
+
+ "Therefore I cannot think thee wholly gone;
+ The better part of thee is with us still;
+ Thy soul its hampering clay aside hath thrown,
+ And only freer wrestles with the ill.
+
+ "Thou art not idle; in thy higher sphere
+ Thy spirit bends itself to loving tasks,
+ And strength to perfect what it dreamed of here
+ Is all the crown and glory that it asks."
+
+The women of America owe much to Jenny June. By example she showed
+them that the career of letters was open to them. Her style, cheerful
+and vivid, sometimes epigrammatic, always entertaining, was her own.
+It could not be copied, it could not be imitated, it stood by itself;
+her career, filled with a large measure of the courage of her success,
+belonged in the broadest sense to women as women. How many worthy
+ambitions that career has stimulated to fruition we know not, and
+never shall know. One thing, however, is certain--that if you deduct
+from the literature of America the names of women who have followed
+Mrs. Croly's example and have been cheered by the fact that she did
+not fall by the wayside, you leave a void that never could be filled.
+How consciously they have been affected by Mrs. Croly's blazing path I
+cannot tell; but the influence has been none the less real and none
+the less powerful.
+
+Woman's battle for literary recognition will not have to be fought
+over again: it belongs to the past. The old contempt of editors and
+publishers, aye, and of readers as well, has gone to join slavery and
+polygamy and human sacrifices in the chamber of horrors. But we can
+never forget the woman who braved that contempt, and faced it down by
+achievement that could not be ignored. Mrs. Croly belonged to the
+period of that early struggle. In her sweetness of temper she lent to
+its very asperities the charm of a tournament, overcoming evil with
+good, and triumphing at last over prejudice which thousands of women
+had feared to face. We loved her for herself. We are sad in spite of
+ourselves that she has gone. But we shall only remember her as one of
+the greatest benefactors of woman in literature; one of the most
+delightful of all the delightful characters that we have ever known.
+
+ "This laurel leaf I cast upon thy bier;
+ Let worthier hands than these thy wreath entwine;
+ Upon thy hearse I shed no useless tear--
+ For us weep rather thou, in calm divine."
+
+
+
+
+In the Silence
+
+_By May Riley Smith_
+
+
+ They are out of the chaos of living,
+ The wreck and debris of the years;
+ They have passed from the struggle and striving,
+ They have drained their goblet of tears.
+ They have ceased one by one from their labors,
+ So we clothed them in garments of rest,
+ And they entered the chamber of silence;--
+ God do for them now what is best!
+
+ We saw not the lift of the curtain,
+ Nor heard the invisible door,
+ As they passed where life's problems uncertain
+ Will follow and burthen no more.
+ We lingered and wept on the threshold--
+ The threshold each mortal must cross,--
+ Then we laid a new wreath down upon it,
+ To mark a new sorrow and loss.
+
+ Then back to our separate places
+ A little more lonely we creep,
+ A little more care in our faces,
+ The wrinkles a little more deep.
+ And we stagger, ah, God, how we stagger
+ As we lift the old load to our back!
+ A little more lonely to carry
+ Because of the comrade we lack.
+
+ But into our lives whether chidden
+ Or welcome, God's comforters come;
+ His sunshine waits not to be bidden,
+ His stars,--they are always at home.
+ His mornings are faithful,--His evenings
+ Allay the day's fever and fret;
+ And night--kind physician--entreats us
+ To slumber and dream and forget.
+
+ O Spirit of infinite kindness
+ And gentleness passing all speech!
+ Forgive when we miss in our blindness
+ The comforting hand them dost reach.
+ Thou sendest the Spring on Thine errand
+ To soften the grief of the world;
+ For us is the calm of the mountain,
+ For us is the rose-leaf uncurled.
+
+ Thou art tenderer, too, than a mother,
+ In the wonderful Book it is said;
+ O Pillow of Comfort! What other
+ So softly could cradle my head?
+ And though Thou hast darkened the portal
+ That leads where our vanished ones be;
+ We lean on our faith in Thy goodness,
+ And leave them to silence and Thee.
+
+
+
+
+Jenny June
+
+_By Fanny Hallock Carpenter_
+
+
+ A beautiful soul has journeyed
+ Out from the Now into Then.
+ Her voice echoes back to us, waiting,
+ The sound of the great Amen.
+
+ Her life was a song so winsome
+ It sung itself night and day
+ Into the hearts of the people
+ Who met her along the way.
+
+ Her life was a flower so fragrant
+ That every one passing her, knew
+ By the perfume from it exhaling,
+ The love out of which it grew.
+
+ Her life was a book so vivid
+ That all, though running, could read
+ The story of earnest endeavor
+ Written for woman's need.
+
+ Her life was a light whose radiance
+ Brightened all woman-kind,
+ As sunshine wakens the flowers,
+ Or genius illumines the mind.
+
+ Her life was a poem so tender
+ It thrilled with its cadence sweet
+ Many a life prosaic,
+ Which caught up the rhythmic beat.
+
+ Her life was a bell whose ringing
+ Gave no uncertain sound,
+ Its chiming rang out to the nations
+ And girdled the world around.
+
+ Her life was a deed so holy,
+ So noble, so brave, so true,
+ That it set all womanhood noting
+ The good one woman could do.
+
+ Her life was a brook, that swelling
+ Grew to a river wide,
+ That freshened the souls of the many
+ Touched by its flowing tide.
+
+ The song has trilled into silence,
+ The flower is faded and gone,
+ The book's strong story is ended,
+ The light is lost in the dawn.
+
+ The poem's sweet rhythm is ended,
+ The chiming has ceased to be,
+ The deed is fully accomplished,
+ The river has joined the sea.
+
+ She dropped the pebble whose ripples
+ To the shores of all time shall extend,
+ She has spoken the word into ether
+ Whose sound-waves never shall end.
+
+ She has started a light on its journey
+ Out into limitless space,
+ She has written a thought for women
+ Eternity cannot erase.
+
+ A wonderful soul has journeyed
+ Out from the Now into Then,
+ Her voice echoes back to us, waiting,
+ The sound of the great Amen.
+
+
+
+
+Resolutions and Tributes From Clubs
+
+
+[Illustration: Fac-simile of resolutions adopted by the Woman's Press
+Club of New York, January 11, 1902.]
+
+
+Resolutions of the New York State Federation of Women's Clubs
+
+
+In Memoriam
+
+_Mrs. Jane Cunningham Croly_
+
+
+We have tenderly laid away to rest our beloved honorary president,
+Jane Cunningham Croly, to sleep the blessed sleep that knows no waking
+in this toilsome, troublous world.
+
+Her gentle soul is at peace, her personal work is accomplished, her
+useful life is ended. She has been taken from further pain and further
+labor, to that existence where all is perfect peace, perfect rest,
+perfect rhythm.
+
+We wish to place upon our records, therefore, our appreciation of the
+fact, that this New York State Federation of Women's Clubs has
+suffered such a loss as can come but once to any, a loss like that of
+a loving mother to an affectionate child.
+
+We shall miss her at our meetings, at our larger gatherings, and at
+our conventions.
+
+We shall hold her, and the desires of her heart in relation to us, in
+loving and constant memory.
+
+And we purpose to take up her work, where she laid it down, and carry
+it on with the same unselfish aims, high ideals, and unremitting
+patience with which she labored, until we shall reach the goal upon
+which her farseeing eyes were fastened, and her great heart was set.
+
+ FANNY HALLOCK CARPENTER.
+ February 13, 1902.
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: Resolutions adopted by The Society of American Women in
+London, March 24th, 1902.]
+
+
+
+
+The Croly Memorial Fund of the Pioneer Club of London
+
+_First Annual Report_
+
+
+In July, 1900, a fund was raised by the exertions of Mrs. E.S.
+Willard, to present a life membership of the Pioneer Club to Mrs. Jane
+Cunningham Croly, known to all who are interested in woman's work as
+"Jenny June."
+
+Mrs. Croly had a special claim to this distinction, for she was the
+originator of women's clubs. The first woman's club was founded by her
+in New York, March, 1868, under the name of "Sorosis." The example was
+quickly followed elsewhere, and when, in 1889, Sorosis, to celebrate
+its majority, called a convention of women's clubs, ninety-seven were
+known to exist in the United States. This convention led to a
+Federation with biennial meetings. In 1896, the Federation included
+one thousand four hundred and twenty-five dubs. The Pioneer is the
+only English woman's club which belongs to the Federation.
+
+Mrs. Croly's activities were not confined to clubs, although up to the
+time of her death the movement owed much to her wisdom and energy. She
+was a journalist, a writer, an admirable critic, and all her life a
+devoted worker for every movement that could raise the position of
+women.
+
+She was a dear and valued friend of Mrs. Marsingberd, the president
+and founder of this club. It was a recognition of their unity of
+spirit and purpose that made the response of this club so ready that
+the only life-membership as yet presented, was offered to Mrs. Croly.
+She was deeply gratified, but unfortunately did not live long enough
+to enjoy a privilege which she highly esteemed. Her useful, loving,
+laborious life ended in December, 1901. But she had been among us from
+time to time. Her interest in us never flagged, and we prize some
+tokens of her regard. Nor shall we soon forget the stirring words she
+addressed to us on two occasions, pointing out the opportunities which
+our association gave for useful work and sympathy.
+
+When the life-membership fee had been paid, some money still remained,
+and when the question arose as to what should be done with it, Lady
+Hamilton made the valuable suggestion that it should be used as the
+foundation of a fund to be called "The Mrs. Croly Memorial Fund," to
+be applied in sisterly loving kindness to such cases as might arise
+within the club, where urgent material help was needed. This
+suggestion was heartily welcomed by a small provisional meeting called
+by Mrs. E.S. Willard, October 15, 1902, when preliminary steps were
+taken. At a second meeting, November 25, a definite constitution was
+formed for the administration of the fund.
+
+It is hoped that the members of the Pioneer Club will do all they can
+to support this fund, for it is an effort to give some tangible
+expression to the principles which governed the lives of both Mrs.
+Croly and our own president. They always unselfishly tried to give
+loving help to sister women.
+
+January 27, 1903.
+
+
+
+
+The Positivist Episode
+
+_By Thaddeus B. Wakeman_
+
+
+ "The Positivist Episode was a positive factor in my
+ life."--MRS. CROLY.
+
+Those were bright, sunny, happy, idyllic, and fruitful days of the
+Positivist Episode, when the first of the two following letters which
+my wife and I now contribute to the "Memories of Mrs. Croly," were
+written. That episode, of which these letters represent the beginning,
+and the end throws an explaining light not only over the life of her
+whom this memorial is to honor, but over that of her husband, who
+passed to the higher life in 1889; and largely also over the lives of
+others more or less associated with, or affected by, the introduction
+of the study and culture of Positivism into America, of which they may
+be regarded as the chief promoters.
+
+Yes, as friends of Mrs. Croly and of those dear to her, we may well
+recall, as she often did, this Positivist Episode as among the
+pleasantest of her--and may we not also add of ours?--earthly days.
+The first letter shows the movement well under way, when meetings had
+begun to be held, and visits to be made to the homes of those deeply
+interested. Never shall we forget the first of those visits made by
+Mrs. Croly to our then "almost out of town" home in 116th street,
+where our house, pleasantly overlooking the East River, was clothed
+with trees and vines. The Catawbas on a large trellis, trained in
+stories with upright canes, excited her admiration, and she assured us
+that she had "never seen nor eaten anybody's grapes with such
+delight." Naturally, a basket or two of grapes soon followed to her
+home away down and over to the other side of town at number 19 Bank
+street. Thus the "vines" and "fruit" referred to in her letter are
+explained; and with them was thus associated in holy sympathy her love
+with ours of "the kindly fruits of the earth." Mr. Croly also referred
+to gifts of this kind in the New York _World_--thirty varieties of
+grapes raised under and in proof of the "law of correlation, expounded
+by the raiser as the law which held us of the world together."
+
+But when our turn came as Positivist students to visit at their home,
+we found the cosey parlors well filled with the higher samples and
+fruits of human culture and intellect. Mrs. Croly's social position,
+sustained by the ability of Mr. Croly and his prominence as managing
+editor of the New York _World_, and afterwards of the _Graphic_,
+enabled her to call together the leaders, and many interested in the
+then (and now?) two leading schools of scientific and constructive
+thought; the Positivist school of Augusta Comte, represented by Henry
+Edgar and partly also by Mr. Croly and others; and also in contrast
+therewith, the Synthetic Philosophy of Herbert Spencer, represented by
+Edward L. Youmans, John Fiske and others. Nor were there wanting those
+who, like the present writer, would combine those two schools, and
+more, into the scientific and republican growth of our newer world and
+life in America.
+
+The initiative of these meetings was a course of lectures procured by
+Mr. Croly, to be delivered by Mr. Edgar at De Garmo Hall early in
+1868. Out of the interest thus excited, Mr. and Mrs. Croly called
+around them the elements above referred to, including, among
+miscellaneous attendants, perhaps a hundred earnest students of
+Positivism and of the higher religious and scientific philosophies.
+The meetings were not always held at the homes mentioned, but at the
+home of Mr. Courtlandt Palmer and of other participants. All the
+parties named, and many others, took part in the discussions of this
+unorganized circle, until its name and influence reached and
+interested generally the thinkers of the city. This interest, as the
+years rolled on, resulted in or influenced the forming of many
+societies, among which were a Positivist Society, the Society of
+Humanity, the New York and Manhattan Liberal Clubs, the Philosophic
+Society of Brooklyn, the Nineteenth Century Club, the Goethe Society,
+and indirectly a Dante Society and several others. All of the clubs
+and societies of women with which Mrs. Croly and her work have been
+associated may be thus included. Certain it is that this "positive
+factor" in her life was the source from which the new, altruistic
+inspiration originally came which made her finally recognized as the
+"Mother of Women's Clubs" and of their beneficent influences--the new
+life, light, and hope of women, of which they are the beginning.
+
+Nor less should be said for the literature that has sprung from the
+same source. It began with the "Positivist's Calendar," by Mr. Edgar,
+and Professor Youmans's admirable collection of articles, and the
+introduction, on "Correlation" of the physical and other forces,
+published by Appleton, and never to be outgrown. Then Professor Fiske
+published in the New York _World_ his able series of lectures on the
+"Positive Philosophy," which some think he weakened by turning into the
+"Cosmic Philosophy." Then (for further details are not in place here)
+Mr. and Mrs. Croly and Mr. Bell and most of us went into literature in
+some way, to an extent that made quite a library, now mostly lost or
+forgotten. Would that I could "lend continuance to the time" of those
+disputants, and show why and how they drifted apart instead of
+together! For the shadow of oblivion seems to be creeping over all;
+and against that I, as the last survivor, seem to be their only and
+yet their helpless protector. Yet we can now see, as they mostly did
+not, that their divergence was really a "differentiation process,"
+leading each to a higher integration of truth.
+
+Thus, what I cannot do for each, the volunteer seeding of time is
+doing silently for all, though they noticed not the good seed they
+scattered. For instance, Mr. Croly wished these words to be placed
+over his grave: "I meant well, tried a little, failed much." He saw
+not that the sound seed of which he was a real and great sower, were
+his well-meant and effective efforts to bring Positivism, as the sum
+and synthesis of science and humanity, before all thoughtful American
+people, as the real religion and basis of their modern life. That view
+of life was then new, but now it is replacing or changing all dogmatic
+or supernatural religions. In a word, modern scientific thought is
+becoming practical, constructive, and positive in religion; directed
+more and more toward advantages in the human future on this earth. The
+real basis of sentiment is the new science of Sociology and the new
+sense of altruism--first named by Auguste Comte and first brought to
+the American people in and by this "Positivist Episode."
+
+It is by the up-coming of such seed as was then sown, that the old
+issues and their old world have been replaced by the new; which we
+should gratefully inherit from those sowers. It is said that they
+seemed to look upon much of their life as failure because they did not
+see the harvest in their day as the direct result of their hands. How
+strange that the faith of evolution did not give them the "after
+sight" which is the crown and reward of those who "mean well," and who
+"work and hope!"
+
+To Mrs. Croly did come not only the well-wishing and the patient
+labor, but also a foretaste of her reward. Her days were extended
+until her purposes fulfilled met the gratitude of her successors. Even
+"the slings and arrows of outrageous fortune," referred to in her last
+letter to us, were warded off by the human providence which, in her
+own words, "realizes the eternal goodness of the perfection of the
+order which governs the universe."
+
+Thus her friendships with the many she loved and served have closed
+with unalloyed satisfaction--to me and mine a sincere friend for more
+than thirty years! And no words come that I might wish unsaid unless
+these: "Be careful now, for I have told more than one that you are my
+god-father!"
+
+
+
+
+From Mrs. Croly to Mr. Wakeman
+
+
+ 19 BANK STREET, NEW YORK,
+ Sept. 26, 1870.
+
+My dear Mr. Wakeman:
+
+Thank you very much for allowing us to share so largely in the
+luxuries of your pleasant home, and in the rewards of your labor. The
+grapes were a great treat to us, and we have enjoyed them exceedingly.
+The variety is wonderful; and the difference in the flavors, each one
+being perfect in itself, constantly excited our admiration.
+
+I hope by this time your term of bachelorhood is at an end, and that
+Mrs. Wakeman and the children are with you. If she has arrived, please
+convey to her my acknowledgments for the card she left for me, and say
+how much I regretted not seeing her. Please also to remind her that
+next Monday (first Monday in October) is the meeting of Sorosis, and
+that I shall expect to find her at Delmonico's, corner of 14th Street
+and Fifth Avenue, at 1 P.M., as my guest. She can walk straight
+upstairs, and a waiter will send in her name to me, so that she need
+not enter alone; or she can arrive a little earlier (I am always there
+early) and see the ladies as they come.
+
+As I have not many occasions for writing notes to you, Mr. Wakeman, I
+desire to say to you, with the deliberation with which one puts pen to
+paper, that I am thankful for having known so true a man, and happy
+that my husband can count him friend. One thing done is worth many
+words spoken, yet I am doubly glad when words and acts walk
+harmoniously together.
+
+ Always your obliged friend,
+ J.C. CROLY.
+
+
+
+From Mrs. Croly to Mrs. Wakeman
+
+
+ 7 BENTRICT TERRACE, REGENT'S PARK, N.W.,
+ LONDON, December 24, 1900.
+
+MY DEAR OLD FRIEND:
+
+I am sure that you have thought many times that I was forgetful and
+ungrateful, but indeed the first part of the indictment cannot be laid
+to my charge. I never forget you, and if I have not written, it is
+because I have suffered and enjoyed many things during the past two
+years, and have permanently lost the power of rapid movement, or of
+doing anything under great stress and pressure.
+
+But now that this wonderful year is ending, this Sabbath of the
+centuries, I feel that I must at least send my love and unforgetness
+to you; also my hope that you are finding on the other side of the
+continent of North America, compensation for all that you left behind
+in the east, and greater promise for the future.
+
+For all that I have gained for some years past I have to thank my
+losses. Chief among my gains is, I hope, a little realization of
+eternal goodness; of the perfection of the order which governs the
+universe, and the relation of every separate atom to the Divine Unity
+of the whole. I know Goethe proclaimed it a hundred years ago; but
+every separate part has to grow to its knowledge for itself.
+
+I wonder how you are spending Christmas. This year seems to me so
+remarkable that it is a privilege to live in it. I am trying to use
+its last days as if they were mine, in doing the things I should be
+most sorry to leave undone.
+
+I expect to return home soon--that is, in a few months. Or rather, as
+I have no home now, and a trustee has lost the money I had saved and
+entrusted to him in making provision for my old age, I shall only try
+to find a corner to rest in.
+
+I hope you have been dealt with more kindly in body and estate. Please
+remember that I never forget the union of the spirit we once
+enjoyed--that the Positivist Episode was a positive factor in my life,
+and that I shall always recall Mr. Wakeman as my chief helper in it.
+
+ With love to you and yours, I am unforgettingly,
+ J.C. CROLY.
+
+
+
+
+ (It has seemed pertinent and interesting as bearing upon the
+ "Positivist Episode" to here insert extracts from
+ testimonials to Mr. Croly published in the memorial issued
+ at the time of his death in May, 1889.)
+
+
+[Illustration: DAVID GOODMAN CROLY.]
+
+
+
+
+From a Testimonial to Mr. Croly, by T.B. Wakeman
+
+
+David G. Croly must not be forgotten. He rendered our country an
+invaluable service, not yet recognized. He was the man who _planted
+Positivism in America_. The many who have felt, the thousands who
+hereafter will feel its influence for good, should learn to bless, and
+to teach others to bless and continue his memory and influence.
+
+In 1867-68 he began his great work. Henry Edgar had the seed from
+Comte direct, and then tried to sow it in a course of lectures given
+in a hall chiefly paid for by Mr. Croly. But the seed would not take.
+After Edgar had gone, the sturdy brain and hand of D.G. Croly took the
+matter in charge and actually made the growth start. Then the _World_,
+with him at its head, evoked and published John Fiske's "Lectures on
+Positivism," far better in their first shape than when pared and
+cooked over into the "Cosmic Philosophy." Then came the "Modern
+Thinker" and "Positive Primer." Then Dr. McCosh came out, in reply,
+with his volume on "Positivism and Christianity." Then Positivist
+Societies and Liberal Clubs, one after another, were formed and some
+continue, whence John Elderkin, Henry Evans, James D. Bell, the writer
+of these lines, and not a few others commenced to ray out the new
+light, which never has been, and never will be extinguished. By the
+aid of that light let a distant posterity read with gratitude the
+names of _David G. and Jane Cunningham Croly_, for without them I know
+it would not have been.
+
+ T.B. WAKEMAN.
+
+
+
+
+From a Testimonial by Herbert D. Croly
+
+
+... I should like to relate one incident in the history of my father's
+relations with myself--an incident which was eminently characteristic
+of certain aspects of his nature.
+
+From my earliest years it was his endeavor to teach me to understand
+and believe in the religion of Auguste Comte. One of my first
+recollections is that of an excursion to Central Park on one bright
+Sunday afternoon in the spring; there, sitting under the trees, he
+talked to me on the theme which lay always nearest his heart--that of
+the solidarity of mankind. There never, indeed, was a time throughout
+my whole youth, when we were alone together, that he did not return to
+the same text and impress upon me that a selfish life was no life at
+all, that "no man liveth for himself, that no man dieth for himself."
+His teachings were as largely negative as positive. While never,
+perhaps, understanding the Christian religion as a man with a weaker
+faith in the truth of his own convictions might have understood it,
+his attitude was one, I judge, of sympathetic scepticism. He was
+always endeavoring to impress upon me that, while there must
+necessarily have been something great and good in a faith that had
+been the inspiration of so many souls, and comfort of mankind through
+so many centuries, yet at the same time it was incomplete; that very
+often the followers of Christ gave more to the doctrine than they
+received from it; and that the teaching of Auguste Comte supplied what
+was lacking in the teaching of Jesus Christ. His desire to impress
+upon me a belief which he held himself with all the force of religious
+conviction led him to attempt explanations which the mind of a child
+could neither grasp nor retain. He even discussed, for my benefit,
+theoretical questions as to the existence and nature of the Supreme
+Being; discussions, of course, that I could so little understand that
+it was like pouring water on a flat board. It was simply the fulness
+of his belief that led him to do this. His desire was that, surrounded
+as I was by people who burnt their candles at the altars of the
+Christian faith, I should have full opportunity to compare the
+Positivist _Grand Etre_ with the Christian Cross. Under such
+instruction it was not strange that in time I dropped insensibly into
+his mode of thinking, or, more correctly, into his mode of believing.
+
+While I was at college I was surrounded by other influences, and while
+retaining everything that was positive and constructive in his
+teaching, I dropped the negative cloth in which it was shrouded. My
+change in opinion was a bitter disappointment to him, as several
+letters which he wrote at the time testify. But intense as was his
+disappointment, it never took the form of a reproach. This is very
+remarkable when we consider what an essential part of his character
+his beliefs constituted. Here was an end, for which he had striven
+through many years, failing at the very time when it should have
+become most fruitful. And his disappointment must have been all the
+more severe because he exaggerated the differences that existed
+between us. It was his opinion that his negative opinions were
+necessarily connected with those which were positive; and that it was
+impossible truly to hold the one without the other. Yet, as I said,
+his disappointment never took the form of a reproach. "It is your
+right; nay, it is even your duty," he used continually to say, "to
+work your own salvation. It has turned out to be different from mine.
+Well, then, mine is the loss."
+
+From an abstract point of view it may not seem to be so much of a
+virtue that a father should consider his son's intellectual honesty to
+be of more importance than his own opinions. But I am not writing from
+an abstract point of view. We are all but children of the earth; not
+good, but simply better than the bad. So it was with David G. Croly.
+His opinions, crystallized by the opposition which they met on every
+side, were so very much the truth to him that he wished his son to
+perceive them clearly and cherish them as devoutly as he did. That
+wish became impossible of fulfilment. Part of his life-work had
+failed. "Mine is the loss."
+
+ H.D. CROLY.
+
+
+
+
+From Mr. Croly to His Son Herbert at College
+
+
+ LOTOS CLUB, Oct. 31, 1886.
+
+My Dear Boy--You said something about the divergence between my ideas
+and those of the philosophers whose works you are reading at college.
+Let me beg of you to form your own judgment on all the higher
+themes--religion included--without any reference to what I may have
+said. All I ask is that you keep your mind open and unpredisposed. In
+the language of the Scripture, "prove all things and hold fast to that
+which is good." Be careful and do not allow first impressions to
+influence your maturer judgment. You say you are reading the
+controversy between Spencer and Harrison on religion. In doing so keep
+in mind the fact that Spencer's matter was revised, while that of
+Harrison was not; and that upon the latter's protest the work was
+withdrawn in England.
+
+I wish during your college year that you would read:
+
+(1) Miss Martineau's translation of Comte's "Positive Philosophy."
+(2) Mill's Estimate of Comte's Life and Works.
+(3) Bridges's Reply to Mill.
+(4) All of Frederic Harrison's writings that you can find.
+(5) All of Herbert Spencer's works that are not technical.
+(6) John Fiske's works.
+(7) The works of the English Positivists, such as Congreve, Bridges
+and Beasley.
+
+By noticing the dates I think you will find that Spencer appropriates
+a great deal from Comte and that he tries to shirk the obligation. It
+would be well to read the latter's "General View of Positivism"
+further along.
+
+My dear son, I shall die happy if I know that you are an earnest
+student of philosophic themes.
+
+Do cultivate all the religious emotions, reverence, awe, and
+aspiration, if for no better reason than as a means of self-culture.
+Educate, train every side of your mental and emotional nature. Read
+poetry and learn the secret of tears and ecstacy. Go to Catholic and
+Episcopal churches and surrender yourself to the inspiration of
+soul-inspiring religious music.
+
+ Ever your affectionate
+ FATHER.
+
+
+
+
+From a Testimonial by Edmund Clarence Stedman
+
+
+My intimacy with Mr. Croly began in 1860, when we were together upon
+the editorial staff of the New York _World_. We had many notions,
+socialistic and otherwise, in common. With these, however, we did not
+venture to imperil the circulation of that conservative newspaper. He
+was City Editor, and knew his business. I was struck by the activity
+of his mind, and his combination of shrewd executive ability with
+inventive skill. I found him a staunch friend, loyal to his
+allies, helpful to his subordinates; moreover, a man of strong
+convictions--which he asserted with a fine dogmatism; an idealist
+withal, quite unhampered by reverence for conventional usage and
+opinion. Absolute mental honesty was his chief characteristic.
+
+He was a humanitarian, in the Positivist sense of the word. All his
+aspirations were for the future glory and happiness of the human race.
+Faith in the reign of law, and a prophetic certainty of man's
+elevation--these were his religion. As a thinker and talker he
+certainly was of the same breed with Tennyson's poet, who
+
+ "Sings of what the world will be
+ When the years have died away."
+
+He bore good fortune and adversity with an equal mind, and he
+displayed stoical courage throughout prolonged illness of a most
+depressing type.
+
+Others will add to your own feeling statement of his varied labors.
+But let me say that, whether our paths came together or diverged, I
+always thought of him as in every sense a comrade. His loss makes the
+lessening roll of those with whom I touched elbows in the old
+newspaper days seem ominously faded.
+
+ EDMUND C. STEDMAN.
+
+
+
+
+From a Testimonial by J.D. Bell
+
+
+Mr. Croly was a great journalist. He was not a great editorial writer,
+but he was a great editor. He had the true executive temper and
+power--that is, the ability to obtain from others the work that was in
+them. He never made the mistake of endeavoring to do everything
+himself. He was just, as well as generous to his subordinates, and
+many of the younger journalists have reason to remember his kindness
+to them. In any company in which he was thrown he was sure to attract
+attention, and there were very few companies in which he did not take
+the leading part by virtue of his ability and not of his
+self-assertion. He never used tobacco in any form, and was otherwise a
+strictly temperate man. In his utterances he was often very radical,
+but in practice he was always thoroughly conservative.
+
+His social predilections led him to study the writings of Auguste
+Comte. He accepted his doctrines and endeavored to popularize them in
+writings and meetings, but with very limited success. Indeed, he often
+said that while intellectually Positivism was in the air, as a social
+doctrine it was too far in advance of the present age to become
+popular.
+
+He was essentially a family man and loved his home and household.
+During the greater part of his married life, however, the exacting
+editorial duties and literary labors of himself and his wife prevented
+them from enjoying the society of the home circle to the extent that
+each desired. Here, as in so many other cases, the individual was
+sacrificed for the benefit of the public.
+
+
+
+
+From a Testimonial by St. Clair McKelway
+
+
+... David G. Croly's personality was always healthy and hopeful. He
+commended with justice, he censured with consideration, he changed or
+cut out your copy with regard exclusively to the increased value of
+the article for newspaper purposes. The staff was like a large family
+under him. Every one's equal rights were regarded, every one's special
+talents were stimulated, every one's peculiar fads or foibles were
+genially borne with. Officially he had no favorites. Personally he
+chose his friends among the staff as freely as he would do among
+outsiders. The unrecorded kindnesses of the man were fragrant and not
+few. To newcomers he would intimate what were the prejudices or
+susceptibilities or limitations of those among whom they were cast. He
+would be just as careful to see that the old standbys did not make
+things rough or unfair for the newcomers. He had little respect for
+the gifts or views that could not be made interconvertible with
+newspaper results. He took a public view of party questions and rarely
+a personal view of any questions. Between what he thought and wished
+as an iconoclast, a reformer, or a reconstructor of foundations and
+what he was intrusted to say as an editor, he drew the line sharp and
+clear. While, as I have remarked, he was rarely a writer with his own
+hand, the articles which he suggested or poured into or pulled out of
+others were made so eminently characteristic of himself that they were
+stamped with his quality as truly as if he had written them himself.
+He was very proud of the success of the men in after life who started
+on their newspaper careers under him. He followed them with good
+wishes always, he spoke strong words for them when, where, and to whom
+they little suspected, and he rightly regarded their success as a
+vindication of his own prescience in having set them on their way, and
+also as a gratification not merely to his confidence in his own
+opinion concerning them, but to the wishes of his unselfish heart in
+desiring that they should take the pinnacles of achievement in
+whatsoever field of newspaper work inclination, necessity, opportunity
+or destiny marked out before them.
+
+ ST. CLAIR MCKELWAY.
+ The _Eagle_ Office, Brooklyn, May 14, 1889.
+
+
+
+
+From a Testimonial by John Elderkin
+
+
+David G. Croly was a strong man. He was strong in his convictions, his
+honesty, and his capacity to meet all the requirements of life in the
+most populous, enterprising, and brilliant city of the continent. His
+strength begot independence, and he was before all else independent in
+the formation and expression of his views, both on public affairs and
+those which are more personal and philosophical. He never apologized
+for his opinions, and his life needs no apology. His mind dwelt on
+that side of every question which involved the interest and welfare of
+the whole mass of mankind, and his religious philosophy was pure
+Humanitarianism. His reverence for Comte was the result of his
+intellectual conviction that in his altruistic teaching was to be
+found the only remedy for the wrongs and sufferings of the world.
+
+In personal intercourse Mr. Croly was suggestive, inspiring and
+encouraging. It was always with a slight shock to preconceived
+notions and prejudices that one listened to his comments on any
+current movement or event, for he was sure to take an original and
+characteristic view which could not be calculated.
+
+
+
+
+From Mrs. Croly's Contribution to Her Husband's Memorial
+
+
+Mr. Croly was in his twenty-seventh year when I first knew him, but as
+yet had made no mark in journalism. He had not found his place in it.
+He was employed as City Editor of the New York _Herald_--a position
+which had not then developed the importance which attaches to it
+to-day--and his duties consisted mainly of making out the "slate" for
+the staff of reporters, and doing such reportorial work as it was the
+province and habit of the City Editor to perform. This afforded little
+scope for a man of Mr. Croly's latent power; and his dissatisfaction
+and desire to find a new field was the cause of our going West within
+three years after our marriage and starting a daily paper in a Western
+town. Had the town been larger the story would have been different. As
+it was, we spent our money, not without result; for Mr. Croly
+discovered that his forte was not execution, but direction, and that
+his fertility of brain only needed a sufficiently wide field to
+develop powers capable of greater expansion.
+
+He was the most utterly destitute of the mechanical or "doing" faculty
+of any man I ever saw, and never used his own hands if he could
+possibly help it. But ideas flowed freely upon all subjects in which
+he was interested, and he distributed them as freely, knowing that the
+reservoir though forever emptied was always full. This amazing
+fertility was in some respects a detriment, for it led him into too
+many projects, and made him careless whom he enriched, while his
+dislike of the mechanism of his work made profit for others at his
+expense. I know no other journalist in New York City, during my own
+journalistic career of thirty-three years, who has made so many and
+such diverse publications, or put so much originality and force into
+the detail of his work. The _World_, and particularly the Sunday
+_World_, which was the foundation of the Sunday newspaper, the New
+York illustrated _Graphic_, the _Round Table_, and other journals were
+built up by his energy, and owed their most striking and successful
+features to his suggestiveness. He was particularly unselfish in his
+estimate of other men and his appreciation of their work. He was as
+proud of discovering the good qualities of a man on his staff as a
+miner of finding a nugget, and never wearied of expatiating upon them.
+Indeed, he did this more than once to his own disadvantage, thus
+furnishing an instrument to treachery.
+
+I am sure the "boys" of the old _World_ staff, St. Clair McKelway,
+A.C. Wheeler ("Nym Crinkle"), T.E. Wilson, H.G. Crickmore, Montgomery
+Schuyler, E.C. Stedman, and others, will look back with a little sigh
+for the "old times," and for the generous recognition they received
+from one who was never at a loss for a subject, or for the treatment
+of a topic, and was always a good comrade and heart and soul
+sympathizer in their work, its trials and its achievements.
+
+A chief quality with Mr. Croly was faithfulness to the interests he
+served. This was put to some severe tests; but they could not be
+called temptations, for disloyalty did not present itself as a
+possibility to him. His faults were those of a nervous temperament,
+combined with great intellectual force and a strength of feeling which
+in some directions and under certain circumstances became prejudice.
+He could never, in any case, be made to run a machine. He hated the
+obvious way of saying or doing a thing. He cultivated the "unexpected"
+almost to a fault, and always gave a touch of originality even to the
+commonplace. His pessimistic and unhopeful temperament was doubtless
+due to inherent and hereditary bodily weakness, and to the lack of
+muscular cultivation in his youth, which might have modified inherent
+tendencies. His mental lack was form not force; and he had enough
+original elemental ideas to have supplied a dozen men. In that respect
+he was superior to every other journalist I have ever known--not
+excepting Horace Greeley, Henry J. Raymond and Frederick Hudson.
+
+But the time has gone by for ideas. It is not that they are a drug in
+the market, but that there is no market for them. To-day is the
+apotheosis of the commonplace, the iteration of the cries of the
+street, the gabble of the sidewalk, and the gossip of the tea-table;
+neither originality nor force is needed for such journalism as this,
+and they may therefore well rest to the music of the pines.
+
+One of the strongest influences in Mr. Croly's life was his
+acquaintance with the Positivist movement in England, and his interest
+in the works of Auguste Comte. Up to this time he had experienced none
+of the undoubted benefit which accrues to every man and woman from the
+possession of an ideal standard, and settled convictions which inspire
+or take the place of religious aspiration. Positivism did all this for
+Mr. Croly, so far as anything could, and he became one of its most
+eager and devoted adherents.
+
+Mr. T.B. Wakeman, himself one of the earliest and most able leaders,
+credits Mr. Croly with being the "father" of the movement in this
+country, and in fact he was the first to make known that any
+representative of Positivist ideas existed in America. He invited and
+paid for the first lecture ever delivered in New York City upon the
+subject; it was given by Mr. Edgar, an unknown "apostle," in a little
+hall (De Garmo) on the corner of 14th street and Fifth avenue, on a
+certain Sunday some twenty or more years ago. The result of the
+lecture was that a dozen people formed a little society and engaged
+Mr. Edgar to give them a series of Sunday talks on the practical
+bearings of the religion of humanity. Mr. Edgar was not in himself an
+interesting exponent of his ideas, but his message inculcated duty,
+love to man, a life open and free from concealments, the possession of
+personal gifts or acquired property as trusts to be used for the good
+of others, and the recognition of value in all that has been and is.
+
+These ideas became more or less an actuating principle. They brought
+together a circle of men and women of the best quality, who endeavored
+to live up to their standard, and by work and daily life, rather than
+by active propagandism, to crystallize opinions into a vital force.
+For several years the regular meetings were held at our house, the
+"festivals" of the year being often given at the residences of other
+members of the society--Mr. T.B. Wakeman, or Mr. Courtlandt Palmer.
+There is still an "old guard" left, of as good, brave, and unselfish
+men and women as ever walked on this earth, and though some differed
+from. Mr. Croly, and from each other on some points, yet they all knew
+and acknowledged that he brought to them the beginning of the best
+inspiration of their lives.
+
+Mr. Croly's latest expressed wish was that all the usual forms should
+be disregarded in the event of his death, except the simplest service
+and the presence of flowers. "If any one thinks enough of me," he
+said, "to bring me flowers, let them; but have no elaborate mourning,
+and bury me close to the earth, near the pines, and facing the sea."
+The legend he left for his grave-stone was: "I meant well, tried a
+little, failed much." But this will not be the verdict of those who
+came under the influence of his strong and many-sided personality.
+
+
+
+
+Mrs. Croly's Club Life
+
+_By Haryot Holt Dey_
+
+
+There is a pleasant and not irrational fancy in the mind of the writer
+that somewhere in space there exists the abiding-place of ideas, and
+that as fast as earth-dwellers are ready for them they are released.
+Like a bird the idea takes flight and seeks a home in the brain of
+some one who is singled out to forward and exploit it for the benefit
+of humanity. Thenceforward, that person becomes the apostle of the
+idea. "We are not in the possession of our ideas," says Heine, "but
+are possessed by them; they master us and force us into the arena
+where like gladiators we must fight for them." But it is only to the
+elect that great ideas are assigned, one who either through heredity
+or by special development is qualified to carry the message. This
+fanciful reasoning applies admirably to the idea for women's
+clubs--organizations for women--and in its selection of Jenny June it
+made no mistake in the character of its agent.
+
+The first woman's club was organized in March, 1868, and was the
+outcome of feminine protest, because women were barred from the
+reception and banquet tendered to Charles Dickens by the Press Club of
+New York City. Among those who applied for tickets on equal grounds
+with men was Mrs. Croly, then an active, recognized force in
+journalism, and when the idea of a woman's club took possession of her
+she had become the most indignant and spirited woman ever locked out
+of a banquet hall.
+
+Forty years ago it required courage for a woman to step aside from the
+ranks of conservatism and organize a woman's club; it was regarded as
+a side issue of "woman's rights," a movement then in grave disrepute.
+But Mrs. Croly had dared untrodden paths once before when she stepped
+into the field of journalism, and her experience there had developed
+self-confidence. She had been writing for women for many years, and
+through her mission had acquired instinctive knowledge of their needs;
+and so when the affront was put upon her by her male colleagues of the
+press she conceived the idea of a club for women. It should be one
+that would manage its own affairs, represent as far as possible the
+active interests of women, and create a bond of fellowship between
+them, which many women as well as men thought at that time would be
+impossible of accomplishment. Mrs. Croly wrote in her "History of
+Clubs" thirty years later: "At this period no one of those connected
+with the undertaking had ever heard of a woman's club, or of any
+secular organization composed entirely of women for the purpose of
+bringing all kinds of women together to work out their objects in
+their own way." And then again: "When the history of the nineteenth
+century comes to be written women will appear as organizers and
+leaders of great organized movements among their own sex for the first
+time in the history of the world."
+
+"The originator specially disavowed any specific object, only asking
+for a representative woman's organization based on perfectly equal
+terms in which women might acquire methods, learn how to work together
+for general objects, not for charity or a propaganda."
+
+"This declaration of principles was the cause of much abusive
+criticism, as well as failure to obtain aid and sympathy. Had Sorosis
+started to _do_ any one thing, from building an asylum for aged and
+indigent 'females' to supplying the natives of Timbuctoo with pocket
+handkerchiefs, it would have found a public already made. But its
+attitude was frankly ignorant and inquiring. It laid no claims to
+wisdom or knowledge that could be of any use to anybody. It simply
+felt the stirring of an intense desire that women should come
+together--all together, not from one church, or one neighborhood, or
+one walk of life, but from all quarters, and take counsel together,
+find the cause of separations and failures, of ignorance and
+wrong-doing, and try to discover better ways, more intelligent
+methods."
+
+Under this banner Sorosis was launched. Alice Cary was its first
+president. The story of Sorosis from the beginning is a very
+interesting one; from the view-point of the press its doings and
+sayings and business affairs generally have always afforded
+subject-matter for comment and conjecture. Of its early days Mrs.
+Croly wrote: "The social events of the first year were memorable, for
+they were the first of their kind, and practically changed the custom
+of confining public dinner-giving to men. The first was offered as an
+_amende honorable_ on the part of the New York Press Club, and
+consisted of a 'breakfast' to which the Press Club invited Sorosis,
+but did not invite it to speak or do anything but sit still and eat,
+and be talked and sung to. The second was a 'tea' given by Sorosis to
+the Press Club at which it reversed the order, furnishing all the
+speakers and allowing the men no chance, not even to respond to their
+own toast. The third was a 'dinner,'--the brightest and best of the
+whole--at which the ladies and gentlemen each paid their own way and
+shared equally the honors and responsibilities." This is said to be
+the first public dinner at which men and women ever sat down on equal
+terms. A report of it in a daily newspaper closed as follows: "The
+entire affair was one of the most delightful events of the season, and
+will long be held in pleasantest memory by all who had the honor to
+participate in it. We believe we violate no secret when we say that
+the gentlemen were most agreeably surprised to find their rival club
+composed of charming women, representing the best aristocracy of the
+metropolis, an aristocracy of sterling good sense, earnest thought,
+aspiration and progressive intellect, with no perceptible taint of
+strong-mindedness."
+
+The growth and expansion of Sorosis were watched by Mrs. Croly with
+the same eager interest with which a mother contemplates the
+development of a child, not knowing just how its character will shape,
+guarding it always with love, for a potential force in its directing.
+It was her spirit that steered it over rough places; that brought
+harmony out of discord; that inspired, soothed, provided wise counsel,
+and that many times sacrificed personal feelings for the good of the
+whole. To do this required mental qualities of a high order--courage,
+foresight, judgment, and not a little of the martyr spirit. Women had
+never organized before, and the conditions to be met and the problems
+to be solved stood absolutely alone, with no precedent to build upon
+or decide even the simplest question. What firmness was required in
+the leader at that time, when, for example, women who had been her
+staunchest allies deserted the ranks because they could not select the
+club name! It was a firm hand that kept the unorganized body from
+going to pieces on the rocks of dissension, and it was at that time
+that the leader proved her inalienable right to her title. She had led
+women into the field of journalism, and now she was leading them into
+organization. Clubs began to form in all parts of the country, and
+when Sorosis arrived at its twenty-first birthday, it was Mrs. Croly's
+idea that they should all come together, and when the invitation was
+issued they came. Thus was formed the General Federation of Women's
+Clubs. At present there are 800,000 women belonging to that
+federation; each State has its own federation, New York forming first,
+at Mrs. Croly's suggestion, and now containing 32,000 enrolled
+members. The General Federation was formed in 1889. The writer recalls
+the triumph in Mrs. Croly's tone when she replied to the appeal of a
+man who came to her to beg to be given the names of the women
+belonging to the federation. "If you choose to send a woman to copy
+the names," she said, "you may do so, but it will take her more than a
+week." And the General Federation was less than three years old at the
+time.
+
+Mrs. Croly organized the Woman's Press Club of New York in 1889. It is
+due to her wisdom that it was carried through many crises. She was its
+president from the day it was founded to the day of her death; always
+its loving teacher, her enthusiasm regarding its development never
+flagged. She lived to see it firmly established, a harmonious and
+delightful organization, and she was satisfied.
+
+Mrs. Croly was neither parliamentarian, orator, nor politician, but
+she had a fund of good sense, wise judgment, and a power of expression
+which, could clarify an atmosphere when mere knowledge of the "Rules
+of Order" would have failed. She had spiritual vision, and by it she
+knew the soul of the club; no amount of dissension could shake her
+faith in its ultimate good, and in times of crisis she presided with a
+serenity only accountable in the fact that she viewed from the
+mountain summit what her associates saw only from the housetop. What
+years of development she enjoyed long before the club idea possessed
+her, endowing her with wisdom and mental breadth, and what
+associations that urged and demanded that she become a student of
+sociology! The seeds of thought planted in those early days of
+journalistic experience, inclusive of what she terms the "Positivist
+Episode," blossomed in her later, more mature years, and all the
+harvest she brought and applied to the organization of women. To the
+casual observer an organized body of women differed in no particular
+form from any ordinary assembly of women. What it was to her one can
+only realize by a careful perusal of her writings on club formation,
+and the moral awakening that sounded the bugle note of progress when
+women began to organize.
+
+Once it came to the hearing of this gentle apostle of development,
+that she had been said to represent a cult. The occasion was a
+reception given in her honor by one of her clubs on her seventieth
+birthday. There had been speeches and congratulations, and the scene
+was one of general rejoicing. "Oh, she is the leader of a cult,"
+whispered a guest, and the remark was repeated to Mrs. Croly. She
+received it with a sorry smile of regret that any one should so
+misinterpret the significance of the scene. As if the narrow and
+exclusive word "cult" could be applied to an assembly that stood for
+organization and human development, which, in her prophetic vision,
+only needed time to unite races, and ultimately to extend around the
+globe. To her it signified "the opening of the door, the stepping out
+into the freedom of the outer air, and the sweet sense of fellowship
+with the whole universe, that comes with liberty and light."
+
+Few women carry their enthusiasm till past three-score-and-ten, as
+Mrs. Croly did. With the failing of physical strength the wand of
+power passed into the hands of younger women whom she hailed as her
+successors, and whose growth and development were the blossoms
+springing from the seed she herself had planted; and in the last years
+of her noble life, when the glow of sunset was on the garden of her
+activities, the love she bore her fellow-women was her unfailing joy
+and inspiration.
+
+At the time of life when people recognize the fact that their forces
+are waning, and that a well-earned period of rest has arrived, Mrs.
+Croly set for herself the last task of her busy life. She felt she had
+something to tell about the success of her great idea, her message to
+women, and she wrote the "History of the Woman's Club Movement in
+America," a volume containing eleven hundred and eighty pages, which
+told the story of nearly all the clubs in the General Federation. This
+book will remain a monument to the founder of women's clubs. Into it
+she put the skill and experience of her long years of editorship,
+urging every faculty to the work, and applying herself with a degree
+of industry that characterized the zeal of her best working years. And
+it testifies to the martyr-like nature of her spirit, that she even
+rallied from the disappointment consequent upon the financial failure
+of the book. The dedication of the work reads as follows: "This book
+has been a labor of love, and it is lovingly dedicated to the
+Twentieth Century Woman by one who has seen and shared in the
+struggles of the Woman of the Nineteenth Century." But nothing that is
+good is lost, and the book testifies to the illimitable ideas, the
+trust in eternal goodness, and the strength of purpose of one who had
+a glorified estimate of latent feminine forces that require to be
+developed.
+
+
+
+
+Essays and Addresses by Jane Cunningham Croly
+
+
+
+
+Beginnings of Organization[1]
+
+Women in Religious Organization
+
+
+When the history of the Nineteenth Century comes to be written, women
+will appear for the first time in the history of the world as
+organizers, and leaders of great organized movements among their own
+sex.
+
+[Footnote 1: _History of the Woman's Club Movement in America._]
+
+The world of to-day, both for men and women, is a different world from
+that which furnished the outlook for the men and women of a hundred
+years ago. Science, invention, have changed its material aspects; and
+while retiring some individual activities and occupations, they have
+created new fields of industry that are rapidly changing the face of
+the world, and making new demands upon strength and energy.
+
+The world which man has conquered, and is still conquering, is no
+longer the purely physical. He is working now toward the discovery and
+control of the powers of the air, and has already harnessed some of
+them to do his bidding. The succession of great events and discoveries
+will mark this century as an epoch in the world's history, and is
+responsible for economic changes which create social disturbance, and
+to which both men and women must adjust themselves, often without
+knowing the why or wherefore of that which is so different from what
+has been. It is one of the paradoxes in human nature that women, while
+being made responsible for human conditions, have been condemned to
+individual isolation. It has been largely the result of general
+physical differentiation and the dependence that grew out of it, and,
+secondarily, the long ages required to produce settled social
+conditions and a reversal of that great unwritten law of kings and
+men--that might made right.
+
+It is true that there was a time, some traditions of which are still
+preserved among the Indian tribes of North America, when the woman
+possessed controlling influence and power. This matriarchal or mother
+age passed with the primitive period in which the energies of men were
+absorbed in hunting and fighting. It was a tribal effort through
+tribal women to formulate and give importance to family life, and it
+must have been accepted and more or less sanctioned by the men. This
+tribal leadership, at first domestic and social, disappeared with the
+development of military leaders, the acquisition of military powers,
+and the centralization of property in lands, houses, and personal
+belongings, that required constant and effective methods of protection
+and defence.
+
+Instances are not wanting of heroic women of those early days who were
+capable of holding and defending person and property against
+aggression and warfare. But the logic of events was strong then, as
+now, and the destiny of the woman was not that of military supremacy.
+
+The first step in associated life taken by women was a simple protest
+against the use and abuse of power on the part of men, wrought up by
+fear or loathing to the point of desperation. Women, usually of rank,
+fled to the desert with one or two companions, and encountered
+unheard-of hardships rather than submit to the fate to which they had
+been condemned by father, brother, or some other man who could
+exercise authority over them. The first Church-sisterhood grew out of
+such beginnings, and gradually obtained the sanction of the Church. A
+recent remarkable work, "Women in Monasticism," shows how wide and
+powerful the system of religious sisterhoods had become as early as
+the fifth century, and traces its growing strength and enlargement
+until its decline, which was coeval with the Reformation.
+
+The strength of this extraordinary development lay in the fact that it
+furnished women with a vocation; it gave employment to faculty. The
+sisterhoods of the convents and monasteries were the nurses, the
+teachers, the students, the caretakers of the poor, and the guardians
+of the orphaned rich. The Fathers of the Church--St. Jerome, St.
+Chrysostom, St. Augustine--all bear witness to the high character of
+these sisterhoods and to their individual members, to their virtues
+and lives of self-sacrificing devotion. Many of these women became
+learned by the exercise of memory alone, for they had no books. Many
+enriched their convents with manuscript books--the result of lives of
+painstaking labor. The Beguines, who founded hospitals and schools,
+were the best educated women of their day--the eleventh century. They
+read Tacitus and Virgil in the original, and were skilled in medicine.
+Disease often took loathsome forms, and only women whose lives were
+consecrated to self-denying labor could have been the patient
+ministers to the diseased poor.
+
+This is all the more noteworthy because the idea of vocation was not
+the early incentive to monastic life. It was sought as a refuge; it
+developed into a vocation; and it is a matter of interest to women
+to-day that these spontaneous vocations, growing out of an enforced
+life, were inspired by love of well-doing, desire for study, the
+acquisition of knowledge, its distribution, and the ever-ready spirit
+of helpfulness at the sacrifice of every personal indulgence.
+
+Naturally the monastic life of women was controlled by the Church, and
+could have continued to exist only by permission. A Spanish lady of
+rank who had befriended Ignatius Loyola as a young student of
+Barcelona, attracted by the odor of sanctity and scholarship which
+attached itself to the Order which he founded, gained reluctant
+permission to establish (1545) an Order of Jesuitesses, subject to the
+same strict rules and discipline. This was the beginning of a strictly
+woman's Jesuit "college," which flourished notwithstanding all the
+efforts Loyola himself made to get rid of it, and the restrictions put
+upon it. Many noble ladies joined it, and it became the foundation of
+a number of houses of the same name and character, extending into
+Flanders and England, when, without cause, except fear perhaps of
+their extent and influence, they were finally suppressed by a bull of
+Pope Urban VIII, bearing date, January 13, 1630. This Order of
+Jesuitesses existed for nearly a century. Their colleges were
+scholastic, and had given rise to preparatory schools, when they were
+summarily suppressed because of their independent life.
+
+Had this Order continued to exist it might have gained an educational
+ascendency throughout Europe which even the strong wave of the
+Reformation would have found it hard to overcome. But the convents and
+monasteries generally suffered at this time from the abuses which had
+crept into the Church, and the rage for power which possessed its
+prelates.
+
+The influence was mischievous also from a social and domestic point
+of view; from the sanctity and superiority attached to those who
+ignored natural ties and duties, thus lowering the social and domestic
+standard, and setting the nun's habit above the woman, the wife and
+the mother. Yet nature had asserted itself even in the convent. The
+motherhood in the monastic woman made her the mother, the caretaker,
+the nurse, the teacher, and the helper of all those who needed
+maternal care, while condemning and ignoring its common aspects and
+place in everyday life.
+
+This absence of domestic ties was not, however, obligatory upon all
+sisterhoods. An interesting story of the "First Council of Women,"
+told by Madame Lendier at the Congress of Women in Paris in 1889,
+bears upon this point.
+
+The monastic school out of which the Council grew, was founded in the
+early part of the seventh century, by Iduberge, wife of Pepin, mayor
+under the Frankish kings.
+
+Iduberge cleared a space in the forest, and built a house for the
+education and religious consecration (if they desired it) of the
+daughters of nobles, her daughter Gertrude becoming the abbess. No vow
+of celibacy was imposed. As long as they remained in the abbey they
+were to conform to the rules of the house, but if they desired to
+marry they were free to leave. The _chanoinesses_ of Nivelle spent
+their morning in religious duties, but the rest of the day they were
+at liberty to mix with the outer world. The abbess alone took upon
+herself the vow of perpetual virginity. A hundred and seventy passed
+away after the death of Gertrude. The abbey had grown in power, had
+gathered around itself a town with gates and towers and
+fortifications, but was independent of the French Government, being
+under the sole rule of the abbess, who was called the "Princess."
+
+This independence excited the jealousy of the Church, and in May, 820,
+Nivelle received a visit from Valcand, the reigning bishop of Liege.
+He was received by the lady abbess in the habit of her order, a cross
+of gold in her hand; mounted on a white horse she rode at the head of
+the procession that marched to meet him. Young girls of noble birth,
+clad in long white gowns trimmed with ermine, and mounted on palfreys,
+followed their abbess, and behind them the town authorities, feudal
+lords and administrators of justice.
+
+At the same time Valcand entered the town with every honor and
+courtesy due to his rank. He held a solemn service, and having given
+the benediction, he rose again and addressed the _chanoinesses_. He
+declared that it had been decided by the Council of Aix-la-Chapelle
+that he should be sent to Nivelle to enforce the rules of St. Benoit,
+which must be followed by all religious bodies; this rule being that
+all the devotees of Nivelle were required to take upon themselves the
+vow of perpetual virginity, to acknowledge themselves dependent upon
+their bishop in all secular matters, and finally to yield up to
+Valcand all temporal power at Nivelle.
+
+This solemn declaration was received in silence. For some moments no
+one moved or spoke, but a low murmur swept over the young sisters of
+Nivelle Abbey. The lady abbess, followed by her _chanoinesses_, rose
+and advanced to the rails of the choir stand. The abbess Hiltrude,
+daughter of Lyderic II, sovereign of Flanders under the emperor, then
+between thirty-five and forty years of age, was beautiful; of that
+calm, grave type which speaks of a quiet, well-regulated life.
+
+"In the name of the Cloister of St. Gertrude," she said, "we protest
+against any interference in the temporal power of this government. We
+claim the right of taking to ourselves husbands when it seems right to
+us so to do. We are therefore resolved to follow the rules of our
+patron saint, as we always have done heretofore, and if this protest
+is insufficient we will present our appeal to our Holy Father, the
+Pope."
+
+The bishop declared that he would maintain the rule given by the
+Council at Aix, and then descending from the pulpit, he ordered his
+people to follow him at once out of Nivelle, refusing to join in any
+of the festivities prepared in his honor.
+
+Hiltrude now took things seriously into her own hands, leaving nothing
+undone to secure the success of her appeal. She sent a courier to the
+Pope, and another to Louis le Debonaire; but the wise abbess took yet
+further precautions: she at once organized a council at Nivelle of all
+the abbesses of the French Empire, requiring silence from them, and
+assuring them of security in the town. The council could not be
+brought together for a year, but on the 1st of May, 821, Hiltrude
+inaugurated her "Concile de Femmes."
+
+She took advantage of the marriage of Count d'Albion with Regina,
+which was to take place at the abbey. Regina was a _chanoinesse_, and
+it was the custom when a member of the circle at the abbey married,
+that the marriage should be solemnized at Nivelle. Fifteen titled
+abbesses, all of aristocratic lineage, arrived with imposing suites.
+The council was a short one. They approved of all that Hiltrude had
+done, and signed the appeal. The document, written, signed, and sealed
+by all the abbesses present, was immediately sent to Rome, and to
+Valcand himself. Meantime the pope and the king, who were much
+perplexed, and the bishop, who was completely baffled by the logic,
+strength and force of appeal of the "Concile," were obliged to
+withdraw the opposition, and the _chanoinesses_ were left in peace to
+marry or not to marry, as they pleased.
+
+The ancient order of deaconesses imposed no vow, yet it was
+co-existent with the early church, and accepted by many of the fathers
+as part of the apostolic order. This position was strengthened by the
+high character of the women, many of them widows, or unprotected
+women, whom death or some other calamity had freed from natural ties.
+
+Ancient church history is full of the records of courage, devotion,
+and self-sacrifice on the part of these women, who were generally of
+high birth, but gave themselves to poverty and the most menial
+offices, and left names which have perpetuated the sanctity of their
+order, and come down to the present day as types of good women.
+
+The ceremonies used in the ordination of a deaconess were precisely
+the same as those used for a deacon. The deaconesses were not
+cloistered: they lived at home with children or relatives. But they
+wore a distinctive dress, and had their place in the church with the
+clergy. The "golden age" of the order is said to have been immediately
+following the apostolic era, before the spirit of monasticism had
+destroyed or limited activities, and shut off sympathy with the
+outside world.
+
+The royal and imperial order of the Hadraschin in Prague, Germany, is
+the most imposing relic remaining of the religious orders of women,
+though not the most numerous. There are about forty chapters still in
+existence of this ancient order, with a royal residence at Prague. The
+abbess possessed the right to crown the queen at coronation
+ceremonies, and exercised it as late as 1836, wearing all the
+magnificent insignia of her rank in the order.
+
+A more numerous order of consecrated women, presided over and governed
+by one "mother-general," is that of St. Joseph de Cluny. This was
+founded by a woman, Madame Javonbey, in the beginning of the present
+century, about ninety years ago. It has one hundred and twenty-eight
+houses in France, and two in the United States. It has others in South
+America, one in Italy, several in the West Indies and some in Africa.
+
+All its property is in community, and its membership--about six
+thousand women--teach in its schools, and care for the sick poor in
+hospitals and in their homes. Two hundred are assigned to the care of
+the insane, by the French Government.
+
+The mother-general administers, from the mother-house _(maison mere)_
+at Paris. She has two assistants and a council of six sisters. Under
+the mother-general there are mother-superiors, one to each estate,
+administering and governing it, but under this mother-superior at
+Paris. These lesser governing women send in weekly reports to the home
+convent at Paris, giving brief accounts of transactions and events,
+such as the entrance of pupils, the purchase of lands, and extra dole
+of food to the poor, the death of a member and the like. They are a
+prosperous, working sisterhood, and have preserved the integrity and
+independence of their beginning.
+
+It was the spirit of protest against church and monastic abuses,
+embodied in Martin Luther, which broke up the monastic system for both
+men and women. Doubtless also it had outlived its usefulness in any
+large or general sense. A more settled social and domestic life was
+becoming possible through the development of trades and industries,
+while the domestic virtues in women began to acquire a value, and
+furnish guarantees to the State.
+
+The discovery of printing gave a tremendous impulse to the spread of
+civilizing and educational influences, to the multiplication of
+schools, and the desire for knowledge. It was the dawn of intellectual
+freedom, and the school of the people was the open door for it.
+
+Spiritual freedom had to wait longer. It waited the unfolding of the
+woman. At the beginning of this century she was still under the
+dominion of the church and its leaders, and her efforts were
+controlled by sects and doctrines.
+
+The first associated work of women in this country, and in this
+century, was still religious and philanthropic. The "Sisters of
+Charity" in America owes its origin to a young and beautiful New York
+woman, Elizabeth Seton, who was born in 1774, married at twenty, but
+lost her husband by death in a very few years. Obliged to support
+herself, she opened a school in Baltimore. But her tendency was toward
+the devoted life of a _religieuse_, and the gift of a foundation fund
+enabled her to gratify this strong desire. She assumed the conventual
+habit, and opened a convent school on July 30, 1809, in Emmetsburg, of
+which she became mother-superior. The character of "Mother" Seton was
+considered saintly by Protestants and Roman Catholics alike. She died
+at her post in 1821, after a life the last half of which was entirely
+spent in self-denying work. Mrs. Seton was exceedingly lovely as a
+young woman; and her sweet, serene face and presence, as she grew
+older, was said to exert a magical influence upon all who came in
+contact with her. This was particularly seen in her care of the sick,
+and in dealing with turbulent spirits: they came immediately under her
+influence without any effort on her part.
+
+The first ten years of the present century saw the beginning of a
+number of religious societies of women, organized to create funds, and
+aid in church mission work. First among these were the "cent"
+societies, 1801 and 1804, and later the Woman's Auxiliaries to the
+Board of Foreign Missions. These grew in size and strength, until in
+1839 there were six hundred and eighty-eight of these societies. But,
+unfortunately, their limited and purely subjective character afforded
+small basis for the wider growth necessary to perpetuity, and they
+gradually declined, until in 1860 they had become nearly extinct.
+
+A little later, 1864, the first independent "Union" of women
+missionary workers was formed in New York by Mrs. Doremus, and within
+a few years every denomination, beginning with the Congregationalists,
+had its organized Woman's Auxiliary to the American Board of Home and
+Foreign Missions. The "Missionary Union" remains, however, the only
+independent society of women workers in this field, managing its own
+affairs, raising its own funds, and sending out its own missionaries,
+both men and women. Its very existence has been a great strength to
+the Woman's Auxiliaries, stimulating them to independent action, and
+especially to the demand for a voice in the disposal of the large sums
+they raise and turn over to the treasury of the American Board.
+
+The oldest purely women-societies in this country were also started
+for missionary and church work. The first is the "Female Charitable
+Society" of Baldwinsville, N.J., and is still existent.
+
+The object of the Baldwinsville society, as stated in the
+constitution, was "to obtain a more perfect view on the infinite
+excellence of the Christian religion in its own nature, the importance
+of making this religion the chief concern of our hearts, the necessity
+of promoting it in our families, and of diffusing it among our fellow
+sinners." A further object is "to afford aid to religious
+institutions, and for the carrying out of this purpose a contribution
+of twelve and a half cents is required at every quarterly meeting."
+
+Mrs. Jane Hamill presided at its first meeting; the Rev. John
+Davenport opened it with prayer. Mrs. Hamill was still the presiding
+officer at its jubilee anniversary in 1867. At its seventy-eighth
+annual meeting Mrs. Payn Bigelow was elected president.
+
+The "Piqua (Ohio) Female Bible Society" was founded in 1818. It
+consisted at first of nine women. In those early days the country was
+a wilderness. Other members were added later. It has had in all, over
+nine hundred members. Mrs. Elizabeth Pettit was its presiding officer
+from 1840 until 1881--forty-one years. The daughters and the
+granddaughters are all made members by right of inheritance, and in
+several instances four generations have been represented at one time.
+It held its seventy-fifth anniversary in 1893, when all the
+descendants of the early members were notified, and many were present.
+It has held a meeting on the first Monday afternoon of each month for
+seventy-eight years, and the records are preserved intact. The founder
+was Mrs. Rachael Johnston, wife of the Indian agent. It has sent over
+fifteen thousand dollars to the parent Bible Society in New York.
+
+It should be remembered that down to the last quarter of the present
+century, there was little sympathy with organizations of women, not
+expressly religious, charitable, or intended to promote charitable
+objects. "What is the object?" was the first question asked of any
+organization of women, and if it was not the making of garments, or
+the collection of funds for a church or philanthropic purpose, it was
+considered unworthy of attention, or injurious doubts were thrown upon
+its motives. In Germany, even yet, societies of women are not
+permitted, except such as have a distinctly religious, educational or
+charitable object.
+
+
+
+
+The Moral Awakening[1]
+
+
+The life of the world is continuous, morally and spiritually as well
+as materially. The individual sees it at short range and in fragments.
+That is the reason why it so often seems dislocated and out of joint.
+A thoughtful writer, Mrs. L.R. Zerbe, says: "When Goethe made his
+discovery of the unity of structure in organic life, he gave to the
+philosophers, who had long taught the value, the 'sovereignty' of the
+individual, a physiological argument against oppression and tyranny,
+and put the whole creation on an equal footing."
+
+[Footnote 1: _History of the Woman's Club Movement in America_.]
+
+The dignity of mind, and the right of the individual to its conscious
+use and possession, had been already clearly enunciated by Fichte,
+Herder, and others, who antedated Goethe. But Goethe went farther. He
+carried the discovery of the rights of the individual to its logical
+conclusion, which was, that the rights of every created thing should
+be given a hearing. This was absolutely new doctrine. It brought women
+and children within the pale of humanity. It moralized and humanized
+nature itself; bringing birds, trees, flowers, all animate life, into
+the "brotherhood" of creation.
+
+The writings of Rousseau and Chateaubriand extended the idea, and
+Madame de Stael and Mary Wollstonecraft were the natural outgrowths of
+it. It may be said indeed to have been the actuating principle of
+modern literature, especially of modern English poetry, which
+vitalizes and idealizes children and nature. Whatever credit may be
+given to others, it should never be forgotten that to Goethe we owe
+the discovery of structural unity, that the cell of all organic life
+is the same.
+
+The ideas that grew out of this discovery reached the higher, thinking
+class, and inspired the poets with a new enthusiasm for humanity long
+before it reached the masses. The French nobility were satiated with
+power. The "Little Trianon" was the only reaction possible to a queen,
+from the wearisome magnificence of Versailles, the gilded slavery of
+the court. The people recognized no sentiment of human sympathy in the
+so-called "whims" and "caprices" of the luxurious occupants of
+palaces; and maddened by countless wrongs, precipitated the French
+Revolution, which, it has been said, turned back the tide of progress
+for one hundred years.
+
+From this movement were developed all those reforms which have made
+the nineteenth century glorious, monumental in the history of
+progressive civilization. The abolition of slavery, the development
+of a spirit of mercy towards dumb animals, the recognition of the
+human rights of women and children--all these may be traced through
+many a winding way, back to the German scientists and philosophers,
+who rediscovered the inner life while working from its outer side.
+
+Yet, as in history there are no sporadic instances, no isolated facts,
+so this flower of our century--the recognition of the rights of all
+created things, with all that it involves--belongs to universal
+history. It is the product of the Reformation and the Renaissance,
+with roots only the records of Rome and Greece and Egypt may discover.
+
+The quickening of moral and spiritual life in our day, its accelerated
+movement, is not to be claimed by or traced to any one set of
+influences or propaganda. The awakening has been all along the line;
+and it has resulted in a new mental attitude toward the human life of
+the world, both as a whole and in its various parts. Its great outcome
+is the learning to live with, rather than for, others.
+
+This new view, this great advance of the moral and spiritual forces,
+addressed itself with singular significance to women. To those who
+were prepared, it came not only as an awakening, but as
+emancipation--emancipation of the soul, freedom from the tyranny of
+tradition and prejudice, and the acquisition of an intellectual
+outlook; a spiritual liberty achieved so quietly as to be unnoticed
+except by those who watched the progress of this bloodless revolution,
+and the falling away of the shackles that bind the spirit in its early
+and often painful effort to reach the light.
+
+The broadening of human sympathy, the freedom of will, gave rise to a
+thousand new forms of activity; some of these an expansion of those
+which had previously existed; others opening new channels of
+communication; all looking towards wider fields of effort, a larger
+unity, a more complete realization of the eternal ideal, the
+fatherhood of God, the motherhood of woman, the brotherhood of man.
+
+Realization of this ideal brought a new conception of duty to the mind
+of woman, unlocked the strong gates of theological and social
+tradition, and opened the windows of her soul to a new and more
+glorious world. The sense of duty is always strong in the woman. If
+she disregards it she never ceases to suffer. Her convictions of it
+have made her the most willing and joyful of martyrs, the most
+persistent and relentless of bigots, the most blind and devoted of
+partisans, the most faithful and believing of friends, and the only
+type out of which Nature could form the mother. This quality has made
+women the constructive force they are in the world, and gives all the
+more importance to the new departure, to the influences of the new
+sources of enlargement that have come into their lives.
+
+Thus it became a necessity that the quickening of conscience, the
+widening of sympathy, the influence of aggregations, the stimulus to
+desire and ambitions, should be accompanied by corresponding growth in
+knowledge and a love beyond the narrow confines of family and church.
+
+The cry of the woman emerging from a darkened past was "light, more
+light," and light was breaking. Gradually came the demand and the
+opportunity for education; for intellectual freedom for women as well
+as men; for cultivation of gifts and faculties. The early half of the
+century was marked by a crusade for the cause of the better education
+of women, as significant as that for the physical emancipation of the
+slave, and as devoted on the part of its leaders.
+
+Simultaneous with this were two other movements--the anti-slavery
+agitation, inspired by the new enthusiasm for human rights and carried
+on largely by the Quakers of both sexes. The woman's-rights movement
+was the natural outgrowth of the individual-sovereignty idea which the
+German philosophers had planted, and of which Mary Wollstonecraft was
+the first great woman-exponent.
+
+The keynote of the educational advance was struck by Emma Willard in
+1821. She was followed by Mary Lyon, Mary Mortimer, and other brave
+women who dared to ask for women the cultivation of such faculties as
+they possessed, without let or hindrance. This demand has taken the
+century to develop and enforce. The work was so gradual that it is not
+yet, by any means, accomplished. Schools and colleges exist, but not
+yet equally, except here and there. They are, however, giving us an
+army of trained women who are bringing the force of knowledge to bear
+upon questions which have heretofore only enlisted sympathies.
+
+Simultaneously with this question of educational opportunity, has
+arisen an eager seeking after knowledge on the part of women who have
+been debarred from its enjoyment, or lacked opportunity for its
+acquisition. The knowledge sought was not that of a limited, sectional
+geography, or a mathematical quantity as taught in schools, but the
+knowledge of the history and development of races and peoples, of the
+laws and principles that underlie this development, and the place of
+the woman in this grand march of the ages.
+
+The woman has been the one isolated fact in the universe. The outlook
+upon the world, the means of education, the opportunities for
+advancement, had all been denied her; and that "community of feeling
+and sense of distributive justice which grows out of cooperative
+interests in work and life, had found small opportunity for growth or
+activity."
+
+The opportunity came with the awakening of the communal spirit, the
+recognition of the law of the solidarity of interests, the
+sociological advance which established a basis of equality among a
+wide diversity of conditions and individuals, and opportunities for
+all capable of using them. This great advance was not confined to a
+society or a neighborhood; it did not require subscription to a tenet,
+or the giving up of one's mode of life. It was simply a change of a
+point of view, the opening of a door, the stepping out into the
+freedom of the outer air, and the sweet sense of fellowship with the
+whole universe that comes with liberty and light.
+
+The difference was only a point of view, but it changed the aspect of
+the world. This new note, which meant for the woman liberty, breadth
+and unity, was struck by the woman's club.
+
+To the term "club," as applied to and by women, may be fitly referred
+the words in which John Addington Symonds defines Renaissance. "This,"
+he remarks, "is not explained by this or that characteristic, but as
+an effort for which at length the time has come." It means the
+attainment of the conscious freedom of the woman spirit, and has been
+manifested first most strongly and most widely in this country,
+because here that spirit has attained the largest measure of freedom.
+
+The woman's club was not an echo; it was not the mere banding together
+for a social and economic purpose, like the clubs of men. It became
+at once, without deliberate intention or concerted action, a
+light-giving and seed-sowing centre of purely altruistic and
+democratic activity. It had no leaders. It brought together qualities
+rather than personages; and by a representation of all interests,
+moral, intellectual, and social, a natural and equal division of work
+and opportunity, created an ideal basis of organization, where every
+one has an equal right to whatever comes to the common centre; where
+the centre itself becomes a radiating medium for the diffusion of the
+best of that which is brought to it, and where, all being freely
+given, no material considerations enter.
+
+This is no ideal or imaginary picture. It is the simplest prose of
+every woman's club and every clubwoman's experience during the past
+thirty years.
+
+It has been in every sense an awakening to the full glory and meaning
+of life. It is also a very narrow and self-absorbed mind that sees in
+these openings only opportunities for its own pleasure, or chances for
+its own advancement on its own narrow and exclusive lines. The lesson
+of the hour is help for those that need it, in the shape in which they
+need it, and kinship with all and everything that exists on the face
+of God's earth. If we miss this we miss the spirit, the illuminating
+light of the whole movement, and lose it in the mire of our own
+selfishness.
+
+The tendency of association upon any broad human basis is to destroy
+the caste spirit, and this the club has done for women more than any
+other influence that as yet has come into existence. A club that is
+narrowed to a clique, a class, or a single object, is a contradiction
+in terms. It may be a society, or a congregation of societies, but it
+is not a club. The essence of a club is its many-sided character, its
+freedom in gathering together and expressing all shades of difference,
+its equal and independent terms of membership, which puts every one
+upon the same footing, and enables each one to find or make her own
+place. The most opposite ideas find equal claims to respect. Women
+widest apart in position and habits of life find much in common, and
+acquaintance and contact mutually helpful and advantageous. Club life
+teaches us that there are many kinds of wealth in the world--the
+wealth of ideas, of knowledge, of sympathy, of readiness to be put in
+any place and used in any way for the general good. These are given,
+and no price is or can be put upon them, yet they ennoble and enrich
+whatever comes within their influence.
+
+We are only at the threshold of a future that thrills us with its
+wonderful possibilities--possibilities of fellowship where separation
+was; of love where hatred was; of unity where division was; of peace
+where war was; of light--physical, mental and spiritual--where
+darkness was; of agreement and equality where differences and
+traditions had built up walls of distinction and lines of caste. This
+beautiful thing needs only to be realized in thought to become an
+actual fact in life, and those who do realize it are enriched by it
+beyond the power of words to express.
+
+Women have been God's own ministers everywhere and at all times. In
+varied ways they have worked for others until the name of woman stands
+for the spirit of self-sacrifice. Now He bids them bind their sheaves
+and show a new and more glorious womanhood; a new unit--the completed
+type of the mother-woman, working with all as well as for all.
+
+
+
+
+The Advantages of a General Federation of Women's Clubs[1]
+
+_Address by Mrs. Croly to the First Meeting of the First Federation of
+Women's Clubs, Held in Brooklyn, N.Y., April 23, 1890_
+
+
+The growth of the woman's club is one of the marvels of the last
+twenty-five years, so fruitful in the development of mental and
+material resources. What it was destined to become was, perhaps, far
+from the minds of those who aided its inception, but all the
+possibilities of the future lay in the germ that was thus planted, for
+it was formed by the marriage of two great elements--freedom and
+unity.
+
+[Footnote 1: _The Cycle._]
+
+The club has been called the "school of the middle-aged woman." It is
+so in a very broad sense. It begins by gratifying her desire for
+fellowship, her thirst for knowledge; by training her in business and
+parliamentary methods; and gradually develops in her the power of
+expressing her own ideas, of concentrating her faculties and focusing
+them upon the object to be attained, the purpose to be accomplished.
+At the same time she finds that a more subtle process has been going
+on in her own mind. An insensible alchemy has been widening her
+horizon, getting rid of prejudice, obliterating old, narrow lines,
+leaving in their place a willingness to see the good in Nazareth as
+well as in Galilee.
+
+This result shows that she is a clubable woman, for it is emphatically
+the club spirit. It is in this respect that the club differs from
+those societies that are devoted to a single purpose; which demand
+subscription to an idea, an opinion, a dogma, a belief, a single basis
+or principle, and do not admit of fellowship on any other terms.
+Doubtless those have their uses--they are the necessary and often
+powerful expression of an advancing public opinion; but they have
+always existed, usually and in past times, under the leadership of
+men, even when composed of women. But it remained for the nineteenth
+century to develop a moral, social, and intellectual force, made up of
+every shade of opinion and belief, of every degree of rank and
+scholastic attainment, of every kind of disposition and habit of
+thought, all moulded into form,--and though as yet only the promise of
+what will be, furnishing an outline of that beautiful united womanhood
+which was the dream with which the club was started, and has been the
+guiding star to its development up to the present time.
+
+The union of clubs in a federation is the natural outgrowth of the
+club idea. It is the recognition of the kinship of all women, of
+whatever creed, opinion, nationality or degree; and it is a sign of a
+bond that entitles every one to equal place;--not to charity or
+toleration alone, but to consideration and respect. Inside of the club
+we are equal sharers of each other's gifts. Each one brings her
+knowledge, her sympathy, her special aptitude, her personal charm of
+manner and disposition, and we are all enriched by this outflowing and
+inflowing, by this equal part and share in a fountain made up of such
+bountiful and diversified elements.
+
+But the tendency of a circle is to widen. This is natural and
+necessary to healthful life. Stop its currents, dam up its inlets and
+outlets, and it is reduced to stagnation, and soon becomes foul and
+mischievous instead of healthy and life-giving. The tendency of narrow
+ideas is to run to routine, to spend time and strength upon trivial
+details, and allow them to block and hinder the consideration of
+weightier matters. There is undoubtedly a use for practice in business
+methods, particularly for those women who have had no previous
+training in business life; but the club ought to be an evolution. Once
+acquired, the knowledge of business ways, methods, and tactics can be
+put to better use than to aid or hinder the transaction of routine
+affairs, which it is the function of a committee to dispose of.
+
+The direction which the enlargement of club life takes must depend in
+the first place upon local conditions and environment. Already in many
+cities it has made itself, as in Philadelphia, the centre of the
+active, moral and intellectual forces. In others, as in Milwaukee, by
+cooperation in spirit and practice, it has provided a home for
+literature and the arts. Whatever the woman's club does, is and ought
+to be done on the broadest human principles; for if it forgets this it
+ceases to be a club, and becomes merely a propaganda for the
+advancement of certain fixed and unchangeable ideas.
+
+But its own life, no matter how broad, is not enough. Whatever is
+vital is social. This is why a club when it comes to understand its
+own powers and sources of life, wishes for the companionship, the
+sympathy, the fellowship, the shaking hands with other clubs. It is
+said that corporations have no soul: clubs have souls, and they call
+loudly for the enlargement of club sympathies, the discussion of
+knotty club questions, the affirmation by others of what have become
+club convictions, and mutual congratulations on club successes.
+
+This is not all that a federation of clubs can accomplish, but it is
+enough for a starting point. It is the kindly, providential,
+sympathetic way in which we are always led from the smaller to the
+larger field of work. Just before descending from a crest in the
+Sierras into the valley of the Yosemite, you come suddenly upon a
+wonderful view; it is called "Inspiration Point," and it is like an
+open door, a revelation of the infinite, a promise in one gleam of
+transcendent beauty, of all the separate and divisible splendors that
+are to follow.
+
+This spirit of enlargement beckons us and leads us to the formation of
+the Federated Union of Clubs, and we cannot do better than follow its
+guidance. We all need, clubs as well as individuals, encouragement and
+counsel; we need to enlarge our knowledge of what other clubs are
+doing, of their extent, of their objects, of their ambitions. Above
+all, we need to enlarge our sympathies, to cultivate sympathy by
+knowledge; for our prejudices are born of ignorance, and we rarely
+dislike what we intimately know. As Charles Lamb said: "How can I
+dislike a man if I know him? Do we ever dislike anything if we know it
+very well?" With the growth of clubs the purely personal
+characteristics of them will disappear, or at least be subordinated to
+larger aims; and it is in the prosecution of these larger aims that
+the federation will find its reasons for existence.
+
+There is a vast work for clubs to do throughout the country in the
+investigation of moral and social questions, in the reformation of
+abuses, in the cultivation of best influences;--not the influence of
+class or clique or party, but a wide, liberalizing, educational
+influence which works for true goodness, for cleanliness, for order,
+for equal opportunities, for the recognition of God in man and nature,
+in whatever stage of unfolding the Divine in us may happen to be. It
+is in the last twenty-five years that village-improvement societies,
+first instigated by a woman--Miss Sallie Goodrich of Stockbridge,
+Mass.--have created a transformation in whole townships, and so
+enhanced the value of property as to drive out the original
+inhabitants and change farming communities into fashionable summer
+resorts. This result is of doubtful value. But every woman's club,
+especially in the newer sections, has in its power, by wise and
+careful action, to improve the conditions, elevate the tone, and
+crystallize the moral force of its community in such a way as to make
+it more desirable to live in, more beneficial to its own citizens,
+more of an example to others.
+
+All these questions of club life and work would naturally come up
+before a federated body, and these would as naturally lead to
+governmental questions; to contrasts and records of activities in
+different parts of the world, and to the investigation of the causes
+which bring about certain results.
+
+Women are naturally both receptive and constructive. The affirmative
+states of mind are those which, particularly belong to women; as
+iconoclasts they are mere echoes. This affirmative condition is most
+favorable to true development. Nothing good has ever come of mere
+negation. But we must look for our truths and our basis of true
+growth, in the light of the rising dawn--not, as heretofore, in the
+waning glory of the setting sun. The union of clubs is the natural
+outgrowth, of the planting of the true club idea. It was a little
+seed, but it contained the germ of a mighty growth in the kinship of
+all women--the women who differ as well as the women who agree; and
+the federation of clubs is the forerunner of that unity of the race of
+which philosophers have spoken, of which poets have dreamed, but which
+only the constructive motherhood and womanhood of the race can
+accomplish.
+
+
+
+
+The Clubwoman[1]
+
+
+The nineteenth century has been remarkable in many ways. It has
+developed a new material and social order; but the fact is not as yet
+fully recognized that it has developed a new woman--the woman who
+works with, other women; the woman in clubs, in societies; the woman
+who helps to form a body of women; who finds fellowship with her own
+sex, outside of the church, outside of any ism, or hobby, but simply
+on the ground of kinship and humanity.
+
+[Footnote 1: _The Cycle_.]
+
+It is not yet twenty-one years since a great daily in New York said
+that if a society composed wholly of women could hold together one
+year, a great many men would have to revise their opinion of women.
+The remark was made apropos of the formation of the first women's
+clubs in this country, and was echoed on all sides publicly and
+privately. It is only significant now as showing the isolated position
+of women, and the general impression which prevailed that they could
+not and would not work together, except, perhaps, for some common
+cause, religious or philanthropic, which for the time being absorbed
+their energies and made them lose sight of their personal jealousies
+and animosities. Why women should have been believed to be
+antagonistic to women it is hard to say. This idea seems to have been
+cultivated assiduously by men, and women have echoed it; for it cannot
+be denied that the new fellowship that has come with the century and
+with the awakening of women to the life which is theirs--the life of
+friendship, of sympathy, of enlargement, of interest in affairs, of
+common kinship with all that exists in a beautiful world--has in it
+something of the nature of a surprise. Is it possible that women may
+have a life of their own, may learn to know and honor each other, may
+find solace in companionship, and lose sight of small troubles in
+larger aims?
+
+These questions have been answered by thousands of women, answered
+with tears, after the manner of women, but tears of joyful recognition
+of the new day which has dawned for them;--a day of larger
+opportunities, a day which comes after a night of ages; for the woman
+is for the first time finding her own place in the world. Heretofore
+she was only welcome if the man wanted her, and if he no longer wanted
+her she was again cast out. But she is now learning that the world
+exists for her also; that she is one half the human race; that life,
+liberty, and the pursuit of whatever is good are as desirable for her
+as for the man, and as necessary in order to put her in _rapport_
+with the eternal springs of all life and its varied forms of activity.
+
+The first impulse of the awakened woman is to unite herself with other
+women; her next to learn that which she does not know in regard to
+art, literature, peoples, races; the countries she has never visited,
+the kinsmen and kinswomen she has never seen, and the degree in which
+their progress has kept pace with or gone beyond her own. This
+knowledge comes to her through her club or literary society.
+
+The woman's club has become the school of the middle-aged woman. It
+has brought her up to the time. It has enabled her to keep pace with
+the better advantages given to her sons and daughters. It has put an
+interest into her life which it had never previously possessed, and
+made her more humanly companionable because better able to judge and
+more willing to suspend judgment. The clubs of women in America--the
+growth mainly of the past twenty years--can now be counted by the
+hundreds, and their membership by many thousands, and the history of
+them all is practically the same.
+
+It is this woman, born of women's clubs, who is the woman of to-day.
+She is the centre of the intellectual activity of townships and
+neighborhoods all over the country. She forms stock companies, and
+builds athenaeums; she is at the head of working guilds; she organizes
+classes, teaches what she knows, while she is being taught what she
+did not know; and in mental activity, and labor which is not routine,
+has renewed her youth, and added to her attractions. She is at the
+same time far removed from a lobbyist. She is able to look at
+different sides; she is socially at home with the best people in every
+sense of the word. She is a lady as well as a woman, and does not
+adopt what is _outre_ in order to obtain notoriety.
+
+
+
+
+The New Life[1]
+
+
+It is a very dull mind, whether belonging to man or woman, that does
+not feel stirred by recent movements--not here alone but all over the
+world--into some quickening sense of the deeper life, the broader
+human claims, the unifying and uniting influences which have sprung
+into activity, and which address, not the visionary, but the
+thoughtful and far-seeing, with prophetic gleams of a new heaven and a
+new earth.
+
+[Footnote 1: _The Cycle_.]
+
+It is also a very narrow and self-absorbed mind which, only sees in
+these openings opportunities for its own pleasure, or chances for its
+own advancement on its own narrow and exclusive lines. The lesson of
+the hour is help for those that need it, in the shape in which they
+need it, and kinship with all and everything that exists on the face
+of God's green earth. If we miss this, we miss the spirit, the
+illuminating light of the whole movement, and lose it in the mire of
+our own selfishness. To women this uplifting, these open doors, mean
+more than to men. They have been hedged about with so many
+restrictions, forced and held in such blind and narrow ways, that it
+is little wonder if sight and steps are feeble, and that they find it
+impossible to take it all in, or to recognize at once the full meaning
+of the day that is dawning for them.
+
+For we are only at the threshold of a future that thrills us with its
+wonderful possibilities;--possibilities of friendship where separation
+was; of love where hatred was; of unity where division was; of peace
+where war was; of light--physical, mental and spiritual--where
+darkness was; of agreement and equality where differences and
+traditions had built up walls of distinction and lines of caste. This
+beautiful thing needs only to be realized in thought to become an
+actual fact in life, and those who do realize it are enriched by it
+beyond the power of words to express. "I should like to wake up rich
+one morning just to see how it would feel," said one woman to another
+not long since. "I do wake up rich every morning now," said the other,
+"though I have still my living to earn, because my life is full of
+prized opportunities, of cherished friendships, of chances for
+acquiring knowledge that I had not in youth, and keeping myself in
+touch with broad human facts and forces. Everything is interesting to
+me, more interesting the closer my acquaintance with it, so that I am
+fast getting rid of those ugly things we call prejudices, and laying
+in a stock of appreciation instead, which is in itself enriching."
+
+The old feeling of patron and dependant--so irksome, so humiliating,
+so feudal, yet containing for many the whole moral law--is done away
+with, and in its place appears a spirit of true fellowship, a growing
+sense of mutual respect and helpfulness. Club life teaches us that
+there are many kinds of wealth in the world--the wealth of ideas, of
+knowledge, of sympathy, of readiness to be put in any place and used
+in any way for the general good. These are given, and no price is or
+can be put upon them; yet they ennoble and enrich whatever comes
+within their influence.
+
+Money is the only kind of wealth that is not common, that is not given
+freely; and for that reason it has a deadening and demoralizing effect
+upon the minds of those who cultivate and increase it for its own
+sake, or fail to put it to its larger and more human uses. Wise
+distribution is the only way in which money can be made valuable in
+the world: it is only as a developing power, as an aid to the worker,
+and a creator of instrumentalities by which good objects can be
+accomplished, that it is desirable. In the light of this view, what
+place do those men and women occupy who shut themselves up with their
+money, and shut out the wide human interests which educate the mind
+and heart to noble issues? Going to church does not help them, for it
+must be an exclusive church and an exclusive pew, under an exclusive
+pastor who patronizes Jesus Christ but does not sympathize with Him,
+and who talks about the "dregs of society" as if it were something
+far removed from the knowledge and consciousness of his hearers.
+
+The woman of the past has especially been cramped up, bound around,
+and blindfolded by her special form of belief, by her tradition, by
+her social customs, by her education, by her whole environment; and
+the effect will remain stamped more or less upon her individuality
+long after the predisposing causes have passed away and better
+influences and circumstances have taken their place.
+
+But the present is full of encouragement. The new life has begun: the
+woman is here;--not the martyred woman of the past; not the
+self-absorbed woman of the present, but the awakened woman of the
+future. That woman whose faculties have been cultivated, whose gifts
+have been trained, whose mind has been enlarged, whose heartbeats
+respond to the touch of the unseen human, and whose quickened insight
+recognizes father, brother, sister, and friend beneath the strange as
+well as the dilapidated robe.
+
+This woman whose face no artist has painted, who is not yet familiar,
+is among us, and will remain. Her work humanizes and reconciles, and
+the changes it will effect will come so noiselessly that the majority
+will not be aware of them till they are accomplished, and then each
+one will announce, and perhaps believe, that they themselves have
+brought these things about. But this will not matter, for when the
+work is done it is really of little consequence who did it, since all
+who do any good work at all are simply agents and ministers, charged
+with a task it is their business to perform, and happy only as they
+are able to execute it. It is those who are "let alone," who live for
+and in themselves, who are the unhappy ones; and for these, though
+they possess fine houses, much gold, stocks and bonds, the poorest
+worker may well fervently pray that the new life may come to these
+also.
+
+
+
+
+The Days That Are[1]
+
+
+We live in an age of discontent. Discontent has been deified. It has
+been called divine; and unrest, the seal as well as the sign of
+progress. Doubtless there is a time and a place even for discontent,
+for there is no faculty that has not its function. But discontent,
+which is a sacred fire when it burns within and is kept for home use,
+is a mischievous and destroying element when it is widely distributed
+and unthinkingly-employed by ignorance and short-sightedness.
+
+[Footnote 1: _The Cycle_.]
+
+Then it is certain that if discontent is good, content is far better,
+and thankfulness better yet. If time teaches us anything, it is to
+work and wait and trust; to be thankful for what is--for the digging
+and seeding time as well as for the harvest; for one must come before
+the other.
+
+Time brings only one regret--that we had not more joy in the things
+that were; more belief, more patience, more love; more knowledge of
+the way things work out; more willingness to help toward the final
+result. The preparation, the planting, the laying foundations, must be
+done in the dark; usually done with blind eyes as well, which see not
+what may or will be, but anticipate a harvest of pain from a
+spring-time of rain. Yet these showers may have been indispensable to
+the ground, and the seed may have expanded and sent its shoots up to
+the surface in consequence of them.
+
+But why use symbols? The days that are;--the days that are with us are
+the good days. Suppose it is hard work, and only the prospect of hard
+work? Work is the best thing we have got: it is salvation. It is the
+means by which we struggle up out of the darkness into the light. It
+is the law of life. It is the ministry of all that is good in the
+world; and the better it is the better for us, the better for every
+one. It is only those who do not know how to work that do not love it;
+to those who do, it is better than play--it is religion.
+
+But this is the mere influence of work itself. Suppose, besides your
+work, you have the blessing of a family to be cared for, and your work
+provides for them? This consecrates every part of it. It makes every
+movement of the hand a benediction, every heart-throb an unuttered
+prayer. Are not these days so full of labor best days? For about you
+are those you love. They are under the roof you provide; their voices
+furnish the music, their presence the sunshine of your life. Sometimes
+that which your discontent craves will come to you. The freedom from
+toil, the absence of "troubles" that now loom up so large to you; but
+with your troubles your joys will have vanished, and you will sit in
+the twilight waiting for the end, and wishing that you had cultivated
+the sweetness instead of the bitterness of the beginning, that you had
+not allowed the thorns to cover up your roses.
+
+Wisdom seems to have been the same always, but each one has to learn
+its lessons for himself. That is the reason why there is so little
+apparent progress in essential truths. There are always those who have
+grown into their realization; there are always those who are at the
+threshold, and who must travel over the same paths, for we can none of
+us acquire true wisdom for another; it must become a part of
+ourselves, of our own moral and spiritual consciousness.
+
+"It is all very well for you," says one; "you have never known the
+pinch of poverty." How do you know that? We none of us know how and
+where the shoe has pinched another person's foot. It is not our
+business to know, but it is our business to prevent our soreness from
+becoming sourness and bitterness. It is our business to make the
+pathway of others as pleasant as we can, so that their unseen corns
+shall irritate them as little as possible. All the wisdom of the days
+that have been, and the days that are, will be found in the following
+lines from Goethe's "Tasso":
+
+ "Would'st thou fashion for thyself a seemly life?
+ Then fret not over what is past and gone;
+ And spite of all thou mayest have lost behind,
+ Yet act as if thy life were just begun.
+ What each day wills, enough for thee to know,
+ What each day wills, the day itself will tell.
+ Do thine own task, and therewith be content;
+ What others do that shall thou fairly judge.
+ Be sure that thou no mortal brother hate,
+ Then all beside leave to the Master Power."
+
+
+
+
+A People's Church[1]
+
+
+"What would you do if you were rich?" This is a question often asked,
+and readily answered by those who have not wealth of their own to
+dispose of, for there is nothing easier than to give away other
+people's money. But it is more difficult to the conscientious, who
+feel that their unearned millions ought to inure in some way to the
+public benefit, yet do not always see the way to the reconciling of
+their own conditions and circumstances with that use of money which
+seems to them wisest and best.
+
+[Footnote 1: _The Cycle_.]
+
+As a rule it may safely be assumed that if all who are poor were
+suddenly made rich, they would do as the majority of our rich men do
+with their money--keep it. But it is at least pleasant to think how
+generous one might be, and as the rich occasionally are; and I propose
+to suggest one object that I hope will one day be realized in this
+great city, where everything good is possible, as well as everything
+evil, and which only needs to take vital root in some active mind to
+become a living reality.
+
+Within a certain area New York may be called a city of churches, but
+they are churches for the rich; solemn, imposing, cathedral-aisled,
+glass-stained, costly, munificently beneficed, elegantly pastored--God
+locked in, the poor locked out. I know there are "mothers'" meetings
+and "mite" societies, and all the rest of it, but all the same the
+poor woman in her old shawl and bonnet would not think of entering one
+of those expensive pews, nor does the man in his working suit feel
+that that is the place for him. Outside, the majority of churches take
+no account of the necessity for the consolation, the comfort, the
+upbuilding, the refreshment of religion, save and only for certain
+hours on Sunday, and then it must be in full toggery, and in company
+with, the eminently respectable.
+
+The most beautiful thing about the old churches abroad is not their
+splendor of carving and painting, but that they stand with, open doors
+week days and Sundays, for the people to enter; and they do enter. The
+market woman with her basket drops in for a moment on her way home
+from the labor of her weary day. The old woman totters in to say her
+"Ave Maria," the young woman to pray away her perplexities. Even the
+business man sometimes finds it a resource from his struggles and
+temptations. The poor, with their crowded houses and narrow quarters,
+have so little privacy as to make quiet, and even an opportunity for
+self-communion, a luxury. Then how often in the perplexities which
+fill their lives they desire for a little while a retreat, a refuge
+where they can think, perhaps receive a word of counsel, at least find
+an atmosphere of absolute peace and restfulness.
+
+The Monday prayer-meeting, the afternoon exhortation; the evening
+conference of the Baptists, the Methodists, the Presbyterians, or the
+Congregationalists, are not what is wanted; nor is it a cold and
+barn-like edifice which makes one feel, if one goes to call upon God,
+as though He were out, and could only be seen at stated times, and by
+the will of the sexton and the trustees.
+
+A people's church is wanted, where the people can come and go as they
+please; which asks no questions, which is always open, which has brief
+singing and organ services that all and any people of any kind and
+degree may attend and feel themselves welcome. A morning service of
+praise, a mid-day song of rejoicing, a vesper hymn of thankfulness. No
+word of condemnation, no word of controversy, no word of doubt, no
+word of assertion or denial; only unceasing love, continued and
+eternal recognition of human kinship and readiness to minister to any
+soul's need as far as it may be reached and helped.
+
+No one minister could perform its offices; its servants would have to
+be in a manner consecrated to its work, and they should be men and
+women who have suffered, and therefore know, but who would find more
+reason for rejoicing than lamentation; who would possess gifts of
+music and oratory, and whose personal influence would be strong for
+righteousness.
+
+There are great churches with scattered congregations, in Fifth
+avenue; there are a few poor churches, and small, for which no one
+cares, and which offer no attractions to the over-flowing population
+of Mott street. The spring and summer will soon come, and then these
+great churches will be closed, their pew-owners distributed over lake
+and mountain in all the different parts of the wide world. But the
+"people" will be here. People who work in foundries and shops, who
+live in tenement-houses; people who earn a hand-to-mouth living as
+clerks, book-keepers, seamstresses and petty store-keepers; people who
+have to stay in such homes as they can support because they cannot
+afford to break them up and go elsewhere.
+
+For these people and their children there is only the street. The
+children occupy the street. For four or five months in the year they
+make life hideous, especially on Sunday, by noise and exhibition of
+vandalism that would disgrace the savages of any age or nation. The
+police acknowledge themselves powerless to prevent it. It is simply
+the exercise of undirected faculty which might be turned to account,
+but which has only noise, confusion, and street warfare for its
+opportunity for exercise.
+
+There are possibilities in these congregations of the highways and
+byways, and when we have our people's church or churches, open all the
+year, and all the night as well as all the day, and the voices of the
+angels for sweetness, singing love and peace on earth, in an anthem
+that pierces the roof, and with the tones of a mighty organ to
+emphasize to all the world its message, and it is not a question of
+clothes, many people will be glad to listen, and will find an
+influence in the music, in the willingness, in the free-heartedness,
+in the sympathy, in the kindness, in the spirit of brotherhood, that
+they would not get out of preaching nor dogma.
+
+Whom are we waiting for to build this church? Is it a woman? Surely it
+is an opportunity that carries the two-fold blessing.
+
+
+
+
+Notes, Letters and Stray Leaves
+
+
+A "free lance" is less free than the organs of a party. In one case it
+means at least the opinions of a group; in the other, the dogmatism of
+the one who wields the lance. Nothing is less free than the
+self-styled freedom of the individual.
+
+Enthusiasm implies a certain narrowness of vision. When people can
+take a broad view they can see the elements of goodness or beauty
+everywhere, and they cease to be enthusiastic in regard to one. The
+great popular preachers are not university men, or those who are quiet
+and literary in style, but strong, dogmatic men.
+
+Perhaps the most noticeable difference between the so-called new woman
+and the new man is this, that she is seizing every opportunity that
+opens up new avenues of individual employment, while he is discovering
+and storing energy to save himself from doing any work at all. The old
+man made other men, and women too, work for him, the new man is making
+the hitherto uncontrolled forces his servants, locking them up in such
+small compass that a twist of the wrist will start the crash of
+worlds.
+
+The notes of the great god Pan, so "piercingly sweet by the river"--a
+far cry and a weary way from Pan to Handel and Beethoven; yet during
+all that time music has been the joy and the consolation of
+peoples,--all except the Quakers.
+
+If Poetry is the prophet of the future, music expresses all
+emotions,--love, joy, fear, above all, aspiration. Music is
+essentially religious, and has inspired the most perfect forms of
+emotional composition we know.
+
+I take off my hat to the new man--that is, I would if I wore one, but
+I wear a bonnet, and pin it on with long, sharp-pointed things which
+if they were not used voluntarily would be considered instruments of
+torture. Think of the man who is testing the force of dynamite--who is
+holding lightning bolts in his hand and forcing them to do the work
+which he has planned for them, who is taking the altitude of the
+mountains in Mars in his observatory in the air at midnight,--think of
+these men stopping to swear while they ran the murderous little weapon
+through six thicknesses of buckram, lining, velvet, lace, feathers,
+ribbon and hair--to fasten on their bonnets!
+
+
+
+
+Letter to the New York Woman's Press Club
+
+
+ October, 1900.
+
+My dear Friends and Fellow-Members:
+
+It was really a grief to me not to be able to meet you individually
+and collectively before leaving to be absent the entire season. The
+accident which disabled me for the summer, threatens to cripple me for
+the winter also, and in this condition of dependence and general
+disability, it seemed best to go where I could have seclusion, and the
+care of some member of my own family.
+
+I resign my place among you with less reluctance because the Woman's
+Press Club is now strong and well able to guard its own interests, and
+direct its own affairs. It will, I am sure, be all the better and
+stronger from being thrown upon its own resources, and made to depend
+wholly upon the potent efforts which have been evoked, and which may
+be still further developed on the part of its membership.
+
+It will be a source of the deepest satisfaction to me in my retirement
+to think of you in connection with the happy times we have had, and
+the good work done during the past three years, and also of the spirit
+of loving fellowship which has grown so strong and so deep. Nothing
+can give greater pleasure than to hear of your continued growth and
+prosperity, of continued endeavor to make the work effective, and the
+life of the Woman's Press Club beautiful and useful.
+
+Remember that a well-rounded club is an epitome of the world; that it
+never can and never ought to be perfect according to any one
+individual's idea of perfection, for every one's ideal is different;
+and it is the unity in this diversity which constitutes the spiritual
+life of the club, as the soul animates and inspires the body.
+
+Exalt the club. Bring your best to the front. Extinguish personal
+aims. Mind not at all the little picking and carping of human
+gadflies, whose desire to extract blood is perhaps a survival of their
+species, and an evidence of their unfitness for human companionship.
+
+I think of you at every gathering, and if you remember me, show it in
+your determination to make the Woman's Press Club of Greater New York
+an honor to the metropolis of the New World and to American womanhood.
+
+ J.C. CROLY.
+ Hill Farm, Hersham,
+ Walton-on-Thames, England.
+
+
+
+
+Letter to Sorosis
+
+
+ May, 1899.
+
+To my dear friends and fellow-members of Sorosis:
+
+On the eve of my departure from New York for a season, my heart turns
+towards Sorosis with a depth of affection I find it difficult to put
+into words. For thirty years it has held a large place in my life. It
+has represented the closest companionship, the dearest friendships,
+the most serious aspirations of my womanhood. The past is filled with
+delightful memories, social and intellectual, of which it was the
+happy instrument and inspiration. Its galleries are stored with living
+pictures of noble women who were with us, who are always of us, who
+have become a part of that eternal source of spiritual life from which
+the best things spring. What is the secret of the strength of Sorosis?
+What is its value to the community and the world at large? It is, as a
+centre of unity. This is our Holy Grail,--and this we are bound never
+to defame, or defile by thought, word or deed.
+
+We planted the seed not in Sorosis alone, but in the General
+Federation; and it is our duty to see that it is preserved in its
+integrity. Sorosis does not want place or power in the organization
+she created, but it is hers to see that the great principle it
+embodied is not lost sight of. That the limitless growth and
+expansion provided for in its foundations are always from centre to
+circumference, not in sections; and that as differences are not
+recognized in the local organization, so there can be no north, south,
+east, or west in the general organization, nor any separation or
+division of interests. This is the aim of Sorosis:--to perfect within
+its own membership that unity in diversity which is the basis of its
+life, and the source of its growth; and, as far as its strength and
+influence extend, preserve it as the foundation of a united womanhood.
+
+The consolation I feel in going away is that I shall find you here
+when I return; not, I hope, crippled and disabled as now, but able to
+be among you once more. I leave a monument of the woman's club in the
+"Women's Club History," which carries marvellous testimony to the
+ideals and aspirations of the woman of the home--for this is the woman
+of the club.
+
+God bless and keep you all! I wish I could look into your kind faces
+individually, and thank you for all that Sorosis past and present has
+been to me.
+
+ Faithfully yours,
+ J.C. CROLY.
+
+
+
+
+Letter to the Society of American Women in London
+
+
+ November, 1901.
+
+To the Society of American women in London:
+
+On the eve of my departure for America, I desire to express to the
+Society of American Women something of what I feel sure I owe it
+individually and collectively since its initial gathering in the
+beginning of March.
+
+My visit to England has been made under extremely trying and painful
+circumstances. I had expected no participation in any social
+functions. I had communicated with only a very few near and dear
+friends. Formal intercourse with comparative strangers seemed
+impossible.
+
+But there was nothing strange in the atmosphere of the American
+Society. It provided at once an atmosphere in which one could breathe
+freely, so kindly and so cordial were its tone and spirit.
+
+It formed at once a social centre in which the best elements
+contributed to the most varying attractions. It brought together many
+of the most charming and progressive women in English as well as
+American society, and also many of the brilliant women we read about,
+but rarely meet.
+
+In addition, it performed a most useful office in extending the hand
+of welcome from American women in London to the representative women
+who attended the International Council; and has a future of
+exceptional character in filling a social need which has never been
+filled by the official representatives in republican America.
+
+It is not too much to say that it has put life in London in quite a
+new and much more attractive aspect to American women, by focusing the
+best elements and bringing them in touch with each other. With time
+and development the highest results of the modern co-operative spirit
+should be attained, and the fulness of a life that will enrich each
+individual member, and reach out beyond to an ever widening sphere of
+happy influence.
+
+ J.C. CROLY.
+
+
+
+
+Letter to the Pioneer Club of London
+
+
+ June, 1901.
+
+To the Finance Committee of the Pioneer Club:
+
+I hope I shall not be considered as taking a liberty in presenting a
+subject of some importance for your consideration.
+
+There is a feeling in some clubs and among some clubwomen that the
+time has arrived for expanding the club idea and at the same time
+drawing closer the ties which unite women in the form of organized
+fellowship, which the modern clubwoman recognizes as a potent and most
+valued element of her club life. It is believed, in short, that the
+time has come for the initial steps to be taken for the formation of a
+European Federation of Women's Clubs.
+
+There are many reasons which seem to make it eminently proper that the
+Pioneer Club should be the one to take these initial steps. It is the
+oldest and best known woman's club in London. It was founded upon the
+broadest human lines by a woman who possessed in the highest degree
+that sixth sense which the nineteenth century contributes to the
+twentieth--the sense of the Universal. This led her to affiliate the
+Pioneer Club in the beginning with the General Federation of Women's
+Clubs in the United States, and should inspire it to progressive life
+and work.
+
+The initial step is not formidable. It is, if thought desirable,
+simply to address a circular letter to women's clubs on record,
+wherever they may be known to exist, proposing a basis of federated
+affiliation, and inviting them to unite in forming a grand Federation
+of organized bodies of women capable of realizing any purpose upon
+which they might bring their united forces to bear.
+
+If it is said, "Of what use is such a Federation?" I might point to
+many instances of educational and municipal progress, and social
+reform in America effected by this combined effort. But details are
+as nothing compared with the one great, glowing, ultimate aim of the
+solidarity of thoughtful, high-minded, intelligent, progressive women.
+It is written in the stars. It will surely become an accomplished
+fact; and there are other clubs willing to take the initiative; but it
+is fitting that the Pioneer Club should lead, and by its wisdom and
+judgment lend an added dignity to noble endeavor.
+
+ J.C. CROLY.
+
+
+
+
+Letters to Mrs. Dimies T.S. Denison, President of Sorosis
+
+
+ 22 AVENUE ROAD,
+ LONDON, NW., January 27, 1899.
+
+My dear Mrs. Denison:
+
+Thank you very much for your delightful letter. It was so good and
+heartening. Its spirit was so representative of the best that
+club-life has given us that it made me feel more than ever thankful
+for Sorosis and for that reserved strength and all-roundedness of
+resource and character which makes it able to successfully tide over
+any difficulties.
+
+I have not heard of any effort to form a London Sorosis, nor do I
+think it could be done successfully on precisely the same lines. If we
+were starting a club to-day it would differ considerably from the one
+started thirty-one years ago. That had to be formed out of such
+materials as were available at that time, and built as it knew and as
+it grew. Its virtue lay in its breadth, in the true and scientific
+character of its conception. It made a centre and worked from that to
+the radiating points of an illimitable circle, not knowing precisely
+where these would take it, but with all the faith of Columbus in
+results founded upon essential principles. We had no idea at the time,
+that at every one of these farther points other centres were being
+formed that also, in their own time and way, struck out feelers and
+shafts, and thus became part of that great system of creative force,
+which, still acting on its central and original idea of a larger
+unity, brought together the General Federation. This is the mother
+idea which Sorosis represents, and which needs no legal enactment to
+enforce. It stands for this as much in London as in New York, and in
+its own way has become unique. It lacks some of the elements of the
+newer clubs, but it contained the germ of them all, and is essentially
+a true growth, an aggregation of all the qualities of a diverse and
+unified womanhood;--not by making it something else, but by studying
+its own spirit and life, and the genius it has developed.
+
+First, it stands for a wide hospitality and the generous recognition
+of all other women; for high standards in literature, art, ethics, and
+all the interests belonging to and growing out of them. Above all, it
+stands for home duty; for honor, faithfulness, loyalty, courage and
+truth. Finally, it stands for subjection;--that highest subjection of
+the one will to the many; of that subordination of our own dominant
+desire to the spirit and will of God, represented by the spirit and
+will of the majority. For the voice of the people is in a real sense
+the voice of God, whether we recognize it or not.
+
+O my beloved Sorosis, you are the core of my heart! What have I said
+but that you represent an ideal of life and character, and that each
+member should hold herself responsible for its preservation and its
+increasing beauty and value?
+
+ Faithfully yours,
+ J.C. CROLY,
+ Honorary President.
+
+
+Dearest Mrs. Denison: When I began this letter it was intended for you
+alone; as I went on it seemed as if it might find a little place at
+the Breakfast. Use your own judgment in regard to having an extract
+made for that purpose...
+
+ Yours lovingly, J.C.C.
+
+
+
+
+ QUEEN'S ROAD, ST. JOHN'S WOOD,
+ LONDON, N.W., April 16, 1899.
+
+My dear President:
+
+What a lovely programme! I am so proud to show it, and so happy that
+Sorosis is going on so beautifully. Have I congratulated you? If not,
+let me do it now with all my heart. I always knew your time would
+come, and that you would make a popular as well as a wise president.
+You have a light touch, but a very appreciative one, and that good
+thing--a fine sense of humor. You do not take yourself too seriously,
+but you give the best of yourself unreservedly. God bless you for
+carrying the banner of Sorosis up to its highest level, and
+maintaining its dignity in a way worthy of its reputation.
+
+The London Club, or Society of American Women in London, is
+flourishing. The president comes often to see me, and in her address
+at the second luncheon, April 10th, said that she considered it a
+special providence that I was in London at the beginning; that I had
+been of the greatest help to her, and that she should always look upon
+me as their "Club Mother." I began to wonder if that was what my leg
+was broken for, and how many more times I might have to be cut to
+pieces to make "Mother" enough to go around.
+
+Mrs. Henry Norman (Muriel Dowie, author of "A Girl in the
+Carpathians") made a brilliant little speech. She is delightful, and
+very anxious to visit America. Her husband is the Englishman who of
+his own choice graduated from Harvard. He has written some very
+appreciative articles about America...
+
+I hope I shall know when Mrs. F. and Mrs. L. are coming, and something
+of their plans. At least how long they will stay in London. Won't you
+be so good as to tell them this and give them my address?
+
+I am endeavoring now to put myself under treatment for the pain and
+weakness I feel when I try to walk (with sticks) in the street...
+
+ Really yours,
+ J.C. CROLY.
+
+
+
+
+ 7 RUE D'ASSAS, PARIS, FRANCE,
+ October 3, 1900.
+
+My very dear President and Friend:
+
+Your letter was most welcome. I have been in a quiet little country
+place since coming from Ober-Ammergau, and know no one. I thought much
+of you in those quiet days, and wished to write, but waited to hear,
+and the echoes did come in a way I understood, for I had letters
+before leaving America which were an indication of the general trend
+of thought and desire. Of course I never for a moment misunderstood
+your attitude in the matter of the election... You could not help your
+election. [Referring to the first vice-presidency of the General
+Federation.]
+
+I am very, very sorry the color question has been raised again. It
+almost made a split six years ago. It was, at the best, premature. It
+was a sacrifice of the greater to the less, of the real good we had
+attained and the ideal towards which we were working, to a theoretical
+possibility which had not yet presented itself. We have yet a thousand
+obstacles to overcome within ourselves; a thousand problems to solve;
+an ideal to work towards capable of infinite expansion. But we should
+not strain the limits while the centre still lacks order and form, and
+depends upon the wisdom with which it is guided for permanence.
+
+We have made some dreadful blunders,... but ideals are not stones in
+the street; they are stars in the sky. They are always beyond us; we
+cannot wear them as breast-pins but we can work towards them...
+
+ Yours faithfully,
+ J. C. CROLY.
+
+
+
+
+ 82 GOWER STREET, BEDFORD SQUARE,
+ LONDON, W.C., April 10, 1901.
+
+My very dear Friend and President:
+
+How good it was of you to send me the beautiful souvenirs of the
+thirty-third Annual Breakfast. They took me straight back to you all
+through a mist of tears that were half pleasure, half pain; pleasure
+that I was not forgotten, pain that I was not there to see the loving
+glance, and share the hand-clasp. It is true I have many friends here,
+but none that seem quite like the old friends; and there is only one
+Sorosis--God's blessing be upon it for evermore! Yet wherever I go,
+God's blessing and His Spirit seem to me to have descended upon women.
+They show the most wonderful goodness and insight. They seem each one
+to be specially made; not the kind that are kept in stock, so to
+speak. Oh, I feel sometimes as if all my life had been partly a test,
+partly an experience of their goodness, and that it is a sufficient
+blessing, for nothing else has been left me.
+
+A writer remarked the other day, in an article on the South African
+war, that the best results of war were ties--the spirit of good
+comradeship that it established among men. This is what we
+preeminently get out of our club life, and without paying so fearful a
+price for it. I hope to see you all when you come together in the
+autumn.
+
+ With loving remembrance,
+ J.C. CROLY.
+
+
+
+
+Letters to Mrs. Charlotte Carmichael Stopes (London)
+
+
+ 11 BARTON STREET, WEST KENSINGTON,
+ Jan. 15, 1889.
+
+My Dear Mrs. Stopes:
+
+It is very kind of you to take this trouble to give us a pleasure, and
+I would not miss it on any account. But it is a little difficult for
+me to name the day. I am in the hands of the dentist this week; I
+shall hardly get through to go to the Writers' Club on Friday. These
+two circumstances have postponed my visit to Miss Genevieve Ward to
+whom it is now arranged that I go a week from to-morrow. I could make
+it any afternoon that week that would suit you. Mrs. Sidney will be
+delighted also to accept your invitation; and perhaps Miss Ward also.
+Please make the afternoon to suit yourself and Miss Blackburn.
+
+ Really yours,
+ J.C. CROLY.
+
+
+
+
+ Jan. 19.
+
+I go to Miss Ward's on Monday. It is her day at home, and therefore
+will be more or less fatiguing. Tuesday I have promised to dine at the
+Crescent Club with Mrs. Phillips and hear Mr. Felix Moscheles' lecture
+afterwards. Miss Ward and her brother, Col. Albert Lee Ward, go also.
+Three days of continuous going out would be too much for me, and
+something would have to give way. I would rather it would be any event
+than yours. Suppose you arrange it for the week following, and in the
+meantime call for me at Miss Ward's on Monday. You will find Miss Ward
+a very striking personality, and I particularly wish Col. Ward to
+accompany me to your house. I will see you on Friday, and you can tell
+me how you decide.
+
+ J.C. CROLY.
+
+
+
+
+ Jan. 20.
+
+Friday the 27th will suit me very well. I have been out-of-doors so
+little as yet, that I feared I might break down on the third day of
+trying. I do know Lady Roberts Austen; have been to luncheon at her
+house, but have not seen her since I came this time; I have
+communicated as yet with so few. I heard from her the other day
+however, and I know she will go to your house if she possibly can. I
+have to drive wherever I go. I move too slowly for crowds and public
+conveyances. I cannot risk weather.
+
+
+
+
+ Feb. 8.
+
+I want to thank you for the afternoon I spent at your house; I enjoyed
+it so very much. You will not consider me "pushing" if I say I am only
+half satisfied. There are so many sides to your house; I want to see
+the Queen of Scots portrait again, and the Donatello, and some of your
+rare cookery books. I expect to change my quarters in about three
+weeks to the North West; then you will let me come and browse, won't
+you. But first you must come and lunch with me. With kind regards to
+your delightful family,
+
+ I am, etc.
+
+
+
+
+ March 12.
+
+May I come up next Thursday afternoon and bring with me an American
+friend, Mrs. Stockber of Silverton, Colorado, who has just arrived by
+the _Umbria_. Mrs. Stockber is an unusually interesting woman. She is
+equal owner with her husband, an intelligent and large-minded German,
+of one of the largest silver mines in the States, and is one of the
+only two honorary women members of the great Association of Mining
+Engineers of the United States. Mrs. Griffin, the President of the new
+Society of American Women in London, also wants to come. I don't want
+to inundate you; and this is only to ask if you are better, and can
+receive a trio safely.
+
+ Yours, etc.
+
+
+
+
+ March 16.
+
+I am sorry to give you so much trouble. But I have a friend here just
+now, a woman of unusual character and ability. I remember I told you
+of her. The other is Mrs. Helen T. Richards of the Boston Institute of
+Technology. The only moment I can get her is on Monday afternoon, and
+I want her to see the collection of prints and your pictures. If it is
+all right I will bring her with me on Monday at 3 P.M. We must go to
+Miss Ward's at 4.30. Do not have tea at that primitive hour; for we
+shall be obliged to have a cup at Miss Ward's. I wish we might have a
+chance of seeing Mr. Stopes; but of course that is something that may
+be prayed for, but not what common people are made for. Dear, take
+care of yourself if you can. There is only one of you.
+
+ Yours,
+ J.C.C.
+
+
+
+
+ March 17.
+
+We will postpone. I cannot reach my two troublesome friends, and next
+week you will be busy and tired. "By-and-by" is coming with the sun
+and flowers. We will come too.
+
+ Yours lovingly and really,
+ J.C.C.
+
+
+
+
+ June 25, 1901,
+ 82 SOMERS' STREET, W.C.
+
+My very dear Friend:
+
+I have only time to thank you for your kind "welcome," and tell you
+how sorry I am not to see you to-day, and your precious Winnie, who I
+hope has really started on the road to recovery. Children are the
+richest boon vouchsafed us in this world, and the parents are the
+trustees of this wealth committed to their charge, but belonging to
+the world at large, and of which time only tells the value. I shall be
+very busy now for a few days, but will see you as soon as possible.
+
+ Affectionately,
+ J.C.C.
+
+
+[Illustration: Facsimile of a portion of a letter written by Mrs.
+Croly in October, 1900.]
+
+
+
+
+ 222 WEST 23D STREET,
+ NEW YORK, Jan. 16, 1901.
+
+My dear Friend:
+
+Thank you very much for your letter and card. It was a great pleasure
+to me to receive it, and to learn something about yourself and what
+you are doing. The news was long belated. The letter was to have been
+printed the week that I left, and I provided to have it sent to about
+a dozen friends as a good-bye. But it was so long delayed by Transvaal
+excitement and sad war news, that I did not expect it to appear at
+all.
+
+I had a wonderful celebration on my seventieth birthday in December;
+poems written, cakes with seventy candles sent, and a great
+spontaneous gathering in my honor, which really bothered me not a
+little, for I do not pose worth a cent, and do not know where to look
+or what to do when people compliment me.
+
+However, one thing gratified me above all others. It was a "birthday
+party" given me by the Daughters of 1812--the most exclusive of
+patriotic societies that is restricted to lineal descendants. The
+gathering was magnificent; the cake was brought in lighted by seventy
+candles borne on the shoulders of four men. By unanimous vote they
+conferred upon me honorary membership, and the insignia were
+conferred. The president in seconding the motion said, this departure
+from their rules (alluding to my English birth) was not in honor of
+"the club," nor of the "literary women," but of the woman who knew no
+line of separation, and whose work had been done for all women. Was
+not that a beautiful thing to say? Only that I intend to be cremated,
+I would have it put on my tombstone.
+
+We had a very bright and very beautiful beginning here to the "Holy
+Year," so far as weather is concerned, and it is also very gay, though
+my lameness prevents me from participating much in social doings. I am
+also grieved by the unexpected effects of the Boer war, in England.
+There must have been shocking blundering and mismanagement somewhere.
+The pitying way in which "poor, stupid, decrepit old England" is
+talked about is galling. Some military officers remarked recently that
+England was hardly worth having a "scrap" with, she would be so easy
+to beat.
+
+Our General Federation holds a Congress in Paris in June, and my
+passage is taken for May 19th. If nothing untoward prevents, I shall
+be in London for a week early in June, and then go to Paris and
+Ober-Ammergau. If you could go it would be very pleasant. Give my love
+to your daughters, and kind regards to Mr. Stopes.
+
+ Yours ever,
+ J.C. CROLY.
+
+
+
+
+Letter to Mrs. Carrie Louise Griffin
+
+ 82 GOWER STREET, BEDFORD SQUARE, W. C.
+ June 25, 1901.
+
+My dear Mrs. Griffin:
+
+Mr. Bell wants an article immediately, about the American Society, for
+the Chicago _Recorder_; and I am glad to write it, because it enables
+me to make it stand for what it does; and will, still more, in the
+very heart of western clubdom; and will be a John the Baptist for you
+if you should go over next summer. He wants some photographs, yours
+particularly; which please send. He left his card with address of
+_Recorder_ in Fleet Street, which I omitted to take up-stairs at the
+moment, and afterwards it could not be found. I am hoping that you
+have it and will give it to me, or that Mr. Griffin perhaps knows it.
+If you can drop in on Monday, A.M., I should be glad to ask you in
+regard to some members--what to say of them, etc. Would Mrs. Clarence
+Burns allow her picture to be used, and have you one of Mrs. De
+Friese?
+
+ Always faithfully yours,
+ J. C. CROLY.
+
+
+
+
+From a Letter to Mrs. May Riley Smith
+
+... I have never done anything that was not helpful to woman so far as
+it lay in my power. (April 2, 1886.)
+
+
+
+
+Letters to Miss Anna Warren Story (Chairman of Executive Committee of
+the Woman's Press Club of New York)
+
+
+ HILL FARM COTTAGE, HERSHAM,
+ WALTON-ON-THAMES, ENGLAND,
+ Oct. 29, 1900.
+
+My dear Executive:
+
+Your letter giving me all the news to date was most kind and welcome.
+It seems very strange to be away from you all in this secluded corner
+of Surrey, with nothing in sight but woods, a meadow in which cows are
+grazing, and one neighboring cottage. My morning walk, when the
+weather will admit of walking, is along the old post road lined with
+woods and at the foot of our little lane or entrance to farm. The
+other morning one solemn old cow put her head through the fence, and
+stared with amazement at my crutches. Four others walked over to see
+what she was looking at; and they all stood in a row, looking and
+making no sound as long as I could see them. It was very funny.
+
+It seems so odd after so many years of continuous and often hurried
+work, to be using days for walking, and little things that since I was
+a grown woman have been crowded into odds and ends of time, or omitted
+for want of enough of it. I am gaining strength, however, and realize
+how complete the prostration was, and how radical the reconstructive
+processes had to be. The seclusion in which I live, surrounded by pine
+woods, a mile and a half from the nearest post office (tho' a postman
+brings our letters) and an equal distance from such supplies as a
+village can afford, is a little trying in some ways, but a real boon
+to me in my present condition.
+
+It would have been very easy to plunge into the activities of women in
+London. Many invitations have reached me, but I have been nowhere but
+to one little dinner given by our only neighbor, the wife of a London
+editor, and herself a popular story writer.
+
+I can walk now with one crutch and a stick, and begin to hope for
+complete restoration, which at one time seemed to me impossible. But,
+oh, how tedious and wearing it is! We have an unusually fine October
+for England, but gray skies and almost daily rains now. But the Surrey
+country is beautiful, full of quaint old villages and objects of
+picturesque interest. I am longing for the time and the weather to
+explore it. I could write all day about my gradually growing desire to
+be "up and doing." But time and space do not admit. Let me say in one
+word how deeply I was touched by the action of the Executive
+Committee, the Governing Board, and club. But I am also disappointed.
+I wanted to leave the field clear, and have new energy put into the
+club by bringing into active and central circulation the young, best
+blood we possess. Thank you for your assurance that as far as possible
+that will be done; and thank every officer and every member in my
+behalf for the long and affectionate confidence they have reposed in
+me, and for the many acts of personal kindness I have received from
+them.
+
+I am sorry you have lost the Countess by removal, and other valuable
+members by death...
+
+ Yours faithfully and affectionately,
+ J.C. CROLY
+
+
+
+
+ NORFOLK VILLA, WEYBRIDGE, SURREY,
+ August 20, 1901.
+
+My dear Anna:
+
+Your letter came most opportunely. I had been thinking about you, the
+Press Club, and my dear friends at home; for somehow I have not felt
+the old pleasure in being in England, and if I had a home to come back
+to, and my goods and chattels were not so far off, I should have come
+back, I think, this autumn.
+
+For one thing, the weather has not been favorable. We had such warm
+weather in July; but every month has had a week or more of very cold
+and wet weather. In Ober-Ammergau on the 8th of July we perished with
+the cold, and the rain almost caked in ice upon us. Still, even such
+weather could not spoil Ober-Ammergau. It is the one thing of its kind
+on earth, and the nearest to an absolutely perfect thing I ever saw. A
+great charm is the unconsciousness of the performers. They do not play
+to an audience. There are no footlights, nothing theatrical; only the
+Great Tragedy wrought out as a living reality. I think of all the
+scenes; the one that made the deepest impression upon me was the one
+in which there were the fewest actors and least acting. That was the
+Garden of Gethsemane. So intense was the agony of spirit, that it
+seemed as if I myself should cry out if the disciples had not gone
+away and left the Saviour alone to his mortal struggle.
+
+It is a great thing, Anna, that these people have done. They have
+lived the Passion of Christ for nearly three hundred years. They are
+born in it; they are fed upon it. They have made a cult of religion;
+and they are absolutely religious, but not in the least sectarian. The
+Christ they have lifted up draws all men unto him.
+
+I have been in a quiet country place for four weeks, and shall stay
+two weeks longer... If I remain this winter we shall probably go back
+to Paris by November and to Italy in the spring. Now that I am here I
+might as well give myself this one more chance... I was very tired
+when I came back from our hurried trip, and was very glad of rest and
+quiet...
+
+Do not let my dear friends in the Press Club build upon me, or weaken
+their force by re-electing me. Elect a young, strong, press woman.
+Anna, do this without any reference to personal feeling or likes or
+dislikes. You are capable of acting impersonally. Beg the club to do
+this in my name, and to pick out their best for the chairmen of their
+representative committees.
+
+My own dear friends and fellow members; how I wish I could make them
+feel the strength of my desire for their growth in wisdom and honor.
+God bless them all!
+
+ Yours affectionately and faithfully,
+ J.C. CROLY.
+
+
+
+
+ ASHOVER, DERBYSHIRE,
+ May 30, 1901.
+
+My dear Anna:
+
+Your kind letter arrived this morning, forwarded by Mrs. Sidney to
+this remote village in Derbyshire. I left London ten days ago because
+I had to get fresh air and quiet. Ashover is a quiet little village; a
+paradise of meadows starred with flowers, and wooded and cultivated;
+hills in which all the treasures of one of the richest counties in
+England (in floral wealth) are to be found. When I came here there
+were still primroses, cowslips, violets, forget-me-nots, and fields
+white with small daisies and yellow with buttercups. Now there are
+masses of yarrow, marguerites, rhododendrons, bluebells, and great
+trees of white and purple lilacs. Roses, I am told, will cover
+everything by and by, but development is a little late this year. I
+wish you could spend a month here this summer: what a revelation of
+English beauty it would be to you!
+
+Thank you for your sympathy with my personal troubles. I am not
+unhappy... The goodness of women to me is always and everywhere
+miraculous. This alone makes life worth living...
+
+I am rejoiced to hear of the Press Club's prosperity. Nothing could
+give me greater pleasure than to know of its constant growth and
+advancement.
+
+ With love, ever yours,
+ J. C. CROLY.
+
+
+
+
+Letters to Mrs. Caroline M. Morse
+
+
+ HILL FARM COTTAGE, WALTON-ON-THAMES,
+ SURREY, ENGLAND, Dec. 13, 1898.
+
+My dear friend:
+
+I was sorry to know from Ethel's note, received day before yesterday,
+that you had been ill, and were still unable to the task of writing. I
+wished above all things that I could in some way help and comfort you,
+having always in mind the help and comfort you were to me during the
+trying days last summer that followed my accident, and the consequent
+long and tedious illness. There are many people who feel
+sympathetically, but so few are capable and who are ready or are
+permitted to apply the act of sympathy. It is the friend in need that
+is the friend we remember with a grateful, lasting love...
+
+At this moment we are on the eve of removal to London where we are
+taking rooms once occupied by the family of David Christie Murray. We
+go to-morrow, and begin a new chapter in this most disastrous of
+years. So many things seem to culminate toward the close of the
+century--good fortune for some, evil fortune for others; hopes dashed
+at the seeming moment of realization, as if all the forces in nature
+were aiding to make an end of the century's efforts in any way that
+would bring finality.
+
+For my part I feel as if I had been forcibly brought to a standstill.
+In a few days (the 19th) I shall have reached the milestone: I shall
+be seventy. Sorosis would have made an occasion of it if I had been in
+New York. As it is, I feel a little tinge of regret that my
+annihilation last June was not more complete; that I did not leave,
+along with my dear friend, Mrs. Demorest. Not that I am wholly
+unhappy; I only feel somehow brought to an unfinished close; left in a
+state of animated suspension. I seem to see everything from a
+distance; separated by my inability to participate in the goings and
+comings, the doings and pleasures of others. I feel the wall that
+stands between those who still live and those who have passed from
+this world; but alas, I still retain consciousness, and desire for
+sympathy, and can see and hear and feel, though my feet are chained.
+It is just three months since I arrived. A part of the time we had
+beautiful weather, and I could walk on the road a little on sunshiny
+days, leaning upon my two sticks. But during the past five weeks, my
+out-door exercise has been nil: the roads were too wet and rough. It
+has been almost constant fog, rain, wind; and the drip, drip, drip, of
+a mist that was wetter than rain. This, I think, has added a little
+rheumatism to give name to the pain and stiffness of joints and newly
+forming muscles. The change we are about to make will be a new
+departure for me--I shall have to try stairs... But I shall have the
+dear companionship of Marjorie,[1] who has lived an ideal out-of-door
+life here. She will there begin to have regular lessons at home, or go
+to kindergarten. I have been reading to her Mary Proctor's "Starland,"
+which by your thoughtful prompting she caused to be sent to me through
+her London publishers. I am so much obliged to you and to her for
+remembering the promise that I should have a copy. It is charming, and
+ought to have a wide sale...
+
+[Footnote 1: Her grandchild.]
+
+I must stop; Vida has come for my mail, and is going to the
+post-office on her bicycle. She and Mr. Sidney are never so happy as
+when taking long bicycle rides on these fine English country roads.
+
+With warmest greetings to Colonel Morse and Ethel, and ever loving
+remembrance to you, dear friend, I am, as always,
+
+ Ever yours,
+ J.C.C.
+
+
+
+
+ 11 BARTON STREET, WEST KENSINGTON,
+ LONDON, January 29, 1899.
+
+My dear friend:
+
+I have been wondering these many days where you are and how it is with
+you. How I have wished that you were near by, and that we could have
+taken some of my lonely, painful "duty" walks upon crutches together.
+I miss your sympathy and ever ready kindness... I suffer terribly now
+with sore and swollen feet--the result of pain, stiffness, strain in
+movement, and lack of exercise. But I am stronger. I can now lift my
+arms and brush my own hair...
+
+We are having beautiful weather just now. We have had sunshine for a
+week, and people go about announcing the fact with joy and surprise,
+as if a new Saviour had arisen; all but the Americans, newly come, who
+complain about everything, rain or shine...
+
+ J.C.C.
+
+
+
+
+
+ LONDON, Jan. 16, 1901.
+
+Dear friend:
+
+This letter is for the family. Poor as it will be, it will have to
+tell of all I would like to say to you, and for the thousand and one
+things I would like to tell of London and of the many kindnesses I
+have received. I had not expected to be here this winter, as you know,
+and ought not to be. The cold and the damp have developed rheumatism
+of a very severe type in my lame leg, and I suffer from pain and
+difficulty in walking... I could, of course, obtain some mitigation of
+these conditions, but the same reason that compelled my return to
+London, Mr. P.'s actual failure, has so encroached upon my
+income--without a prospect of even partial recovery for a long time to
+come--as to make it almost equally difficult to live either in
+Switzerland, where, at Schinznach-les-Bains, I could receive so much
+benefit; or in London, or New York. I wish, as I wished two years ago,
+that my accident had ended it, and saved all the pain and difficulty
+of solving a perpetual and insoluble problem... It seems sometimes as
+if there were only two kinds of people in the world--those who ride
+over others roughshod, and those who are ridden over. The cruel
+accident that shattered me on that June day shattered my world. Life
+since then seems in the nature of a resurrection; every day a special
+gift, and every pleasant thing an act of Divine Providence. Love to
+you all. This is about myself. Write soon and tell me all about
+yourselves.
+
+ Lovingly,
+ J.C.C.
+
+
+
+
+From a Letter to Mrs. Christina J. Higley
+
+
+ LONDON, July--, 1899.
+
+My dear friend:
+
+... It seems as if everything had been taken from me but the
+friendship, the affection of women; and that manifests itself here as
+well as at home. God bless them! They have made all the brightness of
+my life.
+
+ Affectionately,
+ J.C.C.
+
+
+
+
+From a Letter to Mrs. Catherine Young
+
+
+ LONDON, Sept. 3, 1895.
+
+Dearest Mrs. Young:
+
+Your letter has been before my eyes many times...
+
+Keep up your courage and your faith in women and in the _old flag_. I
+came across it the first time after I arrived, in a moment of extreme
+despondency. It did me a world of good... In three weeks, if all goes
+well, I shall see you. We sail for New York on the 12th of this month.
+
+ Affectionately,
+ J.C.C.
+
+
+
+
+From a Letter to Mrs. Harriet Nourse
+
+
+... Oh, yes, I have made my will many times; but some man always
+spoils it and I am obliged to make it over, I am not at all
+superstitious about making a will. My only trouble is having nothing
+to leave. I am fond of superstitions--the little ones. They give
+interest to life, if you have to spend it in one place. A little
+unreason is less monotonous than the eternally reasonable, and if it
+makes you happy for a minute to see the moon over your right shoulder,
+why not see it, and be unreasonably happy?
+
+
+
+
+From a Letter to Mrs. Margaret W. Lemon
+
+
+ 222 WEST 23RD STREET,
+ NEW YORK, Feb. 20, 1900.
+
+My dear Mrs. Lemon:
+
+I am very glad you are to formulate the resolution of thanks and
+appreciation of the work of the Reception Committees. Of course it
+goes without saying that it will be spread upon the minutes.
+
+The work was altogether so fine and painstaking, and showed such
+thought, care, taste and judgment, that, apart from my personal
+pleasure in it, I felt exceedingly proud, and happy at the complete
+and beautiful result... I am sorry you do not like "Current Events."
+To me "Current Topics" means the fag end of everything we know and
+have been obliged to read about in the papers. "Current Events" has a
+broader significance, and leaves out the trivial and vulgar.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ J. C. CROLY.
+
+
+
+
+From a Letter to Mrs. E. S. Willard
+
+
+ BELLA-VISTA, BOSTON HARBOR, MASS.,
+ August 28, 1901.
+
+... As yet I think I am still in London; or at least still in England.
+Crossing the Atlantic is not so much of an undertaking; less than
+taking a "trip" with "crossing" changes. Packing and unpacking, and
+the harassing "customs" are the worst features. There were only
+fifty-six passengers on the _Minneapolis_, but it took us from 8 A.M.
+to 1 P.M., in a pouring rain, to pass the argus-eyes of one hundred
+and eight inspectors, about two to each passenger.
+
+In my case it seemed a bit ironical,--one of Thomas Hardy's "Little
+Ironies," for a _rapid_ American trustee had lost my whole capital
+during my absence... The necessity for tying up the ragged ends and
+applying a test brought me home. But it is a trial, though I seem to
+have lost the power to be unhappy. Do you know what that means? Is
+that unarmed neutrality the serenity of Heaven?
+
+I am as yet living in England. My thoughts are there, and my desire. I
+see you and a few others whom I love come and go, and I exchange the
+loving word, the kindly smile, the sympathetic look.
+
+I am waiting for an indication of where I am to end my days. If my
+steps turn towards the isles of the sea, you will be a magnet to draw
+me, you with your spiritual beauty, and your constant, unfailing
+goodness. God bless you, and grant that I may see you again, and that
+we may gain the love, as well as the peace, that passeth all
+understanding.
+
+ Yours always,
+ J.C. CROLY.
+
+
+
+
+Resolutions of Protest Offered by Mrs. Croly Through the Woman's Press
+Club
+
+(From the Recording Secretary's Report)
+
+
+At a special meeting of the Governing Board, held in the club rooms,
+126 East 23rd street, Dec. 26, 1892, the following resolution
+proposed by the president was adopted.
+
+_Resolved_: That the Woman's Press Club has learned with deep regret
+of the backward action of the Columbian University of Washington, in
+deciding to exclude women from its Medical Department, after ten years
+of co-education.
+
+_Resolved_: That we unite with Pro-Re-Nata of Washington, D. C., in
+expressing an emphatic protest against this retrograde movement; that
+we earnestly hope that better counsels will prevail; that, at a time
+when so conservative an institution as the British Medical Association
+has voted to open its doors to women, the stigma of retrogression will
+not be allowed to rest upon the foremost school in the Capitol of the
+Nation.
+
+
+
+
+Tributes of Friends
+
+
+
+Jane Cunningham Croly
+
+An Appreciation from Miriam Mason Greeley
+
+
+In the joyful Christmas-tide of 1829, into the sweet influence of an
+English country home there came to life a blue-eyed, brown-haired
+maiden, whose sunny nature was destined to laugh with gladness of
+heart, or smile through falling tears, for more than seventy eventful
+years. "Jenny June" while yet a child came with her family to New York
+State, entering here an atmosphere well adapted to foster her
+activities and her power to work for the good of others. Her breadth
+of vision and her genial sympathy would have been evinced in any land
+or clime, but in the stimulating freedom of American thought her
+abilities developed to their best.
+
+She found opportunity to plant the seeds of earnest thought, of which
+later she was to gather such a rich harvest in the confidence of her
+fellow-women. Her eager mind was a rich soil for the growth of ideas
+springing from her fertile brain; which led her to be both
+conservative and impetuous, grave or vivacious, ever fearless and
+versatile, all pervaded with the wholesome balance of quick
+penetration.
+
+To her is due the tribute of praise for having borne the heat and
+burden of the day in the early development of women's clubs. Friends
+tried to persuade her to abandon her plans for organizing woman's
+varied abilities, ridicule assailed her most cherished hope, and the
+sarcasm of opponents barred the way. She lived to triumph in seeing
+her aims successful, and after thirty-five years of club life to be
+honored by one of the highest gifts in the power of the General
+Federation to offer--the honorary vice-presidency.
+
+Mrs. Croly formulated in 1890 her well-matured plan for a general
+federation of women's clubs, and with the cordial assistance of the
+"Mother Club, Sorosis," issued the first call for representatives of
+women's clubs of all the States to meet.
+
+Stimulated by the success of the General Federation, Mrs. Croly urged
+the formation of the New York State Federation, and assisted by
+Sorosis as the hostess, an invitation was issued to all the State
+clubs to be the guests of Sorosis at Sherry's, November, 1894.
+
+[Illustration: MRS. CROLY at the age of 18.]
+
+Mrs. Croly's life-work as a writer had gone forward hand in hand with
+her club interests, and, having finished the foundation work of the
+two federations, she devoted her time to the preparation of her
+massive volume on the "Growth of the Woman's Club Movement," which is
+a monument to her patient industry, and the only permanent record of
+the development of women's clubs in America.
+
+She sleeps--but each woman who to-day shares the benefit and the
+responsive pleasure of club life, should place a leaf in the garland
+for "Jenny June."
+
+
+
+
+From Marie Etienne Burns
+
+
+ "Work is a true savior, and the not knowing how is more the
+ cause of idleness than the love of it."--MRS. CROLY.
+
+The idea of a State Industrial School for Girls originated with Mrs.
+Croly, and at a spring meeting of the Executive Committee of the New
+York State Federation of Women's Clubs, held in 1898, she suggested
+that the first work of the Philanthropic Committee for the year be an
+endeavor to establish a State Industrial School for wayward, not
+criminal, young girls of tenement-house neighborhoods. Soon after this
+Mrs. Croly met with a serious accident and was obliged to give up all
+active work. She decided to go to Europe, hoping to be benefited by a
+stay abroad. Just before her departure Mrs. Croly wrote asking me to
+present the proposed industrial-school plan to the Convention for its
+endorsement. The next day I called upon her to discuss matters. I
+found her confined to her sofa with, a crutch beside her, and
+evidently suffering much pain; but she seemed to be thinking less
+about herself than about the work that was so close to her heart. She
+urged me to take up the work which, she was regretfully obliged to
+abandon, and was most enthusiastic over it.
+
+Mrs. Croly said: "Those who have worked among the poor in large cities
+are aware of the value of orderly and systematic industrial training
+for girls of irresponsible parentage, between the years of twelve and
+eighteen. These girls are often bright and attractive, but they are
+usually self-willed, lacking in judgment, and ignorant of every useful
+art, as well as of all social and domestic standards that lend
+themselves to the development of a true womanhood. Their homes are
+usually unworthy of the name, often scenes of disorder, not
+infrequently of violence, from which their only escape is the street.
+Their vanity and unbridled desire for low forms of pleasure expose
+them to all kinds of evil influences, and the first steps in a
+downward career are taken without at all knowing whither they lead.
+The most dangerous element in the lives of such girls is their
+ignorance. It bars all avenues to respectable employment and deprives
+them of self-respect, which grows with ability to maintain oneself and
+one's integrity in the face of adverse circumstances. In putting the
+knowledge of the simplest art or industry in possession of the
+untrained, unformed girl you supply an almost certain defence against
+that which lurks to destroy."
+
+I fully agreed with Mrs. Croly. My many years of experience as a
+worker among the poor of New York City had taught me the importance,
+and indeed the necessity of just such a school, and I gladly promised
+to carry forward the good work.
+
+Mrs. Croly said in parting: "I can truly say that during the whole of
+my working life in New York, a period of more than forty years, my
+heart has bled for these poor neglected, untrained girls, who yet have
+the elements of a divine womanhood and motherhood within them, though
+undeveloped and hidden by the rankest weeds and growth."
+
+At the Convention in New York City, held in 1901, I presented the
+Industrial School project, and the plan received the unanimous
+endorsement of all those present. It was, however, deemed wiser to
+omit the word "wayward," as the school was to be preventive and in no
+sense reformatory. A Committee was formed, of which Mrs. Croly was
+made Honorary Chairman; and the work upon a State Industrial School
+for Girls was begun.
+
+It was my desire as Acting Chairman of the Committee that the movement
+should carry at all times the banner bearing the name of its inceptor,
+a name that would always suggest not failure but success. While
+seemingly insurmountable obstacles at once arose, they were more or
+less overcome as the preparations and work of the Committee
+progressed. And at the time of Mrs. Croly's death the project had
+reached a point more hopeful than assured, resulting in the
+establishment of at least one school which should stimulate the State
+Legislature into a realization of the needs of the young girls of the
+tenement-house neighborhoods, so that some time in the future there
+might be provided through State legislation, on a broad plan, the
+State Industrial or Trade School for Girls, the idea of which was
+conceived by Jenny June.
+
+
+
+
+From Mrs. Croly's Letter to Mrs. Burns, Relative to the Proposed
+Industrial School for Girls
+
+
+ 222 WEST 23RD STREET,
+ Feb. 28, 1900.
+
+My dear Mrs. Burns:
+
+There is only one point that I would have emphasized, and that I do
+not find included in your otherwise excellent statement. It is the
+moral influence of a training for self-support. Ignorance and idleness
+lead to vice and crime; and a Technical Training School would do more
+to remedy the Social Evil and raise the standard of morals than all
+other influences combined. The fact that work is the great purifier is
+what I wish could have been embodied in the plan presented.
+
+ Yours with real regard.
+ J.C.C.
+
+
+
+
+From Izora Chandler
+
+
+How can one picture all that this one woman was to the hundreds of
+other women who loved her: the gentle demeanor, the thoughtful
+conversation, the high thinking evidenced not less in her choice of
+subject than in the fitness of word and phrase which gave a
+distinctive charm to all her utterances, whether public or private?
+
+When first meeting Mrs. Croly one could hardly believe that so
+gentle-voiced, slight a creature could have accomplished the
+pioneering accredited to her in the enlargement of the mental life of
+women. Drawn to her at the first greeting one was soon convinced of
+the hidden forcefulness of her nature which could be likened to the
+resistless, unyielding under-current, rather than to the wave which
+visibly and noisily assails the shore.
+
+Present or absent, the thought of her was magnetic. While charming the
+heart she convinced the mind with argument. Her power did not absorb
+and minify; it enlarged, enlivened, and became a source of
+inspiration. After talking with her, impossibilities became possible
+to the timid, the diffident were encouraged to dare, and those who
+were strong at coming went away valorous. Her dignity and ready
+decision when presiding over a public assembly were noteworthy. She
+became a stateswoman in whatever concerned her sex; an earnest soul
+pleading for love among co-workers, and for more and yet more of love,
+for only in that atmosphere can the heart of woman come into its
+rightful sovereignty, urging that slights be forgotten, aggressions
+overlooked, and that the fair mantle of love be spread tenderly over
+all.
+
+An earnest devotee of the best and highest in art, she seemed to have
+an insatiable desire after the beautiful; and was never more serene
+and lucid of mind than when considering this scheme, and encouraging
+with rich appreciation those who were in the field.
+
+Her store of knowledge was phenomenal. She was a constant learner, an
+unwearied seeker after wisdom. When those who had given special study
+to any subject addressed the house over which she presided, they
+received her most flattering attention, and in the brief afterword of
+the chairman she indicated intimate knowledge of the matter in hand,
+often giving comprehensive data and suggesting fresh lines for
+consideration. No wonder that the finest minds were attracted to her;
+that thinkers desired her acceptance of their thoughts; that active
+workers sought her cooeperation and leadership. Quiet and forceful;
+competent as a critic, but ready with encouragement; simple in manner,
+easily approached; patient with those who appealed to her, seeking
+rather than waiting to be sought; abundantly appreciative of others,
+her memory becomes an abiding impulse towards high and generous
+thought, towards simple, worthy living.
+
+
+
+
+From Janie C.P. Jones
+
+
+Before my friend's last trip to England I went to bid her good-bye,
+and among her parting words were the following which I never can
+forget:
+
+"I dislike going so far from my friends. To me they are the most
+precious things on earth, the greatest gift the world can bestow; to
+me they have been like flowers all along my path, and their sweet odor
+of influence has made me better every day. I cannot prize them too
+highly, for all I am I owe to them."
+
+To have known one who so highly appreciated the value of friendship,
+who knew the true meaning of the word "friend," and who possessed the
+rare gift of knowing how to retain friends, was an inspiration, and an
+influence which added to the value of life. I think of her now as
+having "gone into her garden to gather lilies for her Beloved."
+
+
+
+
+From Catherine Weed Barnes Ward
+
+
+My task is at once sad and pleasant: sad, because I speak of a dearly
+loved and lost friend; pleasant, because I am asked to bear my
+testimony as to her worth.
+
+Mrs. Croly's friendship and unselfish kindness began with my entrance
+over twenty years ago into club life, and from then onward she was
+continually urging and helping me towards increased intellectual
+effort. Through her active inspiration I joined Sorosis, the Woman's
+Press Club of New York, and other American organizations, as well as
+the Society of American Women in London, the Women Journalists of
+London, and various English organizations, besides taking part in the
+International Congress of Women held in London three or four years
+ago.
+
+Mrs. Croly lived constantly in two generations, her own and the next
+one; her wonderful mental vitality setting the paces of many pulses,
+besides those which stirred her own brain. I know much of the actual
+labor she accomplished for her sex, both here and in England, but even
+nobler than that was the high ideal she set them in her own life and
+the inspiration of her personality to younger women.
+
+To those she called special friends her loyalty was unswerving, true
+as the needle to the pole, and as one blest with such friendship I
+feel the influence of her beautiful, unselfish living will be ever
+with me, though something has gone out of my life, never to be
+replaced. Her daughter, Mrs. Vida Croly Sidney, worthily carries on
+the traditions and work of her noble mother, and her friends feel that
+in her there is a living tie between the untiring spirit laboring now,
+we may well believe, in another existence and the work so loved by
+that spirit while on earth.
+
+A true heart, a generous nature, a broad mind, and keen mental acumen
+are qualities that do not die with their possessor; they bless the
+world to which she has gone and that she left behind.
+
+We can best honor her memory by carrying on her work and by leaving
+the world better and happier for our having lived in it.
+
+
+
+
+From a Letter to the Memorial Committee from Sara J. Lippincott (Grace
+Greenwood)
+
+
+I feel Mrs. Croly's death very deeply. The sacred holiday season,
+dedicated from time immemorial to household joy and mirth, and calling
+for Christian gratitude and hope, was already saddened by
+bereavements, and her death--absolutely unlooked for by me--made it
+melancholy and mournful.
+
+"She should have died hereafter." I did not dream when I saw her last
+that she was to solve the great mystery before me. Though feeble,
+there seemed so much of the old energetic, enthusiastic self about
+her; and I parted from her hoping to see her soon in renewed health
+and strength.
+
+She always had a peculiar fascination for me: her soft, sweet voice;
+her strong though quiet will; her unfailing faith in all things good;
+her loyalty to her sex. I think her pass-word to the realm of rest and
+reward must have been, "I loved my fellow-woman."
+
+ 35 Lockwood Avenue, New Rochelle,
+ January 6, 1902.
+
+
+
+
+From a Letter to the Memorial Committee from Jennie de la M. Lozier
+
+
+Mrs. Croly was a woman of uncommon intuition and sympathy. She took
+wide and far-reaching views of woman's possible development and
+usefulness. She believed in organization as a factor in this
+development, and spared no effort to form and maintain, even at
+personal sacrifice, the woman's club or federation. She was always
+generous and warm-hearted, of boundless hospitality, never more
+genially herself than when her friends gathered about her in her
+attractive home and she could make them happy. I shall always recall
+with pleasure the rare moments when she talked with me of her real
+life, her hopes and her plans. I believe that she constantly exerted a
+noble influence, and that she stood for all that makes for woman's
+unselfish helpfulness, courage and independence.
+
+New York, February 10, 1902.
+
+
+
+
+From Genie H. Rosenfeld
+
+
+In the early days of the Woman's Press Club, when it was divided upon
+the question of a suitable meeting place, and undisciplined members
+were resigning in appreciable numbers, Mrs. Croly surprised me one day
+by declaring that the club had never been stronger than it was at that
+hour.
+
+"Why, Mrs. Croly!" I exclaimed, "we have only a handful of women
+left."
+
+"My dear," she said, "we have lopped off all our dead wood. The
+branches that remain may be few, but they are vigorous, and from them
+will spring up a tree that will be a glory to us."
+
+This little saying of Mrs. Croly's has come back to me and been of use
+many times, and it has often enabled me to understand the benefit of
+lopping off dead wood and starting anew.
+
+
+
+
+Contributed to the New York _Tribune_ by S. A. Lattimore
+
+
+The sad announcement of the death of Mrs. Jane Cunningham Croly
+recalls a delightful incident of several summers ago when I had the
+pleasure of meeting her at Long Branch.
+
+In the course of a most interesting conversation I ventured to ask her
+to give me the origin of her well-known _nom-de-plume_ of "Jenny
+June." In her bright, sympathetic way, which all who knew her can
+describe, she said:
+
+"Yes, I will tell you. In my early girlhood I knew a young clergyman
+who was in the habit of occasionally visiting our house. One day he
+came to bid us good-bye, saying that he was going to a Western city to
+reside. As he bid me goodbye he gave me a little book. It was a volume
+of B. F. Taylor's poems, called 'January and June.' The little book
+opened of itself at a page containing verses entitled 'The Beautiful
+River.' An introductory paragraph read thus: 'On such a night, in such
+a June, who has not sat side by side with somebody for all the world
+like Jenny June? Maybe it was years ago, but it was some time. Maybe
+you had quite forgotten it, but you will be the better for
+remembering. Maybe she has gone on before where it is June all the
+year, and never January at all,--that God forbid. There it was, and
+then it was, and thus it was.' This stanza was marked in pencil:
+
+ 'Jenny June,' then I said, 'let us linger no more
+ On the banks of the beautiful river;
+ Let the boat be unmoored, and muffled the oar,
+ And we'll steal into heaven together.
+ If the angel on duty our coming descries
+ You have nothing to do but throw off the disguise
+ That you wore when you wandered with me;
+ And the sentry will say: "Welcome back to the skies,
+ We long have been waiting for thee!"'
+
+On the margin was written, 'You are the Juniest Jenny I know.'
+
+"The years of my girlhood passed on, and with their passing faded away
+all memory of the young minister. Later there came to me, as I suppose
+there comes to every young girl, the impulse to write, and when some
+early efforts of mine were judged worthy to be published, I was
+confronted for the first time with the question of a signature.
+Shrinking from seeing my own name in print, by some witchery of memory
+the words 'Jenny June' suddenly occurred to me, and that, as you know,
+has been my name ever since."
+
+After a little pause Mrs. Croly said: "Now that I have answered your
+question I must tell you something else. Thirty years after I had
+assumed my _nom-de-plume_ a gray-haired stranger called at my house
+one day and asked to see me. The name he gave recalled no one I had
+ever known, and in meeting there was no recognition on either side.
+But he proceeded in a straightforward way to explain the object of his
+visit: 'For the last thirty years,' he said, 'since my removal from
+this city, I have lived in the West; naturally, I have been a constant
+reader of Eastern papers, and particularly have I read every article I
+have ever seen bearing the signature of "Jenny June." I have made many
+efforts, but always without success, to ascertain who she was, and
+whether the name was real or fictitious. Somehow I have never
+forgotten the little girl I knew before I went West, and to whom I
+gave a little volume of poems with something written on a page that
+contained a stanza that I greatly admired about "Jenny June." I have
+wondered if she had become the famous writer, and upon my return to my
+native city, after so long an absence, I have sought you simply to ask
+if you are that little girl.'"
+
+
+
+
+The Fairies' Gifts
+
+_By Ellen M. Staples_
+
+
+ To an English home one bright Yuletide
+ While Christmas bells rang loud and wide
+
+ Came a babe with the gentle eyes of a dove
+ And a face as fair as a thought of love.
+
+ "Now, God be thanked," the old nurse cried,
+ "That the child is born at Christmas-tide;
+
+ "For the blessed sake of Mary's Son
+ God's benison falls on lives begun
+
+ "When Christmas music fills the air
+ And men are joyful everywhere.
+
+ "And as to Him came Wise Men three
+ Offering gifts on bended knee
+
+ "So to one born at the Holy Time
+ On land or sea, in every clime,
+
+ "Come three Good Fairies, and each one bears
+ A gift to brighten the coming years."
+
+ The pallid mother gently smiled
+ And looked upon her tender child.
+
+ "Good nurse, the legend is full sweet;
+ And I lay my babe at His dear feet
+
+ "Whose human Sonhood is aware
+ Of the painful bliss that mothers bear.
+
+ "I can well believe that heaven may
+ Send gifts to the child of Christmas Day."
+
+ Tired by her flight from Paradise
+ The baby shut her wondering eyes,
+
+ Nor knew that 'round the cradle stood,
+ To bless the babe, three Fairies good.
+
+ The First bent over the cradle head;
+ "These are my gifts to her," she said:
+
+ "A sunny nature, a voice of song,
+ And may faithful friends uncounted throng!"
+
+ The Second murmured in accents low:
+ "The path will be steep and rough, I know,
+
+ "So I give her a heart that is brave and strong,
+ That will patiently work, though the way be long;
+
+ "And though life may fill them with toil and care
+ Her hands shall weaker ones' burdens share."
+
+ Then stood the Third for a moment's space
+ To thoughtfully gaze on the baby face,
+
+ And over her own a radiance came
+ As she softly said: "My gift is a name.
+
+ "Though born while the earth lies spread with
+ snow
+ The babe is a summer-child, and so
+
+ "The sunny nature, the voice of song,
+ The helpful hands, true heart and strong
+
+ "With Nature's self should be in tune,
+ Sweet child, I name thee Jenny June."
+
+
+
+
+From Margaret Ravenhill
+
+
+Jane Cunningham Croly left upon the last century an ineffaceable
+record. For industrious and successful work in journalism she probably
+had no peer. In a speech before the Woman's Press Club not long since,
+she said: "When a woman has written enough to fill a room, she feels
+like burning it instead of preserving it in scrap-books." Probably no
+woman of her day and generation has done more or better work than our
+"Jenny June." No woman had more diversity of gifts; she was equally at
+home in the editorial chair, or the reportorial office; as a speaker
+she excelled. In the old days we who knew her best would sometimes
+notice a hesitancy of speech that would occasionally cloud a brilliant
+idea; but if she hesitated she was never lost, and the idea was worth
+waiting for. She was always clear, logical, forceful in expression,
+and exhaustive in argument. Thoroughness seems the word to express the
+character of Mrs. Croly. She was quick to catch the meaning of the
+uttered thoughts of others, keen in analysis, and executive in all
+work. Witness the many organizations which she helped originate. Her
+long years of rule as president of Sorosis were of inestimable value
+to that "mother of women's clubs." Her great "History of the Club
+Movement" should be in the hands of every woman in the land.
+
+Of Mrs. Croly's personality it is a pleasure to speak. Every woman who
+enjoyed the privilege of her friendship felt the magnetism and charm
+of a rare nature; while, with all her force and power, there was a
+childishness about her that impressed one with the idea that the
+naivete and innocence of childhood had never been wholly lost in the
+woman. I think it was in some measure owing to the fact that she was
+so near-sighted that there was a kind of appealing hesitancy about her
+movements that impelled you to her aid.
+
+Mrs. Croly's home was one of refinement and good taste in every
+detail, and there she was at her best. Always a charming hostess, she
+made every guest feel that he or she was the one most eagerly
+expected; there were the hearty greeting, the few low words of
+welcome, the sunny smile that transformed her face into positive
+beauty. Her Sunday evenings at home came nearer in character to the
+French salon than any others in New York. There were the most
+delightful people to be met: the gifted minds of our own land and
+Europe were among her guests. But Mrs. Croly's proudest boast was that
+she was a woman's woman.
+
+
+
+
+From T. C. Evans, in the New York _Times_
+
+
+When I joined the _World_ staff of writers, in 1860, a few weeks after
+the foundation of that journal, I found Jenny June already there. She
+did not often appear in the office in person, the lady auxiliary in
+journalism not being so familiar a figure as it now is, and she had
+not yet adopted her pretty _nom-de-plume,_ but her husband, David G.
+Croly, held an official post on the staff as city editor, and her
+contributions, which were invariably well written and interesting,
+appeared from the first in the _World_ columns, and as the years went
+on while she and Mr. Croly remained associated with it, with
+increasing frequency. They were written by a woman mainly for women,
+and the maids and matrons of her country over all its area from ocean
+to ocean and from "lands of sun to lands of snow" have never been
+addressed by one of their sex whom they came to know better or to hold
+in higher esteem. Her work assumed no pretentious or high importance,
+but was sweet and wholesome, sensible, and a mirror of the nature out
+of which it proceeded. The name Jenny June, which she adopted a few
+years later, became a beloved household word throughout the land,
+perhaps more widely known than that of any lady journalist who has
+ever wrought in it.
+
+Mrs. Croly's social dispositions and her aptitude for gathering
+interesting people around her were gracious endowments of nature's
+bestowal, as strongly marked in her youth as in her maturer years,
+when she gradually came to have a wider stage on which to display
+them. Her pretty little drawing-rooms, somewhere on the west side near
+Grove Street, are well remembered by me, and first and last I met in
+them a goodly number of people well worthy to be remembered, some with
+their trophies of success yet to win, but their merit divined by their
+clever hostess, perhaps before it had obtained any full recognition
+elsewhere. Many also came who had won their spurs and epaulets and
+shone bravely in the bright glitter of both. In her little
+unpretending salon of that day might be met the brilliant young Edmund
+Clarence Stedman, in the morning glow of his poetic fame; Bayard
+Taylor, risen into the mid-forenoon of his fame, with his Orient
+lyrics published and his translation of "Faust" well begun; perhaps
+Phoebe and Alice Cary, though on this point I cannot be certain, and
+many another of note and distinction in that time, her hospitality
+taking in all arts, and all the presentable workers in them, so that
+poets, painters, sculptors, singers, actors were equally welcome, as
+were those who brought to her only their bright young countenances
+and winning smiles. Her later drawing-rooms, when she had removed up
+town, nearer to the Mayfair of society, became widely celebrated, and
+she founded something perhaps as near to a salon modeled after the
+traditional Parisian standards as any that America has known.
+
+Mrs. Croly is recognized as the chief among the founders of Sorosis,
+the most celebrated woman's club in the world, and parent of the
+innumerable organizations of like sect which have sprung up since
+their renowned progenitor became with fewer vicissitudes and trials
+than might have been anticipated firmly planted on its feet and
+attested its self-supporting and self-reliant character. No social
+development of the modern period is more striking than the swift
+multiplication of women's clubs, not in this country alone, but in
+others, and they have shown a power of beneficent work most
+advantageous to the community at large, which even the most sanguine
+among their promoters could not have anticipated. They have also shown
+that women can legislate and administrate and rise to the point of
+order and lay things on the table in a manner as parliamentary and
+self-restrained as men. For such testimony the world should be
+thankful, as it never got anything of the kind before. Among the
+founders of this now most impressive group of social organizations no
+name stands out more brightly and conspicuously than that of Jane
+Cunningham Croly.
+
+Her recent death, though a surprise and shock to her innumerable
+friends, came when she had passed her seventy-second birthday, and it
+cannot therefore be said that she passed away with her work
+uncompleted. It was fully and most worthily performed, and was the
+fruit of a systematic diligence never remitted, and in which few of
+her sex in any period could have exceeded her. Her memory is fragrant
+as the month from which she took her _nom-de-plume_, and will at least
+be cherished by those whom her gentle discourse, continued for more
+than a generation, has entertained and instructed.
+
+
+
+
+From St. Clair McKelway, in the Brooklyn _Eagle_
+
+
+The death of Jane Cunningham Croly, noticed in Tuesday's _Eagle_,
+involves the loss of a woman of leadership who put a good deal of help
+into others' lives. Born in 1829, she began at seventeen to write for
+newspapers. Her topics were, for a wonder, practical, the young too
+generally beginning with abstract, academical or recondite subjects.
+Hers were "fashions" in dress, fads in food, fancies and foibles in
+decoration etc. From them she advanced to more philosophical or
+general fields, but on all she wrote was the stamp of applicability to
+contemporaneous life.
+
+In the middle, later, and more genial period of her life she did more
+talking than writing. And her talking was always earnest, direct,
+sincere, with a gleam of hope and a note of wisdom in it--the union of
+experience and reflection. Had it been reported it would have made for
+her a literary name: but she was content, or constrained, to limit her
+work to the platform, or to the circle of existence affected by it.
+
+As a clubwoman Mrs. Croly achieved the eminence almost of a pioneer.
+It can be shown that a club or two of women had a titular beginning
+before "Sorosis," but that was the original society started by her on
+the theory that there were opportunities and conditions in club life,
+on an educational or literary basis, of which women could well avail
+themselves. Mrs. Croly sympathized with the more earnest purposes
+entering into her idea, and was in little related to any sensational,
+spectacular, or faddish features that may here or there become
+attached to it. She was a believer in seriousness, an exemplar of
+industry, a devotee to system, and a very remarkably punctual,
+effective and straightforward writer. Her flight was never very high,
+but it was always progressive, and her regulation of her pen by the
+precise rules that govern presswork was entitled to distinct praise.
+She could always be trusted to keep within her topic and herself
+behind it, and she understood the art of putting things to her public
+in a way to discover to them their own thoughts as well as to denote
+her own.
+
+To David G. Croly, her husband, long a newspaper man of admitted power
+and executive force, Mrs. Croly was a constant help, as he too was to
+her. From him she learned not a little of her topical discernment and
+technical knack. He was never afraid of ability in whomever found, and
+he rejoiced that the sex of his wife, and the novel fact that she was
+the first woman in America to write daily for publication, gave to her
+and her subjects a vogue he and his could not command in a world of
+more and mainly personal work. She survived him twelve years. Their
+union was not made any less congenial by marked dissimilarity of
+convictions on cardinal subjects.
+
+Mrs. Croly was the recipient of many evidences of the honor and
+affection in which her own sex held her, and beyond doubt the
+organizations of which she was the inspiring force will pay to her
+memory the tributes her disinterestedness and abilities deserved,
+exercised as she always was for so long with projects nearly related
+to the better equipment of effective womanhood for the conditions and
+conduct of life. Her death at seventy-two, after not a little
+suffering and not a few sorrows, was not unexpected, though it will be
+sincerely and widely regretted. In her last years she was happily made
+aware of the love and tenderness towards her which she had richly
+earned by service, counsel, and example to the lives of others.
+
+
+
+
+From Laura Sedgwick Collins
+
+
+ Dear Friend, dear Helper, passed from earth
+ To heaven, in earthly grace, I here
+ Would give to thee homage sincere
+ And memory sweet. Thy ever kindly word
+ Has oft the sad heart warmed,
+ The drooped head raised, and thy sustaining hand
+ A fainting purpose thrilled
+ To better courage, firmer aim.
+
+ In that far realm where spirits meet
+ And greet with message mystic, there
+ Thou must, in sweet commune
+ Receive reward for earthly deeds.
+ Thy heart ne'er knew the unkind throb,
+ Was ever gentle, firm and true;
+ Whate'er the cause, if once espoused
+ Thou to thy watchword held thyself.
+
+ Throughout our land, in city, town,
+ Thy name beloved remains alive;
+ Alive in hearts, alive in minds,--
+ For thou hadst heart and brain as well
+ To touch the soul and win the thought.
+ Thy work for woman stands unspoiled;
+ Untouched by vanity or marred by pride,
+ Unsullied by a thought of self,
+
+ A generous impulse toward thy sex--
+ A woman's word for woman's need.
+ And so thy name in fragrance fine
+ Bespeaks again returning June,--
+ The spring of promise, budding hope!
+ The cypress changes to the rose,--
+ The rose of dawn, the rose of heaven;
+ And both are thine and thine the crown
+ All jewelled o'er with thy good deeds--
+ Deeds of mercy, deeds of love,
+ Are with us still though thou art gone!
+
+
+
+From Mary Coffin Johnson
+
+
+Many years before I personally knew Mrs. Croly she was at the height
+of her useful public life; the imprint of her hand and mind in
+contemporary literature was an evident fact, and she had become a
+conspicuous figure in the ranks of well-known women. It is therefore
+my privilege to speak of her last few years, when the golden light of
+achievement gilded the eventide of her eventful life.
+
+Having had the peculiar advantage of sitting beside her for six years
+as an officer of the Woman's Press Club I am thoroughly aware of her
+sincerity, and of the singleness of heart which, actuated her motives
+in behalf of women. She believed that every united effort that raises
+the personal standard of thought and purpose is of the utmost
+importance. It was her earnest desire that women should live lofty and
+useful lives. She frequently laid stress upon this manner of life, and
+at such times her temperament seemed charged with sympathetic interest
+in young women journalists. "Unity in Diversity," the motto adopted by
+the General Federation of Women's Clubs, is a fitting expression of
+the broad conceptions she brought into club life; indeed, her success
+in bringing women of unequal social position and essentially different
+callings, into harmonious relationship and unity of purpose was
+markedly characteristic.
+
+During her last years women's clubs became more than ever of absorbing
+interest to her, claiming the complete devotion of her broad mind. The
+untiring devotion she had already given to this part of her life's
+activities had established her fame, and this fame will ever be
+exceptionable, for her work can never be duplicated.
+
+The growing spirit of helpfulness and friendliness which inspires
+women's organizations, the manifold opportunities of various kinds
+which they afford, and the excellent results which follow could, she
+thought, scarcely be estimated. "Club life for women," she would say,
+"requires no justification. When we enter our club rooms we leave
+behind us much of the rubbish of the world. The richest, fullest
+development of life flows through the better social relations, and
+from times of old has been uplifting." "It is not merely that we need
+one another," she would declare, "but that the sense of kinship is
+healthful; it inspires the larger love, and creates a stronger
+relationship. It seems to be God's method of helping humankind to the
+higher and more perfect life."
+
+On various occasions, when only members of the dub were present, she
+would lay aside the formality of the presiding member, and, assuming
+the familiar manner of addressing us, pour forth her lofty ideals for
+women, unconsciously testifying that the secret spring of her actions
+was her love for her own sex. Though the words were always spoken with
+gentle calmness, and in a tone of womanly softness, something in her
+passionate sincerity would, like the effect of a magnet, attract every
+listener, and a spell of silence would fall upon us. In all that she
+said we discerned the Divine Principle.
+
+There were those who, from their own viewpoints, carped at what they
+heard and saw, but a person even of Mrs. Croly's temperament and
+courage, placed amid the recurring action and reaction of a life of
+much publicity, cannot, of course, please every one. It would be
+surprising if in her long career she had not manifested human
+imperfections, and had not sometimes made mistakes; she would have
+been more than human had she not.
+
+It was no easy task for her to stem the tide of difficulties and
+oppositions from without, for from first to last of her diligent life
+she had many trials to endure. Both sunbeam and shadow crossed her
+pathway; but her errors were not uncommon to humankind; moreover, she
+was very patient under misconception. "It is always fair," said Henry
+Ward Beecher, "to credit a man at his best,--let his enemies tell of
+his worst." Another writer remarks: "To get a true idea of any
+character we most seize upon its higher forming element, that to which
+it naturally tends."
+
+Hers was far from an impulsive nature, yet there were times when Mrs.
+Croly suddenly revealed in a marked way her true, deep instincts.
+While on a visit to this country on one occasion, Madame Antoinette
+Sterling, a concert singer in England, was a guest of the Woman's
+Press Club. She was asked to sing for us, and responded with "The Lost
+Chord." In answer to an encore she sang a ballad of her own
+composition, called "The Sheepfold." Mrs. Croly was visibly affected
+by the words; seldom had she ever manifested more feeling. When the
+song was ended she quickly rose, and in a tremulous voice exclaimed:
+"Does not this say to us that if even _one_ were outside, the whole
+strength of the universe would be brought to bear upon it, to bring it
+into the fold!"
+
+In 1897 Mrs. Croly was honored by the General Federation of Women's
+Clubs by the appointment to write the "History of the Woman's Club
+Movement in America," an undertaking that required exceptionable
+ability. The vast amount of mental energy and wearing labor she put
+into this work, added to the past years of constant application to
+literary and other interests, told seriously upon her health. Her
+nervous system had become exceedingly susceptible, and it was evident
+that her good constitution was beginning to break down.
+
+However, the indomitable energy she possessed, and her trained
+capacity for work enabled her to continue until the large volume was
+finished and given to the public.
+
+Early in June, 1898, Mrs. Croly had a serious fall in which she
+fractured her hip, and she was confined to her room for many weeks.
+Though she possessed unusual power of endurance, her lessening
+strength could no longer bear the strain upon the delicate frame, and
+her rallying power was perceptibly diminished. As the fracture slowly
+healed she but feebly met the physical exertion necessary to go about
+on crutches. Even then it was impossible for her to take life
+serenely; she was restlessly eager to be up and doing. When she could
+be removed with safety, which was not until the third of September,
+she went abroad with her daughter, Mrs. Vida Croly Sidney, who had
+come over from England for her, and she spent a year in London and the
+vicinity. In August, 1899, they were in Switzerland, and Mrs. Croly
+took the baths at Schinznach-les-Bains. She returned to America the
+following September, and remained in New York through the winter of
+1899-1900. The change agreed with, her, but her health cannot be said
+to have improved, and she was still very infirm. Her natural affection
+and interest in the Woman's Press Club led her to attend its meetings,
+whenever she was able, going there in the carriage sent for her. On
+the 12th of May she was present at a club meeting, and gave us an
+informal talk, which proved to be her parting address, though at the
+time we knew it not. That day her words were full of significance. She
+expressed herself with fervor, chiefly on the importance of clubwomen
+bearing a large measure of love and good-will towards one another, and
+of the cultivation of the tie of divine charity. With earnestness she
+urged again that we should stand "hand to hand to exercise patience in
+judgment, and to be slow in criticism." "It is God-like," she said,
+"to forgive. Remember," she continued, "that all that is good in this
+life emanates from love; that it is the very best thing that this life
+affords, and that there is nothing on earth that can take the place of
+its ministry. Love has no limitations, and if you give the best talent
+you possess to your club it will give it back to you. Club life is
+often misunderstood, it is true,--but," she slowly added, "there is
+nothing in this world _entirely_ perfect." She spoke touchingly of the
+personal sense of loneliness she felt; that although she was a woman
+among many women she lived many a lonely hour; and she wished it well
+understood that the love and friendship of clubwomen was to her the
+most precious thing in her life. In closing she emphasized the counsel
+she had given, to be "United and conciliatory in our relations with
+each other; to be just; to suspend judgment; and to wait long and
+trust God who knows all. He," she declared, "will not misunderstand
+you."
+
+At the end of May she returned to England. Though nature had not
+become victorious over her feebleness, and she was still almost
+helpless from the effect of the accident of 1898, she heroically
+overcame these physical conditions as far as she was able. Something
+continually impelled her onward. She attended the International
+Congress of Women held during the Paris Exposition of that year, and
+then went on to Ober-Ammergau to the Passion Play, accompanied by Mrs.
+Sidney; and then returned to England, where she stayed until the 27th
+of July, 1901, when she again sailed for New York, business matters
+requiring her presence in this country.
+
+On her arrival in August from the second visit abroad, the grave facts
+that her health was not established, and that her time here was not to
+be long, were soon evident to her friends. The struggle of nature not
+only had begun, the shadow was even now sweeping near. She appeared at
+the November business meeting of the Woman's Press Club, accompanied
+by an attendant, and took the chair, but she was so much exhausted by
+the effort that her nurse easily persuaded her to come away. During
+the following four weeks her prostration and decline were steady.
+
+As the final day of her human infirmity approached, she expressed to
+the close friend who sat beside her a timid shrinking, common to all
+human nature, from the passage out of this life. It may be counted a
+special mercy that, as it afterwards proved, she need not have had any
+disquietude concerning the inevitable moment, for a few hours before
+the closing scene she fell into a state of coma, and passed beyond so
+quietly and tranquilly that she did not herself know when the moment
+came. She entered the world of infinite repose in the forenoon of
+December 23, 1901.
+
+The funeral service was held in the Church of the Transfiguration,
+Mrs. Croly's friends gathering from far and near to pay their last
+tributes of love and regard. The women's clubs and societies of
+Manhattan, Brooklyn, and the suburbs, were represented in large
+numbers, and every seat in the church was filled.
+
+Mrs. Croly lies at rest beside her husband, David G. Croly, in the
+beautiful cemetery near Lakewood, New Jersey.
+
+"Yon's her step ... an' she's carryin' a licht in her hand; a see it
+through the door."
+
+
+
+
+From Caroline M. Morse
+
+
+As Chairman of the Memorial Committee it is my privilege to add my
+memories of Mrs. Croly to those which have preceded. Mine are not of
+her club interests, nor of her identification with the woman's club
+movement. So much has been written, and so well, regarding these
+public phases of her life that it would seem almost officious for me
+to add a stone to the already piled up cairn; I write rather of my
+friend as my family knew her in her home, surrounded by husband and
+children.
+
+It was in 1880 that we first knew Mr. and Mrs. Croly, and the
+acquaintance soon became an intimacy that lasted for twenty-three
+years. They were living in their own house in Seventy-first street, an
+artistically furnished house, an ideal home full of a sweet
+domesticity.
+
+Intimate as we were it was frequently our privilege to gather with the
+family at their Sunday evening supper, when Mrs. Croly was as
+completely the "house-mother" fulfilling the homely duties of the
+table, as, an hour later, she was the gracious, though more formal
+hostess receiving in her drawing-room the usual Sunday night throng of
+old friends and the strangers of distinction who, chancing to be in
+town, were fortunate enough to have letters of introduction to her. I
+see her slight figure moving from group to group, and the low English
+voice and sweet smile with which she encouraged her visitors to speak
+of themselves, and, if they were foreigners, of their missions to this
+country. A characteristic act of hers was to carry around a little
+silver tray on which there might be several glasses of a dainty punch,
+the base of which was a light, non-alcoholic wine. This she offered to
+friends whom she desired particularly to honor, and the act had all
+the significance of the Russian custom of breaking bread and eating
+salt with the host. These Sunday evenings at home, which were a
+feature of the society in which she moved, were continued until a
+short time before her death, or until she was incapacitated by
+illness.
+
+My friend had none of the usual failings of the traditionary
+"emancipated woman"; she would sit down to her basket on an afternoon
+and take up a bit of household sewing with the same spirit and
+aptitude that had guided her in the forenoon in the writing of an
+editorial article or the preparation of a paper to be read before a
+club.
+
+I recall with especial joy the long walks we used to take together.
+After a day of wearisome work, it was one of her great delights to
+leave the piled-up desk and find herself in the street, her arm linked
+in mine. At such times much of her talk was ravishing speculation upon
+things seen and unseen. It was as if, released for the moment from
+the pressure of work, her mind sprang into a world removed from the
+practical and immediate, to revel in contemplation of the divine. Yet
+she was no visionary, and the world of sight held her cheerful
+allegiance. Hers was never "the dyer's hand subdued to what it works
+in," and this is the more remarkable since she never relinquished
+work, even for our beloved walks, without a mild protest at laying
+aside her pen. One afternoon I called, intending to take her out for
+one of our "play-hours," but I failed to find her in her apartment.
+Next morning the post brought me this note:
+
+ "MY DEAR FRIEND:
+
+ "I was so glad to get your card, and so sorry to miss you.
+ It was just that hour out-of-doors with you that I was
+ longing for. I have been so long away, and since my return
+ have been so busy with much detail of correspondence that in
+ quantity is always more or less depressing, that I needed a
+ sight of you to tone me up and restore my standard. I have
+ also taken advantage of enforced quiet to brace up for an
+ heroic two weeks of dentistry, and have therefore been in
+ absolute retirement and upon baby diet of the most innocuous
+ description...
+
+ "I am afraid this recapitulation will take away all desire
+ to repeat your effort in my direction. But I trust that
+ this may find you in a missionary humor, and that you will
+ see that I need 'looking after'--a far stronger motive with
+ most women than friendship, isn't it? Anyway, come again
+ soon, won't you? Afternoon is our gadding time, you know.
+
+ "Really and lovingly your friend.
+
+ "P.S.--This note will show that I truly have not command of
+ all my faculties and need a human tonic."
+
+All out-of-doors was dear to her. Trees were to her as men--rooted,
+and she often naively talked to them as if to friends while we
+strolled in the twilight. Her love of nature even seemed to affect her
+choice of diet, for she preferred simply prepared dishes and the
+natural foods. This was doubtless due in part to her unmixed Old World
+nationality and to her early surroundings in rural England: as she was
+in girlhood, so, in spite of the complex life of this distracting New
+World, she remained to the last.
+
+My friend dwelt lovingly upon anniversaries; the true spirit of
+Christmas entered her heart at every Yuletide season, and her gifts
+showed generous care in selection and in the dainty wrappings in which
+they were sent to us. She delighted in the Christmas and Thanksgiving
+dinners, but St. Valentine's was the dearest, as it was the
+anniversary of her marriage. This the Woman's Press Club of New York
+has always observed as the date of its annual dinner.
+
+She had a keen sense of humor, yet never did she forget herself either
+in posing or pranks, for hers was the unerring sense of the fitness of
+things. An instance of her ready wit comes to me: Soon after her
+return from her last visit to England she came to us to stay for a few
+days. It was in September, three months before her death. On Sunday
+evening several friends dropped in, and from general conversation we
+drifted into singing some of the old songs. Now and then she would add
+her own low tones to our untrained vocalizing, crooning or
+cantillating the tune as if she were musing aloud. We had been singing
+for a full hour, she, with crutch near at hand, sitting apart from us
+at the open window. We had just sung one of her favorites, the old
+ballad "Far Away," and were beginning another with all the energy of
+amateurs when it occurred to me that Mrs. Croly might be tired and
+ready to go to her room for the night. Bending over I whispered,
+"Come, dear, you must be weary of all this." She turned slowly in her
+chair, and looking up into my face, smiling whimsically, said: "Oh,
+no, not yet! I am enjoying the music just as if it were good!"
+
+I have already intimated that the home life of the family was happy.
+There existed between husband and wife a genuine congeniality in
+tastes and pursuits; yet between any two minds when both are strong
+and original there will generally be a divergence; and it has always
+seemed to me that the origin of Sorosis might be traced by the
+psychological analyst to some such divergence between Mrs. Croly's
+lines of intellectual development and those of her equally gifted
+husband, David G. Croly. The power of initiative was strong in each of
+these two, and in each it produced excellent though differing results.
+
+It is cause for regret that Mrs. Croly did not write more in her
+latter years, when her native wisdom had ripened in the soil of a rich
+experience.
+
+Her philosophy was the fruit of a rightly-lived, useful life, and even
+after the distressing accident which lamed her, her enthusiasm never
+waned, but rather seemed intensified and glorified. Seldom do the
+heart and brain work together as did hers. She will ever stand to
+those who knew her as a fine specimen of a rare type. She had
+convictions, and she had the courage to uphold them. She hated shams
+and hypocrisy with the vigor of Carlyle. The bravery of her public
+life was matched by the beauty of her private life. Good and Truth
+were her watchwords. "Good has faculty," says Swedenborg, "but not
+determinate except by truth. Determinate faculty is actual power." In
+the dear friend whom we here commemorate, faculty was determinate.
+
+Brave and honest pleader for woman; true, tender, sincere friend, you
+fought the good fight well; the world is better for your work, and
+among your saddest survivors are those whom you smote with a deserved
+pen-stroke, or with spoken words, who have long since given you
+grateful thanks.
+
+ C.M.M.
+
+
+
+
+L'Envoi
+
+
+ She cut a path through tangled underwood
+ Of old traditions out to broader ways.
+ She lived to hear her work called brave and good,
+ But oh! the thorns, before the crown of bays.
+ The world gives lashes to its pioneers
+ Until the goal is reached--then deafening cheers.
+
+ELLA WHEELER WILCOX.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Memories of Jane Cunningham Croly,
+"Jenny June", by Various
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK JANE CUNNINGHAM ***
+
+***** This file should be named 12099.txt or 12099.zip *****
+This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
+ https://www.gutenberg.org/1/2/0/9/12099/
+
+Produced by Ari J Joki and PG Distributed Proofreaders
+
+Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions
+will be renamed.
+
+Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no
+one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation
+(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without
+permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules,
+set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to
+copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to
+protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project
+Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you
+charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. If you
+do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the
+rules is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose
+such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and
+research. They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do
+practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks. Redistribution is
+subject to the trademark license, especially commercial
+redistribution.
+
+
+
+*** START: FULL LICENSE ***
+
+THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
+PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
+
+To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
+distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
+(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License (available with this file or online at
+https://gutenberg.org/license).
+
+
+Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic works
+
+1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
+and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
+(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
+the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy
+all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession.
+If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the
+terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or
+entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
+
+1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
+used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
+agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
+things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
+even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
+paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement
+and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works. See paragraph 1.E below.
+
+1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation"
+or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the
+collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an
+individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are
+located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from
+copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative
+works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg
+are removed. Of course, we hope that you will support the Project
+Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by
+freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of
+this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with
+the work. You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by
+keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others.
+
+1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
+what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in
+a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check
+the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement
+before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or
+creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project
+Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning
+the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United
+States.
+
+1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
+
+1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate
+access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently
+whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the
+phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed,
+copied or distributed:
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived
+from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is
+posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied
+and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees
+or charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work
+with the phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the
+work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1
+through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the
+Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or
+1.E.9.
+
+1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
+with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
+must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional
+terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked
+to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the
+permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work.
+
+1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
+work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
+
+1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
+electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
+prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
+active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm License.
+
+1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
+compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any
+word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or
+distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than
+"Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version
+posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org),
+you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a
+copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon
+request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other
+form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
+
+1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
+performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
+unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
+
+1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
+access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided
+that
+
+- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
+ the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
+ you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is
+ owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he
+ has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the
+ Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments
+ must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you
+ prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax
+ returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and
+ sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the
+ address specified in Section 4, "Information about donations to
+ the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."
+
+- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
+ you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
+ does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+ License. You must require such a user to return or
+ destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium
+ and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of
+ Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any
+ money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
+ electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days
+ of receipt of the work.
+
+- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
+ distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set
+forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from
+both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael
+Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the
+Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
+
+1.F.
+
+1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
+effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
+public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm
+collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain
+"Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or
+corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual
+property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a
+computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by
+your equipment.
+
+1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
+of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
+liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
+fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
+LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
+PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH F3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
+TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
+LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
+INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
+DAMAGE.
+
+1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
+defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
+receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
+written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
+received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with
+your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you with
+the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a
+refund. If you received the work electronically, the person or entity
+providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to
+receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If the second copy
+is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further
+opportunities to fix the problem.
+
+1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
+in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS' WITH NO OTHER
+WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO
+WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
+
+1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
+warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages.
+If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the
+law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be
+interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by
+the applicable state law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any
+provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions.
+
+1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
+trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
+providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance
+with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production,
+promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works,
+harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees,
+that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do
+or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm
+work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any
+Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause.
+
+
+Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
+electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers
+including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists
+because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from
+people in all walks of life.
+
+Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
+assistance they need, is critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
+goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
+remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
+and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations.
+To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
+and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4
+and the Foundation web page at https://www.pglaf.org.
+
+
+Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive
+Foundation
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
+501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
+state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
+Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
+number is 64-6221541. Its 501(c)(3) letter is posted at
+https://pglaf.org/fundraising. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent
+permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
+
+The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S.
+Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered
+throughout numerous locations. Its business office is located at
+809 North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887, email
+business@pglaf.org. Email contact links and up to date contact
+information can be found at the Foundation's web site and official
+page at https://pglaf.org
+
+For additional contact information:
+ Dr. Gregory B. Newby
+ Chief Executive and Director
+ gbnewby@pglaf.org
+
+Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
+spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
+increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
+freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
+array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
+($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
+status with the IRS.
+
+The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
+charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
+States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
+considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
+with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
+where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To
+SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any
+particular state visit https://pglaf.org
+
+While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
+have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
+against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
+approach us with offers to donate.
+
+International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
+any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
+outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
+
+Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
+methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
+ways including including checks, online payments and credit card
+donations. To donate, please visit: https://pglaf.org/donate
+
+
+Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works.
+
+Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm
+concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared
+with anyone. For thirty years, he produced and distributed Project
+Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support.
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
+editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S.
+unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily
+keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
+
+Each eBook is in a subdirectory of the same number as the eBook's
+eBook number, often in several formats including plain vanilla ASCII,
+compressed (zipped), HTML and others.
+
+Corrected EDITIONS of our eBooks replace the old file and take over
+the old filename and etext number. The replaced older file is renamed.
+VERSIONS based on separate sources are treated as new eBooks receiving
+new filenames and etext numbers.
+
+Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility:
+
+ https://www.gutenberg.org
+
+This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
+including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
+subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
+
+EBooks posted prior to November 2003, with eBook numbers BELOW #10000,
+are filed in directories based on their release date. If you want to
+download any of these eBooks directly, rather than using the regular
+search system you may utilize the following addresses and just
+download by the etext year.
+
+ https://www.gutenberg.org/etext06
+
+ (Or /etext 05, 04, 03, 02, 01, 00, 99,
+ 98, 97, 96, 95, 94, 93, 92, 92, 91 or 90)
+
+EBooks posted since November 2003, with etext numbers OVER #10000, are
+filed in a different way. The year of a release date is no longer part
+of the directory path. The path is based on the etext number (which is
+identical to the filename). The path to the file is made up of single
+digits corresponding to all but the last digit in the filename. For
+example an eBook of filename 10234 would be found at:
+
+ https://www.gutenberg.org/1/0/2/3/10234
+
+or filename 24689 would be found at:
+ https://www.gutenberg.org/2/4/6/8/24689
+
+An alternative method of locating eBooks:
+ https://www.gutenberg.org/GUTINDEX.ALL
+
+
diff --git a/old/12099.zip b/old/12099.zip
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..9491551
--- /dev/null
+++ b/old/12099.zip
Binary files differ